Doug Brunk is a San Diego-based award-winning reporter who began covering health care in 1991. Before joining the company, he wrote for the health sciences division of Columbia University and was an associate editor at Contemporary Long Term Care magazine when it won a Jesse H. Neal Award. His work has been syndicated by the Los Angeles Times and he is the author of two books related to the University of Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball program. Doug has a master’s degree in magazine journalism from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. Follow him on Twitter @dougbrunk.

Baricitinib found effective for moderate to severe AD out to 52 weeks

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Baricitinib, at a dose of 2 mg a day, demonstrated efficacy in adults with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis up to 52 weeks, integrated data from two trials demonstrated.

Bruce Jancin/MDEdge News
Dr. Eric L. Simpson

“With long-term therapy, the baricitinib 2 mg response remains stable or slightly improved, compared with week 16 for skin inflammation, itch, sleep, and quality of life,” presenting study author Eric L. Simpson, MD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Baricitinib is an oral selective Janus kinase 1/JAK2 inhibitor being developed for the treatment of moderate to severe AD in adults who are candidates for systemic therapy. The drug is already approved for AD in Europe at the 2-mg and 4-mg doses. A 16-week placebo-controlled study conducted in North America known as BREEZE-AD5 found that 2 mg of baricitinib improved disease in adults with moderate to severe AD.

For the current analysis, Dr. Simpson, professor of dermatology at Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, and colleagues integrated data from BREEZE-AD5 and BREEZE-AD6, an ongoing, open-label study of BREEZE-AD5, to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of baricitinib 2 mg in patients with moderate to severe AD.

At week 16, patients from BREEZE-AD5 who were on baricitinib 2 mg could either continue the trial out to week 52, or they could transition to BREEZE-AD6 if they were nonresponders. The use of low-potency corticosteroids was permitted after week 16 in BREEZE-AD5 and throughout BREEZE-AD6. Endpoints of interest at week 52 in both trials were the proportions of patients with 75% or greater improvement from baseline in the Eczema and Severity Index (EASI75), a Validated Investigator Global Assessment for Atopic Dermatitis (vIGA-AD) score of 0 or 1, a Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) score of 5 or less, as well as mean SCORing AD (SCORAD) visual analog scales of itch and sleeplessness scores, and the mean percent change from baseline in EASI score.



Dr. Simpson presented data on 146 patients from both trials who were randomized to baricitinib 2 mg. Their mean age was 40 years, 53% were female, 58% were White, 21% were Black, 15% were Asian, and the remainder were from other backgrounds. Their mean duration of AD was 16 years and their average EASI score was 26.6. At weeks 16, 32, and 52, the proportion of patients who achieved an EASI75 response was 40%, 51%, and 49%, respectively, while the mean percent change from baseline in EASI score was –50%, –59%, and –57%.

At weeks 16, 32, and 52, the vIGA-AD responses of 0 or 1 were observed in 27%, 38%, and 31% of patients. The mean SCORAD pruritus score improved from 7.7 at baseline to 4.8 at week 16 and was maintained at weeks 32 (3.8) and 52 (4.3). The mean SCORAD sleeplessness score also improved from 6.5 at baseline to 3.9 at week 16 and remained stable through weeks 32 (3.4) and 52 (3.7).

Finally, among 129 patients who had a baseline DLQI of greater than 5, 39% had DLQI scores of 5 or lower at week 16, compared with 49% at week 32 and 45% at week 52, indicating a small or no effect of AD on quality of life.

The study was sponsored by Eli Lilly, which is developing baricitinib. Dr. Simpson disclosed that he is a consultant to and/or an investigator for several pharmaceutical companies, including Eli Lilly.

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Baricitinib, at a dose of 2 mg a day, demonstrated efficacy in adults with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis up to 52 weeks, integrated data from two trials demonstrated.

Bruce Jancin/MDEdge News
Dr. Eric L. Simpson

“With long-term therapy, the baricitinib 2 mg response remains stable or slightly improved, compared with week 16 for skin inflammation, itch, sleep, and quality of life,” presenting study author Eric L. Simpson, MD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Baricitinib is an oral selective Janus kinase 1/JAK2 inhibitor being developed for the treatment of moderate to severe AD in adults who are candidates for systemic therapy. The drug is already approved for AD in Europe at the 2-mg and 4-mg doses. A 16-week placebo-controlled study conducted in North America known as BREEZE-AD5 found that 2 mg of baricitinib improved disease in adults with moderate to severe AD.

For the current analysis, Dr. Simpson, professor of dermatology at Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, and colleagues integrated data from BREEZE-AD5 and BREEZE-AD6, an ongoing, open-label study of BREEZE-AD5, to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of baricitinib 2 mg in patients with moderate to severe AD.

At week 16, patients from BREEZE-AD5 who were on baricitinib 2 mg could either continue the trial out to week 52, or they could transition to BREEZE-AD6 if they were nonresponders. The use of low-potency corticosteroids was permitted after week 16 in BREEZE-AD5 and throughout BREEZE-AD6. Endpoints of interest at week 52 in both trials were the proportions of patients with 75% or greater improvement from baseline in the Eczema and Severity Index (EASI75), a Validated Investigator Global Assessment for Atopic Dermatitis (vIGA-AD) score of 0 or 1, a Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) score of 5 or less, as well as mean SCORing AD (SCORAD) visual analog scales of itch and sleeplessness scores, and the mean percent change from baseline in EASI score.



Dr. Simpson presented data on 146 patients from both trials who were randomized to baricitinib 2 mg. Their mean age was 40 years, 53% were female, 58% were White, 21% were Black, 15% were Asian, and the remainder were from other backgrounds. Their mean duration of AD was 16 years and their average EASI score was 26.6. At weeks 16, 32, and 52, the proportion of patients who achieved an EASI75 response was 40%, 51%, and 49%, respectively, while the mean percent change from baseline in EASI score was –50%, –59%, and –57%.

At weeks 16, 32, and 52, the vIGA-AD responses of 0 or 1 were observed in 27%, 38%, and 31% of patients. The mean SCORAD pruritus score improved from 7.7 at baseline to 4.8 at week 16 and was maintained at weeks 32 (3.8) and 52 (4.3). The mean SCORAD sleeplessness score also improved from 6.5 at baseline to 3.9 at week 16 and remained stable through weeks 32 (3.4) and 52 (3.7).

Finally, among 129 patients who had a baseline DLQI of greater than 5, 39% had DLQI scores of 5 or lower at week 16, compared with 49% at week 32 and 45% at week 52, indicating a small or no effect of AD on quality of life.

The study was sponsored by Eli Lilly, which is developing baricitinib. Dr. Simpson disclosed that he is a consultant to and/or an investigator for several pharmaceutical companies, including Eli Lilly.

 

Baricitinib, at a dose of 2 mg a day, demonstrated efficacy in adults with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis up to 52 weeks, integrated data from two trials demonstrated.

Bruce Jancin/MDEdge News
Dr. Eric L. Simpson

“With long-term therapy, the baricitinib 2 mg response remains stable or slightly improved, compared with week 16 for skin inflammation, itch, sleep, and quality of life,” presenting study author Eric L. Simpson, MD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Baricitinib is an oral selective Janus kinase 1/JAK2 inhibitor being developed for the treatment of moderate to severe AD in adults who are candidates for systemic therapy. The drug is already approved for AD in Europe at the 2-mg and 4-mg doses. A 16-week placebo-controlled study conducted in North America known as BREEZE-AD5 found that 2 mg of baricitinib improved disease in adults with moderate to severe AD.

For the current analysis, Dr. Simpson, professor of dermatology at Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, and colleagues integrated data from BREEZE-AD5 and BREEZE-AD6, an ongoing, open-label study of BREEZE-AD5, to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of baricitinib 2 mg in patients with moderate to severe AD.

At week 16, patients from BREEZE-AD5 who were on baricitinib 2 mg could either continue the trial out to week 52, or they could transition to BREEZE-AD6 if they were nonresponders. The use of low-potency corticosteroids was permitted after week 16 in BREEZE-AD5 and throughout BREEZE-AD6. Endpoints of interest at week 52 in both trials were the proportions of patients with 75% or greater improvement from baseline in the Eczema and Severity Index (EASI75), a Validated Investigator Global Assessment for Atopic Dermatitis (vIGA-AD) score of 0 or 1, a Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) score of 5 or less, as well as mean SCORing AD (SCORAD) visual analog scales of itch and sleeplessness scores, and the mean percent change from baseline in EASI score.



Dr. Simpson presented data on 146 patients from both trials who were randomized to baricitinib 2 mg. Their mean age was 40 years, 53% were female, 58% were White, 21% were Black, 15% were Asian, and the remainder were from other backgrounds. Their mean duration of AD was 16 years and their average EASI score was 26.6. At weeks 16, 32, and 52, the proportion of patients who achieved an EASI75 response was 40%, 51%, and 49%, respectively, while the mean percent change from baseline in EASI score was –50%, –59%, and –57%.

At weeks 16, 32, and 52, the vIGA-AD responses of 0 or 1 were observed in 27%, 38%, and 31% of patients. The mean SCORAD pruritus score improved from 7.7 at baseline to 4.8 at week 16 and was maintained at weeks 32 (3.8) and 52 (4.3). The mean SCORAD sleeplessness score also improved from 6.5 at baseline to 3.9 at week 16 and remained stable through weeks 32 (3.4) and 52 (3.7).

Finally, among 129 patients who had a baseline DLQI of greater than 5, 39% had DLQI scores of 5 or lower at week 16, compared with 49% at week 32 and 45% at week 52, indicating a small or no effect of AD on quality of life.

The study was sponsored by Eli Lilly, which is developing baricitinib. Dr. Simpson disclosed that he is a consultant to and/or an investigator for several pharmaceutical companies, including Eli Lilly.

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Ruxolitinib cream for atopic dermatitis found to be effective, safe up to 52 weeks

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Fri, 06/25/2021 - 16:23

After treatment with ruxolitinib cream for 52 weeks, between 60% and 80% of atopic dermatitis patients maintained clear or almost clear skin, with no safety signals, results from a long-term analysis of clinical trial data showed.

Dr. Kim A. Papp

“The incidence of application-site reactions was low, and there were no clinically meaningful changes or trends in hematologic parameters,” Kim Papp, MD, PhD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Ruxolitinib cream is a selective Janus kinase 1/JAK2 inhibitor being developed by Incyte for the treatment of atopic dermatitis (AD).

According to a press release from the company, the Food and Drug Administration has extended the New Drug Application review period for the agent by 3 months to September 2021. If approved, it would become first topical JAK inhibitor for use in dermatology.

In two phase 3, randomized studies of identical design involving 1,249 patients aged 12 and older with AD – TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 – ruxolitinib cream demonstrated anti-inflammatory activity, with rapid and sustained antipruritic action, compared with vehicle. To be eligible for the trials patients with an Investigator’s Global Assessment (IGA) score of 2 or 3 and 3%-20% of affected body surface area (BSA) were randomized (2:2:1) to twice-daily 0.75% ruxolitinib cream, 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, or vehicle cream for 8 continuous weeks.

A recently published report found that significantly more patients in TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 achieved IGA treatment success with 0.75% (50% vs. 39%, respectively) and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream (53.8% vs. 51.3%), compared with vehicle (15.1% vs. 7.6%; P < .0001) at week 8. In addition, significant reductions in itch, compared with vehicle, were reported within 12 hours of first applying 1.5% ruxolitinib cream (P < .05).
 

Longterm data

During the symposium, Dr. Papp presented long-term safety data of ruxolitinib cream in patients who were followed for an additional 44 weeks. Those initially randomized to vehicle were rerandomized 1:1 (blinded) to either ruxolitinib cream regimen. They were instructed to treat skin areas with active AD only and to stop treatment 3 days after clearance of lesions, and to restart treatment with ruxolitinib cream at the first sign of recurrence. Safety and tolerability were assessed by frequency and severity of adverse events, while disease control was measured by the proportion of patients with an IGA score of 0 or 1 and the affected BSA.

Dr. Papp, a dermatologist and founder of Probity Medical Research, Waterloo, Ont., reported that 543 patients from TRuE-AD1 and 530 from TRuE-AD2 entered the long-term analysis and that about 78% of these patients completed the study. From weeks 12 to 52, the proportion of patients with an IGA score of 0 or 1 with 0.75% and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream ranged from 62%-77% and 67%-77%, respectively, in TRuE-AD1 to 60%-77% and 72%-80% in TRuE-AD2.

The measured mean total affected BSA was less than 3% throughout the follow-up period in the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream arm in TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 and was less than 3% in the 0.75% ruxolitinib cream arm during most of the study period.



In a pooled safety analysis, treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were reported in 60% and 54% of patients who applied 0.75% and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, respectively, over 44 weeks. The frequency of application-site reactions remained low. Specifically, treatment-related adverse events were reported in 5% of patients who applied 0.75% ruxolitinib cream and in 3% of patients who applied 1.5% ruxolitinib cream; none were serious. TEAEs led to discontinuation in 2% of patients in the 0.75% ruxolitinib cream group, and no patients in the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream group.

“The most common treatment adverse events were upper respiratory tract infections and nasopharyngitis,” Dr. Papp said. “When looking at exposure-adjusted adverse events, we see that there is a high degree of similarity between any of the TEAEs across all of the treatment groups in both studies. We also see that it was patients on the vehicle who experienced the greatest number of application-site reactions.”

Dr. Papp disclosed that he has received honoraria or clinical research grants as a consultant, speaker, scientific officer, advisory board member, and/or steering committee member for several pharmaceutical companies, including Incyte.

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After treatment with ruxolitinib cream for 52 weeks, between 60% and 80% of atopic dermatitis patients maintained clear or almost clear skin, with no safety signals, results from a long-term analysis of clinical trial data showed.

Dr. Kim A. Papp

“The incidence of application-site reactions was low, and there were no clinically meaningful changes or trends in hematologic parameters,” Kim Papp, MD, PhD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Ruxolitinib cream is a selective Janus kinase 1/JAK2 inhibitor being developed by Incyte for the treatment of atopic dermatitis (AD).

According to a press release from the company, the Food and Drug Administration has extended the New Drug Application review period for the agent by 3 months to September 2021. If approved, it would become first topical JAK inhibitor for use in dermatology.

In two phase 3, randomized studies of identical design involving 1,249 patients aged 12 and older with AD – TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 – ruxolitinib cream demonstrated anti-inflammatory activity, with rapid and sustained antipruritic action, compared with vehicle. To be eligible for the trials patients with an Investigator’s Global Assessment (IGA) score of 2 or 3 and 3%-20% of affected body surface area (BSA) were randomized (2:2:1) to twice-daily 0.75% ruxolitinib cream, 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, or vehicle cream for 8 continuous weeks.

A recently published report found that significantly more patients in TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 achieved IGA treatment success with 0.75% (50% vs. 39%, respectively) and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream (53.8% vs. 51.3%), compared with vehicle (15.1% vs. 7.6%; P < .0001) at week 8. In addition, significant reductions in itch, compared with vehicle, were reported within 12 hours of first applying 1.5% ruxolitinib cream (P < .05).
 

Longterm data

During the symposium, Dr. Papp presented long-term safety data of ruxolitinib cream in patients who were followed for an additional 44 weeks. Those initially randomized to vehicle were rerandomized 1:1 (blinded) to either ruxolitinib cream regimen. They were instructed to treat skin areas with active AD only and to stop treatment 3 days after clearance of lesions, and to restart treatment with ruxolitinib cream at the first sign of recurrence. Safety and tolerability were assessed by frequency and severity of adverse events, while disease control was measured by the proportion of patients with an IGA score of 0 or 1 and the affected BSA.

Dr. Papp, a dermatologist and founder of Probity Medical Research, Waterloo, Ont., reported that 543 patients from TRuE-AD1 and 530 from TRuE-AD2 entered the long-term analysis and that about 78% of these patients completed the study. From weeks 12 to 52, the proportion of patients with an IGA score of 0 or 1 with 0.75% and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream ranged from 62%-77% and 67%-77%, respectively, in TRuE-AD1 to 60%-77% and 72%-80% in TRuE-AD2.

The measured mean total affected BSA was less than 3% throughout the follow-up period in the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream arm in TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 and was less than 3% in the 0.75% ruxolitinib cream arm during most of the study period.



In a pooled safety analysis, treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were reported in 60% and 54% of patients who applied 0.75% and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, respectively, over 44 weeks. The frequency of application-site reactions remained low. Specifically, treatment-related adverse events were reported in 5% of patients who applied 0.75% ruxolitinib cream and in 3% of patients who applied 1.5% ruxolitinib cream; none were serious. TEAEs led to discontinuation in 2% of patients in the 0.75% ruxolitinib cream group, and no patients in the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream group.

“The most common treatment adverse events were upper respiratory tract infections and nasopharyngitis,” Dr. Papp said. “When looking at exposure-adjusted adverse events, we see that there is a high degree of similarity between any of the TEAEs across all of the treatment groups in both studies. We also see that it was patients on the vehicle who experienced the greatest number of application-site reactions.”

Dr. Papp disclosed that he has received honoraria or clinical research grants as a consultant, speaker, scientific officer, advisory board member, and/or steering committee member for several pharmaceutical companies, including Incyte.

After treatment with ruxolitinib cream for 52 weeks, between 60% and 80% of atopic dermatitis patients maintained clear or almost clear skin, with no safety signals, results from a long-term analysis of clinical trial data showed.

Dr. Kim A. Papp

“The incidence of application-site reactions was low, and there were no clinically meaningful changes or trends in hematologic parameters,” Kim Papp, MD, PhD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Ruxolitinib cream is a selective Janus kinase 1/JAK2 inhibitor being developed by Incyte for the treatment of atopic dermatitis (AD).

According to a press release from the company, the Food and Drug Administration has extended the New Drug Application review period for the agent by 3 months to September 2021. If approved, it would become first topical JAK inhibitor for use in dermatology.

In two phase 3, randomized studies of identical design involving 1,249 patients aged 12 and older with AD – TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 – ruxolitinib cream demonstrated anti-inflammatory activity, with rapid and sustained antipruritic action, compared with vehicle. To be eligible for the trials patients with an Investigator’s Global Assessment (IGA) score of 2 or 3 and 3%-20% of affected body surface area (BSA) were randomized (2:2:1) to twice-daily 0.75% ruxolitinib cream, 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, or vehicle cream for 8 continuous weeks.

A recently published report found that significantly more patients in TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 achieved IGA treatment success with 0.75% (50% vs. 39%, respectively) and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream (53.8% vs. 51.3%), compared with vehicle (15.1% vs. 7.6%; P < .0001) at week 8. In addition, significant reductions in itch, compared with vehicle, were reported within 12 hours of first applying 1.5% ruxolitinib cream (P < .05).
 

Longterm data

During the symposium, Dr. Papp presented long-term safety data of ruxolitinib cream in patients who were followed for an additional 44 weeks. Those initially randomized to vehicle were rerandomized 1:1 (blinded) to either ruxolitinib cream regimen. They were instructed to treat skin areas with active AD only and to stop treatment 3 days after clearance of lesions, and to restart treatment with ruxolitinib cream at the first sign of recurrence. Safety and tolerability were assessed by frequency and severity of adverse events, while disease control was measured by the proportion of patients with an IGA score of 0 or 1 and the affected BSA.

Dr. Papp, a dermatologist and founder of Probity Medical Research, Waterloo, Ont., reported that 543 patients from TRuE-AD1 and 530 from TRuE-AD2 entered the long-term analysis and that about 78% of these patients completed the study. From weeks 12 to 52, the proportion of patients with an IGA score of 0 or 1 with 0.75% and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream ranged from 62%-77% and 67%-77%, respectively, in TRuE-AD1 to 60%-77% and 72%-80% in TRuE-AD2.

The measured mean total affected BSA was less than 3% throughout the follow-up period in the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream arm in TRuE-AD1 and TRuE-AD2 and was less than 3% in the 0.75% ruxolitinib cream arm during most of the study period.



In a pooled safety analysis, treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were reported in 60% and 54% of patients who applied 0.75% and 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, respectively, over 44 weeks. The frequency of application-site reactions remained low. Specifically, treatment-related adverse events were reported in 5% of patients who applied 0.75% ruxolitinib cream and in 3% of patients who applied 1.5% ruxolitinib cream; none were serious. TEAEs led to discontinuation in 2% of patients in the 0.75% ruxolitinib cream group, and no patients in the 1.5% ruxolitinib cream group.

“The most common treatment adverse events were upper respiratory tract infections and nasopharyngitis,” Dr. Papp said. “When looking at exposure-adjusted adverse events, we see that there is a high degree of similarity between any of the TEAEs across all of the treatment groups in both studies. We also see that it was patients on the vehicle who experienced the greatest number of application-site reactions.”

Dr. Papp disclosed that he has received honoraria or clinical research grants as a consultant, speaker, scientific officer, advisory board member, and/or steering committee member for several pharmaceutical companies, including Incyte.

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Survey spotlights the out-of-pocket burden on Blacks with atopic dermatitis

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Compared with their non-Black counterparts, Black patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) are significantly more likely to be younger, have lower household incomes, live in an urban setting, and use Medicaid or state assistance. They also have significantly poorer disease control and an increased rate of comorbid skin infections.

Dr. Raj Chovatiya

Those are among the key findings from a 25-question survey administered to members of the National Eczema Association.

“Black individuals with AD have a unique sociodemographic and disease profile,” lead study investigator Raj Chovatiya, MD, PhD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium. “Out-of-pocket expenses are just one component of the real-world burden faced by this population.”

According to Dr. Chovatiya, of the department of dermatology at Northwestern University, Chicago, the clinical phenotype and burden of AD can vary across racial and ethnic groups. Black race, for example, is associated with a higher prevalence of AD, a higher burden of moderate to severe disease, increased rates of allergic comorbidities, greater AD-related impact on health-related quality of life, and more treatment-resistant AD.

“These features can make long-term AD control very difficult,” he said. “Given the variable long-term efficacy and safety of current treatments, health care providers and patients often have to combine therapies, seek new treatments, and consider adjunctive approaches – all of which can contribute to increased costs.”

AD is also associated with a considerable financial burden, he continued, including direct health care costs, lost work productivity and out-of-pocket health care expenses. “Previous population-based studies suggest that there are multifactorial increases in overall out-of-pocket health expenses in AD,” Dr. Chovatiya said. “Black race in particular is thought to be associated with increased health care utilization in AD, but little is known about the out-of-pocket health care expenses.”

To characterize the categories and impact of out-of-pocket health care expenses associated with AD management among Black individuals, he and his colleagues administered a 25-question voluntary survey to 113,502 members of the NEA between Nov. 14 and Dec. 21, 2019. They included adults with a self-reported diagnosis of AD or children, teens, or young adults who had a caregiver responding for them. In all, 1,118 respondents met inclusion criteria. Questions included those about out-of-pocket expenses for AD over the past 30 days and over the past year, as well as the disease impact on household finances.



The cohort included 75% of individuals with AD; 25% were primary caregivers of children, teens, and young adults with AD. More than three-quarters of respondents (77%) were female, 73% were White, 11% were Black, 6% were Asian, and the remainder were from other ethnic backgrounds. More than half of respondents (58%) had employer-sponsored insurance coverage and the median annual household income was between $50,000 and $75,000.

Nearly three-quarters of respondents (74%) classified their AD severity as moderate or severe, and 63% reported minimally controlled or somewhat-controlled AD. Black respondents were significantly more likely to be younger, have lower household incomes, live in an urban setting, use Medicaid or state assistance, have poor disease control, and frequent skin infections (P ≤ .02). “A numerically higher proportion of Black respondents also had increased AD severity and reported the use of step-up therapy with systemic agents, prescription polypharmacy with three or more prescriptions, and a higher monthly out-of-pocket cost,” Dr. Chovatiya said.

Compared with their non-Black counterparts, Black survey respondents reported more out-of-pocket costs for prescription medications covered by insurance (74.2% vs. 63.6%, P = .04), prescription medications not covered by insurance (65.1% vs. 46.5%, P = .0004), ED visits (22.1% vs. 11.8%, P = .005), and outpatient laboratory testing (33.3% vs. 21.8%, P = .01). Black race was associated with increased household financial impact from out-of-pocket expenses (P = .0009), and predictors of financial impact included minimally controlled AD (adjusted odds ratio, 13.88; P = .02), comorbid anxiety and/or depression (aOR, 4.34; P = .01), systemic therapy (aOR, 4.34; P = .003), out-of-pocket costs that exceeded $200 per month (aOR, 14.28; P = .0003), and Medicaid insurance (aOR, 4.02; P = .03). Blacks with Medicaid had higher odds of harmful financial impact (aOR, 3.32; P = .0002) than respondents who were Black (aOR, 1.81; P = .04) or those with Medicaid alone (aOR, 1.39; P = .04).

“I looked at some of the findings from recent studies that have talked about this burden, including an increased prevalence among Black children, a higher likelihood of moderate to severe disease, higher rates of ED visits and hospitalizations, and increased prescription medications,” Dr. Chovatiya said.“Our findings reflect these racial and socioeconomic disparities and provide another piece of evidence for increased financial burden among Black individuals with AD and support the need for targeted strategies to address these inequities.”

The study received funding support from the NEA. Dr. Chovatiya disclosed that he is a consultant to, a speaker for, and/or a member of the advisory board for AbbVie, Incyte, and Regeneron/Sanofi-Genzyme.

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Compared with their non-Black counterparts, Black patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) are significantly more likely to be younger, have lower household incomes, live in an urban setting, and use Medicaid or state assistance. They also have significantly poorer disease control and an increased rate of comorbid skin infections.

Dr. Raj Chovatiya

Those are among the key findings from a 25-question survey administered to members of the National Eczema Association.

“Black individuals with AD have a unique sociodemographic and disease profile,” lead study investigator Raj Chovatiya, MD, PhD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium. “Out-of-pocket expenses are just one component of the real-world burden faced by this population.”

According to Dr. Chovatiya, of the department of dermatology at Northwestern University, Chicago, the clinical phenotype and burden of AD can vary across racial and ethnic groups. Black race, for example, is associated with a higher prevalence of AD, a higher burden of moderate to severe disease, increased rates of allergic comorbidities, greater AD-related impact on health-related quality of life, and more treatment-resistant AD.

“These features can make long-term AD control very difficult,” he said. “Given the variable long-term efficacy and safety of current treatments, health care providers and patients often have to combine therapies, seek new treatments, and consider adjunctive approaches – all of which can contribute to increased costs.”

AD is also associated with a considerable financial burden, he continued, including direct health care costs, lost work productivity and out-of-pocket health care expenses. “Previous population-based studies suggest that there are multifactorial increases in overall out-of-pocket health expenses in AD,” Dr. Chovatiya said. “Black race in particular is thought to be associated with increased health care utilization in AD, but little is known about the out-of-pocket health care expenses.”

To characterize the categories and impact of out-of-pocket health care expenses associated with AD management among Black individuals, he and his colleagues administered a 25-question voluntary survey to 113,502 members of the NEA between Nov. 14 and Dec. 21, 2019. They included adults with a self-reported diagnosis of AD or children, teens, or young adults who had a caregiver responding for them. In all, 1,118 respondents met inclusion criteria. Questions included those about out-of-pocket expenses for AD over the past 30 days and over the past year, as well as the disease impact on household finances.



The cohort included 75% of individuals with AD; 25% were primary caregivers of children, teens, and young adults with AD. More than three-quarters of respondents (77%) were female, 73% were White, 11% were Black, 6% were Asian, and the remainder were from other ethnic backgrounds. More than half of respondents (58%) had employer-sponsored insurance coverage and the median annual household income was between $50,000 and $75,000.

Nearly three-quarters of respondents (74%) classified their AD severity as moderate or severe, and 63% reported minimally controlled or somewhat-controlled AD. Black respondents were significantly more likely to be younger, have lower household incomes, live in an urban setting, use Medicaid or state assistance, have poor disease control, and frequent skin infections (P ≤ .02). “A numerically higher proportion of Black respondents also had increased AD severity and reported the use of step-up therapy with systemic agents, prescription polypharmacy with three or more prescriptions, and a higher monthly out-of-pocket cost,” Dr. Chovatiya said.

Compared with their non-Black counterparts, Black survey respondents reported more out-of-pocket costs for prescription medications covered by insurance (74.2% vs. 63.6%, P = .04), prescription medications not covered by insurance (65.1% vs. 46.5%, P = .0004), ED visits (22.1% vs. 11.8%, P = .005), and outpatient laboratory testing (33.3% vs. 21.8%, P = .01). Black race was associated with increased household financial impact from out-of-pocket expenses (P = .0009), and predictors of financial impact included minimally controlled AD (adjusted odds ratio, 13.88; P = .02), comorbid anxiety and/or depression (aOR, 4.34; P = .01), systemic therapy (aOR, 4.34; P = .003), out-of-pocket costs that exceeded $200 per month (aOR, 14.28; P = .0003), and Medicaid insurance (aOR, 4.02; P = .03). Blacks with Medicaid had higher odds of harmful financial impact (aOR, 3.32; P = .0002) than respondents who were Black (aOR, 1.81; P = .04) or those with Medicaid alone (aOR, 1.39; P = .04).

“I looked at some of the findings from recent studies that have talked about this burden, including an increased prevalence among Black children, a higher likelihood of moderate to severe disease, higher rates of ED visits and hospitalizations, and increased prescription medications,” Dr. Chovatiya said.“Our findings reflect these racial and socioeconomic disparities and provide another piece of evidence for increased financial burden among Black individuals with AD and support the need for targeted strategies to address these inequities.”

The study received funding support from the NEA. Dr. Chovatiya disclosed that he is a consultant to, a speaker for, and/or a member of the advisory board for AbbVie, Incyte, and Regeneron/Sanofi-Genzyme.

Compared with their non-Black counterparts, Black patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) are significantly more likely to be younger, have lower household incomes, live in an urban setting, and use Medicaid or state assistance. They also have significantly poorer disease control and an increased rate of comorbid skin infections.

Dr. Raj Chovatiya

Those are among the key findings from a 25-question survey administered to members of the National Eczema Association.

“Black individuals with AD have a unique sociodemographic and disease profile,” lead study investigator Raj Chovatiya, MD, PhD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium. “Out-of-pocket expenses are just one component of the real-world burden faced by this population.”

According to Dr. Chovatiya, of the department of dermatology at Northwestern University, Chicago, the clinical phenotype and burden of AD can vary across racial and ethnic groups. Black race, for example, is associated with a higher prevalence of AD, a higher burden of moderate to severe disease, increased rates of allergic comorbidities, greater AD-related impact on health-related quality of life, and more treatment-resistant AD.

“These features can make long-term AD control very difficult,” he said. “Given the variable long-term efficacy and safety of current treatments, health care providers and patients often have to combine therapies, seek new treatments, and consider adjunctive approaches – all of which can contribute to increased costs.”

AD is also associated with a considerable financial burden, he continued, including direct health care costs, lost work productivity and out-of-pocket health care expenses. “Previous population-based studies suggest that there are multifactorial increases in overall out-of-pocket health expenses in AD,” Dr. Chovatiya said. “Black race in particular is thought to be associated with increased health care utilization in AD, but little is known about the out-of-pocket health care expenses.”

To characterize the categories and impact of out-of-pocket health care expenses associated with AD management among Black individuals, he and his colleagues administered a 25-question voluntary survey to 113,502 members of the NEA between Nov. 14 and Dec. 21, 2019. They included adults with a self-reported diagnosis of AD or children, teens, or young adults who had a caregiver responding for them. In all, 1,118 respondents met inclusion criteria. Questions included those about out-of-pocket expenses for AD over the past 30 days and over the past year, as well as the disease impact on household finances.



The cohort included 75% of individuals with AD; 25% were primary caregivers of children, teens, and young adults with AD. More than three-quarters of respondents (77%) were female, 73% were White, 11% were Black, 6% were Asian, and the remainder were from other ethnic backgrounds. More than half of respondents (58%) had employer-sponsored insurance coverage and the median annual household income was between $50,000 and $75,000.

Nearly three-quarters of respondents (74%) classified their AD severity as moderate or severe, and 63% reported minimally controlled or somewhat-controlled AD. Black respondents were significantly more likely to be younger, have lower household incomes, live in an urban setting, use Medicaid or state assistance, have poor disease control, and frequent skin infections (P ≤ .02). “A numerically higher proportion of Black respondents also had increased AD severity and reported the use of step-up therapy with systemic agents, prescription polypharmacy with three or more prescriptions, and a higher monthly out-of-pocket cost,” Dr. Chovatiya said.

Compared with their non-Black counterparts, Black survey respondents reported more out-of-pocket costs for prescription medications covered by insurance (74.2% vs. 63.6%, P = .04), prescription medications not covered by insurance (65.1% vs. 46.5%, P = .0004), ED visits (22.1% vs. 11.8%, P = .005), and outpatient laboratory testing (33.3% vs. 21.8%, P = .01). Black race was associated with increased household financial impact from out-of-pocket expenses (P = .0009), and predictors of financial impact included minimally controlled AD (adjusted odds ratio, 13.88; P = .02), comorbid anxiety and/or depression (aOR, 4.34; P = .01), systemic therapy (aOR, 4.34; P = .003), out-of-pocket costs that exceeded $200 per month (aOR, 14.28; P = .0003), and Medicaid insurance (aOR, 4.02; P = .03). Blacks with Medicaid had higher odds of harmful financial impact (aOR, 3.32; P = .0002) than respondents who were Black (aOR, 1.81; P = .04) or those with Medicaid alone (aOR, 1.39; P = .04).

“I looked at some of the findings from recent studies that have talked about this burden, including an increased prevalence among Black children, a higher likelihood of moderate to severe disease, higher rates of ED visits and hospitalizations, and increased prescription medications,” Dr. Chovatiya said.“Our findings reflect these racial and socioeconomic disparities and provide another piece of evidence for increased financial burden among Black individuals with AD and support the need for targeted strategies to address these inequities.”

The study received funding support from the NEA. Dr. Chovatiya disclosed that he is a consultant to, a speaker for, and/or a member of the advisory board for AbbVie, Incyte, and Regeneron/Sanofi-Genzyme.

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HIFEM procedure helped to improve UI and female sexual function

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Using high-intensity focused electromagnetic (HIFEM) technology to strengthen pelvic floor muscles for the improvement of urinary incontinence (UI) and female sexual function was safe and effective at 9 months follow-up, results from a multicenter study showed.

“The pelvic floor consists of three pairs of muscles: the pubococcygeus, the iliococcygeus, and the puborectalis,” lead study author Joseph Berenholz, MD, and a diplomate of the American Board of Obstetics & Gynecology, said during the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery. “They control continence through support of pelvic organs. The urethra, the vagina, and the rectum pass through that diaphragm. It also contributes to sexual sensation and arousal. A deconditioning of the pelvic floor is usually the result of child-bearing years or aging, which usually results in urinary incontinence and impairment of sexual function. The noninvasive strengthening of the pelvic floor muscles helps to regain muscle tone and strength.”

In a prospective, open-label, single-arm study conducted at four sites, Dr. Berenholz, medical director of the Michigan Center for Women’s Health in Farmington Hills, and colleagues investigated the long-term effectiveness of HIFEM-induced pelvic floor muscle (PFM) strengthening for improvement of UI and sexual function. HIFEM selectively targets neuromuscular tissue and induces supramaximal PFM contractions that cannot be achieved voluntarily, he said, causing muscle strengthening due to muscle fiber hypertrophy, which helps patients to better isolate and command their muscles.

The study population consisted of 33 females with a mean age of 49 years who had UI and UI-related problems in sexual life. They received six 28-minute HIFEM treatments of the pelvic floor with the BTL Emsella, which is FDA cleared for both stress and urge incontinence. The frequency of visits was two treatments per week and the intensity of HIFEM was adjusted between 0% and 100% based on the patient’s tolerance threshold. Evaluations were conducted at baseline, after the last treatment, at 1, 3, 6, and 9 months. The primary outcomes were change in urine leakage based on the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire–Short Form (ICIQ-UI-SF) and change in sexual function based on the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) and the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire (PISQ-12). Secondary endpoints were adverse events and the comfort of therapy based on a 7-point Likert scale.



Dr. Berenholz reported that from baseline the severity of UI based on the ICIQ-SF significantly decreased 60% by a mean of 8.1 points between baseline and 9 months (P < .001). At 1 month, the FSFI score improved 32% by a mean of 7.1 points (P < .001) and was sustained throughout the study. The most prominent changes were seen in the subdomains of desire, arousal, lubrication, and orgasm response.

The PISQ-12 score incrementally increased 25% to a mean improvement of 8.2 points at 9 months (P < .001). Subjects improved most in the emotive subdomain, reporting more frequent orgasms, increased desire, and sexual excitement. The minimal important difference was 6 points.

“This is a true paradigm shift in the treatment of incontinence and sexual dysfunction,” Dr. Berenholz said. “The therapy was safe, comfortable, no adverse events emerged, and 31 subjects (94%) described the therapy as comfortable. Interim data suggest that treatment effect was maintained for 9 months, and there were no significant declines in scores in the long term. The upcoming 12-month follow-up data will let us know if more maintenance therapy is needed.”

During a question-and-answer session, one of the abstract section chairs, Albert Wolkerstorfer, MD, PhD, wondered about the potential for combination treatments in this patient population. “I can imagine that something that is working on the muscle tone has a totally different mechanism than something that is working on the mucosa and the underlying tissue without really affecting the muscle,” said Dr. Wolkerstorfer, a dermatologist at the Netherlands Institute for Pigment Disorders, department of dermatology, University of Amsterdam. “Would a combination be the way to go?”

Dr. Berenholz said that he sometimes combines HIFEM with the ULTRA Femme 360, a radiofrequency thermal energy device. “We thought this addresses two issues,” he said. “One is fascial muscle, which is the underlying structural issue for incontinence. The other is thermal energy to aid in incontinence prevention by inducing production of elastin and collagen in the midurethra, but also to promote lubrication and heightened sensitivity in the patient who’s either menopausal or has undergone chemotherapy for breast cancer.”

Dr. Berenholz reported having no financial disclosures. Dr. Wolkerstorfer disclosed that he has received consulting fees from Lumenis and InCyte and equipment from Humeca and PerfAction Technologies. He has also received grant funding from Novartis and InCyte and he is a member of InCyte’s advisory board.

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Using high-intensity focused electromagnetic (HIFEM) technology to strengthen pelvic floor muscles for the improvement of urinary incontinence (UI) and female sexual function was safe and effective at 9 months follow-up, results from a multicenter study showed.

“The pelvic floor consists of three pairs of muscles: the pubococcygeus, the iliococcygeus, and the puborectalis,” lead study author Joseph Berenholz, MD, and a diplomate of the American Board of Obstetics & Gynecology, said during the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery. “They control continence through support of pelvic organs. The urethra, the vagina, and the rectum pass through that diaphragm. It also contributes to sexual sensation and arousal. A deconditioning of the pelvic floor is usually the result of child-bearing years or aging, which usually results in urinary incontinence and impairment of sexual function. The noninvasive strengthening of the pelvic floor muscles helps to regain muscle tone and strength.”

In a prospective, open-label, single-arm study conducted at four sites, Dr. Berenholz, medical director of the Michigan Center for Women’s Health in Farmington Hills, and colleagues investigated the long-term effectiveness of HIFEM-induced pelvic floor muscle (PFM) strengthening for improvement of UI and sexual function. HIFEM selectively targets neuromuscular tissue and induces supramaximal PFM contractions that cannot be achieved voluntarily, he said, causing muscle strengthening due to muscle fiber hypertrophy, which helps patients to better isolate and command their muscles.

The study population consisted of 33 females with a mean age of 49 years who had UI and UI-related problems in sexual life. They received six 28-minute HIFEM treatments of the pelvic floor with the BTL Emsella, which is FDA cleared for both stress and urge incontinence. The frequency of visits was two treatments per week and the intensity of HIFEM was adjusted between 0% and 100% based on the patient’s tolerance threshold. Evaluations were conducted at baseline, after the last treatment, at 1, 3, 6, and 9 months. The primary outcomes were change in urine leakage based on the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire–Short Form (ICIQ-UI-SF) and change in sexual function based on the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) and the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire (PISQ-12). Secondary endpoints were adverse events and the comfort of therapy based on a 7-point Likert scale.



Dr. Berenholz reported that from baseline the severity of UI based on the ICIQ-SF significantly decreased 60% by a mean of 8.1 points between baseline and 9 months (P < .001). At 1 month, the FSFI score improved 32% by a mean of 7.1 points (P < .001) and was sustained throughout the study. The most prominent changes were seen in the subdomains of desire, arousal, lubrication, and orgasm response.

The PISQ-12 score incrementally increased 25% to a mean improvement of 8.2 points at 9 months (P < .001). Subjects improved most in the emotive subdomain, reporting more frequent orgasms, increased desire, and sexual excitement. The minimal important difference was 6 points.

“This is a true paradigm shift in the treatment of incontinence and sexual dysfunction,” Dr. Berenholz said. “The therapy was safe, comfortable, no adverse events emerged, and 31 subjects (94%) described the therapy as comfortable. Interim data suggest that treatment effect was maintained for 9 months, and there were no significant declines in scores in the long term. The upcoming 12-month follow-up data will let us know if more maintenance therapy is needed.”

During a question-and-answer session, one of the abstract section chairs, Albert Wolkerstorfer, MD, PhD, wondered about the potential for combination treatments in this patient population. “I can imagine that something that is working on the muscle tone has a totally different mechanism than something that is working on the mucosa and the underlying tissue without really affecting the muscle,” said Dr. Wolkerstorfer, a dermatologist at the Netherlands Institute for Pigment Disorders, department of dermatology, University of Amsterdam. “Would a combination be the way to go?”

Dr. Berenholz said that he sometimes combines HIFEM with the ULTRA Femme 360, a radiofrequency thermal energy device. “We thought this addresses two issues,” he said. “One is fascial muscle, which is the underlying structural issue for incontinence. The other is thermal energy to aid in incontinence prevention by inducing production of elastin and collagen in the midurethra, but also to promote lubrication and heightened sensitivity in the patient who’s either menopausal or has undergone chemotherapy for breast cancer.”

Dr. Berenholz reported having no financial disclosures. Dr. Wolkerstorfer disclosed that he has received consulting fees from Lumenis and InCyte and equipment from Humeca and PerfAction Technologies. He has also received grant funding from Novartis and InCyte and he is a member of InCyte’s advisory board.

 

Using high-intensity focused electromagnetic (HIFEM) technology to strengthen pelvic floor muscles for the improvement of urinary incontinence (UI) and female sexual function was safe and effective at 9 months follow-up, results from a multicenter study showed.

“The pelvic floor consists of three pairs of muscles: the pubococcygeus, the iliococcygeus, and the puborectalis,” lead study author Joseph Berenholz, MD, and a diplomate of the American Board of Obstetics & Gynecology, said during the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery. “They control continence through support of pelvic organs. The urethra, the vagina, and the rectum pass through that diaphragm. It also contributes to sexual sensation and arousal. A deconditioning of the pelvic floor is usually the result of child-bearing years or aging, which usually results in urinary incontinence and impairment of sexual function. The noninvasive strengthening of the pelvic floor muscles helps to regain muscle tone and strength.”

In a prospective, open-label, single-arm study conducted at four sites, Dr. Berenholz, medical director of the Michigan Center for Women’s Health in Farmington Hills, and colleagues investigated the long-term effectiveness of HIFEM-induced pelvic floor muscle (PFM) strengthening for improvement of UI and sexual function. HIFEM selectively targets neuromuscular tissue and induces supramaximal PFM contractions that cannot be achieved voluntarily, he said, causing muscle strengthening due to muscle fiber hypertrophy, which helps patients to better isolate and command their muscles.

The study population consisted of 33 females with a mean age of 49 years who had UI and UI-related problems in sexual life. They received six 28-minute HIFEM treatments of the pelvic floor with the BTL Emsella, which is FDA cleared for both stress and urge incontinence. The frequency of visits was two treatments per week and the intensity of HIFEM was adjusted between 0% and 100% based on the patient’s tolerance threshold. Evaluations were conducted at baseline, after the last treatment, at 1, 3, 6, and 9 months. The primary outcomes were change in urine leakage based on the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire–Short Form (ICIQ-UI-SF) and change in sexual function based on the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) and the Pelvic Organ Prolapse/Urinary Incontinence Sexual Questionnaire (PISQ-12). Secondary endpoints were adverse events and the comfort of therapy based on a 7-point Likert scale.



Dr. Berenholz reported that from baseline the severity of UI based on the ICIQ-SF significantly decreased 60% by a mean of 8.1 points between baseline and 9 months (P < .001). At 1 month, the FSFI score improved 32% by a mean of 7.1 points (P < .001) and was sustained throughout the study. The most prominent changes were seen in the subdomains of desire, arousal, lubrication, and orgasm response.

The PISQ-12 score incrementally increased 25% to a mean improvement of 8.2 points at 9 months (P < .001). Subjects improved most in the emotive subdomain, reporting more frequent orgasms, increased desire, and sexual excitement. The minimal important difference was 6 points.

“This is a true paradigm shift in the treatment of incontinence and sexual dysfunction,” Dr. Berenholz said. “The therapy was safe, comfortable, no adverse events emerged, and 31 subjects (94%) described the therapy as comfortable. Interim data suggest that treatment effect was maintained for 9 months, and there were no significant declines in scores in the long term. The upcoming 12-month follow-up data will let us know if more maintenance therapy is needed.”

During a question-and-answer session, one of the abstract section chairs, Albert Wolkerstorfer, MD, PhD, wondered about the potential for combination treatments in this patient population. “I can imagine that something that is working on the muscle tone has a totally different mechanism than something that is working on the mucosa and the underlying tissue without really affecting the muscle,” said Dr. Wolkerstorfer, a dermatologist at the Netherlands Institute for Pigment Disorders, department of dermatology, University of Amsterdam. “Would a combination be the way to go?”

Dr. Berenholz said that he sometimes combines HIFEM with the ULTRA Femme 360, a radiofrequency thermal energy device. “We thought this addresses two issues,” he said. “One is fascial muscle, which is the underlying structural issue for incontinence. The other is thermal energy to aid in incontinence prevention by inducing production of elastin and collagen in the midurethra, but also to promote lubrication and heightened sensitivity in the patient who’s either menopausal or has undergone chemotherapy for breast cancer.”

Dr. Berenholz reported having no financial disclosures. Dr. Wolkerstorfer disclosed that he has received consulting fees from Lumenis and InCyte and equipment from Humeca and PerfAction Technologies. He has also received grant funding from Novartis and InCyte and he is a member of InCyte’s advisory board.

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12-month follow-up shows monthly maintenance dose of tralokinumab maintains response in some AD patients

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Fri, 06/18/2021 - 12:55

 

A large proportion of initial Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) 0/1 or Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) 75 responders at week 16 maintained response with continued tralokinumab dosing every 2 weeks or every 4 weeks during a 36-week maintenance period without the use of rescue medication including topical corticosteroids, results from a pooled analysis of two trials found.

“The interesting thing here is that there weren’t major differences in the maintenance dosing, which really allows us some flexibility with maintenance dosing for this particular drug,” lead study investigator Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Administered subcutaneously, tralokinumab is a fully human IgG4 monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to interleukin-13, a key driver of underlying inflammation in AD. In two of the drug’s pivotal phase 3 trials, ECZTRA 1 and ECZTRA 2, tralokinumab monotherapy was superior to placebo at week 16 for all primary and secondary endpoints.

The purpose of the current trial was to investigate the maintenance of efficacy after 16 weeks of tralokinumab in those who were initial responders and to assess the efficacy of reduced dosing frequency from 300 mg every 2 weeks to 300 mg every 4 weeks after a 36-week maintenance phase. Patients who used rescue medication, including topical corticosteroids, were considered to be nonresponders.

Dr. Blauvelt reported results from 1,596 adult patients with a mean age of 38 years who were randomized to tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks or placebo in the initial treatment period. At baseline, the mean duration of AD was 28.2 years, 50% had severe disease based on their IGA score, and their mean Dermatology Life Quality Index score was 17.



Of these patients, 412 achieved an IGA score of 0 or 1 and/or an EASI 75 at week 16 with tralokinumab every 2 weeks and were rerandomized (2:2:1) to continue tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks, tralokinumab 300 mg every 4 weeks, or placebo for 36 weeks.

The researchers found that 56%-57% of patients in the tralokinumab every 2-week dosing group maintained their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 response at week 52, compared with 42%-50% of those who received the drug every 4 weeks. “So, there may be a population of patients who require drug every 4 weeks after initially receiving the drug every 2 weeks for the first 16 weeks,” said Dr. Blauvelt, a dermatologist who is president of Oregon Medical Research Center, Portland. “Interestingly, 26%-34% of patients on placebo maintained their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 response a response to week 52. Perhaps those are patients who have more mild disease or more episodic disease when they started this trial.”

He also noted that time to relapse based on their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 was prolonged with tralokinumab treatment, compared with placebo, and adverse event frequency was similar among all treatment groups (73% among those who received tralokinumab every 2 weeks, 66% among those who received tralokinumab every 4 weeks, and 70% in the placebo group).

Dr. Blauvelt concluded that a step-down in tralokinumab dosing to every 4 weeks may be an option for some patients achieving clear or almost clear skin after an initial dosing schedule of every 2 weeks.

LEO Pharma, which is developing tralokinumab, sponsored the analysis. Dr. Blauvelt reported that he is an investigator and a scientific adviser for LEO Pharma and for several other pharmaceutical companies developing treatments for AD.

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A large proportion of initial Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) 0/1 or Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) 75 responders at week 16 maintained response with continued tralokinumab dosing every 2 weeks or every 4 weeks during a 36-week maintenance period without the use of rescue medication including topical corticosteroids, results from a pooled analysis of two trials found.

“The interesting thing here is that there weren’t major differences in the maintenance dosing, which really allows us some flexibility with maintenance dosing for this particular drug,” lead study investigator Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Administered subcutaneously, tralokinumab is a fully human IgG4 monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to interleukin-13, a key driver of underlying inflammation in AD. In two of the drug’s pivotal phase 3 trials, ECZTRA 1 and ECZTRA 2, tralokinumab monotherapy was superior to placebo at week 16 for all primary and secondary endpoints.

The purpose of the current trial was to investigate the maintenance of efficacy after 16 weeks of tralokinumab in those who were initial responders and to assess the efficacy of reduced dosing frequency from 300 mg every 2 weeks to 300 mg every 4 weeks after a 36-week maintenance phase. Patients who used rescue medication, including topical corticosteroids, were considered to be nonresponders.

Dr. Blauvelt reported results from 1,596 adult patients with a mean age of 38 years who were randomized to tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks or placebo in the initial treatment period. At baseline, the mean duration of AD was 28.2 years, 50% had severe disease based on their IGA score, and their mean Dermatology Life Quality Index score was 17.



Of these patients, 412 achieved an IGA score of 0 or 1 and/or an EASI 75 at week 16 with tralokinumab every 2 weeks and were rerandomized (2:2:1) to continue tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks, tralokinumab 300 mg every 4 weeks, or placebo for 36 weeks.

The researchers found that 56%-57% of patients in the tralokinumab every 2-week dosing group maintained their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 response at week 52, compared with 42%-50% of those who received the drug every 4 weeks. “So, there may be a population of patients who require drug every 4 weeks after initially receiving the drug every 2 weeks for the first 16 weeks,” said Dr. Blauvelt, a dermatologist who is president of Oregon Medical Research Center, Portland. “Interestingly, 26%-34% of patients on placebo maintained their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 response a response to week 52. Perhaps those are patients who have more mild disease or more episodic disease when they started this trial.”

He also noted that time to relapse based on their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 was prolonged with tralokinumab treatment, compared with placebo, and adverse event frequency was similar among all treatment groups (73% among those who received tralokinumab every 2 weeks, 66% among those who received tralokinumab every 4 weeks, and 70% in the placebo group).

Dr. Blauvelt concluded that a step-down in tralokinumab dosing to every 4 weeks may be an option for some patients achieving clear or almost clear skin after an initial dosing schedule of every 2 weeks.

LEO Pharma, which is developing tralokinumab, sponsored the analysis. Dr. Blauvelt reported that he is an investigator and a scientific adviser for LEO Pharma and for several other pharmaceutical companies developing treatments for AD.

 

A large proportion of initial Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) 0/1 or Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) 75 responders at week 16 maintained response with continued tralokinumab dosing every 2 weeks or every 4 weeks during a 36-week maintenance period without the use of rescue medication including topical corticosteroids, results from a pooled analysis of two trials found.

“The interesting thing here is that there weren’t major differences in the maintenance dosing, which really allows us some flexibility with maintenance dosing for this particular drug,” lead study investigator Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Administered subcutaneously, tralokinumab is a fully human IgG4 monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to interleukin-13, a key driver of underlying inflammation in AD. In two of the drug’s pivotal phase 3 trials, ECZTRA 1 and ECZTRA 2, tralokinumab monotherapy was superior to placebo at week 16 for all primary and secondary endpoints.

The purpose of the current trial was to investigate the maintenance of efficacy after 16 weeks of tralokinumab in those who were initial responders and to assess the efficacy of reduced dosing frequency from 300 mg every 2 weeks to 300 mg every 4 weeks after a 36-week maintenance phase. Patients who used rescue medication, including topical corticosteroids, were considered to be nonresponders.

Dr. Blauvelt reported results from 1,596 adult patients with a mean age of 38 years who were randomized to tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks or placebo in the initial treatment period. At baseline, the mean duration of AD was 28.2 years, 50% had severe disease based on their IGA score, and their mean Dermatology Life Quality Index score was 17.



Of these patients, 412 achieved an IGA score of 0 or 1 and/or an EASI 75 at week 16 with tralokinumab every 2 weeks and were rerandomized (2:2:1) to continue tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks, tralokinumab 300 mg every 4 weeks, or placebo for 36 weeks.

The researchers found that 56%-57% of patients in the tralokinumab every 2-week dosing group maintained their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 response at week 52, compared with 42%-50% of those who received the drug every 4 weeks. “So, there may be a population of patients who require drug every 4 weeks after initially receiving the drug every 2 weeks for the first 16 weeks,” said Dr. Blauvelt, a dermatologist who is president of Oregon Medical Research Center, Portland. “Interestingly, 26%-34% of patients on placebo maintained their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 response a response to week 52. Perhaps those are patients who have more mild disease or more episodic disease when they started this trial.”

He also noted that time to relapse based on their IGA 0/1 and EASI 75 was prolonged with tralokinumab treatment, compared with placebo, and adverse event frequency was similar among all treatment groups (73% among those who received tralokinumab every 2 weeks, 66% among those who received tralokinumab every 4 weeks, and 70% in the placebo group).

Dr. Blauvelt concluded that a step-down in tralokinumab dosing to every 4 weeks may be an option for some patients achieving clear or almost clear skin after an initial dosing schedule of every 2 weeks.

LEO Pharma, which is developing tralokinumab, sponsored the analysis. Dr. Blauvelt reported that he is an investigator and a scientific adviser for LEO Pharma and for several other pharmaceutical companies developing treatments for AD.

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1 in 15 patients who start dupilumab may develop conjunctivitis, large analysis finds

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Fri, 06/18/2021 - 16:13

 

One in 15 patients who start dupilumab treatment may develop conjunctivitis during the first 6 months, most of which is manageable with ophthalmic treatments, results from large study of U.S. claims data showed.

“About 4 years after dupilumab’s approval, we’re interested in how conjunctivitis has played out in our daily clinical practice,” lead study investigator Maria C. Schneeweiss, MD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Drawing from two nationwide U.S. databases, MarketScan and Optum, Dr. Schneeweiss, of the department of dermatology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, and colleagues sought to characterize the incidence of bacterial and nonbacterial conjunctivitis among 6,730 patients with AD who started treatment with either dupilumab, methotrexate, mycophenolate, or cyclosporine between March 2017 and January 2020. They also wanted to identify patient subgroups at increased or decreased risk of dupilumab-related conjunctivitis in clinical practice.

Of the 6,730 patients, 3,755 started treatment with dupilumab, while 2,010 started with methotrexate, 536 started with mycophenolate, and 429 started with cyclosporine. Using a new-user, active-comparator study design, the researchers identified patients with AD from both databases and selected three dupilumab cohorts: dupilumab versus methotrexate (MTX), dupilumab versus mycophenolate (MMF), and dupilumab versus cyclosporine (CsA). Follow-up lasted 6 months and 1:1 propensity score matching was used to account for conjunctivitis risk factor differences. Patients with a history of conjunctivitis were excluded from the study, except one subgroup limited to those with prior conjunctivitis.

Dr. Schneeweiss reported that the overall incidence rate of conjunctivitis within 6 months of treatment initiation was 6.6% in dupilumab users, or 1 in 15 patients, compared with 3.3% in MTX users, 4.2% in MMF users, and 2.8% in CsA users. The incidence rates for the different types of conjunctivitis were as follows:

  • Bacterial conjunctivitis: 1.5% in dupilumab users versus 0.95% in MTX, 0.4% in MMF, and 0.7% in CsA users.
  • Allergic conjunctivitis: 2.2% in dupilumab users versus 0.8% in MTX, 0.2% in MMF, and 1.6% in CsA users.
  • Keratoconjunctivitis: 0.8% in dupilumab users versus 1.1% in MTX, 1.5% in MMF, and 0.5% in CsA users.

In addition, the rate of conjunctivitis requiring ophthalmic medication was 2.6% in dupilumab users versus 0.7% in MTX, 1% in MMF, and 0.5% in CsA users.



After the researchers applied 1:1 propensity score matching, they observed that the risk of conjunctivitis within 6 months of starting treatment was increased in dupilumab users versus MTX users (relative risk, 2.12), dupilumab versus MMF users (RR, 2.43), and dupilumab versus CsA users (RR, 1.83). Among dupilumab users, the risk of conjunctivitis requiring ophthalmic medication was increased six to eightfold, compared with those who used MTX, MMF or CsA. In addition, bacterial conjunctivitis was increased 1.6- to 4.0-fold, compared with those who used MTX, MMF or CsA, but the confidence intervals were wide and included the null, while allergic conjunctivitis was increased 2.7- to 7-fold when compared with those who used MTX and MMF.

In other findings, the risk of allergic conjunctivitis was similar between dupilumab and CsA users (RR, 1.14), and there was no increased risk of keratoconjunctivitis in dupilumab users, compared with those who used MTX, MMF, or CsA. The relative risk of conjunctivitis in those who used dupilumab was further increased when the analysis was limited to AD patients with comorbid asthma (RR, 2.86), those who used systemic glucocorticoids fewer than 30 days prior (RR, 2.88), and those age 65 and older (RR, 2.57), compared with those who used methotrexate.

“Compared to AD patients who received treatment with other systemic agents, dupilumab treatment doubled the risk of conjunctivitis in clinical practice,” Dr. Schneeweiss concluded. “Risk factors that further increase the risk include comorbid asthma, use of systemic corticosteroids, and older age. It should be noted that conjunctivitis does not require treatment discontinuation and is manageable with ophthalmic medications.”

Lawrence J. Green, MD, clinical professor of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, who was asked to comment on the study, said that the work “verifies what we see clinically: that conjunctivitis is increased among dupilumab users even when it is compared to immunosuppressive agents used to treat other conditions. Because the study is retrospective, one cannot assume all diagnosis of types of conjunctivitis or even of skin disease is entirely accurate. But, with the large numbers of claims looked at and compared, one would think its conclusions are accurate.”

Dr. Schneeweiss reported having no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Green disclosed that he is a speaker, consultant, or investigator for Amgen, AbbVie, Arcutis, Brickell, Candescent, Cassiopeia, Dermavant, Galderma, Janssen, Forte, Incyte, MC-2, Lilly, Novartis, Novan, Ortho Dermatologics, Revance, Sun Pharma, UCB, and Vyne.

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One in 15 patients who start dupilumab treatment may develop conjunctivitis during the first 6 months, most of which is manageable with ophthalmic treatments, results from large study of U.S. claims data showed.

“About 4 years after dupilumab’s approval, we’re interested in how conjunctivitis has played out in our daily clinical practice,” lead study investigator Maria C. Schneeweiss, MD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Drawing from two nationwide U.S. databases, MarketScan and Optum, Dr. Schneeweiss, of the department of dermatology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, and colleagues sought to characterize the incidence of bacterial and nonbacterial conjunctivitis among 6,730 patients with AD who started treatment with either dupilumab, methotrexate, mycophenolate, or cyclosporine between March 2017 and January 2020. They also wanted to identify patient subgroups at increased or decreased risk of dupilumab-related conjunctivitis in clinical practice.

Of the 6,730 patients, 3,755 started treatment with dupilumab, while 2,010 started with methotrexate, 536 started with mycophenolate, and 429 started with cyclosporine. Using a new-user, active-comparator study design, the researchers identified patients with AD from both databases and selected three dupilumab cohorts: dupilumab versus methotrexate (MTX), dupilumab versus mycophenolate (MMF), and dupilumab versus cyclosporine (CsA). Follow-up lasted 6 months and 1:1 propensity score matching was used to account for conjunctivitis risk factor differences. Patients with a history of conjunctivitis were excluded from the study, except one subgroup limited to those with prior conjunctivitis.

Dr. Schneeweiss reported that the overall incidence rate of conjunctivitis within 6 months of treatment initiation was 6.6% in dupilumab users, or 1 in 15 patients, compared with 3.3% in MTX users, 4.2% in MMF users, and 2.8% in CsA users. The incidence rates for the different types of conjunctivitis were as follows:

  • Bacterial conjunctivitis: 1.5% in dupilumab users versus 0.95% in MTX, 0.4% in MMF, and 0.7% in CsA users.
  • Allergic conjunctivitis: 2.2% in dupilumab users versus 0.8% in MTX, 0.2% in MMF, and 1.6% in CsA users.
  • Keratoconjunctivitis: 0.8% in dupilumab users versus 1.1% in MTX, 1.5% in MMF, and 0.5% in CsA users.

In addition, the rate of conjunctivitis requiring ophthalmic medication was 2.6% in dupilumab users versus 0.7% in MTX, 1% in MMF, and 0.5% in CsA users.



After the researchers applied 1:1 propensity score matching, they observed that the risk of conjunctivitis within 6 months of starting treatment was increased in dupilumab users versus MTX users (relative risk, 2.12), dupilumab versus MMF users (RR, 2.43), and dupilumab versus CsA users (RR, 1.83). Among dupilumab users, the risk of conjunctivitis requiring ophthalmic medication was increased six to eightfold, compared with those who used MTX, MMF or CsA. In addition, bacterial conjunctivitis was increased 1.6- to 4.0-fold, compared with those who used MTX, MMF or CsA, but the confidence intervals were wide and included the null, while allergic conjunctivitis was increased 2.7- to 7-fold when compared with those who used MTX and MMF.

In other findings, the risk of allergic conjunctivitis was similar between dupilumab and CsA users (RR, 1.14), and there was no increased risk of keratoconjunctivitis in dupilumab users, compared with those who used MTX, MMF, or CsA. The relative risk of conjunctivitis in those who used dupilumab was further increased when the analysis was limited to AD patients with comorbid asthma (RR, 2.86), those who used systemic glucocorticoids fewer than 30 days prior (RR, 2.88), and those age 65 and older (RR, 2.57), compared with those who used methotrexate.

“Compared to AD patients who received treatment with other systemic agents, dupilumab treatment doubled the risk of conjunctivitis in clinical practice,” Dr. Schneeweiss concluded. “Risk factors that further increase the risk include comorbid asthma, use of systemic corticosteroids, and older age. It should be noted that conjunctivitis does not require treatment discontinuation and is manageable with ophthalmic medications.”

Lawrence J. Green, MD, clinical professor of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, who was asked to comment on the study, said that the work “verifies what we see clinically: that conjunctivitis is increased among dupilumab users even when it is compared to immunosuppressive agents used to treat other conditions. Because the study is retrospective, one cannot assume all diagnosis of types of conjunctivitis or even of skin disease is entirely accurate. But, with the large numbers of claims looked at and compared, one would think its conclusions are accurate.”

Dr. Schneeweiss reported having no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Green disclosed that he is a speaker, consultant, or investigator for Amgen, AbbVie, Arcutis, Brickell, Candescent, Cassiopeia, Dermavant, Galderma, Janssen, Forte, Incyte, MC-2, Lilly, Novartis, Novan, Ortho Dermatologics, Revance, Sun Pharma, UCB, and Vyne.

 

One in 15 patients who start dupilumab treatment may develop conjunctivitis during the first 6 months, most of which is manageable with ophthalmic treatments, results from large study of U.S. claims data showed.

“About 4 years after dupilumab’s approval, we’re interested in how conjunctivitis has played out in our daily clinical practice,” lead study investigator Maria C. Schneeweiss, MD, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium.

Drawing from two nationwide U.S. databases, MarketScan and Optum, Dr. Schneeweiss, of the department of dermatology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, and colleagues sought to characterize the incidence of bacterial and nonbacterial conjunctivitis among 6,730 patients with AD who started treatment with either dupilumab, methotrexate, mycophenolate, or cyclosporine between March 2017 and January 2020. They also wanted to identify patient subgroups at increased or decreased risk of dupilumab-related conjunctivitis in clinical practice.

Of the 6,730 patients, 3,755 started treatment with dupilumab, while 2,010 started with methotrexate, 536 started with mycophenolate, and 429 started with cyclosporine. Using a new-user, active-comparator study design, the researchers identified patients with AD from both databases and selected three dupilumab cohorts: dupilumab versus methotrexate (MTX), dupilumab versus mycophenolate (MMF), and dupilumab versus cyclosporine (CsA). Follow-up lasted 6 months and 1:1 propensity score matching was used to account for conjunctivitis risk factor differences. Patients with a history of conjunctivitis were excluded from the study, except one subgroup limited to those with prior conjunctivitis.

Dr. Schneeweiss reported that the overall incidence rate of conjunctivitis within 6 months of treatment initiation was 6.6% in dupilumab users, or 1 in 15 patients, compared with 3.3% in MTX users, 4.2% in MMF users, and 2.8% in CsA users. The incidence rates for the different types of conjunctivitis were as follows:

  • Bacterial conjunctivitis: 1.5% in dupilumab users versus 0.95% in MTX, 0.4% in MMF, and 0.7% in CsA users.
  • Allergic conjunctivitis: 2.2% in dupilumab users versus 0.8% in MTX, 0.2% in MMF, and 1.6% in CsA users.
  • Keratoconjunctivitis: 0.8% in dupilumab users versus 1.1% in MTX, 1.5% in MMF, and 0.5% in CsA users.

In addition, the rate of conjunctivitis requiring ophthalmic medication was 2.6% in dupilumab users versus 0.7% in MTX, 1% in MMF, and 0.5% in CsA users.



After the researchers applied 1:1 propensity score matching, they observed that the risk of conjunctivitis within 6 months of starting treatment was increased in dupilumab users versus MTX users (relative risk, 2.12), dupilumab versus MMF users (RR, 2.43), and dupilumab versus CsA users (RR, 1.83). Among dupilumab users, the risk of conjunctivitis requiring ophthalmic medication was increased six to eightfold, compared with those who used MTX, MMF or CsA. In addition, bacterial conjunctivitis was increased 1.6- to 4.0-fold, compared with those who used MTX, MMF or CsA, but the confidence intervals were wide and included the null, while allergic conjunctivitis was increased 2.7- to 7-fold when compared with those who used MTX and MMF.

In other findings, the risk of allergic conjunctivitis was similar between dupilumab and CsA users (RR, 1.14), and there was no increased risk of keratoconjunctivitis in dupilumab users, compared with those who used MTX, MMF, or CsA. The relative risk of conjunctivitis in those who used dupilumab was further increased when the analysis was limited to AD patients with comorbid asthma (RR, 2.86), those who used systemic glucocorticoids fewer than 30 days prior (RR, 2.88), and those age 65 and older (RR, 2.57), compared with those who used methotrexate.

“Compared to AD patients who received treatment with other systemic agents, dupilumab treatment doubled the risk of conjunctivitis in clinical practice,” Dr. Schneeweiss concluded. “Risk factors that further increase the risk include comorbid asthma, use of systemic corticosteroids, and older age. It should be noted that conjunctivitis does not require treatment discontinuation and is manageable with ophthalmic medications.”

Lawrence J. Green, MD, clinical professor of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, who was asked to comment on the study, said that the work “verifies what we see clinically: that conjunctivitis is increased among dupilumab users even when it is compared to immunosuppressive agents used to treat other conditions. Because the study is retrospective, one cannot assume all diagnosis of types of conjunctivitis or even of skin disease is entirely accurate. But, with the large numbers of claims looked at and compared, one would think its conclusions are accurate.”

Dr. Schneeweiss reported having no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Green disclosed that he is a speaker, consultant, or investigator for Amgen, AbbVie, Arcutis, Brickell, Candescent, Cassiopeia, Dermavant, Galderma, Janssen, Forte, Incyte, MC-2, Lilly, Novartis, Novan, Ortho Dermatologics, Revance, Sun Pharma, UCB, and Vyne.

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Trial offers first look at how tralokinumab-treated patients weather COVID-19

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Thu, 09/09/2021 - 16:19

Among the 51 patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD) who developed COVID-19 while participating in an open-label clinical trial of tralokinumab, 96% of cases were mild or moderate and all patients continued tralokinumab treatment following their diagnosis.

Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA

“This is a great first look at COVID-19 outcomes in this population,” lead study investigator Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium. “This suggests that tralokinumab does not significantly impact the ability to respond to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. It’s encouraging and promising.”

Tralokinumab is a fully human IgG4 monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to interleukin-13, which is a key driver of underlying inflammation in AD. An ongoing, open-label extension trial called ECZTEND is investigating the long-term safety and efficacy of tralokinumab in patients with AD who participated in previous tralokinumab trials. The purpose of the current case series is to describe the outcomes of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 while participating in ECZTEND, which is a 5-year study.

“Patients are receiving tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks,” said Dr. Blauvelt, a dermatologist who is president of Oregon Medical Research Center, Portland. “They’re allowed to use topical steroids, but they’re not allowed to use other AD treatments. We do regular clinical and safety assessments throughout the study.”

As of Feb. 26, 2021, there were 51 adults with moderate to severe AD who had confirmed COVID-19 infection during treatment with tralokinumab every 2 weeks. “Patients were not required to discontinue tralokinumab treatment following a COVID-19 diagnosis, if continuation was deemed appropriate by the investigator,” Dr. Blauvelt said. Of the 51 patients, 22 were male, 29 were female, their mean age was 38 years, and their baseline body mass index was 27.6 kg/m2. Most of the patients (36, or 71%) were from Europe, 15 (29%) were from North America, and 30 (59%) had a history of asthma.

The average duration of COVID-19 infection was 15 days and severity of disease was mild in 35 patients (69%), moderate in 14 (27%), and severe in 2 (4%). According to the study abstract, those two patients had multiple risk factors and comorbidities, including obesity, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and cardiovascular disease. They were hospitalized for a mean of 7 days, but subsequently recovered – one with sequelae. None of the patients died.



Of the 51 COVID-19 cases, 2 were deemed to be possibly related to tralokinumab treatment by the investigator, Dr. Blauvelt said. Both were mild or moderate cases that occurred in patients younger than age 30. “Interestingly, 75% of the COVID-19 patients had no dose interruption; they continued dosing their tralokinumab every 2 weeks during and around the time they had COVID-19,” he said. “However, 25% of patients did interrupt their dosing during COVID-19 infection. That means that they either delayed or stopped dosing while they were sick.”

Of the 51 patients, 19 (37%) had received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and 6 (12%) had received their second dose. “So, 12% of patients were fully vaccinated,” Dr. Blauvelt said. “We do know that the mRNA vaccines are about 95% effective in preventing COVID-19. Currently in Oregon, about 98% of our cases are in unvaccinated patients and about 2% of COVID-19 patients are fully vaccinated.”

In addition, the recently published ECZTRA5 vaccine study showed that nonlive vaccines (tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis; and meningococcal vaccines) could be safely administered and can elicit normal immune responses in patients treated with tralokinumab.

“We sorely need COVID-19–related safety data for all of our current and emerging systemic and biologic therapies used to treat atopic dermatitis,” said Jonathan I. Silverberg, MD, PhD, MPH, director of clinical research in the division of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, who was asked to comment about these results. “This study is important because it shows that tralokinumab was not associated with any obvious safety signals with respect to COVID-19 infections. The major limitation is that it is not a prospective study designed to assess tralokinumab efficacy in COVID-19 patients per se. However, this post hoc study provides reassuring data. We need similar or even more robust studies for other systemic therapies in AD.”

Dr. Blauvelt reported that he is an investigator and a scientific advisor for LEO Pharma, which is developing tralokinumab, and for several other pharmaceutical companies developing treatments for AD. Dr. Silverberg reported that he is a consultant to and/or an advisory board member for several pharmaceutical companies, including LEO Pharma.

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Among the 51 patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD) who developed COVID-19 while participating in an open-label clinical trial of tralokinumab, 96% of cases were mild or moderate and all patients continued tralokinumab treatment following their diagnosis.

Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA

“This is a great first look at COVID-19 outcomes in this population,” lead study investigator Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium. “This suggests that tralokinumab does not significantly impact the ability to respond to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. It’s encouraging and promising.”

Tralokinumab is a fully human IgG4 monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to interleukin-13, which is a key driver of underlying inflammation in AD. An ongoing, open-label extension trial called ECZTEND is investigating the long-term safety and efficacy of tralokinumab in patients with AD who participated in previous tralokinumab trials. The purpose of the current case series is to describe the outcomes of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 while participating in ECZTEND, which is a 5-year study.

“Patients are receiving tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks,” said Dr. Blauvelt, a dermatologist who is president of Oregon Medical Research Center, Portland. “They’re allowed to use topical steroids, but they’re not allowed to use other AD treatments. We do regular clinical and safety assessments throughout the study.”

As of Feb. 26, 2021, there were 51 adults with moderate to severe AD who had confirmed COVID-19 infection during treatment with tralokinumab every 2 weeks. “Patients were not required to discontinue tralokinumab treatment following a COVID-19 diagnosis, if continuation was deemed appropriate by the investigator,” Dr. Blauvelt said. Of the 51 patients, 22 were male, 29 were female, their mean age was 38 years, and their baseline body mass index was 27.6 kg/m2. Most of the patients (36, or 71%) were from Europe, 15 (29%) were from North America, and 30 (59%) had a history of asthma.

The average duration of COVID-19 infection was 15 days and severity of disease was mild in 35 patients (69%), moderate in 14 (27%), and severe in 2 (4%). According to the study abstract, those two patients had multiple risk factors and comorbidities, including obesity, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and cardiovascular disease. They were hospitalized for a mean of 7 days, but subsequently recovered – one with sequelae. None of the patients died.



Of the 51 COVID-19 cases, 2 were deemed to be possibly related to tralokinumab treatment by the investigator, Dr. Blauvelt said. Both were mild or moderate cases that occurred in patients younger than age 30. “Interestingly, 75% of the COVID-19 patients had no dose interruption; they continued dosing their tralokinumab every 2 weeks during and around the time they had COVID-19,” he said. “However, 25% of patients did interrupt their dosing during COVID-19 infection. That means that they either delayed or stopped dosing while they were sick.”

Of the 51 patients, 19 (37%) had received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and 6 (12%) had received their second dose. “So, 12% of patients were fully vaccinated,” Dr. Blauvelt said. “We do know that the mRNA vaccines are about 95% effective in preventing COVID-19. Currently in Oregon, about 98% of our cases are in unvaccinated patients and about 2% of COVID-19 patients are fully vaccinated.”

In addition, the recently published ECZTRA5 vaccine study showed that nonlive vaccines (tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis; and meningococcal vaccines) could be safely administered and can elicit normal immune responses in patients treated with tralokinumab.

“We sorely need COVID-19–related safety data for all of our current and emerging systemic and biologic therapies used to treat atopic dermatitis,” said Jonathan I. Silverberg, MD, PhD, MPH, director of clinical research in the division of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, who was asked to comment about these results. “This study is important because it shows that tralokinumab was not associated with any obvious safety signals with respect to COVID-19 infections. The major limitation is that it is not a prospective study designed to assess tralokinumab efficacy in COVID-19 patients per se. However, this post hoc study provides reassuring data. We need similar or even more robust studies for other systemic therapies in AD.”

Dr. Blauvelt reported that he is an investigator and a scientific advisor for LEO Pharma, which is developing tralokinumab, and for several other pharmaceutical companies developing treatments for AD. Dr. Silverberg reported that he is a consultant to and/or an advisory board member for several pharmaceutical companies, including LEO Pharma.

Among the 51 patients with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD) who developed COVID-19 while participating in an open-label clinical trial of tralokinumab, 96% of cases were mild or moderate and all patients continued tralokinumab treatment following their diagnosis.

Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA

“This is a great first look at COVID-19 outcomes in this population,” lead study investigator Andrew Blauvelt, MD, MBA, said during the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis symposium. “This suggests that tralokinumab does not significantly impact the ability to respond to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. It’s encouraging and promising.”

Tralokinumab is a fully human IgG4 monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to interleukin-13, which is a key driver of underlying inflammation in AD. An ongoing, open-label extension trial called ECZTEND is investigating the long-term safety and efficacy of tralokinumab in patients with AD who participated in previous tralokinumab trials. The purpose of the current case series is to describe the outcomes of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 while participating in ECZTEND, which is a 5-year study.

“Patients are receiving tralokinumab 300 mg every 2 weeks,” said Dr. Blauvelt, a dermatologist who is president of Oregon Medical Research Center, Portland. “They’re allowed to use topical steroids, but they’re not allowed to use other AD treatments. We do regular clinical and safety assessments throughout the study.”

As of Feb. 26, 2021, there were 51 adults with moderate to severe AD who had confirmed COVID-19 infection during treatment with tralokinumab every 2 weeks. “Patients were not required to discontinue tralokinumab treatment following a COVID-19 diagnosis, if continuation was deemed appropriate by the investigator,” Dr. Blauvelt said. Of the 51 patients, 22 were male, 29 were female, their mean age was 38 years, and their baseline body mass index was 27.6 kg/m2. Most of the patients (36, or 71%) were from Europe, 15 (29%) were from North America, and 30 (59%) had a history of asthma.

The average duration of COVID-19 infection was 15 days and severity of disease was mild in 35 patients (69%), moderate in 14 (27%), and severe in 2 (4%). According to the study abstract, those two patients had multiple risk factors and comorbidities, including obesity, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and cardiovascular disease. They were hospitalized for a mean of 7 days, but subsequently recovered – one with sequelae. None of the patients died.



Of the 51 COVID-19 cases, 2 were deemed to be possibly related to tralokinumab treatment by the investigator, Dr. Blauvelt said. Both were mild or moderate cases that occurred in patients younger than age 30. “Interestingly, 75% of the COVID-19 patients had no dose interruption; they continued dosing their tralokinumab every 2 weeks during and around the time they had COVID-19,” he said. “However, 25% of patients did interrupt their dosing during COVID-19 infection. That means that they either delayed or stopped dosing while they were sick.”

Of the 51 patients, 19 (37%) had received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and 6 (12%) had received their second dose. “So, 12% of patients were fully vaccinated,” Dr. Blauvelt said. “We do know that the mRNA vaccines are about 95% effective in preventing COVID-19. Currently in Oregon, about 98% of our cases are in unvaccinated patients and about 2% of COVID-19 patients are fully vaccinated.”

In addition, the recently published ECZTRA5 vaccine study showed that nonlive vaccines (tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis; and meningococcal vaccines) could be safely administered and can elicit normal immune responses in patients treated with tralokinumab.

“We sorely need COVID-19–related safety data for all of our current and emerging systemic and biologic therapies used to treat atopic dermatitis,” said Jonathan I. Silverberg, MD, PhD, MPH, director of clinical research in the division of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, who was asked to comment about these results. “This study is important because it shows that tralokinumab was not associated with any obvious safety signals with respect to COVID-19 infections. The major limitation is that it is not a prospective study designed to assess tralokinumab efficacy in COVID-19 patients per se. However, this post hoc study provides reassuring data. We need similar or even more robust studies for other systemic therapies in AD.”

Dr. Blauvelt reported that he is an investigator and a scientific advisor for LEO Pharma, which is developing tralokinumab, and for several other pharmaceutical companies developing treatments for AD. Dr. Silverberg reported that he is a consultant to and/or an advisory board member for several pharmaceutical companies, including LEO Pharma.

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Photobiomodulation: Evaluation in a wide range of medical specialties underway

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Thu, 06/17/2021 - 14:27

 

Advances in photobiomodulation have propelled the use of therapeutic applications in a variety of medical specialties, according to Juanita J. Anders, PhD.

Dr. Juanita Anders

During the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery, Dr. Anders, professor of anatomy, physiology, and genetics at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md., defined photobiomodulation (PBM) as the mechanism by which nonionizing optical radiation in the visible and near-infrared spectral range is absorbed by endogenous chromophores to elicit photophysical and photochemical events at various biological scales. Photobiomodulation therapy (PBMT) involves the use of light sources including lasers, LEDs, and broadband light, that emit visible and/or near-infrared light to cause physiological changes in cells and tissues and result in therapeutic benefits.

In dermatology, LED light therapy devices are commonly used for PBMT in wavelengths that range from blue (415 nm) and red (633 nm) to near infrared (830 nm). “Often, when PBMT is referred to by dermatologists it’s called LED therapy or LED light therapy,” Dr. Anders noted. “Some people are under the impression that this is different from PBMT. But remember: It’s not the device that’s producing the photons that is clinically relevant, but it’s the photons themselves. In both cases, the same radiances and fluence ranges are being used and the mechanisms are the same, so it’s all PBMT.”

The therapy is used to treat a wide variety of medical and aesthetic disorders including acne vulgaris, psoriasis, burns, and wound healing. It has also been used in conjunction with surgical aesthetic and resurfacing procedures and has been reported to reduce erythema, edema, bruising, and days to healing. It’s been shown that PBMT stimulates fibroblast proliferation, collagen synthesis, and extracellular matrix resulting in lifting and tightening lax skin.

According to Dr. Anders, French dermatologists Linda Fouque, MD, and Michele Pelletier, MD, performed a series of in vivo and in vitro studies in which they tested the effects of yellow and red light for skin rejuvenation when used individually or in combination. “They found that fibroblasts and keratinocytes in vitro had great improvement in their morphology both with the yellow and red light, but the best improvement was seen with combination therapy,” Dr. Anders said. “This held true in their work looking at epidermal and dermal markers in the skin, where they found the best up-regulation in protein synthesis of such markers as collagens and fibronectin were produced when a combination wavelength light was used.”

Oral mucositis and pain

PBMT is also being used to treat oral mucositis (OM), a common adverse response to chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy, which causes pain, difficulty in swallowing and eating, and oral ulceration, and often interrupts the course of treatments. Authors of a recently published review on the risks and benefits of PBMT concluded that there is consistent evidence from a small number of high-quality studies that PBMT can help prevent the development of cancer therapy–induced OM, reduce pain intensity, as well as promote healing, and enhance patient quality of life.

“They also cautioned that, due to the limited long-term follow-up of patients, there is still concern for the potential long-term risks of PBMT in cancer cell mutation and amplification,” Dr. Anders said. “They advised that PBMT should be used carefully when the irradiation beam is in the direction of the tumor zone.”

Using PBMT for modulation of pain is another area of active research. Based on work from the laboratory of Dr. Anders and others, there are two methods to modulate pain. The first is to target tissue at irradiances below 100 mW/cm2.

“In my laboratory, based on in vivo preclinical animal models of neuropathic pain, we used a 980-nm wavelength laser at 43.25 mW/cm2 transcutaneously delivered to the level of the nerve for 20 seconds,” said Dr. Anders, who is a past president of the ASLMS. “Essentially, we found that the pain was modulated by reducing sensitivity to mechanical stimulation and also by causing an anti-inflammatory shift in microglial and macrophage phenotype in the dorsal root ganglion and spinal cord of affected segments.”

The second way to modulate pain, she continued, is to target tissue at irradiances above 250 mW/cm2. She and her colleagues have conducted in vitro and in vivo studies, which indicate that treatment with an irradiance/fluence rate at 270 mW/cm2 or higher at the nerve can rapidly block pain transmission.

“In vitro, we found that if we used an 810-nm wavelength light at 300 mW/cm2, we got a disruption of microtubules in the DRG neurons in culture, specifically the small neurons, the nociceptive fibers, but we did not affect the proprioceptive fibers unless we increased the length of the treatment,” she said. “We essentially found the same thing in vivo in a rodent model of neuropathic pain.”

In a pilot study, Dr. Anders and coauthors examined the efficacy of laser irradiation of the dorsal root ganglion of the second lumbar spinal nerve for patients with chronic back pain.

They found that PBMT effectively reduced back pain equal to the effects of lidocaine.

Based on these two irradiation approaches of targeting tissue, Dr. Anders recommends that a combination therapy be used to modulate neuropathic pain going forward. “This approach would involve the initial use of a high-irradiance treatment [at least 250 mW/cm2] at the nerve to block the pain transmission,” she said. “That treatment would be followed by a series of low-irradiance treatments [10-100 mW/cm2] along the course of the involved nerve to alter chronic pathology and inflammation.”
 

Potential applications in neurology

Dr. Anders also discussed research efforts under way involving transcranial PBMT: the delivery of near-infrared light through the tissues of the scalp and skull to targeted brain regions to treat neurologic injuries and disorders. “There have been some exciting results in preclinical animal work and in small clinical pilot work that show that there could be possible beneficial effects in Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, depression, and improvement in cognition and memory after a brain injury, such as a TBI,” she said.

“Initially, though, there were a lot of questions about whether you could really deliver light to the brain through the scalp. In my laboratory, we used slices of nonfixed brain and found that the sulci within the human brain act as light-wave guides. We used an 808-nm near-infrared wavelength of light, so that the light could penetrate more deeply.” Using nonfixed cadaver heads, where the light was applied at the scalp surface, Dr. Anders and colleagues were able to measure photons down to the depth of 4 cm. “It’s generally agreed now, though, that it’s to a maximum depth of 2.5-3 cm that enough photons are delivered that would cause a beneficial therapeutic effect,” she said.

Dr. Anders disclosed that she has received equipment from LiteCure, grant funding from the Department of Defense, and that she holds advisory board roles with LiteCure and Neurothera. She has also served in leadership roles for the Optical Society and holds intellectual property rights for the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine.

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Advances in photobiomodulation have propelled the use of therapeutic applications in a variety of medical specialties, according to Juanita J. Anders, PhD.

Dr. Juanita Anders

During the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery, Dr. Anders, professor of anatomy, physiology, and genetics at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md., defined photobiomodulation (PBM) as the mechanism by which nonionizing optical radiation in the visible and near-infrared spectral range is absorbed by endogenous chromophores to elicit photophysical and photochemical events at various biological scales. Photobiomodulation therapy (PBMT) involves the use of light sources including lasers, LEDs, and broadband light, that emit visible and/or near-infrared light to cause physiological changes in cells and tissues and result in therapeutic benefits.

In dermatology, LED light therapy devices are commonly used for PBMT in wavelengths that range from blue (415 nm) and red (633 nm) to near infrared (830 nm). “Often, when PBMT is referred to by dermatologists it’s called LED therapy or LED light therapy,” Dr. Anders noted. “Some people are under the impression that this is different from PBMT. But remember: It’s not the device that’s producing the photons that is clinically relevant, but it’s the photons themselves. In both cases, the same radiances and fluence ranges are being used and the mechanisms are the same, so it’s all PBMT.”

The therapy is used to treat a wide variety of medical and aesthetic disorders including acne vulgaris, psoriasis, burns, and wound healing. It has also been used in conjunction with surgical aesthetic and resurfacing procedures and has been reported to reduce erythema, edema, bruising, and days to healing. It’s been shown that PBMT stimulates fibroblast proliferation, collagen synthesis, and extracellular matrix resulting in lifting and tightening lax skin.

According to Dr. Anders, French dermatologists Linda Fouque, MD, and Michele Pelletier, MD, performed a series of in vivo and in vitro studies in which they tested the effects of yellow and red light for skin rejuvenation when used individually or in combination. “They found that fibroblasts and keratinocytes in vitro had great improvement in their morphology both with the yellow and red light, but the best improvement was seen with combination therapy,” Dr. Anders said. “This held true in their work looking at epidermal and dermal markers in the skin, where they found the best up-regulation in protein synthesis of such markers as collagens and fibronectin were produced when a combination wavelength light was used.”

Oral mucositis and pain

PBMT is also being used to treat oral mucositis (OM), a common adverse response to chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy, which causes pain, difficulty in swallowing and eating, and oral ulceration, and often interrupts the course of treatments. Authors of a recently published review on the risks and benefits of PBMT concluded that there is consistent evidence from a small number of high-quality studies that PBMT can help prevent the development of cancer therapy–induced OM, reduce pain intensity, as well as promote healing, and enhance patient quality of life.

“They also cautioned that, due to the limited long-term follow-up of patients, there is still concern for the potential long-term risks of PBMT in cancer cell mutation and amplification,” Dr. Anders said. “They advised that PBMT should be used carefully when the irradiation beam is in the direction of the tumor zone.”

Using PBMT for modulation of pain is another area of active research. Based on work from the laboratory of Dr. Anders and others, there are two methods to modulate pain. The first is to target tissue at irradiances below 100 mW/cm2.

“In my laboratory, based on in vivo preclinical animal models of neuropathic pain, we used a 980-nm wavelength laser at 43.25 mW/cm2 transcutaneously delivered to the level of the nerve for 20 seconds,” said Dr. Anders, who is a past president of the ASLMS. “Essentially, we found that the pain was modulated by reducing sensitivity to mechanical stimulation and also by causing an anti-inflammatory shift in microglial and macrophage phenotype in the dorsal root ganglion and spinal cord of affected segments.”

The second way to modulate pain, she continued, is to target tissue at irradiances above 250 mW/cm2. She and her colleagues have conducted in vitro and in vivo studies, which indicate that treatment with an irradiance/fluence rate at 270 mW/cm2 or higher at the nerve can rapidly block pain transmission.

“In vitro, we found that if we used an 810-nm wavelength light at 300 mW/cm2, we got a disruption of microtubules in the DRG neurons in culture, specifically the small neurons, the nociceptive fibers, but we did not affect the proprioceptive fibers unless we increased the length of the treatment,” she said. “We essentially found the same thing in vivo in a rodent model of neuropathic pain.”

In a pilot study, Dr. Anders and coauthors examined the efficacy of laser irradiation of the dorsal root ganglion of the second lumbar spinal nerve for patients with chronic back pain.

They found that PBMT effectively reduced back pain equal to the effects of lidocaine.

Based on these two irradiation approaches of targeting tissue, Dr. Anders recommends that a combination therapy be used to modulate neuropathic pain going forward. “This approach would involve the initial use of a high-irradiance treatment [at least 250 mW/cm2] at the nerve to block the pain transmission,” she said. “That treatment would be followed by a series of low-irradiance treatments [10-100 mW/cm2] along the course of the involved nerve to alter chronic pathology and inflammation.”
 

Potential applications in neurology

Dr. Anders also discussed research efforts under way involving transcranial PBMT: the delivery of near-infrared light through the tissues of the scalp and skull to targeted brain regions to treat neurologic injuries and disorders. “There have been some exciting results in preclinical animal work and in small clinical pilot work that show that there could be possible beneficial effects in Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, depression, and improvement in cognition and memory after a brain injury, such as a TBI,” she said.

“Initially, though, there were a lot of questions about whether you could really deliver light to the brain through the scalp. In my laboratory, we used slices of nonfixed brain and found that the sulci within the human brain act as light-wave guides. We used an 808-nm near-infrared wavelength of light, so that the light could penetrate more deeply.” Using nonfixed cadaver heads, where the light was applied at the scalp surface, Dr. Anders and colleagues were able to measure photons down to the depth of 4 cm. “It’s generally agreed now, though, that it’s to a maximum depth of 2.5-3 cm that enough photons are delivered that would cause a beneficial therapeutic effect,” she said.

Dr. Anders disclosed that she has received equipment from LiteCure, grant funding from the Department of Defense, and that she holds advisory board roles with LiteCure and Neurothera. She has also served in leadership roles for the Optical Society and holds intellectual property rights for the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine.

 

Advances in photobiomodulation have propelled the use of therapeutic applications in a variety of medical specialties, according to Juanita J. Anders, PhD.

Dr. Juanita Anders

During the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery, Dr. Anders, professor of anatomy, physiology, and genetics at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md., defined photobiomodulation (PBM) as the mechanism by which nonionizing optical radiation in the visible and near-infrared spectral range is absorbed by endogenous chromophores to elicit photophysical and photochemical events at various biological scales. Photobiomodulation therapy (PBMT) involves the use of light sources including lasers, LEDs, and broadband light, that emit visible and/or near-infrared light to cause physiological changes in cells and tissues and result in therapeutic benefits.

In dermatology, LED light therapy devices are commonly used for PBMT in wavelengths that range from blue (415 nm) and red (633 nm) to near infrared (830 nm). “Often, when PBMT is referred to by dermatologists it’s called LED therapy or LED light therapy,” Dr. Anders noted. “Some people are under the impression that this is different from PBMT. But remember: It’s not the device that’s producing the photons that is clinically relevant, but it’s the photons themselves. In both cases, the same radiances and fluence ranges are being used and the mechanisms are the same, so it’s all PBMT.”

The therapy is used to treat a wide variety of medical and aesthetic disorders including acne vulgaris, psoriasis, burns, and wound healing. It has also been used in conjunction with surgical aesthetic and resurfacing procedures and has been reported to reduce erythema, edema, bruising, and days to healing. It’s been shown that PBMT stimulates fibroblast proliferation, collagen synthesis, and extracellular matrix resulting in lifting and tightening lax skin.

According to Dr. Anders, French dermatologists Linda Fouque, MD, and Michele Pelletier, MD, performed a series of in vivo and in vitro studies in which they tested the effects of yellow and red light for skin rejuvenation when used individually or in combination. “They found that fibroblasts and keratinocytes in vitro had great improvement in their morphology both with the yellow and red light, but the best improvement was seen with combination therapy,” Dr. Anders said. “This held true in their work looking at epidermal and dermal markers in the skin, where they found the best up-regulation in protein synthesis of such markers as collagens and fibronectin were produced when a combination wavelength light was used.”

Oral mucositis and pain

PBMT is also being used to treat oral mucositis (OM), a common adverse response to chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy, which causes pain, difficulty in swallowing and eating, and oral ulceration, and often interrupts the course of treatments. Authors of a recently published review on the risks and benefits of PBMT concluded that there is consistent evidence from a small number of high-quality studies that PBMT can help prevent the development of cancer therapy–induced OM, reduce pain intensity, as well as promote healing, and enhance patient quality of life.

“They also cautioned that, due to the limited long-term follow-up of patients, there is still concern for the potential long-term risks of PBMT in cancer cell mutation and amplification,” Dr. Anders said. “They advised that PBMT should be used carefully when the irradiation beam is in the direction of the tumor zone.”

Using PBMT for modulation of pain is another area of active research. Based on work from the laboratory of Dr. Anders and others, there are two methods to modulate pain. The first is to target tissue at irradiances below 100 mW/cm2.

“In my laboratory, based on in vivo preclinical animal models of neuropathic pain, we used a 980-nm wavelength laser at 43.25 mW/cm2 transcutaneously delivered to the level of the nerve for 20 seconds,” said Dr. Anders, who is a past president of the ASLMS. “Essentially, we found that the pain was modulated by reducing sensitivity to mechanical stimulation and also by causing an anti-inflammatory shift in microglial and macrophage phenotype in the dorsal root ganglion and spinal cord of affected segments.”

The second way to modulate pain, she continued, is to target tissue at irradiances above 250 mW/cm2. She and her colleagues have conducted in vitro and in vivo studies, which indicate that treatment with an irradiance/fluence rate at 270 mW/cm2 or higher at the nerve can rapidly block pain transmission.

“In vitro, we found that if we used an 810-nm wavelength light at 300 mW/cm2, we got a disruption of microtubules in the DRG neurons in culture, specifically the small neurons, the nociceptive fibers, but we did not affect the proprioceptive fibers unless we increased the length of the treatment,” she said. “We essentially found the same thing in vivo in a rodent model of neuropathic pain.”

In a pilot study, Dr. Anders and coauthors examined the efficacy of laser irradiation of the dorsal root ganglion of the second lumbar spinal nerve for patients with chronic back pain.

They found that PBMT effectively reduced back pain equal to the effects of lidocaine.

Based on these two irradiation approaches of targeting tissue, Dr. Anders recommends that a combination therapy be used to modulate neuropathic pain going forward. “This approach would involve the initial use of a high-irradiance treatment [at least 250 mW/cm2] at the nerve to block the pain transmission,” she said. “That treatment would be followed by a series of low-irradiance treatments [10-100 mW/cm2] along the course of the involved nerve to alter chronic pathology and inflammation.”
 

Potential applications in neurology

Dr. Anders also discussed research efforts under way involving transcranial PBMT: the delivery of near-infrared light through the tissues of the scalp and skull to targeted brain regions to treat neurologic injuries and disorders. “There have been some exciting results in preclinical animal work and in small clinical pilot work that show that there could be possible beneficial effects in Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, depression, and improvement in cognition and memory after a brain injury, such as a TBI,” she said.

“Initially, though, there were a lot of questions about whether you could really deliver light to the brain through the scalp. In my laboratory, we used slices of nonfixed brain and found that the sulci within the human brain act as light-wave guides. We used an 808-nm near-infrared wavelength of light, so that the light could penetrate more deeply.” Using nonfixed cadaver heads, where the light was applied at the scalp surface, Dr. Anders and colleagues were able to measure photons down to the depth of 4 cm. “It’s generally agreed now, though, that it’s to a maximum depth of 2.5-3 cm that enough photons are delivered that would cause a beneficial therapeutic effect,” she said.

Dr. Anders disclosed that she has received equipment from LiteCure, grant funding from the Department of Defense, and that she holds advisory board roles with LiteCure and Neurothera. She has also served in leadership roles for the Optical Society and holds intellectual property rights for the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine.

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Expert offers 10 ‘tips and tricks’ for everyday cosmetic practice

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During the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery, H. Ray Jalian, MD, shared his “top 10” tips and tricks for everyday cosmetic practice, based on nearly 10 years of experience treating patients on both coasts of the United States.

Dr. H. Ray Jalian

They are as follows:

1. Know your clinical endpoints. “One of the things that was drilled into me during my fellowship in lasers and cosmetics at Mass General was to know your clinical endpoints and to avoid a cookbook approach,” said Dr. Jalian, who practices dermatology in Los Angeles. “You should treat based on the pathology that you’re seeing on the skin and let the endpoints be your guide. The skin will tell you what you’re doing right, and the skin will tell you what you’re doing wrong. Picking up on these cues will allow you to deliver a safe and effective treatment to your patients.”

The selection of proper treatment parameters is driven by selective photothermolysis, a microsurgery technique that uses customized wavelengths, pulse durations, and fluences to target a chromophore. “Knowing the size and shape of your target allows you to pick the right pulse duration,” he said. “This is dictated by thermal relaxation time, which is proportional to the size and shape of the target. Smaller targets require a shorter pulse width, while larger targets require a longer pulse width.”

2. Do not perform a procedure for which you cannot recognize and treat the side effects. “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve gotten referrals from outside providers with a side effect that, if it had been recognized and treated, would have been inconsequential long-term for the patient,” Dr. Jalian said. “You can only avoid complications by not firing the laser. The more you practice, the more complications you’re going to have. This is inevitable, but good practice and common sense can reduce complications significantly.”



Even the most skilled clinicians encounter side effects from time to time. “The most important thing is to form a network of physicians you trust that you can call or text when you need help in managing a particular complication,” he continued. “This happens to all of us,” he said. Don’t be afraid to phone a colleague, he advised, “and get a fresh set of eyes because oftentimes they can provide insights, especially when you’re having tunnel vision during a complication, that can ultimately result in better patient care.”

3. Don’t forget your clinical training. “Trust your clinical judgment,” Dr. Jalian said. “If something doesn’t seem right, even if it was a case referred to you by experienced practitioners, you are a clinician first and foremost, and you are allowed to make a clinical judgment on lesions.” He referred to a 2011 report in which the authors described a series of four cases where patients presented for cosmetic evaluation of vascular lesions that turned out to be more significant pathologic disease. “Trust your clinical insight because this will serve you in the long term,” he said.

4. Set realistic expectations. Patients with unrealistically high expectations are likely to express dissatisfaction with their treatment results, “no matter how good of a job you do,” Dr. Jalian said. “In addition to safely treating the patient, we strive for patient satisfaction, because with these elective procedures we’re trying to give a patient a result they’re looking for. But our No. 1 job is also to be realistic about the results we can obtain. If someone comes in wanting treatment with a skin-tightening device but clearly needs a face-lift because they have too much laxity, your job is to tell them that this is not the appropriate device for them. Learn the art of saying no. If handled correctly, the patient will often thank you before she heads out the door. Ultimately, honesty is the best policy. I may say something like, ‘I’m not telling you the answer you want to hear, I’m telling you the truth.’ That often goes over well.”

5. Use proper anesthesia. Patients come to you for results, but they’re also likely to remember how well you controlled their pain during procedures. Strategies favored by Dr. Jalian include applying extra topical anesthetic to “hot spots” and splitting up treatment sessions when tackling a large area. “Consider using adjunctive analgesics such as oral medications and nitrous oxide,” he added. Other options, he said, are cooling techniques and distraction techniques, such as the use of a stress ball, consideration of the gate control theory of pain, and “talkesthesia”(using conversation to distract the patient).

6. Obtain proper informed consent. A lack of informed consent ranks as a common reason why doctors get sued. “This happens when a physician fails to inform the patient of all medically reasonable alternatives and their risks, even for noninvasive procedures prior to administering treatment,” Dr. Jalian said. “All patients have the right to an informed consent prior to any treatment. It doesn’t necessarily have to be in a written form, but it’s important to at least have a discussion and document it for all procedures, including medical and cosmetic procedures and oral and topical treatments. Keep it simple. A written consent is ineffective if the patient does not understand material about the procedure.” Avoid the use of excessive medical terms. For example, use bruising instead of purpura, redness instead of erythema, and drooping instead of ptosis.

7. Lower the laser treatment density for darker skin types. According to Dr. Jalian, several clinical studies have demonstrated that lower densities are associated with less postinflammatory hyperpigmentation in Asian and Black patients, without sacrificing clinical outcomes. “Density determines how ‘aggressive’ a treatment is,” he said. “The greater the density, the more downtime is required.”

8. Have a vascular occlusion emergency kit on hand. At a minimum, the kit should contain at least 1,500 units of hyaluronidase, aspirin, timolol/acetazolamide, a Snellen chart, steroids, and an EpiPen.

9. Use standardized photography. Even the slightest change in lighting can manipulate your results. According to Dr. Jalian, standardized photos enable you to monitor patient progress, minimize liability, and can serve as a marketing tool “so that you can capitalize on your talent.”

10. Consider combination treatments. He combines lasers based on target and depth. For example, prior to resurfacing he often performs a pass or two with a color laser such as intense pulsed light. “Depending on what’s being done, we’ll do soft-tissue augmentation before or after treatment with certain lasers,” Dr. Jalian added. “If you’re performing a toxin treatment on the same day as a laser procedure, do not treat the lower face or neck. Do the laser procedure first and limit that to the upper third of the face.”

He reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

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During the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery, H. Ray Jalian, MD, shared his “top 10” tips and tricks for everyday cosmetic practice, based on nearly 10 years of experience treating patients on both coasts of the United States.

Dr. H. Ray Jalian

They are as follows:

1. Know your clinical endpoints. “One of the things that was drilled into me during my fellowship in lasers and cosmetics at Mass General was to know your clinical endpoints and to avoid a cookbook approach,” said Dr. Jalian, who practices dermatology in Los Angeles. “You should treat based on the pathology that you’re seeing on the skin and let the endpoints be your guide. The skin will tell you what you’re doing right, and the skin will tell you what you’re doing wrong. Picking up on these cues will allow you to deliver a safe and effective treatment to your patients.”

The selection of proper treatment parameters is driven by selective photothermolysis, a microsurgery technique that uses customized wavelengths, pulse durations, and fluences to target a chromophore. “Knowing the size and shape of your target allows you to pick the right pulse duration,” he said. “This is dictated by thermal relaxation time, which is proportional to the size and shape of the target. Smaller targets require a shorter pulse width, while larger targets require a longer pulse width.”

2. Do not perform a procedure for which you cannot recognize and treat the side effects. “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve gotten referrals from outside providers with a side effect that, if it had been recognized and treated, would have been inconsequential long-term for the patient,” Dr. Jalian said. “You can only avoid complications by not firing the laser. The more you practice, the more complications you’re going to have. This is inevitable, but good practice and common sense can reduce complications significantly.”



Even the most skilled clinicians encounter side effects from time to time. “The most important thing is to form a network of physicians you trust that you can call or text when you need help in managing a particular complication,” he continued. “This happens to all of us,” he said. Don’t be afraid to phone a colleague, he advised, “and get a fresh set of eyes because oftentimes they can provide insights, especially when you’re having tunnel vision during a complication, that can ultimately result in better patient care.”

3. Don’t forget your clinical training. “Trust your clinical judgment,” Dr. Jalian said. “If something doesn’t seem right, even if it was a case referred to you by experienced practitioners, you are a clinician first and foremost, and you are allowed to make a clinical judgment on lesions.” He referred to a 2011 report in which the authors described a series of four cases where patients presented for cosmetic evaluation of vascular lesions that turned out to be more significant pathologic disease. “Trust your clinical insight because this will serve you in the long term,” he said.

4. Set realistic expectations. Patients with unrealistically high expectations are likely to express dissatisfaction with their treatment results, “no matter how good of a job you do,” Dr. Jalian said. “In addition to safely treating the patient, we strive for patient satisfaction, because with these elective procedures we’re trying to give a patient a result they’re looking for. But our No. 1 job is also to be realistic about the results we can obtain. If someone comes in wanting treatment with a skin-tightening device but clearly needs a face-lift because they have too much laxity, your job is to tell them that this is not the appropriate device for them. Learn the art of saying no. If handled correctly, the patient will often thank you before she heads out the door. Ultimately, honesty is the best policy. I may say something like, ‘I’m not telling you the answer you want to hear, I’m telling you the truth.’ That often goes over well.”

5. Use proper anesthesia. Patients come to you for results, but they’re also likely to remember how well you controlled their pain during procedures. Strategies favored by Dr. Jalian include applying extra topical anesthetic to “hot spots” and splitting up treatment sessions when tackling a large area. “Consider using adjunctive analgesics such as oral medications and nitrous oxide,” he added. Other options, he said, are cooling techniques and distraction techniques, such as the use of a stress ball, consideration of the gate control theory of pain, and “talkesthesia”(using conversation to distract the patient).

6. Obtain proper informed consent. A lack of informed consent ranks as a common reason why doctors get sued. “This happens when a physician fails to inform the patient of all medically reasonable alternatives and their risks, even for noninvasive procedures prior to administering treatment,” Dr. Jalian said. “All patients have the right to an informed consent prior to any treatment. It doesn’t necessarily have to be in a written form, but it’s important to at least have a discussion and document it for all procedures, including medical and cosmetic procedures and oral and topical treatments. Keep it simple. A written consent is ineffective if the patient does not understand material about the procedure.” Avoid the use of excessive medical terms. For example, use bruising instead of purpura, redness instead of erythema, and drooping instead of ptosis.

7. Lower the laser treatment density for darker skin types. According to Dr. Jalian, several clinical studies have demonstrated that lower densities are associated with less postinflammatory hyperpigmentation in Asian and Black patients, without sacrificing clinical outcomes. “Density determines how ‘aggressive’ a treatment is,” he said. “The greater the density, the more downtime is required.”

8. Have a vascular occlusion emergency kit on hand. At a minimum, the kit should contain at least 1,500 units of hyaluronidase, aspirin, timolol/acetazolamide, a Snellen chart, steroids, and an EpiPen.

9. Use standardized photography. Even the slightest change in lighting can manipulate your results. According to Dr. Jalian, standardized photos enable you to monitor patient progress, minimize liability, and can serve as a marketing tool “so that you can capitalize on your talent.”

10. Consider combination treatments. He combines lasers based on target and depth. For example, prior to resurfacing he often performs a pass or two with a color laser such as intense pulsed light. “Depending on what’s being done, we’ll do soft-tissue augmentation before or after treatment with certain lasers,” Dr. Jalian added. “If you’re performing a toxin treatment on the same day as a laser procedure, do not treat the lower face or neck. Do the laser procedure first and limit that to the upper third of the face.”

He reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

During the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery, H. Ray Jalian, MD, shared his “top 10” tips and tricks for everyday cosmetic practice, based on nearly 10 years of experience treating patients on both coasts of the United States.

Dr. H. Ray Jalian

They are as follows:

1. Know your clinical endpoints. “One of the things that was drilled into me during my fellowship in lasers and cosmetics at Mass General was to know your clinical endpoints and to avoid a cookbook approach,” said Dr. Jalian, who practices dermatology in Los Angeles. “You should treat based on the pathology that you’re seeing on the skin and let the endpoints be your guide. The skin will tell you what you’re doing right, and the skin will tell you what you’re doing wrong. Picking up on these cues will allow you to deliver a safe and effective treatment to your patients.”

The selection of proper treatment parameters is driven by selective photothermolysis, a microsurgery technique that uses customized wavelengths, pulse durations, and fluences to target a chromophore. “Knowing the size and shape of your target allows you to pick the right pulse duration,” he said. “This is dictated by thermal relaxation time, which is proportional to the size and shape of the target. Smaller targets require a shorter pulse width, while larger targets require a longer pulse width.”

2. Do not perform a procedure for which you cannot recognize and treat the side effects. “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve gotten referrals from outside providers with a side effect that, if it had been recognized and treated, would have been inconsequential long-term for the patient,” Dr. Jalian said. “You can only avoid complications by not firing the laser. The more you practice, the more complications you’re going to have. This is inevitable, but good practice and common sense can reduce complications significantly.”



Even the most skilled clinicians encounter side effects from time to time. “The most important thing is to form a network of physicians you trust that you can call or text when you need help in managing a particular complication,” he continued. “This happens to all of us,” he said. Don’t be afraid to phone a colleague, he advised, “and get a fresh set of eyes because oftentimes they can provide insights, especially when you’re having tunnel vision during a complication, that can ultimately result in better patient care.”

3. Don’t forget your clinical training. “Trust your clinical judgment,” Dr. Jalian said. “If something doesn’t seem right, even if it was a case referred to you by experienced practitioners, you are a clinician first and foremost, and you are allowed to make a clinical judgment on lesions.” He referred to a 2011 report in which the authors described a series of four cases where patients presented for cosmetic evaluation of vascular lesions that turned out to be more significant pathologic disease. “Trust your clinical insight because this will serve you in the long term,” he said.

4. Set realistic expectations. Patients with unrealistically high expectations are likely to express dissatisfaction with their treatment results, “no matter how good of a job you do,” Dr. Jalian said. “In addition to safely treating the patient, we strive for patient satisfaction, because with these elective procedures we’re trying to give a patient a result they’re looking for. But our No. 1 job is also to be realistic about the results we can obtain. If someone comes in wanting treatment with a skin-tightening device but clearly needs a face-lift because they have too much laxity, your job is to tell them that this is not the appropriate device for them. Learn the art of saying no. If handled correctly, the patient will often thank you before she heads out the door. Ultimately, honesty is the best policy. I may say something like, ‘I’m not telling you the answer you want to hear, I’m telling you the truth.’ That often goes over well.”

5. Use proper anesthesia. Patients come to you for results, but they’re also likely to remember how well you controlled their pain during procedures. Strategies favored by Dr. Jalian include applying extra topical anesthetic to “hot spots” and splitting up treatment sessions when tackling a large area. “Consider using adjunctive analgesics such as oral medications and nitrous oxide,” he added. Other options, he said, are cooling techniques and distraction techniques, such as the use of a stress ball, consideration of the gate control theory of pain, and “talkesthesia”(using conversation to distract the patient).

6. Obtain proper informed consent. A lack of informed consent ranks as a common reason why doctors get sued. “This happens when a physician fails to inform the patient of all medically reasonable alternatives and their risks, even for noninvasive procedures prior to administering treatment,” Dr. Jalian said. “All patients have the right to an informed consent prior to any treatment. It doesn’t necessarily have to be in a written form, but it’s important to at least have a discussion and document it for all procedures, including medical and cosmetic procedures and oral and topical treatments. Keep it simple. A written consent is ineffective if the patient does not understand material about the procedure.” Avoid the use of excessive medical terms. For example, use bruising instead of purpura, redness instead of erythema, and drooping instead of ptosis.

7. Lower the laser treatment density for darker skin types. According to Dr. Jalian, several clinical studies have demonstrated that lower densities are associated with less postinflammatory hyperpigmentation in Asian and Black patients, without sacrificing clinical outcomes. “Density determines how ‘aggressive’ a treatment is,” he said. “The greater the density, the more downtime is required.”

8. Have a vascular occlusion emergency kit on hand. At a minimum, the kit should contain at least 1,500 units of hyaluronidase, aspirin, timolol/acetazolamide, a Snellen chart, steroids, and an EpiPen.

9. Use standardized photography. Even the slightest change in lighting can manipulate your results. According to Dr. Jalian, standardized photos enable you to monitor patient progress, minimize liability, and can serve as a marketing tool “so that you can capitalize on your talent.”

10. Consider combination treatments. He combines lasers based on target and depth. For example, prior to resurfacing he often performs a pass or two with a color laser such as intense pulsed light. “Depending on what’s being done, we’ll do soft-tissue augmentation before or after treatment with certain lasers,” Dr. Jalian added. “If you’re performing a toxin treatment on the same day as a laser procedure, do not treat the lower face or neck. Do the laser procedure first and limit that to the upper third of the face.”

He reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

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Expert shares her tips for an effective cosmetic consultation

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Tue, 06/15/2021 - 09:59

The way Kelly Stankiewicz, MD, sees it, the first step in any cosmetic consultation is to be present and listen intently to the patient’s concerns.

Dr. Kelly Stankiewicz

“I can’t tell you how many times I’ve walked into a room and thought the patient would say they’re concerned about one thing, but they’re concerned about something totally different,” Dr. Stankiewicz, a dermatologist in private practice in Park City, Utah, said during the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery. “The first question I ask is, ‘What would you like to improve?’ ‘What’s bothering you?’ ‘What would you like to make look better?’ Frequently, it’s not what you think.”

Next, she tries to get a sense of their lifestyle by asking patients about their occupation, hobbies, and outdoor activities they may engage in. “Here in Park City, it’s very sunny most all the time, so treatments need to be tailored to when those outdoor activities are being done, or perhaps they can be avoided for a period of time,” she said. “This gives you an idea of what kind of downtime people will tolerate. I also like to hear about their history of cosmetic procedures. If someone has had a lot of cosmetic procedures done, you can talk with them on a more detailed level. If someone is completely unaware of treatment options, you have to keep it simple.”

Dr. Stankiewicz also reviews their personal history of cosmetic procedures when considering safety of treatment. “For instance, if somebody has had a neck lift, you want to be very cautious doing any ablative procedures along the jawline,” she said. “I also like to know if anyone has had any reactions to dermal fillers or neuromodulators that they did not like. It’s very helpful to hear from patients what’s worked for them and what hasn’t. I also like to keep my ear open for pricing concerns. Not everyone will bring up the pricing issues, but sometimes they will, and it’s an important piece of information. Lastly, it’s important to look for any warning signs like irrational behavior or unrealistic expectations. These are patients you want to try to avoid treating.”



She shared four other key components to an effective cosmetic consultation, including the examination itself, which she prefers to separate from the discussion portion of the visit. “I lean the patient back in the exam chair and shine the light on their skin, which is important for evaluating for conditions you may not have discussed that could be easily improved,” Dr. Stankiewicz said.

“If the patient is concerned about pigmented lesions, I’ll pull out my dermatoscope to make sure there isn’t any concern for skin cancer. After the examination, I’ll sit the patient up again so that there is a very distinct start and finish to the examination portion of my cosmetic consultation.”

Surgery vs. noninvasive treatments

Step three in her consultative process is to review treatment options with patients. “I never hold back if surgery is their best treatment option,” she said. “I don’t perform surgery, but I have a list of people I can refer them to.”

CasarsaGuru/Getty Images

Once she addresses the potential for surgery, she reviews noninvasive treatment options, including topical products, injectables, lasers, and chemical peels. “Everyone who comes in for a cosmetic consultation leaves with some sort of topical recommendation, even if it’s as simple as a sunscreen I think they would like or a prescription for generic tretinoin,” she said. “I always present options in a framework starting with those that require lower downtime, higher number of treatment options, and lower cost. Then I move up the scale to tell them more about treatments that require higher downtime, a lower number of treatments, but have a higher cost.”

Step four in her consultative process involves discussing her final treatment recommendations. She’ll say something like, “I’ve been through all these options with you and my final recommendation is X,” and the patient walks away with a clear understanding of the recommendations, she said. “When I leave the room after giving my final recommendation, I’ll write everything down outside of the room, or I’ll have a member of my staff write down everything I’ve said outside the room.”

Finally, she and her staff record all the relevant information for the patient as a customized handout, including the treatment options discussed, how many will be required, whether they have to come in early for numbing cream or not, and the per treatment price tag. “Once we’ve written down everything we’ve discussed, I’ll circle or I’ll star my recommended treatment,” Dr. Stankiewicz said. They also have a handout for topical products, and she checks off the topical products that she discussed with the patient. The third handout she provides to patients is a recommended skin care regimen.

Dr. Stankiewicz reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

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The way Kelly Stankiewicz, MD, sees it, the first step in any cosmetic consultation is to be present and listen intently to the patient’s concerns.

Dr. Kelly Stankiewicz

“I can’t tell you how many times I’ve walked into a room and thought the patient would say they’re concerned about one thing, but they’re concerned about something totally different,” Dr. Stankiewicz, a dermatologist in private practice in Park City, Utah, said during the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery. “The first question I ask is, ‘What would you like to improve?’ ‘What’s bothering you?’ ‘What would you like to make look better?’ Frequently, it’s not what you think.”

Next, she tries to get a sense of their lifestyle by asking patients about their occupation, hobbies, and outdoor activities they may engage in. “Here in Park City, it’s very sunny most all the time, so treatments need to be tailored to when those outdoor activities are being done, or perhaps they can be avoided for a period of time,” she said. “This gives you an idea of what kind of downtime people will tolerate. I also like to hear about their history of cosmetic procedures. If someone has had a lot of cosmetic procedures done, you can talk with them on a more detailed level. If someone is completely unaware of treatment options, you have to keep it simple.”

Dr. Stankiewicz also reviews their personal history of cosmetic procedures when considering safety of treatment. “For instance, if somebody has had a neck lift, you want to be very cautious doing any ablative procedures along the jawline,” she said. “I also like to know if anyone has had any reactions to dermal fillers or neuromodulators that they did not like. It’s very helpful to hear from patients what’s worked for them and what hasn’t. I also like to keep my ear open for pricing concerns. Not everyone will bring up the pricing issues, but sometimes they will, and it’s an important piece of information. Lastly, it’s important to look for any warning signs like irrational behavior or unrealistic expectations. These are patients you want to try to avoid treating.”



She shared four other key components to an effective cosmetic consultation, including the examination itself, which she prefers to separate from the discussion portion of the visit. “I lean the patient back in the exam chair and shine the light on their skin, which is important for evaluating for conditions you may not have discussed that could be easily improved,” Dr. Stankiewicz said.

“If the patient is concerned about pigmented lesions, I’ll pull out my dermatoscope to make sure there isn’t any concern for skin cancer. After the examination, I’ll sit the patient up again so that there is a very distinct start and finish to the examination portion of my cosmetic consultation.”

Surgery vs. noninvasive treatments

Step three in her consultative process is to review treatment options with patients. “I never hold back if surgery is their best treatment option,” she said. “I don’t perform surgery, but I have a list of people I can refer them to.”

CasarsaGuru/Getty Images

Once she addresses the potential for surgery, she reviews noninvasive treatment options, including topical products, injectables, lasers, and chemical peels. “Everyone who comes in for a cosmetic consultation leaves with some sort of topical recommendation, even if it’s as simple as a sunscreen I think they would like or a prescription for generic tretinoin,” she said. “I always present options in a framework starting with those that require lower downtime, higher number of treatment options, and lower cost. Then I move up the scale to tell them more about treatments that require higher downtime, a lower number of treatments, but have a higher cost.”

Step four in her consultative process involves discussing her final treatment recommendations. She’ll say something like, “I’ve been through all these options with you and my final recommendation is X,” and the patient walks away with a clear understanding of the recommendations, she said. “When I leave the room after giving my final recommendation, I’ll write everything down outside of the room, or I’ll have a member of my staff write down everything I’ve said outside the room.”

Finally, she and her staff record all the relevant information for the patient as a customized handout, including the treatment options discussed, how many will be required, whether they have to come in early for numbing cream or not, and the per treatment price tag. “Once we’ve written down everything we’ve discussed, I’ll circle or I’ll star my recommended treatment,” Dr. Stankiewicz said. They also have a handout for topical products, and she checks off the topical products that she discussed with the patient. The third handout she provides to patients is a recommended skin care regimen.

Dr. Stankiewicz reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

The way Kelly Stankiewicz, MD, sees it, the first step in any cosmetic consultation is to be present and listen intently to the patient’s concerns.

Dr. Kelly Stankiewicz

“I can’t tell you how many times I’ve walked into a room and thought the patient would say they’re concerned about one thing, but they’re concerned about something totally different,” Dr. Stankiewicz, a dermatologist in private practice in Park City, Utah, said during the annual conference of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery. “The first question I ask is, ‘What would you like to improve?’ ‘What’s bothering you?’ ‘What would you like to make look better?’ Frequently, it’s not what you think.”

Next, she tries to get a sense of their lifestyle by asking patients about their occupation, hobbies, and outdoor activities they may engage in. “Here in Park City, it’s very sunny most all the time, so treatments need to be tailored to when those outdoor activities are being done, or perhaps they can be avoided for a period of time,” she said. “This gives you an idea of what kind of downtime people will tolerate. I also like to hear about their history of cosmetic procedures. If someone has had a lot of cosmetic procedures done, you can talk with them on a more detailed level. If someone is completely unaware of treatment options, you have to keep it simple.”

Dr. Stankiewicz also reviews their personal history of cosmetic procedures when considering safety of treatment. “For instance, if somebody has had a neck lift, you want to be very cautious doing any ablative procedures along the jawline,” she said. “I also like to know if anyone has had any reactions to dermal fillers or neuromodulators that they did not like. It’s very helpful to hear from patients what’s worked for them and what hasn’t. I also like to keep my ear open for pricing concerns. Not everyone will bring up the pricing issues, but sometimes they will, and it’s an important piece of information. Lastly, it’s important to look for any warning signs like irrational behavior or unrealistic expectations. These are patients you want to try to avoid treating.”



She shared four other key components to an effective cosmetic consultation, including the examination itself, which she prefers to separate from the discussion portion of the visit. “I lean the patient back in the exam chair and shine the light on their skin, which is important for evaluating for conditions you may not have discussed that could be easily improved,” Dr. Stankiewicz said.

“If the patient is concerned about pigmented lesions, I’ll pull out my dermatoscope to make sure there isn’t any concern for skin cancer. After the examination, I’ll sit the patient up again so that there is a very distinct start and finish to the examination portion of my cosmetic consultation.”

Surgery vs. noninvasive treatments

Step three in her consultative process is to review treatment options with patients. “I never hold back if surgery is their best treatment option,” she said. “I don’t perform surgery, but I have a list of people I can refer them to.”

CasarsaGuru/Getty Images

Once she addresses the potential for surgery, she reviews noninvasive treatment options, including topical products, injectables, lasers, and chemical peels. “Everyone who comes in for a cosmetic consultation leaves with some sort of topical recommendation, even if it’s as simple as a sunscreen I think they would like or a prescription for generic tretinoin,” she said. “I always present options in a framework starting with those that require lower downtime, higher number of treatment options, and lower cost. Then I move up the scale to tell them more about treatments that require higher downtime, a lower number of treatments, but have a higher cost.”

Step four in her consultative process involves discussing her final treatment recommendations. She’ll say something like, “I’ve been through all these options with you and my final recommendation is X,” and the patient walks away with a clear understanding of the recommendations, she said. “When I leave the room after giving my final recommendation, I’ll write everything down outside of the room, or I’ll have a member of my staff write down everything I’ve said outside the room.”

Finally, she and her staff record all the relevant information for the patient as a customized handout, including the treatment options discussed, how many will be required, whether they have to come in early for numbing cream or not, and the per treatment price tag. “Once we’ve written down everything we’ve discussed, I’ll circle or I’ll star my recommended treatment,” Dr. Stankiewicz said. They also have a handout for topical products, and she checks off the topical products that she discussed with the patient. The third handout she provides to patients is a recommended skin care regimen.

Dr. Stankiewicz reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

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