Is it time to remove ‘cancer’ label from low-risk prostate tumors?

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 05/11/2022 - 09:36

 

A team of experts is recommending that doctors forgo describing early, low-grade prostate tumors as “cancers” as a way to ease anxiety among patients and their families and reduce unnecessary treatment.

Physicians often advise that men with low-risk prostate tumors wait to see if the disease worsens – an approach called “active surveillance” – rather than rushing to treat the condition. After all, low-grade tumors rarely cause harm, and therapies such as radiation and surgery can carry serious side effects, including impotence and urinary leakage.

Yet doctors still label these lesions “cancer,” and as a result, some experts say, many men in the United States opt for treatment they don’t need.

In a new paper likely to stoke debate, experts from a range of disciplines, as well as one patient, argue that overtreatment could be reduced by removing the word “cancer” from low-risk disease. Tumors that rate 6 on the Gleason score (GS) cannot invade other organs but nonetheless scare patients into undergoing risky treatments, they argue. Fewer than 1% of men with GS6 prostate tumors experience metastatic disease or die from cancer within 15 years of the initial diagnosis, they report.

“No matter how much time a physician may spend downplaying the significance of a GS6 diagnosis or emphasizing the phrase low-risk, the words ‘you have cancer’ have a potent psychological effect on most men and their families,” they wrote in a paper published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Dropping the C word for low-risk tumors, which make up about half of 268,000 prostate cancer diagnoses annually in the United States, is not a new idea. An independent panel convened by the National Institutes of Health proposed just that in 2011.

However, clinician support for the shift appears to be growing, said Scott Eggener, MD, a urologic oncologist and professor of surgery at the University of Chicago, and a coauthor of the new article.

Dr. Eggener said active surveillance has been increasing dramatically in the United States, to about 60% of patients with GS6. “We feel like the landscape is right now to be talking about this issue,” Dr. Eggener told this news organization.

Reducing unnecessary treatment, he and his coauthors argue, could reduce the cost of health care — and boost the benefit of prostate-specific antigen testing for prostate cancer, which the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force at the moment deems small.

In addition, patients with prostate cancer diagnoses encounter increased risk of depression and suicide, disqualification or higher rates for life insurance, and questions from family and friends if they choose active surveillance over treatment – all of which might be ameliorated by a change in terminology.

The word “cancer” has been dropped from bladder, cervical, and thyroid conditions and prostate abnormalities that used to be classified as Gleason 2 through 5, they noted.
 

Keeping the status quo

But some physicians say GS6 doesn’t need a name change.

From a scientific standpoint, GS6 disease has molecular hallmarks of cancer, according to Jonathan Epstein, MD, professor of pathology, urology, and oncology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. More important, Dr. Epstein told Medscape, the classification does not guarantee that more serious cancer is not present, only that it has not been found yet in tissue samples.

Dr. Eggener acknowledged that while GS6 does have molecular markers associated with cancer – a fact that’s “challenging to reconcile with” – giving it another name “would still require surveillance, and since the window of opportunity for curing localized [prostate cancer] is typically measured in years or decades, evidence of histologic progression to a higher-grade cancer would far precede the potential time of future metastasis in the majority of cases.”

Still, Dr. Epstein worries that dropping the cancer designation may lead some patients to forgo active surveillance, which involves repeated imaging and biopsies to check for worse disease. Without such monitoring, he said, “if they do have higher grade cancer that’s unsampled, it will pose a threat to their life.”

Gleason 6 tumors “may progress, some significantly, or be incompletely sampled at the time of diagnosis. Both clinicians and patients need to understand such risk,” Peter Carroll, MD, MPH, a urologist at the University of California, San Francisco, who is critical of the proposed name change, told this news organization.

Regardless of what it’s called, Gleason 6 disease warrants close monitoring, said Joe Gallo, a 77-year-old Pennsylvania man whose high-risk cancer was detected during active surveillance. “If I had taken a laid-back, or less, approach” to monitoring, Mr. Gallo said, “necessary treatment may have been delayed and my condition may have become more serious.”

Some advocates say patients and their families need to be educated that cancer exists on a spectrum of severity.

Mark Lichty, 73, chairman of a support group called Active Surveillance Patients International, received a Gleason 6 diagnosis 17 years ago. He resisted treatment against medical advice, and the cancer never progressed.

Mr. Lichty said active surveillance has been more widely adopted in Sweden, where physicians assure patients that treatment is unnecessary and support systems exist. “Yes, a diagnosis of cancer is frightening,” he said in an interview. But “we can do a lot better in how we communicate the diagnosis.”

Dr. Eggener reported consulting or advisory roles with Sophiris Bio, Francis Medical, Insightec, Profound Medical, and Candel Therapeutics; speakers bureau at Janssen; and fees for travel, accommodations, and expenses from Janssen Biotech and Insightec; as well as an uncompensated relationship with Steba Biotech. The remaining coauthors reported several financial relationships, which are listed in the paper. Dr. Epstein and Dr. Carroll have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

 

A team of experts is recommending that doctors forgo describing early, low-grade prostate tumors as “cancers” as a way to ease anxiety among patients and their families and reduce unnecessary treatment.

Physicians often advise that men with low-risk prostate tumors wait to see if the disease worsens – an approach called “active surveillance” – rather than rushing to treat the condition. After all, low-grade tumors rarely cause harm, and therapies such as radiation and surgery can carry serious side effects, including impotence and urinary leakage.

Yet doctors still label these lesions “cancer,” and as a result, some experts say, many men in the United States opt for treatment they don’t need.

In a new paper likely to stoke debate, experts from a range of disciplines, as well as one patient, argue that overtreatment could be reduced by removing the word “cancer” from low-risk disease. Tumors that rate 6 on the Gleason score (GS) cannot invade other organs but nonetheless scare patients into undergoing risky treatments, they argue. Fewer than 1% of men with GS6 prostate tumors experience metastatic disease or die from cancer within 15 years of the initial diagnosis, they report.

“No matter how much time a physician may spend downplaying the significance of a GS6 diagnosis or emphasizing the phrase low-risk, the words ‘you have cancer’ have a potent psychological effect on most men and their families,” they wrote in a paper published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Dropping the C word for low-risk tumors, which make up about half of 268,000 prostate cancer diagnoses annually in the United States, is not a new idea. An independent panel convened by the National Institutes of Health proposed just that in 2011.

However, clinician support for the shift appears to be growing, said Scott Eggener, MD, a urologic oncologist and professor of surgery at the University of Chicago, and a coauthor of the new article.

Dr. Eggener said active surveillance has been increasing dramatically in the United States, to about 60% of patients with GS6. “We feel like the landscape is right now to be talking about this issue,” Dr. Eggener told this news organization.

Reducing unnecessary treatment, he and his coauthors argue, could reduce the cost of health care — and boost the benefit of prostate-specific antigen testing for prostate cancer, which the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force at the moment deems small.

In addition, patients with prostate cancer diagnoses encounter increased risk of depression and suicide, disqualification or higher rates for life insurance, and questions from family and friends if they choose active surveillance over treatment – all of which might be ameliorated by a change in terminology.

The word “cancer” has been dropped from bladder, cervical, and thyroid conditions and prostate abnormalities that used to be classified as Gleason 2 through 5, they noted.
 

Keeping the status quo

But some physicians say GS6 doesn’t need a name change.

From a scientific standpoint, GS6 disease has molecular hallmarks of cancer, according to Jonathan Epstein, MD, professor of pathology, urology, and oncology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. More important, Dr. Epstein told Medscape, the classification does not guarantee that more serious cancer is not present, only that it has not been found yet in tissue samples.

Dr. Eggener acknowledged that while GS6 does have molecular markers associated with cancer – a fact that’s “challenging to reconcile with” – giving it another name “would still require surveillance, and since the window of opportunity for curing localized [prostate cancer] is typically measured in years or decades, evidence of histologic progression to a higher-grade cancer would far precede the potential time of future metastasis in the majority of cases.”

Still, Dr. Epstein worries that dropping the cancer designation may lead some patients to forgo active surveillance, which involves repeated imaging and biopsies to check for worse disease. Without such monitoring, he said, “if they do have higher grade cancer that’s unsampled, it will pose a threat to their life.”

Gleason 6 tumors “may progress, some significantly, or be incompletely sampled at the time of diagnosis. Both clinicians and patients need to understand such risk,” Peter Carroll, MD, MPH, a urologist at the University of California, San Francisco, who is critical of the proposed name change, told this news organization.

Regardless of what it’s called, Gleason 6 disease warrants close monitoring, said Joe Gallo, a 77-year-old Pennsylvania man whose high-risk cancer was detected during active surveillance. “If I had taken a laid-back, or less, approach” to monitoring, Mr. Gallo said, “necessary treatment may have been delayed and my condition may have become more serious.”

Some advocates say patients and their families need to be educated that cancer exists on a spectrum of severity.

Mark Lichty, 73, chairman of a support group called Active Surveillance Patients International, received a Gleason 6 diagnosis 17 years ago. He resisted treatment against medical advice, and the cancer never progressed.

Mr. Lichty said active surveillance has been more widely adopted in Sweden, where physicians assure patients that treatment is unnecessary and support systems exist. “Yes, a diagnosis of cancer is frightening,” he said in an interview. But “we can do a lot better in how we communicate the diagnosis.”

Dr. Eggener reported consulting or advisory roles with Sophiris Bio, Francis Medical, Insightec, Profound Medical, and Candel Therapeutics; speakers bureau at Janssen; and fees for travel, accommodations, and expenses from Janssen Biotech and Insightec; as well as an uncompensated relationship with Steba Biotech. The remaining coauthors reported several financial relationships, which are listed in the paper. Dr. Epstein and Dr. Carroll have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

A team of experts is recommending that doctors forgo describing early, low-grade prostate tumors as “cancers” as a way to ease anxiety among patients and their families and reduce unnecessary treatment.

Physicians often advise that men with low-risk prostate tumors wait to see if the disease worsens – an approach called “active surveillance” – rather than rushing to treat the condition. After all, low-grade tumors rarely cause harm, and therapies such as radiation and surgery can carry serious side effects, including impotence and urinary leakage.

Yet doctors still label these lesions “cancer,” and as a result, some experts say, many men in the United States opt for treatment they don’t need.

In a new paper likely to stoke debate, experts from a range of disciplines, as well as one patient, argue that overtreatment could be reduced by removing the word “cancer” from low-risk disease. Tumors that rate 6 on the Gleason score (GS) cannot invade other organs but nonetheless scare patients into undergoing risky treatments, they argue. Fewer than 1% of men with GS6 prostate tumors experience metastatic disease or die from cancer within 15 years of the initial diagnosis, they report.

“No matter how much time a physician may spend downplaying the significance of a GS6 diagnosis or emphasizing the phrase low-risk, the words ‘you have cancer’ have a potent psychological effect on most men and their families,” they wrote in a paper published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Dropping the C word for low-risk tumors, which make up about half of 268,000 prostate cancer diagnoses annually in the United States, is not a new idea. An independent panel convened by the National Institutes of Health proposed just that in 2011.

However, clinician support for the shift appears to be growing, said Scott Eggener, MD, a urologic oncologist and professor of surgery at the University of Chicago, and a coauthor of the new article.

Dr. Eggener said active surveillance has been increasing dramatically in the United States, to about 60% of patients with GS6. “We feel like the landscape is right now to be talking about this issue,” Dr. Eggener told this news organization.

Reducing unnecessary treatment, he and his coauthors argue, could reduce the cost of health care — and boost the benefit of prostate-specific antigen testing for prostate cancer, which the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force at the moment deems small.

In addition, patients with prostate cancer diagnoses encounter increased risk of depression and suicide, disqualification or higher rates for life insurance, and questions from family and friends if they choose active surveillance over treatment – all of which might be ameliorated by a change in terminology.

The word “cancer” has been dropped from bladder, cervical, and thyroid conditions and prostate abnormalities that used to be classified as Gleason 2 through 5, they noted.
 

Keeping the status quo

But some physicians say GS6 doesn’t need a name change.

From a scientific standpoint, GS6 disease has molecular hallmarks of cancer, according to Jonathan Epstein, MD, professor of pathology, urology, and oncology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. More important, Dr. Epstein told Medscape, the classification does not guarantee that more serious cancer is not present, only that it has not been found yet in tissue samples.

Dr. Eggener acknowledged that while GS6 does have molecular markers associated with cancer – a fact that’s “challenging to reconcile with” – giving it another name “would still require surveillance, and since the window of opportunity for curing localized [prostate cancer] is typically measured in years or decades, evidence of histologic progression to a higher-grade cancer would far precede the potential time of future metastasis in the majority of cases.”

Still, Dr. Epstein worries that dropping the cancer designation may lead some patients to forgo active surveillance, which involves repeated imaging and biopsies to check for worse disease. Without such monitoring, he said, “if they do have higher grade cancer that’s unsampled, it will pose a threat to their life.”

Gleason 6 tumors “may progress, some significantly, or be incompletely sampled at the time of diagnosis. Both clinicians and patients need to understand such risk,” Peter Carroll, MD, MPH, a urologist at the University of California, San Francisco, who is critical of the proposed name change, told this news organization.

Regardless of what it’s called, Gleason 6 disease warrants close monitoring, said Joe Gallo, a 77-year-old Pennsylvania man whose high-risk cancer was detected during active surveillance. “If I had taken a laid-back, or less, approach” to monitoring, Mr. Gallo said, “necessary treatment may have been delayed and my condition may have become more serious.”

Some advocates say patients and their families need to be educated that cancer exists on a spectrum of severity.

Mark Lichty, 73, chairman of a support group called Active Surveillance Patients International, received a Gleason 6 diagnosis 17 years ago. He resisted treatment against medical advice, and the cancer never progressed.

Mr. Lichty said active surveillance has been more widely adopted in Sweden, where physicians assure patients that treatment is unnecessary and support systems exist. “Yes, a diagnosis of cancer is frightening,” he said in an interview. But “we can do a lot better in how we communicate the diagnosis.”

Dr. Eggener reported consulting or advisory roles with Sophiris Bio, Francis Medical, Insightec, Profound Medical, and Candel Therapeutics; speakers bureau at Janssen; and fees for travel, accommodations, and expenses from Janssen Biotech and Insightec; as well as an uncompensated relationship with Steba Biotech. The remaining coauthors reported several financial relationships, which are listed in the paper. Dr. Epstein and Dr. Carroll have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Study: Disparities shrink with aggressive depression screening

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 04/13/2022 - 13:27

An analysis at a large academic health system suggests that universal screening might help to reduce problematic disparities in depression treatment.  

The study began soon after the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended depression screening for all adults in 2016. The task force based this recommendation on evidence that people who are screened and treated experience fewer debilitating symptoms.

In the new research, the investigators analyzed electronic health record data following a rollout of a universal depression screening program at the University of California, San Francisco. The researchers found that the overall rate of depression screening doubled at six primary care practices over a little more than 2 years, reaching nearly 90%. The investigators presented the data April 9 at the Society of General Internal Medicine 2022 Annual Meeting in Orlando.

Meanwhile, screening disparities diminished for men, older individuals, racial and ethnic minorities, and people with language barriers – all groups that are undertreated for depression.

“It shows that if a health system is really invested, it can achieve really high depression screening,” primary investigator Maria Garcia, MD, MPH, co-director of UCSF’s Multiethnic Health Equity Research Center, told this news organization.
 

Methods for identifying depression

The health system assigned medical assistants to administer annual screening using a validated tool, the Patient Health Questionnaire-2 (PHQ-2). A “yes” response to either of its two questions triggered a longer questionnaire, the PHQ-9, used to diagnose and guide treatment.

Screening forms were available in multiple languages. Medical assistants received training on the importance of identifying depression in undertreated groups, and a banner was inserted in the electronic health record to indicate a screening was due, Dr. Garcia said.

During the rollout, a committee was assigned to monitor screening rates and adjust strategies to target disparities.

Dr. Garcia and fellow researchers calculated the likelihood of a patient being screened starting in September 2017 – when a field for depression screening status was added to the system’s electronic health record – until the rollout was completed on Dec. 31, 2019.
 

Screening disparities narrowed for all groups studied

The screening rate for patients who had a primary care visit increased from 40.5% to 88.8%. Early on, patients with language barriers were less likely to be screened than English-speaking White individuals (odds ratios, 0.55-0.59). Men were less likely to be screened than women (OR, 0.82; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-0.86), and the likelihood of being screened decreased as people got older. By 2019, screening disparities had narrowed for all groups and were only statistically significant for men (OR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.81-0.93).

Ian Kronish, MD, MPH, a general internist and associate professor of medicine at Columbia University, New York, called the increases “impressive,” adding that the data show universal depression screening is possible in a system that serves a diverse population.

Dr. Kronish, who was not involved in this study, noted that other research indicates screening does not result in a significant reduction in depressive symptoms in the overall population. He found this to be the case in a trial he led, which focused on patients with recent cardiac events, for example.

“Given all the effort that is going into depression screening and the inclusion of depression screening as a quality metric, we need definitive randomized clinical trials testing whether depression screening leads to increased treatment uptake and, importantly, improved depressive symptoms and quality of life,” he said.

Dr. Garcia acknowledged that more work needs to be done to address treatment barriers, such as language and lack of insurance, and assess whether greater recognition of depressive symptoms in underserved groups can lead to effective treatment. “But this is an important step to know that universal depression screening narrowed disparities in screening over time,” she added.

Dr. Garcia and Dr. Kronish have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

An analysis at a large academic health system suggests that universal screening might help to reduce problematic disparities in depression treatment.  

The study began soon after the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended depression screening for all adults in 2016. The task force based this recommendation on evidence that people who are screened and treated experience fewer debilitating symptoms.

In the new research, the investigators analyzed electronic health record data following a rollout of a universal depression screening program at the University of California, San Francisco. The researchers found that the overall rate of depression screening doubled at six primary care practices over a little more than 2 years, reaching nearly 90%. The investigators presented the data April 9 at the Society of General Internal Medicine 2022 Annual Meeting in Orlando.

Meanwhile, screening disparities diminished for men, older individuals, racial and ethnic minorities, and people with language barriers – all groups that are undertreated for depression.

“It shows that if a health system is really invested, it can achieve really high depression screening,” primary investigator Maria Garcia, MD, MPH, co-director of UCSF’s Multiethnic Health Equity Research Center, told this news organization.
 

Methods for identifying depression

The health system assigned medical assistants to administer annual screening using a validated tool, the Patient Health Questionnaire-2 (PHQ-2). A “yes” response to either of its two questions triggered a longer questionnaire, the PHQ-9, used to diagnose and guide treatment.

Screening forms were available in multiple languages. Medical assistants received training on the importance of identifying depression in undertreated groups, and a banner was inserted in the electronic health record to indicate a screening was due, Dr. Garcia said.

During the rollout, a committee was assigned to monitor screening rates and adjust strategies to target disparities.

Dr. Garcia and fellow researchers calculated the likelihood of a patient being screened starting in September 2017 – when a field for depression screening status was added to the system’s electronic health record – until the rollout was completed on Dec. 31, 2019.
 

Screening disparities narrowed for all groups studied

The screening rate for patients who had a primary care visit increased from 40.5% to 88.8%. Early on, patients with language barriers were less likely to be screened than English-speaking White individuals (odds ratios, 0.55-0.59). Men were less likely to be screened than women (OR, 0.82; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-0.86), and the likelihood of being screened decreased as people got older. By 2019, screening disparities had narrowed for all groups and were only statistically significant for men (OR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.81-0.93).

Ian Kronish, MD, MPH, a general internist and associate professor of medicine at Columbia University, New York, called the increases “impressive,” adding that the data show universal depression screening is possible in a system that serves a diverse population.

Dr. Kronish, who was not involved in this study, noted that other research indicates screening does not result in a significant reduction in depressive symptoms in the overall population. He found this to be the case in a trial he led, which focused on patients with recent cardiac events, for example.

“Given all the effort that is going into depression screening and the inclusion of depression screening as a quality metric, we need definitive randomized clinical trials testing whether depression screening leads to increased treatment uptake and, importantly, improved depressive symptoms and quality of life,” he said.

Dr. Garcia acknowledged that more work needs to be done to address treatment barriers, such as language and lack of insurance, and assess whether greater recognition of depressive symptoms in underserved groups can lead to effective treatment. “But this is an important step to know that universal depression screening narrowed disparities in screening over time,” she added.

Dr. Garcia and Dr. Kronish have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

An analysis at a large academic health system suggests that universal screening might help to reduce problematic disparities in depression treatment.  

The study began soon after the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended depression screening for all adults in 2016. The task force based this recommendation on evidence that people who are screened and treated experience fewer debilitating symptoms.

In the new research, the investigators analyzed electronic health record data following a rollout of a universal depression screening program at the University of California, San Francisco. The researchers found that the overall rate of depression screening doubled at six primary care practices over a little more than 2 years, reaching nearly 90%. The investigators presented the data April 9 at the Society of General Internal Medicine 2022 Annual Meeting in Orlando.

Meanwhile, screening disparities diminished for men, older individuals, racial and ethnic minorities, and people with language barriers – all groups that are undertreated for depression.

“It shows that if a health system is really invested, it can achieve really high depression screening,” primary investigator Maria Garcia, MD, MPH, co-director of UCSF’s Multiethnic Health Equity Research Center, told this news organization.
 

Methods for identifying depression

The health system assigned medical assistants to administer annual screening using a validated tool, the Patient Health Questionnaire-2 (PHQ-2). A “yes” response to either of its two questions triggered a longer questionnaire, the PHQ-9, used to diagnose and guide treatment.

Screening forms were available in multiple languages. Medical assistants received training on the importance of identifying depression in undertreated groups, and a banner was inserted in the electronic health record to indicate a screening was due, Dr. Garcia said.

During the rollout, a committee was assigned to monitor screening rates and adjust strategies to target disparities.

Dr. Garcia and fellow researchers calculated the likelihood of a patient being screened starting in September 2017 – when a field for depression screening status was added to the system’s electronic health record – until the rollout was completed on Dec. 31, 2019.
 

Screening disparities narrowed for all groups studied

The screening rate for patients who had a primary care visit increased from 40.5% to 88.8%. Early on, patients with language barriers were less likely to be screened than English-speaking White individuals (odds ratios, 0.55-0.59). Men were less likely to be screened than women (OR, 0.82; 95% confidence interval, 0.78-0.86), and the likelihood of being screened decreased as people got older. By 2019, screening disparities had narrowed for all groups and were only statistically significant for men (OR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.81-0.93).

Ian Kronish, MD, MPH, a general internist and associate professor of medicine at Columbia University, New York, called the increases “impressive,” adding that the data show universal depression screening is possible in a system that serves a diverse population.

Dr. Kronish, who was not involved in this study, noted that other research indicates screening does not result in a significant reduction in depressive symptoms in the overall population. He found this to be the case in a trial he led, which focused on patients with recent cardiac events, for example.

“Given all the effort that is going into depression screening and the inclusion of depression screening as a quality metric, we need definitive randomized clinical trials testing whether depression screening leads to increased treatment uptake and, importantly, improved depressive symptoms and quality of life,” he said.

Dr. Garcia acknowledged that more work needs to be done to address treatment barriers, such as language and lack of insurance, and assess whether greater recognition of depressive symptoms in underserved groups can lead to effective treatment. “But this is an important step to know that universal depression screening narrowed disparities in screening over time,” she added.

Dr. Garcia and Dr. Kronish have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM SGIM 2022

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Hospitalists and PCPs crave greater communication

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 04/13/2022 - 13:06

Decades after hospitalists took over inpatient care in the 1990s, hospitalists and primary care physicians (PCPs) still struggle with a communication divide, researchers at one teaching hospital found.

Hospitalists and PCPs want more dialogue while patients are in the hospital in order to coordinate and personalize care, according to data collected at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston. The results were presented at the annual meeting of the Society of General Internal Medicine.

“I think a major takeaway is that both hospitalists and primary care doctors agree that it’s important for primary care doctors to be involved in a patient’s hospitalization. They both identified a value that PCPs can bring to the table,” coresearcher Kristen Flint, MD, a primary care resident, told this news organization.

A majority in both camps reported that communication with the other party occurred in less than 25% of cases, whereas ideally it would happen half of the time. Dr. Flint noted that communication tools differ among hospitals, limiting the applicability of the findings.

The research team surveyed 39 hospitalists and 28 PCPs employed by the medical center during the first half of 2021. They also interviewed six hospitalists as they admitted and discharged patients.

The hospitalist movement, which took hold in response to cost and efficiency demands of managed care, led to the start of inpatient specialists, thereby reducing the need for PCPs to commute between their offices and the hospital to care for patients in both settings. 
 

Primary care involvement is important during hospitalization

In the Beth Israel Deaconess survey, four out of five hospitalists and three-quarters of PCPs agreed that primary care involvement is still important during hospitalization, most critically during discharge and admission. Hospitalists reported that PCPs provide valuable data about a patient’s medical status, social supports, mental health, and goals for care. They also said having such data helps to boost patient trust and improve the quality of inpatient care.

“Most projects around communication between inpatient and outpatient doctors have really focused on the time of discharge,” when clinicians identify what care a patient will need after they leave the hospital, Dr. Flint said. “But we found that both sides felt increased communication at time of admission would also be beneficial.”

The biggest barrier for PCPs, cited by 82% of respondents, was lack of time. Hospitalists’ top impediment was being unable to find contact information for the other party, which was cited by 79% of these survey participants.
 

Hospitalists operate ‘in a very stressful environment’

The Beth Israel Deaconess research “documents what has largely been suspected,” said primary care general internist Allan Goroll, MD.

Dr. Goroll, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview that hospitalists operate “in a very stressful environment.”

“They [hospitalists] appreciate accurate information about a patient’s recent medical history, test results, and responses to treatment as well as a briefing on patient values and preferences, family dynamics, and priorities for the admission. It makes for a safer, more personalized, and more efficient hospital admission,” said Dr. Goroll, who was not involved in the research.

In a 2015 article in the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Goroll and Daniel Hunt, MD, director of hospital medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, proposed a collaborative model in which PCPs visit hospitalized patients and serve as consultants to inpatient staff. Dr. Goroll said Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where he practices, initiated a study of that approach, but it was interrupted by the pandemic.

“As limited time is the most often cited barrier to communication, future interventions such as asynchronous forms of communication between the two groups should be considered,” the researchers wrote in the NEJM perspective.

To narrow the gap, Beth Israel Deaconess will study converting an admission notification letter sent to PCPs into a two-way communication tool in which PCPs can insert patient information, Dr. Flint said.

Dr. Flint and Dr. Goroll have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

Decades after hospitalists took over inpatient care in the 1990s, hospitalists and primary care physicians (PCPs) still struggle with a communication divide, researchers at one teaching hospital found.

Hospitalists and PCPs want more dialogue while patients are in the hospital in order to coordinate and personalize care, according to data collected at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston. The results were presented at the annual meeting of the Society of General Internal Medicine.

“I think a major takeaway is that both hospitalists and primary care doctors agree that it’s important for primary care doctors to be involved in a patient’s hospitalization. They both identified a value that PCPs can bring to the table,” coresearcher Kristen Flint, MD, a primary care resident, told this news organization.

A majority in both camps reported that communication with the other party occurred in less than 25% of cases, whereas ideally it would happen half of the time. Dr. Flint noted that communication tools differ among hospitals, limiting the applicability of the findings.

The research team surveyed 39 hospitalists and 28 PCPs employed by the medical center during the first half of 2021. They also interviewed six hospitalists as they admitted and discharged patients.

The hospitalist movement, which took hold in response to cost and efficiency demands of managed care, led to the start of inpatient specialists, thereby reducing the need for PCPs to commute between their offices and the hospital to care for patients in both settings. 
 

Primary care involvement is important during hospitalization

In the Beth Israel Deaconess survey, four out of five hospitalists and three-quarters of PCPs agreed that primary care involvement is still important during hospitalization, most critically during discharge and admission. Hospitalists reported that PCPs provide valuable data about a patient’s medical status, social supports, mental health, and goals for care. They also said having such data helps to boost patient trust and improve the quality of inpatient care.

“Most projects around communication between inpatient and outpatient doctors have really focused on the time of discharge,” when clinicians identify what care a patient will need after they leave the hospital, Dr. Flint said. “But we found that both sides felt increased communication at time of admission would also be beneficial.”

The biggest barrier for PCPs, cited by 82% of respondents, was lack of time. Hospitalists’ top impediment was being unable to find contact information for the other party, which was cited by 79% of these survey participants.
 

Hospitalists operate ‘in a very stressful environment’

The Beth Israel Deaconess research “documents what has largely been suspected,” said primary care general internist Allan Goroll, MD.

Dr. Goroll, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview that hospitalists operate “in a very stressful environment.”

“They [hospitalists] appreciate accurate information about a patient’s recent medical history, test results, and responses to treatment as well as a briefing on patient values and preferences, family dynamics, and priorities for the admission. It makes for a safer, more personalized, and more efficient hospital admission,” said Dr. Goroll, who was not involved in the research.

In a 2015 article in the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Goroll and Daniel Hunt, MD, director of hospital medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, proposed a collaborative model in which PCPs visit hospitalized patients and serve as consultants to inpatient staff. Dr. Goroll said Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where he practices, initiated a study of that approach, but it was interrupted by the pandemic.

“As limited time is the most often cited barrier to communication, future interventions such as asynchronous forms of communication between the two groups should be considered,” the researchers wrote in the NEJM perspective.

To narrow the gap, Beth Israel Deaconess will study converting an admission notification letter sent to PCPs into a two-way communication tool in which PCPs can insert patient information, Dr. Flint said.

Dr. Flint and Dr. Goroll have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Decades after hospitalists took over inpatient care in the 1990s, hospitalists and primary care physicians (PCPs) still struggle with a communication divide, researchers at one teaching hospital found.

Hospitalists and PCPs want more dialogue while patients are in the hospital in order to coordinate and personalize care, according to data collected at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston. The results were presented at the annual meeting of the Society of General Internal Medicine.

“I think a major takeaway is that both hospitalists and primary care doctors agree that it’s important for primary care doctors to be involved in a patient’s hospitalization. They both identified a value that PCPs can bring to the table,” coresearcher Kristen Flint, MD, a primary care resident, told this news organization.

A majority in both camps reported that communication with the other party occurred in less than 25% of cases, whereas ideally it would happen half of the time. Dr. Flint noted that communication tools differ among hospitals, limiting the applicability of the findings.

The research team surveyed 39 hospitalists and 28 PCPs employed by the medical center during the first half of 2021. They also interviewed six hospitalists as they admitted and discharged patients.

The hospitalist movement, which took hold in response to cost and efficiency demands of managed care, led to the start of inpatient specialists, thereby reducing the need for PCPs to commute between their offices and the hospital to care for patients in both settings. 
 

Primary care involvement is important during hospitalization

In the Beth Israel Deaconess survey, four out of five hospitalists and three-quarters of PCPs agreed that primary care involvement is still important during hospitalization, most critically during discharge and admission. Hospitalists reported that PCPs provide valuable data about a patient’s medical status, social supports, mental health, and goals for care. They also said having such data helps to boost patient trust and improve the quality of inpatient care.

“Most projects around communication between inpatient and outpatient doctors have really focused on the time of discharge,” when clinicians identify what care a patient will need after they leave the hospital, Dr. Flint said. “But we found that both sides felt increased communication at time of admission would also be beneficial.”

The biggest barrier for PCPs, cited by 82% of respondents, was lack of time. Hospitalists’ top impediment was being unable to find contact information for the other party, which was cited by 79% of these survey participants.
 

Hospitalists operate ‘in a very stressful environment’

The Beth Israel Deaconess research “documents what has largely been suspected,” said primary care general internist Allan Goroll, MD.

Dr. Goroll, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, said in an interview that hospitalists operate “in a very stressful environment.”

“They [hospitalists] appreciate accurate information about a patient’s recent medical history, test results, and responses to treatment as well as a briefing on patient values and preferences, family dynamics, and priorities for the admission. It makes for a safer, more personalized, and more efficient hospital admission,” said Dr. Goroll, who was not involved in the research.

In a 2015 article in the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Goroll and Daniel Hunt, MD, director of hospital medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, proposed a collaborative model in which PCPs visit hospitalized patients and serve as consultants to inpatient staff. Dr. Goroll said Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where he practices, initiated a study of that approach, but it was interrupted by the pandemic.

“As limited time is the most often cited barrier to communication, future interventions such as asynchronous forms of communication between the two groups should be considered,” the researchers wrote in the NEJM perspective.

To narrow the gap, Beth Israel Deaconess will study converting an admission notification letter sent to PCPs into a two-way communication tool in which PCPs can insert patient information, Dr. Flint said.

Dr. Flint and Dr. Goroll have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM SGIM 2022

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Hospital factors drive many discharges against medical advice

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 04/15/2022 - 12:43

 

Patients who leave a hospital against medical advice may be called “difficult” or “uncooperative.” But a new study suggests that in many cases, that label is unfair.

The analysis found that in about 1 in 5 cases, shortcomings in the quality of care and other factors beyond patients’ control explain why they leave the hospital before completing recommended treatment.

Clinicians may be quick to blame patients for so-called discharges against medical advice (AMA), which comprise up to 2% of hospital admissions and are associated with an increased risk of mortality and readmission. But “we as providers are very much involved in the reasons why these patients left,” Kushinga Bvute, MD, MPH, a second-year internal medicine resident at Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, who led the new study, told this news organization. Dr. Bvute and her colleagues presented their findings April 6 at the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM) 2022 Annual Meeting, Orlando, Florida.

Dr. Bvute and her colleagues reviewed the records of 548 AMA discharges – out of a total of 354,767 discharges – from Boca Raton Regional Hospital from January 2020 to January 2021. In 44% of cases, patients cited their own reasons for leaving. But in nearly 20% of AMA discharges, the researchers identified factors linked to treatment.

Hospital-related reasons patients cited for leaving AMA were general wait times (3.5%), provider wait times (2.6%), provider care (2.9%), the hospital environment (2.7%), wanting a private room (2%), and seeking medical care elsewhere (6.2%).

Patient-related factors were refusing treatment (27%), feeling better (3.5%), addiction problems (2.9%), financial complications (2.9%), and dependent care (2.4%). Ten (1.8%) eloped, according to the researchers.

Nearly 60% of patients who were discharged AMA were men, with a mean age of 56 years (standard deviation, 19.13). The average stay was 1.64 days.

In roughly one-third of cases, there was no documented reason for the departure – underscoring the need for better reporting, according to the researchers.

To address AMA discharges, hospitals “need to focus on factors they influence, such as high-quality patient care, the hospital environment, and provider-patient relationships,” the researchers report.
 

New procedures needed

The hospital is working on procedures to ensure that reasons for AMA discharges are documented. The administration also is implementing preventive steps, such as communicating with patients about the risks of leaving and providing discharge plans to reduce the likelihood that a patient will return, Dr. Bvute told this news organization.

Dr. Bvute said the findings should encourage individual clinicians to “remove any stereotypes that sometimes come attached to having those three letters on your charts.”

Data were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic, but Dr. Bvute does not believe that fear of coronavirus exposure drove many patients to leave the hospital prematurely.

The study is notable for approaching AMA discharges from a quality improvement perspective, David Alfandre, MD, MPH, a health care ethicist at the VA National Center for Ethics in Health Care, Washington, D.C., said in an interview.

Dr. Alfandre, who was not involved in the study, said it reflects growing recognition that hospitals can take steps to reduce adverse outcomes associated with AMA discharges. “It’s starting to shift the conversation to saying, this isn’t just the patient’s problem, but this is the health care provider’s problem,” he said.

Dr. Alfandre co-authored a 2021 analysis showing that hospital characteristics account for 7.3% of variation in the probability of a patient being discharged AMA. However, research is needed to identify effective interventions besides the established use of buprenorphine and naloxone for patients with opioid use disorder. “I think everybody recognizes the quality of communication is poor, but that doesn’t really help us operationalize that to know what to do,” he said.

Emily Holmes, MD, MPH, medical director of the Changing Health Outcomes Through Integrated Care Excellence Program at IU Health, Indianapolis, cautioned that data may be biased because defining AMA discharge can be subjective.

Reasons are not consistently documented and can be difficult to capture because they are often multifactorial, Dr. Holmes said. “For example, long wait times are more problematic when a patient is worried about finances and care for a child,” she said.

But Dr. Holmes, who was not involved in the study, said it does encourage clinicians “to think about what we can do systematically to reduce AMA discharges.”

Dr. Bvute, Dr. Alfandre, and Dr. Holmes reported no relevant financial relationships.

 

 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

 

Patients who leave a hospital against medical advice may be called “difficult” or “uncooperative.” But a new study suggests that in many cases, that label is unfair.

The analysis found that in about 1 in 5 cases, shortcomings in the quality of care and other factors beyond patients’ control explain why they leave the hospital before completing recommended treatment.

Clinicians may be quick to blame patients for so-called discharges against medical advice (AMA), which comprise up to 2% of hospital admissions and are associated with an increased risk of mortality and readmission. But “we as providers are very much involved in the reasons why these patients left,” Kushinga Bvute, MD, MPH, a second-year internal medicine resident at Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, who led the new study, told this news organization. Dr. Bvute and her colleagues presented their findings April 6 at the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM) 2022 Annual Meeting, Orlando, Florida.

Dr. Bvute and her colleagues reviewed the records of 548 AMA discharges – out of a total of 354,767 discharges – from Boca Raton Regional Hospital from January 2020 to January 2021. In 44% of cases, patients cited their own reasons for leaving. But in nearly 20% of AMA discharges, the researchers identified factors linked to treatment.

Hospital-related reasons patients cited for leaving AMA were general wait times (3.5%), provider wait times (2.6%), provider care (2.9%), the hospital environment (2.7%), wanting a private room (2%), and seeking medical care elsewhere (6.2%).

Patient-related factors were refusing treatment (27%), feeling better (3.5%), addiction problems (2.9%), financial complications (2.9%), and dependent care (2.4%). Ten (1.8%) eloped, according to the researchers.

Nearly 60% of patients who were discharged AMA were men, with a mean age of 56 years (standard deviation, 19.13). The average stay was 1.64 days.

In roughly one-third of cases, there was no documented reason for the departure – underscoring the need for better reporting, according to the researchers.

To address AMA discharges, hospitals “need to focus on factors they influence, such as high-quality patient care, the hospital environment, and provider-patient relationships,” the researchers report.
 

New procedures needed

The hospital is working on procedures to ensure that reasons for AMA discharges are documented. The administration also is implementing preventive steps, such as communicating with patients about the risks of leaving and providing discharge plans to reduce the likelihood that a patient will return, Dr. Bvute told this news organization.

Dr. Bvute said the findings should encourage individual clinicians to “remove any stereotypes that sometimes come attached to having those three letters on your charts.”

Data were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic, but Dr. Bvute does not believe that fear of coronavirus exposure drove many patients to leave the hospital prematurely.

The study is notable for approaching AMA discharges from a quality improvement perspective, David Alfandre, MD, MPH, a health care ethicist at the VA National Center for Ethics in Health Care, Washington, D.C., said in an interview.

Dr. Alfandre, who was not involved in the study, said it reflects growing recognition that hospitals can take steps to reduce adverse outcomes associated with AMA discharges. “It’s starting to shift the conversation to saying, this isn’t just the patient’s problem, but this is the health care provider’s problem,” he said.

Dr. Alfandre co-authored a 2021 analysis showing that hospital characteristics account for 7.3% of variation in the probability of a patient being discharged AMA. However, research is needed to identify effective interventions besides the established use of buprenorphine and naloxone for patients with opioid use disorder. “I think everybody recognizes the quality of communication is poor, but that doesn’t really help us operationalize that to know what to do,” he said.

Emily Holmes, MD, MPH, medical director of the Changing Health Outcomes Through Integrated Care Excellence Program at IU Health, Indianapolis, cautioned that data may be biased because defining AMA discharge can be subjective.

Reasons are not consistently documented and can be difficult to capture because they are often multifactorial, Dr. Holmes said. “For example, long wait times are more problematic when a patient is worried about finances and care for a child,” she said.

But Dr. Holmes, who was not involved in the study, said it does encourage clinicians “to think about what we can do systematically to reduce AMA discharges.”

Dr. Bvute, Dr. Alfandre, and Dr. Holmes reported no relevant financial relationships.

 

 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Patients who leave a hospital against medical advice may be called “difficult” or “uncooperative.” But a new study suggests that in many cases, that label is unfair.

The analysis found that in about 1 in 5 cases, shortcomings in the quality of care and other factors beyond patients’ control explain why they leave the hospital before completing recommended treatment.

Clinicians may be quick to blame patients for so-called discharges against medical advice (AMA), which comprise up to 2% of hospital admissions and are associated with an increased risk of mortality and readmission. But “we as providers are very much involved in the reasons why these patients left,” Kushinga Bvute, MD, MPH, a second-year internal medicine resident at Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, who led the new study, told this news organization. Dr. Bvute and her colleagues presented their findings April 6 at the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM) 2022 Annual Meeting, Orlando, Florida.

Dr. Bvute and her colleagues reviewed the records of 548 AMA discharges – out of a total of 354,767 discharges – from Boca Raton Regional Hospital from January 2020 to January 2021. In 44% of cases, patients cited their own reasons for leaving. But in nearly 20% of AMA discharges, the researchers identified factors linked to treatment.

Hospital-related reasons patients cited for leaving AMA were general wait times (3.5%), provider wait times (2.6%), provider care (2.9%), the hospital environment (2.7%), wanting a private room (2%), and seeking medical care elsewhere (6.2%).

Patient-related factors were refusing treatment (27%), feeling better (3.5%), addiction problems (2.9%), financial complications (2.9%), and dependent care (2.4%). Ten (1.8%) eloped, according to the researchers.

Nearly 60% of patients who were discharged AMA were men, with a mean age of 56 years (standard deviation, 19.13). The average stay was 1.64 days.

In roughly one-third of cases, there was no documented reason for the departure – underscoring the need for better reporting, according to the researchers.

To address AMA discharges, hospitals “need to focus on factors they influence, such as high-quality patient care, the hospital environment, and provider-patient relationships,” the researchers report.
 

New procedures needed

The hospital is working on procedures to ensure that reasons for AMA discharges are documented. The administration also is implementing preventive steps, such as communicating with patients about the risks of leaving and providing discharge plans to reduce the likelihood that a patient will return, Dr. Bvute told this news organization.

Dr. Bvute said the findings should encourage individual clinicians to “remove any stereotypes that sometimes come attached to having those three letters on your charts.”

Data were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic, but Dr. Bvute does not believe that fear of coronavirus exposure drove many patients to leave the hospital prematurely.

The study is notable for approaching AMA discharges from a quality improvement perspective, David Alfandre, MD, MPH, a health care ethicist at the VA National Center for Ethics in Health Care, Washington, D.C., said in an interview.

Dr. Alfandre, who was not involved in the study, said it reflects growing recognition that hospitals can take steps to reduce adverse outcomes associated with AMA discharges. “It’s starting to shift the conversation to saying, this isn’t just the patient’s problem, but this is the health care provider’s problem,” he said.

Dr. Alfandre co-authored a 2021 analysis showing that hospital characteristics account for 7.3% of variation in the probability of a patient being discharged AMA. However, research is needed to identify effective interventions besides the established use of buprenorphine and naloxone for patients with opioid use disorder. “I think everybody recognizes the quality of communication is poor, but that doesn’t really help us operationalize that to know what to do,” he said.

Emily Holmes, MD, MPH, medical director of the Changing Health Outcomes Through Integrated Care Excellence Program at IU Health, Indianapolis, cautioned that data may be biased because defining AMA discharge can be subjective.

Reasons are not consistently documented and can be difficult to capture because they are often multifactorial, Dr. Holmes said. “For example, long wait times are more problematic when a patient is worried about finances and care for a child,” she said.

But Dr. Holmes, who was not involved in the study, said it does encourage clinicians “to think about what we can do systematically to reduce AMA discharges.”

Dr. Bvute, Dr. Alfandre, and Dr. Holmes reported no relevant financial relationships.

 

 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM SGIM 2022

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

TB treatment can be shortened for most children: study

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 03/16/2022 - 10:59

The World Health Organization is expected to recommend truncating treatment of children with mild tuberculosis by 2 months – from 6 months to 4 – after a randomized trial found similar outcomes with the shorter regimen.

An international team of investigators found the abbreviated course of antibiotics was no less effective or safe than conventional treatment and saved an average of $17.34 per child – money that could be used to mitigate the toll of TB, which is estimated to sicken 1.1 million children worldwide each year.

The findings come as deaths from TB are rising as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hindered efforts to find and treat patients. In 2020, according to the WHO, an estimated 1.5 million people died from TB, the first year-over-year increase in such deaths since 2005.

Nearly a quarter of children with TB die, primarily because they go undiagnosed, according to the researchers, who published the study in the New England Journal of Medicine. Shorter treatment “translates into very large cost savings that could be used to improve screening and diagnosis to address the current case detection gap,” first author Anna Turkova, MD, of University College London, told this news organization.

The standard TB regimen is based on trials in adults with severe respiratory disease. However, about two-thirds of children have nonsevere infections.

For the study, Dr. Turkova and colleagues assigned 1,204 children with TB in four countries – Uganda, Zambia, South Africa, and India – to either a 4- or 6-month regimen with first-line medications rifampin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol. Participants were aged 2 months to 15 years and had symptomatic nonsevere lung or lymph node infections with a negative test on a sputum smear microscopy. Eleven percent also had HIV.

After 18 months, 16 participants in the group that received the shortened treatment and 18 in the standard treatment group had experienced an unfavorable outcome – defined as treatment failure, recurrence of TB, loss to follow-up, or death (adjusted difference, -0.4 percentage points; 95% confidence interval, -2.2 to 1.5).

Similar numbers – 47 in the 4-month group and 48 in the 6-month group – experienced severe or life-threatening adverse events, most commonly chest infections, such as pneumonia, and liver problems, during treatment or up to 30 days after the last dose.  
 

New guidelines coming soon

The WHO plans to issue new guidelines and a handbook for TB management in children and adolescents on March 24, World Tuberculosis Day, a spokesman for the agency told Medscape.

Anna Mandalakas, MD, PhD, director of the Global Tuberculosis Program at Baylor College of Medicine, department of pediatrics, Houston, said the shorter regimen should enable more children to successfully complete TB treatment.

“It can be challenging to convince young children to take medications on a regular basis for 6 months,” Dr. Mandalakas, a member of a WHO guidelines development group that reviewed the study, told this news organization. “Despite best intentions, parents often become fatigued and give up the medicine battle.”

Leo Martinez, PhD, an epidemiologist at Boston University School of Public Health who studies pediatric TB, noted that study’s cost-effectiveness analysis applies only to health care costs. Families often suffer financially through lost wages, transportation to health care facilities, and lost employment, fueling a cycle of poverty and disease in low-income countries, he said.

A WHO statement noted that long treatment regimens can add toxicity and risk of drug interactions for children with HIV.

Separate efforts have been underway to hasten TB treatment in different groups of patients. A study published in NEJM showed that 4 months of the potent antibiotic rifapentine, along with another antibiotic, moxifloxacin, was non-inferior to the standard 6-month regimen in patients aged 12 and older. According to the editorial accompanying that study, the research illustrated the potential for shorter treatment courses that would be cheaper and less cumbersome, although that particular combination poses hurdles such as adherence issues and potential bacterial resistance.

Experts agreed that improved diagnostic procedures are critical to significantly reducing TB pediatric deaths – an issue that Dr. Turkova said will be addressed in WHO’s forthcoming handbook.

Because no gold-standard test exists for TB, and symptoms often overlap with other infections, widespread screening of children in households where adults have been diagnosed with TB has been found to improve detection of the disease. “Training of health care workers, easy-to-implement diagnostic algorithms, and widely accessible training materials on chest radiography in childhood TB should also improve case finding and treatment initiation,” she said.

The trial was supported by U.K. government and charitable research funders. Dr. Turkova and Dr. Martinez reported no financial disclosures. Dr. Mandalakas reported honoraria from WHO to support the preparation of diagnostics and treatment chapters in the operational handbook, for providing lectures for Medscape, and for serving on a data safety monitoring board for Janssen Pharmaceuticals.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

The World Health Organization is expected to recommend truncating treatment of children with mild tuberculosis by 2 months – from 6 months to 4 – after a randomized trial found similar outcomes with the shorter regimen.

An international team of investigators found the abbreviated course of antibiotics was no less effective or safe than conventional treatment and saved an average of $17.34 per child – money that could be used to mitigate the toll of TB, which is estimated to sicken 1.1 million children worldwide each year.

The findings come as deaths from TB are rising as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hindered efforts to find and treat patients. In 2020, according to the WHO, an estimated 1.5 million people died from TB, the first year-over-year increase in such deaths since 2005.

Nearly a quarter of children with TB die, primarily because they go undiagnosed, according to the researchers, who published the study in the New England Journal of Medicine. Shorter treatment “translates into very large cost savings that could be used to improve screening and diagnosis to address the current case detection gap,” first author Anna Turkova, MD, of University College London, told this news organization.

The standard TB regimen is based on trials in adults with severe respiratory disease. However, about two-thirds of children have nonsevere infections.

For the study, Dr. Turkova and colleagues assigned 1,204 children with TB in four countries – Uganda, Zambia, South Africa, and India – to either a 4- or 6-month regimen with first-line medications rifampin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol. Participants were aged 2 months to 15 years and had symptomatic nonsevere lung or lymph node infections with a negative test on a sputum smear microscopy. Eleven percent also had HIV.

After 18 months, 16 participants in the group that received the shortened treatment and 18 in the standard treatment group had experienced an unfavorable outcome – defined as treatment failure, recurrence of TB, loss to follow-up, or death (adjusted difference, -0.4 percentage points; 95% confidence interval, -2.2 to 1.5).

Similar numbers – 47 in the 4-month group and 48 in the 6-month group – experienced severe or life-threatening adverse events, most commonly chest infections, such as pneumonia, and liver problems, during treatment or up to 30 days after the last dose.  
 

New guidelines coming soon

The WHO plans to issue new guidelines and a handbook for TB management in children and adolescents on March 24, World Tuberculosis Day, a spokesman for the agency told Medscape.

Anna Mandalakas, MD, PhD, director of the Global Tuberculosis Program at Baylor College of Medicine, department of pediatrics, Houston, said the shorter regimen should enable more children to successfully complete TB treatment.

“It can be challenging to convince young children to take medications on a regular basis for 6 months,” Dr. Mandalakas, a member of a WHO guidelines development group that reviewed the study, told this news organization. “Despite best intentions, parents often become fatigued and give up the medicine battle.”

Leo Martinez, PhD, an epidemiologist at Boston University School of Public Health who studies pediatric TB, noted that study’s cost-effectiveness analysis applies only to health care costs. Families often suffer financially through lost wages, transportation to health care facilities, and lost employment, fueling a cycle of poverty and disease in low-income countries, he said.

A WHO statement noted that long treatment regimens can add toxicity and risk of drug interactions for children with HIV.

Separate efforts have been underway to hasten TB treatment in different groups of patients. A study published in NEJM showed that 4 months of the potent antibiotic rifapentine, along with another antibiotic, moxifloxacin, was non-inferior to the standard 6-month regimen in patients aged 12 and older. According to the editorial accompanying that study, the research illustrated the potential for shorter treatment courses that would be cheaper and less cumbersome, although that particular combination poses hurdles such as adherence issues and potential bacterial resistance.

Experts agreed that improved diagnostic procedures are critical to significantly reducing TB pediatric deaths – an issue that Dr. Turkova said will be addressed in WHO’s forthcoming handbook.

Because no gold-standard test exists for TB, and symptoms often overlap with other infections, widespread screening of children in households where adults have been diagnosed with TB has been found to improve detection of the disease. “Training of health care workers, easy-to-implement diagnostic algorithms, and widely accessible training materials on chest radiography in childhood TB should also improve case finding and treatment initiation,” she said.

The trial was supported by U.K. government and charitable research funders. Dr. Turkova and Dr. Martinez reported no financial disclosures. Dr. Mandalakas reported honoraria from WHO to support the preparation of diagnostics and treatment chapters in the operational handbook, for providing lectures for Medscape, and for serving on a data safety monitoring board for Janssen Pharmaceuticals.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The World Health Organization is expected to recommend truncating treatment of children with mild tuberculosis by 2 months – from 6 months to 4 – after a randomized trial found similar outcomes with the shorter regimen.

An international team of investigators found the abbreviated course of antibiotics was no less effective or safe than conventional treatment and saved an average of $17.34 per child – money that could be used to mitigate the toll of TB, which is estimated to sicken 1.1 million children worldwide each year.

The findings come as deaths from TB are rising as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hindered efforts to find and treat patients. In 2020, according to the WHO, an estimated 1.5 million people died from TB, the first year-over-year increase in such deaths since 2005.

Nearly a quarter of children with TB die, primarily because they go undiagnosed, according to the researchers, who published the study in the New England Journal of Medicine. Shorter treatment “translates into very large cost savings that could be used to improve screening and diagnosis to address the current case detection gap,” first author Anna Turkova, MD, of University College London, told this news organization.

The standard TB regimen is based on trials in adults with severe respiratory disease. However, about two-thirds of children have nonsevere infections.

For the study, Dr. Turkova and colleagues assigned 1,204 children with TB in four countries – Uganda, Zambia, South Africa, and India – to either a 4- or 6-month regimen with first-line medications rifampin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol. Participants were aged 2 months to 15 years and had symptomatic nonsevere lung or lymph node infections with a negative test on a sputum smear microscopy. Eleven percent also had HIV.

After 18 months, 16 participants in the group that received the shortened treatment and 18 in the standard treatment group had experienced an unfavorable outcome – defined as treatment failure, recurrence of TB, loss to follow-up, or death (adjusted difference, -0.4 percentage points; 95% confidence interval, -2.2 to 1.5).

Similar numbers – 47 in the 4-month group and 48 in the 6-month group – experienced severe or life-threatening adverse events, most commonly chest infections, such as pneumonia, and liver problems, during treatment or up to 30 days after the last dose.  
 

New guidelines coming soon

The WHO plans to issue new guidelines and a handbook for TB management in children and adolescents on March 24, World Tuberculosis Day, a spokesman for the agency told Medscape.

Anna Mandalakas, MD, PhD, director of the Global Tuberculosis Program at Baylor College of Medicine, department of pediatrics, Houston, said the shorter regimen should enable more children to successfully complete TB treatment.

“It can be challenging to convince young children to take medications on a regular basis for 6 months,” Dr. Mandalakas, a member of a WHO guidelines development group that reviewed the study, told this news organization. “Despite best intentions, parents often become fatigued and give up the medicine battle.”

Leo Martinez, PhD, an epidemiologist at Boston University School of Public Health who studies pediatric TB, noted that study’s cost-effectiveness analysis applies only to health care costs. Families often suffer financially through lost wages, transportation to health care facilities, and lost employment, fueling a cycle of poverty and disease in low-income countries, he said.

A WHO statement noted that long treatment regimens can add toxicity and risk of drug interactions for children with HIV.

Separate efforts have been underway to hasten TB treatment in different groups of patients. A study published in NEJM showed that 4 months of the potent antibiotic rifapentine, along with another antibiotic, moxifloxacin, was non-inferior to the standard 6-month regimen in patients aged 12 and older. According to the editorial accompanying that study, the research illustrated the potential for shorter treatment courses that would be cheaper and less cumbersome, although that particular combination poses hurdles such as adherence issues and potential bacterial resistance.

Experts agreed that improved diagnostic procedures are critical to significantly reducing TB pediatric deaths – an issue that Dr. Turkova said will be addressed in WHO’s forthcoming handbook.

Because no gold-standard test exists for TB, and symptoms often overlap with other infections, widespread screening of children in households where adults have been diagnosed with TB has been found to improve detection of the disease. “Training of health care workers, easy-to-implement diagnostic algorithms, and widely accessible training materials on chest radiography in childhood TB should also improve case finding and treatment initiation,” she said.

The trial was supported by U.K. government and charitable research funders. Dr. Turkova and Dr. Martinez reported no financial disclosures. Dr. Mandalakas reported honoraria from WHO to support the preparation of diagnostics and treatment chapters in the operational handbook, for providing lectures for Medscape, and for serving on a data safety monitoring board for Janssen Pharmaceuticals.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Pediatrics group stresses benefits of vitamin K shots for infants

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 02/23/2022 - 10:54

After the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) began recommending vitamin K shots for newborns in 1961, infant bleeding as a result of vitamin K deficiency plummeted. The life-threatening disorder is so rare that some parents now question the need for injections to safeguard against it.

The situation amounts to “a failure of our success,” Ivan Hand, MD, a coauthor of a new AAP statement on vitamin K, told this news organization. Much like diseases that can be prevented with vaccines, vitamin K deficiency bleeding isn’t top of mind for parents. “It’s not something they’re aware of or afraid of,” he said.

In 2019, however, the AAP listed public education about the importance of the shots in its 10 most important priorities.

The policy update urges clinicians to bone up on the benefits and perceived risks of vitamin K deficiency, which is essential for clotting, and to “strongly advocate” for the shot in discussions with parents who may get competing messages from their social circles, the internet, and other health care professionals.

Dr. Hand, director of neonatology at NYC Health + Hospitals Kings County, Brooklyn, said clinicians walk a line between educating and alienating parents who favor natural birth processes. “We’re hoping that by talking to the families and answering their questions and explaining the risks, parents will accept vitamin K as a necessary treatment for their babies,” he said.

Vitamin K does not easily pass through the placenta and is not plentiful in breast milk, the preferred nutrition source for newborns. It takes months for babies to build their stores through food and gut bacteria.

Infants who do not receive vitamin K at birth are 81 times more likely to develop late-onset vitamin K deficiency bleeding, which occurs a week to 6 months after birth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One in five babies with the disorder dies, and about half have bleeding in the skull that can lead to brain damage.
 

New dosing for premature infants

The AAP’s new statement, published in the journal Pediatrics, reaffirms the administration of a 1-mg intramuscular dose for infants weighing more than 1,500 grams, or about 3 lb 5 oz, within 6 hours of birth. For premature infants who weigh less, the guidance recommends an intramuscular dose of 0.3 to 0.5 mg/kg.

The group notes that oral preparations of vitamin K have proven less effective because of malabsorption and challenges with adhering to dosing regimens.

The document also warns that breastfed babies can experience vitamin K deficiency bleeding even if they have received the shot, because concentration of vitamin K often wanes before a baby starts eating solid food. The disorder “should be considered when evaluating bleeding in the first 6 months of life, even in infants who received prophylaxis, and especially in exclusively breastfed infants,” it states.

Accounts of parental refusals date back to 2013, when the CDC reported four cases of deficiency bleeding in Tennessee. The infants’ parents said they declined vitamin K because they worried about increased risk of leukemia, thought the injection was unnecessary, or wanted to minimize the baby’s exposure to “toxins.” Leukemia concern stemmed from a 1992 report linking vitamin K to childhood cancer, an association that did not hold up in subsequent studies.

More recent research has documented parental concerns about preservatives and injection pain as well as distrust of medical and public health authorities. Some parents have been accused of neglect for refusing to allow their babies to receive the shots.  

Phoebe Danziger, MD, a pediatrician and writer in rural Michigan who has studied parental refusal of standard-of-care interventions, called the document a “welcome update” to the AAP’s last statement on the topic, in 2003. She told this news organization that lower dosing for premature infants may reassure some vitamin K–hesitant parents who worry about one-size-fits-all dosing.

But Dr. Danziger added that “evidence is lacking to support the claim that pediatricians can really move the needle on parental hesitancy and refusal simply through better listening and more persuasive counseling.” She said the AAP should do more to address “the broader social climate of mistrust and misinformation” that fuels refusal.

Dr. Hand and Dr. Danziger have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

After the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) began recommending vitamin K shots for newborns in 1961, infant bleeding as a result of vitamin K deficiency plummeted. The life-threatening disorder is so rare that some parents now question the need for injections to safeguard against it.

The situation amounts to “a failure of our success,” Ivan Hand, MD, a coauthor of a new AAP statement on vitamin K, told this news organization. Much like diseases that can be prevented with vaccines, vitamin K deficiency bleeding isn’t top of mind for parents. “It’s not something they’re aware of or afraid of,” he said.

In 2019, however, the AAP listed public education about the importance of the shots in its 10 most important priorities.

The policy update urges clinicians to bone up on the benefits and perceived risks of vitamin K deficiency, which is essential for clotting, and to “strongly advocate” for the shot in discussions with parents who may get competing messages from their social circles, the internet, and other health care professionals.

Dr. Hand, director of neonatology at NYC Health + Hospitals Kings County, Brooklyn, said clinicians walk a line between educating and alienating parents who favor natural birth processes. “We’re hoping that by talking to the families and answering their questions and explaining the risks, parents will accept vitamin K as a necessary treatment for their babies,” he said.

Vitamin K does not easily pass through the placenta and is not plentiful in breast milk, the preferred nutrition source for newborns. It takes months for babies to build their stores through food and gut bacteria.

Infants who do not receive vitamin K at birth are 81 times more likely to develop late-onset vitamin K deficiency bleeding, which occurs a week to 6 months after birth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One in five babies with the disorder dies, and about half have bleeding in the skull that can lead to brain damage.
 

New dosing for premature infants

The AAP’s new statement, published in the journal Pediatrics, reaffirms the administration of a 1-mg intramuscular dose for infants weighing more than 1,500 grams, or about 3 lb 5 oz, within 6 hours of birth. For premature infants who weigh less, the guidance recommends an intramuscular dose of 0.3 to 0.5 mg/kg.

The group notes that oral preparations of vitamin K have proven less effective because of malabsorption and challenges with adhering to dosing regimens.

The document also warns that breastfed babies can experience vitamin K deficiency bleeding even if they have received the shot, because concentration of vitamin K often wanes before a baby starts eating solid food. The disorder “should be considered when evaluating bleeding in the first 6 months of life, even in infants who received prophylaxis, and especially in exclusively breastfed infants,” it states.

Accounts of parental refusals date back to 2013, when the CDC reported four cases of deficiency bleeding in Tennessee. The infants’ parents said they declined vitamin K because they worried about increased risk of leukemia, thought the injection was unnecessary, or wanted to minimize the baby’s exposure to “toxins.” Leukemia concern stemmed from a 1992 report linking vitamin K to childhood cancer, an association that did not hold up in subsequent studies.

More recent research has documented parental concerns about preservatives and injection pain as well as distrust of medical and public health authorities. Some parents have been accused of neglect for refusing to allow their babies to receive the shots.  

Phoebe Danziger, MD, a pediatrician and writer in rural Michigan who has studied parental refusal of standard-of-care interventions, called the document a “welcome update” to the AAP’s last statement on the topic, in 2003. She told this news organization that lower dosing for premature infants may reassure some vitamin K–hesitant parents who worry about one-size-fits-all dosing.

But Dr. Danziger added that “evidence is lacking to support the claim that pediatricians can really move the needle on parental hesitancy and refusal simply through better listening and more persuasive counseling.” She said the AAP should do more to address “the broader social climate of mistrust and misinformation” that fuels refusal.

Dr. Hand and Dr. Danziger have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

After the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) began recommending vitamin K shots for newborns in 1961, infant bleeding as a result of vitamin K deficiency plummeted. The life-threatening disorder is so rare that some parents now question the need for injections to safeguard against it.

The situation amounts to “a failure of our success,” Ivan Hand, MD, a coauthor of a new AAP statement on vitamin K, told this news organization. Much like diseases that can be prevented with vaccines, vitamin K deficiency bleeding isn’t top of mind for parents. “It’s not something they’re aware of or afraid of,” he said.

In 2019, however, the AAP listed public education about the importance of the shots in its 10 most important priorities.

The policy update urges clinicians to bone up on the benefits and perceived risks of vitamin K deficiency, which is essential for clotting, and to “strongly advocate” for the shot in discussions with parents who may get competing messages from their social circles, the internet, and other health care professionals.

Dr. Hand, director of neonatology at NYC Health + Hospitals Kings County, Brooklyn, said clinicians walk a line between educating and alienating parents who favor natural birth processes. “We’re hoping that by talking to the families and answering their questions and explaining the risks, parents will accept vitamin K as a necessary treatment for their babies,” he said.

Vitamin K does not easily pass through the placenta and is not plentiful in breast milk, the preferred nutrition source for newborns. It takes months for babies to build their stores through food and gut bacteria.

Infants who do not receive vitamin K at birth are 81 times more likely to develop late-onset vitamin K deficiency bleeding, which occurs a week to 6 months after birth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One in five babies with the disorder dies, and about half have bleeding in the skull that can lead to brain damage.
 

New dosing for premature infants

The AAP’s new statement, published in the journal Pediatrics, reaffirms the administration of a 1-mg intramuscular dose for infants weighing more than 1,500 grams, or about 3 lb 5 oz, within 6 hours of birth. For premature infants who weigh less, the guidance recommends an intramuscular dose of 0.3 to 0.5 mg/kg.

The group notes that oral preparations of vitamin K have proven less effective because of malabsorption and challenges with adhering to dosing regimens.

The document also warns that breastfed babies can experience vitamin K deficiency bleeding even if they have received the shot, because concentration of vitamin K often wanes before a baby starts eating solid food. The disorder “should be considered when evaluating bleeding in the first 6 months of life, even in infants who received prophylaxis, and especially in exclusively breastfed infants,” it states.

Accounts of parental refusals date back to 2013, when the CDC reported four cases of deficiency bleeding in Tennessee. The infants’ parents said they declined vitamin K because they worried about increased risk of leukemia, thought the injection was unnecessary, or wanted to minimize the baby’s exposure to “toxins.” Leukemia concern stemmed from a 1992 report linking vitamin K to childhood cancer, an association that did not hold up in subsequent studies.

More recent research has documented parental concerns about preservatives and injection pain as well as distrust of medical and public health authorities. Some parents have been accused of neglect for refusing to allow their babies to receive the shots.  

Phoebe Danziger, MD, a pediatrician and writer in rural Michigan who has studied parental refusal of standard-of-care interventions, called the document a “welcome update” to the AAP’s last statement on the topic, in 2003. She told this news organization that lower dosing for premature infants may reassure some vitamin K–hesitant parents who worry about one-size-fits-all dosing.

But Dr. Danziger added that “evidence is lacking to support the claim that pediatricians can really move the needle on parental hesitancy and refusal simply through better listening and more persuasive counseling.” She said the AAP should do more to address “the broader social climate of mistrust and misinformation” that fuels refusal.

Dr. Hand and Dr. Danziger have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Body fat linked to lower bone density, particularly in men

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 02/14/2022 - 15:01

Contrary to conventional clinical wisdom, greater body fat is associated with lower bone mineral density (BMD), particularly in men, an analysis of data from a large, nationally representative sample has found.  

Much previous research has suggested that obesity protects against fractures and loss of BMD for a variety of reasons, including the beneficial effects of weight-bearing on the skeleton and hormonal factors linked to body fat. But the new findings should prompt a reconsideration of the relationship between obesity and fracture risk, according to the investigators, whose study appears in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

“While higher BMI [body mass index] is generally associated with higher bone density, our study demonstrates that lean and fat mass affect bone density differently and that obesity is not a guarantee against osteoporosis,” Rajesh K. Jain, MD, of the University of Chicago said in an interview.

Dr. Jain and a colleague, Tamara Vokes, MD, used multivariant modeling to examine the relationship between BMD and body composition of 10,814 men and women aged 20-59 years from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2011-2018. All underwent total body dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry scans.

Participants were stratified into sex-specific quartiles based on lean mass index (LMI; lean mass divided by height squared) and fat mass index (FMI; fat mass divided by height squared). Lean mass had a strong positive association with bone density, whereas fat mass had a moderate negative effect, the researchers found.

An additional kg/m2 of FMI was associated with a 0.10 lower T score, the number of standard deviations from the expected bone density of a young adult (P < .001). The negative effect was greater in men, who had a 0.13 lower T score per additional 1 kg/m2 of FMI, compared with 0.08 lower in women (P < .001). The effect was most pronounced in people in the highest FMI quartile.

Body composition is not a routine clinical measurement, Dr. Jain and Dr. Vokes noted. Prior studies of the effect of body composition on bone density have been limited by small patient numbers, referral bias, lack of racial or ethnic diversity, and the use of estimates rather than true measures of fat and lean tissue. NHANES is designed to mirror the U.S. population.

The researchers say when it comes to patients with obesity, the findings “should not dissuade clinicians from assessing bone density, particularly if other risk factors are present.”
 

Useful clinical proxies for body composition

Clinicians have no routine way to measure body composition in an office setting. As a result, Dr. Jain advised clinicians to look at factors that correlate with high body fat, such as the presence of diabetes, or with low lean mass, such as poor performance on physical activity measures like grip strength, when deciding whether to consider osteoporosis screening. Patients with obesity should undergo recommended bone density screening, especially if they have other risk factors such as older age, previous fracture, steroid use, or a family history of fracture.

Although some extra weight may have a beneficial loading effect, too much extra weight can lead to metabolic problems and restrict movement, according to Rodrigo J. Valderrábano, MD, medical director of clinical research for the Research Program in Men’s Health: Aging and Metabolism, Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “There’s a general sense that the extra weight is only good for your bones if you can carry it around,” said Dr. Valderrábano, who was not involved in the study.

More research is needed to understand why fat affects men and women differently, Dr. Jain noted. The researchers found that testosterone and estradiol values did not fully explain the variation.

Adipokines released by fat cells may be important in driving bone loss but were not measured in the study, Peter R. Ebeling, MD, president of the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research, said in an interview. Distribution of fractures in obesity suggests that a high FMI may preferentially affect cortical bone instead of trabecular bone, but further studies using high-resolution peripheral quantitative CT are required to confirm the difference.

Dr. Ebeling, who was not involved in the new study, agreed that the positive relationship between BMI and BMD has led to false reassurance that people with obesity may be protected from fragility fractures. “The take-home message for clinicians is that we should not neglect bone health in our patients with obesity, both male and female.”

Dr. Jain has reported receiving grant support from the Amgen Foundation and being a consultant for Radius Health. Dr. Vokes has reported being an investigator, consultant, and speaker for Radius Health, investigator and consultant for Takeda Pharmaceutical, and investigator for Ascendis Pharma. Dr. Valderrábano and Dr. Ebeling reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

Contrary to conventional clinical wisdom, greater body fat is associated with lower bone mineral density (BMD), particularly in men, an analysis of data from a large, nationally representative sample has found.  

Much previous research has suggested that obesity protects against fractures and loss of BMD for a variety of reasons, including the beneficial effects of weight-bearing on the skeleton and hormonal factors linked to body fat. But the new findings should prompt a reconsideration of the relationship between obesity and fracture risk, according to the investigators, whose study appears in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

“While higher BMI [body mass index] is generally associated with higher bone density, our study demonstrates that lean and fat mass affect bone density differently and that obesity is not a guarantee against osteoporosis,” Rajesh K. Jain, MD, of the University of Chicago said in an interview.

Dr. Jain and a colleague, Tamara Vokes, MD, used multivariant modeling to examine the relationship between BMD and body composition of 10,814 men and women aged 20-59 years from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2011-2018. All underwent total body dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry scans.

Participants were stratified into sex-specific quartiles based on lean mass index (LMI; lean mass divided by height squared) and fat mass index (FMI; fat mass divided by height squared). Lean mass had a strong positive association with bone density, whereas fat mass had a moderate negative effect, the researchers found.

An additional kg/m2 of FMI was associated with a 0.10 lower T score, the number of standard deviations from the expected bone density of a young adult (P < .001). The negative effect was greater in men, who had a 0.13 lower T score per additional 1 kg/m2 of FMI, compared with 0.08 lower in women (P < .001). The effect was most pronounced in people in the highest FMI quartile.

Body composition is not a routine clinical measurement, Dr. Jain and Dr. Vokes noted. Prior studies of the effect of body composition on bone density have been limited by small patient numbers, referral bias, lack of racial or ethnic diversity, and the use of estimates rather than true measures of fat and lean tissue. NHANES is designed to mirror the U.S. population.

The researchers say when it comes to patients with obesity, the findings “should not dissuade clinicians from assessing bone density, particularly if other risk factors are present.”
 

Useful clinical proxies for body composition

Clinicians have no routine way to measure body composition in an office setting. As a result, Dr. Jain advised clinicians to look at factors that correlate with high body fat, such as the presence of diabetes, or with low lean mass, such as poor performance on physical activity measures like grip strength, when deciding whether to consider osteoporosis screening. Patients with obesity should undergo recommended bone density screening, especially if they have other risk factors such as older age, previous fracture, steroid use, or a family history of fracture.

Although some extra weight may have a beneficial loading effect, too much extra weight can lead to metabolic problems and restrict movement, according to Rodrigo J. Valderrábano, MD, medical director of clinical research for the Research Program in Men’s Health: Aging and Metabolism, Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “There’s a general sense that the extra weight is only good for your bones if you can carry it around,” said Dr. Valderrábano, who was not involved in the study.

More research is needed to understand why fat affects men and women differently, Dr. Jain noted. The researchers found that testosterone and estradiol values did not fully explain the variation.

Adipokines released by fat cells may be important in driving bone loss but were not measured in the study, Peter R. Ebeling, MD, president of the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research, said in an interview. Distribution of fractures in obesity suggests that a high FMI may preferentially affect cortical bone instead of trabecular bone, but further studies using high-resolution peripheral quantitative CT are required to confirm the difference.

Dr. Ebeling, who was not involved in the new study, agreed that the positive relationship between BMI and BMD has led to false reassurance that people with obesity may be protected from fragility fractures. “The take-home message for clinicians is that we should not neglect bone health in our patients with obesity, both male and female.”

Dr. Jain has reported receiving grant support from the Amgen Foundation and being a consultant for Radius Health. Dr. Vokes has reported being an investigator, consultant, and speaker for Radius Health, investigator and consultant for Takeda Pharmaceutical, and investigator for Ascendis Pharma. Dr. Valderrábano and Dr. Ebeling reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Contrary to conventional clinical wisdom, greater body fat is associated with lower bone mineral density (BMD), particularly in men, an analysis of data from a large, nationally representative sample has found.  

Much previous research has suggested that obesity protects against fractures and loss of BMD for a variety of reasons, including the beneficial effects of weight-bearing on the skeleton and hormonal factors linked to body fat. But the new findings should prompt a reconsideration of the relationship between obesity and fracture risk, according to the investigators, whose study appears in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

“While higher BMI [body mass index] is generally associated with higher bone density, our study demonstrates that lean and fat mass affect bone density differently and that obesity is not a guarantee against osteoporosis,” Rajesh K. Jain, MD, of the University of Chicago said in an interview.

Dr. Jain and a colleague, Tamara Vokes, MD, used multivariant modeling to examine the relationship between BMD and body composition of 10,814 men and women aged 20-59 years from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2011-2018. All underwent total body dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry scans.

Participants were stratified into sex-specific quartiles based on lean mass index (LMI; lean mass divided by height squared) and fat mass index (FMI; fat mass divided by height squared). Lean mass had a strong positive association with bone density, whereas fat mass had a moderate negative effect, the researchers found.

An additional kg/m2 of FMI was associated with a 0.10 lower T score, the number of standard deviations from the expected bone density of a young adult (P < .001). The negative effect was greater in men, who had a 0.13 lower T score per additional 1 kg/m2 of FMI, compared with 0.08 lower in women (P < .001). The effect was most pronounced in people in the highest FMI quartile.

Body composition is not a routine clinical measurement, Dr. Jain and Dr. Vokes noted. Prior studies of the effect of body composition on bone density have been limited by small patient numbers, referral bias, lack of racial or ethnic diversity, and the use of estimates rather than true measures of fat and lean tissue. NHANES is designed to mirror the U.S. population.

The researchers say when it comes to patients with obesity, the findings “should not dissuade clinicians from assessing bone density, particularly if other risk factors are present.”
 

Useful clinical proxies for body composition

Clinicians have no routine way to measure body composition in an office setting. As a result, Dr. Jain advised clinicians to look at factors that correlate with high body fat, such as the presence of diabetes, or with low lean mass, such as poor performance on physical activity measures like grip strength, when deciding whether to consider osteoporosis screening. Patients with obesity should undergo recommended bone density screening, especially if they have other risk factors such as older age, previous fracture, steroid use, or a family history of fracture.

Although some extra weight may have a beneficial loading effect, too much extra weight can lead to metabolic problems and restrict movement, according to Rodrigo J. Valderrábano, MD, medical director of clinical research for the Research Program in Men’s Health: Aging and Metabolism, Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “There’s a general sense that the extra weight is only good for your bones if you can carry it around,” said Dr. Valderrábano, who was not involved in the study.

More research is needed to understand why fat affects men and women differently, Dr. Jain noted. The researchers found that testosterone and estradiol values did not fully explain the variation.

Adipokines released by fat cells may be important in driving bone loss but were not measured in the study, Peter R. Ebeling, MD, president of the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research, said in an interview. Distribution of fractures in obesity suggests that a high FMI may preferentially affect cortical bone instead of trabecular bone, but further studies using high-resolution peripheral quantitative CT are required to confirm the difference.

Dr. Ebeling, who was not involved in the new study, agreed that the positive relationship between BMI and BMD has led to false reassurance that people with obesity may be protected from fragility fractures. “The take-home message for clinicians is that we should not neglect bone health in our patients with obesity, both male and female.”

Dr. Jain has reported receiving grant support from the Amgen Foundation and being a consultant for Radius Health. Dr. Vokes has reported being an investigator, consultant, and speaker for Radius Health, investigator and consultant for Takeda Pharmaceutical, and investigator for Ascendis Pharma. Dr. Valderrábano and Dr. Ebeling reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Perinatal deaths from COVID show ‘extensive’ placental damage

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 12/15/2022 - 14:33

Recent evidence has shown that women who contract COVID-19 during pregnancy are at increased risk for pregnancy loss and neonatal death. Now, an analysis of pathology data from dozens of perinatal deaths shows how.

Unlike numerous pathogens that kill the fetus by infecting it directly, SARS-CoV-2 causes “widespread and severe” destruction of the placenta that deprives the fetus of oxygen, a team of 44 researchers in 12 countries concluded after examining 64 stillbirths and four neonatal deaths in which the placentas were infected with the virus. They noted that such damage occurs in a small percentage of pregnant women with COVID and that all the women in the study had not been vaccinated against the disease.

The findings were published online Feb. 10 in the Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine.

Nearly all placentas had each of three features that pathologists have dubbed SARS-CoV-2 placentitis: large deposits of fibrin, a clotting protein that obstructs the flow of blood, death of cells in the trophoblast, and an unusual form of inflammation called chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Some had other abnormalities that could have exacerbated the condition.

The researchers called the extent of damage “striking,” affecting 77.7% of the placenta on average. The virus did not appear to harm fetal tissue, but placental damage “was extensive and highly destructive,” they write. Notably, none of the women in the analysis were known to have severe COVID.
 

Virus seen ‘chewing up the placenta’

David Schwartz, MD, a pathologist in Atlanta, and the lead author of the study, said COVID appears to be unique in destroying the placenta.

“I don’t know of any infection that does that to this degree or with this uniformity,” Dr. Schwartz told this news organization. “The simple message is that this infection is chewing up the placenta and destroying its capability to oxygenate the fetus.”

In November, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that maternal COVID increases the risk of losing a pregnancy. From March 2020 to September 2021, 8,154 stillbirths were reported, affecting 0.65% of births by women without COVID and 1.26% of births by women with COVID, for a relative risk of 1.90 (95% confidence interval, 1.69-2.15).

Delta, the variant that dominated in mid-2021, appears to have been particularly harmful. The CDC reported that the relative risk for stillbirth for mothers with COVID-19 during that period increased to 4.04 (95% CI, 3.28-4.97). Many cases in the new analysis coincided with Delta.

Dr. Schwartz and his colleagues said immunization, along with antiviral therapy, might reduce the chance of SARS-CoV-2 infecting the placenta. None of the mothers in the analysis was vaccinated, and Dr. Schwartz said he is not aware of a single case in a vaccinated woman.

The analysis comes on the heels of a study from the National Institutes of Health linking severe to moderate COVID infection to greater risk of other pregnancy complications: cesarean and preterm delivery, death during childbirth, postpartum hemorrhaging, and non-COVID infections.

Diana Bianchi, MD, director of NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, said those findings underscore the need for pregnant women to be vaccinated. (The shots have been shown to be safe for pregnant women.)

Denise Jamieson, MD, MPH, chair of the department of gynecology and obstetrics at Emory University, Atlanta, who was not involved in the new analysis, said the findings may have important clinical implications. In addition to ensuring that pregnant patients are fully vaccinated, she said “there may be opportunities to more closely monitor the placenta during pregnancy using imaging modalities such as ultrasound.”

Even in the presence of severe abnormalities, a fetus that has reached a viable gestational age could potentially be delivered prior to stillbirth, Dr. Jamieson said. The 64 stillbirths in the analysis ranged from 15 to 39.2 weeks of gestation, with an average of 30 weeks. Eight were delivered at full term.

However, additional studies are needed to support monitoring of placental changes, she said: “It is not ready for prime time now.”

Christopher Zahn, MD, vice president of practice activities the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, cautioned that data on COVID and pregnancy complications remain limited.

The findings in this analysis “do not prove the association between COVID-19 infection and neonatal outcomes,” Dr. Zahn said. “While stillbirth could potentially be another adverse outcome for pregnant people who contract COVID-19, currently we don’t have enough data to confirm that a COVID-19 infection at any point in pregnancy indicates increased risk of stillbirth.”

He added that ACOG continues to strongly recommend vaccination against COVID for women who are pregnant, recently pregnant, or planning to be pregnant.

Dr. Schwartz and Dr. Jamieson have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. One author reported receiving financial support from the Slovak Research and Development Agency. Another reported funding from the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research and the Fetus for Life charity.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

Recent evidence has shown that women who contract COVID-19 during pregnancy are at increased risk for pregnancy loss and neonatal death. Now, an analysis of pathology data from dozens of perinatal deaths shows how.

Unlike numerous pathogens that kill the fetus by infecting it directly, SARS-CoV-2 causes “widespread and severe” destruction of the placenta that deprives the fetus of oxygen, a team of 44 researchers in 12 countries concluded after examining 64 stillbirths and four neonatal deaths in which the placentas were infected with the virus. They noted that such damage occurs in a small percentage of pregnant women with COVID and that all the women in the study had not been vaccinated against the disease.

The findings were published online Feb. 10 in the Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine.

Nearly all placentas had each of three features that pathologists have dubbed SARS-CoV-2 placentitis: large deposits of fibrin, a clotting protein that obstructs the flow of blood, death of cells in the trophoblast, and an unusual form of inflammation called chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Some had other abnormalities that could have exacerbated the condition.

The researchers called the extent of damage “striking,” affecting 77.7% of the placenta on average. The virus did not appear to harm fetal tissue, but placental damage “was extensive and highly destructive,” they write. Notably, none of the women in the analysis were known to have severe COVID.
 

Virus seen ‘chewing up the placenta’

David Schwartz, MD, a pathologist in Atlanta, and the lead author of the study, said COVID appears to be unique in destroying the placenta.

“I don’t know of any infection that does that to this degree or with this uniformity,” Dr. Schwartz told this news organization. “The simple message is that this infection is chewing up the placenta and destroying its capability to oxygenate the fetus.”

In November, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that maternal COVID increases the risk of losing a pregnancy. From March 2020 to September 2021, 8,154 stillbirths were reported, affecting 0.65% of births by women without COVID and 1.26% of births by women with COVID, for a relative risk of 1.90 (95% confidence interval, 1.69-2.15).

Delta, the variant that dominated in mid-2021, appears to have been particularly harmful. The CDC reported that the relative risk for stillbirth for mothers with COVID-19 during that period increased to 4.04 (95% CI, 3.28-4.97). Many cases in the new analysis coincided with Delta.

Dr. Schwartz and his colleagues said immunization, along with antiviral therapy, might reduce the chance of SARS-CoV-2 infecting the placenta. None of the mothers in the analysis was vaccinated, and Dr. Schwartz said he is not aware of a single case in a vaccinated woman.

The analysis comes on the heels of a study from the National Institutes of Health linking severe to moderate COVID infection to greater risk of other pregnancy complications: cesarean and preterm delivery, death during childbirth, postpartum hemorrhaging, and non-COVID infections.

Diana Bianchi, MD, director of NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, said those findings underscore the need for pregnant women to be vaccinated. (The shots have been shown to be safe for pregnant women.)

Denise Jamieson, MD, MPH, chair of the department of gynecology and obstetrics at Emory University, Atlanta, who was not involved in the new analysis, said the findings may have important clinical implications. In addition to ensuring that pregnant patients are fully vaccinated, she said “there may be opportunities to more closely monitor the placenta during pregnancy using imaging modalities such as ultrasound.”

Even in the presence of severe abnormalities, a fetus that has reached a viable gestational age could potentially be delivered prior to stillbirth, Dr. Jamieson said. The 64 stillbirths in the analysis ranged from 15 to 39.2 weeks of gestation, with an average of 30 weeks. Eight were delivered at full term.

However, additional studies are needed to support monitoring of placental changes, she said: “It is not ready for prime time now.”

Christopher Zahn, MD, vice president of practice activities the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, cautioned that data on COVID and pregnancy complications remain limited.

The findings in this analysis “do not prove the association between COVID-19 infection and neonatal outcomes,” Dr. Zahn said. “While stillbirth could potentially be another adverse outcome for pregnant people who contract COVID-19, currently we don’t have enough data to confirm that a COVID-19 infection at any point in pregnancy indicates increased risk of stillbirth.”

He added that ACOG continues to strongly recommend vaccination against COVID for women who are pregnant, recently pregnant, or planning to be pregnant.

Dr. Schwartz and Dr. Jamieson have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. One author reported receiving financial support from the Slovak Research and Development Agency. Another reported funding from the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research and the Fetus for Life charity.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recent evidence has shown that women who contract COVID-19 during pregnancy are at increased risk for pregnancy loss and neonatal death. Now, an analysis of pathology data from dozens of perinatal deaths shows how.

Unlike numerous pathogens that kill the fetus by infecting it directly, SARS-CoV-2 causes “widespread and severe” destruction of the placenta that deprives the fetus of oxygen, a team of 44 researchers in 12 countries concluded after examining 64 stillbirths and four neonatal deaths in which the placentas were infected with the virus. They noted that such damage occurs in a small percentage of pregnant women with COVID and that all the women in the study had not been vaccinated against the disease.

The findings were published online Feb. 10 in the Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine.

Nearly all placentas had each of three features that pathologists have dubbed SARS-CoV-2 placentitis: large deposits of fibrin, a clotting protein that obstructs the flow of blood, death of cells in the trophoblast, and an unusual form of inflammation called chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Some had other abnormalities that could have exacerbated the condition.

The researchers called the extent of damage “striking,” affecting 77.7% of the placenta on average. The virus did not appear to harm fetal tissue, but placental damage “was extensive and highly destructive,” they write. Notably, none of the women in the analysis were known to have severe COVID.
 

Virus seen ‘chewing up the placenta’

David Schwartz, MD, a pathologist in Atlanta, and the lead author of the study, said COVID appears to be unique in destroying the placenta.

“I don’t know of any infection that does that to this degree or with this uniformity,” Dr. Schwartz told this news organization. “The simple message is that this infection is chewing up the placenta and destroying its capability to oxygenate the fetus.”

In November, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that maternal COVID increases the risk of losing a pregnancy. From March 2020 to September 2021, 8,154 stillbirths were reported, affecting 0.65% of births by women without COVID and 1.26% of births by women with COVID, for a relative risk of 1.90 (95% confidence interval, 1.69-2.15).

Delta, the variant that dominated in mid-2021, appears to have been particularly harmful. The CDC reported that the relative risk for stillbirth for mothers with COVID-19 during that period increased to 4.04 (95% CI, 3.28-4.97). Many cases in the new analysis coincided with Delta.

Dr. Schwartz and his colleagues said immunization, along with antiviral therapy, might reduce the chance of SARS-CoV-2 infecting the placenta. None of the mothers in the analysis was vaccinated, and Dr. Schwartz said he is not aware of a single case in a vaccinated woman.

The analysis comes on the heels of a study from the National Institutes of Health linking severe to moderate COVID infection to greater risk of other pregnancy complications: cesarean and preterm delivery, death during childbirth, postpartum hemorrhaging, and non-COVID infections.

Diana Bianchi, MD, director of NIH’s Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, said those findings underscore the need for pregnant women to be vaccinated. (The shots have been shown to be safe for pregnant women.)

Denise Jamieson, MD, MPH, chair of the department of gynecology and obstetrics at Emory University, Atlanta, who was not involved in the new analysis, said the findings may have important clinical implications. In addition to ensuring that pregnant patients are fully vaccinated, she said “there may be opportunities to more closely monitor the placenta during pregnancy using imaging modalities such as ultrasound.”

Even in the presence of severe abnormalities, a fetus that has reached a viable gestational age could potentially be delivered prior to stillbirth, Dr. Jamieson said. The 64 stillbirths in the analysis ranged from 15 to 39.2 weeks of gestation, with an average of 30 weeks. Eight were delivered at full term.

However, additional studies are needed to support monitoring of placental changes, she said: “It is not ready for prime time now.”

Christopher Zahn, MD, vice president of practice activities the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, cautioned that data on COVID and pregnancy complications remain limited.

The findings in this analysis “do not prove the association between COVID-19 infection and neonatal outcomes,” Dr. Zahn said. “While stillbirth could potentially be another adverse outcome for pregnant people who contract COVID-19, currently we don’t have enough data to confirm that a COVID-19 infection at any point in pregnancy indicates increased risk of stillbirth.”

He added that ACOG continues to strongly recommend vaccination against COVID for women who are pregnant, recently pregnant, or planning to be pregnant.

Dr. Schwartz and Dr. Jamieson have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. One author reported receiving financial support from the Slovak Research and Development Agency. Another reported funding from the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research and the Fetus for Life charity.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

At-home cervical ripening linked with less time in L&D unit

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 01/19/2022 - 14:33

Women who undergo balloon cervical ripening at home spend less time in the labor and delivery unit and have fewer cesarean deliveries than those who have the induction procedure in a hospital, researchers have found.

The findings, from a meta-analysis of eight previously conducted randomized clinical trials involving 740 women, should spur hospitals to “create and adhere to evidence-based guidelines” for outpatient balloon use, according to the researchers.

“Outpatient balloon cervical ripening is a safe alternative for low-risk patients and has the potential for significant benefits to patients and labor and delivery units,” the authors reported Jan. 6 in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

The rate of labor induction in the United States rose to 29.4% in 2019, the year following publication of the ARRIVE trial of low-risk nulliparous pregnant women, which found that induction at 39 weeks resulted in fewer cesarean deliveries with no difference in neonatal outcomes compared with expectant management, defined as continuing pregnancy until at least 40 weeks 5 days unless induction was medically indicated. Most women require preparation with a balloon-tipped catheter that slowly inflates to stretch and thin out the cervix, a process that can take many hours.

The devices have been shown to be safe, effective, and inexpensive, but the data on outpatient use are limited, according to the researchers. The new study is the “most comprehensive” examination of randomized clinical trials comparing outpatient and inpatient balloon cervical ripening, they say.

The trials included singleton gestations of at least 37 weeks of primarily low-risk patients. Body mass index was slightly lower in the outpatient group, with no differences in maternal age, gestational age at induction, or parity.

Six studies with 571 patients reported on the primary outcome, defined as time from labor unit admission to delivery. The outpatient group had a mean 16.3 hours compared with 23.8 hours for the inpatient group, a difference of 7.24 hours. However, data from three of the studies showed the inpatient group experienced 5.19 hours on average less between balloon expulsion and delivery, potentially due to more frequent adjustments and evaluation for expulsion.

The researchers observed no differences in adverse maternal or neonatal outcomes, and no stillbirths were reported among 378 patients who had the outpatient procedure. Cesarean delivery occurred less often in the outpatient group (21%) versus the inpatient group (27%) (risk ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.59-0.98).

Corresponding author Vincenzo Berghella, MD, director of the Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine at Jefferson University Hospitals, Philadelphia, called the data “very assuring.” He said, “We knew induction was good in the hospital for many indications. We now know that induction can be started at home and it’s safe.”

Dr. Berghella added that the lower rate of cesarean delivery in the outpatient group likely reflected less use of fetal heart-rate monitoring, which can produce false-positive predictions of fetal compromise.

Still, too few patients have been studied to completely rule out rare adverse events with use of the balloons in the outpatient setting, the researchers acknowledge.

Aaron B. Caughey, MD, PhD, of Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, who was not involved in the study, said current data do not put to rest all safety concerns with the balloons, and it will be vital for health systems to report outcomes as outpatient use of the devices increases.

“Outcomes such as chorioamnionitis and postpartum hemorrhage will be important to have more data on, though there do not appear to be trends from these data,” Dr. Caughey told this news organization. Rarer outcomes, such as cervical injury, placenta abruption, and fetal injury, he added, “will require much larger studies to examine these potential but unlikely risks.”

The authors and Dr. Caughey have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

*Correction, 1/19/22: An earlier version of the headline of this article misstated a study finding. The study found that women who undergo balloon cervical ripening spend less time in the labor and delivery unit than those who have the induction procedure in a hospital.

Publications
Topics
Sections

Women who undergo balloon cervical ripening at home spend less time in the labor and delivery unit and have fewer cesarean deliveries than those who have the induction procedure in a hospital, researchers have found.

The findings, from a meta-analysis of eight previously conducted randomized clinical trials involving 740 women, should spur hospitals to “create and adhere to evidence-based guidelines” for outpatient balloon use, according to the researchers.

“Outpatient balloon cervical ripening is a safe alternative for low-risk patients and has the potential for significant benefits to patients and labor and delivery units,” the authors reported Jan. 6 in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

The rate of labor induction in the United States rose to 29.4% in 2019, the year following publication of the ARRIVE trial of low-risk nulliparous pregnant women, which found that induction at 39 weeks resulted in fewer cesarean deliveries with no difference in neonatal outcomes compared with expectant management, defined as continuing pregnancy until at least 40 weeks 5 days unless induction was medically indicated. Most women require preparation with a balloon-tipped catheter that slowly inflates to stretch and thin out the cervix, a process that can take many hours.

The devices have been shown to be safe, effective, and inexpensive, but the data on outpatient use are limited, according to the researchers. The new study is the “most comprehensive” examination of randomized clinical trials comparing outpatient and inpatient balloon cervical ripening, they say.

The trials included singleton gestations of at least 37 weeks of primarily low-risk patients. Body mass index was slightly lower in the outpatient group, with no differences in maternal age, gestational age at induction, or parity.

Six studies with 571 patients reported on the primary outcome, defined as time from labor unit admission to delivery. The outpatient group had a mean 16.3 hours compared with 23.8 hours for the inpatient group, a difference of 7.24 hours. However, data from three of the studies showed the inpatient group experienced 5.19 hours on average less between balloon expulsion and delivery, potentially due to more frequent adjustments and evaluation for expulsion.

The researchers observed no differences in adverse maternal or neonatal outcomes, and no stillbirths were reported among 378 patients who had the outpatient procedure. Cesarean delivery occurred less often in the outpatient group (21%) versus the inpatient group (27%) (risk ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.59-0.98).

Corresponding author Vincenzo Berghella, MD, director of the Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine at Jefferson University Hospitals, Philadelphia, called the data “very assuring.” He said, “We knew induction was good in the hospital for many indications. We now know that induction can be started at home and it’s safe.”

Dr. Berghella added that the lower rate of cesarean delivery in the outpatient group likely reflected less use of fetal heart-rate monitoring, which can produce false-positive predictions of fetal compromise.

Still, too few patients have been studied to completely rule out rare adverse events with use of the balloons in the outpatient setting, the researchers acknowledge.

Aaron B. Caughey, MD, PhD, of Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, who was not involved in the study, said current data do not put to rest all safety concerns with the balloons, and it will be vital for health systems to report outcomes as outpatient use of the devices increases.

“Outcomes such as chorioamnionitis and postpartum hemorrhage will be important to have more data on, though there do not appear to be trends from these data,” Dr. Caughey told this news organization. Rarer outcomes, such as cervical injury, placenta abruption, and fetal injury, he added, “will require much larger studies to examine these potential but unlikely risks.”

The authors and Dr. Caughey have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

*Correction, 1/19/22: An earlier version of the headline of this article misstated a study finding. The study found that women who undergo balloon cervical ripening spend less time in the labor and delivery unit than those who have the induction procedure in a hospital.

Women who undergo balloon cervical ripening at home spend less time in the labor and delivery unit and have fewer cesarean deliveries than those who have the induction procedure in a hospital, researchers have found.

The findings, from a meta-analysis of eight previously conducted randomized clinical trials involving 740 women, should spur hospitals to “create and adhere to evidence-based guidelines” for outpatient balloon use, according to the researchers.

“Outpatient balloon cervical ripening is a safe alternative for low-risk patients and has the potential for significant benefits to patients and labor and delivery units,” the authors reported Jan. 6 in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

The rate of labor induction in the United States rose to 29.4% in 2019, the year following publication of the ARRIVE trial of low-risk nulliparous pregnant women, which found that induction at 39 weeks resulted in fewer cesarean deliveries with no difference in neonatal outcomes compared with expectant management, defined as continuing pregnancy until at least 40 weeks 5 days unless induction was medically indicated. Most women require preparation with a balloon-tipped catheter that slowly inflates to stretch and thin out the cervix, a process that can take many hours.

The devices have been shown to be safe, effective, and inexpensive, but the data on outpatient use are limited, according to the researchers. The new study is the “most comprehensive” examination of randomized clinical trials comparing outpatient and inpatient balloon cervical ripening, they say.

The trials included singleton gestations of at least 37 weeks of primarily low-risk patients. Body mass index was slightly lower in the outpatient group, with no differences in maternal age, gestational age at induction, or parity.

Six studies with 571 patients reported on the primary outcome, defined as time from labor unit admission to delivery. The outpatient group had a mean 16.3 hours compared with 23.8 hours for the inpatient group, a difference of 7.24 hours. However, data from three of the studies showed the inpatient group experienced 5.19 hours on average less between balloon expulsion and delivery, potentially due to more frequent adjustments and evaluation for expulsion.

The researchers observed no differences in adverse maternal or neonatal outcomes, and no stillbirths were reported among 378 patients who had the outpatient procedure. Cesarean delivery occurred less often in the outpatient group (21%) versus the inpatient group (27%) (risk ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.59-0.98).

Corresponding author Vincenzo Berghella, MD, director of the Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine at Jefferson University Hospitals, Philadelphia, called the data “very assuring.” He said, “We knew induction was good in the hospital for many indications. We now know that induction can be started at home and it’s safe.”

Dr. Berghella added that the lower rate of cesarean delivery in the outpatient group likely reflected less use of fetal heart-rate monitoring, which can produce false-positive predictions of fetal compromise.

Still, too few patients have been studied to completely rule out rare adverse events with use of the balloons in the outpatient setting, the researchers acknowledge.

Aaron B. Caughey, MD, PhD, of Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, who was not involved in the study, said current data do not put to rest all safety concerns with the balloons, and it will be vital for health systems to report outcomes as outpatient use of the devices increases.

“Outcomes such as chorioamnionitis and postpartum hemorrhage will be important to have more data on, though there do not appear to be trends from these data,” Dr. Caughey told this news organization. Rarer outcomes, such as cervical injury, placenta abruption, and fetal injury, he added, “will require much larger studies to examine these potential but unlikely risks.”

The authors and Dr. Caughey have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

*Correction, 1/19/22: An earlier version of the headline of this article misstated a study finding. The study found that women who undergo balloon cervical ripening spend less time in the labor and delivery unit than those who have the induction procedure in a hospital.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Visceral fat may help ID heart risk in obese youth

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 12/21/2021 - 11:05

The amount of fat surrounding abdominal organs may help clinicians identify cardiovascular risk in young people with obesity, researchers have found.

Severely overweight children and young adults showed a subtle association between visceral fat and arterial stiffness independent of body mass index (BMI). The association was not present in those of healthy weight, possibly because their visceral fat stores are too small to have a detectable effect on cardiovascular health, according to the researchers, who reported their findings in the latest issue of Pediatric Obesity.

“Those kids with greater visceral fat had stiffer arteries, which can overtax and overstress the system and lead to unfortunate consequences in terms of cardiovascular health down the line,” senior author Joseph M. Kindler, PhD, an assistant professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Georgia, Athens, told this news organization.

The data came from cross-sectional measurements in 605 youth (67% female, 56% non-Black) aged 10-23 years at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The sample included 236 individuals of healthy weight, 224 with obesity, and 145 with type 2 diabetes.    

Visceral fat was assessed with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), a widely used test of bone mineral density screening to assess fracture risk. Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV) was used to gauge arterial stiffness, a subclinical sign of cardiovascular disease.

Visceral fat was associated with PWV in all three groups of study subjects (P < .05), the researchers found, whereas the amount of subcutaneous fat was linked to arterial stiffness in obese youth and those with obesity but not those whose weight was considered healthy.

The amount of fat was associated with an additional 1.6% of the variability in arterial stiffness in youth with obesity after accounting for BMI. Subcutaneous fat, meanwhile, did not appear to affect PWV, the researchers found. “In youth with healthy weight, visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, BMI, and waist circumference were not significantly associated with PWV in any analyses,” they write.

The researchers cited a paucity of data on the relationship between visceral fat and cardiovascular disease in children with obesity. Although BMI is a reliable and readily available indicator of risk for disease, DXA “might give us a little more information,” Dr. Kindler, a nutritionist and bone biologist, said. As for clinical use to supplement BMI and waist circumference, he said, “maybe there’s room for visceral fat, but we do need a lot more science to back those decisions down the line.”

For example, what normal visceral fat accumulation during childhood looks like is unknown, he said.

Rigorous longitudinal studies are needed to establish cause and effect, but the new findings offer “a potential connection between visceral fat and cardiovascular disease risk in youth in a relatively large sample,” Wei Shen, MD, MPH, the associate director of the body composition unit at the New York Obesity Nutrition Research Center at Columbia University, New York, said.

Ideally, said Dr. Shen, who was not involved in the latest study, it would be “more credible to use the most accurate measure of visceral fat, the volumetric measurement of visceral fat using MRI” to establish a causal relationship with cardiovascular risk. However, MRI is more expensive and less accessible than DXA. To assess visceral fat in the clinic, “waist circumference may still be a good choice, as it is so convenient to use,” she added.

Dr. Kindler and his colleagues highlighted the need to examine the effect of excess visceral fat as well as intrahepatic fat on youth with type 2 diabetes, who experience cardiovascular complications independent of whether they are obese. In the new study, the positive association between visceral fat and arterial stiffness did not differ between youth with obesity and normal glucose control and those with obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Funding came from the Endocrine Fellows Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the University of Georgia Obesity Initiative. Dr. Kindler and Dr. Shen have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Topics
Sections

The amount of fat surrounding abdominal organs may help clinicians identify cardiovascular risk in young people with obesity, researchers have found.

Severely overweight children and young adults showed a subtle association between visceral fat and arterial stiffness independent of body mass index (BMI). The association was not present in those of healthy weight, possibly because their visceral fat stores are too small to have a detectable effect on cardiovascular health, according to the researchers, who reported their findings in the latest issue of Pediatric Obesity.

“Those kids with greater visceral fat had stiffer arteries, which can overtax and overstress the system and lead to unfortunate consequences in terms of cardiovascular health down the line,” senior author Joseph M. Kindler, PhD, an assistant professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Georgia, Athens, told this news organization.

The data came from cross-sectional measurements in 605 youth (67% female, 56% non-Black) aged 10-23 years at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The sample included 236 individuals of healthy weight, 224 with obesity, and 145 with type 2 diabetes.    

Visceral fat was assessed with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), a widely used test of bone mineral density screening to assess fracture risk. Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV) was used to gauge arterial stiffness, a subclinical sign of cardiovascular disease.

Visceral fat was associated with PWV in all three groups of study subjects (P < .05), the researchers found, whereas the amount of subcutaneous fat was linked to arterial stiffness in obese youth and those with obesity but not those whose weight was considered healthy.

The amount of fat was associated with an additional 1.6% of the variability in arterial stiffness in youth with obesity after accounting for BMI. Subcutaneous fat, meanwhile, did not appear to affect PWV, the researchers found. “In youth with healthy weight, visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, BMI, and waist circumference were not significantly associated with PWV in any analyses,” they write.

The researchers cited a paucity of data on the relationship between visceral fat and cardiovascular disease in children with obesity. Although BMI is a reliable and readily available indicator of risk for disease, DXA “might give us a little more information,” Dr. Kindler, a nutritionist and bone biologist, said. As for clinical use to supplement BMI and waist circumference, he said, “maybe there’s room for visceral fat, but we do need a lot more science to back those decisions down the line.”

For example, what normal visceral fat accumulation during childhood looks like is unknown, he said.

Rigorous longitudinal studies are needed to establish cause and effect, but the new findings offer “a potential connection between visceral fat and cardiovascular disease risk in youth in a relatively large sample,” Wei Shen, MD, MPH, the associate director of the body composition unit at the New York Obesity Nutrition Research Center at Columbia University, New York, said.

Ideally, said Dr. Shen, who was not involved in the latest study, it would be “more credible to use the most accurate measure of visceral fat, the volumetric measurement of visceral fat using MRI” to establish a causal relationship with cardiovascular risk. However, MRI is more expensive and less accessible than DXA. To assess visceral fat in the clinic, “waist circumference may still be a good choice, as it is so convenient to use,” she added.

Dr. Kindler and his colleagues highlighted the need to examine the effect of excess visceral fat as well as intrahepatic fat on youth with type 2 diabetes, who experience cardiovascular complications independent of whether they are obese. In the new study, the positive association between visceral fat and arterial stiffness did not differ between youth with obesity and normal glucose control and those with obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Funding came from the Endocrine Fellows Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the University of Georgia Obesity Initiative. Dr. Kindler and Dr. Shen have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The amount of fat surrounding abdominal organs may help clinicians identify cardiovascular risk in young people with obesity, researchers have found.

Severely overweight children and young adults showed a subtle association between visceral fat and arterial stiffness independent of body mass index (BMI). The association was not present in those of healthy weight, possibly because their visceral fat stores are too small to have a detectable effect on cardiovascular health, according to the researchers, who reported their findings in the latest issue of Pediatric Obesity.

“Those kids with greater visceral fat had stiffer arteries, which can overtax and overstress the system and lead to unfortunate consequences in terms of cardiovascular health down the line,” senior author Joseph M. Kindler, PhD, an assistant professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Georgia, Athens, told this news organization.

The data came from cross-sectional measurements in 605 youth (67% female, 56% non-Black) aged 10-23 years at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The sample included 236 individuals of healthy weight, 224 with obesity, and 145 with type 2 diabetes.    

Visceral fat was assessed with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), a widely used test of bone mineral density screening to assess fracture risk. Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV) was used to gauge arterial stiffness, a subclinical sign of cardiovascular disease.

Visceral fat was associated with PWV in all three groups of study subjects (P < .05), the researchers found, whereas the amount of subcutaneous fat was linked to arterial stiffness in obese youth and those with obesity but not those whose weight was considered healthy.

The amount of fat was associated with an additional 1.6% of the variability in arterial stiffness in youth with obesity after accounting for BMI. Subcutaneous fat, meanwhile, did not appear to affect PWV, the researchers found. “In youth with healthy weight, visceral fat, subcutaneous fat, BMI, and waist circumference were not significantly associated with PWV in any analyses,” they write.

The researchers cited a paucity of data on the relationship between visceral fat and cardiovascular disease in children with obesity. Although BMI is a reliable and readily available indicator of risk for disease, DXA “might give us a little more information,” Dr. Kindler, a nutritionist and bone biologist, said. As for clinical use to supplement BMI and waist circumference, he said, “maybe there’s room for visceral fat, but we do need a lot more science to back those decisions down the line.”

For example, what normal visceral fat accumulation during childhood looks like is unknown, he said.

Rigorous longitudinal studies are needed to establish cause and effect, but the new findings offer “a potential connection between visceral fat and cardiovascular disease risk in youth in a relatively large sample,” Wei Shen, MD, MPH, the associate director of the body composition unit at the New York Obesity Nutrition Research Center at Columbia University, New York, said.

Ideally, said Dr. Shen, who was not involved in the latest study, it would be “more credible to use the most accurate measure of visceral fat, the volumetric measurement of visceral fat using MRI” to establish a causal relationship with cardiovascular risk. However, MRI is more expensive and less accessible than DXA. To assess visceral fat in the clinic, “waist circumference may still be a good choice, as it is so convenient to use,” she added.

Dr. Kindler and his colleagues highlighted the need to examine the effect of excess visceral fat as well as intrahepatic fat on youth with type 2 diabetes, who experience cardiovascular complications independent of whether they are obese. In the new study, the positive association between visceral fat and arterial stiffness did not differ between youth with obesity and normal glucose control and those with obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Funding came from the Endocrine Fellows Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the University of Georgia Obesity Initiative. Dr. Kindler and Dr. Shen have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article