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AAN blasts ‘runaway’ costs for neurologic and other prescription drugs

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 15:40

A new position statement from the American Academy of Neurology and other organizations warns that soaring prices for neurologic and other prescription medications is leading to rationing of care and diverting clinicians’ time from the clinic to insurance bureaucracy.

This situation is also taking a toll on neurologists’ mental health, who already have the second-highest burnout rate across medical specialties, the statement adds.

The statement was published online Oct. 5, 2021, in Neurology.
 

Dramatic price increases

Drafted by the Ethics, Law, and Humanities Committee – a joint committee that includes the AAN, the American Neurological Association, and the Child Neurology Society – the statement was prompted by a 2018 report from the AAN Neurology Drug Pricing Task Force to address challenges associated with high drug costs.

It highlights ethical concerns from high drug costs, policy proposals that might temper the problem, and how clinicians can adjust to the current reality of pharmaceutical pricing and better advocate for changes to the healthcare system.

“Runaway drug costs continue to be a pressing problem with recent dramatic price increases not only for specialty drugs, but also generic ones,” said lead author Amy Tsou, MD, MSc, codirector of the ECRI Evidence-Based Practice Center at the Center for Evidence and Guidelines in Plymouth Meeting, Pa.

She noted that one in four Americans has difficulty paying for medication, and many report going without a medication because of cost.

“Ensuring a fair system for drug pricing and coverage rules that balance the goods of individual patients with the needs of broader populations when resources are limited remains more important than ever,” Dr. Tsou said.

Out-of-pocket costs for neurologic medications have risen dramatically over the past decade, with the fastest rise reported among drugs for multiple sclerosis. Results from a study published in 2019 showed that, between 2004 and 2016, patients’ out-of-pocket expenses skyrocketed from $15 a month to $309 a month.

The steep increases have forced some neurology patients to ration their medication or stop taking it altogether, which is one of the ethical concerns cited in the AAN statement.
 

Patient self-rationing

Commenting on the statement, Ilana Katz Sand, MD, associate director of the Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis at Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, noted that clinicians are already acutely aware of the effect high drug costs have on their patients’ medical decisions. However, statements such as the current one bring much-needed outside attention to the problem.

“I’ve definitely had more and more people struggling with deductibles and copays, even among people who are insured,” said Dr. Katz Sand, who was not involved with the AAN paper.

She has a number of patients who have rationed their medication or stopped taking it altogether when their copays increased or they lost access to a copay assistance program because their insurance company chose to cover a still-expensive generic drug with no assistance program over a slightly costlier brand-name medication that comes with patient discounts.

Too often, patients don’t tell her they’re not taking their medication as prescribed. At a recent appointment, Dr. Katz Sand learned about a patient’s drug rationing only after a routine MRI showed new brain lesions that regular treatment might have prevented.

Another patient, new to her clinic, questioned the treatment plan Dr. Katz Sand recommended because they could not cover the copay. This sort of self-rationing happens in patients with and without insurance, she added.

“It’s a terrible thing and it’s happening to all patients,” Dr. Katz Sand said, adding that “the old credo of ‘yeah, the drug prices are high, but they are covered by insurance’ is not a sustainable argument anymore.”
 

 

 

What neurologists can do

Some sort of rationing is an unavoidable outcome of steep treatment costs, the authors noted. But what does that mean in clinical practice?

Neurologists should be aware of the costs involved in ordering diagnostic tests, treatment, or medication – and shouldn’t feel compelled to order treatments or tests that they feel are medically inappropriate just because a patient requests them, the authors wrote.

The statement also encourages clinicians to include financial realities in the shared decision-making process with patients.

However, Dr. Katz Sand said that is not always possible. Drug prices aren’t fixed, with different insurance plans offering different pricing, deductibles, and copays. “It’s hard for us to attempt to incorporate discussions about price in our discussions with patients when we can’t even predict what their out-of-pocket cost is going to be,” she said.

“Every single prescription we write requires prior authorization, and that’s directly related to the fact that the cost of these drugs is so high,” she added.

As do many other clinicians, Dr. Katz Sand spends hours each week on preauthorization forms and haggling with insurance companies on behalf of her patients. To get needed medication at a cost they can afford sometimes takes creative problem solving and almost always takes a lot of time. “It all adds to the administrative burden, patients’ stress, and our stress,” she said.
 

Physician-advocates needed

The AAN paper identifies a number of policy reforms to address drug pricing at a national level, including giving Medicare officials the power to negotiate drug prices, allowing the safe importation of drugs from other countries, and speeding the Food and Drug Administration approval process for generic drugs.

There is also a need to address systemic problems that, the authors noted, help create and perpetuate health care disparities. Lawmakers at the state and federal level are considering a number of these policy ideas and others that could address the kinds of issues Dr. Katz Sand described. However, the chances of their success are slim at best, said Bruce H. Cohen, MD, chair of the AAN advocacy committee and director of the NeuroDevelopmental Science Center at Akron (Ohio) Children’s Hospital.

“On a federal level, we’re watching in real time how the entrenched divisions, even within parties, are resulting in continued stalemate,” said Dr. Cohen, who is not one of the statement authors.

Those ideas need advocates and the AAN paper suggests neurologists should be among the ones championing these changes, he added.

“One of the most effective strategies is to bring attention to the impact high drug costs have on neurology patients and medical practices,” Dr. Cohen said. “It’s so important to make sure policy makers know the significant impact of high drug costs in neurology and within the context of finite resources.”

One way to do that is to share statements such as the current one with members of Congress working on policy reform, Dr. Cohen said. Another is through programs such as the academy’s annual Neurology on the Hill conference.

A third strategy is to encourage individuals such as Dr. Katz Sand to speak out when and where they can, he added.

While she agrees with the idea, finding time for advocacy work amid patient care, administrative work, and research is challenging. Dr. Katz Sand would like to see groups like the AAN work with health care institutions to implement policies that allocate time and resources to train clinicians in advocacy – and then support their efforts on that front.

“I’m really glad they wrote this and think they did a good job of crystallizing the issues,” Dr. Katz Sand said. “It’s good to put it out there as a document that could help serve as the basis for the requests we make collectively. I just hope that people listen.”

The paper received no funding. The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

 

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

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A new position statement from the American Academy of Neurology and other organizations warns that soaring prices for neurologic and other prescription medications is leading to rationing of care and diverting clinicians’ time from the clinic to insurance bureaucracy.

This situation is also taking a toll on neurologists’ mental health, who already have the second-highest burnout rate across medical specialties, the statement adds.

The statement was published online Oct. 5, 2021, in Neurology.
 

Dramatic price increases

Drafted by the Ethics, Law, and Humanities Committee – a joint committee that includes the AAN, the American Neurological Association, and the Child Neurology Society – the statement was prompted by a 2018 report from the AAN Neurology Drug Pricing Task Force to address challenges associated with high drug costs.

It highlights ethical concerns from high drug costs, policy proposals that might temper the problem, and how clinicians can adjust to the current reality of pharmaceutical pricing and better advocate for changes to the healthcare system.

“Runaway drug costs continue to be a pressing problem with recent dramatic price increases not only for specialty drugs, but also generic ones,” said lead author Amy Tsou, MD, MSc, codirector of the ECRI Evidence-Based Practice Center at the Center for Evidence and Guidelines in Plymouth Meeting, Pa.

She noted that one in four Americans has difficulty paying for medication, and many report going without a medication because of cost.

“Ensuring a fair system for drug pricing and coverage rules that balance the goods of individual patients with the needs of broader populations when resources are limited remains more important than ever,” Dr. Tsou said.

Out-of-pocket costs for neurologic medications have risen dramatically over the past decade, with the fastest rise reported among drugs for multiple sclerosis. Results from a study published in 2019 showed that, between 2004 and 2016, patients’ out-of-pocket expenses skyrocketed from $15 a month to $309 a month.

The steep increases have forced some neurology patients to ration their medication or stop taking it altogether, which is one of the ethical concerns cited in the AAN statement.
 

Patient self-rationing

Commenting on the statement, Ilana Katz Sand, MD, associate director of the Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis at Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, noted that clinicians are already acutely aware of the effect high drug costs have on their patients’ medical decisions. However, statements such as the current one bring much-needed outside attention to the problem.

“I’ve definitely had more and more people struggling with deductibles and copays, even among people who are insured,” said Dr. Katz Sand, who was not involved with the AAN paper.

She has a number of patients who have rationed their medication or stopped taking it altogether when their copays increased or they lost access to a copay assistance program because their insurance company chose to cover a still-expensive generic drug with no assistance program over a slightly costlier brand-name medication that comes with patient discounts.

Too often, patients don’t tell her they’re not taking their medication as prescribed. At a recent appointment, Dr. Katz Sand learned about a patient’s drug rationing only after a routine MRI showed new brain lesions that regular treatment might have prevented.

Another patient, new to her clinic, questioned the treatment plan Dr. Katz Sand recommended because they could not cover the copay. This sort of self-rationing happens in patients with and without insurance, she added.

“It’s a terrible thing and it’s happening to all patients,” Dr. Katz Sand said, adding that “the old credo of ‘yeah, the drug prices are high, but they are covered by insurance’ is not a sustainable argument anymore.”
 

 

 

What neurologists can do

Some sort of rationing is an unavoidable outcome of steep treatment costs, the authors noted. But what does that mean in clinical practice?

Neurologists should be aware of the costs involved in ordering diagnostic tests, treatment, or medication – and shouldn’t feel compelled to order treatments or tests that they feel are medically inappropriate just because a patient requests them, the authors wrote.

The statement also encourages clinicians to include financial realities in the shared decision-making process with patients.

However, Dr. Katz Sand said that is not always possible. Drug prices aren’t fixed, with different insurance plans offering different pricing, deductibles, and copays. “It’s hard for us to attempt to incorporate discussions about price in our discussions with patients when we can’t even predict what their out-of-pocket cost is going to be,” she said.

“Every single prescription we write requires prior authorization, and that’s directly related to the fact that the cost of these drugs is so high,” she added.

As do many other clinicians, Dr. Katz Sand spends hours each week on preauthorization forms and haggling with insurance companies on behalf of her patients. To get needed medication at a cost they can afford sometimes takes creative problem solving and almost always takes a lot of time. “It all adds to the administrative burden, patients’ stress, and our stress,” she said.
 

Physician-advocates needed

The AAN paper identifies a number of policy reforms to address drug pricing at a national level, including giving Medicare officials the power to negotiate drug prices, allowing the safe importation of drugs from other countries, and speeding the Food and Drug Administration approval process for generic drugs.

There is also a need to address systemic problems that, the authors noted, help create and perpetuate health care disparities. Lawmakers at the state and federal level are considering a number of these policy ideas and others that could address the kinds of issues Dr. Katz Sand described. However, the chances of their success are slim at best, said Bruce H. Cohen, MD, chair of the AAN advocacy committee and director of the NeuroDevelopmental Science Center at Akron (Ohio) Children’s Hospital.

“On a federal level, we’re watching in real time how the entrenched divisions, even within parties, are resulting in continued stalemate,” said Dr. Cohen, who is not one of the statement authors.

Those ideas need advocates and the AAN paper suggests neurologists should be among the ones championing these changes, he added.

“One of the most effective strategies is to bring attention to the impact high drug costs have on neurology patients and medical practices,” Dr. Cohen said. “It’s so important to make sure policy makers know the significant impact of high drug costs in neurology and within the context of finite resources.”

One way to do that is to share statements such as the current one with members of Congress working on policy reform, Dr. Cohen said. Another is through programs such as the academy’s annual Neurology on the Hill conference.

A third strategy is to encourage individuals such as Dr. Katz Sand to speak out when and where they can, he added.

While she agrees with the idea, finding time for advocacy work amid patient care, administrative work, and research is challenging. Dr. Katz Sand would like to see groups like the AAN work with health care institutions to implement policies that allocate time and resources to train clinicians in advocacy – and then support their efforts on that front.

“I’m really glad they wrote this and think they did a good job of crystallizing the issues,” Dr. Katz Sand said. “It’s good to put it out there as a document that could help serve as the basis for the requests we make collectively. I just hope that people listen.”

The paper received no funding. The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

 

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

A new position statement from the American Academy of Neurology and other organizations warns that soaring prices for neurologic and other prescription medications is leading to rationing of care and diverting clinicians’ time from the clinic to insurance bureaucracy.

This situation is also taking a toll on neurologists’ mental health, who already have the second-highest burnout rate across medical specialties, the statement adds.

The statement was published online Oct. 5, 2021, in Neurology.
 

Dramatic price increases

Drafted by the Ethics, Law, and Humanities Committee – a joint committee that includes the AAN, the American Neurological Association, and the Child Neurology Society – the statement was prompted by a 2018 report from the AAN Neurology Drug Pricing Task Force to address challenges associated with high drug costs.

It highlights ethical concerns from high drug costs, policy proposals that might temper the problem, and how clinicians can adjust to the current reality of pharmaceutical pricing and better advocate for changes to the healthcare system.

“Runaway drug costs continue to be a pressing problem with recent dramatic price increases not only for specialty drugs, but also generic ones,” said lead author Amy Tsou, MD, MSc, codirector of the ECRI Evidence-Based Practice Center at the Center for Evidence and Guidelines in Plymouth Meeting, Pa.

She noted that one in four Americans has difficulty paying for medication, and many report going without a medication because of cost.

“Ensuring a fair system for drug pricing and coverage rules that balance the goods of individual patients with the needs of broader populations when resources are limited remains more important than ever,” Dr. Tsou said.

Out-of-pocket costs for neurologic medications have risen dramatically over the past decade, with the fastest rise reported among drugs for multiple sclerosis. Results from a study published in 2019 showed that, between 2004 and 2016, patients’ out-of-pocket expenses skyrocketed from $15 a month to $309 a month.

The steep increases have forced some neurology patients to ration their medication or stop taking it altogether, which is one of the ethical concerns cited in the AAN statement.
 

Patient self-rationing

Commenting on the statement, Ilana Katz Sand, MD, associate director of the Dickinson Center for Multiple Sclerosis at Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, noted that clinicians are already acutely aware of the effect high drug costs have on their patients’ medical decisions. However, statements such as the current one bring much-needed outside attention to the problem.

“I’ve definitely had more and more people struggling with deductibles and copays, even among people who are insured,” said Dr. Katz Sand, who was not involved with the AAN paper.

She has a number of patients who have rationed their medication or stopped taking it altogether when their copays increased or they lost access to a copay assistance program because their insurance company chose to cover a still-expensive generic drug with no assistance program over a slightly costlier brand-name medication that comes with patient discounts.

Too often, patients don’t tell her they’re not taking their medication as prescribed. At a recent appointment, Dr. Katz Sand learned about a patient’s drug rationing only after a routine MRI showed new brain lesions that regular treatment might have prevented.

Another patient, new to her clinic, questioned the treatment plan Dr. Katz Sand recommended because they could not cover the copay. This sort of self-rationing happens in patients with and without insurance, she added.

“It’s a terrible thing and it’s happening to all patients,” Dr. Katz Sand said, adding that “the old credo of ‘yeah, the drug prices are high, but they are covered by insurance’ is not a sustainable argument anymore.”
 

 

 

What neurologists can do

Some sort of rationing is an unavoidable outcome of steep treatment costs, the authors noted. But what does that mean in clinical practice?

Neurologists should be aware of the costs involved in ordering diagnostic tests, treatment, or medication – and shouldn’t feel compelled to order treatments or tests that they feel are medically inappropriate just because a patient requests them, the authors wrote.

The statement also encourages clinicians to include financial realities in the shared decision-making process with patients.

However, Dr. Katz Sand said that is not always possible. Drug prices aren’t fixed, with different insurance plans offering different pricing, deductibles, and copays. “It’s hard for us to attempt to incorporate discussions about price in our discussions with patients when we can’t even predict what their out-of-pocket cost is going to be,” she said.

“Every single prescription we write requires prior authorization, and that’s directly related to the fact that the cost of these drugs is so high,” she added.

As do many other clinicians, Dr. Katz Sand spends hours each week on preauthorization forms and haggling with insurance companies on behalf of her patients. To get needed medication at a cost they can afford sometimes takes creative problem solving and almost always takes a lot of time. “It all adds to the administrative burden, patients’ stress, and our stress,” she said.
 

Physician-advocates needed

The AAN paper identifies a number of policy reforms to address drug pricing at a national level, including giving Medicare officials the power to negotiate drug prices, allowing the safe importation of drugs from other countries, and speeding the Food and Drug Administration approval process for generic drugs.

There is also a need to address systemic problems that, the authors noted, help create and perpetuate health care disparities. Lawmakers at the state and federal level are considering a number of these policy ideas and others that could address the kinds of issues Dr. Katz Sand described. However, the chances of their success are slim at best, said Bruce H. Cohen, MD, chair of the AAN advocacy committee and director of the NeuroDevelopmental Science Center at Akron (Ohio) Children’s Hospital.

“On a federal level, we’re watching in real time how the entrenched divisions, even within parties, are resulting in continued stalemate,” said Dr. Cohen, who is not one of the statement authors.

Those ideas need advocates and the AAN paper suggests neurologists should be among the ones championing these changes, he added.

“One of the most effective strategies is to bring attention to the impact high drug costs have on neurology patients and medical practices,” Dr. Cohen said. “It’s so important to make sure policy makers know the significant impact of high drug costs in neurology and within the context of finite resources.”

One way to do that is to share statements such as the current one with members of Congress working on policy reform, Dr. Cohen said. Another is through programs such as the academy’s annual Neurology on the Hill conference.

A third strategy is to encourage individuals such as Dr. Katz Sand to speak out when and where they can, he added.

While she agrees with the idea, finding time for advocacy work amid patient care, administrative work, and research is challenging. Dr. Katz Sand would like to see groups like the AAN work with health care institutions to implement policies that allocate time and resources to train clinicians in advocacy – and then support their efforts on that front.

“I’m really glad they wrote this and think they did a good job of crystallizing the issues,” Dr. Katz Sand said. “It’s good to put it out there as a document that could help serve as the basis for the requests we make collectively. I just hope that people listen.”

The paper received no funding. The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

 

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

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Community mourns nurse knocked over, killed in Times Square

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The outpouring of support for a longtime New Jersey oncology nurse who died after being knocked to the ground in Times Square by a fleeing cellphone thief culminated in a Mass Monday in New York City. The Mass was promoted by the local consulate general of the Philippines.

Maria Ambrocio, 58, was visiting Times Square with a friend on October 1 when she was shoved to the ground by a man who reportedly snatched a cellphone and was running away. He later collided with a police officer before being arrested.

Ms. Ambrosio, of Bayonne, N.J., was taken to Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan with a traumatic brain injury. She was taken off life support a day later.

Jermaine Foster, 26, was charged with murder and robbery and is scheduled to appear in New York Criminal Court Thursday, according to court records.

Ms. Ambrocio, who had been a nurse for 25 years at Bayonne Medical Center in New Jersey, treated cancer patients, even during the height of the pandemic. The medical community at the hospital posted on social media, “Maria’s untimely death is a profound loss to us all, especially those whose lives she touched each day at Bayonne Medical Center.”

New York organizations expressed sympathy after the incident. Tom Harris, president of the Times Square Alliance, said in a statement shared with this news organization, “Our deepest condolences to the family of Maria Ambrocio. The killing of Maria Ambrocio near Times Square highlights one of our city’s greatest public safety challenges, the proliferation of people with untreated mental illness and drug addictions on our streets committing crimes without an effective strategy to address them. Our city needs to come together and solve these problems and those of us who work in these areas are willing and able to help. Let her death not be in vain.”

The New York Philippine consulate reported on its Facebook page that Ms. Ambrocio had just visited its office when the incident occurred. “We grieve with the rest of the Filipino Community over the death of our kababayan [countryman], Maria Ambrocio, a 58-year-old health frontliner from Bayonne, New Jersey....

“Maria’s passing was announced shortly after she was removed from life support a few hours ago. She had been on life support for the head trauma she sustained on Friday afternoon after she was knocked down by someone who was described as a mentally disturbed homeless man. Maria was walking with a kababayan near Times Square after visiting the Philippine consulate general when she was struck by the suspect, who was reportedly being chased after grabbing a mobile phone from someone.”

On the day she passed away, Bayonne Mayor Jimmy Davis shared an emotional message on Facebook: “I’m asking for all Bayonne people to say a prayer for Maria Ambrocio. Maria, an Oncology nurse at Bayonne Medical Center, was viciously attacked in an unprovoked assault by a deranged man in Times Square yesterday.

“Please keep Maria and her family in your thoughts through these difficult days.”

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

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The outpouring of support for a longtime New Jersey oncology nurse who died after being knocked to the ground in Times Square by a fleeing cellphone thief culminated in a Mass Monday in New York City. The Mass was promoted by the local consulate general of the Philippines.

Maria Ambrocio, 58, was visiting Times Square with a friend on October 1 when she was shoved to the ground by a man who reportedly snatched a cellphone and was running away. He later collided with a police officer before being arrested.

Ms. Ambrosio, of Bayonne, N.J., was taken to Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan with a traumatic brain injury. She was taken off life support a day later.

Jermaine Foster, 26, was charged with murder and robbery and is scheduled to appear in New York Criminal Court Thursday, according to court records.

Ms. Ambrocio, who had been a nurse for 25 years at Bayonne Medical Center in New Jersey, treated cancer patients, even during the height of the pandemic. The medical community at the hospital posted on social media, “Maria’s untimely death is a profound loss to us all, especially those whose lives she touched each day at Bayonne Medical Center.”

New York organizations expressed sympathy after the incident. Tom Harris, president of the Times Square Alliance, said in a statement shared with this news organization, “Our deepest condolences to the family of Maria Ambrocio. The killing of Maria Ambrocio near Times Square highlights one of our city’s greatest public safety challenges, the proliferation of people with untreated mental illness and drug addictions on our streets committing crimes without an effective strategy to address them. Our city needs to come together and solve these problems and those of us who work in these areas are willing and able to help. Let her death not be in vain.”

The New York Philippine consulate reported on its Facebook page that Ms. Ambrocio had just visited its office when the incident occurred. “We grieve with the rest of the Filipino Community over the death of our kababayan [countryman], Maria Ambrocio, a 58-year-old health frontliner from Bayonne, New Jersey....

“Maria’s passing was announced shortly after she was removed from life support a few hours ago. She had been on life support for the head trauma she sustained on Friday afternoon after she was knocked down by someone who was described as a mentally disturbed homeless man. Maria was walking with a kababayan near Times Square after visiting the Philippine consulate general when she was struck by the suspect, who was reportedly being chased after grabbing a mobile phone from someone.”

On the day she passed away, Bayonne Mayor Jimmy Davis shared an emotional message on Facebook: “I’m asking for all Bayonne people to say a prayer for Maria Ambrocio. Maria, an Oncology nurse at Bayonne Medical Center, was viciously attacked in an unprovoked assault by a deranged man in Times Square yesterday.

“Please keep Maria and her family in your thoughts through these difficult days.”

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

The outpouring of support for a longtime New Jersey oncology nurse who died after being knocked to the ground in Times Square by a fleeing cellphone thief culminated in a Mass Monday in New York City. The Mass was promoted by the local consulate general of the Philippines.

Maria Ambrocio, 58, was visiting Times Square with a friend on October 1 when she was shoved to the ground by a man who reportedly snatched a cellphone and was running away. He later collided with a police officer before being arrested.

Ms. Ambrosio, of Bayonne, N.J., was taken to Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan with a traumatic brain injury. She was taken off life support a day later.

Jermaine Foster, 26, was charged with murder and robbery and is scheduled to appear in New York Criminal Court Thursday, according to court records.

Ms. Ambrocio, who had been a nurse for 25 years at Bayonne Medical Center in New Jersey, treated cancer patients, even during the height of the pandemic. The medical community at the hospital posted on social media, “Maria’s untimely death is a profound loss to us all, especially those whose lives she touched each day at Bayonne Medical Center.”

New York organizations expressed sympathy after the incident. Tom Harris, president of the Times Square Alliance, said in a statement shared with this news organization, “Our deepest condolences to the family of Maria Ambrocio. The killing of Maria Ambrocio near Times Square highlights one of our city’s greatest public safety challenges, the proliferation of people with untreated mental illness and drug addictions on our streets committing crimes without an effective strategy to address them. Our city needs to come together and solve these problems and those of us who work in these areas are willing and able to help. Let her death not be in vain.”

The New York Philippine consulate reported on its Facebook page that Ms. Ambrocio had just visited its office when the incident occurred. “We grieve with the rest of the Filipino Community over the death of our kababayan [countryman], Maria Ambrocio, a 58-year-old health frontliner from Bayonne, New Jersey....

“Maria’s passing was announced shortly after she was removed from life support a few hours ago. She had been on life support for the head trauma she sustained on Friday afternoon after she was knocked down by someone who was described as a mentally disturbed homeless man. Maria was walking with a kababayan near Times Square after visiting the Philippine consulate general when she was struck by the suspect, who was reportedly being chased after grabbing a mobile phone from someone.”

On the day she passed away, Bayonne Mayor Jimmy Davis shared an emotional message on Facebook: “I’m asking for all Bayonne people to say a prayer for Maria Ambrocio. Maria, an Oncology nurse at Bayonne Medical Center, was viciously attacked in an unprovoked assault by a deranged man in Times Square yesterday.

“Please keep Maria and her family in your thoughts through these difficult days.”

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

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Benzene prompts recalls of spray antifungals and sunscreens

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The presence of benzene has prompted voluntary company recalls of antifungal foot sprays and sunscreen products, all aerosol spray products.

mark wragg/iStockphoto.com

Bayer has voluntarily recalled batches of its Lotrimin and Tinactin products because of benzene detected in some samples, according to an Oct. 1 company announcement, available on the Food and Drug Administration website. “It is important to note that Bayer’s decision to voluntarily recall these products is a precautionary measure and that the levels detected are not expected to cause adverse health consequences in consumers,” the announcement said.

Benzene is classified as a human carcinogen present in the environment from both natural sources and human activity, and it has been shown to cause cancer with long-term exposure.

The products included in the recall – all in aerosol spray cans – are unexpired Lotrimin and Tinactin sprays with lot numbers starting with TN, CV, or NAA that were distributed to consumer venues between September 2018 and September 2021. The over-the-counter products are Lotrimin Anti-Fungal Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, Lotrimin Anti-Fungal Jock Itch (AFJI) Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, Lotrimin Anti-Fungal (AF) Athlete’s Foot Deodorant Powder Spray, Lotrimin AF Athlete’s Foot Liquid Spray, Lotrimin AF Athlete’s Foot Daily Prevention Deodorant Powder Spray, Tinactin Jock Itch (JI) Powder Spray, Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Deodorant Powder Spray, Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, and Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Liquid Spray.

Bayer has received no reports of adverse events related to the recall. The company also reported no concerns with its antifungal creams or other products.



In addition, Coppertone has issued a voluntary recall of specific lots of five spray sunscreen products because of the presence of benzene, according to a Sept. 30th company announcement, also posted on the FDA website. The recall includes Pure&Simple spray for babies, children, and adults; Coppertone Sport Mineral Spray; and Travel-sized Coppertone Sport spray. The specific lots were manufactured between January and June 2021, and are listed on the company announcement.

“Daily exposure to benzene at the levels detected in these affected Coppertone aerosol sunscreen spray products would not be expected to cause adverse health consequences based on generally accepted exposure modeling by numerous regulatory agencies,” according to the announcement. Coppertone has received no reports of adverse events related to the recall.

In the announcement, Coppertone advised consumers to discontinue use of the impacted products, dispose of the aerosol cans properly, and contact their physician or health care provider if they experience any problems related to the sunscreen sprays.

In May 2021, online pharmacy Valisure, which routinely tests their medications, petitioned the FDA to recall specific sunscreens after detecting high benzene levels in several brands and batches of sunscreen products. The FDA evaluated the petition, but the agency itself did not issue any recalls of sunscreens.

Clinicians are advised to report any adverse events to the FDA’s MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program either online or by regular mail or fax using this form.

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The presence of benzene has prompted voluntary company recalls of antifungal foot sprays and sunscreen products, all aerosol spray products.

mark wragg/iStockphoto.com

Bayer has voluntarily recalled batches of its Lotrimin and Tinactin products because of benzene detected in some samples, according to an Oct. 1 company announcement, available on the Food and Drug Administration website. “It is important to note that Bayer’s decision to voluntarily recall these products is a precautionary measure and that the levels detected are not expected to cause adverse health consequences in consumers,” the announcement said.

Benzene is classified as a human carcinogen present in the environment from both natural sources and human activity, and it has been shown to cause cancer with long-term exposure.

The products included in the recall – all in aerosol spray cans – are unexpired Lotrimin and Tinactin sprays with lot numbers starting with TN, CV, or NAA that were distributed to consumer venues between September 2018 and September 2021. The over-the-counter products are Lotrimin Anti-Fungal Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, Lotrimin Anti-Fungal Jock Itch (AFJI) Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, Lotrimin Anti-Fungal (AF) Athlete’s Foot Deodorant Powder Spray, Lotrimin AF Athlete’s Foot Liquid Spray, Lotrimin AF Athlete’s Foot Daily Prevention Deodorant Powder Spray, Tinactin Jock Itch (JI) Powder Spray, Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Deodorant Powder Spray, Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, and Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Liquid Spray.

Bayer has received no reports of adverse events related to the recall. The company also reported no concerns with its antifungal creams or other products.



In addition, Coppertone has issued a voluntary recall of specific lots of five spray sunscreen products because of the presence of benzene, according to a Sept. 30th company announcement, also posted on the FDA website. The recall includes Pure&Simple spray for babies, children, and adults; Coppertone Sport Mineral Spray; and Travel-sized Coppertone Sport spray. The specific lots were manufactured between January and June 2021, and are listed on the company announcement.

“Daily exposure to benzene at the levels detected in these affected Coppertone aerosol sunscreen spray products would not be expected to cause adverse health consequences based on generally accepted exposure modeling by numerous regulatory agencies,” according to the announcement. Coppertone has received no reports of adverse events related to the recall.

In the announcement, Coppertone advised consumers to discontinue use of the impacted products, dispose of the aerosol cans properly, and contact their physician or health care provider if they experience any problems related to the sunscreen sprays.

In May 2021, online pharmacy Valisure, which routinely tests their medications, petitioned the FDA to recall specific sunscreens after detecting high benzene levels in several brands and batches of sunscreen products. The FDA evaluated the petition, but the agency itself did not issue any recalls of sunscreens.

Clinicians are advised to report any adverse events to the FDA’s MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program either online or by regular mail or fax using this form.

The presence of benzene has prompted voluntary company recalls of antifungal foot sprays and sunscreen products, all aerosol spray products.

mark wragg/iStockphoto.com

Bayer has voluntarily recalled batches of its Lotrimin and Tinactin products because of benzene detected in some samples, according to an Oct. 1 company announcement, available on the Food and Drug Administration website. “It is important to note that Bayer’s decision to voluntarily recall these products is a precautionary measure and that the levels detected are not expected to cause adverse health consequences in consumers,” the announcement said.

Benzene is classified as a human carcinogen present in the environment from both natural sources and human activity, and it has been shown to cause cancer with long-term exposure.

The products included in the recall – all in aerosol spray cans – are unexpired Lotrimin and Tinactin sprays with lot numbers starting with TN, CV, or NAA that were distributed to consumer venues between September 2018 and September 2021. The over-the-counter products are Lotrimin Anti-Fungal Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, Lotrimin Anti-Fungal Jock Itch (AFJI) Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, Lotrimin Anti-Fungal (AF) Athlete’s Foot Deodorant Powder Spray, Lotrimin AF Athlete’s Foot Liquid Spray, Lotrimin AF Athlete’s Foot Daily Prevention Deodorant Powder Spray, Tinactin Jock Itch (JI) Powder Spray, Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Deodorant Powder Spray, Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Powder Spray, and Tinactin Athlete’s Foot Liquid Spray.

Bayer has received no reports of adverse events related to the recall. The company also reported no concerns with its antifungal creams or other products.



In addition, Coppertone has issued a voluntary recall of specific lots of five spray sunscreen products because of the presence of benzene, according to a Sept. 30th company announcement, also posted on the FDA website. The recall includes Pure&Simple spray for babies, children, and adults; Coppertone Sport Mineral Spray; and Travel-sized Coppertone Sport spray. The specific lots were manufactured between January and June 2021, and are listed on the company announcement.

“Daily exposure to benzene at the levels detected in these affected Coppertone aerosol sunscreen spray products would not be expected to cause adverse health consequences based on generally accepted exposure modeling by numerous regulatory agencies,” according to the announcement. Coppertone has received no reports of adverse events related to the recall.

In the announcement, Coppertone advised consumers to discontinue use of the impacted products, dispose of the aerosol cans properly, and contact their physician or health care provider if they experience any problems related to the sunscreen sprays.

In May 2021, online pharmacy Valisure, which routinely tests their medications, petitioned the FDA to recall specific sunscreens after detecting high benzene levels in several brands and batches of sunscreen products. The FDA evaluated the petition, but the agency itself did not issue any recalls of sunscreens.

Clinicians are advised to report any adverse events to the FDA’s MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program either online or by regular mail or fax using this form.

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Is AFib a stroke cause or innocent bystander? The debate continues

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 15:40

Discovery of substantial atrial fibrillation (AFib) is usually an indication to start oral anticoagulation (OAC) for stroke prevention, but it’s far from settled whether such AFib is actually a direct cause of thromboembolic stroke. And that has implications for whether patients with occasional bouts of the arrhythmia need to be on continuous OAC.  

It’s possible that some with infrequent paroxysmal AFib can get away with OAC maintained only about as long as the arrhythmia persists, and then go off the drugs, say researchers based on their study, which, they caution, would need the support of prospective trials before such a strategy could be considered.

But importantly, in their patients who had been continuously monitored by their cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) prior to experiencing a stroke, the 30-day risk of that stroke more than tripled if their AFib burden on 1 day reached at least 5-6 hours. The risk jumped especially high within the first few days after accumulating that amount of AFib in a day, but then fell off sharply over the next few days.

Based on the study, “Your risk of stroke goes up acutely when you have an episode of AFib, and it decreases rapidly, back to baseline – certainly by 30 days and it looked like in our data by 5 days,” Daniel E. Singer, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in an interview.

Increasingly, he noted, “there’s a widespread belief that AFib is a risk marker, not a causal risk factor.” In that scenario, most embolic strokes are caused by thrombi formed as a result of an atrial myopathy, characterized by fibrosis and inflammation, that also happens to trigger AFib.

But the current findings are, “from a mechanistic point of view, very much in favor of AFib being a causal risk factor, acutely raising the risk of stroke,” said Dr. Singer, who is lead author on the analysis published online Sept. 29 in JAMA Cardiology.

Some studies have “shown that anticoagulants seem to lower stroke risk even in patients without atrial fib, and even from sources not likely to be coming from the atrium,” Mintu P. Turakhia, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, Palo Alto, said in an interview. Collectively they point to “atrial fibrillation as a cause of and a noncausal marker for stroke.”

For example, Dr. Turakhia pointed out in an editorial accompanying the current report that stroke in patients with CIEDs “may occur during prolonged periods of sinus rhythm.”

The current study, he said in an interview, doesn’t preclude atrial myopathy as one direct cause of stroke-associated thrombus, because probably both the myopathy and AFib can be culprits. Still, AFib itself it may bear more responsibility for strokes in patients with fewer competing risks for stroke.

In such patients at lower vascular risk, who may have a CHA2DS2-VASc score of only 1 or 2, for example, “AFib can become a more important cause” of ischemic stroke, Dr. Turakhia said. That’s when AFib is more likely to be temporally related to stroke as the likely culprit, the mechanism addressed by Dr. Singer and associates.

“I think we’re all trying to grapple with what the truth is,” Dr. Singer observed. Still, the current study was unusual for primarily looking at the temporal relationship between AFib and stroke, rather than stroke risk. “And once again, as we found in our earlier study, but now a much larger study, it’s a tight relationship.”

Based on the current results, he said, the risk is “high when you have AFib, and it decreases very rapidly after the AFib is over.” And, “it takes multiple hours of AFib to raise stroke risk.” Inclusion in the analysis required accumulation of at least 5.5 hours of AFib on at least 1 day in a month, the cut point at which stroke risk started to climb significantly in an earlier trial.  

In the current analysis, however, the 30-day odds ratio for stroke was a nonsignificant 2.75 for an AFib burden of 6-23 hours in a day and jumped to a significant 5.0 for a burden in excess of 23 hours in a day. “That’s a lot of AFib” before the risk actually goes up, and supports AFib as causative, Dr. Singer said. If it were the myopathy itself triggering stroke in these particular patients, the risk would be ongoing and not subject to a threshold of AFib burden.
 

 

 

Implications for noncontinuous OAC

“The hope is that there are people who have very little AFib: They may have several hours, and then they have nothing for 6 months. Do they have to be anticoagulated or not?” Dr. Singer asked.

“If you believe the risk-marker story, you might say they have to be anticoagulated. But if you believe our results, you would certainly think there’s a good chance they don’t have to be anticoagulated,” he said.

“So it is logical to think, if you have the right people and continuous monitoring, that you could have time-delimited anticoagulation.” That is, patients might start right away on a direct OAC once reaching the AFib threshold in a day, Dr. Singer said, “going on and off anticoagulants in parallel with their episodes of AFib.”

The strategy wouldn’t be feasible in patients who often experience AFib, Dr. Singer noted, “but it might work for people who have infrequent paroxysmal AFib.” It certainly would first have to be tested in prospective trials, he said. Such trials would be more practical than ever to carry out given the growing availability of continuous AFib monitoring by wearables.

“We need a trial to make the case whether it’s safe or not,” Dr. Turakhia said of such a rhythm-guided approach to OAC for AFib. The population to start with, he said, would be patients with paroxysmal AFib and low CHA2DS2-VASc scores. “If you think CHA2DS2-VASc as an integrated score of vascular risk, such patients would have a lot fewer reasons to have strokes. And if they do have a stroke, it’s more reasonable to assume that it’s likely caused by atrial fib and not just a marker.”

Importantly, such a strategy could well be safer than continuous OAC for some patients – those at the lowest vascular risk and with the most occasional AFib and lowest AFib burden “who are otherwise doing fine,” Dr. Turakhia said. In such patients on continuous OAC, he proposed, the risks of bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage could potentially exceed the expected degree of protection from ischemic events.
 

Discordant periods of AFib burden

Dr. Singer and his colleagues linked a national electronic health record database with Medtronic CareLink records covering 10 years to identify 891 patients who experienced an ischemic stroke preceded by at least 120 days of continuous heart-rhythm monitoring.

The patients were then categorized by their pattern of AFib, if any, within each of two prestroke periods: the most recent 30 days, which was the test period, and the preceding 91-120 days, the control period.

The analysis then excluded any patients who reached an AFib-burden threshold of at least 5.5 hours on any day during both the test and control periods, and those who did not attain that threshold in either period.

“The ones who had AFib in both periods mostly had permanent AFib, and ones that didn’t have AFib in either period mostly were in sinus rhythm,” Dr. Singer said. It was “close to 100%” in both cases.

Those exclusions left 66 patients, 7.4% of the total, who reached the AFib-burden threshold on at least 1 day during either the test or control periods, but not both. They included 52 and 14 patients, respectively, with “discordant” periods, that is, at least that burden of AFib in a day during either the test or control period, but not both.

Comparing AFib burden at test versus control periods among patients for whom the two periods were discordant yielded an OR for stroke of 3.71 (95% confidence interval, 2.06-6.70).

Stroke risk levels were not evenly spread throughout the 24-hour periods that met the AFib-burden threshold or the 30 days preceding the patients’ strokes. The OR for stroke was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.62-9.55) during days 1-5 following the day in which the AFib-burden threshold was met. And it was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.08-12.01) over 30 days if the AFib burden exceeded 23 hours on any day of the test period.

The study’s case-crossover design, in which each patient served as their own control, is one of its advantages, Dr. Singer observed. Most patient features, including CHA2DS2-VASc score and comorbidities, did not change appreciably from earliest to the latest 30-day period, which strengthens the comparison of the two because “you don’t have to worry about long-term confounding.”

Dr. Singer was supported by the Eliot B. and Edith C. Shoolman fund of the Massachusetts General Hospital. He discloses receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim and Bristol-Myers Squibb; personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fitbit, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, and Pfizer; and royalties from UpToDate.

Dr. Turakhia discloses personal fees from Medtronic, Abbott, Sanofi, Pfizer, Myokardia, Johnson & Johnson, Milestone Pharmaceuticals, InCarda Therapeutics, 100Plus, Forward Pharma, and AliveCor; and grants from Bristol-Myers Squibb, the American Heart Association, Apple, and Bayer.

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

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Discovery of substantial atrial fibrillation (AFib) is usually an indication to start oral anticoagulation (OAC) for stroke prevention, but it’s far from settled whether such AFib is actually a direct cause of thromboembolic stroke. And that has implications for whether patients with occasional bouts of the arrhythmia need to be on continuous OAC.  

It’s possible that some with infrequent paroxysmal AFib can get away with OAC maintained only about as long as the arrhythmia persists, and then go off the drugs, say researchers based on their study, which, they caution, would need the support of prospective trials before such a strategy could be considered.

But importantly, in their patients who had been continuously monitored by their cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) prior to experiencing a stroke, the 30-day risk of that stroke more than tripled if their AFib burden on 1 day reached at least 5-6 hours. The risk jumped especially high within the first few days after accumulating that amount of AFib in a day, but then fell off sharply over the next few days.

Based on the study, “Your risk of stroke goes up acutely when you have an episode of AFib, and it decreases rapidly, back to baseline – certainly by 30 days and it looked like in our data by 5 days,” Daniel E. Singer, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in an interview.

Increasingly, he noted, “there’s a widespread belief that AFib is a risk marker, not a causal risk factor.” In that scenario, most embolic strokes are caused by thrombi formed as a result of an atrial myopathy, characterized by fibrosis and inflammation, that also happens to trigger AFib.

But the current findings are, “from a mechanistic point of view, very much in favor of AFib being a causal risk factor, acutely raising the risk of stroke,” said Dr. Singer, who is lead author on the analysis published online Sept. 29 in JAMA Cardiology.

Some studies have “shown that anticoagulants seem to lower stroke risk even in patients without atrial fib, and even from sources not likely to be coming from the atrium,” Mintu P. Turakhia, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, Palo Alto, said in an interview. Collectively they point to “atrial fibrillation as a cause of and a noncausal marker for stroke.”

For example, Dr. Turakhia pointed out in an editorial accompanying the current report that stroke in patients with CIEDs “may occur during prolonged periods of sinus rhythm.”

The current study, he said in an interview, doesn’t preclude atrial myopathy as one direct cause of stroke-associated thrombus, because probably both the myopathy and AFib can be culprits. Still, AFib itself it may bear more responsibility for strokes in patients with fewer competing risks for stroke.

In such patients at lower vascular risk, who may have a CHA2DS2-VASc score of only 1 or 2, for example, “AFib can become a more important cause” of ischemic stroke, Dr. Turakhia said. That’s when AFib is more likely to be temporally related to stroke as the likely culprit, the mechanism addressed by Dr. Singer and associates.

“I think we’re all trying to grapple with what the truth is,” Dr. Singer observed. Still, the current study was unusual for primarily looking at the temporal relationship between AFib and stroke, rather than stroke risk. “And once again, as we found in our earlier study, but now a much larger study, it’s a tight relationship.”

Based on the current results, he said, the risk is “high when you have AFib, and it decreases very rapidly after the AFib is over.” And, “it takes multiple hours of AFib to raise stroke risk.” Inclusion in the analysis required accumulation of at least 5.5 hours of AFib on at least 1 day in a month, the cut point at which stroke risk started to climb significantly in an earlier trial.  

In the current analysis, however, the 30-day odds ratio for stroke was a nonsignificant 2.75 for an AFib burden of 6-23 hours in a day and jumped to a significant 5.0 for a burden in excess of 23 hours in a day. “That’s a lot of AFib” before the risk actually goes up, and supports AFib as causative, Dr. Singer said. If it were the myopathy itself triggering stroke in these particular patients, the risk would be ongoing and not subject to a threshold of AFib burden.
 

 

 

Implications for noncontinuous OAC

“The hope is that there are people who have very little AFib: They may have several hours, and then they have nothing for 6 months. Do they have to be anticoagulated or not?” Dr. Singer asked.

“If you believe the risk-marker story, you might say they have to be anticoagulated. But if you believe our results, you would certainly think there’s a good chance they don’t have to be anticoagulated,” he said.

“So it is logical to think, if you have the right people and continuous monitoring, that you could have time-delimited anticoagulation.” That is, patients might start right away on a direct OAC once reaching the AFib threshold in a day, Dr. Singer said, “going on and off anticoagulants in parallel with their episodes of AFib.”

The strategy wouldn’t be feasible in patients who often experience AFib, Dr. Singer noted, “but it might work for people who have infrequent paroxysmal AFib.” It certainly would first have to be tested in prospective trials, he said. Such trials would be more practical than ever to carry out given the growing availability of continuous AFib monitoring by wearables.

“We need a trial to make the case whether it’s safe or not,” Dr. Turakhia said of such a rhythm-guided approach to OAC for AFib. The population to start with, he said, would be patients with paroxysmal AFib and low CHA2DS2-VASc scores. “If you think CHA2DS2-VASc as an integrated score of vascular risk, such patients would have a lot fewer reasons to have strokes. And if they do have a stroke, it’s more reasonable to assume that it’s likely caused by atrial fib and not just a marker.”

Importantly, such a strategy could well be safer than continuous OAC for some patients – those at the lowest vascular risk and with the most occasional AFib and lowest AFib burden “who are otherwise doing fine,” Dr. Turakhia said. In such patients on continuous OAC, he proposed, the risks of bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage could potentially exceed the expected degree of protection from ischemic events.
 

Discordant periods of AFib burden

Dr. Singer and his colleagues linked a national electronic health record database with Medtronic CareLink records covering 10 years to identify 891 patients who experienced an ischemic stroke preceded by at least 120 days of continuous heart-rhythm monitoring.

The patients were then categorized by their pattern of AFib, if any, within each of two prestroke periods: the most recent 30 days, which was the test period, and the preceding 91-120 days, the control period.

The analysis then excluded any patients who reached an AFib-burden threshold of at least 5.5 hours on any day during both the test and control periods, and those who did not attain that threshold in either period.

“The ones who had AFib in both periods mostly had permanent AFib, and ones that didn’t have AFib in either period mostly were in sinus rhythm,” Dr. Singer said. It was “close to 100%” in both cases.

Those exclusions left 66 patients, 7.4% of the total, who reached the AFib-burden threshold on at least 1 day during either the test or control periods, but not both. They included 52 and 14 patients, respectively, with “discordant” periods, that is, at least that burden of AFib in a day during either the test or control period, but not both.

Comparing AFib burden at test versus control periods among patients for whom the two periods were discordant yielded an OR for stroke of 3.71 (95% confidence interval, 2.06-6.70).

Stroke risk levels were not evenly spread throughout the 24-hour periods that met the AFib-burden threshold or the 30 days preceding the patients’ strokes. The OR for stroke was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.62-9.55) during days 1-5 following the day in which the AFib-burden threshold was met. And it was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.08-12.01) over 30 days if the AFib burden exceeded 23 hours on any day of the test period.

The study’s case-crossover design, in which each patient served as their own control, is one of its advantages, Dr. Singer observed. Most patient features, including CHA2DS2-VASc score and comorbidities, did not change appreciably from earliest to the latest 30-day period, which strengthens the comparison of the two because “you don’t have to worry about long-term confounding.”

Dr. Singer was supported by the Eliot B. and Edith C. Shoolman fund of the Massachusetts General Hospital. He discloses receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim and Bristol-Myers Squibb; personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fitbit, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, and Pfizer; and royalties from UpToDate.

Dr. Turakhia discloses personal fees from Medtronic, Abbott, Sanofi, Pfizer, Myokardia, Johnson & Johnson, Milestone Pharmaceuticals, InCarda Therapeutics, 100Plus, Forward Pharma, and AliveCor; and grants from Bristol-Myers Squibb, the American Heart Association, Apple, and Bayer.

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

Discovery of substantial atrial fibrillation (AFib) is usually an indication to start oral anticoagulation (OAC) for stroke prevention, but it’s far from settled whether such AFib is actually a direct cause of thromboembolic stroke. And that has implications for whether patients with occasional bouts of the arrhythmia need to be on continuous OAC.  

It’s possible that some with infrequent paroxysmal AFib can get away with OAC maintained only about as long as the arrhythmia persists, and then go off the drugs, say researchers based on their study, which, they caution, would need the support of prospective trials before such a strategy could be considered.

But importantly, in their patients who had been continuously monitored by their cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) prior to experiencing a stroke, the 30-day risk of that stroke more than tripled if their AFib burden on 1 day reached at least 5-6 hours. The risk jumped especially high within the first few days after accumulating that amount of AFib in a day, but then fell off sharply over the next few days.

Based on the study, “Your risk of stroke goes up acutely when you have an episode of AFib, and it decreases rapidly, back to baseline – certainly by 30 days and it looked like in our data by 5 days,” Daniel E. Singer, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in an interview.

Increasingly, he noted, “there’s a widespread belief that AFib is a risk marker, not a causal risk factor.” In that scenario, most embolic strokes are caused by thrombi formed as a result of an atrial myopathy, characterized by fibrosis and inflammation, that also happens to trigger AFib.

But the current findings are, “from a mechanistic point of view, very much in favor of AFib being a causal risk factor, acutely raising the risk of stroke,” said Dr. Singer, who is lead author on the analysis published online Sept. 29 in JAMA Cardiology.

Some studies have “shown that anticoagulants seem to lower stroke risk even in patients without atrial fib, and even from sources not likely to be coming from the atrium,” Mintu P. Turakhia, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, Palo Alto, said in an interview. Collectively they point to “atrial fibrillation as a cause of and a noncausal marker for stroke.”

For example, Dr. Turakhia pointed out in an editorial accompanying the current report that stroke in patients with CIEDs “may occur during prolonged periods of sinus rhythm.”

The current study, he said in an interview, doesn’t preclude atrial myopathy as one direct cause of stroke-associated thrombus, because probably both the myopathy and AFib can be culprits. Still, AFib itself it may bear more responsibility for strokes in patients with fewer competing risks for stroke.

In such patients at lower vascular risk, who may have a CHA2DS2-VASc score of only 1 or 2, for example, “AFib can become a more important cause” of ischemic stroke, Dr. Turakhia said. That’s when AFib is more likely to be temporally related to stroke as the likely culprit, the mechanism addressed by Dr. Singer and associates.

“I think we’re all trying to grapple with what the truth is,” Dr. Singer observed. Still, the current study was unusual for primarily looking at the temporal relationship between AFib and stroke, rather than stroke risk. “And once again, as we found in our earlier study, but now a much larger study, it’s a tight relationship.”

Based on the current results, he said, the risk is “high when you have AFib, and it decreases very rapidly after the AFib is over.” And, “it takes multiple hours of AFib to raise stroke risk.” Inclusion in the analysis required accumulation of at least 5.5 hours of AFib on at least 1 day in a month, the cut point at which stroke risk started to climb significantly in an earlier trial.  

In the current analysis, however, the 30-day odds ratio for stroke was a nonsignificant 2.75 for an AFib burden of 6-23 hours in a day and jumped to a significant 5.0 for a burden in excess of 23 hours in a day. “That’s a lot of AFib” before the risk actually goes up, and supports AFib as causative, Dr. Singer said. If it were the myopathy itself triggering stroke in these particular patients, the risk would be ongoing and not subject to a threshold of AFib burden.
 

 

 

Implications for noncontinuous OAC

“The hope is that there are people who have very little AFib: They may have several hours, and then they have nothing for 6 months. Do they have to be anticoagulated or not?” Dr. Singer asked.

“If you believe the risk-marker story, you might say they have to be anticoagulated. But if you believe our results, you would certainly think there’s a good chance they don’t have to be anticoagulated,” he said.

“So it is logical to think, if you have the right people and continuous monitoring, that you could have time-delimited anticoagulation.” That is, patients might start right away on a direct OAC once reaching the AFib threshold in a day, Dr. Singer said, “going on and off anticoagulants in parallel with their episodes of AFib.”

The strategy wouldn’t be feasible in patients who often experience AFib, Dr. Singer noted, “but it might work for people who have infrequent paroxysmal AFib.” It certainly would first have to be tested in prospective trials, he said. Such trials would be more practical than ever to carry out given the growing availability of continuous AFib monitoring by wearables.

“We need a trial to make the case whether it’s safe or not,” Dr. Turakhia said of such a rhythm-guided approach to OAC for AFib. The population to start with, he said, would be patients with paroxysmal AFib and low CHA2DS2-VASc scores. “If you think CHA2DS2-VASc as an integrated score of vascular risk, such patients would have a lot fewer reasons to have strokes. And if they do have a stroke, it’s more reasonable to assume that it’s likely caused by atrial fib and not just a marker.”

Importantly, such a strategy could well be safer than continuous OAC for some patients – those at the lowest vascular risk and with the most occasional AFib and lowest AFib burden “who are otherwise doing fine,” Dr. Turakhia said. In such patients on continuous OAC, he proposed, the risks of bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage could potentially exceed the expected degree of protection from ischemic events.
 

Discordant periods of AFib burden

Dr. Singer and his colleagues linked a national electronic health record database with Medtronic CareLink records covering 10 years to identify 891 patients who experienced an ischemic stroke preceded by at least 120 days of continuous heart-rhythm monitoring.

The patients were then categorized by their pattern of AFib, if any, within each of two prestroke periods: the most recent 30 days, which was the test period, and the preceding 91-120 days, the control period.

The analysis then excluded any patients who reached an AFib-burden threshold of at least 5.5 hours on any day during both the test and control periods, and those who did not attain that threshold in either period.

“The ones who had AFib in both periods mostly had permanent AFib, and ones that didn’t have AFib in either period mostly were in sinus rhythm,” Dr. Singer said. It was “close to 100%” in both cases.

Those exclusions left 66 patients, 7.4% of the total, who reached the AFib-burden threshold on at least 1 day during either the test or control periods, but not both. They included 52 and 14 patients, respectively, with “discordant” periods, that is, at least that burden of AFib in a day during either the test or control period, but not both.

Comparing AFib burden at test versus control periods among patients for whom the two periods were discordant yielded an OR for stroke of 3.71 (95% confidence interval, 2.06-6.70).

Stroke risk levels were not evenly spread throughout the 24-hour periods that met the AFib-burden threshold or the 30 days preceding the patients’ strokes. The OR for stroke was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.62-9.55) during days 1-5 following the day in which the AFib-burden threshold was met. And it was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.08-12.01) over 30 days if the AFib burden exceeded 23 hours on any day of the test period.

The study’s case-crossover design, in which each patient served as their own control, is one of its advantages, Dr. Singer observed. Most patient features, including CHA2DS2-VASc score and comorbidities, did not change appreciably from earliest to the latest 30-day period, which strengthens the comparison of the two because “you don’t have to worry about long-term confounding.”

Dr. Singer was supported by the Eliot B. and Edith C. Shoolman fund of the Massachusetts General Hospital. He discloses receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim and Bristol-Myers Squibb; personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fitbit, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, and Pfizer; and royalties from UpToDate.

Dr. Turakhia discloses personal fees from Medtronic, Abbott, Sanofi, Pfizer, Myokardia, Johnson & Johnson, Milestone Pharmaceuticals, InCarda Therapeutics, 100Plus, Forward Pharma, and AliveCor; and grants from Bristol-Myers Squibb, the American Heart Association, Apple, and Bayer.

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

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‘Regionalized’ care tied to better survival in tough cancer

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 14:36

The experience and expertise cultivated within a “regionalized” gastric cancer center appears to improve patient outcomes in this difficult tumor type, which has a relatively low 5-year survival rate in the United States, according to researchers.

The Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) Gastric-Esophageal Cancer Program was established in 2016 to consolidate the care of patients with gastric cancer and increase physician specialization and standardization.

In a retrospective study, Kaiser Permanente investigators compared the outcomes of the 942 patients diagnosed before the regional gastric cancer team was established with the outcomes of the 487 patients treated after it was implemented. Overall, the transformation appears to enhance the delivery of care and improves clinical and oncologic outcomes.

For example, among 394 patients who received curative-intent surgery, overall survival at 2 years increased from 72.7% before the program to 85.5% afterward.

“The regionalized gastric cancer program combines the benefits of community-based care, which is local and convenient, with the expertise of a specialized cancer center,” said coauthor Lisa Herrinton, PhD, a research scientist at the Kaiser Permanente division of research, in a statement.

She added that, in their integrated care system, “it is easy for the different physicians that treat cancer patients – including surgical oncologists, medical oncologists, and radiation oncologists, among others – to come together and collaborate and tie their work flows together.”

The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Gastric cancer accounts for about 27,600 cases diagnosed annually in the United States, but the overall 5-year survival is still only 32%. About half of the cases are locoregional (stage I-III) and potentially eligible for curative-intent surgery and adjuvant therapy, the authors pointed out in the study.

As compared with North America, the incidence rate is five to six times higher in East Asia, but they have developed better surveillance for early detection and treatment is highly effective, as the increased incidence allows oncologists and surgeons to achieve greater specialization. Laparoscopic gastrectomy and extended (D2) lymph node dissection are more commonly performed in East Asia as compared with the United States, and surgical outcomes appear to be better in East Asia.
 

Regionalizing care

The rationale for regionalizing care was that increasing and concentrating the volume of cases to a specific location would make it more possible to introduce new surgical procedures as well as allow medical oncologists to uniformly introduce and standardize the use of the newest chemotherapy regimens.

Prior to regionalization, gastric cancer surgery was performed at 19 medical centers in the Kaiser system. Now, curative-intent laparoscopic gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy or esophagojejunostomy and side-to-side jejunojejunostomy is subsequently performed at only two centers by five surgeons.

“The two centers were selected based on how skilled the surgeons were at performing advanced minimally invasive oncologic surgery,” said lead author Swee H. Teh, MD, surgical director, gastric cancer surgery, Kaiser Permanente Northern California. “We also looked at the center’s retrospective gastrectomy outcomes and the strength of the leadership that would be collaborating with the regional multidisciplinary team.”

Dr. Teh said in an interview that it was imperative that their regional gastric cancer centers have surgeons highly skilled in advanced minimally invasive gastrointestinal surgery. “This is a newer technique and not one of our more senior surgeons had been trained in [it],” he said. “With this change, some surgeons were now no longer performing gastric cancer surgery.”

Not only were the centers selected based on the surgical skills of the surgeons already there, but they also took into account the locations and geographical membership distribution. “We have found that our patients’ traveling distance to receive surgical care has not changed significantly,” Dr. Teh said.
 

 

 

Improved outcomes

The cohort included 1,429 eligible patients all stages of gastric cancer; one-third were treated after regionalization, 650 had stage I-III disease, and 394 underwent curative-intent surgery.

Overall survival at 2 years was 32.8% pre- and 37.3% post regionalization (P = .20) for all stages of cancer; stage I-III cases with or without surgery, 55.6% and 61.1%, respectively (P = .25); and among all surgery patients, 72.7% and 85.5%, respectively (P < .03).

Among patients who underwent surgery, the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy increased from 35% to 66% (P < .0001), as did laparoscopic gastrectomy from 18% to 92% (P < .0001), and D2 lymphadenectomy from 2% to 80% (P < .0001). In addition, dissection of 15 or more lymph nodes also rose from 61% to 95% (P < .0001). Post regionalization, the resection margin was more often negative, and the resection less often involved other organs.

The median length of hospitalization declined from 7 to 3 days (P < .001) after regionalization but all-cause readmissions and reoperation at 30 and 90 days were similar in both cohorts. The risk of bowel obstruction was less frequent post regionalization (P = .01 at both 30 and 90 days), as was risk of infection (P = .03 at 30 days and P = .01 at 90 days).

The risk of one or more serious adverse events was also lower (P < .01), and 30-day mortality did not change (pre 0.7% and post 0.0%, P = .34).
 

Generalizability may not be feasible

But although this was successful for Kaiser, the authors note that a key limitation of the study is generalizability – and that regionalization may not be feasible in many U.S. settings.

“There needs to be a standardized workflow that all stakeholders agree upon,” Dr. Teh explained. “For example, in our gastric cancer staging pathway, all patients who are considered candidates for surgery have four staging tests: CT scan, PET scan and endoscopic ultrasound [EUS], and staging laparoscopy.”

Another important aspect is that in order to make sure the workflow is smooth and timely, all subspecialties responsible for the staging modalities need to create a “special access.” What this means, he continued, is for example, that the radiology department must ensure that these patients will have their CT scan and PET scans promptly. “Similarly, the GI department must provide quick access to EUS, and the surgery department must quickly provide a staging laparoscopy,” Dr. Teh said. “We have been extremely successful in achieving this goal.”

Dr. Teh also noted that a skilled patient navigator and a team where each member brings high-level expertise and experience to the table are also necessary. And innovative technology is also needed.

“We use artificial intelligence to identify all newly diagnosed cases of gastric [cancer], and within 24 hours of a patient’s diagnosis, a notification is sent to entire team about this new patient,” he added. “We also use AI to extract data to create a dashboard that will track each patient’s progress and outcomes, so that the results are accessible to every member of the team. The innovative technology has also helped us build a comprehensive survivorship program.”

They also noted in their study that European and Canadian systems, as well as the Department of Veterans Affairs, could probably implement components of this, including enhanced recovery after surgery.

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Teh and Dr. Herrinton have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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The experience and expertise cultivated within a “regionalized” gastric cancer center appears to improve patient outcomes in this difficult tumor type, which has a relatively low 5-year survival rate in the United States, according to researchers.

The Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) Gastric-Esophageal Cancer Program was established in 2016 to consolidate the care of patients with gastric cancer and increase physician specialization and standardization.

In a retrospective study, Kaiser Permanente investigators compared the outcomes of the 942 patients diagnosed before the regional gastric cancer team was established with the outcomes of the 487 patients treated after it was implemented. Overall, the transformation appears to enhance the delivery of care and improves clinical and oncologic outcomes.

For example, among 394 patients who received curative-intent surgery, overall survival at 2 years increased from 72.7% before the program to 85.5% afterward.

“The regionalized gastric cancer program combines the benefits of community-based care, which is local and convenient, with the expertise of a specialized cancer center,” said coauthor Lisa Herrinton, PhD, a research scientist at the Kaiser Permanente division of research, in a statement.

She added that, in their integrated care system, “it is easy for the different physicians that treat cancer patients – including surgical oncologists, medical oncologists, and radiation oncologists, among others – to come together and collaborate and tie their work flows together.”

The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Gastric cancer accounts for about 27,600 cases diagnosed annually in the United States, but the overall 5-year survival is still only 32%. About half of the cases are locoregional (stage I-III) and potentially eligible for curative-intent surgery and adjuvant therapy, the authors pointed out in the study.

As compared with North America, the incidence rate is five to six times higher in East Asia, but they have developed better surveillance for early detection and treatment is highly effective, as the increased incidence allows oncologists and surgeons to achieve greater specialization. Laparoscopic gastrectomy and extended (D2) lymph node dissection are more commonly performed in East Asia as compared with the United States, and surgical outcomes appear to be better in East Asia.
 

Regionalizing care

The rationale for regionalizing care was that increasing and concentrating the volume of cases to a specific location would make it more possible to introduce new surgical procedures as well as allow medical oncologists to uniformly introduce and standardize the use of the newest chemotherapy regimens.

Prior to regionalization, gastric cancer surgery was performed at 19 medical centers in the Kaiser system. Now, curative-intent laparoscopic gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy or esophagojejunostomy and side-to-side jejunojejunostomy is subsequently performed at only two centers by five surgeons.

“The two centers were selected based on how skilled the surgeons were at performing advanced minimally invasive oncologic surgery,” said lead author Swee H. Teh, MD, surgical director, gastric cancer surgery, Kaiser Permanente Northern California. “We also looked at the center’s retrospective gastrectomy outcomes and the strength of the leadership that would be collaborating with the regional multidisciplinary team.”

Dr. Teh said in an interview that it was imperative that their regional gastric cancer centers have surgeons highly skilled in advanced minimally invasive gastrointestinal surgery. “This is a newer technique and not one of our more senior surgeons had been trained in [it],” he said. “With this change, some surgeons were now no longer performing gastric cancer surgery.”

Not only were the centers selected based on the surgical skills of the surgeons already there, but they also took into account the locations and geographical membership distribution. “We have found that our patients’ traveling distance to receive surgical care has not changed significantly,” Dr. Teh said.
 

 

 

Improved outcomes

The cohort included 1,429 eligible patients all stages of gastric cancer; one-third were treated after regionalization, 650 had stage I-III disease, and 394 underwent curative-intent surgery.

Overall survival at 2 years was 32.8% pre- and 37.3% post regionalization (P = .20) for all stages of cancer; stage I-III cases with or without surgery, 55.6% and 61.1%, respectively (P = .25); and among all surgery patients, 72.7% and 85.5%, respectively (P < .03).

Among patients who underwent surgery, the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy increased from 35% to 66% (P < .0001), as did laparoscopic gastrectomy from 18% to 92% (P < .0001), and D2 lymphadenectomy from 2% to 80% (P < .0001). In addition, dissection of 15 or more lymph nodes also rose from 61% to 95% (P < .0001). Post regionalization, the resection margin was more often negative, and the resection less often involved other organs.

The median length of hospitalization declined from 7 to 3 days (P < .001) after regionalization but all-cause readmissions and reoperation at 30 and 90 days were similar in both cohorts. The risk of bowel obstruction was less frequent post regionalization (P = .01 at both 30 and 90 days), as was risk of infection (P = .03 at 30 days and P = .01 at 90 days).

The risk of one or more serious adverse events was also lower (P < .01), and 30-day mortality did not change (pre 0.7% and post 0.0%, P = .34).
 

Generalizability may not be feasible

But although this was successful for Kaiser, the authors note that a key limitation of the study is generalizability – and that regionalization may not be feasible in many U.S. settings.

“There needs to be a standardized workflow that all stakeholders agree upon,” Dr. Teh explained. “For example, in our gastric cancer staging pathway, all patients who are considered candidates for surgery have four staging tests: CT scan, PET scan and endoscopic ultrasound [EUS], and staging laparoscopy.”

Another important aspect is that in order to make sure the workflow is smooth and timely, all subspecialties responsible for the staging modalities need to create a “special access.” What this means, he continued, is for example, that the radiology department must ensure that these patients will have their CT scan and PET scans promptly. “Similarly, the GI department must provide quick access to EUS, and the surgery department must quickly provide a staging laparoscopy,” Dr. Teh said. “We have been extremely successful in achieving this goal.”

Dr. Teh also noted that a skilled patient navigator and a team where each member brings high-level expertise and experience to the table are also necessary. And innovative technology is also needed.

“We use artificial intelligence to identify all newly diagnosed cases of gastric [cancer], and within 24 hours of a patient’s diagnosis, a notification is sent to entire team about this new patient,” he added. “We also use AI to extract data to create a dashboard that will track each patient’s progress and outcomes, so that the results are accessible to every member of the team. The innovative technology has also helped us build a comprehensive survivorship program.”

They also noted in their study that European and Canadian systems, as well as the Department of Veterans Affairs, could probably implement components of this, including enhanced recovery after surgery.

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Teh and Dr. Herrinton have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

The experience and expertise cultivated within a “regionalized” gastric cancer center appears to improve patient outcomes in this difficult tumor type, which has a relatively low 5-year survival rate in the United States, according to researchers.

The Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) Gastric-Esophageal Cancer Program was established in 2016 to consolidate the care of patients with gastric cancer and increase physician specialization and standardization.

In a retrospective study, Kaiser Permanente investigators compared the outcomes of the 942 patients diagnosed before the regional gastric cancer team was established with the outcomes of the 487 patients treated after it was implemented. Overall, the transformation appears to enhance the delivery of care and improves clinical and oncologic outcomes.

For example, among 394 patients who received curative-intent surgery, overall survival at 2 years increased from 72.7% before the program to 85.5% afterward.

“The regionalized gastric cancer program combines the benefits of community-based care, which is local and convenient, with the expertise of a specialized cancer center,” said coauthor Lisa Herrinton, PhD, a research scientist at the Kaiser Permanente division of research, in a statement.

She added that, in their integrated care system, “it is easy for the different physicians that treat cancer patients – including surgical oncologists, medical oncologists, and radiation oncologists, among others – to come together and collaborate and tie their work flows together.”

The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Gastric cancer accounts for about 27,600 cases diagnosed annually in the United States, but the overall 5-year survival is still only 32%. About half of the cases are locoregional (stage I-III) and potentially eligible for curative-intent surgery and adjuvant therapy, the authors pointed out in the study.

As compared with North America, the incidence rate is five to six times higher in East Asia, but they have developed better surveillance for early detection and treatment is highly effective, as the increased incidence allows oncologists and surgeons to achieve greater specialization. Laparoscopic gastrectomy and extended (D2) lymph node dissection are more commonly performed in East Asia as compared with the United States, and surgical outcomes appear to be better in East Asia.
 

Regionalizing care

The rationale for regionalizing care was that increasing and concentrating the volume of cases to a specific location would make it more possible to introduce new surgical procedures as well as allow medical oncologists to uniformly introduce and standardize the use of the newest chemotherapy regimens.

Prior to regionalization, gastric cancer surgery was performed at 19 medical centers in the Kaiser system. Now, curative-intent laparoscopic gastrectomy with Roux-en-Y gastrojejunostomy or esophagojejunostomy and side-to-side jejunojejunostomy is subsequently performed at only two centers by five surgeons.

“The two centers were selected based on how skilled the surgeons were at performing advanced minimally invasive oncologic surgery,” said lead author Swee H. Teh, MD, surgical director, gastric cancer surgery, Kaiser Permanente Northern California. “We also looked at the center’s retrospective gastrectomy outcomes and the strength of the leadership that would be collaborating with the regional multidisciplinary team.”

Dr. Teh said in an interview that it was imperative that their regional gastric cancer centers have surgeons highly skilled in advanced minimally invasive gastrointestinal surgery. “This is a newer technique and not one of our more senior surgeons had been trained in [it],” he said. “With this change, some surgeons were now no longer performing gastric cancer surgery.”

Not only were the centers selected based on the surgical skills of the surgeons already there, but they also took into account the locations and geographical membership distribution. “We have found that our patients’ traveling distance to receive surgical care has not changed significantly,” Dr. Teh said.
 

 

 

Improved outcomes

The cohort included 1,429 eligible patients all stages of gastric cancer; one-third were treated after regionalization, 650 had stage I-III disease, and 394 underwent curative-intent surgery.

Overall survival at 2 years was 32.8% pre- and 37.3% post regionalization (P = .20) for all stages of cancer; stage I-III cases with or without surgery, 55.6% and 61.1%, respectively (P = .25); and among all surgery patients, 72.7% and 85.5%, respectively (P < .03).

Among patients who underwent surgery, the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy increased from 35% to 66% (P < .0001), as did laparoscopic gastrectomy from 18% to 92% (P < .0001), and D2 lymphadenectomy from 2% to 80% (P < .0001). In addition, dissection of 15 or more lymph nodes also rose from 61% to 95% (P < .0001). Post regionalization, the resection margin was more often negative, and the resection less often involved other organs.

The median length of hospitalization declined from 7 to 3 days (P < .001) after regionalization but all-cause readmissions and reoperation at 30 and 90 days were similar in both cohorts. The risk of bowel obstruction was less frequent post regionalization (P = .01 at both 30 and 90 days), as was risk of infection (P = .03 at 30 days and P = .01 at 90 days).

The risk of one or more serious adverse events was also lower (P < .01), and 30-day mortality did not change (pre 0.7% and post 0.0%, P = .34).
 

Generalizability may not be feasible

But although this was successful for Kaiser, the authors note that a key limitation of the study is generalizability – and that regionalization may not be feasible in many U.S. settings.

“There needs to be a standardized workflow that all stakeholders agree upon,” Dr. Teh explained. “For example, in our gastric cancer staging pathway, all patients who are considered candidates for surgery have four staging tests: CT scan, PET scan and endoscopic ultrasound [EUS], and staging laparoscopy.”

Another important aspect is that in order to make sure the workflow is smooth and timely, all subspecialties responsible for the staging modalities need to create a “special access.” What this means, he continued, is for example, that the radiology department must ensure that these patients will have their CT scan and PET scans promptly. “Similarly, the GI department must provide quick access to EUS, and the surgery department must quickly provide a staging laparoscopy,” Dr. Teh said. “We have been extremely successful in achieving this goal.”

Dr. Teh also noted that a skilled patient navigator and a team where each member brings high-level expertise and experience to the table are also necessary. And innovative technology is also needed.

“We use artificial intelligence to identify all newly diagnosed cases of gastric [cancer], and within 24 hours of a patient’s diagnosis, a notification is sent to entire team about this new patient,” he added. “We also use AI to extract data to create a dashboard that will track each patient’s progress and outcomes, so that the results are accessible to every member of the team. The innovative technology has also helped us build a comprehensive survivorship program.”

They also noted in their study that European and Canadian systems, as well as the Department of Veterans Affairs, could probably implement components of this, including enhanced recovery after surgery.

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Teh and Dr. Herrinton have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Genes related to osteosarcoma survival identified

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Investigators in China have identified 14 immune-related genes associated with survival in osteosarcoma.

When they combined them into a risk score and added one additional factor – metastases at diagnosis – the model was an “excellent” predictor of 1-year survival, the team said (area under the curve, 0.947; 95% confidence interval, 0.832-0.972).

“The survival-associated” immune-related genes (IRGs) “examined in this study have potential for identifying prognosis in osteosarcoma and may be clinically useful as relevant clinical biomarkers and candidate targets for anticancer therapy,” said investigators led by Wangmi Liu, MD, of Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China. The study was published in JAMA Network Open.

They explained that it’s often difficult to distinguish high- and low-risk patients at osteosarcoma diagnosis. To address the issue, they analyzed the genomic signatures of 84 patients in the Cancer Genome Atlas and their associated clinical information.

The team split their subjects evenly into high-risk and low-risk groups based on a score developed from their genetic signatures. A total of 26 patients in the high-risk group (61.9%) died over a median follow up of 4.1 years versus only 1 (2.4%) in the low-risk group.

The risk score also correlated positively with B-cell tumor infiltration, and negatively with infiltration of CD8 T cells and macrophages.

Overall, 16 genes were significantly up-regulated, and 187 genes were significantly down-regulated in the high-risk group, including three survival-associated IRGs: CCL2, CD79A, and FPR1.

The differentially expressed genes were most significantly associated with transmembrane signaling receptor activity and inflammatory response. The team noted that “it has been reported that inflammatory response plays a critical role in tumor initiation, promotion, malignant conversion, invasion, and metastases.”

Of the 14 survival-associated IRGs, 5 have been reported before in osteosarcoma. The other nine were deduced from computational analysis and may be potential treatment targets, including bone morphogenetic protein 8b (BMP8b). Another member of the BMP family, BMP9, has been shown to promote the proliferation of osteosarcoma cells, “which is similar to this study’s finding that BMP8b was a risk factor in osteosarcoma. Therefore, the role of BMP8b in osteosarcoma needs further research,” the team said.

“Because the database provides limited clinical information, other important factors, such as staging and grading, were not included in our analysis. Therefore, extrapolation based on the findings must be done very carefully,” they cautioned.

The work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and others. The investigators didn’t have any disclosures.

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Investigators in China have identified 14 immune-related genes associated with survival in osteosarcoma.

When they combined them into a risk score and added one additional factor – metastases at diagnosis – the model was an “excellent” predictor of 1-year survival, the team said (area under the curve, 0.947; 95% confidence interval, 0.832-0.972).

“The survival-associated” immune-related genes (IRGs) “examined in this study have potential for identifying prognosis in osteosarcoma and may be clinically useful as relevant clinical biomarkers and candidate targets for anticancer therapy,” said investigators led by Wangmi Liu, MD, of Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China. The study was published in JAMA Network Open.

They explained that it’s often difficult to distinguish high- and low-risk patients at osteosarcoma diagnosis. To address the issue, they analyzed the genomic signatures of 84 patients in the Cancer Genome Atlas and their associated clinical information.

The team split their subjects evenly into high-risk and low-risk groups based on a score developed from their genetic signatures. A total of 26 patients in the high-risk group (61.9%) died over a median follow up of 4.1 years versus only 1 (2.4%) in the low-risk group.

The risk score also correlated positively with B-cell tumor infiltration, and negatively with infiltration of CD8 T cells and macrophages.

Overall, 16 genes were significantly up-regulated, and 187 genes were significantly down-regulated in the high-risk group, including three survival-associated IRGs: CCL2, CD79A, and FPR1.

The differentially expressed genes were most significantly associated with transmembrane signaling receptor activity and inflammatory response. The team noted that “it has been reported that inflammatory response plays a critical role in tumor initiation, promotion, malignant conversion, invasion, and metastases.”

Of the 14 survival-associated IRGs, 5 have been reported before in osteosarcoma. The other nine were deduced from computational analysis and may be potential treatment targets, including bone morphogenetic protein 8b (BMP8b). Another member of the BMP family, BMP9, has been shown to promote the proliferation of osteosarcoma cells, “which is similar to this study’s finding that BMP8b was a risk factor in osteosarcoma. Therefore, the role of BMP8b in osteosarcoma needs further research,” the team said.

“Because the database provides limited clinical information, other important factors, such as staging and grading, were not included in our analysis. Therefore, extrapolation based on the findings must be done very carefully,” they cautioned.

The work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and others. The investigators didn’t have any disclosures.

Investigators in China have identified 14 immune-related genes associated with survival in osteosarcoma.

When they combined them into a risk score and added one additional factor – metastases at diagnosis – the model was an “excellent” predictor of 1-year survival, the team said (area under the curve, 0.947; 95% confidence interval, 0.832-0.972).

“The survival-associated” immune-related genes (IRGs) “examined in this study have potential for identifying prognosis in osteosarcoma and may be clinically useful as relevant clinical biomarkers and candidate targets for anticancer therapy,” said investigators led by Wangmi Liu, MD, of Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China. The study was published in JAMA Network Open.

They explained that it’s often difficult to distinguish high- and low-risk patients at osteosarcoma diagnosis. To address the issue, they analyzed the genomic signatures of 84 patients in the Cancer Genome Atlas and their associated clinical information.

The team split their subjects evenly into high-risk and low-risk groups based on a score developed from their genetic signatures. A total of 26 patients in the high-risk group (61.9%) died over a median follow up of 4.1 years versus only 1 (2.4%) in the low-risk group.

The risk score also correlated positively with B-cell tumor infiltration, and negatively with infiltration of CD8 T cells and macrophages.

Overall, 16 genes were significantly up-regulated, and 187 genes were significantly down-regulated in the high-risk group, including three survival-associated IRGs: CCL2, CD79A, and FPR1.

The differentially expressed genes were most significantly associated with transmembrane signaling receptor activity and inflammatory response. The team noted that “it has been reported that inflammatory response plays a critical role in tumor initiation, promotion, malignant conversion, invasion, and metastases.”

Of the 14 survival-associated IRGs, 5 have been reported before in osteosarcoma. The other nine were deduced from computational analysis and may be potential treatment targets, including bone morphogenetic protein 8b (BMP8b). Another member of the BMP family, BMP9, has been shown to promote the proliferation of osteosarcoma cells, “which is similar to this study’s finding that BMP8b was a risk factor in osteosarcoma. Therefore, the role of BMP8b in osteosarcoma needs further research,” the team said.

“Because the database provides limited clinical information, other important factors, such as staging and grading, were not included in our analysis. Therefore, extrapolation based on the findings must be done very carefully,” they cautioned.

The work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and others. The investigators didn’t have any disclosures.

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Many patients, doctors unaware of advancements in cancer care

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Many patients with cancer, as well as doctors in fields other than oncology, are unaware of just how much progress has been made in recent years in the treatment of cancer, particularly with immunotherapy.

This is the main finding from two studies presented at the 2021 European Society for Medical Oncology Congress.

The survey of patients found that most don’t understand how immunotherapy works, and the survey of doctors found that many working outside of the cancer field are using information on survival that is wildly out of date.

When a patient is first told they have cancer, counseling is usually done by a surgeon or general medical doctor and not an oncologist, said Conleth Murphy, MD, of Bon Secours Hospital Cork, Ireland, and coauthor of the second study.

Noncancer doctors often grossly underestimate patients’ chances of survival, Dr. Murphy’s study found. This suggests that doctors who practice outside of cancer care may be working with the same information they learned in medical school, he said.

“These patients must be spared the traumatic effects of being handed a death sentence that no longer reflects the current reality,” Dr. Murphy said.

After receiving a diagnosis of cancer, “patients often immediately have pressing questions about what it means for their future,” he noted. A common question is: “How long do I have left?”

Nononcologists should refrain from answering patients’ questions with numbers, Dr. Murphy said.

Family doctors are likely to be influenced by the experience they have had with specific cancer patients in their practice, said Cyril Bonin, MD, a general practitioner in Usson-du-Poitou, France, who has 900 patients in his practice.

He sees about 10 patients with a new diagnosis of cancer each year. In addition, about 50 of his patients are in active treatment for cancer or have finished treatment and are considered cancer survivors.

“It is not entirely realistic for us to expect practitioners who deal with hundreds of different diseases to keep up with every facet of a rapidly changing oncology landscape,” said Marco Donia, MD, an expert in immunotherapy from the University of Copenhagen.

That landscape has changed dramatically in recent years, particularly since immunotherapy was added to the arsenal. Immunotherapy is a way to fine-tune your immune system to fight cancer.

For example, in the past, patients with metastatic melanoma would have an average survival of about 1 year. But now, some patients who have responded to immunotherapy are still alive 10 years later.
 

Findings from the patient survey

It is important that patients stay well informed because immunotherapy is a “complex treatment that is too often mistaken for a miracle cure,” said Paris Kosmidis, MD, the co-author of the patient survey.

“The more patients know about it, the better the communication with their medical team and thus the better their outcomes are likely to be,” said Dr. Kosmidis, who is co-founder and chief medical officer of CareAcross, an online service that provides personalized education for cancer patients

The survey was of 5,589 patients with cancer who were recruited from CareAcross clients from the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, and Germany.

The survey asked them about how immunotherapy works, what it costs, and its side effects.

Almost half responded “not sure/do not know,” but about a third correctly answered that immunotherapy “activates the immune system to kill cancer cells.”

Similarly, more than half thought that immunotherapy started working right away, while only 20% correctly answered that it takes several weeks to become effective.

“This is important because patients need to start their therapy with realistic expectations, for example to avoid disappointment when their symptoms take some time to disappear,” Dr. Kosmidis said.

A small group of 24 patients with lung cancer who had been treated with immunotherapy got many correct answers, but they overestimated the intensity of side effects, compared with other therapies.

“Well-informed patients who know what to expect can do 90% of the job of preventing side effects from becoming severe by having them treated early,” said Dr. Donia, of the University of Copenhagen.

Most cancer patients were also unaware of the cost of immunotherapy, which can exceed $100,000 a year, Dr. Kosmidis said.
 

 

 

Results of the doctor survey

The other survey presented at the meeting looked at how much doctors know about survival for 12 of the most common cancers.

Dr. Murphy and colleagues asked 301 noncancer doctors and 46 cancer specialists to estimate the percentage of patients who could be expected to live for 5 years after diagnosis (a measure known as the 5-year survival rate).

Answers from the two groups were compared and graded according to cancer survival statistics from the National Cancer Registry of Ireland.

Both groups of doctors had a hard time estimating the survival of common cancers.

Nononcologists accurately predicted 5-year survival for just two of the cancer types, while the cancer specialists got it right for four cancer types.

However, the noncancer doctors had a more pessimistic outlook on cancer survival generally and severely underestimated the chances of survival in specific cancers, particularly stage IV breast cancer. The survival for this cancer has “evolved considerably over time and now reaches 40% in Ireland,” Dr. Murphy pointed out.

“These results are in line with what we had expected because most physicians’ knowledge of oncology dates back to whatever education they received during their years of training, so their perceptions of cancer prognosis are likely to lag behind the major survival gains achieved in the recent past,” Dr. Murphy said.

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

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Many patients with cancer, as well as doctors in fields other than oncology, are unaware of just how much progress has been made in recent years in the treatment of cancer, particularly with immunotherapy.

This is the main finding from two studies presented at the 2021 European Society for Medical Oncology Congress.

The survey of patients found that most don’t understand how immunotherapy works, and the survey of doctors found that many working outside of the cancer field are using information on survival that is wildly out of date.

When a patient is first told they have cancer, counseling is usually done by a surgeon or general medical doctor and not an oncologist, said Conleth Murphy, MD, of Bon Secours Hospital Cork, Ireland, and coauthor of the second study.

Noncancer doctors often grossly underestimate patients’ chances of survival, Dr. Murphy’s study found. This suggests that doctors who practice outside of cancer care may be working with the same information they learned in medical school, he said.

“These patients must be spared the traumatic effects of being handed a death sentence that no longer reflects the current reality,” Dr. Murphy said.

After receiving a diagnosis of cancer, “patients often immediately have pressing questions about what it means for their future,” he noted. A common question is: “How long do I have left?”

Nononcologists should refrain from answering patients’ questions with numbers, Dr. Murphy said.

Family doctors are likely to be influenced by the experience they have had with specific cancer patients in their practice, said Cyril Bonin, MD, a general practitioner in Usson-du-Poitou, France, who has 900 patients in his practice.

He sees about 10 patients with a new diagnosis of cancer each year. In addition, about 50 of his patients are in active treatment for cancer or have finished treatment and are considered cancer survivors.

“It is not entirely realistic for us to expect practitioners who deal with hundreds of different diseases to keep up with every facet of a rapidly changing oncology landscape,” said Marco Donia, MD, an expert in immunotherapy from the University of Copenhagen.

That landscape has changed dramatically in recent years, particularly since immunotherapy was added to the arsenal. Immunotherapy is a way to fine-tune your immune system to fight cancer.

For example, in the past, patients with metastatic melanoma would have an average survival of about 1 year. But now, some patients who have responded to immunotherapy are still alive 10 years later.
 

Findings from the patient survey

It is important that patients stay well informed because immunotherapy is a “complex treatment that is too often mistaken for a miracle cure,” said Paris Kosmidis, MD, the co-author of the patient survey.

“The more patients know about it, the better the communication with their medical team and thus the better their outcomes are likely to be,” said Dr. Kosmidis, who is co-founder and chief medical officer of CareAcross, an online service that provides personalized education for cancer patients

The survey was of 5,589 patients with cancer who were recruited from CareAcross clients from the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, and Germany.

The survey asked them about how immunotherapy works, what it costs, and its side effects.

Almost half responded “not sure/do not know,” but about a third correctly answered that immunotherapy “activates the immune system to kill cancer cells.”

Similarly, more than half thought that immunotherapy started working right away, while only 20% correctly answered that it takes several weeks to become effective.

“This is important because patients need to start their therapy with realistic expectations, for example to avoid disappointment when their symptoms take some time to disappear,” Dr. Kosmidis said.

A small group of 24 patients with lung cancer who had been treated with immunotherapy got many correct answers, but they overestimated the intensity of side effects, compared with other therapies.

“Well-informed patients who know what to expect can do 90% of the job of preventing side effects from becoming severe by having them treated early,” said Dr. Donia, of the University of Copenhagen.

Most cancer patients were also unaware of the cost of immunotherapy, which can exceed $100,000 a year, Dr. Kosmidis said.
 

 

 

Results of the doctor survey

The other survey presented at the meeting looked at how much doctors know about survival for 12 of the most common cancers.

Dr. Murphy and colleagues asked 301 noncancer doctors and 46 cancer specialists to estimate the percentage of patients who could be expected to live for 5 years after diagnosis (a measure known as the 5-year survival rate).

Answers from the two groups were compared and graded according to cancer survival statistics from the National Cancer Registry of Ireland.

Both groups of doctors had a hard time estimating the survival of common cancers.

Nononcologists accurately predicted 5-year survival for just two of the cancer types, while the cancer specialists got it right for four cancer types.

However, the noncancer doctors had a more pessimistic outlook on cancer survival generally and severely underestimated the chances of survival in specific cancers, particularly stage IV breast cancer. The survival for this cancer has “evolved considerably over time and now reaches 40% in Ireland,” Dr. Murphy pointed out.

“These results are in line with what we had expected because most physicians’ knowledge of oncology dates back to whatever education they received during their years of training, so their perceptions of cancer prognosis are likely to lag behind the major survival gains achieved in the recent past,” Dr. Murphy said.

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

Many patients with cancer, as well as doctors in fields other than oncology, are unaware of just how much progress has been made in recent years in the treatment of cancer, particularly with immunotherapy.

This is the main finding from two studies presented at the 2021 European Society for Medical Oncology Congress.

The survey of patients found that most don’t understand how immunotherapy works, and the survey of doctors found that many working outside of the cancer field are using information on survival that is wildly out of date.

When a patient is first told they have cancer, counseling is usually done by a surgeon or general medical doctor and not an oncologist, said Conleth Murphy, MD, of Bon Secours Hospital Cork, Ireland, and coauthor of the second study.

Noncancer doctors often grossly underestimate patients’ chances of survival, Dr. Murphy’s study found. This suggests that doctors who practice outside of cancer care may be working with the same information they learned in medical school, he said.

“These patients must be spared the traumatic effects of being handed a death sentence that no longer reflects the current reality,” Dr. Murphy said.

After receiving a diagnosis of cancer, “patients often immediately have pressing questions about what it means for their future,” he noted. A common question is: “How long do I have left?”

Nononcologists should refrain from answering patients’ questions with numbers, Dr. Murphy said.

Family doctors are likely to be influenced by the experience they have had with specific cancer patients in their practice, said Cyril Bonin, MD, a general practitioner in Usson-du-Poitou, France, who has 900 patients in his practice.

He sees about 10 patients with a new diagnosis of cancer each year. In addition, about 50 of his patients are in active treatment for cancer or have finished treatment and are considered cancer survivors.

“It is not entirely realistic for us to expect practitioners who deal with hundreds of different diseases to keep up with every facet of a rapidly changing oncology landscape,” said Marco Donia, MD, an expert in immunotherapy from the University of Copenhagen.

That landscape has changed dramatically in recent years, particularly since immunotherapy was added to the arsenal. Immunotherapy is a way to fine-tune your immune system to fight cancer.

For example, in the past, patients with metastatic melanoma would have an average survival of about 1 year. But now, some patients who have responded to immunotherapy are still alive 10 years later.
 

Findings from the patient survey

It is important that patients stay well informed because immunotherapy is a “complex treatment that is too often mistaken for a miracle cure,” said Paris Kosmidis, MD, the co-author of the patient survey.

“The more patients know about it, the better the communication with their medical team and thus the better their outcomes are likely to be,” said Dr. Kosmidis, who is co-founder and chief medical officer of CareAcross, an online service that provides personalized education for cancer patients

The survey was of 5,589 patients with cancer who were recruited from CareAcross clients from the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, and Germany.

The survey asked them about how immunotherapy works, what it costs, and its side effects.

Almost half responded “not sure/do not know,” but about a third correctly answered that immunotherapy “activates the immune system to kill cancer cells.”

Similarly, more than half thought that immunotherapy started working right away, while only 20% correctly answered that it takes several weeks to become effective.

“This is important because patients need to start their therapy with realistic expectations, for example to avoid disappointment when their symptoms take some time to disappear,” Dr. Kosmidis said.

A small group of 24 patients with lung cancer who had been treated with immunotherapy got many correct answers, but they overestimated the intensity of side effects, compared with other therapies.

“Well-informed patients who know what to expect can do 90% of the job of preventing side effects from becoming severe by having them treated early,” said Dr. Donia, of the University of Copenhagen.

Most cancer patients were also unaware of the cost of immunotherapy, which can exceed $100,000 a year, Dr. Kosmidis said.
 

 

 

Results of the doctor survey

The other survey presented at the meeting looked at how much doctors know about survival for 12 of the most common cancers.

Dr. Murphy and colleagues asked 301 noncancer doctors and 46 cancer specialists to estimate the percentage of patients who could be expected to live for 5 years after diagnosis (a measure known as the 5-year survival rate).

Answers from the two groups were compared and graded according to cancer survival statistics from the National Cancer Registry of Ireland.

Both groups of doctors had a hard time estimating the survival of common cancers.

Nononcologists accurately predicted 5-year survival for just two of the cancer types, while the cancer specialists got it right for four cancer types.

However, the noncancer doctors had a more pessimistic outlook on cancer survival generally and severely underestimated the chances of survival in specific cancers, particularly stage IV breast cancer. The survival for this cancer has “evolved considerably over time and now reaches 40% in Ireland,” Dr. Murphy pointed out.

“These results are in line with what we had expected because most physicians’ knowledge of oncology dates back to whatever education they received during their years of training, so their perceptions of cancer prognosis are likely to lag behind the major survival gains achieved in the recent past,” Dr. Murphy said.

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

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Opioid prescriptions following Mohs surgery dropped over the last decade

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The proportion of patients who obtained an opioid prescription for hydrocodone after Mohs micrographic surgery fell by 21.7% between 2011 and 2020, while the use of tramadol increased by 26.3% between 2009 and 2020, according to a cross-sectional analysis of national insurance claims data.

Surya A. Veerabagu

The findings suggest that dermatologic surgeons generally understood opioid prescription risks and public health warnings about the opioid epidemic, corresponding study author Surya A. Veerabagu said in an interview.

“The frequency of opioid prescriptions after Mohs surgery went up a little bit from 2009 to 2011, but then it subsequently decreased,” said Ms. Veerabagu, a 4th-year student at Tulane University, New Orleans. “It very much correlates with the overarching opioid trends of the time. From 2010 to 2015, research questioning the safety of opioids increased and in 2012, national prescriptions claims for opioids began to decrease. More media outlets voiced concerns over the growing opioid epidemic, as well.”

As she and her associates noted in their study, published online Sept. 22 in JAMA Dermatology, sales of opioids skyrocketed, increasing by 400% from 1999 to 2011, while prescription opioid–related deaths exceeded deaths caused by heroin and cocaine combined.

“In 2016, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services declared the opioid epidemic a public health emergency, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released guidelines to curtail unnecessary opioid prescriptions,” they wrote. “Unfortunately, overdose deaths involving prescription opioids continued to increase even after these measures.”



The researchers drew from Optum Clinformatics Data Mart (Optum CDM), a nationally representative insurance claims database, and limited the analysis to 358,012 adults who underwent Mohs surgery and obtained an opioid prescription within 2 days of surgery in the United States from Jan. 1, 2009, to June 1, 2020. They found that 34.6% of patients underwent Mohs surgery with opioid claims in 2009. This rose to a peak of 39.6% in 2011, then decreased annually to a rate of 11.7% in 2020.

The four opioids obtained most during the study period were hydrocodone (55%), codeine (16.3%), oxycodone (12%), and tramadol (11.6%). However, over time, the proportion of patients who obtained hydrocodone fell 21.7% from a peak of 67.1% in 2011 to 45.4% in 2020, while the proportion of patients who obtained tramadol – generally recognized as a safer option – increased 26.3% from a low of 1.6% in 2009 to 27.9% in 2020.

“The switch from very addictive opioids like hydrocodone and oxycodone to weaker opioids like tramadol was fascinating to see,” said Ms. Veerabagu, who conducted the study during her research fellowship in the department of dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. “I remember at first thinking I had coded the data wrong. I reviewed the results with the team to ensure it was correct. We noticed that propoxyphene prescriptions suddenly dropped to 0% in 2011.” She found that the FDA warning in 2010 and recall regarding the use of propoxyphene because of cardiotoxicity correlated with her data, which, “in addition to the thorough review, convinced me that my coding was correct.” Prior to 2011, propoxyphene constituted 28% of prescriptions in 2009 and 24% of prescriptions in 2010.

In an interview, Maryam M. Asgari, MD, professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that the findings support recent opioid prescription recommendations following Mohs and other dermatologic procedures from professional societies including those from the American College of Mohs Surgery.

Dr. Maryam M. Asgari

“More awareness has been raised in the past decade regarding the opioid epidemic and the rise of opioid abuse and deaths,” she said. “There has been increased scrutiny on procedures and prescribing of opioids post procedures.”

State-led efforts to lower the number of opioid prescriptions also play a role. For example, in 2016, Massachusetts launched the Massachusetts Prescription Awareness Tool (MassPAT), which imposes a 7-day limit on first-time prescriptions of opioids to patients and mandates that all prescribers check the prescription drug monitoring program before prescribing schedule II or III substances.

“The MassPAT system also gives you quarterly data on how your opioid prescriptions compare with those of your peers within your specialty and subspecialty,” Dr. Asgari said. “If you’re an outlier, I think that quickly leads you to change your prescribing patterns.”

Dr. Asgari noted that most opioids prescribed in the study by Ms. Veerabagu and colleagues were for cancers that arose on the head and neck. “There is still a perception among providers that cancers that arise in those anatomic sites can potentially cause more discomfort for the patient,” she said. “So, knowing more about the degree of pain among the head and neck cases would be an area of knowledge that would help provider behavior down the line.”

Ms. Veerabagu acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that unfilled prescriptions could not be accounted for, nor could opioids not taken or those obtained without a prescription. “We cannot survey patients in insurance claims database studies, so we have no way of knowing if everyone’s pain was adequately controlled from 2009 to 2020,” she said.

“The main takeaway message is to make sure doctors and patients share an open dialogue,” she added. “Informing patients of the major pros and cons of the appropriate postoperative pain management options available, including opioids’ addiction potential, is crucial. We hope our study adds to the larger continuing conversation of opioid usage within dermatology.”

The study’s senior author was Cerrene N. Giordano, MD, of the department of dermatology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Coauthor Jeremy R. Etzkorn, MD, is supported by a Dermatology Foundation Career Development Award in Dermatologic Surgery; coauthor Megan H. Noe, MD, MPH, reported receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim outside the submitted work. Another coauthor, Thuzar M. Shin, MD, PhD, reported receiving grants from Regeneron outside the submitted work. Dr. Asgari disclosed that she has received support from the Melanoma Research Alliance. She also contributes a chapter on skin cancer to UpToDate, for which she receives royalties.

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The proportion of patients who obtained an opioid prescription for hydrocodone after Mohs micrographic surgery fell by 21.7% between 2011 and 2020, while the use of tramadol increased by 26.3% between 2009 and 2020, according to a cross-sectional analysis of national insurance claims data.

Surya A. Veerabagu

The findings suggest that dermatologic surgeons generally understood opioid prescription risks and public health warnings about the opioid epidemic, corresponding study author Surya A. Veerabagu said in an interview.

“The frequency of opioid prescriptions after Mohs surgery went up a little bit from 2009 to 2011, but then it subsequently decreased,” said Ms. Veerabagu, a 4th-year student at Tulane University, New Orleans. “It very much correlates with the overarching opioid trends of the time. From 2010 to 2015, research questioning the safety of opioids increased and in 2012, national prescriptions claims for opioids began to decrease. More media outlets voiced concerns over the growing opioid epidemic, as well.”

As she and her associates noted in their study, published online Sept. 22 in JAMA Dermatology, sales of opioids skyrocketed, increasing by 400% from 1999 to 2011, while prescription opioid–related deaths exceeded deaths caused by heroin and cocaine combined.

“In 2016, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services declared the opioid epidemic a public health emergency, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released guidelines to curtail unnecessary opioid prescriptions,” they wrote. “Unfortunately, overdose deaths involving prescription opioids continued to increase even after these measures.”



The researchers drew from Optum Clinformatics Data Mart (Optum CDM), a nationally representative insurance claims database, and limited the analysis to 358,012 adults who underwent Mohs surgery and obtained an opioid prescription within 2 days of surgery in the United States from Jan. 1, 2009, to June 1, 2020. They found that 34.6% of patients underwent Mohs surgery with opioid claims in 2009. This rose to a peak of 39.6% in 2011, then decreased annually to a rate of 11.7% in 2020.

The four opioids obtained most during the study period were hydrocodone (55%), codeine (16.3%), oxycodone (12%), and tramadol (11.6%). However, over time, the proportion of patients who obtained hydrocodone fell 21.7% from a peak of 67.1% in 2011 to 45.4% in 2020, while the proportion of patients who obtained tramadol – generally recognized as a safer option – increased 26.3% from a low of 1.6% in 2009 to 27.9% in 2020.

“The switch from very addictive opioids like hydrocodone and oxycodone to weaker opioids like tramadol was fascinating to see,” said Ms. Veerabagu, who conducted the study during her research fellowship in the department of dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. “I remember at first thinking I had coded the data wrong. I reviewed the results with the team to ensure it was correct. We noticed that propoxyphene prescriptions suddenly dropped to 0% in 2011.” She found that the FDA warning in 2010 and recall regarding the use of propoxyphene because of cardiotoxicity correlated with her data, which, “in addition to the thorough review, convinced me that my coding was correct.” Prior to 2011, propoxyphene constituted 28% of prescriptions in 2009 and 24% of prescriptions in 2010.

In an interview, Maryam M. Asgari, MD, professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that the findings support recent opioid prescription recommendations following Mohs and other dermatologic procedures from professional societies including those from the American College of Mohs Surgery.

Dr. Maryam M. Asgari

“More awareness has been raised in the past decade regarding the opioid epidemic and the rise of opioid abuse and deaths,” she said. “There has been increased scrutiny on procedures and prescribing of opioids post procedures.”

State-led efforts to lower the number of opioid prescriptions also play a role. For example, in 2016, Massachusetts launched the Massachusetts Prescription Awareness Tool (MassPAT), which imposes a 7-day limit on first-time prescriptions of opioids to patients and mandates that all prescribers check the prescription drug monitoring program before prescribing schedule II or III substances.

“The MassPAT system also gives you quarterly data on how your opioid prescriptions compare with those of your peers within your specialty and subspecialty,” Dr. Asgari said. “If you’re an outlier, I think that quickly leads you to change your prescribing patterns.”

Dr. Asgari noted that most opioids prescribed in the study by Ms. Veerabagu and colleagues were for cancers that arose on the head and neck. “There is still a perception among providers that cancers that arise in those anatomic sites can potentially cause more discomfort for the patient,” she said. “So, knowing more about the degree of pain among the head and neck cases would be an area of knowledge that would help provider behavior down the line.”

Ms. Veerabagu acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that unfilled prescriptions could not be accounted for, nor could opioids not taken or those obtained without a prescription. “We cannot survey patients in insurance claims database studies, so we have no way of knowing if everyone’s pain was adequately controlled from 2009 to 2020,” she said.

“The main takeaway message is to make sure doctors and patients share an open dialogue,” she added. “Informing patients of the major pros and cons of the appropriate postoperative pain management options available, including opioids’ addiction potential, is crucial. We hope our study adds to the larger continuing conversation of opioid usage within dermatology.”

The study’s senior author was Cerrene N. Giordano, MD, of the department of dermatology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Coauthor Jeremy R. Etzkorn, MD, is supported by a Dermatology Foundation Career Development Award in Dermatologic Surgery; coauthor Megan H. Noe, MD, MPH, reported receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim outside the submitted work. Another coauthor, Thuzar M. Shin, MD, PhD, reported receiving grants from Regeneron outside the submitted work. Dr. Asgari disclosed that she has received support from the Melanoma Research Alliance. She also contributes a chapter on skin cancer to UpToDate, for which she receives royalties.

The proportion of patients who obtained an opioid prescription for hydrocodone after Mohs micrographic surgery fell by 21.7% between 2011 and 2020, while the use of tramadol increased by 26.3% between 2009 and 2020, according to a cross-sectional analysis of national insurance claims data.

Surya A. Veerabagu

The findings suggest that dermatologic surgeons generally understood opioid prescription risks and public health warnings about the opioid epidemic, corresponding study author Surya A. Veerabagu said in an interview.

“The frequency of opioid prescriptions after Mohs surgery went up a little bit from 2009 to 2011, but then it subsequently decreased,” said Ms. Veerabagu, a 4th-year student at Tulane University, New Orleans. “It very much correlates with the overarching opioid trends of the time. From 2010 to 2015, research questioning the safety of opioids increased and in 2012, national prescriptions claims for opioids began to decrease. More media outlets voiced concerns over the growing opioid epidemic, as well.”

As she and her associates noted in their study, published online Sept. 22 in JAMA Dermatology, sales of opioids skyrocketed, increasing by 400% from 1999 to 2011, while prescription opioid–related deaths exceeded deaths caused by heroin and cocaine combined.

“In 2016, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services declared the opioid epidemic a public health emergency, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released guidelines to curtail unnecessary opioid prescriptions,” they wrote. “Unfortunately, overdose deaths involving prescription opioids continued to increase even after these measures.”



The researchers drew from Optum Clinformatics Data Mart (Optum CDM), a nationally representative insurance claims database, and limited the analysis to 358,012 adults who underwent Mohs surgery and obtained an opioid prescription within 2 days of surgery in the United States from Jan. 1, 2009, to June 1, 2020. They found that 34.6% of patients underwent Mohs surgery with opioid claims in 2009. This rose to a peak of 39.6% in 2011, then decreased annually to a rate of 11.7% in 2020.

The four opioids obtained most during the study period were hydrocodone (55%), codeine (16.3%), oxycodone (12%), and tramadol (11.6%). However, over time, the proportion of patients who obtained hydrocodone fell 21.7% from a peak of 67.1% in 2011 to 45.4% in 2020, while the proportion of patients who obtained tramadol – generally recognized as a safer option – increased 26.3% from a low of 1.6% in 2009 to 27.9% in 2020.

“The switch from very addictive opioids like hydrocodone and oxycodone to weaker opioids like tramadol was fascinating to see,” said Ms. Veerabagu, who conducted the study during her research fellowship in the department of dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. “I remember at first thinking I had coded the data wrong. I reviewed the results with the team to ensure it was correct. We noticed that propoxyphene prescriptions suddenly dropped to 0% in 2011.” She found that the FDA warning in 2010 and recall regarding the use of propoxyphene because of cardiotoxicity correlated with her data, which, “in addition to the thorough review, convinced me that my coding was correct.” Prior to 2011, propoxyphene constituted 28% of prescriptions in 2009 and 24% of prescriptions in 2010.

In an interview, Maryam M. Asgari, MD, professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School, Boston, said that the findings support recent opioid prescription recommendations following Mohs and other dermatologic procedures from professional societies including those from the American College of Mohs Surgery.

Dr. Maryam M. Asgari

“More awareness has been raised in the past decade regarding the opioid epidemic and the rise of opioid abuse and deaths,” she said. “There has been increased scrutiny on procedures and prescribing of opioids post procedures.”

State-led efforts to lower the number of opioid prescriptions also play a role. For example, in 2016, Massachusetts launched the Massachusetts Prescription Awareness Tool (MassPAT), which imposes a 7-day limit on first-time prescriptions of opioids to patients and mandates that all prescribers check the prescription drug monitoring program before prescribing schedule II or III substances.

“The MassPAT system also gives you quarterly data on how your opioid prescriptions compare with those of your peers within your specialty and subspecialty,” Dr. Asgari said. “If you’re an outlier, I think that quickly leads you to change your prescribing patterns.”

Dr. Asgari noted that most opioids prescribed in the study by Ms. Veerabagu and colleagues were for cancers that arose on the head and neck. “There is still a perception among providers that cancers that arise in those anatomic sites can potentially cause more discomfort for the patient,” she said. “So, knowing more about the degree of pain among the head and neck cases would be an area of knowledge that would help provider behavior down the line.”

Ms. Veerabagu acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that unfilled prescriptions could not be accounted for, nor could opioids not taken or those obtained without a prescription. “We cannot survey patients in insurance claims database studies, so we have no way of knowing if everyone’s pain was adequately controlled from 2009 to 2020,” she said.

“The main takeaway message is to make sure doctors and patients share an open dialogue,” she added. “Informing patients of the major pros and cons of the appropriate postoperative pain management options available, including opioids’ addiction potential, is crucial. We hope our study adds to the larger continuing conversation of opioid usage within dermatology.”

The study’s senior author was Cerrene N. Giordano, MD, of the department of dermatology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Coauthor Jeremy R. Etzkorn, MD, is supported by a Dermatology Foundation Career Development Award in Dermatologic Surgery; coauthor Megan H. Noe, MD, MPH, reported receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim outside the submitted work. Another coauthor, Thuzar M. Shin, MD, PhD, reported receiving grants from Regeneron outside the submitted work. Dr. Asgari disclosed that she has received support from the Melanoma Research Alliance. She also contributes a chapter on skin cancer to UpToDate, for which she receives royalties.

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FROM JAMA DERMATOLOGY

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Evaluating the Impact of a Simulated Hypersensitivity Reaction Case Study for New Fellows and Chemotherapy Nurses in an Outpatient Infusion Clinic

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Background

All chemotherapeutic agents have potential to cause infusion reactions. Our primary objective was to develop a project to assist in appropriate training of nursing staff and incoming fellows for clinic efficiency and patient safety.

Methods

A multi-disciplinary team, including physicians, nurses, and a pharmacist met and following a pre-assessment, a pareto chart was created to determine where to focus our efforts. The results revealed the following areas of concern from most important to least important: utilization of an infusion reaction “kit,” team discussion with staff, infusion reaction simulation, a competency checklist for reactions and “other.” Other responses included: reaction orders in the chart, hands on scenarios, and continued reinforcements. The team resolved to conduct an infusion reaction simulation program to provide an environment to meet many needs of the team, new and experienced. Set in the outpatient infusion center, the program included: a patient/actor, a facilitator, infusion nursing staff, and physicians/fellows. Physicians were invited to participate in the training, but infusion staff were unaware of the program to provide another real life aspect to the simulation; however, both were blinded to the scenario. The pharmacist facilitated the event where the patient actor proceeded to start with a minor infusion reaction that progressed to full anaphylaxis.

Results

Using a Likert scale, a post simulation assessment included 6 questions: 90% of participants felt strongly the exercise increased awareness of the infusion reaction e-kit, 80% felt strongly the exercise was meaningful to their practice, 90% strongly agreed or agreed the scenario simulated a real life situation, also 90% strongly agreed or agreed the program helped them think critically. Finally, 100% of participants strongly agreed or agreed they felt confident in their ability to intervene in the event of a hypersensitivity reaction. Our objectives were achieved: identify the signs and symptoms of a hypersensitivity reaction, utilize the proper intervention in the event of a hypersensitivity reaction. Other outcomes include an updated chemotherapy order consult complete with standing reaction orders in the medical record.

 

Conclusion

Ultimately, our interdisciplinary simulation concluded with increased awareness, improved confidence, and strengthened collaboration, communication and accountability among our infusion staff and oncology providers

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Background

All chemotherapeutic agents have potential to cause infusion reactions. Our primary objective was to develop a project to assist in appropriate training of nursing staff and incoming fellows for clinic efficiency and patient safety.

Methods

A multi-disciplinary team, including physicians, nurses, and a pharmacist met and following a pre-assessment, a pareto chart was created to determine where to focus our efforts. The results revealed the following areas of concern from most important to least important: utilization of an infusion reaction “kit,” team discussion with staff, infusion reaction simulation, a competency checklist for reactions and “other.” Other responses included: reaction orders in the chart, hands on scenarios, and continued reinforcements. The team resolved to conduct an infusion reaction simulation program to provide an environment to meet many needs of the team, new and experienced. Set in the outpatient infusion center, the program included: a patient/actor, a facilitator, infusion nursing staff, and physicians/fellows. Physicians were invited to participate in the training, but infusion staff were unaware of the program to provide another real life aspect to the simulation; however, both were blinded to the scenario. The pharmacist facilitated the event where the patient actor proceeded to start with a minor infusion reaction that progressed to full anaphylaxis.

Results

Using a Likert scale, a post simulation assessment included 6 questions: 90% of participants felt strongly the exercise increased awareness of the infusion reaction e-kit, 80% felt strongly the exercise was meaningful to their practice, 90% strongly agreed or agreed the scenario simulated a real life situation, also 90% strongly agreed or agreed the program helped them think critically. Finally, 100% of participants strongly agreed or agreed they felt confident in their ability to intervene in the event of a hypersensitivity reaction. Our objectives were achieved: identify the signs and symptoms of a hypersensitivity reaction, utilize the proper intervention in the event of a hypersensitivity reaction. Other outcomes include an updated chemotherapy order consult complete with standing reaction orders in the medical record.

 

Conclusion

Ultimately, our interdisciplinary simulation concluded with increased awareness, improved confidence, and strengthened collaboration, communication and accountability among our infusion staff and oncology providers

Background

All chemotherapeutic agents have potential to cause infusion reactions. Our primary objective was to develop a project to assist in appropriate training of nursing staff and incoming fellows for clinic efficiency and patient safety.

Methods

A multi-disciplinary team, including physicians, nurses, and a pharmacist met and following a pre-assessment, a pareto chart was created to determine where to focus our efforts. The results revealed the following areas of concern from most important to least important: utilization of an infusion reaction “kit,” team discussion with staff, infusion reaction simulation, a competency checklist for reactions and “other.” Other responses included: reaction orders in the chart, hands on scenarios, and continued reinforcements. The team resolved to conduct an infusion reaction simulation program to provide an environment to meet many needs of the team, new and experienced. Set in the outpatient infusion center, the program included: a patient/actor, a facilitator, infusion nursing staff, and physicians/fellows. Physicians were invited to participate in the training, but infusion staff were unaware of the program to provide another real life aspect to the simulation; however, both were blinded to the scenario. The pharmacist facilitated the event where the patient actor proceeded to start with a minor infusion reaction that progressed to full anaphylaxis.

Results

Using a Likert scale, a post simulation assessment included 6 questions: 90% of participants felt strongly the exercise increased awareness of the infusion reaction e-kit, 80% felt strongly the exercise was meaningful to their practice, 90% strongly agreed or agreed the scenario simulated a real life situation, also 90% strongly agreed or agreed the program helped them think critically. Finally, 100% of participants strongly agreed or agreed they felt confident in their ability to intervene in the event of a hypersensitivity reaction. Our objectives were achieved: identify the signs and symptoms of a hypersensitivity reaction, utilize the proper intervention in the event of a hypersensitivity reaction. Other outcomes include an updated chemotherapy order consult complete with standing reaction orders in the medical record.

 

Conclusion

Ultimately, our interdisciplinary simulation concluded with increased awareness, improved confidence, and strengthened collaboration, communication and accountability among our infusion staff and oncology providers

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Extending Maintenance Flush Intervals for Implanted Ports at VA Northeast Ohio Healthcare System (VANEOHS)

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At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hematology Oncology Department at VANEOHS looked for ways to continue safe oncologic care delivery while limiting unnecessary in-person visits for our Veterans. The Hematology Oncology team considered extending the interval between maintenance flushes for implanted ports, however wanted to confirm the change aligned with safe practice recommendations. A literature review supported changing the medical center’s current practice of maintenance flushing from every four to six weeks to every twelve weeks. The literature review suggested that this change was safe and effective. Our goal was to ensure this change in practice did not cause an increase in alteplase usage or an increase in port related complications such as infection. A pre-intervention data review from August 1, 2019 to February 2, 2020 (n = 217) showed that 8 orders (4%) were placed for alteplase for oncology patients receiving maintenance port flushes and there were no implanted port infections reported during that timeframe. Interventions included: updating the implanted port order set in Computerized Patient Record System (CPRS) and providing education to Veterans and nurses regarding the change. A post-intervention data review from August 1, 2020 to February 28, 2021 (n = 94) demonstrated that 2 orders (2%) were placed for alteplase for oncology patients receiving maintenance port flushes and there were no implanted port infections reported during that timeframe. This trial confirmed that an implanted port flush maintenance schedule of up to twelve weeks aligned with safe practice recommendations and did not increase port related complications. Due to the positive outcome of implementing an extended interval between maintenance port flushes the medic

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At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hematology Oncology Department at VANEOHS looked for ways to continue safe oncologic care delivery while limiting unnecessary in-person visits for our Veterans. The Hematology Oncology team considered extending the interval between maintenance flushes for implanted ports, however wanted to confirm the change aligned with safe practice recommendations. A literature review supported changing the medical center’s current practice of maintenance flushing from every four to six weeks to every twelve weeks. The literature review suggested that this change was safe and effective. Our goal was to ensure this change in practice did not cause an increase in alteplase usage or an increase in port related complications such as infection. A pre-intervention data review from August 1, 2019 to February 2, 2020 (n = 217) showed that 8 orders (4%) were placed for alteplase for oncology patients receiving maintenance port flushes and there were no implanted port infections reported during that timeframe. Interventions included: updating the implanted port order set in Computerized Patient Record System (CPRS) and providing education to Veterans and nurses regarding the change. A post-intervention data review from August 1, 2020 to February 28, 2021 (n = 94) demonstrated that 2 orders (2%) were placed for alteplase for oncology patients receiving maintenance port flushes and there were no implanted port infections reported during that timeframe. This trial confirmed that an implanted port flush maintenance schedule of up to twelve weeks aligned with safe practice recommendations and did not increase port related complications. Due to the positive outcome of implementing an extended interval between maintenance port flushes the medic

At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hematology Oncology Department at VANEOHS looked for ways to continue safe oncologic care delivery while limiting unnecessary in-person visits for our Veterans. The Hematology Oncology team considered extending the interval between maintenance flushes for implanted ports, however wanted to confirm the change aligned with safe practice recommendations. A literature review supported changing the medical center’s current practice of maintenance flushing from every four to six weeks to every twelve weeks. The literature review suggested that this change was safe and effective. Our goal was to ensure this change in practice did not cause an increase in alteplase usage or an increase in port related complications such as infection. A pre-intervention data review from August 1, 2019 to February 2, 2020 (n = 217) showed that 8 orders (4%) were placed for alteplase for oncology patients receiving maintenance port flushes and there were no implanted port infections reported during that timeframe. Interventions included: updating the implanted port order set in Computerized Patient Record System (CPRS) and providing education to Veterans and nurses regarding the change. A post-intervention data review from August 1, 2020 to February 28, 2021 (n = 94) demonstrated that 2 orders (2%) were placed for alteplase for oncology patients receiving maintenance port flushes and there were no implanted port infections reported during that timeframe. This trial confirmed that an implanted port flush maintenance schedule of up to twelve weeks aligned with safe practice recommendations and did not increase port related complications. Due to the positive outcome of implementing an extended interval between maintenance port flushes the medic

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