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AHA pens roadmap to more patient-focused care for PAD
Patient-reported symptoms and quality of life should guide treatment for the roughly 8.5 million people in the United States living with peripheral artery disease (PAD), the American Heart Association said in a new scientific statement released Oct. 13.
“The person living with PAD is the authority on the impact it has on their daily life. Our treatment must be grounded in their lived experiences and go beyond the clinical measures of how well blood flows through the arteries,” Kim G. Smolderen, PhD, lead author of the statement writing group, says in a release.
“We have spent years developing and validating standardized instruments to capture people’s experiences in a reliable and sensitive way. We are now at a point where we can start integrating this information into real-world care, through pilot programs that can develop quality benchmarks for different phenotypes of patients with PAD and the types of treatments they undergo, as seen from their perspective,” adds Dr. Smolderen, co-director of the Vascular Medicine Outcomes Research (VAMOS) lab at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
The statement, “Advancing Peripheral Artery Disease Quality of Care and Outcomes Through Patient-Reported Health Status Assessment,” is published online in Circulation.
It comes on the heels of a 2021 AHA statement urging greater attention to PAD, which is underdiagnosed and undertreated in the United States despite its high prevalence.
Fragmented care
Dr. Smolderen said that the multidisciplinary writing group was united in one overarching goal: “How can we disrupt the fragmented care model for PAD and make PAD care more accountable, value-based, and patient-centered?”
“True disruption is needed in a clinical space where the treatment of lower-extremity disease lies in the hands of many different specialties and variability in care and outcomes is a major concern,” Dr. Smolderen said.
The statement calls for improving and individualizing PAD care by gathering feedback from their experience through treatment using systematic and validated patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs).
PROMs for PAD include the Walking Impairment Questionnaire (WIQ), the Vascular Quality of Life Questionnaire (VascuQoL), and Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ).
Accountability tied to reimbursement
Dr. Smolderen noted that PROMs are increasingly being integrated into definitions of what it means to deliver high-quality, patient-centered care, and PROMs scores may directly impact reimbursement.
“Using a template that has been implemented in other medical conditions, we propose a shift in metrics that will tell us whether high-quality PAD care has been delivered from a patients’ perspective,” Dr. Smolderen told this news organization.
That is, “have we been able to improve the health status of that person’s life? We may have removed the blockage in the arteries, but will the patient feel that this intervention has addressed their PAD-specific health status goals?”
To facilitate accountability in quality PAD care, the writing group calls for developing, testing, and implementing PAD-specific patient-reported outcomes performance measures – or PRO-PMs.
Pilot efforts demonstrating feasibility of PRO-PMs in various practice settings are needed, as is implementation research evaluating the integration of PRO-PMs and pragmatic clinical trial evidence to demonstrate efficacy of the use of PROs in real world care settings to improve overall PAD outcomes, the writing group says.
“Following that experience and data, we believe value-based models can be proposed integrating PRO information that will affect accountability in PAD care and may ultimately affect reimbursement,” Dr. Smolderen said.
“Adoption of this new paradigm will further improve the quality of care for PAD and will put the patient front and center, as an agent in their care,” she added.
This scientific statement was prepared by the volunteer writing group on behalf of the AHA Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease and the Council on Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health. The writing group includes a patient advocate and experts in clinical psychology, outcomes research, nursing, cardiology, vascular surgery, and vascular medicine.
This research had no commercial funding. Dr. Smolderen has disclosed relationships with Optum, Abbott, Cook Medical, Happify, and Tegus.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Patient-reported symptoms and quality of life should guide treatment for the roughly 8.5 million people in the United States living with peripheral artery disease (PAD), the American Heart Association said in a new scientific statement released Oct. 13.
“The person living with PAD is the authority on the impact it has on their daily life. Our treatment must be grounded in their lived experiences and go beyond the clinical measures of how well blood flows through the arteries,” Kim G. Smolderen, PhD, lead author of the statement writing group, says in a release.
“We have spent years developing and validating standardized instruments to capture people’s experiences in a reliable and sensitive way. We are now at a point where we can start integrating this information into real-world care, through pilot programs that can develop quality benchmarks for different phenotypes of patients with PAD and the types of treatments they undergo, as seen from their perspective,” adds Dr. Smolderen, co-director of the Vascular Medicine Outcomes Research (VAMOS) lab at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
The statement, “Advancing Peripheral Artery Disease Quality of Care and Outcomes Through Patient-Reported Health Status Assessment,” is published online in Circulation.
It comes on the heels of a 2021 AHA statement urging greater attention to PAD, which is underdiagnosed and undertreated in the United States despite its high prevalence.
Fragmented care
Dr. Smolderen said that the multidisciplinary writing group was united in one overarching goal: “How can we disrupt the fragmented care model for PAD and make PAD care more accountable, value-based, and patient-centered?”
“True disruption is needed in a clinical space where the treatment of lower-extremity disease lies in the hands of many different specialties and variability in care and outcomes is a major concern,” Dr. Smolderen said.
The statement calls for improving and individualizing PAD care by gathering feedback from their experience through treatment using systematic and validated patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs).
PROMs for PAD include the Walking Impairment Questionnaire (WIQ), the Vascular Quality of Life Questionnaire (VascuQoL), and Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ).
Accountability tied to reimbursement
Dr. Smolderen noted that PROMs are increasingly being integrated into definitions of what it means to deliver high-quality, patient-centered care, and PROMs scores may directly impact reimbursement.
“Using a template that has been implemented in other medical conditions, we propose a shift in metrics that will tell us whether high-quality PAD care has been delivered from a patients’ perspective,” Dr. Smolderen told this news organization.
That is, “have we been able to improve the health status of that person’s life? We may have removed the blockage in the arteries, but will the patient feel that this intervention has addressed their PAD-specific health status goals?”
To facilitate accountability in quality PAD care, the writing group calls for developing, testing, and implementing PAD-specific patient-reported outcomes performance measures – or PRO-PMs.
Pilot efforts demonstrating feasibility of PRO-PMs in various practice settings are needed, as is implementation research evaluating the integration of PRO-PMs and pragmatic clinical trial evidence to demonstrate efficacy of the use of PROs in real world care settings to improve overall PAD outcomes, the writing group says.
“Following that experience and data, we believe value-based models can be proposed integrating PRO information that will affect accountability in PAD care and may ultimately affect reimbursement,” Dr. Smolderen said.
“Adoption of this new paradigm will further improve the quality of care for PAD and will put the patient front and center, as an agent in their care,” she added.
This scientific statement was prepared by the volunteer writing group on behalf of the AHA Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease and the Council on Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health. The writing group includes a patient advocate and experts in clinical psychology, outcomes research, nursing, cardiology, vascular surgery, and vascular medicine.
This research had no commercial funding. Dr. Smolderen has disclosed relationships with Optum, Abbott, Cook Medical, Happify, and Tegus.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Patient-reported symptoms and quality of life should guide treatment for the roughly 8.5 million people in the United States living with peripheral artery disease (PAD), the American Heart Association said in a new scientific statement released Oct. 13.
“The person living with PAD is the authority on the impact it has on their daily life. Our treatment must be grounded in their lived experiences and go beyond the clinical measures of how well blood flows through the arteries,” Kim G. Smolderen, PhD, lead author of the statement writing group, says in a release.
“We have spent years developing and validating standardized instruments to capture people’s experiences in a reliable and sensitive way. We are now at a point where we can start integrating this information into real-world care, through pilot programs that can develop quality benchmarks for different phenotypes of patients with PAD and the types of treatments they undergo, as seen from their perspective,” adds Dr. Smolderen, co-director of the Vascular Medicine Outcomes Research (VAMOS) lab at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
The statement, “Advancing Peripheral Artery Disease Quality of Care and Outcomes Through Patient-Reported Health Status Assessment,” is published online in Circulation.
It comes on the heels of a 2021 AHA statement urging greater attention to PAD, which is underdiagnosed and undertreated in the United States despite its high prevalence.
Fragmented care
Dr. Smolderen said that the multidisciplinary writing group was united in one overarching goal: “How can we disrupt the fragmented care model for PAD and make PAD care more accountable, value-based, and patient-centered?”
“True disruption is needed in a clinical space where the treatment of lower-extremity disease lies in the hands of many different specialties and variability in care and outcomes is a major concern,” Dr. Smolderen said.
The statement calls for improving and individualizing PAD care by gathering feedback from their experience through treatment using systematic and validated patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs).
PROMs for PAD include the Walking Impairment Questionnaire (WIQ), the Vascular Quality of Life Questionnaire (VascuQoL), and Peripheral Artery Questionnaire (PAQ).
Accountability tied to reimbursement
Dr. Smolderen noted that PROMs are increasingly being integrated into definitions of what it means to deliver high-quality, patient-centered care, and PROMs scores may directly impact reimbursement.
“Using a template that has been implemented in other medical conditions, we propose a shift in metrics that will tell us whether high-quality PAD care has been delivered from a patients’ perspective,” Dr. Smolderen told this news organization.
That is, “have we been able to improve the health status of that person’s life? We may have removed the blockage in the arteries, but will the patient feel that this intervention has addressed their PAD-specific health status goals?”
To facilitate accountability in quality PAD care, the writing group calls for developing, testing, and implementing PAD-specific patient-reported outcomes performance measures – or PRO-PMs.
Pilot efforts demonstrating feasibility of PRO-PMs in various practice settings are needed, as is implementation research evaluating the integration of PRO-PMs and pragmatic clinical trial evidence to demonstrate efficacy of the use of PROs in real world care settings to improve overall PAD outcomes, the writing group says.
“Following that experience and data, we believe value-based models can be proposed integrating PRO information that will affect accountability in PAD care and may ultimately affect reimbursement,” Dr. Smolderen said.
“Adoption of this new paradigm will further improve the quality of care for PAD and will put the patient front and center, as an agent in their care,” she added.
This scientific statement was prepared by the volunteer writing group on behalf of the AHA Council on Peripheral Vascular Disease and the Council on Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health. The writing group includes a patient advocate and experts in clinical psychology, outcomes research, nursing, cardiology, vascular surgery, and vascular medicine.
This research had no commercial funding. Dr. Smolderen has disclosed relationships with Optum, Abbott, Cook Medical, Happify, and Tegus.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM CIRCULATION
Athletes with mild HCM can likely continue competitive sports
Athletes with mild hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) at low risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) can safely continue to exercise at competitive levels, a retrospective study suggests.
During a mean follow-up of 4.5 years, athletes who continued to engage in high-intensity competitive sports after a mild HCM diagnosis were free of cardiac symptoms, and there were no deaths, incidents of sustained ventricular tachycardia or syncope, or changes in cardiac electrical, structural, or functional phenotypes.
“This study supports emerging evidence that HCM individuals with a low-risk profile and mild hypertrophy may engage in vigorous exercise and competitive sport,” Sanjay Sharma, MD, of St. George’s University of London, said in an interview. Current guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology and the American College of Cardiology support a more liberal approach to exercise for these individuals.
That said, he added, “it is important to emphasize that our cohort consisted of a group of adult competitive athletes who had probably been competing for several years before the diagnosis was made and therefore represented a self-selected, low-risk cohort. It is difficult to extrapolate this data to adolescent athletes, who appear to be more vulnerable to exercise-related SCD from HCM.”
The study was published online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
Vigorous exercise OK for some
Dr. Sharma and colleagues analyzed data from 53 athletes with HCM who continued to participate in competitive sports. The mean age was 39 years, 98% were men, and 72% were White. About half (53%) competed as professionals, and were most commonly engaged in cycling, football, running, and rugby.
Participants underwent 6-12 monthly assessments that included electrocardiograms, echocardiograms, cardiopulmonary exercise testing, Holter monitoring (≥ 24 hours), and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. A majority (64.2%) were evaluated because of an abnormal electrocardiograms, and one presented with an incidental abnormal echocardiogram.
About a quarter (24.5%) were symptomatic and 5 (9.4%) were identified on family screening. Eight (15%) had a family history of HCM, and six (11.3%) of SCD.
At the baseline evaluation, all athletes had a “low” ESC 5-year SCD risk score for HCM (1.9% ± 0.9%). None had syncope. Mean peak VO2 was 40.7 ± 6.8 mL/kg per minute.
The mean left ventricular wall thickness was 14.6 ± 2.3 mm; all had normal LV systolic and diastolic function and no LV outflow tract obstruction at rest or on provocation testing. In addition, none had an LV apical aneurysm.
Twenty-two (41%) showed late gadolinium enhancement on baseline cardiac magnetic resonance imaging.
A total of 19 participants underwent genotyping; 4 (21.1%) had a pathogenic/likely pathogenic sarcomeric variant. None took cardiovascular medication or had an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD).
During a mean follow-up of 4.5 years, all participants continued to exercise at the same level as before their diagnosis; none underwent detraining. All stayed free of cardiac symptoms, and there were no deaths, sustained ventricular tachycardia episodes, or syncope.
Four demonstrated new, nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT) during follow-up, one of whom underwent ICD implantation because of an increased risk score and subsequently moderated exercise levels.
One participant had a 30-second atrial fibrillation (AFib) episode lasting longer than 30 seconds, started on a beta-blocker and oral anticoagulation, and also moderated exercise levels.
The event rate was 2.1% per year for asymptomatic arrhythmias (NSVT and AFib). No changes were observed in the cardiac electrical, structural, or functional phenotype during follow-up.
Dr. Sharma and colleagues stated: “Our sample size is small; however, it is nearly double the size of a previously studied Italian athletic cohort, and one-half were professional athletes. Furthermore, 17% of our cohort comprised Black athletes who are perceived to be at higher risk of SCD than White athletes.”
Daniele Massera, MD, assistant professor in the HCM program, department of medicine, Charney Division of Cardiology, New York University Langone Health, said in an interview: “Of note, these were athletes/patients at the very low end of phenotypic severity of HCM. ... It is also notable that diastolic function was normal in all of them, an uncommon finding in patients with HCM.”
Like Dr. Sharma, he said the findings are in line with recent guidelines, and cautioned: “This small study applies only to a very small subset of patients who are being evaluated at specialized HCM programs: asymptomatic male individuals who have mild, low-risk HCM and are on no medicines.
“The findings cannot be generalized to the population of symptomatic individuals with (or without) outflow obstruction, more severe hypertrophy, and who have ICDs and/or take medication for symptoms, nor to younger patients or adolescents, who may be at higher risk for adverse outcomes,” he concluded.
Individualized approach urged
Dr. Sharma was a coauthor of the recent article challenging the traditional restrictive approach to exercise for athletes diagnosed with HCM and other inherited cardiovascular diseases. The article suggested that individualized recommendations, taking risks into consideration, can help guide those who want to exercise or participate in competitive sports.
Dr. Sharma also is a coauthor of a 6-month follow-up to the SAFE-HCM study, which compared the effects of a supervised 12-week high-intensity exercise program to usual care in low-risk individuals with HCM (mean age, 45.7).
In the 6-month follow-up study, published as an abstract in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology 2021 supplement, “exercising individuals had improved functional capacity and atherosclerotic risk profile and there were no differences in the composite safety outcomes [cardiovascular death, cardiac arrest, device therapy, exercise-induced syncope, sustained VT, NSVT, or sustained atrial arrhythmias] between exercising individuals and usual care individuals,” Dr. Sharma said.
The full study will soon be ready to submit for publication, he added.
No commercial funding or relevant conflicts of interest were disclosed.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Athletes with mild hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) at low risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) can safely continue to exercise at competitive levels, a retrospective study suggests.
During a mean follow-up of 4.5 years, athletes who continued to engage in high-intensity competitive sports after a mild HCM diagnosis were free of cardiac symptoms, and there were no deaths, incidents of sustained ventricular tachycardia or syncope, or changes in cardiac electrical, structural, or functional phenotypes.
“This study supports emerging evidence that HCM individuals with a low-risk profile and mild hypertrophy may engage in vigorous exercise and competitive sport,” Sanjay Sharma, MD, of St. George’s University of London, said in an interview. Current guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology and the American College of Cardiology support a more liberal approach to exercise for these individuals.
That said, he added, “it is important to emphasize that our cohort consisted of a group of adult competitive athletes who had probably been competing for several years before the diagnosis was made and therefore represented a self-selected, low-risk cohort. It is difficult to extrapolate this data to adolescent athletes, who appear to be more vulnerable to exercise-related SCD from HCM.”
The study was published online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
Vigorous exercise OK for some
Dr. Sharma and colleagues analyzed data from 53 athletes with HCM who continued to participate in competitive sports. The mean age was 39 years, 98% were men, and 72% were White. About half (53%) competed as professionals, and were most commonly engaged in cycling, football, running, and rugby.
Participants underwent 6-12 monthly assessments that included electrocardiograms, echocardiograms, cardiopulmonary exercise testing, Holter monitoring (≥ 24 hours), and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. A majority (64.2%) were evaluated because of an abnormal electrocardiograms, and one presented with an incidental abnormal echocardiogram.
About a quarter (24.5%) were symptomatic and 5 (9.4%) were identified on family screening. Eight (15%) had a family history of HCM, and six (11.3%) of SCD.
At the baseline evaluation, all athletes had a “low” ESC 5-year SCD risk score for HCM (1.9% ± 0.9%). None had syncope. Mean peak VO2 was 40.7 ± 6.8 mL/kg per minute.
The mean left ventricular wall thickness was 14.6 ± 2.3 mm; all had normal LV systolic and diastolic function and no LV outflow tract obstruction at rest or on provocation testing. In addition, none had an LV apical aneurysm.
Twenty-two (41%) showed late gadolinium enhancement on baseline cardiac magnetic resonance imaging.
A total of 19 participants underwent genotyping; 4 (21.1%) had a pathogenic/likely pathogenic sarcomeric variant. None took cardiovascular medication or had an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD).
During a mean follow-up of 4.5 years, all participants continued to exercise at the same level as before their diagnosis; none underwent detraining. All stayed free of cardiac symptoms, and there were no deaths, sustained ventricular tachycardia episodes, or syncope.
Four demonstrated new, nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT) during follow-up, one of whom underwent ICD implantation because of an increased risk score and subsequently moderated exercise levels.
One participant had a 30-second atrial fibrillation (AFib) episode lasting longer than 30 seconds, started on a beta-blocker and oral anticoagulation, and also moderated exercise levels.
The event rate was 2.1% per year for asymptomatic arrhythmias (NSVT and AFib). No changes were observed in the cardiac electrical, structural, or functional phenotype during follow-up.
Dr. Sharma and colleagues stated: “Our sample size is small; however, it is nearly double the size of a previously studied Italian athletic cohort, and one-half were professional athletes. Furthermore, 17% of our cohort comprised Black athletes who are perceived to be at higher risk of SCD than White athletes.”
Daniele Massera, MD, assistant professor in the HCM program, department of medicine, Charney Division of Cardiology, New York University Langone Health, said in an interview: “Of note, these were athletes/patients at the very low end of phenotypic severity of HCM. ... It is also notable that diastolic function was normal in all of them, an uncommon finding in patients with HCM.”
Like Dr. Sharma, he said the findings are in line with recent guidelines, and cautioned: “This small study applies only to a very small subset of patients who are being evaluated at specialized HCM programs: asymptomatic male individuals who have mild, low-risk HCM and are on no medicines.
“The findings cannot be generalized to the population of symptomatic individuals with (or without) outflow obstruction, more severe hypertrophy, and who have ICDs and/or take medication for symptoms, nor to younger patients or adolescents, who may be at higher risk for adverse outcomes,” he concluded.
Individualized approach urged
Dr. Sharma was a coauthor of the recent article challenging the traditional restrictive approach to exercise for athletes diagnosed with HCM and other inherited cardiovascular diseases. The article suggested that individualized recommendations, taking risks into consideration, can help guide those who want to exercise or participate in competitive sports.
Dr. Sharma also is a coauthor of a 6-month follow-up to the SAFE-HCM study, which compared the effects of a supervised 12-week high-intensity exercise program to usual care in low-risk individuals with HCM (mean age, 45.7).
In the 6-month follow-up study, published as an abstract in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology 2021 supplement, “exercising individuals had improved functional capacity and atherosclerotic risk profile and there were no differences in the composite safety outcomes [cardiovascular death, cardiac arrest, device therapy, exercise-induced syncope, sustained VT, NSVT, or sustained atrial arrhythmias] between exercising individuals and usual care individuals,” Dr. Sharma said.
The full study will soon be ready to submit for publication, he added.
No commercial funding or relevant conflicts of interest were disclosed.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Athletes with mild hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) at low risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) can safely continue to exercise at competitive levels, a retrospective study suggests.
During a mean follow-up of 4.5 years, athletes who continued to engage in high-intensity competitive sports after a mild HCM diagnosis were free of cardiac symptoms, and there were no deaths, incidents of sustained ventricular tachycardia or syncope, or changes in cardiac electrical, structural, or functional phenotypes.
“This study supports emerging evidence that HCM individuals with a low-risk profile and mild hypertrophy may engage in vigorous exercise and competitive sport,” Sanjay Sharma, MD, of St. George’s University of London, said in an interview. Current guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology and the American College of Cardiology support a more liberal approach to exercise for these individuals.
That said, he added, “it is important to emphasize that our cohort consisted of a group of adult competitive athletes who had probably been competing for several years before the diagnosis was made and therefore represented a self-selected, low-risk cohort. It is difficult to extrapolate this data to adolescent athletes, who appear to be more vulnerable to exercise-related SCD from HCM.”
The study was published online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
Vigorous exercise OK for some
Dr. Sharma and colleagues analyzed data from 53 athletes with HCM who continued to participate in competitive sports. The mean age was 39 years, 98% were men, and 72% were White. About half (53%) competed as professionals, and were most commonly engaged in cycling, football, running, and rugby.
Participants underwent 6-12 monthly assessments that included electrocardiograms, echocardiograms, cardiopulmonary exercise testing, Holter monitoring (≥ 24 hours), and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. A majority (64.2%) were evaluated because of an abnormal electrocardiograms, and one presented with an incidental abnormal echocardiogram.
About a quarter (24.5%) were symptomatic and 5 (9.4%) were identified on family screening. Eight (15%) had a family history of HCM, and six (11.3%) of SCD.
At the baseline evaluation, all athletes had a “low” ESC 5-year SCD risk score for HCM (1.9% ± 0.9%). None had syncope. Mean peak VO2 was 40.7 ± 6.8 mL/kg per minute.
The mean left ventricular wall thickness was 14.6 ± 2.3 mm; all had normal LV systolic and diastolic function and no LV outflow tract obstruction at rest or on provocation testing. In addition, none had an LV apical aneurysm.
Twenty-two (41%) showed late gadolinium enhancement on baseline cardiac magnetic resonance imaging.
A total of 19 participants underwent genotyping; 4 (21.1%) had a pathogenic/likely pathogenic sarcomeric variant. None took cardiovascular medication or had an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD).
During a mean follow-up of 4.5 years, all participants continued to exercise at the same level as before their diagnosis; none underwent detraining. All stayed free of cardiac symptoms, and there were no deaths, sustained ventricular tachycardia episodes, or syncope.
Four demonstrated new, nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT) during follow-up, one of whom underwent ICD implantation because of an increased risk score and subsequently moderated exercise levels.
One participant had a 30-second atrial fibrillation (AFib) episode lasting longer than 30 seconds, started on a beta-blocker and oral anticoagulation, and also moderated exercise levels.
The event rate was 2.1% per year for asymptomatic arrhythmias (NSVT and AFib). No changes were observed in the cardiac electrical, structural, or functional phenotype during follow-up.
Dr. Sharma and colleagues stated: “Our sample size is small; however, it is nearly double the size of a previously studied Italian athletic cohort, and one-half were professional athletes. Furthermore, 17% of our cohort comprised Black athletes who are perceived to be at higher risk of SCD than White athletes.”
Daniele Massera, MD, assistant professor in the HCM program, department of medicine, Charney Division of Cardiology, New York University Langone Health, said in an interview: “Of note, these were athletes/patients at the very low end of phenotypic severity of HCM. ... It is also notable that diastolic function was normal in all of them, an uncommon finding in patients with HCM.”
Like Dr. Sharma, he said the findings are in line with recent guidelines, and cautioned: “This small study applies only to a very small subset of patients who are being evaluated at specialized HCM programs: asymptomatic male individuals who have mild, low-risk HCM and are on no medicines.
“The findings cannot be generalized to the population of symptomatic individuals with (or without) outflow obstruction, more severe hypertrophy, and who have ICDs and/or take medication for symptoms, nor to younger patients or adolescents, who may be at higher risk for adverse outcomes,” he concluded.
Individualized approach urged
Dr. Sharma was a coauthor of the recent article challenging the traditional restrictive approach to exercise for athletes diagnosed with HCM and other inherited cardiovascular diseases. The article suggested that individualized recommendations, taking risks into consideration, can help guide those who want to exercise or participate in competitive sports.
Dr. Sharma also is a coauthor of a 6-month follow-up to the SAFE-HCM study, which compared the effects of a supervised 12-week high-intensity exercise program to usual care in low-risk individuals with HCM (mean age, 45.7).
In the 6-month follow-up study, published as an abstract in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology 2021 supplement, “exercising individuals had improved functional capacity and atherosclerotic risk profile and there were no differences in the composite safety outcomes [cardiovascular death, cardiac arrest, device therapy, exercise-induced syncope, sustained VT, NSVT, or sustained atrial arrhythmias] between exercising individuals and usual care individuals,” Dr. Sharma said.
The full study will soon be ready to submit for publication, he added.
No commercial funding or relevant conflicts of interest were disclosed.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
Weight loss history affects success in obesity management
Women with repeated attempts at weight loss, even if the weight is regained, have modestly greater weight loss at an obesity management clinic than women without such a history, data suggest.
In a retrospective study of data for more than 11,000 participants in a weight-management program, the frequency of weight loss was significantly correlated with the total lifetime weight loss in men (r = 0.61, P < .0001) and women (r = 0.60, P < .0001).
“It should be harder for you to lose weight when you’re older, as opposed to younger. That’s just biology,” study author Sean Wharton, MD, PharmD, medical director of the Wharton Medical Clinic, Burlington, Ont., told this news organization. But older people “have practiced a whole lot more than younger people. That’s probably one of the big things” in their favor, he added.
Dr. Wharton also is a clinical adjunct professor at York University, Toronto, and the lead author of 2020 Canadian clinical practice guidelines on obesity.
The current data were published in Obesity.
Practice makes perfect?
The prevalence of obesity is increasing. It is uncertain whether frequent weight losses help or hinder future weight-loss attempts. The effect of age at overweight on future weight loss attempts is also unclear.
To examine these questions, the current researchers analyzed the experiences of patients with obesity treated at the Wharton Medical Clinic Weight Management Program, Hamilton, Ont. At enrollment, participants responded to a questionnaire that elicited information about basic demographics, past weight loss and health practices, medical history, and family medical history. Patients did not receive any stipend for their participation and consented to the use of their medical data for research purposes. The investigators assessed weight change through a retrospective review of electronic medical records.
The study examined a data set that included 36,124 patients who were predominantly White, middle-aged women. “Although this is reflective of the demographic that is most commonly seeking obesity management in North America, the applicability of these findings to other groups is unclear,” wrote the investigators.
As a group, women under age 40 lost 1.7 kg, while those from ages 40 to 60 lost 3.2 kg, and women older than 60 lost 4.2 kg. Weight loss among men was greater and followed a similar pattern. Men under age 40 lost 3.0 kg, those between ages 40 and 60 lost 4.2 kg, and those older than 60 lost 5.2 kg.
To examine how long participants had been trying to lose weight, the investigators analyzed their age of overweight onset. Most participants reported having become overweight before age 40 and having lost at least 4.5 kg at least once in their lifetime. Older women with a longer history of losing weight had better results during the study.
In middle-aged and older women, but not men or younger women, earlier age of overweight onset and lifetime weight loss were associated with modestly greater weight loss at the clinic. When the researchers assessed women age 60 and older, they found that those who had an age of overweight onset before age 10 lost 4.9 kg on average, while those whose age of overweight onset was between ages 20 and 39 lost 4.3 kg. Women with an age of overweight onset above 40 had a weight loss of 3.5 kg.
The finding of greater weight loss in older women who were experienced in dieting was surprising, said Dr. Wharton. It may reflect the effects of perseverance and lifestyle changes. “The other thing is that [older women] also have more time. They have more availability. They make more appointments. They have the ability to be more focused,” said Dr. Wharton.
The Wharton Medical Clinic operates within the Ontario Health Insurance Plan, and all services are provided at no charge to the patient, which may reduce the selection bias against patients with low socioeconomic status, wrote the investigators.
Inclusive population
Lesley D. Lutes, PhD, director of the Center for Obesity and Well-Being Research Excellence (CORE) at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said that one of its strengths was its reflection of real-world experience.
Too often, study populations do not reflect well the experiences of people battling obesity, she added. Many potential participants are excluded because of common medical comorbidities such as heart conditions. “So, you don’t see the real-world outcomes for the majority of people” from these studies, said Dr. Lutes.
Furthermore, researchers sometimes draw conclusions about obesity based on data that draws from only a “tiny slice” of the group of patients who can qualify for studies, she added. The resulting recommendations may not suit most patients.
In contrast, the current research was based on a more inclusive set of patient data. “That was an incredible strength of this study, that there [were] no exclusionary criteria” in terms of medical conditions, she said.
No outside funding for the study was reported. Dr. Wharton is the medical director of the Wharton Medical Clinic.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Women with repeated attempts at weight loss, even if the weight is regained, have modestly greater weight loss at an obesity management clinic than women without such a history, data suggest.
In a retrospective study of data for more than 11,000 participants in a weight-management program, the frequency of weight loss was significantly correlated with the total lifetime weight loss in men (r = 0.61, P < .0001) and women (r = 0.60, P < .0001).
“It should be harder for you to lose weight when you’re older, as opposed to younger. That’s just biology,” study author Sean Wharton, MD, PharmD, medical director of the Wharton Medical Clinic, Burlington, Ont., told this news organization. But older people “have practiced a whole lot more than younger people. That’s probably one of the big things” in their favor, he added.
Dr. Wharton also is a clinical adjunct professor at York University, Toronto, and the lead author of 2020 Canadian clinical practice guidelines on obesity.
The current data were published in Obesity.
Practice makes perfect?
The prevalence of obesity is increasing. It is uncertain whether frequent weight losses help or hinder future weight-loss attempts. The effect of age at overweight on future weight loss attempts is also unclear.
To examine these questions, the current researchers analyzed the experiences of patients with obesity treated at the Wharton Medical Clinic Weight Management Program, Hamilton, Ont. At enrollment, participants responded to a questionnaire that elicited information about basic demographics, past weight loss and health practices, medical history, and family medical history. Patients did not receive any stipend for their participation and consented to the use of their medical data for research purposes. The investigators assessed weight change through a retrospective review of electronic medical records.
The study examined a data set that included 36,124 patients who were predominantly White, middle-aged women. “Although this is reflective of the demographic that is most commonly seeking obesity management in North America, the applicability of these findings to other groups is unclear,” wrote the investigators.
As a group, women under age 40 lost 1.7 kg, while those from ages 40 to 60 lost 3.2 kg, and women older than 60 lost 4.2 kg. Weight loss among men was greater and followed a similar pattern. Men under age 40 lost 3.0 kg, those between ages 40 and 60 lost 4.2 kg, and those older than 60 lost 5.2 kg.
To examine how long participants had been trying to lose weight, the investigators analyzed their age of overweight onset. Most participants reported having become overweight before age 40 and having lost at least 4.5 kg at least once in their lifetime. Older women with a longer history of losing weight had better results during the study.
In middle-aged and older women, but not men or younger women, earlier age of overweight onset and lifetime weight loss were associated with modestly greater weight loss at the clinic. When the researchers assessed women age 60 and older, they found that those who had an age of overweight onset before age 10 lost 4.9 kg on average, while those whose age of overweight onset was between ages 20 and 39 lost 4.3 kg. Women with an age of overweight onset above 40 had a weight loss of 3.5 kg.
The finding of greater weight loss in older women who were experienced in dieting was surprising, said Dr. Wharton. It may reflect the effects of perseverance and lifestyle changes. “The other thing is that [older women] also have more time. They have more availability. They make more appointments. They have the ability to be more focused,” said Dr. Wharton.
The Wharton Medical Clinic operates within the Ontario Health Insurance Plan, and all services are provided at no charge to the patient, which may reduce the selection bias against patients with low socioeconomic status, wrote the investigators.
Inclusive population
Lesley D. Lutes, PhD, director of the Center for Obesity and Well-Being Research Excellence (CORE) at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said that one of its strengths was its reflection of real-world experience.
Too often, study populations do not reflect well the experiences of people battling obesity, she added. Many potential participants are excluded because of common medical comorbidities such as heart conditions. “So, you don’t see the real-world outcomes for the majority of people” from these studies, said Dr. Lutes.
Furthermore, researchers sometimes draw conclusions about obesity based on data that draws from only a “tiny slice” of the group of patients who can qualify for studies, she added. The resulting recommendations may not suit most patients.
In contrast, the current research was based on a more inclusive set of patient data. “That was an incredible strength of this study, that there [were] no exclusionary criteria” in terms of medical conditions, she said.
No outside funding for the study was reported. Dr. Wharton is the medical director of the Wharton Medical Clinic.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Women with repeated attempts at weight loss, even if the weight is regained, have modestly greater weight loss at an obesity management clinic than women without such a history, data suggest.
In a retrospective study of data for more than 11,000 participants in a weight-management program, the frequency of weight loss was significantly correlated with the total lifetime weight loss in men (r = 0.61, P < .0001) and women (r = 0.60, P < .0001).
“It should be harder for you to lose weight when you’re older, as opposed to younger. That’s just biology,” study author Sean Wharton, MD, PharmD, medical director of the Wharton Medical Clinic, Burlington, Ont., told this news organization. But older people “have practiced a whole lot more than younger people. That’s probably one of the big things” in their favor, he added.
Dr. Wharton also is a clinical adjunct professor at York University, Toronto, and the lead author of 2020 Canadian clinical practice guidelines on obesity.
The current data were published in Obesity.
Practice makes perfect?
The prevalence of obesity is increasing. It is uncertain whether frequent weight losses help or hinder future weight-loss attempts. The effect of age at overweight on future weight loss attempts is also unclear.
To examine these questions, the current researchers analyzed the experiences of patients with obesity treated at the Wharton Medical Clinic Weight Management Program, Hamilton, Ont. At enrollment, participants responded to a questionnaire that elicited information about basic demographics, past weight loss and health practices, medical history, and family medical history. Patients did not receive any stipend for their participation and consented to the use of their medical data for research purposes. The investigators assessed weight change through a retrospective review of electronic medical records.
The study examined a data set that included 36,124 patients who were predominantly White, middle-aged women. “Although this is reflective of the demographic that is most commonly seeking obesity management in North America, the applicability of these findings to other groups is unclear,” wrote the investigators.
As a group, women under age 40 lost 1.7 kg, while those from ages 40 to 60 lost 3.2 kg, and women older than 60 lost 4.2 kg. Weight loss among men was greater and followed a similar pattern. Men under age 40 lost 3.0 kg, those between ages 40 and 60 lost 4.2 kg, and those older than 60 lost 5.2 kg.
To examine how long participants had been trying to lose weight, the investigators analyzed their age of overweight onset. Most participants reported having become overweight before age 40 and having lost at least 4.5 kg at least once in their lifetime. Older women with a longer history of losing weight had better results during the study.
In middle-aged and older women, but not men or younger women, earlier age of overweight onset and lifetime weight loss were associated with modestly greater weight loss at the clinic. When the researchers assessed women age 60 and older, they found that those who had an age of overweight onset before age 10 lost 4.9 kg on average, while those whose age of overweight onset was between ages 20 and 39 lost 4.3 kg. Women with an age of overweight onset above 40 had a weight loss of 3.5 kg.
The finding of greater weight loss in older women who were experienced in dieting was surprising, said Dr. Wharton. It may reflect the effects of perseverance and lifestyle changes. “The other thing is that [older women] also have more time. They have more availability. They make more appointments. They have the ability to be more focused,” said Dr. Wharton.
The Wharton Medical Clinic operates within the Ontario Health Insurance Plan, and all services are provided at no charge to the patient, which may reduce the selection bias against patients with low socioeconomic status, wrote the investigators.
Inclusive population
Lesley D. Lutes, PhD, director of the Center for Obesity and Well-Being Research Excellence (CORE) at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said that one of its strengths was its reflection of real-world experience.
Too often, study populations do not reflect well the experiences of people battling obesity, she added. Many potential participants are excluded because of common medical comorbidities such as heart conditions. “So, you don’t see the real-world outcomes for the majority of people” from these studies, said Dr. Lutes.
Furthermore, researchers sometimes draw conclusions about obesity based on data that draws from only a “tiny slice” of the group of patients who can qualify for studies, she added. The resulting recommendations may not suit most patients.
In contrast, the current research was based on a more inclusive set of patient data. “That was an incredible strength of this study, that there [were] no exclusionary criteria” in terms of medical conditions, she said.
No outside funding for the study was reported. Dr. Wharton is the medical director of the Wharton Medical Clinic.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Novel head-up CPR position raises odds of survival of out-of-hospital heart attacks
Individuals who experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) with nonshockable presentations have a better chance of survival when first responders use a novel CPR approach that includes gradual head-up positioning combined with basic but effective circulation-enhancing adjuncts, as shown from data from more than 2,000 patients.
In a study presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Emergency Physicians, Paul Pepe, MD, medical director for Dallas County Emergency Medical Services, reviewed data from five EMS systems that had adopted the new approach. Data were collected prospectively over the past 2 years from a national registry of patients who had received what Dr. Pepe called a “neuroprotective CPR bundle” (NP-CPR).
The study compared 380 NP-CPR case patients to 1,852 control patients who had received conventional CPR. Control data came from high-performance EMS systems that had participated in well-monitored, published OHCA trials funded by the National Institutes of Health. The primary outcome that was used for comparison was successful survival to hospital discharge with neurologically intact status (SURV-NI).
Traditional CPR supine chest compression techniques, if performed early and properly, can be lifesaving, but they are suboptimal, Dr. Pepe said. “Current techniques create pressure waves that run up the arterial side, but they also create back-pressure on the venous side, increasing intracranial pressure (ICP), thus compromising optimal cerebral blood flow,” he told this news organization.
For that reason, a modified physiologic approach to CPR was designed. It involves an airway adjunct called an impedance threshold device (ITD) and active compression-decompression (ACD) with a device “resembling a toilet plunger,” Dr. Pepe said.
The devices draw more blood out of the brain and into the thorax in a complementary fashion. The combination of these two adjuncts had dramatically improved SURV-NI by 50% in a clinical trial, Dr. Pepe said.
The new technology uses automated gradual head-up/torso-up positioning (AHUP) after first “priming the pump” with ITD-ACD–enhanced circulation. It was found to markedly augment that effect even further. In the laboratory setting, this synergistic NP-CPR bundle has been shown to help normalize cerebral perfusion pressure, further promoting neuro-intact survival. Normalization of end-tidal CO2 is routinely observed, according to Dr. Pepe.
In contrast to patients who present with ventricular fibrillation (shockable cases), patients with nonshockable presentations always have had grim prognoses, Dr. Pepe said. Until now, lifesaving advances had not been found, despite the fact that nonshockable presentations (asystole or electrical activity with no pulse) constitute approximately 80% of OHCA cases, or about 250,000 to 300,00 cases a year in the United States, he said.
In the study, approximately 60% of both the NP-CPR patients and control patients had asystole (flatline) presentations. The NP-CPR group had a significant threefold improvement in SURV-NI, compared with patients treated with conventional CPR in the high-functioning systems (odds ratio, 3.09). In a propensity-scored analysis matching all variables known to affect outcome, the OR increased to nearly fourfold higher (OR, 3.87; 95% confidence interval, 1.27-11.78), Dr. Pepe said.
The researchers also found that the time from receipt of a 911 call to initiation of AHUP was associated with progressively higher chances of survival. The median time for application was 11 minutes; when the elapsed time was less than 11 minutes, the SURV-NI was nearly 11-fold higher for NP-CPR patients than for control patients (OR, 10.59), with survival chances of 6% versus 0.5%. ORs were even higher when the time to treatment was less than 16 minutes (OR, 13.58), with survival rates of 5% versus 0.4%.
The findings not only demonstrate proof of concept in these most futile cases but also that implementation is feasible for the majority of patients, considering that the median time to the start of any CPR by a first responder was 8 minutes for both NP-CPR patients and control patients, “let alone 11 minutes for the AHUP initiation,” Dr. Pepe said. “This finally gives some hope for these nonshockable cases,” he emphasized.
“All of these devices have now been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration and should be adopted by all first-in responders,” said Dr. Pepe. “But they should be implemented as a bundle and in the proper sequence and as soon as feasible.”
Training and implementation efforts continue to expand, and more lives can be saved as more firefighters and first-in response teams acquire equipment and training, which can cut the time to response, he said.
The registry will continue to monitor outcomes with NP-CPR – the term was suggested by a patient who survived through this new approach – and Dr. Pepe and colleagues expect the statistics to improve further with wider adoption and faster implementation with the fastest responders.
A recent study by Dr. Pepe’s team, published in Resuscitation, showed the effectiveness of the neuroprotective bundle in improving survival for OHCA patients overall. The current study confirmed its impact on neuro-intact survival for the subgroup of patients with nonshockable cases.
One other take-home message is that head-up CPR cannot yet be performed by lay bystanders. “Also, do not implement this unless you are going to do it right,” Dr. Pepe emphasized in an interview.
Advanced CPR Solutions provided some materials and research funding for an independent data collector. No other relevant financial relationships have been disclosed.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Individuals who experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) with nonshockable presentations have a better chance of survival when first responders use a novel CPR approach that includes gradual head-up positioning combined with basic but effective circulation-enhancing adjuncts, as shown from data from more than 2,000 patients.
In a study presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Emergency Physicians, Paul Pepe, MD, medical director for Dallas County Emergency Medical Services, reviewed data from five EMS systems that had adopted the new approach. Data were collected prospectively over the past 2 years from a national registry of patients who had received what Dr. Pepe called a “neuroprotective CPR bundle” (NP-CPR).
The study compared 380 NP-CPR case patients to 1,852 control patients who had received conventional CPR. Control data came from high-performance EMS systems that had participated in well-monitored, published OHCA trials funded by the National Institutes of Health. The primary outcome that was used for comparison was successful survival to hospital discharge with neurologically intact status (SURV-NI).
Traditional CPR supine chest compression techniques, if performed early and properly, can be lifesaving, but they are suboptimal, Dr. Pepe said. “Current techniques create pressure waves that run up the arterial side, but they also create back-pressure on the venous side, increasing intracranial pressure (ICP), thus compromising optimal cerebral blood flow,” he told this news organization.
For that reason, a modified physiologic approach to CPR was designed. It involves an airway adjunct called an impedance threshold device (ITD) and active compression-decompression (ACD) with a device “resembling a toilet plunger,” Dr. Pepe said.
The devices draw more blood out of the brain and into the thorax in a complementary fashion. The combination of these two adjuncts had dramatically improved SURV-NI by 50% in a clinical trial, Dr. Pepe said.
The new technology uses automated gradual head-up/torso-up positioning (AHUP) after first “priming the pump” with ITD-ACD–enhanced circulation. It was found to markedly augment that effect even further. In the laboratory setting, this synergistic NP-CPR bundle has been shown to help normalize cerebral perfusion pressure, further promoting neuro-intact survival. Normalization of end-tidal CO2 is routinely observed, according to Dr. Pepe.
In contrast to patients who present with ventricular fibrillation (shockable cases), patients with nonshockable presentations always have had grim prognoses, Dr. Pepe said. Until now, lifesaving advances had not been found, despite the fact that nonshockable presentations (asystole or electrical activity with no pulse) constitute approximately 80% of OHCA cases, or about 250,000 to 300,00 cases a year in the United States, he said.
In the study, approximately 60% of both the NP-CPR patients and control patients had asystole (flatline) presentations. The NP-CPR group had a significant threefold improvement in SURV-NI, compared with patients treated with conventional CPR in the high-functioning systems (odds ratio, 3.09). In a propensity-scored analysis matching all variables known to affect outcome, the OR increased to nearly fourfold higher (OR, 3.87; 95% confidence interval, 1.27-11.78), Dr. Pepe said.
The researchers also found that the time from receipt of a 911 call to initiation of AHUP was associated with progressively higher chances of survival. The median time for application was 11 minutes; when the elapsed time was less than 11 minutes, the SURV-NI was nearly 11-fold higher for NP-CPR patients than for control patients (OR, 10.59), with survival chances of 6% versus 0.5%. ORs were even higher when the time to treatment was less than 16 minutes (OR, 13.58), with survival rates of 5% versus 0.4%.
The findings not only demonstrate proof of concept in these most futile cases but also that implementation is feasible for the majority of patients, considering that the median time to the start of any CPR by a first responder was 8 minutes for both NP-CPR patients and control patients, “let alone 11 minutes for the AHUP initiation,” Dr. Pepe said. “This finally gives some hope for these nonshockable cases,” he emphasized.
“All of these devices have now been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration and should be adopted by all first-in responders,” said Dr. Pepe. “But they should be implemented as a bundle and in the proper sequence and as soon as feasible.”
Training and implementation efforts continue to expand, and more lives can be saved as more firefighters and first-in response teams acquire equipment and training, which can cut the time to response, he said.
The registry will continue to monitor outcomes with NP-CPR – the term was suggested by a patient who survived through this new approach – and Dr. Pepe and colleagues expect the statistics to improve further with wider adoption and faster implementation with the fastest responders.
A recent study by Dr. Pepe’s team, published in Resuscitation, showed the effectiveness of the neuroprotective bundle in improving survival for OHCA patients overall. The current study confirmed its impact on neuro-intact survival for the subgroup of patients with nonshockable cases.
One other take-home message is that head-up CPR cannot yet be performed by lay bystanders. “Also, do not implement this unless you are going to do it right,” Dr. Pepe emphasized in an interview.
Advanced CPR Solutions provided some materials and research funding for an independent data collector. No other relevant financial relationships have been disclosed.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Individuals who experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) with nonshockable presentations have a better chance of survival when first responders use a novel CPR approach that includes gradual head-up positioning combined with basic but effective circulation-enhancing adjuncts, as shown from data from more than 2,000 patients.
In a study presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Emergency Physicians, Paul Pepe, MD, medical director for Dallas County Emergency Medical Services, reviewed data from five EMS systems that had adopted the new approach. Data were collected prospectively over the past 2 years from a national registry of patients who had received what Dr. Pepe called a “neuroprotective CPR bundle” (NP-CPR).
The study compared 380 NP-CPR case patients to 1,852 control patients who had received conventional CPR. Control data came from high-performance EMS systems that had participated in well-monitored, published OHCA trials funded by the National Institutes of Health. The primary outcome that was used for comparison was successful survival to hospital discharge with neurologically intact status (SURV-NI).
Traditional CPR supine chest compression techniques, if performed early and properly, can be lifesaving, but they are suboptimal, Dr. Pepe said. “Current techniques create pressure waves that run up the arterial side, but they also create back-pressure on the venous side, increasing intracranial pressure (ICP), thus compromising optimal cerebral blood flow,” he told this news organization.
For that reason, a modified physiologic approach to CPR was designed. It involves an airway adjunct called an impedance threshold device (ITD) and active compression-decompression (ACD) with a device “resembling a toilet plunger,” Dr. Pepe said.
The devices draw more blood out of the brain and into the thorax in a complementary fashion. The combination of these two adjuncts had dramatically improved SURV-NI by 50% in a clinical trial, Dr. Pepe said.
The new technology uses automated gradual head-up/torso-up positioning (AHUP) after first “priming the pump” with ITD-ACD–enhanced circulation. It was found to markedly augment that effect even further. In the laboratory setting, this synergistic NP-CPR bundle has been shown to help normalize cerebral perfusion pressure, further promoting neuro-intact survival. Normalization of end-tidal CO2 is routinely observed, according to Dr. Pepe.
In contrast to patients who present with ventricular fibrillation (shockable cases), patients with nonshockable presentations always have had grim prognoses, Dr. Pepe said. Until now, lifesaving advances had not been found, despite the fact that nonshockable presentations (asystole or electrical activity with no pulse) constitute approximately 80% of OHCA cases, or about 250,000 to 300,00 cases a year in the United States, he said.
In the study, approximately 60% of both the NP-CPR patients and control patients had asystole (flatline) presentations. The NP-CPR group had a significant threefold improvement in SURV-NI, compared with patients treated with conventional CPR in the high-functioning systems (odds ratio, 3.09). In a propensity-scored analysis matching all variables known to affect outcome, the OR increased to nearly fourfold higher (OR, 3.87; 95% confidence interval, 1.27-11.78), Dr. Pepe said.
The researchers also found that the time from receipt of a 911 call to initiation of AHUP was associated with progressively higher chances of survival. The median time for application was 11 minutes; when the elapsed time was less than 11 minutes, the SURV-NI was nearly 11-fold higher for NP-CPR patients than for control patients (OR, 10.59), with survival chances of 6% versus 0.5%. ORs were even higher when the time to treatment was less than 16 minutes (OR, 13.58), with survival rates of 5% versus 0.4%.
The findings not only demonstrate proof of concept in these most futile cases but also that implementation is feasible for the majority of patients, considering that the median time to the start of any CPR by a first responder was 8 minutes for both NP-CPR patients and control patients, “let alone 11 minutes for the AHUP initiation,” Dr. Pepe said. “This finally gives some hope for these nonshockable cases,” he emphasized.
“All of these devices have now been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration and should be adopted by all first-in responders,” said Dr. Pepe. “But they should be implemented as a bundle and in the proper sequence and as soon as feasible.”
Training and implementation efforts continue to expand, and more lives can be saved as more firefighters and first-in response teams acquire equipment and training, which can cut the time to response, he said.
The registry will continue to monitor outcomes with NP-CPR – the term was suggested by a patient who survived through this new approach – and Dr. Pepe and colleagues expect the statistics to improve further with wider adoption and faster implementation with the fastest responders.
A recent study by Dr. Pepe’s team, published in Resuscitation, showed the effectiveness of the neuroprotective bundle in improving survival for OHCA patients overall. The current study confirmed its impact on neuro-intact survival for the subgroup of patients with nonshockable cases.
One other take-home message is that head-up CPR cannot yet be performed by lay bystanders. “Also, do not implement this unless you are going to do it right,” Dr. Pepe emphasized in an interview.
Advanced CPR Solutions provided some materials and research funding for an independent data collector. No other relevant financial relationships have been disclosed.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ACEP 2022
First they get long COVID, then they lose their health care
It’s a devastating series of setbacks for long COVID patients. First, they get the debilitating symptoms of their condition. Then they are forced to give up their jobs, or severely curtail their work hours, as their symptoms linger. And next, for many, they lose their employer-sponsored health insurance.
While not all long COVID patients are debilitated, the CDC’s ongoing survey on long COVID found a quarter of adults with long COVID report it significantly affects their day-to-day living activities.
Estimates have shown that long COVID has disrupted the lives of anywhere from 16 million to 34 million Americans between the ages of 18 and 65.
While hard data is still limited, a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis found that more than half of adults with long COVID who worked before getting the virus are now either out of work or working fewer hours.
According to data from the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey, out of the estimated 16 million working-age adults who currently have long COVID, 2 million to 4 million of them are out of work because of their symptoms. The cost of those lost wages ranges from $170 billion a year to as much as $230 billion, the Census Bureau says. And given that approximately 155 million Americans have employer-sponsored health insurance, the welfare of working-age adults may be under serious threat.
“Millions of people are now impacted by long COVID, and oftentimes along with that comes the inability to work,” says Megan Cole Brahim, PhD, an assistant professor in the department of health law, policy, and management at Boston University and codirector of the school’s Medicaid policy lab. “And because a lot of people get their health insurance coverage through employer-sponsored coverage, no longer being able to work means you may not have access to the health insurance that you once had.”
The CDC defines long COVID as a wide array of health conditions, including malaise, fatigue, shortness of breath, mental health issues, problems with the part of the nervous system that controls body functions, and more.
Gwen Bishop was working remotely for the human resources department at the University of Washington Medical Centers, Seattle, when she got COVID-19. When the infection passed, Ms. Bishop, 39, thought she’d start feeling well enough to get back to work – but that didn’t happen.
“When I would log in to work and just try to read emails,” she says, “it was like they were written in Greek. It made no sense and was incredibly stressful.”
This falls in line with what researchers have found out about the nervous system issues reported by people with long COVID. People who have survived acute COVID infections have reported lasting sensory and motor function problems, brain fog, and memory problems.
Ms. Bishop, who was diagnosed with ADHD when she was in grade school, says another complication she got from her long COVID was a new intolerance to stimulants like coffee and her ADHD medication, Vyvanse, which were normal parts of her everyday life.
“Every time I would take my ADHD medicine or have a cup of coffee, I would have a panic attack until it wore off,” says Ms. Bishop. “Vyvanse is a very long-acting stimulant, so that would be an entire day of an endless panic attack.”
In order for her to get a medical leave approved, Ms. Bishop needed to get documents by a certain date from her doctor’s office that confirmed her long COVID diagnosis. She was able to get a couple of extensions, but Bishop says that with the burden that has been placed on our medical systems, getting in to see a doctor through her employer insurance was taking much longer than expected. By the time she got an appointment, she says, she had already been fired for missing too much work. Emails she provided showing exchanges between her and her employer verify her story. And without her health insurance, her appointment through that provider would no longer have been covered.
In July 2021, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services issued guidance recognizing long COVID as a disability “if the person’s condition or any of its symptoms is a ‘physical or mental’ impairment that ‘substantially limits’ one or more major life activities.”
But getting access to disability benefits hasn’t been easy for people with long COVID. On top of having to be out of work for 12 months before being able to qualify for Social Security Disability Insurance, some of those who have applied say they have had to put up a fight to actually gain access to disability insurance. The Social Security Administration has yet to reveal just how many applications that cited long COVID have been denied so far.
David Barnett, a former bartender in the Seattle area in his early 40s, got COVID-19 in March 2020. Before his infection, he spent much of his time working on his feet, bodybuilding, and hiking with his partner. But for the last nearly 3 years, even just going for a walk has been a major challenge. He says he has spent much of his post-COVID life either chair-bound or bed-bound because of his symptoms.
He is currently on his partner’s health insurance plan but is still responsible for copays and out-of-network appointments and treatments. After being unable to bartend any more, he started a GoFundMe account and dug into his personal savings. He says he applied for food stamps and is getting ready to sell his truck. Mr. Barnett applied for disability in March of this year but says he was denied benefits by the Social Security Administration and has hired a lawyer to appeal.
He runs a 24-hour online support group on Zoom for people with long COVID and says that no one in his close circle has successfully gotten access to disability payments.
Alba Azola, MD, codirector of Johns Hopkins University’s Post-Acute COVID-19 Team, says at least half of her patients need some level of accommodations to get back to work; most can, if given the proper accommodations, such as switching to a job that can be done sitting down, or with limited time standing. But there are still patients who have been more severely disabled by their long COVID symptoms.
“Work is such a part of people’s identity. The people who are very impaired, all they want to do is to get back to work and their normal lives,” she says.
Many of Dr. Azola’s long COVID patients aren’t able to return to their original jobs. She says they often have to find new positions more tailored to their new realities. One patient, a nurse and mother of five who previously worked in a facility where she got COVID-19, was out of work for 9 months after her infection. She ultimately lost her job, and Dr. Azola says the patient’s employer was hesitant to provide her with any accommodations. The patient was finally able to find a different job as a nurse coordinator where she doesn’t have to be standing for more than 10 minutes at a time.
Ge Bai, PhD, a professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, says the novelty of long COVID and the continued uncertainty around it raise questions for health insurance providers.
“There’s no well-defined pathway to treat or cure this condition,” Dr. Bai says. “Right now, employers have discretion to determine when a condition is being covered or not being covered. So people with long COVID do have a risk that their treatments won’t be covered.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
It’s a devastating series of setbacks for long COVID patients. First, they get the debilitating symptoms of their condition. Then they are forced to give up their jobs, or severely curtail their work hours, as their symptoms linger. And next, for many, they lose their employer-sponsored health insurance.
While not all long COVID patients are debilitated, the CDC’s ongoing survey on long COVID found a quarter of adults with long COVID report it significantly affects their day-to-day living activities.
Estimates have shown that long COVID has disrupted the lives of anywhere from 16 million to 34 million Americans between the ages of 18 and 65.
While hard data is still limited, a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis found that more than half of adults with long COVID who worked before getting the virus are now either out of work or working fewer hours.
According to data from the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey, out of the estimated 16 million working-age adults who currently have long COVID, 2 million to 4 million of them are out of work because of their symptoms. The cost of those lost wages ranges from $170 billion a year to as much as $230 billion, the Census Bureau says. And given that approximately 155 million Americans have employer-sponsored health insurance, the welfare of working-age adults may be under serious threat.
“Millions of people are now impacted by long COVID, and oftentimes along with that comes the inability to work,” says Megan Cole Brahim, PhD, an assistant professor in the department of health law, policy, and management at Boston University and codirector of the school’s Medicaid policy lab. “And because a lot of people get their health insurance coverage through employer-sponsored coverage, no longer being able to work means you may not have access to the health insurance that you once had.”
The CDC defines long COVID as a wide array of health conditions, including malaise, fatigue, shortness of breath, mental health issues, problems with the part of the nervous system that controls body functions, and more.
Gwen Bishop was working remotely for the human resources department at the University of Washington Medical Centers, Seattle, when she got COVID-19. When the infection passed, Ms. Bishop, 39, thought she’d start feeling well enough to get back to work – but that didn’t happen.
“When I would log in to work and just try to read emails,” she says, “it was like they were written in Greek. It made no sense and was incredibly stressful.”
This falls in line with what researchers have found out about the nervous system issues reported by people with long COVID. People who have survived acute COVID infections have reported lasting sensory and motor function problems, brain fog, and memory problems.
Ms. Bishop, who was diagnosed with ADHD when she was in grade school, says another complication she got from her long COVID was a new intolerance to stimulants like coffee and her ADHD medication, Vyvanse, which were normal parts of her everyday life.
“Every time I would take my ADHD medicine or have a cup of coffee, I would have a panic attack until it wore off,” says Ms. Bishop. “Vyvanse is a very long-acting stimulant, so that would be an entire day of an endless panic attack.”
In order for her to get a medical leave approved, Ms. Bishop needed to get documents by a certain date from her doctor’s office that confirmed her long COVID diagnosis. She was able to get a couple of extensions, but Bishop says that with the burden that has been placed on our medical systems, getting in to see a doctor through her employer insurance was taking much longer than expected. By the time she got an appointment, she says, she had already been fired for missing too much work. Emails she provided showing exchanges between her and her employer verify her story. And without her health insurance, her appointment through that provider would no longer have been covered.
In July 2021, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services issued guidance recognizing long COVID as a disability “if the person’s condition or any of its symptoms is a ‘physical or mental’ impairment that ‘substantially limits’ one or more major life activities.”
But getting access to disability benefits hasn’t been easy for people with long COVID. On top of having to be out of work for 12 months before being able to qualify for Social Security Disability Insurance, some of those who have applied say they have had to put up a fight to actually gain access to disability insurance. The Social Security Administration has yet to reveal just how many applications that cited long COVID have been denied so far.
David Barnett, a former bartender in the Seattle area in his early 40s, got COVID-19 in March 2020. Before his infection, he spent much of his time working on his feet, bodybuilding, and hiking with his partner. But for the last nearly 3 years, even just going for a walk has been a major challenge. He says he has spent much of his post-COVID life either chair-bound or bed-bound because of his symptoms.
He is currently on his partner’s health insurance plan but is still responsible for copays and out-of-network appointments and treatments. After being unable to bartend any more, he started a GoFundMe account and dug into his personal savings. He says he applied for food stamps and is getting ready to sell his truck. Mr. Barnett applied for disability in March of this year but says he was denied benefits by the Social Security Administration and has hired a lawyer to appeal.
He runs a 24-hour online support group on Zoom for people with long COVID and says that no one in his close circle has successfully gotten access to disability payments.
Alba Azola, MD, codirector of Johns Hopkins University’s Post-Acute COVID-19 Team, says at least half of her patients need some level of accommodations to get back to work; most can, if given the proper accommodations, such as switching to a job that can be done sitting down, or with limited time standing. But there are still patients who have been more severely disabled by their long COVID symptoms.
“Work is such a part of people’s identity. The people who are very impaired, all they want to do is to get back to work and their normal lives,” she says.
Many of Dr. Azola’s long COVID patients aren’t able to return to their original jobs. She says they often have to find new positions more tailored to their new realities. One patient, a nurse and mother of five who previously worked in a facility where she got COVID-19, was out of work for 9 months after her infection. She ultimately lost her job, and Dr. Azola says the patient’s employer was hesitant to provide her with any accommodations. The patient was finally able to find a different job as a nurse coordinator where she doesn’t have to be standing for more than 10 minutes at a time.
Ge Bai, PhD, a professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, says the novelty of long COVID and the continued uncertainty around it raise questions for health insurance providers.
“There’s no well-defined pathway to treat or cure this condition,” Dr. Bai says. “Right now, employers have discretion to determine when a condition is being covered or not being covered. So people with long COVID do have a risk that their treatments won’t be covered.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
It’s a devastating series of setbacks for long COVID patients. First, they get the debilitating symptoms of their condition. Then they are forced to give up their jobs, or severely curtail their work hours, as their symptoms linger. And next, for many, they lose their employer-sponsored health insurance.
While not all long COVID patients are debilitated, the CDC’s ongoing survey on long COVID found a quarter of adults with long COVID report it significantly affects their day-to-day living activities.
Estimates have shown that long COVID has disrupted the lives of anywhere from 16 million to 34 million Americans between the ages of 18 and 65.
While hard data is still limited, a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis found that more than half of adults with long COVID who worked before getting the virus are now either out of work or working fewer hours.
According to data from the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey, out of the estimated 16 million working-age adults who currently have long COVID, 2 million to 4 million of them are out of work because of their symptoms. The cost of those lost wages ranges from $170 billion a year to as much as $230 billion, the Census Bureau says. And given that approximately 155 million Americans have employer-sponsored health insurance, the welfare of working-age adults may be under serious threat.
“Millions of people are now impacted by long COVID, and oftentimes along with that comes the inability to work,” says Megan Cole Brahim, PhD, an assistant professor in the department of health law, policy, and management at Boston University and codirector of the school’s Medicaid policy lab. “And because a lot of people get their health insurance coverage through employer-sponsored coverage, no longer being able to work means you may not have access to the health insurance that you once had.”
The CDC defines long COVID as a wide array of health conditions, including malaise, fatigue, shortness of breath, mental health issues, problems with the part of the nervous system that controls body functions, and more.
Gwen Bishop was working remotely for the human resources department at the University of Washington Medical Centers, Seattle, when she got COVID-19. When the infection passed, Ms. Bishop, 39, thought she’d start feeling well enough to get back to work – but that didn’t happen.
“When I would log in to work and just try to read emails,” she says, “it was like they were written in Greek. It made no sense and was incredibly stressful.”
This falls in line with what researchers have found out about the nervous system issues reported by people with long COVID. People who have survived acute COVID infections have reported lasting sensory and motor function problems, brain fog, and memory problems.
Ms. Bishop, who was diagnosed with ADHD when she was in grade school, says another complication she got from her long COVID was a new intolerance to stimulants like coffee and her ADHD medication, Vyvanse, which were normal parts of her everyday life.
“Every time I would take my ADHD medicine or have a cup of coffee, I would have a panic attack until it wore off,” says Ms. Bishop. “Vyvanse is a very long-acting stimulant, so that would be an entire day of an endless panic attack.”
In order for her to get a medical leave approved, Ms. Bishop needed to get documents by a certain date from her doctor’s office that confirmed her long COVID diagnosis. She was able to get a couple of extensions, but Bishop says that with the burden that has been placed on our medical systems, getting in to see a doctor through her employer insurance was taking much longer than expected. By the time she got an appointment, she says, she had already been fired for missing too much work. Emails she provided showing exchanges between her and her employer verify her story. And without her health insurance, her appointment through that provider would no longer have been covered.
In July 2021, the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services issued guidance recognizing long COVID as a disability “if the person’s condition or any of its symptoms is a ‘physical or mental’ impairment that ‘substantially limits’ one or more major life activities.”
But getting access to disability benefits hasn’t been easy for people with long COVID. On top of having to be out of work for 12 months before being able to qualify for Social Security Disability Insurance, some of those who have applied say they have had to put up a fight to actually gain access to disability insurance. The Social Security Administration has yet to reveal just how many applications that cited long COVID have been denied so far.
David Barnett, a former bartender in the Seattle area in his early 40s, got COVID-19 in March 2020. Before his infection, he spent much of his time working on his feet, bodybuilding, and hiking with his partner. But for the last nearly 3 years, even just going for a walk has been a major challenge. He says he has spent much of his post-COVID life either chair-bound or bed-bound because of his symptoms.
He is currently on his partner’s health insurance plan but is still responsible for copays and out-of-network appointments and treatments. After being unable to bartend any more, he started a GoFundMe account and dug into his personal savings. He says he applied for food stamps and is getting ready to sell his truck. Mr. Barnett applied for disability in March of this year but says he was denied benefits by the Social Security Administration and has hired a lawyer to appeal.
He runs a 24-hour online support group on Zoom for people with long COVID and says that no one in his close circle has successfully gotten access to disability payments.
Alba Azola, MD, codirector of Johns Hopkins University’s Post-Acute COVID-19 Team, says at least half of her patients need some level of accommodations to get back to work; most can, if given the proper accommodations, such as switching to a job that can be done sitting down, or with limited time standing. But there are still patients who have been more severely disabled by their long COVID symptoms.
“Work is such a part of people’s identity. The people who are very impaired, all they want to do is to get back to work and their normal lives,” she says.
Many of Dr. Azola’s long COVID patients aren’t able to return to their original jobs. She says they often have to find new positions more tailored to their new realities. One patient, a nurse and mother of five who previously worked in a facility where she got COVID-19, was out of work for 9 months after her infection. She ultimately lost her job, and Dr. Azola says the patient’s employer was hesitant to provide her with any accommodations. The patient was finally able to find a different job as a nurse coordinator where she doesn’t have to be standing for more than 10 minutes at a time.
Ge Bai, PhD, a professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, says the novelty of long COVID and the continued uncertainty around it raise questions for health insurance providers.
“There’s no well-defined pathway to treat or cure this condition,” Dr. Bai says. “Right now, employers have discretion to determine when a condition is being covered or not being covered. So people with long COVID do have a risk that their treatments won’t be covered.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Dermatologists embrace low-dose oral minoxidil as hair loss adjunctive therapy
It’s not a new drug – it’s been available in topical form for hair loss since 1988 and was approved as an antihypertensive in 1979 – but
.The number of scholarly publications examining its use for hair loss has grown dramatically in the last 2 years: There were 2 in 2019, and that jumped to 17 in 2020 and 20 in 2021, with another 16 published so far this year, according to a PubMed search. An August article in The New York Times touting it as a potential cheap magic bullet is likely to drum up even more interest, said dermatologists.
The low-dose formulation is especially exciting for women, as there have been few great oral options for them, clinicians said.
Female hair loss “is devastating,” said Lily Talakoub, MD, adding that topical minoxidil (Rogaine), topical serums, and supplements “really do not provide the considerable growth that women really want to see.” Oral minoxidil is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for hair loss, but “it has been shown in studies to cause the hairs to grow,” and has become a “lifeline” for women, said Dr. Talakoub, a dermatologist who is in private practice in McLean, Va.
“For many years we haven’t had anything new to tell patients medically,” said Lynne J. Goldberg, MD, professor of dermatology and pathology at Boston University School of Medicine. “Now, all of the sudden there’s a cheap, widely available efficacious medicine. That’s huge for female-pattern hair loss,” said Dr. Goldberg, who is also the director of the Boston Medical Center’s Hair Clinic.
“I’ve been using oral minoxidil for about 4 years with great success,” said dermatologist Eva Simmons-O’Brien, MD, who is in private practice in Towson, Md. She has used it primarily in women, mainly because she sees more women than men for hair loss.
Dr. Simmons-O’Brien said the excitement about low-dose oral minoxidil follows an increasing recognition in the medical and scientific community that hair loss is more than just a cosmetic issue.
Mechanism not fully understood
When minoxidil was first brought to market as an antihypertensive, clinicians noted hair growth in “balding patients,” which led to the development of the topical form. Even though it has been used for hair growth for decades, its mechanism of action is not fully understood. It is known that minoxidil is a vasodilator; it may also increase DNA synthesis and enhance cell proliferation, according to a review published in 2019.
“The positive effect of minoxidil on hair growth is mainly due to its metabolite, minoxidil sulfate, and the enzyme responsible for this conversion is sulfotransferase, which is located in hair follicles and varies in production among individuals,” write the authors, all affiliated with Mahidol University in Bangkok, Thailand.
Writing in the American Academy of Dermatology’s Dermatology World Insights and Inquiries, Warren R. Heymann, MD, observed that “even after decades of use,” how minoxidil improves alopecia is still not completely understood. He noted that a 2020 review found that minoxidil’s vasodilatory effects “are propagated by upregulation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), increasing cutaneous blood flow with resultant increase in oxygen and growth factor delivery to the hair follicle.” The medication prolongs the anagen phase and shortens the telogen phase, added Dr. Heymann, head of dermatology at Rowan University, Camden, N.J.
As an antihypertensive, minoxidil is given at 5-40 mg daily. Those doses have produced serious side effects such as sodium and fluid retention, ischemic heart disease, pericardial effusion, and pulmonary hypertension, according to the Thai researchers.
Those side effects have appeared to be rare with low-dose oral minoxidil. However, in JAAD Case Reports, South African researchers reported a case in which low-dose oral minoxidil may have led to cardiac side effects. A healthy 40-year-old woman, who after 3 weeks of treatment with 5% topical minoxidil, tacrolimus ointment 0.1%, clobetasol propionate ointment, 100 mg of doxycycline twice daily, and 0.25 mg of oral minoxidil daily, was hospitalized with full-body edema. An ultrasound showed fluid collections in the pericardium, pleural space, and abdomen. She also had a pleural effusion. The patient was given 40 mg of intravenous furosemide daily for 4 days, and the edema resolved.
“Having excluded other causes of pericardial effusion and anasarca in the previously healthy, young woman, we concluded that LDOM [low-dose oral minoxidil] was responsible for her clinical presentation,” write the authors.
A review of 17 studies published on-line in 2020 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology found low-dose minoxidil to be safe and effective. Androgenetic alopecia was the most commonly studied, with doses of 0.25-1.25 mg proving to be effective and safe. It was also safe and effective for female-pattern hair loss, traction alopecia, chronic telogen effluvium, lichen planopilaris, alopecia areata, and permanent chemotherapy-induced alopecia.
The most common adverse effect was hypertrichosis. Other adverse events included postural hypotension and dizziness, lower-limb edema, and mild blood pressure changes.
In another multicenter, 1,404-patient safety study published in 2021 in JAAD, the authors found that hypertrichosis was the most frequent adverse event, reported by 15% of patients. Systemic adverse events included lightheadedness (1.7% of patients), fluid retention (1.3%), tachycardia (0.9%), headache (0.4%), periorbital edema (0.3%), and insomnia (0.2%). Only 29 patients (1.2%) withdrew because of these side effects.
“It definitely helps, and it’s relatively safe,” said Adam Friedman, MD, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University in Washington. “But I wouldn’t want to call it a game-changer,” he said, adding that it works best when used in combination with other therapies. He often uses it with a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor – finasteride (Propecia) or dutasteride (Avodart) – “rather than as a monotherapy,” said Dr. Friedman.
From Australia to around the globe
The first publication on low-dose oral minoxidil for hair loss was in December 2017. The pilot study in female-pattern hair loss was published in the International Journal of Dermatology by Rodney Sinclair, MBBS, MD, a Melbourne, Australia–based dermatologist.
Amy McMichael, MD, professor of dermatology at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., said she first heard Dr. Sinclair present his findings at an alopecia research meeting in Japan shortly before his initial publication.
“After that, I think all of us said, ‘Huh, this is interesting, and let’s try it, because we’re always looking for something more to help our patients,’” Dr. McMichael said, adding that she’s been prescribing low-dose minoxidil to her patients for 5 years.
She and colleagues at Wake Forest, along with Jerry Cooley, MD, a dermatologist in private practice in Charlotte, published a retrospective case series in March, looking at 105 adult patients – 80 women (ages 24-80) and 25 men (ages 19-63) – who were treated for androgenetic alopecia and/or telogen effluvium with oral minoxidil (dose range of 0.625–2.5 mg) once daily for a year, matched to 105 case controls.
Efficacy was based on the clinician’s assessment of clinical response and clinical photographic evaluation using a 3-point scale (worsening, stabilization, and improvement). Half of those treated demonstrated clinical improvement and 43% demonstrated stabilization. There was a significant difference (P < .001) in clinical response between those who received minoxidil and the controls.
Ideal patients?
Given its ease of use and low cost – $4-$12 for a 30-day supply of 2.5 mg tablets, according to GoodRX – low-dose minoxidil is a good fit for many patients, said dermatologists.
The best candidate is “a woman who’s perimenopausal or menopausal who’s got what we would say is moderate to severe loss of hair that’s kind of just starting,” said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien. The medication is not likely to grow hair where there is scarring already, however, she said.
“I tend to use it in people who either don’t want to do the topical minoxidil or have used it and have a lot of potential side effects from it,” like itching and irritation, said Dr. McMichael. She said oral minoxidil can also be helpful as an adjunct in patients with alopecia areata and that it can be used after anti-inflammatory treatments in central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia.
Dr. Goldberg said low-dose minoxidil would not be her first choice for female-pattern hair loss but that it’s “a great alternative” for people who can’t tolerate the topical form. Most of the women she has prescribed it to “have been pretty happy,” she added.
“I would be a little cautious in patients on a number of other medications,” Dr. Goldberg said, noting minoxidil’s potential systemic side effects.
Clinicians said they generally consult with a patient’s internist when they are starting them on oral minoxidil. “I always want to touch base with the primary care physician first,” said Dr. Friedman.
“If they’re on oral antihypertensive medications already, then I would ask them to talk to either their primary care physician or their cardiologist to make sure it’s okay to give this low dose,” said Dr. McMichael.
At the low doses, minoxidil rarely has any blood pressure–lowering effects, dermatologists said.
Women are usually started on 1.25 mg, while men can start at a higher, 2.5-mg dose, said clinicians.
Dr. Goldberg and Dr. Simmons-O’Brien said that recent additional warnings for finasteride about sexual side effects and the potential for suicide have changed the way they approach its use in young men, and that it has highlighted the potential for oral minoxidil as an alternative.
Oral minoxidil is rarely used as a monotherapy. “It takes a village” to address hair loss, said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien, noting that she likes to evaluate nutrition, vitamin D levels, and whether a patient is anemic or has thyroid disease when determining a course of action.
Dermatologists said they use oral minoxidil in combination with spironolactone, topical minoxidil, finasteride, or dutasteride. If patients are already on antihypertensives or at risk for excessive blood pressure–lowering effects of a combination that includes spironolactone, the dermatologists said again they will consult with a patient’s primary care physician first.
For women, the main limiting factor with oral minoxidil may be unwanted hair growth, usually on the face. Most of the clinicians interviewed for this story said they did not use spironolactone to counteract that hypertrichosis.
Dr. McMichael said she cautions African American women or women of African descent – who tend to have more body hair at baseline – that they should be aware of the potential for excess hair growth associated with low-dose minoxidil. She and other dermatologists interviewed for this story said they urge patients who are bothered by the excess hair to shave or wax or use other nonpharmacologic approaches.
The excess hair growth is less bothersome for men, they said.
Not a magic wand
Despite the increased profile and interest, oral minoxidil is not a cure-all, clinicians said.
“It’s important for patients to realize that hair loss can be complicated and there is no one magic wand,” said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien. Clinicians typically “are using several things to help encourage these follicular units to not miniaturize and disappear and create scars,” she said.
Dr. Friedman said he finds that patients have a hard time hearing that to continue to maintain growth, they have to take a medication for the rest of their life. “If you stop, you will have to start again,” he said.
Oral minoxidil, when used in combination with other therapies, will improve hair growth, said Dr. Goldberg. But it will not take someone back a decade, she said. “I try to temper expectations – promise a little and achieve more,” Dr. Goldberg said.
The study was independently supported. Dr. Smith and Dr. Jones report no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Simmons-O’Brien reports that she has received speaking fees from Isdin. Dr. McMichael disclosed relationships with Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Nutrafol, Revian, and UCB Pharma. Dr. Friedman, Dr. Goldberg, and Dr. Talakoub reported no disclosures.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
It’s not a new drug – it’s been available in topical form for hair loss since 1988 and was approved as an antihypertensive in 1979 – but
.The number of scholarly publications examining its use for hair loss has grown dramatically in the last 2 years: There were 2 in 2019, and that jumped to 17 in 2020 and 20 in 2021, with another 16 published so far this year, according to a PubMed search. An August article in The New York Times touting it as a potential cheap magic bullet is likely to drum up even more interest, said dermatologists.
The low-dose formulation is especially exciting for women, as there have been few great oral options for them, clinicians said.
Female hair loss “is devastating,” said Lily Talakoub, MD, adding that topical minoxidil (Rogaine), topical serums, and supplements “really do not provide the considerable growth that women really want to see.” Oral minoxidil is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for hair loss, but “it has been shown in studies to cause the hairs to grow,” and has become a “lifeline” for women, said Dr. Talakoub, a dermatologist who is in private practice in McLean, Va.
“For many years we haven’t had anything new to tell patients medically,” said Lynne J. Goldberg, MD, professor of dermatology and pathology at Boston University School of Medicine. “Now, all of the sudden there’s a cheap, widely available efficacious medicine. That’s huge for female-pattern hair loss,” said Dr. Goldberg, who is also the director of the Boston Medical Center’s Hair Clinic.
“I’ve been using oral minoxidil for about 4 years with great success,” said dermatologist Eva Simmons-O’Brien, MD, who is in private practice in Towson, Md. She has used it primarily in women, mainly because she sees more women than men for hair loss.
Dr. Simmons-O’Brien said the excitement about low-dose oral minoxidil follows an increasing recognition in the medical and scientific community that hair loss is more than just a cosmetic issue.
Mechanism not fully understood
When minoxidil was first brought to market as an antihypertensive, clinicians noted hair growth in “balding patients,” which led to the development of the topical form. Even though it has been used for hair growth for decades, its mechanism of action is not fully understood. It is known that minoxidil is a vasodilator; it may also increase DNA synthesis and enhance cell proliferation, according to a review published in 2019.
“The positive effect of minoxidil on hair growth is mainly due to its metabolite, minoxidil sulfate, and the enzyme responsible for this conversion is sulfotransferase, which is located in hair follicles and varies in production among individuals,” write the authors, all affiliated with Mahidol University in Bangkok, Thailand.
Writing in the American Academy of Dermatology’s Dermatology World Insights and Inquiries, Warren R. Heymann, MD, observed that “even after decades of use,” how minoxidil improves alopecia is still not completely understood. He noted that a 2020 review found that minoxidil’s vasodilatory effects “are propagated by upregulation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), increasing cutaneous blood flow with resultant increase in oxygen and growth factor delivery to the hair follicle.” The medication prolongs the anagen phase and shortens the telogen phase, added Dr. Heymann, head of dermatology at Rowan University, Camden, N.J.
As an antihypertensive, minoxidil is given at 5-40 mg daily. Those doses have produced serious side effects such as sodium and fluid retention, ischemic heart disease, pericardial effusion, and pulmonary hypertension, according to the Thai researchers.
Those side effects have appeared to be rare with low-dose oral minoxidil. However, in JAAD Case Reports, South African researchers reported a case in which low-dose oral minoxidil may have led to cardiac side effects. A healthy 40-year-old woman, who after 3 weeks of treatment with 5% topical minoxidil, tacrolimus ointment 0.1%, clobetasol propionate ointment, 100 mg of doxycycline twice daily, and 0.25 mg of oral minoxidil daily, was hospitalized with full-body edema. An ultrasound showed fluid collections in the pericardium, pleural space, and abdomen. She also had a pleural effusion. The patient was given 40 mg of intravenous furosemide daily for 4 days, and the edema resolved.
“Having excluded other causes of pericardial effusion and anasarca in the previously healthy, young woman, we concluded that LDOM [low-dose oral minoxidil] was responsible for her clinical presentation,” write the authors.
A review of 17 studies published on-line in 2020 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology found low-dose minoxidil to be safe and effective. Androgenetic alopecia was the most commonly studied, with doses of 0.25-1.25 mg proving to be effective and safe. It was also safe and effective for female-pattern hair loss, traction alopecia, chronic telogen effluvium, lichen planopilaris, alopecia areata, and permanent chemotherapy-induced alopecia.
The most common adverse effect was hypertrichosis. Other adverse events included postural hypotension and dizziness, lower-limb edema, and mild blood pressure changes.
In another multicenter, 1,404-patient safety study published in 2021 in JAAD, the authors found that hypertrichosis was the most frequent adverse event, reported by 15% of patients. Systemic adverse events included lightheadedness (1.7% of patients), fluid retention (1.3%), tachycardia (0.9%), headache (0.4%), periorbital edema (0.3%), and insomnia (0.2%). Only 29 patients (1.2%) withdrew because of these side effects.
“It definitely helps, and it’s relatively safe,” said Adam Friedman, MD, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University in Washington. “But I wouldn’t want to call it a game-changer,” he said, adding that it works best when used in combination with other therapies. He often uses it with a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor – finasteride (Propecia) or dutasteride (Avodart) – “rather than as a monotherapy,” said Dr. Friedman.
From Australia to around the globe
The first publication on low-dose oral minoxidil for hair loss was in December 2017. The pilot study in female-pattern hair loss was published in the International Journal of Dermatology by Rodney Sinclair, MBBS, MD, a Melbourne, Australia–based dermatologist.
Amy McMichael, MD, professor of dermatology at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., said she first heard Dr. Sinclair present his findings at an alopecia research meeting in Japan shortly before his initial publication.
“After that, I think all of us said, ‘Huh, this is interesting, and let’s try it, because we’re always looking for something more to help our patients,’” Dr. McMichael said, adding that she’s been prescribing low-dose minoxidil to her patients for 5 years.
She and colleagues at Wake Forest, along with Jerry Cooley, MD, a dermatologist in private practice in Charlotte, published a retrospective case series in March, looking at 105 adult patients – 80 women (ages 24-80) and 25 men (ages 19-63) – who were treated for androgenetic alopecia and/or telogen effluvium with oral minoxidil (dose range of 0.625–2.5 mg) once daily for a year, matched to 105 case controls.
Efficacy was based on the clinician’s assessment of clinical response and clinical photographic evaluation using a 3-point scale (worsening, stabilization, and improvement). Half of those treated demonstrated clinical improvement and 43% demonstrated stabilization. There was a significant difference (P < .001) in clinical response between those who received minoxidil and the controls.
Ideal patients?
Given its ease of use and low cost – $4-$12 for a 30-day supply of 2.5 mg tablets, according to GoodRX – low-dose minoxidil is a good fit for many patients, said dermatologists.
The best candidate is “a woman who’s perimenopausal or menopausal who’s got what we would say is moderate to severe loss of hair that’s kind of just starting,” said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien. The medication is not likely to grow hair where there is scarring already, however, she said.
“I tend to use it in people who either don’t want to do the topical minoxidil or have used it and have a lot of potential side effects from it,” like itching and irritation, said Dr. McMichael. She said oral minoxidil can also be helpful as an adjunct in patients with alopecia areata and that it can be used after anti-inflammatory treatments in central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia.
Dr. Goldberg said low-dose minoxidil would not be her first choice for female-pattern hair loss but that it’s “a great alternative” for people who can’t tolerate the topical form. Most of the women she has prescribed it to “have been pretty happy,” she added.
“I would be a little cautious in patients on a number of other medications,” Dr. Goldberg said, noting minoxidil’s potential systemic side effects.
Clinicians said they generally consult with a patient’s internist when they are starting them on oral minoxidil. “I always want to touch base with the primary care physician first,” said Dr. Friedman.
“If they’re on oral antihypertensive medications already, then I would ask them to talk to either their primary care physician or their cardiologist to make sure it’s okay to give this low dose,” said Dr. McMichael.
At the low doses, minoxidil rarely has any blood pressure–lowering effects, dermatologists said.
Women are usually started on 1.25 mg, while men can start at a higher, 2.5-mg dose, said clinicians.
Dr. Goldberg and Dr. Simmons-O’Brien said that recent additional warnings for finasteride about sexual side effects and the potential for suicide have changed the way they approach its use in young men, and that it has highlighted the potential for oral minoxidil as an alternative.
Oral minoxidil is rarely used as a monotherapy. “It takes a village” to address hair loss, said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien, noting that she likes to evaluate nutrition, vitamin D levels, and whether a patient is anemic or has thyroid disease when determining a course of action.
Dermatologists said they use oral minoxidil in combination with spironolactone, topical minoxidil, finasteride, or dutasteride. If patients are already on antihypertensives or at risk for excessive blood pressure–lowering effects of a combination that includes spironolactone, the dermatologists said again they will consult with a patient’s primary care physician first.
For women, the main limiting factor with oral minoxidil may be unwanted hair growth, usually on the face. Most of the clinicians interviewed for this story said they did not use spironolactone to counteract that hypertrichosis.
Dr. McMichael said she cautions African American women or women of African descent – who tend to have more body hair at baseline – that they should be aware of the potential for excess hair growth associated with low-dose minoxidil. She and other dermatologists interviewed for this story said they urge patients who are bothered by the excess hair to shave or wax or use other nonpharmacologic approaches.
The excess hair growth is less bothersome for men, they said.
Not a magic wand
Despite the increased profile and interest, oral minoxidil is not a cure-all, clinicians said.
“It’s important for patients to realize that hair loss can be complicated and there is no one magic wand,” said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien. Clinicians typically “are using several things to help encourage these follicular units to not miniaturize and disappear and create scars,” she said.
Dr. Friedman said he finds that patients have a hard time hearing that to continue to maintain growth, they have to take a medication for the rest of their life. “If you stop, you will have to start again,” he said.
Oral minoxidil, when used in combination with other therapies, will improve hair growth, said Dr. Goldberg. But it will not take someone back a decade, she said. “I try to temper expectations – promise a little and achieve more,” Dr. Goldberg said.
The study was independently supported. Dr. Smith and Dr. Jones report no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Simmons-O’Brien reports that she has received speaking fees from Isdin. Dr. McMichael disclosed relationships with Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Nutrafol, Revian, and UCB Pharma. Dr. Friedman, Dr. Goldberg, and Dr. Talakoub reported no disclosures.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
It’s not a new drug – it’s been available in topical form for hair loss since 1988 and was approved as an antihypertensive in 1979 – but
.The number of scholarly publications examining its use for hair loss has grown dramatically in the last 2 years: There were 2 in 2019, and that jumped to 17 in 2020 and 20 in 2021, with another 16 published so far this year, according to a PubMed search. An August article in The New York Times touting it as a potential cheap magic bullet is likely to drum up even more interest, said dermatologists.
The low-dose formulation is especially exciting for women, as there have been few great oral options for them, clinicians said.
Female hair loss “is devastating,” said Lily Talakoub, MD, adding that topical minoxidil (Rogaine), topical serums, and supplements “really do not provide the considerable growth that women really want to see.” Oral minoxidil is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for hair loss, but “it has been shown in studies to cause the hairs to grow,” and has become a “lifeline” for women, said Dr. Talakoub, a dermatologist who is in private practice in McLean, Va.
“For many years we haven’t had anything new to tell patients medically,” said Lynne J. Goldberg, MD, professor of dermatology and pathology at Boston University School of Medicine. “Now, all of the sudden there’s a cheap, widely available efficacious medicine. That’s huge for female-pattern hair loss,” said Dr. Goldberg, who is also the director of the Boston Medical Center’s Hair Clinic.
“I’ve been using oral minoxidil for about 4 years with great success,” said dermatologist Eva Simmons-O’Brien, MD, who is in private practice in Towson, Md. She has used it primarily in women, mainly because she sees more women than men for hair loss.
Dr. Simmons-O’Brien said the excitement about low-dose oral minoxidil follows an increasing recognition in the medical and scientific community that hair loss is more than just a cosmetic issue.
Mechanism not fully understood
When minoxidil was first brought to market as an antihypertensive, clinicians noted hair growth in “balding patients,” which led to the development of the topical form. Even though it has been used for hair growth for decades, its mechanism of action is not fully understood. It is known that minoxidil is a vasodilator; it may also increase DNA synthesis and enhance cell proliferation, according to a review published in 2019.
“The positive effect of minoxidil on hair growth is mainly due to its metabolite, minoxidil sulfate, and the enzyme responsible for this conversion is sulfotransferase, which is located in hair follicles and varies in production among individuals,” write the authors, all affiliated with Mahidol University in Bangkok, Thailand.
Writing in the American Academy of Dermatology’s Dermatology World Insights and Inquiries, Warren R. Heymann, MD, observed that “even after decades of use,” how minoxidil improves alopecia is still not completely understood. He noted that a 2020 review found that minoxidil’s vasodilatory effects “are propagated by upregulation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), increasing cutaneous blood flow with resultant increase in oxygen and growth factor delivery to the hair follicle.” The medication prolongs the anagen phase and shortens the telogen phase, added Dr. Heymann, head of dermatology at Rowan University, Camden, N.J.
As an antihypertensive, minoxidil is given at 5-40 mg daily. Those doses have produced serious side effects such as sodium and fluid retention, ischemic heart disease, pericardial effusion, and pulmonary hypertension, according to the Thai researchers.
Those side effects have appeared to be rare with low-dose oral minoxidil. However, in JAAD Case Reports, South African researchers reported a case in which low-dose oral minoxidil may have led to cardiac side effects. A healthy 40-year-old woman, who after 3 weeks of treatment with 5% topical minoxidil, tacrolimus ointment 0.1%, clobetasol propionate ointment, 100 mg of doxycycline twice daily, and 0.25 mg of oral minoxidil daily, was hospitalized with full-body edema. An ultrasound showed fluid collections in the pericardium, pleural space, and abdomen. She also had a pleural effusion. The patient was given 40 mg of intravenous furosemide daily for 4 days, and the edema resolved.
“Having excluded other causes of pericardial effusion and anasarca in the previously healthy, young woman, we concluded that LDOM [low-dose oral minoxidil] was responsible for her clinical presentation,” write the authors.
A review of 17 studies published on-line in 2020 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology found low-dose minoxidil to be safe and effective. Androgenetic alopecia was the most commonly studied, with doses of 0.25-1.25 mg proving to be effective and safe. It was also safe and effective for female-pattern hair loss, traction alopecia, chronic telogen effluvium, lichen planopilaris, alopecia areata, and permanent chemotherapy-induced alopecia.
The most common adverse effect was hypertrichosis. Other adverse events included postural hypotension and dizziness, lower-limb edema, and mild blood pressure changes.
In another multicenter, 1,404-patient safety study published in 2021 in JAAD, the authors found that hypertrichosis was the most frequent adverse event, reported by 15% of patients. Systemic adverse events included lightheadedness (1.7% of patients), fluid retention (1.3%), tachycardia (0.9%), headache (0.4%), periorbital edema (0.3%), and insomnia (0.2%). Only 29 patients (1.2%) withdrew because of these side effects.
“It definitely helps, and it’s relatively safe,” said Adam Friedman, MD, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University in Washington. “But I wouldn’t want to call it a game-changer,” he said, adding that it works best when used in combination with other therapies. He often uses it with a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor – finasteride (Propecia) or dutasteride (Avodart) – “rather than as a monotherapy,” said Dr. Friedman.
From Australia to around the globe
The first publication on low-dose oral minoxidil for hair loss was in December 2017. The pilot study in female-pattern hair loss was published in the International Journal of Dermatology by Rodney Sinclair, MBBS, MD, a Melbourne, Australia–based dermatologist.
Amy McMichael, MD, professor of dermatology at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., said she first heard Dr. Sinclair present his findings at an alopecia research meeting in Japan shortly before his initial publication.
“After that, I think all of us said, ‘Huh, this is interesting, and let’s try it, because we’re always looking for something more to help our patients,’” Dr. McMichael said, adding that she’s been prescribing low-dose minoxidil to her patients for 5 years.
She and colleagues at Wake Forest, along with Jerry Cooley, MD, a dermatologist in private practice in Charlotte, published a retrospective case series in March, looking at 105 adult patients – 80 women (ages 24-80) and 25 men (ages 19-63) – who were treated for androgenetic alopecia and/or telogen effluvium with oral minoxidil (dose range of 0.625–2.5 mg) once daily for a year, matched to 105 case controls.
Efficacy was based on the clinician’s assessment of clinical response and clinical photographic evaluation using a 3-point scale (worsening, stabilization, and improvement). Half of those treated demonstrated clinical improvement and 43% demonstrated stabilization. There was a significant difference (P < .001) in clinical response between those who received minoxidil and the controls.
Ideal patients?
Given its ease of use and low cost – $4-$12 for a 30-day supply of 2.5 mg tablets, according to GoodRX – low-dose minoxidil is a good fit for many patients, said dermatologists.
The best candidate is “a woman who’s perimenopausal or menopausal who’s got what we would say is moderate to severe loss of hair that’s kind of just starting,” said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien. The medication is not likely to grow hair where there is scarring already, however, she said.
“I tend to use it in people who either don’t want to do the topical minoxidil or have used it and have a lot of potential side effects from it,” like itching and irritation, said Dr. McMichael. She said oral minoxidil can also be helpful as an adjunct in patients with alopecia areata and that it can be used after anti-inflammatory treatments in central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia.
Dr. Goldberg said low-dose minoxidil would not be her first choice for female-pattern hair loss but that it’s “a great alternative” for people who can’t tolerate the topical form. Most of the women she has prescribed it to “have been pretty happy,” she added.
“I would be a little cautious in patients on a number of other medications,” Dr. Goldberg said, noting minoxidil’s potential systemic side effects.
Clinicians said they generally consult with a patient’s internist when they are starting them on oral minoxidil. “I always want to touch base with the primary care physician first,” said Dr. Friedman.
“If they’re on oral antihypertensive medications already, then I would ask them to talk to either their primary care physician or their cardiologist to make sure it’s okay to give this low dose,” said Dr. McMichael.
At the low doses, minoxidil rarely has any blood pressure–lowering effects, dermatologists said.
Women are usually started on 1.25 mg, while men can start at a higher, 2.5-mg dose, said clinicians.
Dr. Goldberg and Dr. Simmons-O’Brien said that recent additional warnings for finasteride about sexual side effects and the potential for suicide have changed the way they approach its use in young men, and that it has highlighted the potential for oral minoxidil as an alternative.
Oral minoxidil is rarely used as a monotherapy. “It takes a village” to address hair loss, said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien, noting that she likes to evaluate nutrition, vitamin D levels, and whether a patient is anemic or has thyroid disease when determining a course of action.
Dermatologists said they use oral minoxidil in combination with spironolactone, topical minoxidil, finasteride, or dutasteride. If patients are already on antihypertensives or at risk for excessive blood pressure–lowering effects of a combination that includes spironolactone, the dermatologists said again they will consult with a patient’s primary care physician first.
For women, the main limiting factor with oral minoxidil may be unwanted hair growth, usually on the face. Most of the clinicians interviewed for this story said they did not use spironolactone to counteract that hypertrichosis.
Dr. McMichael said she cautions African American women or women of African descent – who tend to have more body hair at baseline – that they should be aware of the potential for excess hair growth associated with low-dose minoxidil. She and other dermatologists interviewed for this story said they urge patients who are bothered by the excess hair to shave or wax or use other nonpharmacologic approaches.
The excess hair growth is less bothersome for men, they said.
Not a magic wand
Despite the increased profile and interest, oral minoxidil is not a cure-all, clinicians said.
“It’s important for patients to realize that hair loss can be complicated and there is no one magic wand,” said Dr. Simmons-O’Brien. Clinicians typically “are using several things to help encourage these follicular units to not miniaturize and disappear and create scars,” she said.
Dr. Friedman said he finds that patients have a hard time hearing that to continue to maintain growth, they have to take a medication for the rest of their life. “If you stop, you will have to start again,” he said.
Oral minoxidil, when used in combination with other therapies, will improve hair growth, said Dr. Goldberg. But it will not take someone back a decade, she said. “I try to temper expectations – promise a little and achieve more,” Dr. Goldberg said.
The study was independently supported. Dr. Smith and Dr. Jones report no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Simmons-O’Brien reports that she has received speaking fees from Isdin. Dr. McMichael disclosed relationships with Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Nutrafol, Revian, and UCB Pharma. Dr. Friedman, Dr. Goldberg, and Dr. Talakoub reported no disclosures.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FDA approves self-administered, SubQ furosemide preparation
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a furosemide preparation (Furoscix, scPharmaceuticals) intended for subcutaneous self-administration by outpatients with chronic heart failure and volume overload, the company has announced.
The product is indicated for use with a SmartDose On-Body Infuser (West Pharmaceutical Services) single-use subcutaneous administration device, which affixes to the abdomen.
The infuser is loaded by the patient or caregiver with a prefilled cartridge and is programmed to deliver Furoscix 30 mg over 1 hour followed by a 4-hour infusion at 12.5 mg/h, for a total fixed dose of 80 mg, scPharmaceuticals said in a press release on the drug approval.
Furosemide, a loop diuretic and one of the world’s most frequently used drugs, is conventionally given intravenously in the hospital or orally on an outpatient basis.
The company describes its furosemide preparation, used with the infuser, as “the first and only FDA-approved subcutaneous loop diuretic that delivers [intravenous]-equivalent diuresis at home.” It has been shown to “produce similar diuresis and natriuresis compared to intravenous furosemide.”
“This marks a tremendous opportunity to improve the at-home management of worsening congestion in patients with heart failure who display reduced responsiveness to oral diuretics and require administration of [intravenous] diuretics, which typically requires admission to the hospital,” William T. Abraham, MD, said in the press release.
The FDA approval “is significant and will allow patients to be treated outside of the hospital setting,” said Dr. Abraham, of Ohio State University, Columbus, and an scPharmaceuticals board member.
The Furoscix indication doesn’t cover emergent use or use in acute pulmonary edema, nor is it meant to be used chronically “and should be replaced with oral diuretics as soon as practical,” the company states.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a furosemide preparation (Furoscix, scPharmaceuticals) intended for subcutaneous self-administration by outpatients with chronic heart failure and volume overload, the company has announced.
The product is indicated for use with a SmartDose On-Body Infuser (West Pharmaceutical Services) single-use subcutaneous administration device, which affixes to the abdomen.
The infuser is loaded by the patient or caregiver with a prefilled cartridge and is programmed to deliver Furoscix 30 mg over 1 hour followed by a 4-hour infusion at 12.5 mg/h, for a total fixed dose of 80 mg, scPharmaceuticals said in a press release on the drug approval.
Furosemide, a loop diuretic and one of the world’s most frequently used drugs, is conventionally given intravenously in the hospital or orally on an outpatient basis.
The company describes its furosemide preparation, used with the infuser, as “the first and only FDA-approved subcutaneous loop diuretic that delivers [intravenous]-equivalent diuresis at home.” It has been shown to “produce similar diuresis and natriuresis compared to intravenous furosemide.”
“This marks a tremendous opportunity to improve the at-home management of worsening congestion in patients with heart failure who display reduced responsiveness to oral diuretics and require administration of [intravenous] diuretics, which typically requires admission to the hospital,” William T. Abraham, MD, said in the press release.
The FDA approval “is significant and will allow patients to be treated outside of the hospital setting,” said Dr. Abraham, of Ohio State University, Columbus, and an scPharmaceuticals board member.
The Furoscix indication doesn’t cover emergent use or use in acute pulmonary edema, nor is it meant to be used chronically “and should be replaced with oral diuretics as soon as practical,” the company states.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a furosemide preparation (Furoscix, scPharmaceuticals) intended for subcutaneous self-administration by outpatients with chronic heart failure and volume overload, the company has announced.
The product is indicated for use with a SmartDose On-Body Infuser (West Pharmaceutical Services) single-use subcutaneous administration device, which affixes to the abdomen.
The infuser is loaded by the patient or caregiver with a prefilled cartridge and is programmed to deliver Furoscix 30 mg over 1 hour followed by a 4-hour infusion at 12.5 mg/h, for a total fixed dose of 80 mg, scPharmaceuticals said in a press release on the drug approval.
Furosemide, a loop diuretic and one of the world’s most frequently used drugs, is conventionally given intravenously in the hospital or orally on an outpatient basis.
The company describes its furosemide preparation, used with the infuser, as “the first and only FDA-approved subcutaneous loop diuretic that delivers [intravenous]-equivalent diuresis at home.” It has been shown to “produce similar diuresis and natriuresis compared to intravenous furosemide.”
“This marks a tremendous opportunity to improve the at-home management of worsening congestion in patients with heart failure who display reduced responsiveness to oral diuretics and require administration of [intravenous] diuretics, which typically requires admission to the hospital,” William T. Abraham, MD, said in the press release.
The FDA approval “is significant and will allow patients to be treated outside of the hospital setting,” said Dr. Abraham, of Ohio State University, Columbus, and an scPharmaceuticals board member.
The Furoscix indication doesn’t cover emergent use or use in acute pulmonary edema, nor is it meant to be used chronically “and should be replaced with oral diuretics as soon as practical,” the company states.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Loan forgiveness and med school debt: What about me?
This transcript has been edited for clarity.
Hi. I’m Art Caplan. I run the division of medical ethics at New York University Grossman School of Medicine.
Many of you know that President Biden created a loan forgiveness program, forgiving up to $10,000 against federal student loans, including graduate and undergraduate education. The Department of Education is supposed to provide up to $20,000 in debt cancellation to Pell Grant recipients who have loans that are held by the Department of Education. Borrowers can get this relief if their income is less than $125,000 for an individual or $250,000 for married couples.
Many people have looked at this and said, “Hey, wait a minute. I paid off my loans. I didn’t get any reimbursement. That isn’t fair.”
who often still have huge amounts of debt, and either because of the income limits or because they don’t qualify because this debt was accrued long in the past, they’re saying, “What about me? Don’t you want to give any relief to me?”
This is a topic near and dear to my heart because I happen to be at a medical school, NYU, that has decided for the two medical schools it runs – our main campus, NYU in Manhattan and NYU Langone out on Long Island – that we’re going to go tuition free. We’ve done it for a couple of years.
We did it because I think all the administrators and faculty understood the tremendous burden that debt poses on people who both carry forward their undergraduate debt and then have medical school debt. This really leads to very difficult situations – which we have great empathy for – about what specialty you’re going to go into, whether you have to moonlight, and how you’re going to manage a huge burden of debt.
Many people don’t have sympathy out in the public. They say doctors make a large amount of money and they live a nice lifestyle, so we’re not going to relieve their debt. The reality is that, whoever you are, short of Bill Gates or Elon Musk, having hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt is no easy task to live with and to work off.
Still, when we created free tuition at NYU for our medical school, there were many people who paid high tuition fees in the past. Some of them said to us, “What about me?” We decided not to try to do anything retrospectively. The plan was to build up enough money so that we could handle no-cost tuition going forward. We didn’t really have it in our pocketbook to help people who’d already paid their debts or were saddled with NYU debt. Is it fair? No, it’s probably not fair, but it’s an improvement.
That’s what I want people to think about who are saying, “What about my medical school debt? What about my undergraduate plus medical school debt?” I think we should be grateful when efforts are being made to reduce very burdensome student loans that people have. It’s good to give that benefit and move it forward.
Does that mean no one should get anything unless everyone with any kind of debt from school is covered? I don’t think so. I don’t think that’s fair either.
It is possible that we could continue to agitate politically and say, let’s go after some of the health care debt. Let’s go after some of the things that are still driving people to have to work more than they would or to choose specialties that they really don’t want to be in because they have to make up that debt.
It doesn’t mean the last word has been said about the politics of debt relief or, for that matter, the price of going to medical school in the first place and trying to see whether that can be driven down.
I don’t think it’s right to say, “If I can’t benefit, given the huge burden that I’m carrying, then I’m not going to try to give relief to others.” I think we’re relieving debt to the extent that we can do it. The nation can afford it. Going forward is a good thing. It’s wrong to create those gigantic debts in the first place.
What are we going to do about the past? We may decide that we need some sort of forgiveness or reparations for loans that were built up for others going backwards. I wouldn’t hold hostage the future and our children to what was probably a very poor, unethical practice about saddling doctors and others in the past with huge debt.
I’m Art Caplan at the division of medical ethics at New York University Grossman School of Medicine. Thank you for watching.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
This transcript has been edited for clarity.
Hi. I’m Art Caplan. I run the division of medical ethics at New York University Grossman School of Medicine.
Many of you know that President Biden created a loan forgiveness program, forgiving up to $10,000 against federal student loans, including graduate and undergraduate education. The Department of Education is supposed to provide up to $20,000 in debt cancellation to Pell Grant recipients who have loans that are held by the Department of Education. Borrowers can get this relief if their income is less than $125,000 for an individual or $250,000 for married couples.
Many people have looked at this and said, “Hey, wait a minute. I paid off my loans. I didn’t get any reimbursement. That isn’t fair.”
who often still have huge amounts of debt, and either because of the income limits or because they don’t qualify because this debt was accrued long in the past, they’re saying, “What about me? Don’t you want to give any relief to me?”
This is a topic near and dear to my heart because I happen to be at a medical school, NYU, that has decided for the two medical schools it runs – our main campus, NYU in Manhattan and NYU Langone out on Long Island – that we’re going to go tuition free. We’ve done it for a couple of years.
We did it because I think all the administrators and faculty understood the tremendous burden that debt poses on people who both carry forward their undergraduate debt and then have medical school debt. This really leads to very difficult situations – which we have great empathy for – about what specialty you’re going to go into, whether you have to moonlight, and how you’re going to manage a huge burden of debt.
Many people don’t have sympathy out in the public. They say doctors make a large amount of money and they live a nice lifestyle, so we’re not going to relieve their debt. The reality is that, whoever you are, short of Bill Gates or Elon Musk, having hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt is no easy task to live with and to work off.
Still, when we created free tuition at NYU for our medical school, there were many people who paid high tuition fees in the past. Some of them said to us, “What about me?” We decided not to try to do anything retrospectively. The plan was to build up enough money so that we could handle no-cost tuition going forward. We didn’t really have it in our pocketbook to help people who’d already paid their debts or were saddled with NYU debt. Is it fair? No, it’s probably not fair, but it’s an improvement.
That’s what I want people to think about who are saying, “What about my medical school debt? What about my undergraduate plus medical school debt?” I think we should be grateful when efforts are being made to reduce very burdensome student loans that people have. It’s good to give that benefit and move it forward.
Does that mean no one should get anything unless everyone with any kind of debt from school is covered? I don’t think so. I don’t think that’s fair either.
It is possible that we could continue to agitate politically and say, let’s go after some of the health care debt. Let’s go after some of the things that are still driving people to have to work more than they would or to choose specialties that they really don’t want to be in because they have to make up that debt.
It doesn’t mean the last word has been said about the politics of debt relief or, for that matter, the price of going to medical school in the first place and trying to see whether that can be driven down.
I don’t think it’s right to say, “If I can’t benefit, given the huge burden that I’m carrying, then I’m not going to try to give relief to others.” I think we’re relieving debt to the extent that we can do it. The nation can afford it. Going forward is a good thing. It’s wrong to create those gigantic debts in the first place.
What are we going to do about the past? We may decide that we need some sort of forgiveness or reparations for loans that were built up for others going backwards. I wouldn’t hold hostage the future and our children to what was probably a very poor, unethical practice about saddling doctors and others in the past with huge debt.
I’m Art Caplan at the division of medical ethics at New York University Grossman School of Medicine. Thank you for watching.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
This transcript has been edited for clarity.
Hi. I’m Art Caplan. I run the division of medical ethics at New York University Grossman School of Medicine.
Many of you know that President Biden created a loan forgiveness program, forgiving up to $10,000 against federal student loans, including graduate and undergraduate education. The Department of Education is supposed to provide up to $20,000 in debt cancellation to Pell Grant recipients who have loans that are held by the Department of Education. Borrowers can get this relief if their income is less than $125,000 for an individual or $250,000 for married couples.
Many people have looked at this and said, “Hey, wait a minute. I paid off my loans. I didn’t get any reimbursement. That isn’t fair.”
who often still have huge amounts of debt, and either because of the income limits or because they don’t qualify because this debt was accrued long in the past, they’re saying, “What about me? Don’t you want to give any relief to me?”
This is a topic near and dear to my heart because I happen to be at a medical school, NYU, that has decided for the two medical schools it runs – our main campus, NYU in Manhattan and NYU Langone out on Long Island – that we’re going to go tuition free. We’ve done it for a couple of years.
We did it because I think all the administrators and faculty understood the tremendous burden that debt poses on people who both carry forward their undergraduate debt and then have medical school debt. This really leads to very difficult situations – which we have great empathy for – about what specialty you’re going to go into, whether you have to moonlight, and how you’re going to manage a huge burden of debt.
Many people don’t have sympathy out in the public. They say doctors make a large amount of money and they live a nice lifestyle, so we’re not going to relieve their debt. The reality is that, whoever you are, short of Bill Gates or Elon Musk, having hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt is no easy task to live with and to work off.
Still, when we created free tuition at NYU for our medical school, there were many people who paid high tuition fees in the past. Some of them said to us, “What about me?” We decided not to try to do anything retrospectively. The plan was to build up enough money so that we could handle no-cost tuition going forward. We didn’t really have it in our pocketbook to help people who’d already paid their debts or were saddled with NYU debt. Is it fair? No, it’s probably not fair, but it’s an improvement.
That’s what I want people to think about who are saying, “What about my medical school debt? What about my undergraduate plus medical school debt?” I think we should be grateful when efforts are being made to reduce very burdensome student loans that people have. It’s good to give that benefit and move it forward.
Does that mean no one should get anything unless everyone with any kind of debt from school is covered? I don’t think so. I don’t think that’s fair either.
It is possible that we could continue to agitate politically and say, let’s go after some of the health care debt. Let’s go after some of the things that are still driving people to have to work more than they would or to choose specialties that they really don’t want to be in because they have to make up that debt.
It doesn’t mean the last word has been said about the politics of debt relief or, for that matter, the price of going to medical school in the first place and trying to see whether that can be driven down.
I don’t think it’s right to say, “If I can’t benefit, given the huge burden that I’m carrying, then I’m not going to try to give relief to others.” I think we’re relieving debt to the extent that we can do it. The nation can afford it. Going forward is a good thing. It’s wrong to create those gigantic debts in the first place.
What are we going to do about the past? We may decide that we need some sort of forgiveness or reparations for loans that were built up for others going backwards. I wouldn’t hold hostage the future and our children to what was probably a very poor, unethical practice about saddling doctors and others in the past with huge debt.
I’m Art Caplan at the division of medical ethics at New York University Grossman School of Medicine. Thank you for watching.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The marked contrast in pandemic outcomes between Japan and the United States
This article was originally published Oct. 8 on Medscape Editor-In-Chief Eric Topol’s “Ground Truths” column on Substack.
Over time it has the least cumulative deaths per capita of any major country in the world. That’s without a zero-Covid policy or any national lockdowns, which is why I have not included China as a comparator.
Before we get into that data, let’s take a look at the age pyramids for Japan and the United States. The No. 1 risk factor for death from COVID-19 is advanced age, and you can see that in Japan about 25% of the population is age 65 and older, whereas in the United States that proportion is substantially reduced at 15%. Sure there are differences in comorbidities such as obesity and diabetes, but there is also the trade-off of a much higher population density in Japan.
Besides masks, which were distributed early on by the government to the population in Japan, there was the “Avoid the 3Cs” cluster-busting strategy, widely disseminated in the spring of 2020, leveraging Pareto’s 80-20 principle, long before there were any vaccines available. For a good portion of the pandemic, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan maintained a strict policy for border control, which while hard to quantify, may certainly have contributed to its success.
Besides these factors, once vaccines became available, Japan got the population with the primary series to 83% rapidly, even after getting a late start by many months compared with the United States, which has peaked at 68%. That’s a big gap.
But that gap got much worse when it came to boosters. Ninety-five percent of Japanese eligible compared with 40.8% of Americans have had a booster shot. Of note, that 95% in Japan pertains to the whole population. In the United States the percentage of people age 65 and older who have had two boosters is currently only 42%. I’ve previously reviewed the important lifesaving impact of two boosters among people age 65 and older from five independent studies during Omicron waves throughout the world.
Now let’s turn to cumulative fatalities in the two countries. There’s a huge, nearly ninefold difference, per capita. Using today’s Covid-19 Dashboard, there are cumulatively 45,533 deaths in Japan and 1,062,560 American deaths. That translates to 1 in 2,758 people in Japan compared with 1 in 315 Americans dying of COVID.
And if we look at excess mortality instead of confirmed COVID deaths, that enormous gap doesn’t change.
Obviously it would be good to have data for other COVID outcomes, such as hospitalizations, ICUs, and Long COVID, but they are not accessible.
Comparing Japan, the country that has fared the best, with the United States, one of the worst pandemic outcome results, leaves us with a sense that Prof Ian MacKay’s “Swiss cheese model” is the best explanation. It’s not just one thing. Masks, consistent evidence-based communication (3Cs) with attention to ventilation and air quality, and the outstanding uptake of vaccines and boosters all contributed to Japan’s success.
There is another factor to add to that model – Paxlovid. Its benefit of reducing hospitalizations and deaths for people over age 65 is unquestionable.
That’s why I had previously modified the Swiss cheese model to add Paxlovid.
But in the United States, where 15% of the population is 65 and older, they account for over 75% of the daily death toll, still in the range of 400 per day. Here, with a very high proportion of people age 65 and older left vulnerable without boosters, or primary vaccines, Paxlovid is only being given to less than 25% of the eligible (age 50+), and less people age 80 and older are getting Paxlovid than those age 45. The reasons that doctors are not prescribing it – worried about interactions for a 5-day course and rebound – are not substantiated.
Bottom line: In the United States we are not protecting our population anywhere near as well as Japan, as grossly evident by the fatalities among people at the highest risk. There needs to be far better uptake of boosters and use of Paxlovid in the age 65+ group, but the need for amped up protection is not at all restricted to this age subgroup. Across all age groups age 18 and over there is an 81% reduction of hospitalizations with two boosters with the most updated CDC data available, through the Omicron BA.5 wave.
No less the previous data through May 2022 showing protection from death across all ages with two boosters
And please don’t forget that around the world, over 20 million lives were saved, just in 2021, the first year of vaccines.
We can learn so much from a model country like Japan. Yes, we need nasal and variant-proof vaccines to effectively deal with the new variants that are already getting legs in places like XBB in Singapore and ones not on the radar yet. But right now we’ve got to do far better for people getting boosters and, when a person age 65 or older gets COVID, Paxlovid. Take a look at the Chris Hayes video segment when he pleaded for Americans to get a booster shot. Every day that vaccine waning of the U.S. population exceeds the small percentage of people who get a booster, our vulnerability increases. If we don’t get that on track, it’s likely going to be a rough winter ahead.
Dr. Topol is director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute in La Jolla, Calif. He has received research grants from the National Institutes of Health and reported conflicts of interest involving Dexcom, Illumina, Molecular Stethoscope, Quest Diagnostics, and Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
This article was originally published Oct. 8 on Medscape Editor-In-Chief Eric Topol’s “Ground Truths” column on Substack.
Over time it has the least cumulative deaths per capita of any major country in the world. That’s without a zero-Covid policy or any national lockdowns, which is why I have not included China as a comparator.
Before we get into that data, let’s take a look at the age pyramids for Japan and the United States. The No. 1 risk factor for death from COVID-19 is advanced age, and you can see that in Japan about 25% of the population is age 65 and older, whereas in the United States that proportion is substantially reduced at 15%. Sure there are differences in comorbidities such as obesity and diabetes, but there is also the trade-off of a much higher population density in Japan.
Besides masks, which were distributed early on by the government to the population in Japan, there was the “Avoid the 3Cs” cluster-busting strategy, widely disseminated in the spring of 2020, leveraging Pareto’s 80-20 principle, long before there were any vaccines available. For a good portion of the pandemic, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan maintained a strict policy for border control, which while hard to quantify, may certainly have contributed to its success.
Besides these factors, once vaccines became available, Japan got the population with the primary series to 83% rapidly, even after getting a late start by many months compared with the United States, which has peaked at 68%. That’s a big gap.
But that gap got much worse when it came to boosters. Ninety-five percent of Japanese eligible compared with 40.8% of Americans have had a booster shot. Of note, that 95% in Japan pertains to the whole population. In the United States the percentage of people age 65 and older who have had two boosters is currently only 42%. I’ve previously reviewed the important lifesaving impact of two boosters among people age 65 and older from five independent studies during Omicron waves throughout the world.
Now let’s turn to cumulative fatalities in the two countries. There’s a huge, nearly ninefold difference, per capita. Using today’s Covid-19 Dashboard, there are cumulatively 45,533 deaths in Japan and 1,062,560 American deaths. That translates to 1 in 2,758 people in Japan compared with 1 in 315 Americans dying of COVID.
And if we look at excess mortality instead of confirmed COVID deaths, that enormous gap doesn’t change.
Obviously it would be good to have data for other COVID outcomes, such as hospitalizations, ICUs, and Long COVID, but they are not accessible.
Comparing Japan, the country that has fared the best, with the United States, one of the worst pandemic outcome results, leaves us with a sense that Prof Ian MacKay’s “Swiss cheese model” is the best explanation. It’s not just one thing. Masks, consistent evidence-based communication (3Cs) with attention to ventilation and air quality, and the outstanding uptake of vaccines and boosters all contributed to Japan’s success.
There is another factor to add to that model – Paxlovid. Its benefit of reducing hospitalizations and deaths for people over age 65 is unquestionable.
That’s why I had previously modified the Swiss cheese model to add Paxlovid.
But in the United States, where 15% of the population is 65 and older, they account for over 75% of the daily death toll, still in the range of 400 per day. Here, with a very high proportion of people age 65 and older left vulnerable without boosters, or primary vaccines, Paxlovid is only being given to less than 25% of the eligible (age 50+), and less people age 80 and older are getting Paxlovid than those age 45. The reasons that doctors are not prescribing it – worried about interactions for a 5-day course and rebound – are not substantiated.
Bottom line: In the United States we are not protecting our population anywhere near as well as Japan, as grossly evident by the fatalities among people at the highest risk. There needs to be far better uptake of boosters and use of Paxlovid in the age 65+ group, but the need for amped up protection is not at all restricted to this age subgroup. Across all age groups age 18 and over there is an 81% reduction of hospitalizations with two boosters with the most updated CDC data available, through the Omicron BA.5 wave.
No less the previous data through May 2022 showing protection from death across all ages with two boosters
And please don’t forget that around the world, over 20 million lives were saved, just in 2021, the first year of vaccines.
We can learn so much from a model country like Japan. Yes, we need nasal and variant-proof vaccines to effectively deal with the new variants that are already getting legs in places like XBB in Singapore and ones not on the radar yet. But right now we’ve got to do far better for people getting boosters and, when a person age 65 or older gets COVID, Paxlovid. Take a look at the Chris Hayes video segment when he pleaded for Americans to get a booster shot. Every day that vaccine waning of the U.S. population exceeds the small percentage of people who get a booster, our vulnerability increases. If we don’t get that on track, it’s likely going to be a rough winter ahead.
Dr. Topol is director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute in La Jolla, Calif. He has received research grants from the National Institutes of Health and reported conflicts of interest involving Dexcom, Illumina, Molecular Stethoscope, Quest Diagnostics, and Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
This article was originally published Oct. 8 on Medscape Editor-In-Chief Eric Topol’s “Ground Truths” column on Substack.
Over time it has the least cumulative deaths per capita of any major country in the world. That’s without a zero-Covid policy or any national lockdowns, which is why I have not included China as a comparator.
Before we get into that data, let’s take a look at the age pyramids for Japan and the United States. The No. 1 risk factor for death from COVID-19 is advanced age, and you can see that in Japan about 25% of the population is age 65 and older, whereas in the United States that proportion is substantially reduced at 15%. Sure there are differences in comorbidities such as obesity and diabetes, but there is also the trade-off of a much higher population density in Japan.
Besides masks, which were distributed early on by the government to the population in Japan, there was the “Avoid the 3Cs” cluster-busting strategy, widely disseminated in the spring of 2020, leveraging Pareto’s 80-20 principle, long before there were any vaccines available. For a good portion of the pandemic, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan maintained a strict policy for border control, which while hard to quantify, may certainly have contributed to its success.
Besides these factors, once vaccines became available, Japan got the population with the primary series to 83% rapidly, even after getting a late start by many months compared with the United States, which has peaked at 68%. That’s a big gap.
But that gap got much worse when it came to boosters. Ninety-five percent of Japanese eligible compared with 40.8% of Americans have had a booster shot. Of note, that 95% in Japan pertains to the whole population. In the United States the percentage of people age 65 and older who have had two boosters is currently only 42%. I’ve previously reviewed the important lifesaving impact of two boosters among people age 65 and older from five independent studies during Omicron waves throughout the world.
Now let’s turn to cumulative fatalities in the two countries. There’s a huge, nearly ninefold difference, per capita. Using today’s Covid-19 Dashboard, there are cumulatively 45,533 deaths in Japan and 1,062,560 American deaths. That translates to 1 in 2,758 people in Japan compared with 1 in 315 Americans dying of COVID.
And if we look at excess mortality instead of confirmed COVID deaths, that enormous gap doesn’t change.
Obviously it would be good to have data for other COVID outcomes, such as hospitalizations, ICUs, and Long COVID, but they are not accessible.
Comparing Japan, the country that has fared the best, with the United States, one of the worst pandemic outcome results, leaves us with a sense that Prof Ian MacKay’s “Swiss cheese model” is the best explanation. It’s not just one thing. Masks, consistent evidence-based communication (3Cs) with attention to ventilation and air quality, and the outstanding uptake of vaccines and boosters all contributed to Japan’s success.
There is another factor to add to that model – Paxlovid. Its benefit of reducing hospitalizations and deaths for people over age 65 is unquestionable.
That’s why I had previously modified the Swiss cheese model to add Paxlovid.
But in the United States, where 15% of the population is 65 and older, they account for over 75% of the daily death toll, still in the range of 400 per day. Here, with a very high proportion of people age 65 and older left vulnerable without boosters, or primary vaccines, Paxlovid is only being given to less than 25% of the eligible (age 50+), and less people age 80 and older are getting Paxlovid than those age 45. The reasons that doctors are not prescribing it – worried about interactions for a 5-day course and rebound – are not substantiated.
Bottom line: In the United States we are not protecting our population anywhere near as well as Japan, as grossly evident by the fatalities among people at the highest risk. There needs to be far better uptake of boosters and use of Paxlovid in the age 65+ group, but the need for amped up protection is not at all restricted to this age subgroup. Across all age groups age 18 and over there is an 81% reduction of hospitalizations with two boosters with the most updated CDC data available, through the Omicron BA.5 wave.
No less the previous data through May 2022 showing protection from death across all ages with two boosters
And please don’t forget that around the world, over 20 million lives were saved, just in 2021, the first year of vaccines.
We can learn so much from a model country like Japan. Yes, we need nasal and variant-proof vaccines to effectively deal with the new variants that are already getting legs in places like XBB in Singapore and ones not on the radar yet. But right now we’ve got to do far better for people getting boosters and, when a person age 65 or older gets COVID, Paxlovid. Take a look at the Chris Hayes video segment when he pleaded for Americans to get a booster shot. Every day that vaccine waning of the U.S. population exceeds the small percentage of people who get a booster, our vulnerability increases. If we don’t get that on track, it’s likely going to be a rough winter ahead.
Dr. Topol is director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute in La Jolla, Calif. He has received research grants from the National Institutes of Health and reported conflicts of interest involving Dexcom, Illumina, Molecular Stethoscope, Quest Diagnostics, and Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Tirzepatide’s benefits expand: Lean mass up, serum lipids down
STOCKHOLM – New insights into the benefits of treatment with the “twincretin” tirzepatide for people with overweight or obesity – with or without diabetes – come from new findings reported at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
Additional results from the SURMOUNT-1 trial, which matched tirzepatide against placebo in people with overweight or obesity, provide further details on the favorable changes produced by 72 weeks of tirzepatide treatment on outcomes that included fat and lean mass, insulin sensitivity, and patient-reported outcomes related to functional health and well being, reported Ania M. Jastreboff, MD, PhD.
And results from a meta-analysis of six trials that compared tirzepatide (Mounjaro) against several different comparators in patients with type 2 diabetes further confirm the drug’s ability to reliably produce positive changes in blood lipids, especially by significantly lowering levels of triglycerides, LDL cholesterol, and very LDL (VLDL) cholesterol, said Thomas Karagiannis, MD, PhD, in a separate report at the meeting.
Tirzepatide works as an agonist on receptors for both the glucagonlike peptide–1 (GLP-1), and for the glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide, and received Food and Drug Administration approval for treating people with type 2 diabetes in May 2022. On the basis of results from SURMOUNT-1, the FDA on Oct. 6 granted tirzepatide fast-track designation for a proposed labeling of the agent for treating people with overweight or obesity. This FDA decision will likely remain pending at least until results from a second trial in people with overweight or obesity but without diabetes, SURMOUNT-2, become available in 2023.
SURMOUNT-1 randomized 2,539 people with obesity or overweight and at least one weight-related complication to a weekly injection of tirzepatide or placebo for 72 weeks. The study’s primary efficacy endpoints were the average reduction in weight from baseline, and the percentage of people in each treatment arm achieving weight loss of at least 5% from baseline.
For both endpoints, the outcomes with tirzepatide significantly surpassed placebo effects. Average weight loss ranged from 15%-21% from baseline, depending on dose, compared with 3% on placebo. The rate of participants with at least a 5% weight loss ranged from 85% to 91%, compared with 35% with placebo, as reported in July 2022 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Cutting fat mass, boosting lean mass
New results from the trial reported by Dr. Jastreboff included a cut in fat mass from 46.2% of total body mass at baseline to 38.5% after 72 weeks, compared with a change from 46.8% at baseline to 44.7% after 72 weeks in the placebo group. Concurrently, lean mass increased with tirzepatide treatment from 51.0% at baseline to 58.1% after 72 weeks.
Participants who received tirzepatide, compared with those who received placebo, had “proportionately greater decrease in fat mass and proportionately greater increase in lean mass” compared with those who received placebo, said Dr. Jastreboff, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine specialist with Yale Medicine in New Haven, Conn. “I was impressed by the amount of visceral fat lost.”
These effects translated into a significant reduction in fat mass-to-lean mass ratio among the people treated with tirzepatide, with the greatest reduction in those who lost at least 15% of their starting weight. In that subgroup the fat-to-lean mass ratio dropped from 0.94 at baseline to 0.64 after 72 weeks of treatment, she said.
Focus on diet quality
People treated with tirzepatide “eat so little food that we need to improve the quality of what they eat to protect their muscle,” commented Carel le Roux, MBChB, PhD, a professor in the Diabetes Complications Research Centre of University College Dublin. “You no longer need a dietitian to help people lose weight, because the drug does that. You need dietitians to look after the nutritional health of patients while they lose weight,” Dr. le Roux said in a separate session at the meeting.
Additional tests showed that blood glucose and insulin levels were all significantly lower among trial participants on all three doses of tirzepatide compared with those on placebo, and the tirzepatide-treated subjects also had significant, roughly twofold elevations in their insulin sensitivity measured by the Matsuda Index.
The impact of tirzepatide on glucose and insulin levels and on insulin sensitivity was similar regardless of whether study participants had normoglycemia or prediabetes at entry. By design, no study participants had diabetes.
The trial assessed patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes using the 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36). Participants had significant increases in all eight domains within the SF-36 at all three tirzepatide doses, compared with placebo, at 72 weeks, Dr. Jastreboff reported. Improvements in the physical function domain increased most notably among study participants on tirzepatide who had functional limitations at baseline. Heart rate rose among participants who received either of the two highest tirzepatide doses by 2.3-2.5 beats/min, comparable with the effect of other injected incretin-based treatments.
Lipids improve in those with type 2 diabetes
Tirzepatide treatment also results in a “secondary effect” of improving levels of several lipids in people with type 2 diabetes, according to a meta-analysis of findings from six randomized trials. The meta-analysis collectively involved 4,502 participants treated for numerous weeks with one of three doses of tirzepatide and 2,144 people in comparator groups, reported Dr. Karagiannis, a diabetes researcher at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece).
Among the significant lipid changes linked with tirzepatide treatment, compared with placebo, were an average 13 mg/dL decrease in LDL cholesterol, an average 6 mg/dL decrease in VLDL cholesterol, and an average 50 mg/dL decrease in triglycerides. In comparison to a GLP-1 receptor agonist, an average 25 mg/dL decrease in triglycerides and an average 4 mg/dL reduction in VLDL cholesterol were seen. And trials comparing tirzepatide with basal insulin saw average reductions of 7% in LDL cholesterol, 15% in VLDL cholesterol, 15% in triglycerides, and an 8% increase in HDL cholesterol.
Dr. Karagiannis highlighted that the clinical impact of these effects is unclear, although he noted that the average reduction in LDL cholesterol relative to placebo is of a magnitude that could have a modest effect on long-term outcomes.
These lipid effects of tirzepatide “should be considered alongside” tirzepatide’s “key metabolic effects” on weight and hemoglobin A1c as well as the drug’s safety, concluded Dr. Karagiannis.
The tirzepatide trials were all funded by Eli Lilly, which markets tirzepatide (Mounjaro). Dr. Jastreboff has been an adviser and consultant to Eli Lilly, as well as to Intellihealth, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Rhythm Scholars, Roche, and Weight Watchers, and she has received research funding from Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk. Dr. Karagiannis had no disclosures. Dr. le Roux has had financial relationships with Eli Lilly, as well as with Boehringer Ingelheim, Consilient Health, Covidion, Fractyl, GL Dynamics, Herbalife, Johnson & Johnson, Keyron, and Novo Nordisk.
STOCKHOLM – New insights into the benefits of treatment with the “twincretin” tirzepatide for people with overweight or obesity – with or without diabetes – come from new findings reported at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
Additional results from the SURMOUNT-1 trial, which matched tirzepatide against placebo in people with overweight or obesity, provide further details on the favorable changes produced by 72 weeks of tirzepatide treatment on outcomes that included fat and lean mass, insulin sensitivity, and patient-reported outcomes related to functional health and well being, reported Ania M. Jastreboff, MD, PhD.
And results from a meta-analysis of six trials that compared tirzepatide (Mounjaro) against several different comparators in patients with type 2 diabetes further confirm the drug’s ability to reliably produce positive changes in blood lipids, especially by significantly lowering levels of triglycerides, LDL cholesterol, and very LDL (VLDL) cholesterol, said Thomas Karagiannis, MD, PhD, in a separate report at the meeting.
Tirzepatide works as an agonist on receptors for both the glucagonlike peptide–1 (GLP-1), and for the glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide, and received Food and Drug Administration approval for treating people with type 2 diabetes in May 2022. On the basis of results from SURMOUNT-1, the FDA on Oct. 6 granted tirzepatide fast-track designation for a proposed labeling of the agent for treating people with overweight or obesity. This FDA decision will likely remain pending at least until results from a second trial in people with overweight or obesity but without diabetes, SURMOUNT-2, become available in 2023.
SURMOUNT-1 randomized 2,539 people with obesity or overweight and at least one weight-related complication to a weekly injection of tirzepatide or placebo for 72 weeks. The study’s primary efficacy endpoints were the average reduction in weight from baseline, and the percentage of people in each treatment arm achieving weight loss of at least 5% from baseline.
For both endpoints, the outcomes with tirzepatide significantly surpassed placebo effects. Average weight loss ranged from 15%-21% from baseline, depending on dose, compared with 3% on placebo. The rate of participants with at least a 5% weight loss ranged from 85% to 91%, compared with 35% with placebo, as reported in July 2022 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Cutting fat mass, boosting lean mass
New results from the trial reported by Dr. Jastreboff included a cut in fat mass from 46.2% of total body mass at baseline to 38.5% after 72 weeks, compared with a change from 46.8% at baseline to 44.7% after 72 weeks in the placebo group. Concurrently, lean mass increased with tirzepatide treatment from 51.0% at baseline to 58.1% after 72 weeks.
Participants who received tirzepatide, compared with those who received placebo, had “proportionately greater decrease in fat mass and proportionately greater increase in lean mass” compared with those who received placebo, said Dr. Jastreboff, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine specialist with Yale Medicine in New Haven, Conn. “I was impressed by the amount of visceral fat lost.”
These effects translated into a significant reduction in fat mass-to-lean mass ratio among the people treated with tirzepatide, with the greatest reduction in those who lost at least 15% of their starting weight. In that subgroup the fat-to-lean mass ratio dropped from 0.94 at baseline to 0.64 after 72 weeks of treatment, she said.
Focus on diet quality
People treated with tirzepatide “eat so little food that we need to improve the quality of what they eat to protect their muscle,” commented Carel le Roux, MBChB, PhD, a professor in the Diabetes Complications Research Centre of University College Dublin. “You no longer need a dietitian to help people lose weight, because the drug does that. You need dietitians to look after the nutritional health of patients while they lose weight,” Dr. le Roux said in a separate session at the meeting.
Additional tests showed that blood glucose and insulin levels were all significantly lower among trial participants on all three doses of tirzepatide compared with those on placebo, and the tirzepatide-treated subjects also had significant, roughly twofold elevations in their insulin sensitivity measured by the Matsuda Index.
The impact of tirzepatide on glucose and insulin levels and on insulin sensitivity was similar regardless of whether study participants had normoglycemia or prediabetes at entry. By design, no study participants had diabetes.
The trial assessed patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes using the 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36). Participants had significant increases in all eight domains within the SF-36 at all three tirzepatide doses, compared with placebo, at 72 weeks, Dr. Jastreboff reported. Improvements in the physical function domain increased most notably among study participants on tirzepatide who had functional limitations at baseline. Heart rate rose among participants who received either of the two highest tirzepatide doses by 2.3-2.5 beats/min, comparable with the effect of other injected incretin-based treatments.
Lipids improve in those with type 2 diabetes
Tirzepatide treatment also results in a “secondary effect” of improving levels of several lipids in people with type 2 diabetes, according to a meta-analysis of findings from six randomized trials. The meta-analysis collectively involved 4,502 participants treated for numerous weeks with one of three doses of tirzepatide and 2,144 people in comparator groups, reported Dr. Karagiannis, a diabetes researcher at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece).
Among the significant lipid changes linked with tirzepatide treatment, compared with placebo, were an average 13 mg/dL decrease in LDL cholesterol, an average 6 mg/dL decrease in VLDL cholesterol, and an average 50 mg/dL decrease in triglycerides. In comparison to a GLP-1 receptor agonist, an average 25 mg/dL decrease in triglycerides and an average 4 mg/dL reduction in VLDL cholesterol were seen. And trials comparing tirzepatide with basal insulin saw average reductions of 7% in LDL cholesterol, 15% in VLDL cholesterol, 15% in triglycerides, and an 8% increase in HDL cholesterol.
Dr. Karagiannis highlighted that the clinical impact of these effects is unclear, although he noted that the average reduction in LDL cholesterol relative to placebo is of a magnitude that could have a modest effect on long-term outcomes.
These lipid effects of tirzepatide “should be considered alongside” tirzepatide’s “key metabolic effects” on weight and hemoglobin A1c as well as the drug’s safety, concluded Dr. Karagiannis.
The tirzepatide trials were all funded by Eli Lilly, which markets tirzepatide (Mounjaro). Dr. Jastreboff has been an adviser and consultant to Eli Lilly, as well as to Intellihealth, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Rhythm Scholars, Roche, and Weight Watchers, and she has received research funding from Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk. Dr. Karagiannis had no disclosures. Dr. le Roux has had financial relationships with Eli Lilly, as well as with Boehringer Ingelheim, Consilient Health, Covidion, Fractyl, GL Dynamics, Herbalife, Johnson & Johnson, Keyron, and Novo Nordisk.
STOCKHOLM – New insights into the benefits of treatment with the “twincretin” tirzepatide for people with overweight or obesity – with or without diabetes – come from new findings reported at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes.
Additional results from the SURMOUNT-1 trial, which matched tirzepatide against placebo in people with overweight or obesity, provide further details on the favorable changes produced by 72 weeks of tirzepatide treatment on outcomes that included fat and lean mass, insulin sensitivity, and patient-reported outcomes related to functional health and well being, reported Ania M. Jastreboff, MD, PhD.
And results from a meta-analysis of six trials that compared tirzepatide (Mounjaro) against several different comparators in patients with type 2 diabetes further confirm the drug’s ability to reliably produce positive changes in blood lipids, especially by significantly lowering levels of triglycerides, LDL cholesterol, and very LDL (VLDL) cholesterol, said Thomas Karagiannis, MD, PhD, in a separate report at the meeting.
Tirzepatide works as an agonist on receptors for both the glucagonlike peptide–1 (GLP-1), and for the glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide, and received Food and Drug Administration approval for treating people with type 2 diabetes in May 2022. On the basis of results from SURMOUNT-1, the FDA on Oct. 6 granted tirzepatide fast-track designation for a proposed labeling of the agent for treating people with overweight or obesity. This FDA decision will likely remain pending at least until results from a second trial in people with overweight or obesity but without diabetes, SURMOUNT-2, become available in 2023.
SURMOUNT-1 randomized 2,539 people with obesity or overweight and at least one weight-related complication to a weekly injection of tirzepatide or placebo for 72 weeks. The study’s primary efficacy endpoints were the average reduction in weight from baseline, and the percentage of people in each treatment arm achieving weight loss of at least 5% from baseline.
For both endpoints, the outcomes with tirzepatide significantly surpassed placebo effects. Average weight loss ranged from 15%-21% from baseline, depending on dose, compared with 3% on placebo. The rate of participants with at least a 5% weight loss ranged from 85% to 91%, compared with 35% with placebo, as reported in July 2022 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Cutting fat mass, boosting lean mass
New results from the trial reported by Dr. Jastreboff included a cut in fat mass from 46.2% of total body mass at baseline to 38.5% after 72 weeks, compared with a change from 46.8% at baseline to 44.7% after 72 weeks in the placebo group. Concurrently, lean mass increased with tirzepatide treatment from 51.0% at baseline to 58.1% after 72 weeks.
Participants who received tirzepatide, compared with those who received placebo, had “proportionately greater decrease in fat mass and proportionately greater increase in lean mass” compared with those who received placebo, said Dr. Jastreboff, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine specialist with Yale Medicine in New Haven, Conn. “I was impressed by the amount of visceral fat lost.”
These effects translated into a significant reduction in fat mass-to-lean mass ratio among the people treated with tirzepatide, with the greatest reduction in those who lost at least 15% of their starting weight. In that subgroup the fat-to-lean mass ratio dropped from 0.94 at baseline to 0.64 after 72 weeks of treatment, she said.
Focus on diet quality
People treated with tirzepatide “eat so little food that we need to improve the quality of what they eat to protect their muscle,” commented Carel le Roux, MBChB, PhD, a professor in the Diabetes Complications Research Centre of University College Dublin. “You no longer need a dietitian to help people lose weight, because the drug does that. You need dietitians to look after the nutritional health of patients while they lose weight,” Dr. le Roux said in a separate session at the meeting.
Additional tests showed that blood glucose and insulin levels were all significantly lower among trial participants on all three doses of tirzepatide compared with those on placebo, and the tirzepatide-treated subjects also had significant, roughly twofold elevations in their insulin sensitivity measured by the Matsuda Index.
The impact of tirzepatide on glucose and insulin levels and on insulin sensitivity was similar regardless of whether study participants had normoglycemia or prediabetes at entry. By design, no study participants had diabetes.
The trial assessed patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes using the 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36). Participants had significant increases in all eight domains within the SF-36 at all three tirzepatide doses, compared with placebo, at 72 weeks, Dr. Jastreboff reported. Improvements in the physical function domain increased most notably among study participants on tirzepatide who had functional limitations at baseline. Heart rate rose among participants who received either of the two highest tirzepatide doses by 2.3-2.5 beats/min, comparable with the effect of other injected incretin-based treatments.
Lipids improve in those with type 2 diabetes
Tirzepatide treatment also results in a “secondary effect” of improving levels of several lipids in people with type 2 diabetes, according to a meta-analysis of findings from six randomized trials. The meta-analysis collectively involved 4,502 participants treated for numerous weeks with one of three doses of tirzepatide and 2,144 people in comparator groups, reported Dr. Karagiannis, a diabetes researcher at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece).
Among the significant lipid changes linked with tirzepatide treatment, compared with placebo, were an average 13 mg/dL decrease in LDL cholesterol, an average 6 mg/dL decrease in VLDL cholesterol, and an average 50 mg/dL decrease in triglycerides. In comparison to a GLP-1 receptor agonist, an average 25 mg/dL decrease in triglycerides and an average 4 mg/dL reduction in VLDL cholesterol were seen. And trials comparing tirzepatide with basal insulin saw average reductions of 7% in LDL cholesterol, 15% in VLDL cholesterol, 15% in triglycerides, and an 8% increase in HDL cholesterol.
Dr. Karagiannis highlighted that the clinical impact of these effects is unclear, although he noted that the average reduction in LDL cholesterol relative to placebo is of a magnitude that could have a modest effect on long-term outcomes.
These lipid effects of tirzepatide “should be considered alongside” tirzepatide’s “key metabolic effects” on weight and hemoglobin A1c as well as the drug’s safety, concluded Dr. Karagiannis.
The tirzepatide trials were all funded by Eli Lilly, which markets tirzepatide (Mounjaro). Dr. Jastreboff has been an adviser and consultant to Eli Lilly, as well as to Intellihealth, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Rhythm Scholars, Roche, and Weight Watchers, and she has received research funding from Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk. Dr. Karagiannis had no disclosures. Dr. le Roux has had financial relationships with Eli Lilly, as well as with Boehringer Ingelheim, Consilient Health, Covidion, Fractyl, GL Dynamics, Herbalife, Johnson & Johnson, Keyron, and Novo Nordisk.
AT EASD 2022