New ACC, AHA, SCAI interventional cardiology training guidance

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The American College of Cardiology, the American Heart Association, and the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI) have jointly issued new guidance outlining competency-based advanced training requirements for interventional cardiology trainees.

It’s the first document of its kind to define the training requirements for the full breadth of interventional cardiology for adults, including coronary interventions, peripheral vascular interventions (PVIs), and structural heart interventions (SHIs), the organizations say.

enot-poloskun/Getty Images


“With this groundbreaking document, the writing committee provides a roadmap for both program directors and interventional cardiology trainees to help them progress through important training milestones,” Theodore A. Bass, MD, chair of the statement writing committee, says in a news release.

“The document defines the required competencies for the full scope of interventional cardiology, providing trainees for the first time with the information to support training across all these areas,” Dr. Bass adds.
 

Minimum of 250 procedures

To gain the necessary experience in interventional cardiology, cardiovascular fellows are advised to complete the following:

  • A 3-year general cardiovascular disease fellowship (successful completion consists of Level I competency in all aspects of cardiovascular medicine and Level II competency in diagnostic cardiac catheterization to pursue interventional cardiology training);
  • A 1-year accredited interventional cardiology fellowship, the focus of which is coronary intervention with the opportunity to gain procedural experience in various aspects of PVI or SHI (Level III competency);
  • An option for additional post-fellowship training based on the trainee’s career goals.

The goal of Level III training is to provide the interventional cardiology trainees with a “well-rounded, competency-based education,” including didactic instruction, clinical experience in the diagnosis and care of patients, and hands-on procedural experience, the writing group says.

Competency requirements are defined using the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education’s six “essential” competency domains: medical knowledge; patient care and procedural skills; practice-based learning and improvement; systems-based practice; interpersonal and communication skills; and professionalism.

To support attaining these competencies, the writing committee recommends a minimum of 250 interventional cardiology procedures. Of these, 200 should be coronary procedures, with the remaining 50 specialized in coronary, PVI, or SHI, which allows the fellows to customize training on the basis of their career goals.

Adjunctive procedures related to physiologic assessment and intracoronary imaging are also required (25 of each). “These minimum numbers are meant to provide trainees with exposure to a variety and spectrum of complexity of clinical case material and give supervising faculty sufficient opportunity to evaluate trainees’ competency,” the writing group says.

In addition to their procedural skills, evaluation of interventional cardiology trainee proficiency should include regular assessment of a trainee’s ability to clinically diagnose and manage patients across the broad spectrum of diseases.

Assessment of trainees should involve multiple components, including direct observation by instructors, case logs, chart reviews (including adherence to guideline recommendations, appropriate use criteria, and patient outcomes), simulation training, and assessment of leadership skills.

Trainees must also acquire experience working as part of a multidisciplinary team to provide a holistic approach to patient care. The document also highlights the importance of leadership skills, mentorship and lifelong learning beyond initial training.

The 2023 ACC/AHA/SCAI Advanced Training Statement on Interventional Cardiology (Coronary, Peripheral Vascular, and Structural Heart Interventions) was published online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The statement was developed in collaboration with and endorsed by the American Association for Thoracic Surgery, the American Society of Echocardiography, the Heart Failure Society of America, the Heart Rhythm Society, the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists, the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and the Society for Vascular Medicine.

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

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The American College of Cardiology, the American Heart Association, and the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI) have jointly issued new guidance outlining competency-based advanced training requirements for interventional cardiology trainees.

It’s the first document of its kind to define the training requirements for the full breadth of interventional cardiology for adults, including coronary interventions, peripheral vascular interventions (PVIs), and structural heart interventions (SHIs), the organizations say.

enot-poloskun/Getty Images


“With this groundbreaking document, the writing committee provides a roadmap for both program directors and interventional cardiology trainees to help them progress through important training milestones,” Theodore A. Bass, MD, chair of the statement writing committee, says in a news release.

“The document defines the required competencies for the full scope of interventional cardiology, providing trainees for the first time with the information to support training across all these areas,” Dr. Bass adds.
 

Minimum of 250 procedures

To gain the necessary experience in interventional cardiology, cardiovascular fellows are advised to complete the following:

  • A 3-year general cardiovascular disease fellowship (successful completion consists of Level I competency in all aspects of cardiovascular medicine and Level II competency in diagnostic cardiac catheterization to pursue interventional cardiology training);
  • A 1-year accredited interventional cardiology fellowship, the focus of which is coronary intervention with the opportunity to gain procedural experience in various aspects of PVI or SHI (Level III competency);
  • An option for additional post-fellowship training based on the trainee’s career goals.

The goal of Level III training is to provide the interventional cardiology trainees with a “well-rounded, competency-based education,” including didactic instruction, clinical experience in the diagnosis and care of patients, and hands-on procedural experience, the writing group says.

Competency requirements are defined using the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education’s six “essential” competency domains: medical knowledge; patient care and procedural skills; practice-based learning and improvement; systems-based practice; interpersonal and communication skills; and professionalism.

To support attaining these competencies, the writing committee recommends a minimum of 250 interventional cardiology procedures. Of these, 200 should be coronary procedures, with the remaining 50 specialized in coronary, PVI, or SHI, which allows the fellows to customize training on the basis of their career goals.

Adjunctive procedures related to physiologic assessment and intracoronary imaging are also required (25 of each). “These minimum numbers are meant to provide trainees with exposure to a variety and spectrum of complexity of clinical case material and give supervising faculty sufficient opportunity to evaluate trainees’ competency,” the writing group says.

In addition to their procedural skills, evaluation of interventional cardiology trainee proficiency should include regular assessment of a trainee’s ability to clinically diagnose and manage patients across the broad spectrum of diseases.

Assessment of trainees should involve multiple components, including direct observation by instructors, case logs, chart reviews (including adherence to guideline recommendations, appropriate use criteria, and patient outcomes), simulation training, and assessment of leadership skills.

Trainees must also acquire experience working as part of a multidisciplinary team to provide a holistic approach to patient care. The document also highlights the importance of leadership skills, mentorship and lifelong learning beyond initial training.

The 2023 ACC/AHA/SCAI Advanced Training Statement on Interventional Cardiology (Coronary, Peripheral Vascular, and Structural Heart Interventions) was published online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The statement was developed in collaboration with and endorsed by the American Association for Thoracic Surgery, the American Society of Echocardiography, the Heart Failure Society of America, the Heart Rhythm Society, the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists, the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and the Society for Vascular Medicine.

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

The American College of Cardiology, the American Heart Association, and the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI) have jointly issued new guidance outlining competency-based advanced training requirements for interventional cardiology trainees.

It’s the first document of its kind to define the training requirements for the full breadth of interventional cardiology for adults, including coronary interventions, peripheral vascular interventions (PVIs), and structural heart interventions (SHIs), the organizations say.

enot-poloskun/Getty Images


“With this groundbreaking document, the writing committee provides a roadmap for both program directors and interventional cardiology trainees to help them progress through important training milestones,” Theodore A. Bass, MD, chair of the statement writing committee, says in a news release.

“The document defines the required competencies for the full scope of interventional cardiology, providing trainees for the first time with the information to support training across all these areas,” Dr. Bass adds.
 

Minimum of 250 procedures

To gain the necessary experience in interventional cardiology, cardiovascular fellows are advised to complete the following:

  • A 3-year general cardiovascular disease fellowship (successful completion consists of Level I competency in all aspects of cardiovascular medicine and Level II competency in diagnostic cardiac catheterization to pursue interventional cardiology training);
  • A 1-year accredited interventional cardiology fellowship, the focus of which is coronary intervention with the opportunity to gain procedural experience in various aspects of PVI or SHI (Level III competency);
  • An option for additional post-fellowship training based on the trainee’s career goals.

The goal of Level III training is to provide the interventional cardiology trainees with a “well-rounded, competency-based education,” including didactic instruction, clinical experience in the diagnosis and care of patients, and hands-on procedural experience, the writing group says.

Competency requirements are defined using the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education’s six “essential” competency domains: medical knowledge; patient care and procedural skills; practice-based learning and improvement; systems-based practice; interpersonal and communication skills; and professionalism.

To support attaining these competencies, the writing committee recommends a minimum of 250 interventional cardiology procedures. Of these, 200 should be coronary procedures, with the remaining 50 specialized in coronary, PVI, or SHI, which allows the fellows to customize training on the basis of their career goals.

Adjunctive procedures related to physiologic assessment and intracoronary imaging are also required (25 of each). “These minimum numbers are meant to provide trainees with exposure to a variety and spectrum of complexity of clinical case material and give supervising faculty sufficient opportunity to evaluate trainees’ competency,” the writing group says.

In addition to their procedural skills, evaluation of interventional cardiology trainee proficiency should include regular assessment of a trainee’s ability to clinically diagnose and manage patients across the broad spectrum of diseases.

Assessment of trainees should involve multiple components, including direct observation by instructors, case logs, chart reviews (including adherence to guideline recommendations, appropriate use criteria, and patient outcomes), simulation training, and assessment of leadership skills.

Trainees must also acquire experience working as part of a multidisciplinary team to provide a holistic approach to patient care. The document also highlights the importance of leadership skills, mentorship and lifelong learning beyond initial training.

The 2023 ACC/AHA/SCAI Advanced Training Statement on Interventional Cardiology (Coronary, Peripheral Vascular, and Structural Heart Interventions) was published online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The statement was developed in collaboration with and endorsed by the American Association for Thoracic Surgery, the American Society of Echocardiography, the Heart Failure Society of America, the Heart Rhythm Society, the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists, the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and the Society for Vascular Medicine.

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

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Factors linked to higher risk for death in young cancer survivors

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Modifiable chronic health conditions and socioeconomic factors may raise the risk for death in adult survivors of childhood cancer, according to new data from the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort.

Survivors with a greater number and severity of modifiable chronic health conditions as well as those living in the most versus least resource-deprived areas had a significantly higher risk of all-cause and health-related late death.

Finding ways to mitigate these factors “will be important to improving health outcomes and developing risk-stratification strategies to optimize care delivery to survivors at varying risk of adverse health events,” the researchers wrote.

The study indicates that treating chronic health conditions alone may not be enough to increase a cancer survivor’s lifespan; improving local environments matters too.

“It is important for clinicians to ask patients about their specific situation,” first author Matthew J. Ehrhardt, MD, department of oncology, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, said in a news release. “It’s easy to prescribe medications or to tell people to exercise. It takes more time and more thoughtfulness to sit and understand environments in which they are residing.”

“As clinicians, we may have limited ability to modify some of those factors. But we can work closely with the rest of the health care team, such as social workers, for example, to help survivors to identify and access local resources,” Dr. Ehrhardt added.

The study was published online in JAMA Network Open.

A growing population of childhood cancer survivors faces an increased risk for premature death in the years following their diagnosis. However, associations between social determinants of health, modifiable health conditions, and late mortality in childhood cancer survivors remain unclear.

To assess late mortality, the study team analyzed data on 9,440 participants (median age at assessment, 27.5 years; range, 5.3-71.9 years) who lived at least 5 years after being diagnosed with a childhood cancer between 1962 and 2012.

During a median follow-up of about 18 years, childhood cancer survivors had an increased rate of both all-cause and health-related late mortality (standardized mortality rate, 7.6 for both). Among specific health-related causes of death, SMRs were 16.0 for subsequent neoplasms, 9.0 for pulmonary causes, 4.2 for cardiac causes, and 4.3 for other health-related causes.

To evaluate ties between modifiable chronic health conditions, social determinants, and late mortality, the researchers restricted their analysis to 3,407 adult study participants for whom relevant data were available. Modifiable chronic health conditions included dyslipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, underweight or obesity, bone mineral deficiency, and hypothyroidism.

After adjusting for individual factors, including age at diagnosis and treatment, as well as neighborhood-level factors, the researchers observed a significantly increased risk for death among survivors with one or more modifiable chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (relative risk, 2.2), two chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (RR, 2.6) or three chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (RR, 3.6).

These findings suggest that “increased late mortality experienced by childhood cancer survivors in adulthood may not be predetermined by treatment-related risk factors alone,” the researchers said.

In addition, survivors living in the most disadvantaged areas, as measured by the area deprivation index (ADI), had a five- to eightfold increased risk of late death from any cause compared with those living in the least disadvantaged areas, even after adjusting for modifiable chronic health conditions, cancer treatment, demographics, and individual socioeconomic factors.

The findings have important public health implications, Dr. Ehrhardt and colleagues said. The results can, for instance, help identify and stratify cancer survivors at higher lifetime risk for specific chronic conditions and late death. 

This risk-stratified approach to care, however, is “relatively static” and does not account for risk factors acquired after cancer diagnosis and treatment, such as social determinants of health.

That is why also focusing on socioeconomic factors is important, and transitional care services following cancer treatment should consider that survivors in disadvantaged neighborhoods may lack supportive resources to address health issues, potentially leading to increased risk for death, the researchers said.

The knowledge that living in a resource-poor neighborhood may raise the risk for late death in childhood cancer survivors “strengthens support for public health policies that will direct resources to such regions and facilitate a multipronged approach to risk mitigation,” the authors concluded.

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities. The authors reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Modifiable chronic health conditions and socioeconomic factors may raise the risk for death in adult survivors of childhood cancer, according to new data from the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort.

Survivors with a greater number and severity of modifiable chronic health conditions as well as those living in the most versus least resource-deprived areas had a significantly higher risk of all-cause and health-related late death.

Finding ways to mitigate these factors “will be important to improving health outcomes and developing risk-stratification strategies to optimize care delivery to survivors at varying risk of adverse health events,” the researchers wrote.

The study indicates that treating chronic health conditions alone may not be enough to increase a cancer survivor’s lifespan; improving local environments matters too.

“It is important for clinicians to ask patients about their specific situation,” first author Matthew J. Ehrhardt, MD, department of oncology, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, said in a news release. “It’s easy to prescribe medications or to tell people to exercise. It takes more time and more thoughtfulness to sit and understand environments in which they are residing.”

“As clinicians, we may have limited ability to modify some of those factors. But we can work closely with the rest of the health care team, such as social workers, for example, to help survivors to identify and access local resources,” Dr. Ehrhardt added.

The study was published online in JAMA Network Open.

A growing population of childhood cancer survivors faces an increased risk for premature death in the years following their diagnosis. However, associations between social determinants of health, modifiable health conditions, and late mortality in childhood cancer survivors remain unclear.

To assess late mortality, the study team analyzed data on 9,440 participants (median age at assessment, 27.5 years; range, 5.3-71.9 years) who lived at least 5 years after being diagnosed with a childhood cancer between 1962 and 2012.

During a median follow-up of about 18 years, childhood cancer survivors had an increased rate of both all-cause and health-related late mortality (standardized mortality rate, 7.6 for both). Among specific health-related causes of death, SMRs were 16.0 for subsequent neoplasms, 9.0 for pulmonary causes, 4.2 for cardiac causes, and 4.3 for other health-related causes.

To evaluate ties between modifiable chronic health conditions, social determinants, and late mortality, the researchers restricted their analysis to 3,407 adult study participants for whom relevant data were available. Modifiable chronic health conditions included dyslipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, underweight or obesity, bone mineral deficiency, and hypothyroidism.

After adjusting for individual factors, including age at diagnosis and treatment, as well as neighborhood-level factors, the researchers observed a significantly increased risk for death among survivors with one or more modifiable chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (relative risk, 2.2), two chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (RR, 2.6) or three chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (RR, 3.6).

These findings suggest that “increased late mortality experienced by childhood cancer survivors in adulthood may not be predetermined by treatment-related risk factors alone,” the researchers said.

In addition, survivors living in the most disadvantaged areas, as measured by the area deprivation index (ADI), had a five- to eightfold increased risk of late death from any cause compared with those living in the least disadvantaged areas, even after adjusting for modifiable chronic health conditions, cancer treatment, demographics, and individual socioeconomic factors.

The findings have important public health implications, Dr. Ehrhardt and colleagues said. The results can, for instance, help identify and stratify cancer survivors at higher lifetime risk for specific chronic conditions and late death. 

This risk-stratified approach to care, however, is “relatively static” and does not account for risk factors acquired after cancer diagnosis and treatment, such as social determinants of health.

That is why also focusing on socioeconomic factors is important, and transitional care services following cancer treatment should consider that survivors in disadvantaged neighborhoods may lack supportive resources to address health issues, potentially leading to increased risk for death, the researchers said.

The knowledge that living in a resource-poor neighborhood may raise the risk for late death in childhood cancer survivors “strengthens support for public health policies that will direct resources to such regions and facilitate a multipronged approach to risk mitigation,” the authors concluded.

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities. The authors reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

Modifiable chronic health conditions and socioeconomic factors may raise the risk for death in adult survivors of childhood cancer, according to new data from the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort.

Survivors with a greater number and severity of modifiable chronic health conditions as well as those living in the most versus least resource-deprived areas had a significantly higher risk of all-cause and health-related late death.

Finding ways to mitigate these factors “will be important to improving health outcomes and developing risk-stratification strategies to optimize care delivery to survivors at varying risk of adverse health events,” the researchers wrote.

The study indicates that treating chronic health conditions alone may not be enough to increase a cancer survivor’s lifespan; improving local environments matters too.

“It is important for clinicians to ask patients about their specific situation,” first author Matthew J. Ehrhardt, MD, department of oncology, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, said in a news release. “It’s easy to prescribe medications or to tell people to exercise. It takes more time and more thoughtfulness to sit and understand environments in which they are residing.”

“As clinicians, we may have limited ability to modify some of those factors. But we can work closely with the rest of the health care team, such as social workers, for example, to help survivors to identify and access local resources,” Dr. Ehrhardt added.

The study was published online in JAMA Network Open.

A growing population of childhood cancer survivors faces an increased risk for premature death in the years following their diagnosis. However, associations between social determinants of health, modifiable health conditions, and late mortality in childhood cancer survivors remain unclear.

To assess late mortality, the study team analyzed data on 9,440 participants (median age at assessment, 27.5 years; range, 5.3-71.9 years) who lived at least 5 years after being diagnosed with a childhood cancer between 1962 and 2012.

During a median follow-up of about 18 years, childhood cancer survivors had an increased rate of both all-cause and health-related late mortality (standardized mortality rate, 7.6 for both). Among specific health-related causes of death, SMRs were 16.0 for subsequent neoplasms, 9.0 for pulmonary causes, 4.2 for cardiac causes, and 4.3 for other health-related causes.

To evaluate ties between modifiable chronic health conditions, social determinants, and late mortality, the researchers restricted their analysis to 3,407 adult study participants for whom relevant data were available. Modifiable chronic health conditions included dyslipidemia, hypertension, diabetes, underweight or obesity, bone mineral deficiency, and hypothyroidism.

After adjusting for individual factors, including age at diagnosis and treatment, as well as neighborhood-level factors, the researchers observed a significantly increased risk for death among survivors with one or more modifiable chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (relative risk, 2.2), two chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (RR, 2.6) or three chronic health conditions of grade 2 or higher (RR, 3.6).

These findings suggest that “increased late mortality experienced by childhood cancer survivors in adulthood may not be predetermined by treatment-related risk factors alone,” the researchers said.

In addition, survivors living in the most disadvantaged areas, as measured by the area deprivation index (ADI), had a five- to eightfold increased risk of late death from any cause compared with those living in the least disadvantaged areas, even after adjusting for modifiable chronic health conditions, cancer treatment, demographics, and individual socioeconomic factors.

The findings have important public health implications, Dr. Ehrhardt and colleagues said. The results can, for instance, help identify and stratify cancer survivors at higher lifetime risk for specific chronic conditions and late death. 

This risk-stratified approach to care, however, is “relatively static” and does not account for risk factors acquired after cancer diagnosis and treatment, such as social determinants of health.

That is why also focusing on socioeconomic factors is important, and transitional care services following cancer treatment should consider that survivors in disadvantaged neighborhoods may lack supportive resources to address health issues, potentially leading to increased risk for death, the researchers said.

The knowledge that living in a resource-poor neighborhood may raise the risk for late death in childhood cancer survivors “strengthens support for public health policies that will direct resources to such regions and facilitate a multipronged approach to risk mitigation,” the authors concluded.

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities. The authors reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Diabetes drug tied to lower dementia risk

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Treatment with the thiazolidinedione pioglitazone may offer the greatest protection against dementia for older adults with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) who have a history of stroke or ischemic heart disease, new research suggests.

Overall, in a large cohort study from South Korea, patients who took pioglitazone were 16% less likely to develop dementia over an average of 10 years than peers who did not take the drug.

However, the dementia risk reduction was 54% among those with ischemic heart disease and 43% among those with a history of stroke.

“Our study was to see the association between pioglitazone use and incidence of dementia, not how (with what mechanisms) this drug can suppress dementia pathology,” coinvestigator Eosu Kim, MD, PhD, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea, said in an interview.

However, “as we found this drug is more effective in diabetic patients who have blood circulation problems in the heart or brain than in those without such problems, we speculate that pioglitazone’s antidementia action may be related to improving blood vessel’s health,” Dr. Kim said.

This finding suggests that pioglitazone could be used as a personalized treatment approach for dementia prevention in this subgroup of patients with diabetes, the researchers noted.

The results were published online in Neurology.
 

Dose-response relationship

Risk for dementia is doubled in adults with T2DM, the investigators wrote. Prior studies have suggested that pioglitazone may protect against dementia, as well as a first or recurrent stroke, in patients with T2DM.

This led Dr. Kim and colleagues to examine the effects of pioglitazone on dementia risk overall and in relation to stroke and ischemic heart disease.

Using the national Korean health database, the researchers identified 91,218 adults aged 50 and older with new-onset T2DM who did not have dementia. A total of 3,467 were treated with pioglitazone.

Pioglitazone exposure was defined as a total cumulative daily dose of 90 or more calculated from all dispensations during 4 years after T2DM diagnosis, with outcomes assessed after this period.

Over an average of 10 years, 8.3% of pioglitazone users developed dementia, compared with 10.0% of nonusers.

There was a statistically significant 16% lower risk for developing all-cause dementia among pioglitazone users than among nonusers (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.84; 95% confidence interval, 0.75-0.95).

A dose-response relationship was evident; pioglitazone users who received the highest cumulative daily dose were at lower risk for dementia (aHR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.55-0.94).
 

Several limitations

The reduced risk for dementia was more pronounced among patients who used pioglitazone for 4 years in comparison with patients who did not use the drug (aHR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.44-0.90).

The apparent protective effect of pioglitazone with regard to dementia was greater among those with a history of ischemic heart disease (aHR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.24-0.90) or stroke (aHR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.38-0.86) before diabetes diagnosis.

The incidence of stroke was also reduced with pioglitazone use (aHR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.66-1.0).

“These results provide valuable information on who could potentially benefit from pioglitazone use for prevention of dementia,” Dr. Kim said in a news release.

However, “the risk and benefit balance of long-term use of this drug to prevent dementia should be prospectively assessed,” he said in an interview.

The researchers cautioned that the study was observational; hence, the reported associations cannot address causal relationships. Also, because of the use of claims data, drug compliance could not be guaranteed, and exposure may have been overestimated.

There is also the potential for selection bias, and no information on apolipoprotein E was available, they noted.
 

 

 

More data needed

In an accompanying editorial, Colleen J. Maxwell, PhD, University of Waterloo (Ont.), and colleagues wrote that the results “not only support previous studies showing the potential cognitive benefit of pioglitazone but also extend our understanding of this benefit through the mediating effect of reducing ischemic stroke.”

However, because of their associated risks, which include fractures, weight gain, heart failure, and bladder cancer, thiazolidinediones are not currently favored in diabetes management guidelines – and their use has significantly declined since the mid to late 2000s, the editorialists noted.

They agreed that it will be important to reassess the risk-benefit profile of pioglitazone in T2DM as additional findings emerge.

They also noted that sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors, which have significant cardiovascular and renal benefits and minimal side effects, may also lower the risk for dementia.

“As both pioglitazone and SGLT-2 inhibitors are second-line options for physicians, the current decision would easily be in favor of SGLT-2 inhibitors given their safety profile,” Dr. Maxwell and colleagues wrote.

For now, pioglitazone “should not be used to prevent dementia in patients with T2DM,” they concluded.

The study was supported by grants from the National Research Foundation of Korea funded by the Korean government and the Ministry of Health and Welfare. The investigators and editorialists report no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Treatment with the thiazolidinedione pioglitazone may offer the greatest protection against dementia for older adults with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) who have a history of stroke or ischemic heart disease, new research suggests.

Overall, in a large cohort study from South Korea, patients who took pioglitazone were 16% less likely to develop dementia over an average of 10 years than peers who did not take the drug.

However, the dementia risk reduction was 54% among those with ischemic heart disease and 43% among those with a history of stroke.

“Our study was to see the association between pioglitazone use and incidence of dementia, not how (with what mechanisms) this drug can suppress dementia pathology,” coinvestigator Eosu Kim, MD, PhD, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea, said in an interview.

However, “as we found this drug is more effective in diabetic patients who have blood circulation problems in the heart or brain than in those without such problems, we speculate that pioglitazone’s antidementia action may be related to improving blood vessel’s health,” Dr. Kim said.

This finding suggests that pioglitazone could be used as a personalized treatment approach for dementia prevention in this subgroup of patients with diabetes, the researchers noted.

The results were published online in Neurology.
 

Dose-response relationship

Risk for dementia is doubled in adults with T2DM, the investigators wrote. Prior studies have suggested that pioglitazone may protect against dementia, as well as a first or recurrent stroke, in patients with T2DM.

This led Dr. Kim and colleagues to examine the effects of pioglitazone on dementia risk overall and in relation to stroke and ischemic heart disease.

Using the national Korean health database, the researchers identified 91,218 adults aged 50 and older with new-onset T2DM who did not have dementia. A total of 3,467 were treated with pioglitazone.

Pioglitazone exposure was defined as a total cumulative daily dose of 90 or more calculated from all dispensations during 4 years after T2DM diagnosis, with outcomes assessed after this period.

Over an average of 10 years, 8.3% of pioglitazone users developed dementia, compared with 10.0% of nonusers.

There was a statistically significant 16% lower risk for developing all-cause dementia among pioglitazone users than among nonusers (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.84; 95% confidence interval, 0.75-0.95).

A dose-response relationship was evident; pioglitazone users who received the highest cumulative daily dose were at lower risk for dementia (aHR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.55-0.94).
 

Several limitations

The reduced risk for dementia was more pronounced among patients who used pioglitazone for 4 years in comparison with patients who did not use the drug (aHR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.44-0.90).

The apparent protective effect of pioglitazone with regard to dementia was greater among those with a history of ischemic heart disease (aHR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.24-0.90) or stroke (aHR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.38-0.86) before diabetes diagnosis.

The incidence of stroke was also reduced with pioglitazone use (aHR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.66-1.0).

“These results provide valuable information on who could potentially benefit from pioglitazone use for prevention of dementia,” Dr. Kim said in a news release.

However, “the risk and benefit balance of long-term use of this drug to prevent dementia should be prospectively assessed,” he said in an interview.

The researchers cautioned that the study was observational; hence, the reported associations cannot address causal relationships. Also, because of the use of claims data, drug compliance could not be guaranteed, and exposure may have been overestimated.

There is also the potential for selection bias, and no information on apolipoprotein E was available, they noted.
 

 

 

More data needed

In an accompanying editorial, Colleen J. Maxwell, PhD, University of Waterloo (Ont.), and colleagues wrote that the results “not only support previous studies showing the potential cognitive benefit of pioglitazone but also extend our understanding of this benefit through the mediating effect of reducing ischemic stroke.”

However, because of their associated risks, which include fractures, weight gain, heart failure, and bladder cancer, thiazolidinediones are not currently favored in diabetes management guidelines – and their use has significantly declined since the mid to late 2000s, the editorialists noted.

They agreed that it will be important to reassess the risk-benefit profile of pioglitazone in T2DM as additional findings emerge.

They also noted that sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors, which have significant cardiovascular and renal benefits and minimal side effects, may also lower the risk for dementia.

“As both pioglitazone and SGLT-2 inhibitors are second-line options for physicians, the current decision would easily be in favor of SGLT-2 inhibitors given their safety profile,” Dr. Maxwell and colleagues wrote.

For now, pioglitazone “should not be used to prevent dementia in patients with T2DM,” they concluded.

The study was supported by grants from the National Research Foundation of Korea funded by the Korean government and the Ministry of Health and Welfare. The investigators and editorialists report no relevant financial relationships.

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

Treatment with the thiazolidinedione pioglitazone may offer the greatest protection against dementia for older adults with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) who have a history of stroke or ischemic heart disease, new research suggests.

Overall, in a large cohort study from South Korea, patients who took pioglitazone were 16% less likely to develop dementia over an average of 10 years than peers who did not take the drug.

However, the dementia risk reduction was 54% among those with ischemic heart disease and 43% among those with a history of stroke.

“Our study was to see the association between pioglitazone use and incidence of dementia, not how (with what mechanisms) this drug can suppress dementia pathology,” coinvestigator Eosu Kim, MD, PhD, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea, said in an interview.

However, “as we found this drug is more effective in diabetic patients who have blood circulation problems in the heart or brain than in those without such problems, we speculate that pioglitazone’s antidementia action may be related to improving blood vessel’s health,” Dr. Kim said.

This finding suggests that pioglitazone could be used as a personalized treatment approach for dementia prevention in this subgroup of patients with diabetes, the researchers noted.

The results were published online in Neurology.
 

Dose-response relationship

Risk for dementia is doubled in adults with T2DM, the investigators wrote. Prior studies have suggested that pioglitazone may protect against dementia, as well as a first or recurrent stroke, in patients with T2DM.

This led Dr. Kim and colleagues to examine the effects of pioglitazone on dementia risk overall and in relation to stroke and ischemic heart disease.

Using the national Korean health database, the researchers identified 91,218 adults aged 50 and older with new-onset T2DM who did not have dementia. A total of 3,467 were treated with pioglitazone.

Pioglitazone exposure was defined as a total cumulative daily dose of 90 or more calculated from all dispensations during 4 years after T2DM diagnosis, with outcomes assessed after this period.

Over an average of 10 years, 8.3% of pioglitazone users developed dementia, compared with 10.0% of nonusers.

There was a statistically significant 16% lower risk for developing all-cause dementia among pioglitazone users than among nonusers (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.84; 95% confidence interval, 0.75-0.95).

A dose-response relationship was evident; pioglitazone users who received the highest cumulative daily dose were at lower risk for dementia (aHR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.55-0.94).
 

Several limitations

The reduced risk for dementia was more pronounced among patients who used pioglitazone for 4 years in comparison with patients who did not use the drug (aHR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.44-0.90).

The apparent protective effect of pioglitazone with regard to dementia was greater among those with a history of ischemic heart disease (aHR, 0.46; 95% CI, 0.24-0.90) or stroke (aHR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.38-0.86) before diabetes diagnosis.

The incidence of stroke was also reduced with pioglitazone use (aHR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.66-1.0).

“These results provide valuable information on who could potentially benefit from pioglitazone use for prevention of dementia,” Dr. Kim said in a news release.

However, “the risk and benefit balance of long-term use of this drug to prevent dementia should be prospectively assessed,” he said in an interview.

The researchers cautioned that the study was observational; hence, the reported associations cannot address causal relationships. Also, because of the use of claims data, drug compliance could not be guaranteed, and exposure may have been overestimated.

There is also the potential for selection bias, and no information on apolipoprotein E was available, they noted.
 

 

 

More data needed

In an accompanying editorial, Colleen J. Maxwell, PhD, University of Waterloo (Ont.), and colleagues wrote that the results “not only support previous studies showing the potential cognitive benefit of pioglitazone but also extend our understanding of this benefit through the mediating effect of reducing ischemic stroke.”

However, because of their associated risks, which include fractures, weight gain, heart failure, and bladder cancer, thiazolidinediones are not currently favored in diabetes management guidelines – and their use has significantly declined since the mid to late 2000s, the editorialists noted.

They agreed that it will be important to reassess the risk-benefit profile of pioglitazone in T2DM as additional findings emerge.

They also noted that sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors, which have significant cardiovascular and renal benefits and minimal side effects, may also lower the risk for dementia.

“As both pioglitazone and SGLT-2 inhibitors are second-line options for physicians, the current decision would easily be in favor of SGLT-2 inhibitors given their safety profile,” Dr. Maxwell and colleagues wrote.

For now, pioglitazone “should not be used to prevent dementia in patients with T2DM,” they concluded.

The study was supported by grants from the National Research Foundation of Korea funded by the Korean government and the Ministry of Health and Welfare. The investigators and editorialists report no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Breast cancer exacts high financial toll worldwide

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Treatment for breast cancer exacts a high financial toll on patients, not just in the United States and other high-income countries but in low- and middle-income countries as well, a meta-analysis found.

Although the rate of financial toxicity was much higher in low- and middle-income countries – affecting 79% of patients – more than 35% of patients in high-income countries also incurred financial hardship, the study team found.

The findings highlight the need for policies to offset the burden of direct and indirect costs for breast cancer care and improve the financial health of vulnerable patients, said the study authors, led by Kavitha Ranganathan, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston.

The study was published online in JAMA Network Open.

 

The most expensive malignancy?

Patients with breast cancer may be particularly burdened by costs of care, with one study showing substantially higher out-of-pocket costs for patients with breast cancer than colorectal, lung, and prostate cancer combined.

A Lancet Oncology Commission report revealed that breast cancer was the most expensive cancer in the United States in 2010, accounting for $16.5 billion, or 13% of all cancer-related spending. A separate analysis found that individual direct medical costs of breast cancer care can reach $100,000.

In high-income countries, the financial burden of breast cancer care may be the result of novel and costly cancer therapeutics and interventions, overuse of services, increased willingness to pay, and varying insurance coverage. In low- and middle-income countries, women may experience delayed diagnosis because of limited access to screening and high-quality diagnostic services, leading to more later-stage diagnoses requiring more extensive treatments. Lower baseline income, limited insurance coverage, and greater distance to treatment centers may also be factors.

“Establishing the global extent of financial toxicity and comparing the economic burden of disease in different populations is imperative to help policy makers prioritize funding of breast cancer care infrastructure,” Dr. Ranganathan and colleagues write.

In their meta-analysis of 18 studies – 14 from high-income countries and 4 from low – published from 2008 to 2021, the authors found that the definition of financial toxicity varied widely across studies.

For example, some used specific numerical criteria for defining financial toxicity, such as medical cost exceeding 40% of household capacity to pay or potential income or out-of-pocket costs exceeding 30% of annual household income.

Others used patient-reported outcome measures instruments evaluating subjective statements of financial difficulty, such as an affirmative answer to having financial difficulty or trouble paying medical bills, or paying more for medical care than is affordable.

In other studies, financial toxicity was defined according to a patient’s report of specific, objective financial consequences of care, including losing income or a job; having to borrow money or go into debt; having trouble paying for food, rent, or transportation; or having to forgo any type of medical care because of cost.

In their analysis, the pooled rate of financial toxicity among patients with breast cancer was 35.3% in high-income countries and 78.8% in low/middle-income countries, both demonstrating high heterogeneity or variability (P for heterogeneity < .001). In contrast, typical financial toxicity rates across all health conditions in low-income countries ranged from 6% to 12%, the investigators noted.

One study assessing quality of life measures in Egypt found that 47.5% of patients were food insecure, 66% needed financial assistance, 34% used savings to pay for treatment, and 41.2% lacked savings altogether.
 

 

 

Burden reduction

Given the high rates of financial toxicity associated with breast cancer, what strategies might reduce this cost burden?

When exploring potential factors associated with financial toxicity, the researchers found no clear association between financial toxicity and race, employment status, and age, and could draw no firm conclusions about the impact of comorbidities and urban vs. rural place of residence. In addition, cancer stage and treatments were “extremely” heterogeneous across studies and the authors found no clear association between either factor and financial toxicity.

But the authors noted that the highest-priority patients are typically those who have low education, have low socioeconomic status, lack health insurance, and live in low-resource areas.

To reduce financial toxicity and improve outcomes among patients with breast cancer, the study team recommended four potential strategies:

  • Use targeted educational campaigns to raise awareness about the signs and symptoms of breast cancer and the importance of early diagnosis and treatment.
  • Expand health care coverage to minimize direct medical out-of-pocket costs.
  • Develop programs to assist with direct nonmedical and indirect costs, such as transportation to and lodging near treatment centers and childcare.
  • Improve screening, referral, and treatment infrastructure for breast cancer care.

The researchers also noted that their data highlight the value of universal health care coverage as a policy strategy, with evidence of lower financial toxicity rates in countries with universal health coverage.

Support for the study was provided in part by the National Cancer Institute, United Nations Institute for Training and Research and the Global Surgery Foundation, Harvard Global Health Institute, Connors Center for Women’s Health and Gender Biology, the Center for Surgery and Public Health, and the National Endowment for Plastic Surgery. Dr. Ranganathan reports no relevant financial relationships. Several coauthors have disclosures; the full list can be found with the original article.

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

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Treatment for breast cancer exacts a high financial toll on patients, not just in the United States and other high-income countries but in low- and middle-income countries as well, a meta-analysis found.

Although the rate of financial toxicity was much higher in low- and middle-income countries – affecting 79% of patients – more than 35% of patients in high-income countries also incurred financial hardship, the study team found.

The findings highlight the need for policies to offset the burden of direct and indirect costs for breast cancer care and improve the financial health of vulnerable patients, said the study authors, led by Kavitha Ranganathan, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston.

The study was published online in JAMA Network Open.

 

The most expensive malignancy?

Patients with breast cancer may be particularly burdened by costs of care, with one study showing substantially higher out-of-pocket costs for patients with breast cancer than colorectal, lung, and prostate cancer combined.

A Lancet Oncology Commission report revealed that breast cancer was the most expensive cancer in the United States in 2010, accounting for $16.5 billion, or 13% of all cancer-related spending. A separate analysis found that individual direct medical costs of breast cancer care can reach $100,000.

In high-income countries, the financial burden of breast cancer care may be the result of novel and costly cancer therapeutics and interventions, overuse of services, increased willingness to pay, and varying insurance coverage. In low- and middle-income countries, women may experience delayed diagnosis because of limited access to screening and high-quality diagnostic services, leading to more later-stage diagnoses requiring more extensive treatments. Lower baseline income, limited insurance coverage, and greater distance to treatment centers may also be factors.

“Establishing the global extent of financial toxicity and comparing the economic burden of disease in different populations is imperative to help policy makers prioritize funding of breast cancer care infrastructure,” Dr. Ranganathan and colleagues write.

In their meta-analysis of 18 studies – 14 from high-income countries and 4 from low – published from 2008 to 2021, the authors found that the definition of financial toxicity varied widely across studies.

For example, some used specific numerical criteria for defining financial toxicity, such as medical cost exceeding 40% of household capacity to pay or potential income or out-of-pocket costs exceeding 30% of annual household income.

Others used patient-reported outcome measures instruments evaluating subjective statements of financial difficulty, such as an affirmative answer to having financial difficulty or trouble paying medical bills, or paying more for medical care than is affordable.

In other studies, financial toxicity was defined according to a patient’s report of specific, objective financial consequences of care, including losing income or a job; having to borrow money or go into debt; having trouble paying for food, rent, or transportation; or having to forgo any type of medical care because of cost.

In their analysis, the pooled rate of financial toxicity among patients with breast cancer was 35.3% in high-income countries and 78.8% in low/middle-income countries, both demonstrating high heterogeneity or variability (P for heterogeneity < .001). In contrast, typical financial toxicity rates across all health conditions in low-income countries ranged from 6% to 12%, the investigators noted.

One study assessing quality of life measures in Egypt found that 47.5% of patients were food insecure, 66% needed financial assistance, 34% used savings to pay for treatment, and 41.2% lacked savings altogether.
 

 

 

Burden reduction

Given the high rates of financial toxicity associated with breast cancer, what strategies might reduce this cost burden?

When exploring potential factors associated with financial toxicity, the researchers found no clear association between financial toxicity and race, employment status, and age, and could draw no firm conclusions about the impact of comorbidities and urban vs. rural place of residence. In addition, cancer stage and treatments were “extremely” heterogeneous across studies and the authors found no clear association between either factor and financial toxicity.

But the authors noted that the highest-priority patients are typically those who have low education, have low socioeconomic status, lack health insurance, and live in low-resource areas.

To reduce financial toxicity and improve outcomes among patients with breast cancer, the study team recommended four potential strategies:

  • Use targeted educational campaigns to raise awareness about the signs and symptoms of breast cancer and the importance of early diagnosis and treatment.
  • Expand health care coverage to minimize direct medical out-of-pocket costs.
  • Develop programs to assist with direct nonmedical and indirect costs, such as transportation to and lodging near treatment centers and childcare.
  • Improve screening, referral, and treatment infrastructure for breast cancer care.

The researchers also noted that their data highlight the value of universal health care coverage as a policy strategy, with evidence of lower financial toxicity rates in countries with universal health coverage.

Support for the study was provided in part by the National Cancer Institute, United Nations Institute for Training and Research and the Global Surgery Foundation, Harvard Global Health Institute, Connors Center for Women’s Health and Gender Biology, the Center for Surgery and Public Health, and the National Endowment for Plastic Surgery. Dr. Ranganathan reports no relevant financial relationships. Several coauthors have disclosures; the full list can be found with the original article.

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

Treatment for breast cancer exacts a high financial toll on patients, not just in the United States and other high-income countries but in low- and middle-income countries as well, a meta-analysis found.

Although the rate of financial toxicity was much higher in low- and middle-income countries – affecting 79% of patients – more than 35% of patients in high-income countries also incurred financial hardship, the study team found.

The findings highlight the need for policies to offset the burden of direct and indirect costs for breast cancer care and improve the financial health of vulnerable patients, said the study authors, led by Kavitha Ranganathan, MD, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston.

The study was published online in JAMA Network Open.

 

The most expensive malignancy?

Patients with breast cancer may be particularly burdened by costs of care, with one study showing substantially higher out-of-pocket costs for patients with breast cancer than colorectal, lung, and prostate cancer combined.

A Lancet Oncology Commission report revealed that breast cancer was the most expensive cancer in the United States in 2010, accounting for $16.5 billion, or 13% of all cancer-related spending. A separate analysis found that individual direct medical costs of breast cancer care can reach $100,000.

In high-income countries, the financial burden of breast cancer care may be the result of novel and costly cancer therapeutics and interventions, overuse of services, increased willingness to pay, and varying insurance coverage. In low- and middle-income countries, women may experience delayed diagnosis because of limited access to screening and high-quality diagnostic services, leading to more later-stage diagnoses requiring more extensive treatments. Lower baseline income, limited insurance coverage, and greater distance to treatment centers may also be factors.

“Establishing the global extent of financial toxicity and comparing the economic burden of disease in different populations is imperative to help policy makers prioritize funding of breast cancer care infrastructure,” Dr. Ranganathan and colleagues write.

In their meta-analysis of 18 studies – 14 from high-income countries and 4 from low – published from 2008 to 2021, the authors found that the definition of financial toxicity varied widely across studies.

For example, some used specific numerical criteria for defining financial toxicity, such as medical cost exceeding 40% of household capacity to pay or potential income or out-of-pocket costs exceeding 30% of annual household income.

Others used patient-reported outcome measures instruments evaluating subjective statements of financial difficulty, such as an affirmative answer to having financial difficulty or trouble paying medical bills, or paying more for medical care than is affordable.

In other studies, financial toxicity was defined according to a patient’s report of specific, objective financial consequences of care, including losing income or a job; having to borrow money or go into debt; having trouble paying for food, rent, or transportation; or having to forgo any type of medical care because of cost.

In their analysis, the pooled rate of financial toxicity among patients with breast cancer was 35.3% in high-income countries and 78.8% in low/middle-income countries, both demonstrating high heterogeneity or variability (P for heterogeneity < .001). In contrast, typical financial toxicity rates across all health conditions in low-income countries ranged from 6% to 12%, the investigators noted.

One study assessing quality of life measures in Egypt found that 47.5% of patients were food insecure, 66% needed financial assistance, 34% used savings to pay for treatment, and 41.2% lacked savings altogether.
 

 

 

Burden reduction

Given the high rates of financial toxicity associated with breast cancer, what strategies might reduce this cost burden?

When exploring potential factors associated with financial toxicity, the researchers found no clear association between financial toxicity and race, employment status, and age, and could draw no firm conclusions about the impact of comorbidities and urban vs. rural place of residence. In addition, cancer stage and treatments were “extremely” heterogeneous across studies and the authors found no clear association between either factor and financial toxicity.

But the authors noted that the highest-priority patients are typically those who have low education, have low socioeconomic status, lack health insurance, and live in low-resource areas.

To reduce financial toxicity and improve outcomes among patients with breast cancer, the study team recommended four potential strategies:

  • Use targeted educational campaigns to raise awareness about the signs and symptoms of breast cancer and the importance of early diagnosis and treatment.
  • Expand health care coverage to minimize direct medical out-of-pocket costs.
  • Develop programs to assist with direct nonmedical and indirect costs, such as transportation to and lodging near treatment centers and childcare.
  • Improve screening, referral, and treatment infrastructure for breast cancer care.

The researchers also noted that their data highlight the value of universal health care coverage as a policy strategy, with evidence of lower financial toxicity rates in countries with universal health coverage.

Support for the study was provided in part by the National Cancer Institute, United Nations Institute for Training and Research and the Global Surgery Foundation, Harvard Global Health Institute, Connors Center for Women’s Health and Gender Biology, the Center for Surgery and Public Health, and the National Endowment for Plastic Surgery. Dr. Ranganathan reports no relevant financial relationships. Several coauthors have disclosures; the full list can be found with the original article.

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

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‘Sighing’ tops mindfulness for reduced stress, improved mood

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Cyclic sighing is more effective than mindfulness meditation for improving mood and reducing stress, new research suggests.

In a randomized controlled study, daily breathwork – especially cyclic breathing, which emphasizes shorter inhalations and prolonged exhalations – was associated with greater improvement in mood and a slower respiratory rate than mindfulness meditation.

Dr. David Spiegel

“We were pleased that just 5 minutes a day of the breathing exercises positively affected mood and resulted in slower respiratory rate, indicating reduced arousal,” coinvestigator David Spiegel, MD, who directs the Center for Stress and Health at Stanford (Calif.) University, told this news organization.

The findings were published online in Cell Reports Medicine.
 

Intentional breath control

Controlled breathwork has emerged as a potential tool to manage stress and boost well-being.

In the new study, researchers compared three different daily 5-minute breathwork exercises to an equal amount of mindfulness meditation over 1 month in 108 healthy adults recruited mostly from an undergraduate psychology class at Stanford: 33 participants practiced cyclic hyperventilation, which emphasizes robust inhalation, short retention and rapid exhalation, 30 did exhale-focused cyclic sighing, 21 performed box breathing, which emphasizes equal duration of inhalation, breath retention, and exhalation, and 24 practiced mindfulness meditation (the control group).

The primary endpoints were improvement in mood and anxiety, as well as reduced physiologic arousal (respiratory rate, heart rate, and heart rate variability). Physiological data was collected using a wearable WHOOP strap.

All four groups showed significant daily improvement in mood, as well as reduction in anxiety and negative mood, but there were significant differences between mindfulness meditation and breathwork.

Using a mixed-effects model, the researchers showed that breathwork, especially the exhale-focused cyclic sighing, produced greater improvement in mood (P < .05) and reduction in respiratory rate (P < .05), compared with mindfulness meditation.
 

Specific patterns vs. passive attention

The finding supports the team’s hypothesis that intentional control over breath with specific breathing patterns produces more benefit to mood than passive attention to one’s breath, as in mindfulness meditation practice.

“It turned out that the cyclic sighing was indeed most soothing,” Dr. Spiegel noted.

“We expected that because of respiratory sinus arrhythmia. Exhaling is accomplished by increasing pressure in the chest, which increases venous return to the heart, triggering parasympathetic slowing of heart rate via the sinoatrial node,” he said.

Dr. Spiegel added that, conversely, inspiration reduces venous return, triggering sympathetic activity and increased heart rate.

“The magnitude of this heart rate variability is associated with better health, including recovery from myocardial infarction and even cancer survival. So self-soothing is a good thing, and we expected an advantage for cyclic sighing,” he said.

Dr. Andrew Huberman

“If you’re looking to improve sleep and reduce daytime stress, recover from intense work, life, and/or training, then interventions that facilitate autonomic control (and indeed you can control it), brief (5 minutes) structured breathwork is among the more powerful (and zero cost) tools,” tweeted senior investigator Andrew Huberman, PhD, professor of neurobiology at Stanford.
 

Immediate application?

Sara Lazar, PhD, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, said the findings are “interesting” but cautioned that this is “just one study with a pretty small sample size,” and it only enrolled healthy college students.

 

 

courtesy Massachusetts General Hospital
Dr. Sara Lazar

Dr. Lazar, who also runs the Lazar Lab for Meditation Research at Mass General, noted that she would want to see a future study “done with working-age adults and with clinical populations.”

“It should also be noted that mindfulness had a bigger effect on negative affect, which could have implications for conditions such as depression or trauma,” said Dr. Lazar, who was not involved with the current research.

Also weighing in, Steven R. Thorp, PhD, professor at California School of Professional Psychology, Alliant International University, San Diego, said in an interview the study is “really interesting and well done.”

Dr. Steven Thorp

“Although breathing exercises and breathing retraining are commonly found in psychosocial interventions, especially for anxiety disorders, there have been few empirical studies comparing different breathing protocols,” Dr. Thorp said.

In this study, the passive observation of breaths (mindfulness) and specific breathwork interventions “all worked to decrease state anxiety; but the breathwork, particularly the cyclic sighing protocol, produced a greater overall reduction in respiratory rate and increase in positive mood,” he noted.

“These techniques can be recommended by all clinicians because all clients have access to their breath at all times – and only 5 minutes of daily practice can yield the benefits. Moreover, as the authors note, the immediate benefits may encourage clients to engage with the breathwork and potentially other aspects of treatment,” Dr. Thorp said.

The study was funded by Victor and Winnie Koo and Tianren Culture and a Stanford School of Medicine Discovery Innovation Award. WHOOP donated the wrist straps used in the study, but was not involved in the study’s design or analysis. Dr. Huberman is an advisor to WHOOP. Dr. Lazar and Dr. Thorp have reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Cyclic sighing is more effective than mindfulness meditation for improving mood and reducing stress, new research suggests.

In a randomized controlled study, daily breathwork – especially cyclic breathing, which emphasizes shorter inhalations and prolonged exhalations – was associated with greater improvement in mood and a slower respiratory rate than mindfulness meditation.

Dr. David Spiegel

“We were pleased that just 5 minutes a day of the breathing exercises positively affected mood and resulted in slower respiratory rate, indicating reduced arousal,” coinvestigator David Spiegel, MD, who directs the Center for Stress and Health at Stanford (Calif.) University, told this news organization.

The findings were published online in Cell Reports Medicine.
 

Intentional breath control

Controlled breathwork has emerged as a potential tool to manage stress and boost well-being.

In the new study, researchers compared three different daily 5-minute breathwork exercises to an equal amount of mindfulness meditation over 1 month in 108 healthy adults recruited mostly from an undergraduate psychology class at Stanford: 33 participants practiced cyclic hyperventilation, which emphasizes robust inhalation, short retention and rapid exhalation, 30 did exhale-focused cyclic sighing, 21 performed box breathing, which emphasizes equal duration of inhalation, breath retention, and exhalation, and 24 practiced mindfulness meditation (the control group).

The primary endpoints were improvement in mood and anxiety, as well as reduced physiologic arousal (respiratory rate, heart rate, and heart rate variability). Physiological data was collected using a wearable WHOOP strap.

All four groups showed significant daily improvement in mood, as well as reduction in anxiety and negative mood, but there were significant differences between mindfulness meditation and breathwork.

Using a mixed-effects model, the researchers showed that breathwork, especially the exhale-focused cyclic sighing, produced greater improvement in mood (P < .05) and reduction in respiratory rate (P < .05), compared with mindfulness meditation.
 

Specific patterns vs. passive attention

The finding supports the team’s hypothesis that intentional control over breath with specific breathing patterns produces more benefit to mood than passive attention to one’s breath, as in mindfulness meditation practice.

“It turned out that the cyclic sighing was indeed most soothing,” Dr. Spiegel noted.

“We expected that because of respiratory sinus arrhythmia. Exhaling is accomplished by increasing pressure in the chest, which increases venous return to the heart, triggering parasympathetic slowing of heart rate via the sinoatrial node,” he said.

Dr. Spiegel added that, conversely, inspiration reduces venous return, triggering sympathetic activity and increased heart rate.

“The magnitude of this heart rate variability is associated with better health, including recovery from myocardial infarction and even cancer survival. So self-soothing is a good thing, and we expected an advantage for cyclic sighing,” he said.

Dr. Andrew Huberman

“If you’re looking to improve sleep and reduce daytime stress, recover from intense work, life, and/or training, then interventions that facilitate autonomic control (and indeed you can control it), brief (5 minutes) structured breathwork is among the more powerful (and zero cost) tools,” tweeted senior investigator Andrew Huberman, PhD, professor of neurobiology at Stanford.
 

Immediate application?

Sara Lazar, PhD, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, said the findings are “interesting” but cautioned that this is “just one study with a pretty small sample size,” and it only enrolled healthy college students.

 

 

courtesy Massachusetts General Hospital
Dr. Sara Lazar

Dr. Lazar, who also runs the Lazar Lab for Meditation Research at Mass General, noted that she would want to see a future study “done with working-age adults and with clinical populations.”

“It should also be noted that mindfulness had a bigger effect on negative affect, which could have implications for conditions such as depression or trauma,” said Dr. Lazar, who was not involved with the current research.

Also weighing in, Steven R. Thorp, PhD, professor at California School of Professional Psychology, Alliant International University, San Diego, said in an interview the study is “really interesting and well done.”

Dr. Steven Thorp

“Although breathing exercises and breathing retraining are commonly found in psychosocial interventions, especially for anxiety disorders, there have been few empirical studies comparing different breathing protocols,” Dr. Thorp said.

In this study, the passive observation of breaths (mindfulness) and specific breathwork interventions “all worked to decrease state anxiety; but the breathwork, particularly the cyclic sighing protocol, produced a greater overall reduction in respiratory rate and increase in positive mood,” he noted.

“These techniques can be recommended by all clinicians because all clients have access to their breath at all times – and only 5 minutes of daily practice can yield the benefits. Moreover, as the authors note, the immediate benefits may encourage clients to engage with the breathwork and potentially other aspects of treatment,” Dr. Thorp said.

The study was funded by Victor and Winnie Koo and Tianren Culture and a Stanford School of Medicine Discovery Innovation Award. WHOOP donated the wrist straps used in the study, but was not involved in the study’s design or analysis. Dr. Huberman is an advisor to WHOOP. Dr. Lazar and Dr. Thorp have reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

Cyclic sighing is more effective than mindfulness meditation for improving mood and reducing stress, new research suggests.

In a randomized controlled study, daily breathwork – especially cyclic breathing, which emphasizes shorter inhalations and prolonged exhalations – was associated with greater improvement in mood and a slower respiratory rate than mindfulness meditation.

Dr. David Spiegel

“We were pleased that just 5 minutes a day of the breathing exercises positively affected mood and resulted in slower respiratory rate, indicating reduced arousal,” coinvestigator David Spiegel, MD, who directs the Center for Stress and Health at Stanford (Calif.) University, told this news organization.

The findings were published online in Cell Reports Medicine.
 

Intentional breath control

Controlled breathwork has emerged as a potential tool to manage stress and boost well-being.

In the new study, researchers compared three different daily 5-minute breathwork exercises to an equal amount of mindfulness meditation over 1 month in 108 healthy adults recruited mostly from an undergraduate psychology class at Stanford: 33 participants practiced cyclic hyperventilation, which emphasizes robust inhalation, short retention and rapid exhalation, 30 did exhale-focused cyclic sighing, 21 performed box breathing, which emphasizes equal duration of inhalation, breath retention, and exhalation, and 24 practiced mindfulness meditation (the control group).

The primary endpoints were improvement in mood and anxiety, as well as reduced physiologic arousal (respiratory rate, heart rate, and heart rate variability). Physiological data was collected using a wearable WHOOP strap.

All four groups showed significant daily improvement in mood, as well as reduction in anxiety and negative mood, but there were significant differences between mindfulness meditation and breathwork.

Using a mixed-effects model, the researchers showed that breathwork, especially the exhale-focused cyclic sighing, produced greater improvement in mood (P < .05) and reduction in respiratory rate (P < .05), compared with mindfulness meditation.
 

Specific patterns vs. passive attention

The finding supports the team’s hypothesis that intentional control over breath with specific breathing patterns produces more benefit to mood than passive attention to one’s breath, as in mindfulness meditation practice.

“It turned out that the cyclic sighing was indeed most soothing,” Dr. Spiegel noted.

“We expected that because of respiratory sinus arrhythmia. Exhaling is accomplished by increasing pressure in the chest, which increases venous return to the heart, triggering parasympathetic slowing of heart rate via the sinoatrial node,” he said.

Dr. Spiegel added that, conversely, inspiration reduces venous return, triggering sympathetic activity and increased heart rate.

“The magnitude of this heart rate variability is associated with better health, including recovery from myocardial infarction and even cancer survival. So self-soothing is a good thing, and we expected an advantage for cyclic sighing,” he said.

Dr. Andrew Huberman

“If you’re looking to improve sleep and reduce daytime stress, recover from intense work, life, and/or training, then interventions that facilitate autonomic control (and indeed you can control it), brief (5 minutes) structured breathwork is among the more powerful (and zero cost) tools,” tweeted senior investigator Andrew Huberman, PhD, professor of neurobiology at Stanford.
 

Immediate application?

Sara Lazar, PhD, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, said the findings are “interesting” but cautioned that this is “just one study with a pretty small sample size,” and it only enrolled healthy college students.

 

 

courtesy Massachusetts General Hospital
Dr. Sara Lazar

Dr. Lazar, who also runs the Lazar Lab for Meditation Research at Mass General, noted that she would want to see a future study “done with working-age adults and with clinical populations.”

“It should also be noted that mindfulness had a bigger effect on negative affect, which could have implications for conditions such as depression or trauma,” said Dr. Lazar, who was not involved with the current research.

Also weighing in, Steven R. Thorp, PhD, professor at California School of Professional Psychology, Alliant International University, San Diego, said in an interview the study is “really interesting and well done.”

Dr. Steven Thorp

“Although breathing exercises and breathing retraining are commonly found in psychosocial interventions, especially for anxiety disorders, there have been few empirical studies comparing different breathing protocols,” Dr. Thorp said.

In this study, the passive observation of breaths (mindfulness) and specific breathwork interventions “all worked to decrease state anxiety; but the breathwork, particularly the cyclic sighing protocol, produced a greater overall reduction in respiratory rate and increase in positive mood,” he noted.

“These techniques can be recommended by all clinicians because all clients have access to their breath at all times – and only 5 minutes of daily practice can yield the benefits. Moreover, as the authors note, the immediate benefits may encourage clients to engage with the breathwork and potentially other aspects of treatment,” Dr. Thorp said.

The study was funded by Victor and Winnie Koo and Tianren Culture and a Stanford School of Medicine Discovery Innovation Award. WHOOP donated the wrist straps used in the study, but was not involved in the study’s design or analysis. Dr. Huberman is an advisor to WHOOP. Dr. Lazar and Dr. Thorp have reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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FDA puts hold on esophagitis, H. pylori drug, owing to impurity concerns

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FDA puts hold on esophagitis, H. pylori drug, owing to impurity concerns

The Food and Drug Administration will not act on Phathom Pharmaceutical’s vonoprazan new drug application (NDA) for erosive esophagitis or its postapproval supplement for Helicobacter pylori until the company addresses concerns over the presence of nitrosamine impurities.

The FDA approved the company’s two vonoprazan-based treatments for H. pylori infection, Voquezna Triple Pak (vonoprazan, amoxicillin, clarithromycin) and Voquezna Dual Pak (vonoprazan, amoxicillin), last May.

The target action date of the company’s NDA for vonoprazan for the treatment of erosive esophagitis was Jan. 11, 2023.

In a news release, Phathom said it has received complete response letters from the FDA related to its erosive esophagitis NDA and H. pylori postapproval supplement.

Both letters address specifications and controls for a nitrosamine drug substance–related impurity, N-nitroso-vonoprazan (NVP), which was detected in the initial commercial launch materials of both products.

The FDA letters ask Phathom to provide “additional stability data to demonstrate that levels of the impurity previously found in vonoprazan drug product will remain at or below the daily acceptable intake throughout the proposed shelf life of the product,” Phathom said.

Phathom said it has conducted “extensive root cause investigations regarding the trace levels of the impurity since it was detected and has implemented mitigation measures to control the levels of NVP below the acceptable intake.”

The company expects to meet with the FDA before the end of March to discuss a resubmission plan and a timeline for the vonoprazan products.

Owing to the regulatory delays, Phathom said it no longer expects product launches for H. pylori or erosive esophagitis in the first quarter of 2023.

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

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The Food and Drug Administration will not act on Phathom Pharmaceutical’s vonoprazan new drug application (NDA) for erosive esophagitis or its postapproval supplement for Helicobacter pylori until the company addresses concerns over the presence of nitrosamine impurities.

The FDA approved the company’s two vonoprazan-based treatments for H. pylori infection, Voquezna Triple Pak (vonoprazan, amoxicillin, clarithromycin) and Voquezna Dual Pak (vonoprazan, amoxicillin), last May.

The target action date of the company’s NDA for vonoprazan for the treatment of erosive esophagitis was Jan. 11, 2023.

In a news release, Phathom said it has received complete response letters from the FDA related to its erosive esophagitis NDA and H. pylori postapproval supplement.

Both letters address specifications and controls for a nitrosamine drug substance–related impurity, N-nitroso-vonoprazan (NVP), which was detected in the initial commercial launch materials of both products.

The FDA letters ask Phathom to provide “additional stability data to demonstrate that levels of the impurity previously found in vonoprazan drug product will remain at or below the daily acceptable intake throughout the proposed shelf life of the product,” Phathom said.

Phathom said it has conducted “extensive root cause investigations regarding the trace levels of the impurity since it was detected and has implemented mitigation measures to control the levels of NVP below the acceptable intake.”

The company expects to meet with the FDA before the end of March to discuss a resubmission plan and a timeline for the vonoprazan products.

Owing to the regulatory delays, Phathom said it no longer expects product launches for H. pylori or erosive esophagitis in the first quarter of 2023.

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

The Food and Drug Administration will not act on Phathom Pharmaceutical’s vonoprazan new drug application (NDA) for erosive esophagitis or its postapproval supplement for Helicobacter pylori until the company addresses concerns over the presence of nitrosamine impurities.

The FDA approved the company’s two vonoprazan-based treatments for H. pylori infection, Voquezna Triple Pak (vonoprazan, amoxicillin, clarithromycin) and Voquezna Dual Pak (vonoprazan, amoxicillin), last May.

The target action date of the company’s NDA for vonoprazan for the treatment of erosive esophagitis was Jan. 11, 2023.

In a news release, Phathom said it has received complete response letters from the FDA related to its erosive esophagitis NDA and H. pylori postapproval supplement.

Both letters address specifications and controls for a nitrosamine drug substance–related impurity, N-nitroso-vonoprazan (NVP), which was detected in the initial commercial launch materials of both products.

The FDA letters ask Phathom to provide “additional stability data to demonstrate that levels of the impurity previously found in vonoprazan drug product will remain at or below the daily acceptable intake throughout the proposed shelf life of the product,” Phathom said.

Phathom said it has conducted “extensive root cause investigations regarding the trace levels of the impurity since it was detected and has implemented mitigation measures to control the levels of NVP below the acceptable intake.”

The company expects to meet with the FDA before the end of March to discuss a resubmission plan and a timeline for the vonoprazan products.

Owing to the regulatory delays, Phathom said it no longer expects product launches for H. pylori or erosive esophagitis in the first quarter of 2023.

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

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Room for improvement in Barrett esophagus care

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Adherence to the Seattle biopsy protocol and recommended endoscopic surveillance intervals – two established quality indicators (QIs) in Barrett esophagus (BE) – varies widely by individual endoscopist and center, an analysis of U.S. registry data shows.

“As the GI Quality Improvement Consortium (GIQuIC) registry represents the ‘best-case scenario’ for adherence, since sites and endoscopists enrolled in this quality registry are aware that their practices are being monitored, these results indicate that there is still room for improvement and better consistency,” the researchers write.

The study was published online in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.

Quality care in BE, which is a precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), includes adherence to the Seattle biopsy protocol for sampling the BE segment (four-quadrant biopsies every 2 cm) and to a surveillance interval of 3-5 years for patients with nondysplastic BE (NDBE).

Previous studies have found poor adherence to these two QIs, but those studies only provided overall estimates, and individual endoscopists or different sites were not taken into consideration.

Jennifer Kolb, MD, with the University of California, Los Angeles, and colleagues say their study is the first to highlight variation in adherence to these measures at the center and endoscopist levels.

The study is also the first U.S. population–based study to report the dysplasia detection rate (DDR), which is a proposed quality indicator. The findings on this metric also demonstrate marked variability across endoscopists and sites.
 

Study details

Using the nationwide GIQuIC registry, the researchers evaluated endoscopist and site-based adherence to the Seattle protocol and surveillance interval advice from January 2018 to May 2021.

Among 255 practices with 1,195 endoscopists who performed 20,155 upper endoscopies for suspected or established BE, overall adherence to the Seattle protocol was 86%, which is considerably higher than the 51% reported in a study conducted from 2002 to 2007, Dr. Kolb and colleagues note.

When researchers looked specifically at 572 endoscopists for whom there were at least 10 endoscopy records in the registry, they found high variability in adherence to the Seattle protocol (median, 93.8%; interquartile range, 18.9%).

Adherence to the Seattle protocol was also variable among 153 practices for which there were at least 20 endoscopy records (median, 90%; IQR, 20.1%).

Of the 12,100 upper endoscopies with documented NDBE, 8,517 (70.4%) had a guideline-concordant–recommended surveillance interval of 3-5 years, with variability at both the endoscopist (median, 82.4%; IQR, 36.3%) and site level (median, 77.2%; IQR, 28.9%).

Endoscopist and site adherence to the Seattle protocol and surveillance guidance generally rose along with volume of upper endoscopies performed.

The overall DDR was 3.1%; it varied among endoscopists and sites (mean, 3.3% for both).

The investigators note that the 95% confidence intervals for each provider for DDR were “highly variable” and ranged from –20% to 119.3%. Notably, increasing upper endoscopy volume had an inconsistent effect on adherence rates and DDR by endoscopists and sites.

The investigators saw no correlation between overall DDR and Seattle protocol adherence among sites and only weak but statistically significant negative correlation between DDR and Seattle protocol adherence among individual endoscopists.
 

Practical approaches to improvement

The researchers say their observations from the GIQuIC database “most accurately represent the real-world experience in Barrett’s endoscopy.”

The results can serve as a “benchmark for quality initiatives and intervention trials aimed at improving outcomes for patients with BE,” they say.

Improving adherence to key QI measures and ensuring more consistent clinical behavior across practice groups and endoscopists are “critical first steps” to ensure high-quality BE care, Dr. Kolb and colleagues say.

To that end, they encourage professional societies to emphasize these metrics to their members and to streamline the reporting systems for QIs within the electronic health records used across various practice settings.

Avenues to improve examination quality may include educational interventions, such as online learning platforms that teach dysplasia detection or that highlight best practices, they add. These educational tools should be easy to use and should emphasize quality improvement measures.

“Future efforts are warranted to identify and extinguish predictors of this variability and to determine whether these interventions can improve DDR and adherence rates to QIs among endoscopists doing these examinations with the goal to improve EAC outcomes,” they conclude.

The study had no financial support. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Adherence to the Seattle biopsy protocol and recommended endoscopic surveillance intervals – two established quality indicators (QIs) in Barrett esophagus (BE) – varies widely by individual endoscopist and center, an analysis of U.S. registry data shows.

“As the GI Quality Improvement Consortium (GIQuIC) registry represents the ‘best-case scenario’ for adherence, since sites and endoscopists enrolled in this quality registry are aware that their practices are being monitored, these results indicate that there is still room for improvement and better consistency,” the researchers write.

The study was published online in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.

Quality care in BE, which is a precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), includes adherence to the Seattle biopsy protocol for sampling the BE segment (four-quadrant biopsies every 2 cm) and to a surveillance interval of 3-5 years for patients with nondysplastic BE (NDBE).

Previous studies have found poor adherence to these two QIs, but those studies only provided overall estimates, and individual endoscopists or different sites were not taken into consideration.

Jennifer Kolb, MD, with the University of California, Los Angeles, and colleagues say their study is the first to highlight variation in adherence to these measures at the center and endoscopist levels.

The study is also the first U.S. population–based study to report the dysplasia detection rate (DDR), which is a proposed quality indicator. The findings on this metric also demonstrate marked variability across endoscopists and sites.
 

Study details

Using the nationwide GIQuIC registry, the researchers evaluated endoscopist and site-based adherence to the Seattle protocol and surveillance interval advice from January 2018 to May 2021.

Among 255 practices with 1,195 endoscopists who performed 20,155 upper endoscopies for suspected or established BE, overall adherence to the Seattle protocol was 86%, which is considerably higher than the 51% reported in a study conducted from 2002 to 2007, Dr. Kolb and colleagues note.

When researchers looked specifically at 572 endoscopists for whom there were at least 10 endoscopy records in the registry, they found high variability in adherence to the Seattle protocol (median, 93.8%; interquartile range, 18.9%).

Adherence to the Seattle protocol was also variable among 153 practices for which there were at least 20 endoscopy records (median, 90%; IQR, 20.1%).

Of the 12,100 upper endoscopies with documented NDBE, 8,517 (70.4%) had a guideline-concordant–recommended surveillance interval of 3-5 years, with variability at both the endoscopist (median, 82.4%; IQR, 36.3%) and site level (median, 77.2%; IQR, 28.9%).

Endoscopist and site adherence to the Seattle protocol and surveillance guidance generally rose along with volume of upper endoscopies performed.

The overall DDR was 3.1%; it varied among endoscopists and sites (mean, 3.3% for both).

The investigators note that the 95% confidence intervals for each provider for DDR were “highly variable” and ranged from –20% to 119.3%. Notably, increasing upper endoscopy volume had an inconsistent effect on adherence rates and DDR by endoscopists and sites.

The investigators saw no correlation between overall DDR and Seattle protocol adherence among sites and only weak but statistically significant negative correlation between DDR and Seattle protocol adherence among individual endoscopists.
 

Practical approaches to improvement

The researchers say their observations from the GIQuIC database “most accurately represent the real-world experience in Barrett’s endoscopy.”

The results can serve as a “benchmark for quality initiatives and intervention trials aimed at improving outcomes for patients with BE,” they say.

Improving adherence to key QI measures and ensuring more consistent clinical behavior across practice groups and endoscopists are “critical first steps” to ensure high-quality BE care, Dr. Kolb and colleagues say.

To that end, they encourage professional societies to emphasize these metrics to their members and to streamline the reporting systems for QIs within the electronic health records used across various practice settings.

Avenues to improve examination quality may include educational interventions, such as online learning platforms that teach dysplasia detection or that highlight best practices, they add. These educational tools should be easy to use and should emphasize quality improvement measures.

“Future efforts are warranted to identify and extinguish predictors of this variability and to determine whether these interventions can improve DDR and adherence rates to QIs among endoscopists doing these examinations with the goal to improve EAC outcomes,” they conclude.

The study had no financial support. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Adherence to the Seattle biopsy protocol and recommended endoscopic surveillance intervals – two established quality indicators (QIs) in Barrett esophagus (BE) – varies widely by individual endoscopist and center, an analysis of U.S. registry data shows.

“As the GI Quality Improvement Consortium (GIQuIC) registry represents the ‘best-case scenario’ for adherence, since sites and endoscopists enrolled in this quality registry are aware that their practices are being monitored, these results indicate that there is still room for improvement and better consistency,” the researchers write.

The study was published online in The American Journal of Gastroenterology.

Quality care in BE, which is a precursor to esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), includes adherence to the Seattle biopsy protocol for sampling the BE segment (four-quadrant biopsies every 2 cm) and to a surveillance interval of 3-5 years for patients with nondysplastic BE (NDBE).

Previous studies have found poor adherence to these two QIs, but those studies only provided overall estimates, and individual endoscopists or different sites were not taken into consideration.

Jennifer Kolb, MD, with the University of California, Los Angeles, and colleagues say their study is the first to highlight variation in adherence to these measures at the center and endoscopist levels.

The study is also the first U.S. population–based study to report the dysplasia detection rate (DDR), which is a proposed quality indicator. The findings on this metric also demonstrate marked variability across endoscopists and sites.
 

Study details

Using the nationwide GIQuIC registry, the researchers evaluated endoscopist and site-based adherence to the Seattle protocol and surveillance interval advice from January 2018 to May 2021.

Among 255 practices with 1,195 endoscopists who performed 20,155 upper endoscopies for suspected or established BE, overall adherence to the Seattle protocol was 86%, which is considerably higher than the 51% reported in a study conducted from 2002 to 2007, Dr. Kolb and colleagues note.

When researchers looked specifically at 572 endoscopists for whom there were at least 10 endoscopy records in the registry, they found high variability in adherence to the Seattle protocol (median, 93.8%; interquartile range, 18.9%).

Adherence to the Seattle protocol was also variable among 153 practices for which there were at least 20 endoscopy records (median, 90%; IQR, 20.1%).

Of the 12,100 upper endoscopies with documented NDBE, 8,517 (70.4%) had a guideline-concordant–recommended surveillance interval of 3-5 years, with variability at both the endoscopist (median, 82.4%; IQR, 36.3%) and site level (median, 77.2%; IQR, 28.9%).

Endoscopist and site adherence to the Seattle protocol and surveillance guidance generally rose along with volume of upper endoscopies performed.

The overall DDR was 3.1%; it varied among endoscopists and sites (mean, 3.3% for both).

The investigators note that the 95% confidence intervals for each provider for DDR were “highly variable” and ranged from –20% to 119.3%. Notably, increasing upper endoscopy volume had an inconsistent effect on adherence rates and DDR by endoscopists and sites.

The investigators saw no correlation between overall DDR and Seattle protocol adherence among sites and only weak but statistically significant negative correlation between DDR and Seattle protocol adherence among individual endoscopists.
 

Practical approaches to improvement

The researchers say their observations from the GIQuIC database “most accurately represent the real-world experience in Barrett’s endoscopy.”

The results can serve as a “benchmark for quality initiatives and intervention trials aimed at improving outcomes for patients with BE,” they say.

Improving adherence to key QI measures and ensuring more consistent clinical behavior across practice groups and endoscopists are “critical first steps” to ensure high-quality BE care, Dr. Kolb and colleagues say.

To that end, they encourage professional societies to emphasize these metrics to their members and to streamline the reporting systems for QIs within the electronic health records used across various practice settings.

Avenues to improve examination quality may include educational interventions, such as online learning platforms that teach dysplasia detection or that highlight best practices, they add. These educational tools should be easy to use and should emphasize quality improvement measures.

“Future efforts are warranted to identify and extinguish predictors of this variability and to determine whether these interventions can improve DDR and adherence rates to QIs among endoscopists doing these examinations with the goal to improve EAC outcomes,” they conclude.

The study had no financial support. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Dapagliflozin gets expanded heart failure indication in Europe

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The European Commission has expanded the indication for dapagliflozin (Forxiga) to include heart failure across the full spectrum of left ventricular ejection fraction – including HF with mildly reduced and preserved ejection fraction, AstraZeneca has announced.

The EC nod for the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor (known as Farxiga in the United States) follows the positive opinion of the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency in December 2022.

The committee’s decision was based on results from the DELIVER phase 3 trial, which showed clear clinical benefits of the SGLT2 inhibitor in patients with HF regardless of their left ventricular function.

The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual congress.

The data support the use of SGLT2 inhibitors as “foundational agents for virtually all patients with heart failure” regardless of their ejection fraction or whether or not they have type 2 diabetes, said study presenter Scott D. Solomon, MD, of Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, both in Boston.

The Food and Drug Administration is currently reviewing AstraZeneca’s application to expand the HF indication for dapagliflozin in the United States.

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

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The European Commission has expanded the indication for dapagliflozin (Forxiga) to include heart failure across the full spectrum of left ventricular ejection fraction – including HF with mildly reduced and preserved ejection fraction, AstraZeneca has announced.

The EC nod for the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor (known as Farxiga in the United States) follows the positive opinion of the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency in December 2022.

The committee’s decision was based on results from the DELIVER phase 3 trial, which showed clear clinical benefits of the SGLT2 inhibitor in patients with HF regardless of their left ventricular function.

The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual congress.

The data support the use of SGLT2 inhibitors as “foundational agents for virtually all patients with heart failure” regardless of their ejection fraction or whether or not they have type 2 diabetes, said study presenter Scott D. Solomon, MD, of Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, both in Boston.

The Food and Drug Administration is currently reviewing AstraZeneca’s application to expand the HF indication for dapagliflozin in the United States.

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

The European Commission has expanded the indication for dapagliflozin (Forxiga) to include heart failure across the full spectrum of left ventricular ejection fraction – including HF with mildly reduced and preserved ejection fraction, AstraZeneca has announced.

The EC nod for the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor (known as Farxiga in the United States) follows the positive opinion of the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency in December 2022.

The committee’s decision was based on results from the DELIVER phase 3 trial, which showed clear clinical benefits of the SGLT2 inhibitor in patients with HF regardless of their left ventricular function.

The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual congress.

The data support the use of SGLT2 inhibitors as “foundational agents for virtually all patients with heart failure” regardless of their ejection fraction or whether or not they have type 2 diabetes, said study presenter Scott D. Solomon, MD, of Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, both in Boston.

The Food and Drug Administration is currently reviewing AstraZeneca’s application to expand the HF indication for dapagliflozin in the United States.

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

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Cardiac monitoring company settles DOJ false claims allegations

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Beyond Reps (dba IronRod Health and Cardiac Monitoring Services) has agreed to pay $673,200 to resolve allegations that it submitted false claims to federal health care programs relating to remote cardiac monitoring services.

The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that between Jan. 1, 2018, and April 30, 2021, IronRod, with headquarters in Phoenix, used technicians who lacked required credentials to conduct remote cardiac monitoring readings.

The government further alleges that between June 1, 2018, and Aug. 20, 2018, the company misrepresented that it performed services in New York state in order to get higher reimbursements from Medicare for remote cardiac monitoring services.

“Providers that seek payment from federal health programs are required to follow laws meant to protect beneficiaries, as well as to protect the integrity of those programs,” U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross said in a statement.

“Our office is committed to pursuing cases against any provider that cuts corners or seeks to obtain payments for which they are not entitled,” Ms. Ross said.

A request to Beyond Reps for comment was not returned.

The civil settlement resolves claims brought under the qui tam (whistleblower) provisions of the False Claims Act by Coleen DeGroat.

Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. Ms. DeGroat will receive a share of the settlement.

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

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Beyond Reps (dba IronRod Health and Cardiac Monitoring Services) has agreed to pay $673,200 to resolve allegations that it submitted false claims to federal health care programs relating to remote cardiac monitoring services.

The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that between Jan. 1, 2018, and April 30, 2021, IronRod, with headquarters in Phoenix, used technicians who lacked required credentials to conduct remote cardiac monitoring readings.

The government further alleges that between June 1, 2018, and Aug. 20, 2018, the company misrepresented that it performed services in New York state in order to get higher reimbursements from Medicare for remote cardiac monitoring services.

“Providers that seek payment from federal health programs are required to follow laws meant to protect beneficiaries, as well as to protect the integrity of those programs,” U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross said in a statement.

“Our office is committed to pursuing cases against any provider that cuts corners or seeks to obtain payments for which they are not entitled,” Ms. Ross said.

A request to Beyond Reps for comment was not returned.

The civil settlement resolves claims brought under the qui tam (whistleblower) provisions of the False Claims Act by Coleen DeGroat.

Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. Ms. DeGroat will receive a share of the settlement.

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

Beyond Reps (dba IronRod Health and Cardiac Monitoring Services) has agreed to pay $673,200 to resolve allegations that it submitted false claims to federal health care programs relating to remote cardiac monitoring services.

The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that between Jan. 1, 2018, and April 30, 2021, IronRod, with headquarters in Phoenix, used technicians who lacked required credentials to conduct remote cardiac monitoring readings.

The government further alleges that between June 1, 2018, and Aug. 20, 2018, the company misrepresented that it performed services in New York state in order to get higher reimbursements from Medicare for remote cardiac monitoring services.

“Providers that seek payment from federal health programs are required to follow laws meant to protect beneficiaries, as well as to protect the integrity of those programs,” U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross said in a statement.

“Our office is committed to pursuing cases against any provider that cuts corners or seeks to obtain payments for which they are not entitled,” Ms. Ross said.

A request to Beyond Reps for comment was not returned.

The civil settlement resolves claims brought under the qui tam (whistleblower) provisions of the False Claims Act by Coleen DeGroat.

Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. Ms. DeGroat will receive a share of the settlement.

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

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Can a hormone shot rescue low libido?

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The reproductive hormone kisspeptin may be a treatment option for low sexual desire in men and women, according to results from two small randomized controlled trials.

The data suggest that injections of kisspeptin can boost sexual desire in men and women and can increase penile rigidity in men.

Together, these two studies provide proof of concept for the development of kisspeptin-based therapeutics for men and women with distressing hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), study investigator Alexander Comninos, MD, PhD, Imperial College London, said in a news release.

One study was published online Feb. 3, 2022, in JAMA Network Open. The other was published in October 2022.
 

Unmet need

HSDD affects up to 10% of women and 8% of men worldwide and leads to psychological and social harm, the news release noted.

“There is a real unmet need to find new, safer, and more effective therapies for this distressing condition for both women and men seeking treatment,” Dr. Comninos said.

Kisspeptin is a naturally occurring reproductive hormone that serves as a crucial activator of the reproductive system. Emerging evidence from animal models shows that kisspeptin signaling has key roles in modulating reproductive behavior, including sexual motivation and erections.

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study, the researchers enrolled 32 healthy heterosexual men (mean age, 37.9 years) who had HSDD.

At the first study visit, the men were given an infusion of kisspeptin-54 (1 nmol/kg per hour) or placebo (saline) over 75 minutes. The participants then crossed over to the other treatment at a second study visit at least 7 days later.

The active treatment significantly increased circulating kisspeptin levels. A steady state was reached after 30-75 minutes of infusion, the researchers reported.
 

Similar data in men, women

While the men viewed sexual videos, kisspeptin significantly modulated brain activity on fMRI in key structures of the sexual-processing network, compared with placebo (P = .003).

In addition, the treatment led to significant increases in penile tumescence in response to sexual stimuli (by up to 56% more than placebo; P = .02) and behavioral measures of sexual desire – most notably increased happiness about sex (P = .02).

Given the significant stimulatory effect of kisspeptin administration on penile rigidity, coupled with its demonstrated proerectile effect in rodents, future studies should examine the use of kisspeptin for patients with erectile dysfunction, the researchers wrote.

The second study included 32 women with HSDD and had the same design. Its results also showed that kisspeptin restored sexual and attraction brain processing without adverse effects.

“It is highly encouraging to see the same boosting effect in both women and men, although the precise brain pathways were slightly different, as might be expected,” coinvestigator Waljit Dhillo, PhD, Imperial College London, said in the news release.

“Collectively, the results suggest that kisspeptin may offer a safe and much-needed treatment for HSDD that affects millions of people around the world; and we look forward to taking this forward in future larger studies and in other patient groups,” Dr. Dhillo added.

The study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Imperial Biomedical Research Centre and the Medical Research Council, part of UK Research and Innovation. Dr. Comninos reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Dhillo reported receiving consulting fees from Myovant Sciences and KaNDy Therapeutics outside the submitted work.

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

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The reproductive hormone kisspeptin may be a treatment option for low sexual desire in men and women, according to results from two small randomized controlled trials.

The data suggest that injections of kisspeptin can boost sexual desire in men and women and can increase penile rigidity in men.

Together, these two studies provide proof of concept for the development of kisspeptin-based therapeutics for men and women with distressing hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), study investigator Alexander Comninos, MD, PhD, Imperial College London, said in a news release.

One study was published online Feb. 3, 2022, in JAMA Network Open. The other was published in October 2022.
 

Unmet need

HSDD affects up to 10% of women and 8% of men worldwide and leads to psychological and social harm, the news release noted.

“There is a real unmet need to find new, safer, and more effective therapies for this distressing condition for both women and men seeking treatment,” Dr. Comninos said.

Kisspeptin is a naturally occurring reproductive hormone that serves as a crucial activator of the reproductive system. Emerging evidence from animal models shows that kisspeptin signaling has key roles in modulating reproductive behavior, including sexual motivation and erections.

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study, the researchers enrolled 32 healthy heterosexual men (mean age, 37.9 years) who had HSDD.

At the first study visit, the men were given an infusion of kisspeptin-54 (1 nmol/kg per hour) or placebo (saline) over 75 minutes. The participants then crossed over to the other treatment at a second study visit at least 7 days later.

The active treatment significantly increased circulating kisspeptin levels. A steady state was reached after 30-75 minutes of infusion, the researchers reported.
 

Similar data in men, women

While the men viewed sexual videos, kisspeptin significantly modulated brain activity on fMRI in key structures of the sexual-processing network, compared with placebo (P = .003).

In addition, the treatment led to significant increases in penile tumescence in response to sexual stimuli (by up to 56% more than placebo; P = .02) and behavioral measures of sexual desire – most notably increased happiness about sex (P = .02).

Given the significant stimulatory effect of kisspeptin administration on penile rigidity, coupled with its demonstrated proerectile effect in rodents, future studies should examine the use of kisspeptin for patients with erectile dysfunction, the researchers wrote.

The second study included 32 women with HSDD and had the same design. Its results also showed that kisspeptin restored sexual and attraction brain processing without adverse effects.

“It is highly encouraging to see the same boosting effect in both women and men, although the precise brain pathways were slightly different, as might be expected,” coinvestigator Waljit Dhillo, PhD, Imperial College London, said in the news release.

“Collectively, the results suggest that kisspeptin may offer a safe and much-needed treatment for HSDD that affects millions of people around the world; and we look forward to taking this forward in future larger studies and in other patient groups,” Dr. Dhillo added.

The study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Imperial Biomedical Research Centre and the Medical Research Council, part of UK Research and Innovation. Dr. Comninos reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Dhillo reported receiving consulting fees from Myovant Sciences and KaNDy Therapeutics outside the submitted work.

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

The reproductive hormone kisspeptin may be a treatment option for low sexual desire in men and women, according to results from two small randomized controlled trials.

The data suggest that injections of kisspeptin can boost sexual desire in men and women and can increase penile rigidity in men.

Together, these two studies provide proof of concept for the development of kisspeptin-based therapeutics for men and women with distressing hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), study investigator Alexander Comninos, MD, PhD, Imperial College London, said in a news release.

One study was published online Feb. 3, 2022, in JAMA Network Open. The other was published in October 2022.
 

Unmet need

HSDD affects up to 10% of women and 8% of men worldwide and leads to psychological and social harm, the news release noted.

“There is a real unmet need to find new, safer, and more effective therapies for this distressing condition for both women and men seeking treatment,” Dr. Comninos said.

Kisspeptin is a naturally occurring reproductive hormone that serves as a crucial activator of the reproductive system. Emerging evidence from animal models shows that kisspeptin signaling has key roles in modulating reproductive behavior, including sexual motivation and erections.

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study, the researchers enrolled 32 healthy heterosexual men (mean age, 37.9 years) who had HSDD.

At the first study visit, the men were given an infusion of kisspeptin-54 (1 nmol/kg per hour) or placebo (saline) over 75 minutes. The participants then crossed over to the other treatment at a second study visit at least 7 days later.

The active treatment significantly increased circulating kisspeptin levels. A steady state was reached after 30-75 minutes of infusion, the researchers reported.
 

Similar data in men, women

While the men viewed sexual videos, kisspeptin significantly modulated brain activity on fMRI in key structures of the sexual-processing network, compared with placebo (P = .003).

In addition, the treatment led to significant increases in penile tumescence in response to sexual stimuli (by up to 56% more than placebo; P = .02) and behavioral measures of sexual desire – most notably increased happiness about sex (P = .02).

Given the significant stimulatory effect of kisspeptin administration on penile rigidity, coupled with its demonstrated proerectile effect in rodents, future studies should examine the use of kisspeptin for patients with erectile dysfunction, the researchers wrote.

The second study included 32 women with HSDD and had the same design. Its results also showed that kisspeptin restored sexual and attraction brain processing without adverse effects.

“It is highly encouraging to see the same boosting effect in both women and men, although the precise brain pathways were slightly different, as might be expected,” coinvestigator Waljit Dhillo, PhD, Imperial College London, said in the news release.

“Collectively, the results suggest that kisspeptin may offer a safe and much-needed treatment for HSDD that affects millions of people around the world; and we look forward to taking this forward in future larger studies and in other patient groups,” Dr. Dhillo added.

The study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Imperial Biomedical Research Centre and the Medical Research Council, part of UK Research and Innovation. Dr. Comninos reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Dhillo reported receiving consulting fees from Myovant Sciences and KaNDy Therapeutics outside the submitted work.

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

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