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TransCon PTH nears U.S. approval for hypoparathyroidism?
SEATTLE –
Findings from 110-week phase 2 data for the once-daily investigational parathyroid hormone (PTH) replacement drug were recently presented at the annual scientific & clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology.
Overall, the drug was associated with independence from conventional calcium and active vitamin D therapy in most patients at 110 weeks, with no discontinuations due to adverse effects.
“Patients with hypoparathyroidism have low serum calcium levels and struggle with quality of life and biochemical abnormalities. The data from the TransCon PTH studies seem to show that a lot of these abnormalities can be reversed,” presenter Mishaela R. Rubin, MD, said in an interview.
Other PTH replacement therapies such as Nupara (now discontinued) and teriparatide (off-label) have been used in some patients with hypoparathyroidism.
However, “[TransCon PTH] is delivered in such a way as to have a prolonged half-life, so that’s kind of a special benefit that it has,” added Dr. Rubin of the division of endocrinology and metabolic bone disease, department of medicine, Columbia University, New York.
Asked to comment, session moderator Thanh Hoang, DO, of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Silver Spring, Md., said: “I think it’s a very promising medication because right now we don’t have a lot of options ... I think it would help a lot of patients.”
Approval denied, company addressing concerns
On May 1, the Food and Drug Administration issued a complete response letter, signaling denial of approval for the TransCon PTH, citing concerns related to manufacturing control of the product’s drug/device combination product, but not about the product’s safety and efficacy, according to an Ascendis statement.
The company is now working with the FDA to address these issues and is awaiting a European Union decision later this year.
The FDA did not request that the company conduct further clinical trials of TransCon PTH, which now include published 26-week phase 2 and phase 3 data along with the current longer-term phase 2 data presented at AACE.
“The company has said that they’re hopeful the issues will be addressable and that the FDA did not have any concerns about safety,” Dr. Rubin said in an interview.
Calcium normalized, bone turnover improved
Dr. Rubin presented long-term efficacy and safety data from the Phase 2 PaTH Forward trial, which involved 57 of the initial 59 participants who completed week 110 of an open-label extension of the trial.
During the first 4 weeks, patients had been randomized to TransCon PTH at fixed doses of 15 µg/day, 18 µg/day, 21 µg/day, or placebo. After week 4, all patients switched to TransCon PTH titrated to doses of 6-60 µg/day along with conventional therapy, with the goal of maintaining normocalcemia.
Participants were a mean age of 50 years, 81% were women, and 92% were White. Causes of hypoparathyroidism were neck surgery in 80%, autoimmune disease in 2%, and idiopathic disease in 19%. Disease duration was 12 years (range 1-39), and all were taking conventional therapy including calcium and active vitamin D (calcitriol or alfacaldiol).
At 110 weeks, all 57 patients were able to stop taking active vitamin D, and 53 of the 57 (93%) patients achieved independence from conventional therapy, defined as taking 0 µg/day of active vitamin D and no more than 600 mg/day of calcium (the dietary supplement dose). A total of 44 (77%) patients were not taking any calcium or active vitamin D.
“This really establishes the durability up to 2 years of keeping people off conventional therapy,” Dr. Rubin said during her presentation.
There was an initial uptick to 9.4 mg/dL in mean serum calcium, as some participants were still taking active vitamin D, but that dropped to 8.9 mg/dL by week 26. Mean 24-hour urine calcium dropped from 428 mg/day at baseline to 173 mg/day by week 26. Both serum calcium and urine calcium remained in the normal range through week 110 in all patients, at 8.6 mg/dL and 167 mg/day, respectively.
“This is a really important outcome because we know that high urine calcium in these patients sets them at risk for going on to develop nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and ultimately, chronic kidney disease,” Dr. Rubin said.
Serum levels of two bone formation markers peaked at 12 weeks after initiation of TransCon PTH. Both trended downward thereafter through week 110 to levels approximating those of age- and sex-matched controls.
“Both markers started off low, consistent with hypoparathyroidism, but with initiation of TransCon PTH we see a robust increase in bone turnover markers, almost as if the bone is ‘waking up,’ if you will. And this is consistent with calcium being mobilized from the skeleton and going into the circulation,” Dr. Rubin explained.
Bone mineral density assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry normalized, primarily in the first 26 weeks. For lumbar spine L1-L4, mean Z-scores dropped from 1.6 to 1.0 at 26 weeks and down to 0.7 by week 100. For total hip, those values were 1.0, 0.6, and 0.4, respectively. The values approached age- and sex-matched norms, Dr. Rubin noted, to “perhaps where their skeleton would be if they hadn’t had hypoparathyroidism.”
Overall 56 of the 57 (94.9%) patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events, of which 25 (42.4%) were treatment related and none were deemed serious. There were no treatment-emergent adverse events related to hypercalcemia or hypocalcemia leading to health care visits or hospitalization, none leading to discontinuation of study drug, and none to death.
“So overall, a reassuring safety profile,” Dr. Rubin said. “We look forward to presenting the next 2 years’ worth of data to the end of the open-label extension study.”
Dr. Rubin is a paid researcher for Ascendis, which funded the study. Dr. Hoang has reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
SEATTLE –
Findings from 110-week phase 2 data for the once-daily investigational parathyroid hormone (PTH) replacement drug were recently presented at the annual scientific & clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology.
Overall, the drug was associated with independence from conventional calcium and active vitamin D therapy in most patients at 110 weeks, with no discontinuations due to adverse effects.
“Patients with hypoparathyroidism have low serum calcium levels and struggle with quality of life and biochemical abnormalities. The data from the TransCon PTH studies seem to show that a lot of these abnormalities can be reversed,” presenter Mishaela R. Rubin, MD, said in an interview.
Other PTH replacement therapies such as Nupara (now discontinued) and teriparatide (off-label) have been used in some patients with hypoparathyroidism.
However, “[TransCon PTH] is delivered in such a way as to have a prolonged half-life, so that’s kind of a special benefit that it has,” added Dr. Rubin of the division of endocrinology and metabolic bone disease, department of medicine, Columbia University, New York.
Asked to comment, session moderator Thanh Hoang, DO, of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Silver Spring, Md., said: “I think it’s a very promising medication because right now we don’t have a lot of options ... I think it would help a lot of patients.”
Approval denied, company addressing concerns
On May 1, the Food and Drug Administration issued a complete response letter, signaling denial of approval for the TransCon PTH, citing concerns related to manufacturing control of the product’s drug/device combination product, but not about the product’s safety and efficacy, according to an Ascendis statement.
The company is now working with the FDA to address these issues and is awaiting a European Union decision later this year.
The FDA did not request that the company conduct further clinical trials of TransCon PTH, which now include published 26-week phase 2 and phase 3 data along with the current longer-term phase 2 data presented at AACE.
“The company has said that they’re hopeful the issues will be addressable and that the FDA did not have any concerns about safety,” Dr. Rubin said in an interview.
Calcium normalized, bone turnover improved
Dr. Rubin presented long-term efficacy and safety data from the Phase 2 PaTH Forward trial, which involved 57 of the initial 59 participants who completed week 110 of an open-label extension of the trial.
During the first 4 weeks, patients had been randomized to TransCon PTH at fixed doses of 15 µg/day, 18 µg/day, 21 µg/day, or placebo. After week 4, all patients switched to TransCon PTH titrated to doses of 6-60 µg/day along with conventional therapy, with the goal of maintaining normocalcemia.
Participants were a mean age of 50 years, 81% were women, and 92% were White. Causes of hypoparathyroidism were neck surgery in 80%, autoimmune disease in 2%, and idiopathic disease in 19%. Disease duration was 12 years (range 1-39), and all were taking conventional therapy including calcium and active vitamin D (calcitriol or alfacaldiol).
At 110 weeks, all 57 patients were able to stop taking active vitamin D, and 53 of the 57 (93%) patients achieved independence from conventional therapy, defined as taking 0 µg/day of active vitamin D and no more than 600 mg/day of calcium (the dietary supplement dose). A total of 44 (77%) patients were not taking any calcium or active vitamin D.
“This really establishes the durability up to 2 years of keeping people off conventional therapy,” Dr. Rubin said during her presentation.
There was an initial uptick to 9.4 mg/dL in mean serum calcium, as some participants were still taking active vitamin D, but that dropped to 8.9 mg/dL by week 26. Mean 24-hour urine calcium dropped from 428 mg/day at baseline to 173 mg/day by week 26. Both serum calcium and urine calcium remained in the normal range through week 110 in all patients, at 8.6 mg/dL and 167 mg/day, respectively.
“This is a really important outcome because we know that high urine calcium in these patients sets them at risk for going on to develop nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and ultimately, chronic kidney disease,” Dr. Rubin said.
Serum levels of two bone formation markers peaked at 12 weeks after initiation of TransCon PTH. Both trended downward thereafter through week 110 to levels approximating those of age- and sex-matched controls.
“Both markers started off low, consistent with hypoparathyroidism, but with initiation of TransCon PTH we see a robust increase in bone turnover markers, almost as if the bone is ‘waking up,’ if you will. And this is consistent with calcium being mobilized from the skeleton and going into the circulation,” Dr. Rubin explained.
Bone mineral density assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry normalized, primarily in the first 26 weeks. For lumbar spine L1-L4, mean Z-scores dropped from 1.6 to 1.0 at 26 weeks and down to 0.7 by week 100. For total hip, those values were 1.0, 0.6, and 0.4, respectively. The values approached age- and sex-matched norms, Dr. Rubin noted, to “perhaps where their skeleton would be if they hadn’t had hypoparathyroidism.”
Overall 56 of the 57 (94.9%) patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events, of which 25 (42.4%) were treatment related and none were deemed serious. There were no treatment-emergent adverse events related to hypercalcemia or hypocalcemia leading to health care visits or hospitalization, none leading to discontinuation of study drug, and none to death.
“So overall, a reassuring safety profile,” Dr. Rubin said. “We look forward to presenting the next 2 years’ worth of data to the end of the open-label extension study.”
Dr. Rubin is a paid researcher for Ascendis, which funded the study. Dr. Hoang has reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
SEATTLE –
Findings from 110-week phase 2 data for the once-daily investigational parathyroid hormone (PTH) replacement drug were recently presented at the annual scientific & clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology.
Overall, the drug was associated with independence from conventional calcium and active vitamin D therapy in most patients at 110 weeks, with no discontinuations due to adverse effects.
“Patients with hypoparathyroidism have low serum calcium levels and struggle with quality of life and biochemical abnormalities. The data from the TransCon PTH studies seem to show that a lot of these abnormalities can be reversed,” presenter Mishaela R. Rubin, MD, said in an interview.
Other PTH replacement therapies such as Nupara (now discontinued) and teriparatide (off-label) have been used in some patients with hypoparathyroidism.
However, “[TransCon PTH] is delivered in such a way as to have a prolonged half-life, so that’s kind of a special benefit that it has,” added Dr. Rubin of the division of endocrinology and metabolic bone disease, department of medicine, Columbia University, New York.
Asked to comment, session moderator Thanh Hoang, DO, of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Silver Spring, Md., said: “I think it’s a very promising medication because right now we don’t have a lot of options ... I think it would help a lot of patients.”
Approval denied, company addressing concerns
On May 1, the Food and Drug Administration issued a complete response letter, signaling denial of approval for the TransCon PTH, citing concerns related to manufacturing control of the product’s drug/device combination product, but not about the product’s safety and efficacy, according to an Ascendis statement.
The company is now working with the FDA to address these issues and is awaiting a European Union decision later this year.
The FDA did not request that the company conduct further clinical trials of TransCon PTH, which now include published 26-week phase 2 and phase 3 data along with the current longer-term phase 2 data presented at AACE.
“The company has said that they’re hopeful the issues will be addressable and that the FDA did not have any concerns about safety,” Dr. Rubin said in an interview.
Calcium normalized, bone turnover improved
Dr. Rubin presented long-term efficacy and safety data from the Phase 2 PaTH Forward trial, which involved 57 of the initial 59 participants who completed week 110 of an open-label extension of the trial.
During the first 4 weeks, patients had been randomized to TransCon PTH at fixed doses of 15 µg/day, 18 µg/day, 21 µg/day, or placebo. After week 4, all patients switched to TransCon PTH titrated to doses of 6-60 µg/day along with conventional therapy, with the goal of maintaining normocalcemia.
Participants were a mean age of 50 years, 81% were women, and 92% were White. Causes of hypoparathyroidism were neck surgery in 80%, autoimmune disease in 2%, and idiopathic disease in 19%. Disease duration was 12 years (range 1-39), and all were taking conventional therapy including calcium and active vitamin D (calcitriol or alfacaldiol).
At 110 weeks, all 57 patients were able to stop taking active vitamin D, and 53 of the 57 (93%) patients achieved independence from conventional therapy, defined as taking 0 µg/day of active vitamin D and no more than 600 mg/day of calcium (the dietary supplement dose). A total of 44 (77%) patients were not taking any calcium or active vitamin D.
“This really establishes the durability up to 2 years of keeping people off conventional therapy,” Dr. Rubin said during her presentation.
There was an initial uptick to 9.4 mg/dL in mean serum calcium, as some participants were still taking active vitamin D, but that dropped to 8.9 mg/dL by week 26. Mean 24-hour urine calcium dropped from 428 mg/day at baseline to 173 mg/day by week 26. Both serum calcium and urine calcium remained in the normal range through week 110 in all patients, at 8.6 mg/dL and 167 mg/day, respectively.
“This is a really important outcome because we know that high urine calcium in these patients sets them at risk for going on to develop nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and ultimately, chronic kidney disease,” Dr. Rubin said.
Serum levels of two bone formation markers peaked at 12 weeks after initiation of TransCon PTH. Both trended downward thereafter through week 110 to levels approximating those of age- and sex-matched controls.
“Both markers started off low, consistent with hypoparathyroidism, but with initiation of TransCon PTH we see a robust increase in bone turnover markers, almost as if the bone is ‘waking up,’ if you will. And this is consistent with calcium being mobilized from the skeleton and going into the circulation,” Dr. Rubin explained.
Bone mineral density assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry normalized, primarily in the first 26 weeks. For lumbar spine L1-L4, mean Z-scores dropped from 1.6 to 1.0 at 26 weeks and down to 0.7 by week 100. For total hip, those values were 1.0, 0.6, and 0.4, respectively. The values approached age- and sex-matched norms, Dr. Rubin noted, to “perhaps where their skeleton would be if they hadn’t had hypoparathyroidism.”
Overall 56 of the 57 (94.9%) patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events, of which 25 (42.4%) were treatment related and none were deemed serious. There were no treatment-emergent adverse events related to hypercalcemia or hypocalcemia leading to health care visits or hospitalization, none leading to discontinuation of study drug, and none to death.
“So overall, a reassuring safety profile,” Dr. Rubin said. “We look forward to presenting the next 2 years’ worth of data to the end of the open-label extension study.”
Dr. Rubin is a paid researcher for Ascendis, which funded the study. Dr. Hoang has reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
AT AACE 2023
Docs fervently hope federal ban on noncompete clauses goes through
The Federal Trade Commission’s proposed regulation that would ban noncompete agreements across the country seems like potential good news for doctors. Of course, many hospitals and employers are against it. As a result, the FTC’s sweeping proposal has tongues wagging on both sides of the issue.
Many physicians are thrilled that they may soon have more control over their career and not be stuck in jobs where they feel frustrated, underpaid, or blocked in their progress.
As of 2018, as many as 45% of primary care physicians had inked such agreements with their employers.
Typically, the agreements prevent physicians from practicing medicine with a new employer for a defined period within a specific geographic area. No matter how attractive an alternate offer of employment might be, doctors are bound by the agreements to say no if the offer exists in that defined area and time period.
The period for public comment on the proposed regulation ended on April 19, and there is currently no set date for a decision.
In a Medscape poll of 558 physicians, more than 9 out of 10 respondents said that they were either currently bound by a noncompete clause or that they had been bound by one in the past that had forced them to temporarily stop working, commute long distances, move to a different area, or switch fields.
The new proposal would make it illegal for an employer, such as a hospital or large group, to enter a noncompete with a worker; maintain a noncompete with a worker; or represent to a worker, under certain circumstances, that the worker is subject to a noncompete.
It also would not only ban future noncompete agreements but also retroactively invalidate existing ones. The FTC reasons that noncompete clauses could potentially increase worker earnings as well as lower health care costs by billions of dollars. If the ruling were to move forward, it would represent part of President Biden’s “worker-forward” priorities, focusing on how competition can be a good thing for employees. The President billed the FTC’s announcement as a “huge win for workers.”
In its statements on the proposed ban, the FTC claimed that it could lower consumer prices across the board by as much as $150 billion per year and return nearly $300 million to workers each year.
However, even if passed, the draft rule would keep in place nonsolicitation rules that many health care organizations have put into place. That means that, if a physician leaves an employer, he or she cannot reach out to former patients and colleagues to bring them along or invite them to switch to him or her in the new job.
Within that clause, however, the FTC has specified that if such nonsolicitation agreement has the “equivalent effect” of a noncompete, the agency would deem it such. That means, even if that rule stays, it could be contested and may be interpreted as violating the noncompete law. So there’s value in reading all the fine print should the ban move forward.
Could the ban bring potential downsides?
Most physicians view the potential to break free of a noncompete agreement as a victory. Peter Glennon, an employment litigation attorney with The Glennon Law Firm in Rochester, N.Y., says not so fast. “If you ask anyone if they’d prefer a noncompete agreement, of course they’re going to say no,” he said in an interview. “It sounds like a restriction, one that can hold you back.”
Mr. Glennon believes that there are actually upsides to physician noncompetes. For instance, many noncompetes come with sign-on bonuses that could potentially disappear without the agreements. There’s also the fact that when some physicians sign a noncompete agreement, they then receive pro bono training and continuing education along with marketing and promotion of their skills. Without signing a noncompete, employers may be less incentivized to provide all those benefits to their physician employers.
Those benefits – and the noncompetes – also vary by specialty, Mr. Glennon said. “In 2021, Washington, DC, banned noncompetes for doctors making less than $250,000. So, most generalists there can walk across the street and get a new job. For specialists like cardiologists or neurosurgeons, however, advanced training and marketing benefits matter, so many of them don’t want to lose noncompetes.”
Still, most physicians hope that the FTC’s ban takes hold. Manan Shah, MD, founder, and chief medical officer at Wyndly, an allergy relief startup practice, is one of them.
“Initially, it might disincentivize hospital systems from helping new physicians build up their name and practice because they might be concerned about a physician leaving and starting anew,” he said. “But in the long term, hospitals require physicians to bring their patients to them for care, so the best hospitals will always compete for the best physicians and support them as they build up their practice.”
Dr. Shah views noncompetes as overly prohibitive to physicians. “Right now, if a physician starts a job at a large hospital system and realizes they want to switch jobs, the noncompete distances are so wide they often have to move cities to continue practicing,” he said. “Picking up and starting over in a new city isn’t an option for everyone and can be especially difficult for someone with a family.”
Where Mr. Glennon argued that a physician leaving a team-based practice might harm patients, Shah takes a different perspective. “Imagine you have a doctor whom you trust and have been working with,” he said. “If something changes at their hospital and they decide to move, you literally have to find a new doctor instead of just being able to see them at another location down the street.”
Another potential burden of the noncompete agreements is that they could possibly squelch doctor’s desires to hang up their own shingle. According to Dr. Shah, the agreements make it so that if a physician wants to work independently, it’s nearly impossible to fly solo. “This is frustrating because independent practices have been shown to be more cost effective and allow patients to build better relationships with their doctors,” he claimed.
A 2016 study from Annals of Family Medicine supports that claim, at least for small general practices. Another study appearing in JAMA concurred. It does point out, however, that the cost equation is nuanced and that benefits of larger systems include more resilience to economic downturns and can provide more specialized care.
Will nonprofit hospitals be subject to this noncompete ban?
Further complicating the noncompete ban issue is how it might impact nonprofit institutions versus their for-profit peers. Most hospitals structured as nonprofits would be exempt from the rule because the FTC Act provides that it can enforce against “persons, partnerships, or corporations,” which are further defined as entities “organized to carry on business for their own profit or that of their members.”
The fallout from this, said Dr. Shah, is that it “would disproportionately affect health care providers, since many hospital systems are nonprofits. This is disconcerting because we know that many nonprofit systems make large profits anyway and can offer executive teams’ lucrative packages, while the nurses, assistants, and physicians providing the care are generally not well compensated.”
So far, about nine states plus Washington, D.C., have already put noncompete bans in place, and they may serve as a harbinger of things to come should the federal ban go into effect. Each varies in its specifics. Some, like Indiana, outright ban them, whereas others limit them based on variables like income and industry. “We’re seeing these states responding to local market conditions,” said Darryl Drevna, senior director of regulatory affairs at the American Medical Group Association. “Health care is a hyperlocal market. Depending on the situation, the bans adapt and respond specific to those states.”
Should the federal ban take hold, however, it will supersede whatever rules the individual states have in place.
Some opponents of the federal ban proposal question its authority to begin with, however, Mr. Glennon included. “Many people believe the FTC is overstepping,” he said. “Some people believe that Section 5 of the FTC Act does not give it the authority to police labor markets.”
Mr. Drevna noted that the FTC has taken an aggressive stance, one that will ultimately wind up in the courts. “How it works out is anyone’s guess,” he said. “Ideally, the FTC will consider the comments and concerns of groups like AMGA and realize that states are best suited to regulate in this area.”
In general, the ban’s supporters are employees/physicians; those who oppose it are their employers. Joining the AMGA in speaking out against the noncompete ban is the American Hospital Association, whereas the American College of Emergency Physicians has come out largely in support of the ban.
Still, doctors like Dr. Shah remain hopeful. “I am optimistic that perhaps my colleagues will not continue to be stuck in overrestrictive noncompetes, but I am also realistic,” he said. “Hospital systems are already coming out strongly against this and they have deep pockets, so I won’t be surprised if it does not come to pass.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Federal Trade Commission’s proposed regulation that would ban noncompete agreements across the country seems like potential good news for doctors. Of course, many hospitals and employers are against it. As a result, the FTC’s sweeping proposal has tongues wagging on both sides of the issue.
Many physicians are thrilled that they may soon have more control over their career and not be stuck in jobs where they feel frustrated, underpaid, or blocked in their progress.
As of 2018, as many as 45% of primary care physicians had inked such agreements with their employers.
Typically, the agreements prevent physicians from practicing medicine with a new employer for a defined period within a specific geographic area. No matter how attractive an alternate offer of employment might be, doctors are bound by the agreements to say no if the offer exists in that defined area and time period.
The period for public comment on the proposed regulation ended on April 19, and there is currently no set date for a decision.
In a Medscape poll of 558 physicians, more than 9 out of 10 respondents said that they were either currently bound by a noncompete clause or that they had been bound by one in the past that had forced them to temporarily stop working, commute long distances, move to a different area, or switch fields.
The new proposal would make it illegal for an employer, such as a hospital or large group, to enter a noncompete with a worker; maintain a noncompete with a worker; or represent to a worker, under certain circumstances, that the worker is subject to a noncompete.
It also would not only ban future noncompete agreements but also retroactively invalidate existing ones. The FTC reasons that noncompete clauses could potentially increase worker earnings as well as lower health care costs by billions of dollars. If the ruling were to move forward, it would represent part of President Biden’s “worker-forward” priorities, focusing on how competition can be a good thing for employees. The President billed the FTC’s announcement as a “huge win for workers.”
In its statements on the proposed ban, the FTC claimed that it could lower consumer prices across the board by as much as $150 billion per year and return nearly $300 million to workers each year.
However, even if passed, the draft rule would keep in place nonsolicitation rules that many health care organizations have put into place. That means that, if a physician leaves an employer, he or she cannot reach out to former patients and colleagues to bring them along or invite them to switch to him or her in the new job.
Within that clause, however, the FTC has specified that if such nonsolicitation agreement has the “equivalent effect” of a noncompete, the agency would deem it such. That means, even if that rule stays, it could be contested and may be interpreted as violating the noncompete law. So there’s value in reading all the fine print should the ban move forward.
Could the ban bring potential downsides?
Most physicians view the potential to break free of a noncompete agreement as a victory. Peter Glennon, an employment litigation attorney with The Glennon Law Firm in Rochester, N.Y., says not so fast. “If you ask anyone if they’d prefer a noncompete agreement, of course they’re going to say no,” he said in an interview. “It sounds like a restriction, one that can hold you back.”
Mr. Glennon believes that there are actually upsides to physician noncompetes. For instance, many noncompetes come with sign-on bonuses that could potentially disappear without the agreements. There’s also the fact that when some physicians sign a noncompete agreement, they then receive pro bono training and continuing education along with marketing and promotion of their skills. Without signing a noncompete, employers may be less incentivized to provide all those benefits to their physician employers.
Those benefits – and the noncompetes – also vary by specialty, Mr. Glennon said. “In 2021, Washington, DC, banned noncompetes for doctors making less than $250,000. So, most generalists there can walk across the street and get a new job. For specialists like cardiologists or neurosurgeons, however, advanced training and marketing benefits matter, so many of them don’t want to lose noncompetes.”
Still, most physicians hope that the FTC’s ban takes hold. Manan Shah, MD, founder, and chief medical officer at Wyndly, an allergy relief startup practice, is one of them.
“Initially, it might disincentivize hospital systems from helping new physicians build up their name and practice because they might be concerned about a physician leaving and starting anew,” he said. “But in the long term, hospitals require physicians to bring their patients to them for care, so the best hospitals will always compete for the best physicians and support them as they build up their practice.”
Dr. Shah views noncompetes as overly prohibitive to physicians. “Right now, if a physician starts a job at a large hospital system and realizes they want to switch jobs, the noncompete distances are so wide they often have to move cities to continue practicing,” he said. “Picking up and starting over in a new city isn’t an option for everyone and can be especially difficult for someone with a family.”
Where Mr. Glennon argued that a physician leaving a team-based practice might harm patients, Shah takes a different perspective. “Imagine you have a doctor whom you trust and have been working with,” he said. “If something changes at their hospital and they decide to move, you literally have to find a new doctor instead of just being able to see them at another location down the street.”
Another potential burden of the noncompete agreements is that they could possibly squelch doctor’s desires to hang up their own shingle. According to Dr. Shah, the agreements make it so that if a physician wants to work independently, it’s nearly impossible to fly solo. “This is frustrating because independent practices have been shown to be more cost effective and allow patients to build better relationships with their doctors,” he claimed.
A 2016 study from Annals of Family Medicine supports that claim, at least for small general practices. Another study appearing in JAMA concurred. It does point out, however, that the cost equation is nuanced and that benefits of larger systems include more resilience to economic downturns and can provide more specialized care.
Will nonprofit hospitals be subject to this noncompete ban?
Further complicating the noncompete ban issue is how it might impact nonprofit institutions versus their for-profit peers. Most hospitals structured as nonprofits would be exempt from the rule because the FTC Act provides that it can enforce against “persons, partnerships, or corporations,” which are further defined as entities “organized to carry on business for their own profit or that of their members.”
The fallout from this, said Dr. Shah, is that it “would disproportionately affect health care providers, since many hospital systems are nonprofits. This is disconcerting because we know that many nonprofit systems make large profits anyway and can offer executive teams’ lucrative packages, while the nurses, assistants, and physicians providing the care are generally not well compensated.”
So far, about nine states plus Washington, D.C., have already put noncompete bans in place, and they may serve as a harbinger of things to come should the federal ban go into effect. Each varies in its specifics. Some, like Indiana, outright ban them, whereas others limit them based on variables like income and industry. “We’re seeing these states responding to local market conditions,” said Darryl Drevna, senior director of regulatory affairs at the American Medical Group Association. “Health care is a hyperlocal market. Depending on the situation, the bans adapt and respond specific to those states.”
Should the federal ban take hold, however, it will supersede whatever rules the individual states have in place.
Some opponents of the federal ban proposal question its authority to begin with, however, Mr. Glennon included. “Many people believe the FTC is overstepping,” he said. “Some people believe that Section 5 of the FTC Act does not give it the authority to police labor markets.”
Mr. Drevna noted that the FTC has taken an aggressive stance, one that will ultimately wind up in the courts. “How it works out is anyone’s guess,” he said. “Ideally, the FTC will consider the comments and concerns of groups like AMGA and realize that states are best suited to regulate in this area.”
In general, the ban’s supporters are employees/physicians; those who oppose it are their employers. Joining the AMGA in speaking out against the noncompete ban is the American Hospital Association, whereas the American College of Emergency Physicians has come out largely in support of the ban.
Still, doctors like Dr. Shah remain hopeful. “I am optimistic that perhaps my colleagues will not continue to be stuck in overrestrictive noncompetes, but I am also realistic,” he said. “Hospital systems are already coming out strongly against this and they have deep pockets, so I won’t be surprised if it does not come to pass.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Federal Trade Commission’s proposed regulation that would ban noncompete agreements across the country seems like potential good news for doctors. Of course, many hospitals and employers are against it. As a result, the FTC’s sweeping proposal has tongues wagging on both sides of the issue.
Many physicians are thrilled that they may soon have more control over their career and not be stuck in jobs where they feel frustrated, underpaid, or blocked in their progress.
As of 2018, as many as 45% of primary care physicians had inked such agreements with their employers.
Typically, the agreements prevent physicians from practicing medicine with a new employer for a defined period within a specific geographic area. No matter how attractive an alternate offer of employment might be, doctors are bound by the agreements to say no if the offer exists in that defined area and time period.
The period for public comment on the proposed regulation ended on April 19, and there is currently no set date for a decision.
In a Medscape poll of 558 physicians, more than 9 out of 10 respondents said that they were either currently bound by a noncompete clause or that they had been bound by one in the past that had forced them to temporarily stop working, commute long distances, move to a different area, or switch fields.
The new proposal would make it illegal for an employer, such as a hospital or large group, to enter a noncompete with a worker; maintain a noncompete with a worker; or represent to a worker, under certain circumstances, that the worker is subject to a noncompete.
It also would not only ban future noncompete agreements but also retroactively invalidate existing ones. The FTC reasons that noncompete clauses could potentially increase worker earnings as well as lower health care costs by billions of dollars. If the ruling were to move forward, it would represent part of President Biden’s “worker-forward” priorities, focusing on how competition can be a good thing for employees. The President billed the FTC’s announcement as a “huge win for workers.”
In its statements on the proposed ban, the FTC claimed that it could lower consumer prices across the board by as much as $150 billion per year and return nearly $300 million to workers each year.
However, even if passed, the draft rule would keep in place nonsolicitation rules that many health care organizations have put into place. That means that, if a physician leaves an employer, he or she cannot reach out to former patients and colleagues to bring them along or invite them to switch to him or her in the new job.
Within that clause, however, the FTC has specified that if such nonsolicitation agreement has the “equivalent effect” of a noncompete, the agency would deem it such. That means, even if that rule stays, it could be contested and may be interpreted as violating the noncompete law. So there’s value in reading all the fine print should the ban move forward.
Could the ban bring potential downsides?
Most physicians view the potential to break free of a noncompete agreement as a victory. Peter Glennon, an employment litigation attorney with The Glennon Law Firm in Rochester, N.Y., says not so fast. “If you ask anyone if they’d prefer a noncompete agreement, of course they’re going to say no,” he said in an interview. “It sounds like a restriction, one that can hold you back.”
Mr. Glennon believes that there are actually upsides to physician noncompetes. For instance, many noncompetes come with sign-on bonuses that could potentially disappear without the agreements. There’s also the fact that when some physicians sign a noncompete agreement, they then receive pro bono training and continuing education along with marketing and promotion of their skills. Without signing a noncompete, employers may be less incentivized to provide all those benefits to their physician employers.
Those benefits – and the noncompetes – also vary by specialty, Mr. Glennon said. “In 2021, Washington, DC, banned noncompetes for doctors making less than $250,000. So, most generalists there can walk across the street and get a new job. For specialists like cardiologists or neurosurgeons, however, advanced training and marketing benefits matter, so many of them don’t want to lose noncompetes.”
Still, most physicians hope that the FTC’s ban takes hold. Manan Shah, MD, founder, and chief medical officer at Wyndly, an allergy relief startup practice, is one of them.
“Initially, it might disincentivize hospital systems from helping new physicians build up their name and practice because they might be concerned about a physician leaving and starting anew,” he said. “But in the long term, hospitals require physicians to bring their patients to them for care, so the best hospitals will always compete for the best physicians and support them as they build up their practice.”
Dr. Shah views noncompetes as overly prohibitive to physicians. “Right now, if a physician starts a job at a large hospital system and realizes they want to switch jobs, the noncompete distances are so wide they often have to move cities to continue practicing,” he said. “Picking up and starting over in a new city isn’t an option for everyone and can be especially difficult for someone with a family.”
Where Mr. Glennon argued that a physician leaving a team-based practice might harm patients, Shah takes a different perspective. “Imagine you have a doctor whom you trust and have been working with,” he said. “If something changes at their hospital and they decide to move, you literally have to find a new doctor instead of just being able to see them at another location down the street.”
Another potential burden of the noncompete agreements is that they could possibly squelch doctor’s desires to hang up their own shingle. According to Dr. Shah, the agreements make it so that if a physician wants to work independently, it’s nearly impossible to fly solo. “This is frustrating because independent practices have been shown to be more cost effective and allow patients to build better relationships with their doctors,” he claimed.
A 2016 study from Annals of Family Medicine supports that claim, at least for small general practices. Another study appearing in JAMA concurred. It does point out, however, that the cost equation is nuanced and that benefits of larger systems include more resilience to economic downturns and can provide more specialized care.
Will nonprofit hospitals be subject to this noncompete ban?
Further complicating the noncompete ban issue is how it might impact nonprofit institutions versus their for-profit peers. Most hospitals structured as nonprofits would be exempt from the rule because the FTC Act provides that it can enforce against “persons, partnerships, or corporations,” which are further defined as entities “organized to carry on business for their own profit or that of their members.”
The fallout from this, said Dr. Shah, is that it “would disproportionately affect health care providers, since many hospital systems are nonprofits. This is disconcerting because we know that many nonprofit systems make large profits anyway and can offer executive teams’ lucrative packages, while the nurses, assistants, and physicians providing the care are generally not well compensated.”
So far, about nine states plus Washington, D.C., have already put noncompete bans in place, and they may serve as a harbinger of things to come should the federal ban go into effect. Each varies in its specifics. Some, like Indiana, outright ban them, whereas others limit them based on variables like income and industry. “We’re seeing these states responding to local market conditions,” said Darryl Drevna, senior director of regulatory affairs at the American Medical Group Association. “Health care is a hyperlocal market. Depending on the situation, the bans adapt and respond specific to those states.”
Should the federal ban take hold, however, it will supersede whatever rules the individual states have in place.
Some opponents of the federal ban proposal question its authority to begin with, however, Mr. Glennon included. “Many people believe the FTC is overstepping,” he said. “Some people believe that Section 5 of the FTC Act does not give it the authority to police labor markets.”
Mr. Drevna noted that the FTC has taken an aggressive stance, one that will ultimately wind up in the courts. “How it works out is anyone’s guess,” he said. “Ideally, the FTC will consider the comments and concerns of groups like AMGA and realize that states are best suited to regulate in this area.”
In general, the ban’s supporters are employees/physicians; those who oppose it are their employers. Joining the AMGA in speaking out against the noncompete ban is the American Hospital Association, whereas the American College of Emergency Physicians has come out largely in support of the ban.
Still, doctors like Dr. Shah remain hopeful. “I am optimistic that perhaps my colleagues will not continue to be stuck in overrestrictive noncompetes, but I am also realistic,” he said. “Hospital systems are already coming out strongly against this and they have deep pockets, so I won’t be surprised if it does not come to pass.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
How BMI over time impacts GI cancer risk
according to new data from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial.
The researchers found that being overweight or obese in early and middle adulthood was associated with an increased risk for colorectal cancer (CRC) and noncolorectal GI cancers. Maintaining or increasing BMI over time among overweight or obese individuals was also associated with an increased GI cancer risk.
Aspirin use did not significantly modify these associations, suggesting that aspirin may not be as effective for cancer prevention among overweight or obese individuals.
The results provide “relatively consistent messaging that overweight or obesity from early to later adulthood as well as BMI increases throughout adulthood were associated with increased risk of GI cancers, especially CRC,” the authors of an editorial accompanying the study wrote.
These “important findings highlight the unmet need to identify the critical time window linking adiposity and GI cancer,” said editorialists Mengyao Shi, MBBS, MPD, and Yin Cao, ScD, MPH, of Washington University in St. Louis.
The analysis was published online in JAMA Network Open.
A growing body of evidence has revealed a strong association between obesity and GI cancers, with chronic inflammation being a likely cause. As rates of overweight and obesity continue to grow, better understanding of the association between obesity and cancer has become increasingly important.
In the analysis, Holli A. Loomans-Kropp, PhD, MPH, with Ohio State University, Columbus, and Asad Umar, PhD, DVM, with the National Cancer Institute, Rockville, Md., explored associations between BMI in early adulthood (age 20), middle adulthood (age 50) and later adulthood (age 55 and over) and GI cancer risk in 135,161 adults from the PLCO Cancer Screening Trial.
BMI was determined using self-reported height and weight at each age time point. The median age at enrollment was 62 years, and 50% of participants were women. Overweight BMI was 25.0-29.9 kg/m2 and obese BMI was 30 or higher.
During as many as 21 years of follow-up, 2,803 individuals developed CRC and 2,285 developed non-CRC GI cancers (esophageal, liver, gastric, and pancreatic).
Overweight BMI in early, middle, and later adulthood was associated with an increased risk of CRC (hazard ratio, 1.23 for early and middle years; HR, 1.21 for later years). Obese BMI in middle and later adulthood was also associated with increased risk of CRC (HR, 1.55 and 1.39, respectively).
The authors observed similar associations between BMI in middle and later adulthood and overall GI and non-CRC GI risk.
“When modeled continuously, we observed 2%-4% increased risk of both CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer with each 1-unit increase in BMI across all time points,” the researchers said.
Their data also suggest that BMI over time may be associated with GI cancer risk. Adults who exhibited no change in overweight or obese BMIs between early and later adulthood and those who exhibited increases in BMI from underweight or normal in early adulthood to overweight or obese BMI in later adulthood had a significantly higher risk for CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer.
Among frequent aspirin users, those with overweight or obese BMIs in early, middle, and later adulthood still had an increased risk for CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer (hazard ratios, 1.44, 1.45, and 1.43, respectively).
The finding that regular weekly aspirin use did not modify GI cancer risk suggests that obesity may alter the cancer-preventive effect of aspirin, the researchers suggested. Individuals with obesity may need to increase aspirin frequency or dosage to see an effect, but upping the dose comes with its own risks, including GI bleeding.
Overall, until now, most epidemiologic studies have examined BMI at one time point, “missing the opportunity to delineate the contribution of adiposity throughout the life course,” Dr. Shi and Dr. Cao wrote.
“As we continue to investigate precision-based interventions to intercept the link between obesity and cancer, it is imperative to reiterate the importance of maintaining a healthy weight and lifestyle from an early age and incorporate it widely into cancer prevention strategies at all levels with immediate implementation,” the editorialists concluded.
This study was supported in part by funds from Ohio State University and the NIH. The study authors reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Cao has received personal fees from Geneoscopy for consulting.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
according to new data from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial.
The researchers found that being overweight or obese in early and middle adulthood was associated with an increased risk for colorectal cancer (CRC) and noncolorectal GI cancers. Maintaining or increasing BMI over time among overweight or obese individuals was also associated with an increased GI cancer risk.
Aspirin use did not significantly modify these associations, suggesting that aspirin may not be as effective for cancer prevention among overweight or obese individuals.
The results provide “relatively consistent messaging that overweight or obesity from early to later adulthood as well as BMI increases throughout adulthood were associated with increased risk of GI cancers, especially CRC,” the authors of an editorial accompanying the study wrote.
These “important findings highlight the unmet need to identify the critical time window linking adiposity and GI cancer,” said editorialists Mengyao Shi, MBBS, MPD, and Yin Cao, ScD, MPH, of Washington University in St. Louis.
The analysis was published online in JAMA Network Open.
A growing body of evidence has revealed a strong association between obesity and GI cancers, with chronic inflammation being a likely cause. As rates of overweight and obesity continue to grow, better understanding of the association between obesity and cancer has become increasingly important.
In the analysis, Holli A. Loomans-Kropp, PhD, MPH, with Ohio State University, Columbus, and Asad Umar, PhD, DVM, with the National Cancer Institute, Rockville, Md., explored associations between BMI in early adulthood (age 20), middle adulthood (age 50) and later adulthood (age 55 and over) and GI cancer risk in 135,161 adults from the PLCO Cancer Screening Trial.
BMI was determined using self-reported height and weight at each age time point. The median age at enrollment was 62 years, and 50% of participants were women. Overweight BMI was 25.0-29.9 kg/m2 and obese BMI was 30 or higher.
During as many as 21 years of follow-up, 2,803 individuals developed CRC and 2,285 developed non-CRC GI cancers (esophageal, liver, gastric, and pancreatic).
Overweight BMI in early, middle, and later adulthood was associated with an increased risk of CRC (hazard ratio, 1.23 for early and middle years; HR, 1.21 for later years). Obese BMI in middle and later adulthood was also associated with increased risk of CRC (HR, 1.55 and 1.39, respectively).
The authors observed similar associations between BMI in middle and later adulthood and overall GI and non-CRC GI risk.
“When modeled continuously, we observed 2%-4% increased risk of both CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer with each 1-unit increase in BMI across all time points,” the researchers said.
Their data also suggest that BMI over time may be associated with GI cancer risk. Adults who exhibited no change in overweight or obese BMIs between early and later adulthood and those who exhibited increases in BMI from underweight or normal in early adulthood to overweight or obese BMI in later adulthood had a significantly higher risk for CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer.
Among frequent aspirin users, those with overweight or obese BMIs in early, middle, and later adulthood still had an increased risk for CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer (hazard ratios, 1.44, 1.45, and 1.43, respectively).
The finding that regular weekly aspirin use did not modify GI cancer risk suggests that obesity may alter the cancer-preventive effect of aspirin, the researchers suggested. Individuals with obesity may need to increase aspirin frequency or dosage to see an effect, but upping the dose comes with its own risks, including GI bleeding.
Overall, until now, most epidemiologic studies have examined BMI at one time point, “missing the opportunity to delineate the contribution of adiposity throughout the life course,” Dr. Shi and Dr. Cao wrote.
“As we continue to investigate precision-based interventions to intercept the link between obesity and cancer, it is imperative to reiterate the importance of maintaining a healthy weight and lifestyle from an early age and incorporate it widely into cancer prevention strategies at all levels with immediate implementation,” the editorialists concluded.
This study was supported in part by funds from Ohio State University and the NIH. The study authors reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Cao has received personal fees from Geneoscopy for consulting.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
according to new data from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial.
The researchers found that being overweight or obese in early and middle adulthood was associated with an increased risk for colorectal cancer (CRC) and noncolorectal GI cancers. Maintaining or increasing BMI over time among overweight or obese individuals was also associated with an increased GI cancer risk.
Aspirin use did not significantly modify these associations, suggesting that aspirin may not be as effective for cancer prevention among overweight or obese individuals.
The results provide “relatively consistent messaging that overweight or obesity from early to later adulthood as well as BMI increases throughout adulthood were associated with increased risk of GI cancers, especially CRC,” the authors of an editorial accompanying the study wrote.
These “important findings highlight the unmet need to identify the critical time window linking adiposity and GI cancer,” said editorialists Mengyao Shi, MBBS, MPD, and Yin Cao, ScD, MPH, of Washington University in St. Louis.
The analysis was published online in JAMA Network Open.
A growing body of evidence has revealed a strong association between obesity and GI cancers, with chronic inflammation being a likely cause. As rates of overweight and obesity continue to grow, better understanding of the association between obesity and cancer has become increasingly important.
In the analysis, Holli A. Loomans-Kropp, PhD, MPH, with Ohio State University, Columbus, and Asad Umar, PhD, DVM, with the National Cancer Institute, Rockville, Md., explored associations between BMI in early adulthood (age 20), middle adulthood (age 50) and later adulthood (age 55 and over) and GI cancer risk in 135,161 adults from the PLCO Cancer Screening Trial.
BMI was determined using self-reported height and weight at each age time point. The median age at enrollment was 62 years, and 50% of participants were women. Overweight BMI was 25.0-29.9 kg/m2 and obese BMI was 30 or higher.
During as many as 21 years of follow-up, 2,803 individuals developed CRC and 2,285 developed non-CRC GI cancers (esophageal, liver, gastric, and pancreatic).
Overweight BMI in early, middle, and later adulthood was associated with an increased risk of CRC (hazard ratio, 1.23 for early and middle years; HR, 1.21 for later years). Obese BMI in middle and later adulthood was also associated with increased risk of CRC (HR, 1.55 and 1.39, respectively).
The authors observed similar associations between BMI in middle and later adulthood and overall GI and non-CRC GI risk.
“When modeled continuously, we observed 2%-4% increased risk of both CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer with each 1-unit increase in BMI across all time points,” the researchers said.
Their data also suggest that BMI over time may be associated with GI cancer risk. Adults who exhibited no change in overweight or obese BMIs between early and later adulthood and those who exhibited increases in BMI from underweight or normal in early adulthood to overweight or obese BMI in later adulthood had a significantly higher risk for CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer.
Among frequent aspirin users, those with overweight or obese BMIs in early, middle, and later adulthood still had an increased risk for CRC and noncolorectal GI cancer (hazard ratios, 1.44, 1.45, and 1.43, respectively).
The finding that regular weekly aspirin use did not modify GI cancer risk suggests that obesity may alter the cancer-preventive effect of aspirin, the researchers suggested. Individuals with obesity may need to increase aspirin frequency or dosage to see an effect, but upping the dose comes with its own risks, including GI bleeding.
Overall, until now, most epidemiologic studies have examined BMI at one time point, “missing the opportunity to delineate the contribution of adiposity throughout the life course,” Dr. Shi and Dr. Cao wrote.
“As we continue to investigate precision-based interventions to intercept the link between obesity and cancer, it is imperative to reiterate the importance of maintaining a healthy weight and lifestyle from an early age and incorporate it widely into cancer prevention strategies at all levels with immediate implementation,” the editorialists concluded.
This study was supported in part by funds from Ohio State University and the NIH. The study authors reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Cao has received personal fees from Geneoscopy for consulting.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN
Could vitamin D supplementation help in long COVID?
, in a retrospective, case-matched study.
The lower levels of vitamin D in patients with long COVID were most notable in those with brain fog.
These findings, by Luigi di Filippo, MD, and colleagues, were recently presented at the European Congress of Endocrinology and published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
“Our data suggest that vitamin D levels should be evaluated in COVID-19 patients after hospital discharge,” wrote the researchers, from San Raffaele Hospital, Milan.
“The role of vitamin D supplementation as a preventive strategy of COVID-19 sequelae should be tested in randomized controlled trials,” they urged.
The researchers also stressed that this was a controlled study in a homogeneous population, it included multiple signs and symptoms of long COVID, and it had a longer follow-up than most previous studies (6 vs. 3 months).
“The highly controlled nature of our study helps us better understand the role of vitamin D deficiency in long COVID and establish that there is likely a link between vitamin D deficiency and long COVID,” senior author Andrea Giustina, MD, said in a press release from the ECE.
“Our study shows that COVID-19 patients with low vitamin D levels are more likely to develop long COVID, but it is not yet known whether vitamin D supplements could improve the symptoms or reduce this risk altogether,” he cautioned.
“If confirmed in large, interventional, randomized controlled trials, [our data suggest] that vitamin D supplementation could represent a possible preventive strategy in reducing the burden of COVID-19 sequelae,” Dr. Giustina and colleagues wrote.
Reasonable to test vitamin D levels, consider supplementation
Invited to comment, Amiel Dror, MD, PhD, who led a related study that showed that people with a vitamin D deficiency were more likely to have severe COVID-19, agreed.
“The novelty and significance of this [new] study lie in the fact that it expands on our current understanding of the interplay between vitamin D and COVID-19, taking it beyond the acute phase of the disease,” said Dr. Dror, from Bar-Ilan University, Safed, Israel.
“It’s striking to see how vitamin D levels continue to influence patients’ health even after recovery from the initial infection,” he noted.
“The findings certainly add weight to the argument for conducting a randomized control trial [RCT],” he continued, which “would enable us to conclusively determine whether vitamin D supplementation can effectively reduce the risk or severity of long COVID.”
“In the interim,” Dr. Dror said, “given the safety profile of vitamin D and its broad health benefits, it could be reasonable to test for vitamin D levels in patients admitted with COVID-19. If levels are found to be low, supplementation could be considered.”
“However, it’s important to note that this should be done under medical supervision,” he cautioned, “and further studies are needed to establish the optimal timing and dosage of supplementation.”
“I anticipate that we’ll see more RCTs [of this] in the future,” he speculated.
Low vitamin D and risk of long COVID
Long COVID is an emerging syndrome that affects 50%-70% of COVID-19 survivors.
Low levels of vitamin D have been associated with increased likelihood of needing mechanical ventilation and worse survival in patients hospitalized with COVID-19, but the risk of long COVID associated with vitamin D has not been known.
Researchers analyzed data from adults aged 18 and older hospitalized at San Raffaele Hospital with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 and discharged during the first pandemic wave, from March to May 2020, and then seen 6-months later for follow-up.
Patients were excluded if they had been admitted to the intensive care unit during hospitalization or had missing medical data or blood samples available to determine (OH) vitamin D levels, at admission and the 6-month follow-up.
Long COVID-19 was defined based on the U.K. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines as the concomitant presence of at least two or more of 17 signs and symptoms that were absent prior to the COVID-19 infection and could only be attributed to that acute disease.
Researchers identified 50 patients with long COVID at the 6-month follow-up and matched them with 50 patients without long COVID at that time point, based on age, sex, concomitant comorbidities, need for noninvasive mechanical ventilation, and week of evaluation.
Patients were a mean age of 61 years (range, 51-73) and 56% were men; 28% had been on a ventilator during hospitalization for COVID-19.
The most frequent signs and symptoms at 6 months in the patients with long COVID were asthenia (weakness, 38% of patients), dysgeusia (bad taste in the mouth, 34%), dyspnea (shortness of breath, 34%), and anosmia (loss of sense of smell, 24%).
Most symptoms were related to the cardiorespiratory system (42%), the feeling of well-being (42%), or the senses (36%), and fewer patients had symptoms related to neurocognitive impairment (headache or brain fog, 14%), or ear, nose, and throat (12%), or gastrointestinal system (4%).
Patients with long COVID had lower mean 25(OH) vitamin D levels than patients without long COVID (20.1 vs 23.2 ng/mL; P = .03). However, actual vitamin D deficiency levels were similar in both groups.
Two-thirds of patients with low vitamin D levels at hospital admission still presented with low levels at the 6-month follow-up.
Vitamin D levels were significantly lower in patients with neurocognitive symptoms at follow-up (n = 7) than in those without such symptoms (n = 93) (14.6 vs. 20.6 ng/mL; P = .042).
In patients with vitamin D deficiency (< 20 ng/mL) at admission and at follow-up (n = 42), those with long COVID (n = 22) had lower vitamin D levels at follow-up than those without long COVID (n = 20) (12.7 vs. 15.2 ng/mL; P = .041).
And in multiple regression analyses, a lower 25(OH) vitamin D level at follow-up was the only variable that was significantly associated with long COVID (odds ratio, 1.09; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.16; P = .008).
The findings “strongly reinforce the clinical usefulness of 25(OH) vitamin D evaluation as a possible modifiable pathophysiological factor underlying this emerging worldwide critical health issue,” the researchers concluded.
The study was supported by Abiogen Pharma. One study author is an employee at Abiogen. Dr. Giustina has reported being a consultant for Abiogen and Takeda and receiving a research grant to his institution from Takeda. Dr. Di Filippo and the other authors reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
, in a retrospective, case-matched study.
The lower levels of vitamin D in patients with long COVID were most notable in those with brain fog.
These findings, by Luigi di Filippo, MD, and colleagues, were recently presented at the European Congress of Endocrinology and published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
“Our data suggest that vitamin D levels should be evaluated in COVID-19 patients after hospital discharge,” wrote the researchers, from San Raffaele Hospital, Milan.
“The role of vitamin D supplementation as a preventive strategy of COVID-19 sequelae should be tested in randomized controlled trials,” they urged.
The researchers also stressed that this was a controlled study in a homogeneous population, it included multiple signs and symptoms of long COVID, and it had a longer follow-up than most previous studies (6 vs. 3 months).
“The highly controlled nature of our study helps us better understand the role of vitamin D deficiency in long COVID and establish that there is likely a link between vitamin D deficiency and long COVID,” senior author Andrea Giustina, MD, said in a press release from the ECE.
“Our study shows that COVID-19 patients with low vitamin D levels are more likely to develop long COVID, but it is not yet known whether vitamin D supplements could improve the symptoms or reduce this risk altogether,” he cautioned.
“If confirmed in large, interventional, randomized controlled trials, [our data suggest] that vitamin D supplementation could represent a possible preventive strategy in reducing the burden of COVID-19 sequelae,” Dr. Giustina and colleagues wrote.
Reasonable to test vitamin D levels, consider supplementation
Invited to comment, Amiel Dror, MD, PhD, who led a related study that showed that people with a vitamin D deficiency were more likely to have severe COVID-19, agreed.
“The novelty and significance of this [new] study lie in the fact that it expands on our current understanding of the interplay between vitamin D and COVID-19, taking it beyond the acute phase of the disease,” said Dr. Dror, from Bar-Ilan University, Safed, Israel.
“It’s striking to see how vitamin D levels continue to influence patients’ health even after recovery from the initial infection,” he noted.
“The findings certainly add weight to the argument for conducting a randomized control trial [RCT],” he continued, which “would enable us to conclusively determine whether vitamin D supplementation can effectively reduce the risk or severity of long COVID.”
“In the interim,” Dr. Dror said, “given the safety profile of vitamin D and its broad health benefits, it could be reasonable to test for vitamin D levels in patients admitted with COVID-19. If levels are found to be low, supplementation could be considered.”
“However, it’s important to note that this should be done under medical supervision,” he cautioned, “and further studies are needed to establish the optimal timing and dosage of supplementation.”
“I anticipate that we’ll see more RCTs [of this] in the future,” he speculated.
Low vitamin D and risk of long COVID
Long COVID is an emerging syndrome that affects 50%-70% of COVID-19 survivors.
Low levels of vitamin D have been associated with increased likelihood of needing mechanical ventilation and worse survival in patients hospitalized with COVID-19, but the risk of long COVID associated with vitamin D has not been known.
Researchers analyzed data from adults aged 18 and older hospitalized at San Raffaele Hospital with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 and discharged during the first pandemic wave, from March to May 2020, and then seen 6-months later for follow-up.
Patients were excluded if they had been admitted to the intensive care unit during hospitalization or had missing medical data or blood samples available to determine (OH) vitamin D levels, at admission and the 6-month follow-up.
Long COVID-19 was defined based on the U.K. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines as the concomitant presence of at least two or more of 17 signs and symptoms that were absent prior to the COVID-19 infection and could only be attributed to that acute disease.
Researchers identified 50 patients with long COVID at the 6-month follow-up and matched them with 50 patients without long COVID at that time point, based on age, sex, concomitant comorbidities, need for noninvasive mechanical ventilation, and week of evaluation.
Patients were a mean age of 61 years (range, 51-73) and 56% were men; 28% had been on a ventilator during hospitalization for COVID-19.
The most frequent signs and symptoms at 6 months in the patients with long COVID were asthenia (weakness, 38% of patients), dysgeusia (bad taste in the mouth, 34%), dyspnea (shortness of breath, 34%), and anosmia (loss of sense of smell, 24%).
Most symptoms were related to the cardiorespiratory system (42%), the feeling of well-being (42%), or the senses (36%), and fewer patients had symptoms related to neurocognitive impairment (headache or brain fog, 14%), or ear, nose, and throat (12%), or gastrointestinal system (4%).
Patients with long COVID had lower mean 25(OH) vitamin D levels than patients without long COVID (20.1 vs 23.2 ng/mL; P = .03). However, actual vitamin D deficiency levels were similar in both groups.
Two-thirds of patients with low vitamin D levels at hospital admission still presented with low levels at the 6-month follow-up.
Vitamin D levels were significantly lower in patients with neurocognitive symptoms at follow-up (n = 7) than in those without such symptoms (n = 93) (14.6 vs. 20.6 ng/mL; P = .042).
In patients with vitamin D deficiency (< 20 ng/mL) at admission and at follow-up (n = 42), those with long COVID (n = 22) had lower vitamin D levels at follow-up than those without long COVID (n = 20) (12.7 vs. 15.2 ng/mL; P = .041).
And in multiple regression analyses, a lower 25(OH) vitamin D level at follow-up was the only variable that was significantly associated with long COVID (odds ratio, 1.09; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.16; P = .008).
The findings “strongly reinforce the clinical usefulness of 25(OH) vitamin D evaluation as a possible modifiable pathophysiological factor underlying this emerging worldwide critical health issue,” the researchers concluded.
The study was supported by Abiogen Pharma. One study author is an employee at Abiogen. Dr. Giustina has reported being a consultant for Abiogen and Takeda and receiving a research grant to his institution from Takeda. Dr. Di Filippo and the other authors reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
, in a retrospective, case-matched study.
The lower levels of vitamin D in patients with long COVID were most notable in those with brain fog.
These findings, by Luigi di Filippo, MD, and colleagues, were recently presented at the European Congress of Endocrinology and published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
“Our data suggest that vitamin D levels should be evaluated in COVID-19 patients after hospital discharge,” wrote the researchers, from San Raffaele Hospital, Milan.
“The role of vitamin D supplementation as a preventive strategy of COVID-19 sequelae should be tested in randomized controlled trials,” they urged.
The researchers also stressed that this was a controlled study in a homogeneous population, it included multiple signs and symptoms of long COVID, and it had a longer follow-up than most previous studies (6 vs. 3 months).
“The highly controlled nature of our study helps us better understand the role of vitamin D deficiency in long COVID and establish that there is likely a link between vitamin D deficiency and long COVID,” senior author Andrea Giustina, MD, said in a press release from the ECE.
“Our study shows that COVID-19 patients with low vitamin D levels are more likely to develop long COVID, but it is not yet known whether vitamin D supplements could improve the symptoms or reduce this risk altogether,” he cautioned.
“If confirmed in large, interventional, randomized controlled trials, [our data suggest] that vitamin D supplementation could represent a possible preventive strategy in reducing the burden of COVID-19 sequelae,” Dr. Giustina and colleagues wrote.
Reasonable to test vitamin D levels, consider supplementation
Invited to comment, Amiel Dror, MD, PhD, who led a related study that showed that people with a vitamin D deficiency were more likely to have severe COVID-19, agreed.
“The novelty and significance of this [new] study lie in the fact that it expands on our current understanding of the interplay between vitamin D and COVID-19, taking it beyond the acute phase of the disease,” said Dr. Dror, from Bar-Ilan University, Safed, Israel.
“It’s striking to see how vitamin D levels continue to influence patients’ health even after recovery from the initial infection,” he noted.
“The findings certainly add weight to the argument for conducting a randomized control trial [RCT],” he continued, which “would enable us to conclusively determine whether vitamin D supplementation can effectively reduce the risk or severity of long COVID.”
“In the interim,” Dr. Dror said, “given the safety profile of vitamin D and its broad health benefits, it could be reasonable to test for vitamin D levels in patients admitted with COVID-19. If levels are found to be low, supplementation could be considered.”
“However, it’s important to note that this should be done under medical supervision,” he cautioned, “and further studies are needed to establish the optimal timing and dosage of supplementation.”
“I anticipate that we’ll see more RCTs [of this] in the future,” he speculated.
Low vitamin D and risk of long COVID
Long COVID is an emerging syndrome that affects 50%-70% of COVID-19 survivors.
Low levels of vitamin D have been associated with increased likelihood of needing mechanical ventilation and worse survival in patients hospitalized with COVID-19, but the risk of long COVID associated with vitamin D has not been known.
Researchers analyzed data from adults aged 18 and older hospitalized at San Raffaele Hospital with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 and discharged during the first pandemic wave, from March to May 2020, and then seen 6-months later for follow-up.
Patients were excluded if they had been admitted to the intensive care unit during hospitalization or had missing medical data or blood samples available to determine (OH) vitamin D levels, at admission and the 6-month follow-up.
Long COVID-19 was defined based on the U.K. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines as the concomitant presence of at least two or more of 17 signs and symptoms that were absent prior to the COVID-19 infection and could only be attributed to that acute disease.
Researchers identified 50 patients with long COVID at the 6-month follow-up and matched them with 50 patients without long COVID at that time point, based on age, sex, concomitant comorbidities, need for noninvasive mechanical ventilation, and week of evaluation.
Patients were a mean age of 61 years (range, 51-73) and 56% were men; 28% had been on a ventilator during hospitalization for COVID-19.
The most frequent signs and symptoms at 6 months in the patients with long COVID were asthenia (weakness, 38% of patients), dysgeusia (bad taste in the mouth, 34%), dyspnea (shortness of breath, 34%), and anosmia (loss of sense of smell, 24%).
Most symptoms were related to the cardiorespiratory system (42%), the feeling of well-being (42%), or the senses (36%), and fewer patients had symptoms related to neurocognitive impairment (headache or brain fog, 14%), or ear, nose, and throat (12%), or gastrointestinal system (4%).
Patients with long COVID had lower mean 25(OH) vitamin D levels than patients without long COVID (20.1 vs 23.2 ng/mL; P = .03). However, actual vitamin D deficiency levels were similar in both groups.
Two-thirds of patients with low vitamin D levels at hospital admission still presented with low levels at the 6-month follow-up.
Vitamin D levels were significantly lower in patients with neurocognitive symptoms at follow-up (n = 7) than in those without such symptoms (n = 93) (14.6 vs. 20.6 ng/mL; P = .042).
In patients with vitamin D deficiency (< 20 ng/mL) at admission and at follow-up (n = 42), those with long COVID (n = 22) had lower vitamin D levels at follow-up than those without long COVID (n = 20) (12.7 vs. 15.2 ng/mL; P = .041).
And in multiple regression analyses, a lower 25(OH) vitamin D level at follow-up was the only variable that was significantly associated with long COVID (odds ratio, 1.09; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-1.16; P = .008).
The findings “strongly reinforce the clinical usefulness of 25(OH) vitamin D evaluation as a possible modifiable pathophysiological factor underlying this emerging worldwide critical health issue,” the researchers concluded.
The study was supported by Abiogen Pharma. One study author is an employee at Abiogen. Dr. Giustina has reported being a consultant for Abiogen and Takeda and receiving a research grant to his institution from Takeda. Dr. Di Filippo and the other authors reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ECE 2023
Nonpharmacologic therapies for T2D: Five things to know
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Diabetes Statistic Report, there are more than 37 million adults aged 18 years or older with diabetes in the United States, representing 14.7% of the adult population. Approximately 90%-95% of people diagnosed with diabetes have type 2 diabetes (T2D). An increasing aging population with T2D and a disparate incidence and burden of disease in African American and Hispanic populations raise important care considerations in effective disease assessment and management, especially in primary care, where the majority of diabetes management occurs.
This extends to the need for quality patient education in an effort to give persons with diabetes a better understanding of what it’s like to live with the disease.
Here are five things to know about nonpharmacologic therapies for effective T2D management.
1. Understand and treat the person before the disease.
Diabetes is a complex and unrelenting disease of self-management, requiring an individualized care approach to achieve optimal health outcomes and quality of life for persons living with this condition. Over 90% of care is provided by the person with diabetes, therefore understanding the lived world of the person with diabetes and its connected impact on self-care is critical to establishing effective treatment recommendations, especially for people from racial and ethnic minority groups and lower socioeconomic status where diabetes disparities are highest. Disease prevalence, cost of care, and disease burden are driven by social determinants of health (SDOH) factors that need to be assessed, and strategies addressing causative factors need to be implemented. SDOH factors, including the built environment, safety, financial status, education, food access, health care access, and social support, directly affect the ability of a person with diabetes to effectively implement treatment recommendations, including access to new medications. The adoption of a shared decision-making approach is key to person-centered care. Shared decision-making promotes a positive communication feedback loop, therapeutic patient-care team relationship, and collaborative plan of care between the person with diabetes and the care team. It also supports the establishment of mutual respect between the person with diabetes and the care team members. This cultivates the strong, open, and authentic partnership needed for effective chronic disease management.
2. Quality diabetes education is the foundation for effective self-care.
Diabetes self-management education and support (DSMES) is a fundamental component of diabetes care and ensures patients have the knowledge, skills, motivation, and resources necessary for effectively managing this condition. Despite treatment advances and the evidence base for DSMES, less than 5% of Medicare beneficiaries and 6.8% of privately insured beneficiaries have utilized its services, and this is a likely contributor to the lack of improvement for achieving national diabetes clinical targets. The Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (ADCES7) Self-Care Behaviors provides an evidence-based framework for an optimal DSMES curriculum, incorporating the self-care behaviors of healthy coping (e.g., having a positive attitude toward diabetes self-management), nutritious eating, being active, taking medication, monitoring, reducing risk, and problem-solving.
There are four core times to implement and adapt referral for DSMES: (1) at diagnosis, (2) annually or when not meeting targets, (3) when complications arise, and (4) with transitions in life and care. DSMES referrals should be made for programs accredited by the ADCES or American Diabetes Association (ADA) and led by expert Certified Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (CDCES). The multidisciplinary composition and clinical skill level of CDCES make them a highly valued member of the diabetes care team. CDCES have demonstrated not only diabetes education expertise but are involved in broader health care roles to include population health management, technology integration, mitigation of therapeutic inertia, quality improvement activity, and delivery of cost-effective care.
3. Establish a strong foundation in lifestyle medicine.
Lifestyle medicine encompasses healthy eating, physical activity, restorative sleep, stress management, avoidance of risky behaviors, and positive social connections. It has also been strongly connected as a primary modality to prevent and treat chronic conditions like T2D. Lifestyle modifications have been noted in reducing the incidence of developing diabetes, reversing disease, improving clinical markers such as A1c and lipids, weight reduction, reducing use of medications, and improving quality of life. The multidisciplinary care team and CDCES can support the empowerment of individuals with T2D to develop the life skills and knowledge needed to establish positive self-care behaviors and successfully achieve health goals. Lifestyle medicine is not a replacement for pharmacologic interventions but rather serves as an adjunct when medication management is required.
4. Harness technology in diabetes treatment and care delivery.
Diabetes technology is advancing swiftly and includes glucose monitors, medication delivery devices, data-sharing platforms, and disease self-management applications. Combined with education and support, diabetes technology has been shown to have a positive clinical and personal impact on disease outcomes and quality of life. Regardless of its benefits, at times technology can seem overwhelming for the person with diabetes and the care team. Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (DCES) can support the care team and people living with diabetes to effectively identify, implement, and evaluate patient-centered diabetes technologies, as well as implement processes to drive clinical efficiencies and sustainability. Patient-generated health data reports can provide the care team with effective and proficient evaluation of diabetes care and needed treatment changes.
The expansion of telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic, including real-time and asynchronous approaches, coupled with in-person care team visits, has resulted in improved access to diabetes care and education. Moreover, there continues to be an expanding health system focus on improving access to care beyond traditional brick and mortar solutions. Telehealth poses one possible access solution for people living with diabetes for whom factors such as transportation, remote geographies, and physical limitations affect their ability to attend in-person care visits.
5. Assess and address diabetes-related distress.
The persistent nature of diabetes self-care expectations and the impact on lifestyle behaviors, medication adherence, and glycemic control demands the need for assessment and treatment of diabetes-related distress (DRD). DRD can be expressed as shame, guilt, anger, fear, and frustration in combination with the everyday context of life priorities and stressors. An assessment of diabetes distress, utilizing a simple scale, should be included as part of an annual therapeutic diabetes care plan. The ADA Standards of Care in Diabetes recommends assessing patients’ psychological and social situations as an ongoing part of medical management, including an annual screening for depression and other psychological problems. The prevalence of depression is nearly twice as high in people with T2D than in the general population and can significantly influence patients’ ability to self-manage their diabetes and achieve healthy outcomes. Assessment and treatment of psychosocial components of care can result in significant improvements in A1c and other positive outcomes, including quality of life.
Kellie M. Rodriguez, director of the global diabetes program at Parkland Health, Dallas, Tex., disclosed ties with the Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Diabetes Statistic Report, there are more than 37 million adults aged 18 years or older with diabetes in the United States, representing 14.7% of the adult population. Approximately 90%-95% of people diagnosed with diabetes have type 2 diabetes (T2D). An increasing aging population with T2D and a disparate incidence and burden of disease in African American and Hispanic populations raise important care considerations in effective disease assessment and management, especially in primary care, where the majority of diabetes management occurs.
This extends to the need for quality patient education in an effort to give persons with diabetes a better understanding of what it’s like to live with the disease.
Here are five things to know about nonpharmacologic therapies for effective T2D management.
1. Understand and treat the person before the disease.
Diabetes is a complex and unrelenting disease of self-management, requiring an individualized care approach to achieve optimal health outcomes and quality of life for persons living with this condition. Over 90% of care is provided by the person with diabetes, therefore understanding the lived world of the person with diabetes and its connected impact on self-care is critical to establishing effective treatment recommendations, especially for people from racial and ethnic minority groups and lower socioeconomic status where diabetes disparities are highest. Disease prevalence, cost of care, and disease burden are driven by social determinants of health (SDOH) factors that need to be assessed, and strategies addressing causative factors need to be implemented. SDOH factors, including the built environment, safety, financial status, education, food access, health care access, and social support, directly affect the ability of a person with diabetes to effectively implement treatment recommendations, including access to new medications. The adoption of a shared decision-making approach is key to person-centered care. Shared decision-making promotes a positive communication feedback loop, therapeutic patient-care team relationship, and collaborative plan of care between the person with diabetes and the care team. It also supports the establishment of mutual respect between the person with diabetes and the care team members. This cultivates the strong, open, and authentic partnership needed for effective chronic disease management.
2. Quality diabetes education is the foundation for effective self-care.
Diabetes self-management education and support (DSMES) is a fundamental component of diabetes care and ensures patients have the knowledge, skills, motivation, and resources necessary for effectively managing this condition. Despite treatment advances and the evidence base for DSMES, less than 5% of Medicare beneficiaries and 6.8% of privately insured beneficiaries have utilized its services, and this is a likely contributor to the lack of improvement for achieving national diabetes clinical targets. The Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (ADCES7) Self-Care Behaviors provides an evidence-based framework for an optimal DSMES curriculum, incorporating the self-care behaviors of healthy coping (e.g., having a positive attitude toward diabetes self-management), nutritious eating, being active, taking medication, monitoring, reducing risk, and problem-solving.
There are four core times to implement and adapt referral for DSMES: (1) at diagnosis, (2) annually or when not meeting targets, (3) when complications arise, and (4) with transitions in life and care. DSMES referrals should be made for programs accredited by the ADCES or American Diabetes Association (ADA) and led by expert Certified Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (CDCES). The multidisciplinary composition and clinical skill level of CDCES make them a highly valued member of the diabetes care team. CDCES have demonstrated not only diabetes education expertise but are involved in broader health care roles to include population health management, technology integration, mitigation of therapeutic inertia, quality improvement activity, and delivery of cost-effective care.
3. Establish a strong foundation in lifestyle medicine.
Lifestyle medicine encompasses healthy eating, physical activity, restorative sleep, stress management, avoidance of risky behaviors, and positive social connections. It has also been strongly connected as a primary modality to prevent and treat chronic conditions like T2D. Lifestyle modifications have been noted in reducing the incidence of developing diabetes, reversing disease, improving clinical markers such as A1c and lipids, weight reduction, reducing use of medications, and improving quality of life. The multidisciplinary care team and CDCES can support the empowerment of individuals with T2D to develop the life skills and knowledge needed to establish positive self-care behaviors and successfully achieve health goals. Lifestyle medicine is not a replacement for pharmacologic interventions but rather serves as an adjunct when medication management is required.
4. Harness technology in diabetes treatment and care delivery.
Diabetes technology is advancing swiftly and includes glucose monitors, medication delivery devices, data-sharing platforms, and disease self-management applications. Combined with education and support, diabetes technology has been shown to have a positive clinical and personal impact on disease outcomes and quality of life. Regardless of its benefits, at times technology can seem overwhelming for the person with diabetes and the care team. Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (DCES) can support the care team and people living with diabetes to effectively identify, implement, and evaluate patient-centered diabetes technologies, as well as implement processes to drive clinical efficiencies and sustainability. Patient-generated health data reports can provide the care team with effective and proficient evaluation of diabetes care and needed treatment changes.
The expansion of telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic, including real-time and asynchronous approaches, coupled with in-person care team visits, has resulted in improved access to diabetes care and education. Moreover, there continues to be an expanding health system focus on improving access to care beyond traditional brick and mortar solutions. Telehealth poses one possible access solution for people living with diabetes for whom factors such as transportation, remote geographies, and physical limitations affect their ability to attend in-person care visits.
5. Assess and address diabetes-related distress.
The persistent nature of diabetes self-care expectations and the impact on lifestyle behaviors, medication adherence, and glycemic control demands the need for assessment and treatment of diabetes-related distress (DRD). DRD can be expressed as shame, guilt, anger, fear, and frustration in combination with the everyday context of life priorities and stressors. An assessment of diabetes distress, utilizing a simple scale, should be included as part of an annual therapeutic diabetes care plan. The ADA Standards of Care in Diabetes recommends assessing patients’ psychological and social situations as an ongoing part of medical management, including an annual screening for depression and other psychological problems. The prevalence of depression is nearly twice as high in people with T2D than in the general population and can significantly influence patients’ ability to self-manage their diabetes and achieve healthy outcomes. Assessment and treatment of psychosocial components of care can result in significant improvements in A1c and other positive outcomes, including quality of life.
Kellie M. Rodriguez, director of the global diabetes program at Parkland Health, Dallas, Tex., disclosed ties with the Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Diabetes Statistic Report, there are more than 37 million adults aged 18 years or older with diabetes in the United States, representing 14.7% of the adult population. Approximately 90%-95% of people diagnosed with diabetes have type 2 diabetes (T2D). An increasing aging population with T2D and a disparate incidence and burden of disease in African American and Hispanic populations raise important care considerations in effective disease assessment and management, especially in primary care, where the majority of diabetes management occurs.
This extends to the need for quality patient education in an effort to give persons with diabetes a better understanding of what it’s like to live with the disease.
Here are five things to know about nonpharmacologic therapies for effective T2D management.
1. Understand and treat the person before the disease.
Diabetes is a complex and unrelenting disease of self-management, requiring an individualized care approach to achieve optimal health outcomes and quality of life for persons living with this condition. Over 90% of care is provided by the person with diabetes, therefore understanding the lived world of the person with diabetes and its connected impact on self-care is critical to establishing effective treatment recommendations, especially for people from racial and ethnic minority groups and lower socioeconomic status where diabetes disparities are highest. Disease prevalence, cost of care, and disease burden are driven by social determinants of health (SDOH) factors that need to be assessed, and strategies addressing causative factors need to be implemented. SDOH factors, including the built environment, safety, financial status, education, food access, health care access, and social support, directly affect the ability of a person with diabetes to effectively implement treatment recommendations, including access to new medications. The adoption of a shared decision-making approach is key to person-centered care. Shared decision-making promotes a positive communication feedback loop, therapeutic patient-care team relationship, and collaborative plan of care between the person with diabetes and the care team. It also supports the establishment of mutual respect between the person with diabetes and the care team members. This cultivates the strong, open, and authentic partnership needed for effective chronic disease management.
2. Quality diabetes education is the foundation for effective self-care.
Diabetes self-management education and support (DSMES) is a fundamental component of diabetes care and ensures patients have the knowledge, skills, motivation, and resources necessary for effectively managing this condition. Despite treatment advances and the evidence base for DSMES, less than 5% of Medicare beneficiaries and 6.8% of privately insured beneficiaries have utilized its services, and this is a likely contributor to the lack of improvement for achieving national diabetes clinical targets. The Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (ADCES7) Self-Care Behaviors provides an evidence-based framework for an optimal DSMES curriculum, incorporating the self-care behaviors of healthy coping (e.g., having a positive attitude toward diabetes self-management), nutritious eating, being active, taking medication, monitoring, reducing risk, and problem-solving.
There are four core times to implement and adapt referral for DSMES: (1) at diagnosis, (2) annually or when not meeting targets, (3) when complications arise, and (4) with transitions in life and care. DSMES referrals should be made for programs accredited by the ADCES or American Diabetes Association (ADA) and led by expert Certified Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (CDCES). The multidisciplinary composition and clinical skill level of CDCES make them a highly valued member of the diabetes care team. CDCES have demonstrated not only diabetes education expertise but are involved in broader health care roles to include population health management, technology integration, mitigation of therapeutic inertia, quality improvement activity, and delivery of cost-effective care.
3. Establish a strong foundation in lifestyle medicine.
Lifestyle medicine encompasses healthy eating, physical activity, restorative sleep, stress management, avoidance of risky behaviors, and positive social connections. It has also been strongly connected as a primary modality to prevent and treat chronic conditions like T2D. Lifestyle modifications have been noted in reducing the incidence of developing diabetes, reversing disease, improving clinical markers such as A1c and lipids, weight reduction, reducing use of medications, and improving quality of life. The multidisciplinary care team and CDCES can support the empowerment of individuals with T2D to develop the life skills and knowledge needed to establish positive self-care behaviors and successfully achieve health goals. Lifestyle medicine is not a replacement for pharmacologic interventions but rather serves as an adjunct when medication management is required.
4. Harness technology in diabetes treatment and care delivery.
Diabetes technology is advancing swiftly and includes glucose monitors, medication delivery devices, data-sharing platforms, and disease self-management applications. Combined with education and support, diabetes technology has been shown to have a positive clinical and personal impact on disease outcomes and quality of life. Regardless of its benefits, at times technology can seem overwhelming for the person with diabetes and the care team. Diabetes Care and Education Specialists (DCES) can support the care team and people living with diabetes to effectively identify, implement, and evaluate patient-centered diabetes technologies, as well as implement processes to drive clinical efficiencies and sustainability. Patient-generated health data reports can provide the care team with effective and proficient evaluation of diabetes care and needed treatment changes.
The expansion of telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic, including real-time and asynchronous approaches, coupled with in-person care team visits, has resulted in improved access to diabetes care and education. Moreover, there continues to be an expanding health system focus on improving access to care beyond traditional brick and mortar solutions. Telehealth poses one possible access solution for people living with diabetes for whom factors such as transportation, remote geographies, and physical limitations affect their ability to attend in-person care visits.
5. Assess and address diabetes-related distress.
The persistent nature of diabetes self-care expectations and the impact on lifestyle behaviors, medication adherence, and glycemic control demands the need for assessment and treatment of diabetes-related distress (DRD). DRD can be expressed as shame, guilt, anger, fear, and frustration in combination with the everyday context of life priorities and stressors. An assessment of diabetes distress, utilizing a simple scale, should be included as part of an annual therapeutic diabetes care plan. The ADA Standards of Care in Diabetes recommends assessing patients’ psychological and social situations as an ongoing part of medical management, including an annual screening for depression and other psychological problems. The prevalence of depression is nearly twice as high in people with T2D than in the general population and can significantly influence patients’ ability to self-manage their diabetes and achieve healthy outcomes. Assessment and treatment of psychosocial components of care can result in significant improvements in A1c and other positive outcomes, including quality of life.
Kellie M. Rodriguez, director of the global diabetes program at Parkland Health, Dallas, Tex., disclosed ties with the Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
Foot ulcers red flag for eye disease in diabetes
Sores on the feet can signal problems with the eyes in patients with diabetes.
Prior research and anecdotal experience show that diabetic foot ulcers and diabetic retinopathy frequently co-occur.
David J. Ramsey, MD, PhD, MPH, director of ophthalmic research at Lahey Hospital & Medical Center, Burlington, Mass., said when clinicians detect either condition, they should involve a team that can intervene to help protect a patient’s vision and mobility.
For example, they should ensure patients receive comprehensive eye and foot evaluations and help them optimize diabetes management.
The new study, presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, “adds an important dimension” to understanding the association between the conditions, said Dr. Ramsey, who recently reviewed correlations between diabetic foot ulcers and diabetic retinopathy and their underlying causes.
“Patients with diabetic foot ulcers appear to receive less attention to their diabetic retinopathy and may receive fewer treatments with eye injections targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), an important driver of progression of diabetic retinopathy,” said Dr. Ramsey, who is also an associate professor of ophthalmology at Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston. He was not involved in the study presented at ARVO 2023.
In the new study, Christopher T. Zhu, a medical student at UT Health San Antonio, and colleagues analyzed data from 426 eyes of 213 patients with type 2 diabetes who had had at least two eye exams between 2012 and 2022; 72 of the patients had diabetic foot ulcers. Patients were followed for about 4 years on average.
Patients with diabetic foot ulcers had a higher percentage of eyes with macular edema on their initial exam (32.6% vs. 28%). By the final exam, the percentage of eyes with macular edema was significantly greater in the group with diabetic foot ulcers (64.6% vs. 37.6%; P < .0001), Mr. Zhu’s group reported.
Eyes with nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy progressed to proliferative diabetic retinopathy, the worst grade, at a higher rate in the group with foot ulcers (50.6% vs. 35.6%; P = .03). In addition, patients with foot ulcers were more likely to experience vitreous hemorrhage (55.6% vs. 38.7%), the researchers found.
Despite patients with foot ulcers tending to have worse disease, they received fewer treatments for retinopathy. Those without ulcers received an average of 6.9 anti-VEGF injections per eye, while those with ulcers averaged 4.3.
Foot ulcers may hinder the ability of patients to get to appointments to receive the injections, Mr. Zhu and colleagues wrote. “For many patients in our part of the country [South Texas], a lack of transportation is a particular barrier to health care access,” Mr. Zhu told this news organization.
Mr. Zhu’s team conducted their study after noticing that patients with diabetes and foot ulcers who presented to their eye clinics “appeared to progress faster to worse grades of retinopathy” than patients with diabetes who did not have ulcers.
“Similar to how foot ulcers develop due to a severe disruption in blood flow [vascular] and a loss of sensation [neurologic], diabetic retinopathy may have a relation to microvascular disease, neurologic degeneration, and inflammation,” he said.
The findings confirm “that poor perfusion of the eye and foot are linked and can cause ischemic retinopathy leading to the development of proliferative diabetic retinopathy and vitreous hemorrhages, both serious, vision-threatening conditions,” Dr. Ramsey said.
To some extent, fewer treatments with anti-VEGF agents may account for why patients with foot ulcers have more eye complications, Dr. Ramsey added. “Additional research needs to be done to further dissect the cause and the effect, but it’s a very important finding that we need to increase awareness about,” he said.
Dr. Ramsey and Mr. Zhu reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Sores on the feet can signal problems with the eyes in patients with diabetes.
Prior research and anecdotal experience show that diabetic foot ulcers and diabetic retinopathy frequently co-occur.
David J. Ramsey, MD, PhD, MPH, director of ophthalmic research at Lahey Hospital & Medical Center, Burlington, Mass., said when clinicians detect either condition, they should involve a team that can intervene to help protect a patient’s vision and mobility.
For example, they should ensure patients receive comprehensive eye and foot evaluations and help them optimize diabetes management.
The new study, presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, “adds an important dimension” to understanding the association between the conditions, said Dr. Ramsey, who recently reviewed correlations between diabetic foot ulcers and diabetic retinopathy and their underlying causes.
“Patients with diabetic foot ulcers appear to receive less attention to their diabetic retinopathy and may receive fewer treatments with eye injections targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), an important driver of progression of diabetic retinopathy,” said Dr. Ramsey, who is also an associate professor of ophthalmology at Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston. He was not involved in the study presented at ARVO 2023.
In the new study, Christopher T. Zhu, a medical student at UT Health San Antonio, and colleagues analyzed data from 426 eyes of 213 patients with type 2 diabetes who had had at least two eye exams between 2012 and 2022; 72 of the patients had diabetic foot ulcers. Patients were followed for about 4 years on average.
Patients with diabetic foot ulcers had a higher percentage of eyes with macular edema on their initial exam (32.6% vs. 28%). By the final exam, the percentage of eyes with macular edema was significantly greater in the group with diabetic foot ulcers (64.6% vs. 37.6%; P < .0001), Mr. Zhu’s group reported.
Eyes with nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy progressed to proliferative diabetic retinopathy, the worst grade, at a higher rate in the group with foot ulcers (50.6% vs. 35.6%; P = .03). In addition, patients with foot ulcers were more likely to experience vitreous hemorrhage (55.6% vs. 38.7%), the researchers found.
Despite patients with foot ulcers tending to have worse disease, they received fewer treatments for retinopathy. Those without ulcers received an average of 6.9 anti-VEGF injections per eye, while those with ulcers averaged 4.3.
Foot ulcers may hinder the ability of patients to get to appointments to receive the injections, Mr. Zhu and colleagues wrote. “For many patients in our part of the country [South Texas], a lack of transportation is a particular barrier to health care access,” Mr. Zhu told this news organization.
Mr. Zhu’s team conducted their study after noticing that patients with diabetes and foot ulcers who presented to their eye clinics “appeared to progress faster to worse grades of retinopathy” than patients with diabetes who did not have ulcers.
“Similar to how foot ulcers develop due to a severe disruption in blood flow [vascular] and a loss of sensation [neurologic], diabetic retinopathy may have a relation to microvascular disease, neurologic degeneration, and inflammation,” he said.
The findings confirm “that poor perfusion of the eye and foot are linked and can cause ischemic retinopathy leading to the development of proliferative diabetic retinopathy and vitreous hemorrhages, both serious, vision-threatening conditions,” Dr. Ramsey said.
To some extent, fewer treatments with anti-VEGF agents may account for why patients with foot ulcers have more eye complications, Dr. Ramsey added. “Additional research needs to be done to further dissect the cause and the effect, but it’s a very important finding that we need to increase awareness about,” he said.
Dr. Ramsey and Mr. Zhu reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Sores on the feet can signal problems with the eyes in patients with diabetes.
Prior research and anecdotal experience show that diabetic foot ulcers and diabetic retinopathy frequently co-occur.
David J. Ramsey, MD, PhD, MPH, director of ophthalmic research at Lahey Hospital & Medical Center, Burlington, Mass., said when clinicians detect either condition, they should involve a team that can intervene to help protect a patient’s vision and mobility.
For example, they should ensure patients receive comprehensive eye and foot evaluations and help them optimize diabetes management.
The new study, presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, “adds an important dimension” to understanding the association between the conditions, said Dr. Ramsey, who recently reviewed correlations between diabetic foot ulcers and diabetic retinopathy and their underlying causes.
“Patients with diabetic foot ulcers appear to receive less attention to their diabetic retinopathy and may receive fewer treatments with eye injections targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), an important driver of progression of diabetic retinopathy,” said Dr. Ramsey, who is also an associate professor of ophthalmology at Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston. He was not involved in the study presented at ARVO 2023.
In the new study, Christopher T. Zhu, a medical student at UT Health San Antonio, and colleagues analyzed data from 426 eyes of 213 patients with type 2 diabetes who had had at least two eye exams between 2012 and 2022; 72 of the patients had diabetic foot ulcers. Patients were followed for about 4 years on average.
Patients with diabetic foot ulcers had a higher percentage of eyes with macular edema on their initial exam (32.6% vs. 28%). By the final exam, the percentage of eyes with macular edema was significantly greater in the group with diabetic foot ulcers (64.6% vs. 37.6%; P < .0001), Mr. Zhu’s group reported.
Eyes with nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy progressed to proliferative diabetic retinopathy, the worst grade, at a higher rate in the group with foot ulcers (50.6% vs. 35.6%; P = .03). In addition, patients with foot ulcers were more likely to experience vitreous hemorrhage (55.6% vs. 38.7%), the researchers found.
Despite patients with foot ulcers tending to have worse disease, they received fewer treatments for retinopathy. Those without ulcers received an average of 6.9 anti-VEGF injections per eye, while those with ulcers averaged 4.3.
Foot ulcers may hinder the ability of patients to get to appointments to receive the injections, Mr. Zhu and colleagues wrote. “For many patients in our part of the country [South Texas], a lack of transportation is a particular barrier to health care access,” Mr. Zhu told this news organization.
Mr. Zhu’s team conducted their study after noticing that patients with diabetes and foot ulcers who presented to their eye clinics “appeared to progress faster to worse grades of retinopathy” than patients with diabetes who did not have ulcers.
“Similar to how foot ulcers develop due to a severe disruption in blood flow [vascular] and a loss of sensation [neurologic], diabetic retinopathy may have a relation to microvascular disease, neurologic degeneration, and inflammation,” he said.
The findings confirm “that poor perfusion of the eye and foot are linked and can cause ischemic retinopathy leading to the development of proliferative diabetic retinopathy and vitreous hemorrhages, both serious, vision-threatening conditions,” Dr. Ramsey said.
To some extent, fewer treatments with anti-VEGF agents may account for why patients with foot ulcers have more eye complications, Dr. Ramsey added. “Additional research needs to be done to further dissect the cause and the effect, but it’s a very important finding that we need to increase awareness about,” he said.
Dr. Ramsey and Mr. Zhu reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ARVO 2023
Preventing breaks and falls in older adults
LONG BEACH, CALIF. – Ms. S had recently arrived home after a stay at a skilled nursing facility to recover from a hip fracture resulting from osteoporosis. For many patients, follow-up care would have included a DEXA scan or a prescription for a bisphosphonate from a primary care clinician not trained in geriatrics.
But the 85-year-old received care that went further and that is considered best practice for the management of geriatric fractures: A physical therapist visited her after discharge and provided education on the importance of maintaining mobility. Ms. S also underwent assessment for fall risk and gait balance, and a team of multidisciplinary clinicians managed other factors, from postural hypotension to footwear and foot problems.
Sonja Rosen, MD, professor of medicine and chief of geriatric medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, talked about Ms. S as part of a panel discussion on applying the “Geriatric 5Ms” for patients with osteoporosis at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society.
“You have to figure out why they are falling and help them not fall again,” Dr. Rosen said.
Approximately 10 million Americans have osteoporosis, and another 44 million have low bone density. One in two women and up to one in four men will experience a bone fracture as a result of osteoporosis, according to the Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation.
, which involves considering the care preferences and goals for health care outcomes of individuals.
Ms. S eventually visited a geriatrician through the Cedars-Sinai Geriatric Fracture Program, which has been shown to lower costs and shorten hospital stays. In the program, she was advised to use a walker. Initially, she saw the aid as a hindrance – she felt she should be able to walk without it, like before. But with education, she learned that it is impossible to predict falls and that the walking aid could reduce her risk of a stumble.
Dr. Rosen said clinicians should address any vision problems, prescriptions for psychotropic drugs,which can affect balance, and heart rate and rhythm abnormalities, and they should suggest modifications to the home environment, such as installing grab bars in showers and removing rugs that can easily be tripped over.
The program at Cedars-Sinai, like similar initiatives, offers a team with resources that some clinicians may not have access to, such as a care coordinator and bone-health coach. But health care providers can utilize aspects, such as making referrals to community exercise classes.
Dr. Rosen and her colleagues studied the effects of such exercise programs and found that the programs lessen loneliness and social isolation. Fear of falling decreased in 75% of participants, “which is so key to these postfracture patients in getting back out into the world and engaging in their prior level of functional status,” Dr. Rosen said.
The second ‘M’: Medication management
The second “M,” medications, can help clinicians sequence osteoporosis drugs, depending on patient characteristics and scenarios.
Cathleen Colon-Emeric, MD, MHS, chief of geriatrics at Duke University, in Durham, N.C., dived into the case history of Ms. S, who had hypertension and insomnia in addition to osteoporosis.
First-line treatment for Ms. S – and for most patients – was an oral bisphosphonate, Dr. Colon-Emeric said. Compared with placebo, the drugs decrease the risk of overall osteoporotic fractures by nearly 40% (odds ratio, 0.62). But the medications are linked to injury of the esophageal mucosa. This risk is decreased when a patient stays upright for 30 minutes after taking oral bisphosphonates. Dr. Colon-Emeric displayed a slide of a woman receiving a pedicure at a nail salon.
“The picture of the pedicure is to share the wonderful idea I got from one skilled nursing facility I was working with, who makes sure they do safe administration to prevent esophagitis in their patients by having them all go to a spa day, where they all sit up and get their nails done while they wait their 30 minutes [after taking the pill] sitting up safely,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said.
This strategy drew applause from the audience.
Dr. Colon-Emeric advised that clinicians use judgment in the interpretation of results from the Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX). Incorporating race into estimates of fracture risk has pros and cons. While there are racial and ethnic differences in average bone density, the data for race calibrations to estimate risk are dated, she said. Clinicians should compare FRAX estimates with and without race input to help patients understand a range of risks.
Some patients may be reluctant to begin taking osteoporosis drugs because of misinformation originating from inaccurate news reports or anecdotes from friends. Dr. Colon-Emeric advised clinicians to remind patients that one in five who experience a fracture will have another injury in the following 2 years.
“A major osteoporotic fracture is akin to a heart attack; it has a very similar 1-year mortality rate and a very similar rate of a subsequent secondary event,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said. “We have a class of medications that decrease both those risks by nearly a third.”
Shared decision-making can help patients understand the risks and benefits of treatment, she said.
“People are really scared about the side effects,” Michelle Keller, PhD, MPH, a research scientist at Cedars-Sinai who attended the session, said. “The idea that a “bone attack” is like a heart attack gets the message across.”
Mind and multicomplexity
Medical complexity of a patient must be considered when making decisions on treatment, according to Joshua Niznik, PharmD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the Center for Aging and Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
“Medical complexity is an acknowledgment of the entire person, the burden of their multiple chronic conditions, advanced illnesses, and also their biopsychosocial needs and how those together might augment treatment selection and decision-making,” Dr. Niznik said.
Studies by Dr. Niznik and others have shown that swallowing difficulties, severe dementia, and being older than 90 are linked with a lower likelihood of receiving treatment for osteoporosis.
But therapies for fracture prevention, especially bisphosphonates, appear to be at least as effective for adults with medical complexity as they are for people without such conditions, Dr. Niznik said. Physicians must consider the potential treatment burden and the likelihood of benefit, he said.
Dr. Niznik’s research has shown a lack of strong evidence on how clinicians can manage patients in nursing homes. In some cases, deprescribing is reasonable, such as for patients who have undergone treatment for several years and whose life expectancy is less than 2 years.
“In the absence of any of those, if they are not already treated for osteoporosis, it makes sense to initiate treatment at that time,” Dr. Niznik said.
Matters most: Patient input
Clinicians need to educate patients on how long they must undergo a treatment before they experience benefits, according to Sarah D. Berry, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, in Boston.
A meta-analysis of studies that included more than 20,000 women who were randomly assigned to receive bisphosphonate or placebo found that one nonvertebral fracture was avoided during a 12-month period for every 100 persons treated. One hip fracture was avoided during a 20-month period for every 200 patients treated.
“In general, in persons with a 2-year life expectancy, time to benefit favors bisphosphonate use,” Dr. Berry said. “Anabolics may have an even quicker time to benefit.”
Dr. Berry said a shared a decision-making model can help clinicians facilitate discussions that help patients prioritize goals and compare options while considering results, benefits, and harms. And she offered a final tip: Use tools with absolute risk reduction to convey risks and benefits, as the relative risk calculations overestimate how effective treatment will be.
Dr. Rosen has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Colon-Emeric has received grants from the National Institutes of Health and VA Health Services Research and Development Funding; has served as endpoint adjudication chair for UCB Pharma; and has received royalties from Wolters Kluwer. Dr. Niznik has received funding from the National Institute of Aging and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dr. Berry has received funding from the NIH and royalties from Wolters Kluwer.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
LONG BEACH, CALIF. – Ms. S had recently arrived home after a stay at a skilled nursing facility to recover from a hip fracture resulting from osteoporosis. For many patients, follow-up care would have included a DEXA scan or a prescription for a bisphosphonate from a primary care clinician not trained in geriatrics.
But the 85-year-old received care that went further and that is considered best practice for the management of geriatric fractures: A physical therapist visited her after discharge and provided education on the importance of maintaining mobility. Ms. S also underwent assessment for fall risk and gait balance, and a team of multidisciplinary clinicians managed other factors, from postural hypotension to footwear and foot problems.
Sonja Rosen, MD, professor of medicine and chief of geriatric medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, talked about Ms. S as part of a panel discussion on applying the “Geriatric 5Ms” for patients with osteoporosis at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society.
“You have to figure out why they are falling and help them not fall again,” Dr. Rosen said.
Approximately 10 million Americans have osteoporosis, and another 44 million have low bone density. One in two women and up to one in four men will experience a bone fracture as a result of osteoporosis, according to the Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation.
, which involves considering the care preferences and goals for health care outcomes of individuals.
Ms. S eventually visited a geriatrician through the Cedars-Sinai Geriatric Fracture Program, which has been shown to lower costs and shorten hospital stays. In the program, she was advised to use a walker. Initially, she saw the aid as a hindrance – she felt she should be able to walk without it, like before. But with education, she learned that it is impossible to predict falls and that the walking aid could reduce her risk of a stumble.
Dr. Rosen said clinicians should address any vision problems, prescriptions for psychotropic drugs,which can affect balance, and heart rate and rhythm abnormalities, and they should suggest modifications to the home environment, such as installing grab bars in showers and removing rugs that can easily be tripped over.
The program at Cedars-Sinai, like similar initiatives, offers a team with resources that some clinicians may not have access to, such as a care coordinator and bone-health coach. But health care providers can utilize aspects, such as making referrals to community exercise classes.
Dr. Rosen and her colleagues studied the effects of such exercise programs and found that the programs lessen loneliness and social isolation. Fear of falling decreased in 75% of participants, “which is so key to these postfracture patients in getting back out into the world and engaging in their prior level of functional status,” Dr. Rosen said.
The second ‘M’: Medication management
The second “M,” medications, can help clinicians sequence osteoporosis drugs, depending on patient characteristics and scenarios.
Cathleen Colon-Emeric, MD, MHS, chief of geriatrics at Duke University, in Durham, N.C., dived into the case history of Ms. S, who had hypertension and insomnia in addition to osteoporosis.
First-line treatment for Ms. S – and for most patients – was an oral bisphosphonate, Dr. Colon-Emeric said. Compared with placebo, the drugs decrease the risk of overall osteoporotic fractures by nearly 40% (odds ratio, 0.62). But the medications are linked to injury of the esophageal mucosa. This risk is decreased when a patient stays upright for 30 minutes after taking oral bisphosphonates. Dr. Colon-Emeric displayed a slide of a woman receiving a pedicure at a nail salon.
“The picture of the pedicure is to share the wonderful idea I got from one skilled nursing facility I was working with, who makes sure they do safe administration to prevent esophagitis in their patients by having them all go to a spa day, where they all sit up and get their nails done while they wait their 30 minutes [after taking the pill] sitting up safely,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said.
This strategy drew applause from the audience.
Dr. Colon-Emeric advised that clinicians use judgment in the interpretation of results from the Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX). Incorporating race into estimates of fracture risk has pros and cons. While there are racial and ethnic differences in average bone density, the data for race calibrations to estimate risk are dated, she said. Clinicians should compare FRAX estimates with and without race input to help patients understand a range of risks.
Some patients may be reluctant to begin taking osteoporosis drugs because of misinformation originating from inaccurate news reports or anecdotes from friends. Dr. Colon-Emeric advised clinicians to remind patients that one in five who experience a fracture will have another injury in the following 2 years.
“A major osteoporotic fracture is akin to a heart attack; it has a very similar 1-year mortality rate and a very similar rate of a subsequent secondary event,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said. “We have a class of medications that decrease both those risks by nearly a third.”
Shared decision-making can help patients understand the risks and benefits of treatment, she said.
“People are really scared about the side effects,” Michelle Keller, PhD, MPH, a research scientist at Cedars-Sinai who attended the session, said. “The idea that a “bone attack” is like a heart attack gets the message across.”
Mind and multicomplexity
Medical complexity of a patient must be considered when making decisions on treatment, according to Joshua Niznik, PharmD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the Center for Aging and Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
“Medical complexity is an acknowledgment of the entire person, the burden of their multiple chronic conditions, advanced illnesses, and also their biopsychosocial needs and how those together might augment treatment selection and decision-making,” Dr. Niznik said.
Studies by Dr. Niznik and others have shown that swallowing difficulties, severe dementia, and being older than 90 are linked with a lower likelihood of receiving treatment for osteoporosis.
But therapies for fracture prevention, especially bisphosphonates, appear to be at least as effective for adults with medical complexity as they are for people without such conditions, Dr. Niznik said. Physicians must consider the potential treatment burden and the likelihood of benefit, he said.
Dr. Niznik’s research has shown a lack of strong evidence on how clinicians can manage patients in nursing homes. In some cases, deprescribing is reasonable, such as for patients who have undergone treatment for several years and whose life expectancy is less than 2 years.
“In the absence of any of those, if they are not already treated for osteoporosis, it makes sense to initiate treatment at that time,” Dr. Niznik said.
Matters most: Patient input
Clinicians need to educate patients on how long they must undergo a treatment before they experience benefits, according to Sarah D. Berry, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, in Boston.
A meta-analysis of studies that included more than 20,000 women who were randomly assigned to receive bisphosphonate or placebo found that one nonvertebral fracture was avoided during a 12-month period for every 100 persons treated. One hip fracture was avoided during a 20-month period for every 200 patients treated.
“In general, in persons with a 2-year life expectancy, time to benefit favors bisphosphonate use,” Dr. Berry said. “Anabolics may have an even quicker time to benefit.”
Dr. Berry said a shared a decision-making model can help clinicians facilitate discussions that help patients prioritize goals and compare options while considering results, benefits, and harms. And she offered a final tip: Use tools with absolute risk reduction to convey risks and benefits, as the relative risk calculations overestimate how effective treatment will be.
Dr. Rosen has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Colon-Emeric has received grants from the National Institutes of Health and VA Health Services Research and Development Funding; has served as endpoint adjudication chair for UCB Pharma; and has received royalties from Wolters Kluwer. Dr. Niznik has received funding from the National Institute of Aging and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dr. Berry has received funding from the NIH and royalties from Wolters Kluwer.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
LONG BEACH, CALIF. – Ms. S had recently arrived home after a stay at a skilled nursing facility to recover from a hip fracture resulting from osteoporosis. For many patients, follow-up care would have included a DEXA scan or a prescription for a bisphosphonate from a primary care clinician not trained in geriatrics.
But the 85-year-old received care that went further and that is considered best practice for the management of geriatric fractures: A physical therapist visited her after discharge and provided education on the importance of maintaining mobility. Ms. S also underwent assessment for fall risk and gait balance, and a team of multidisciplinary clinicians managed other factors, from postural hypotension to footwear and foot problems.
Sonja Rosen, MD, professor of medicine and chief of geriatric medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, talked about Ms. S as part of a panel discussion on applying the “Geriatric 5Ms” for patients with osteoporosis at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society.
“You have to figure out why they are falling and help them not fall again,” Dr. Rosen said.
Approximately 10 million Americans have osteoporosis, and another 44 million have low bone density. One in two women and up to one in four men will experience a bone fracture as a result of osteoporosis, according to the Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation.
, which involves considering the care preferences and goals for health care outcomes of individuals.
Ms. S eventually visited a geriatrician through the Cedars-Sinai Geriatric Fracture Program, which has been shown to lower costs and shorten hospital stays. In the program, she was advised to use a walker. Initially, she saw the aid as a hindrance – she felt she should be able to walk without it, like before. But with education, she learned that it is impossible to predict falls and that the walking aid could reduce her risk of a stumble.
Dr. Rosen said clinicians should address any vision problems, prescriptions for psychotropic drugs,which can affect balance, and heart rate and rhythm abnormalities, and they should suggest modifications to the home environment, such as installing grab bars in showers and removing rugs that can easily be tripped over.
The program at Cedars-Sinai, like similar initiatives, offers a team with resources that some clinicians may not have access to, such as a care coordinator and bone-health coach. But health care providers can utilize aspects, such as making referrals to community exercise classes.
Dr. Rosen and her colleagues studied the effects of such exercise programs and found that the programs lessen loneliness and social isolation. Fear of falling decreased in 75% of participants, “which is so key to these postfracture patients in getting back out into the world and engaging in their prior level of functional status,” Dr. Rosen said.
The second ‘M’: Medication management
The second “M,” medications, can help clinicians sequence osteoporosis drugs, depending on patient characteristics and scenarios.
Cathleen Colon-Emeric, MD, MHS, chief of geriatrics at Duke University, in Durham, N.C., dived into the case history of Ms. S, who had hypertension and insomnia in addition to osteoporosis.
First-line treatment for Ms. S – and for most patients – was an oral bisphosphonate, Dr. Colon-Emeric said. Compared with placebo, the drugs decrease the risk of overall osteoporotic fractures by nearly 40% (odds ratio, 0.62). But the medications are linked to injury of the esophageal mucosa. This risk is decreased when a patient stays upright for 30 minutes after taking oral bisphosphonates. Dr. Colon-Emeric displayed a slide of a woman receiving a pedicure at a nail salon.
“The picture of the pedicure is to share the wonderful idea I got from one skilled nursing facility I was working with, who makes sure they do safe administration to prevent esophagitis in their patients by having them all go to a spa day, where they all sit up and get their nails done while they wait their 30 minutes [after taking the pill] sitting up safely,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said.
This strategy drew applause from the audience.
Dr. Colon-Emeric advised that clinicians use judgment in the interpretation of results from the Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX). Incorporating race into estimates of fracture risk has pros and cons. While there are racial and ethnic differences in average bone density, the data for race calibrations to estimate risk are dated, she said. Clinicians should compare FRAX estimates with and without race input to help patients understand a range of risks.
Some patients may be reluctant to begin taking osteoporosis drugs because of misinformation originating from inaccurate news reports or anecdotes from friends. Dr. Colon-Emeric advised clinicians to remind patients that one in five who experience a fracture will have another injury in the following 2 years.
“A major osteoporotic fracture is akin to a heart attack; it has a very similar 1-year mortality rate and a very similar rate of a subsequent secondary event,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said. “We have a class of medications that decrease both those risks by nearly a third.”
Shared decision-making can help patients understand the risks and benefits of treatment, she said.
“People are really scared about the side effects,” Michelle Keller, PhD, MPH, a research scientist at Cedars-Sinai who attended the session, said. “The idea that a “bone attack” is like a heart attack gets the message across.”
Mind and multicomplexity
Medical complexity of a patient must be considered when making decisions on treatment, according to Joshua Niznik, PharmD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the Center for Aging and Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
“Medical complexity is an acknowledgment of the entire person, the burden of their multiple chronic conditions, advanced illnesses, and also their biopsychosocial needs and how those together might augment treatment selection and decision-making,” Dr. Niznik said.
Studies by Dr. Niznik and others have shown that swallowing difficulties, severe dementia, and being older than 90 are linked with a lower likelihood of receiving treatment for osteoporosis.
But therapies for fracture prevention, especially bisphosphonates, appear to be at least as effective for adults with medical complexity as they are for people without such conditions, Dr. Niznik said. Physicians must consider the potential treatment burden and the likelihood of benefit, he said.
Dr. Niznik’s research has shown a lack of strong evidence on how clinicians can manage patients in nursing homes. In some cases, deprescribing is reasonable, such as for patients who have undergone treatment for several years and whose life expectancy is less than 2 years.
“In the absence of any of those, if they are not already treated for osteoporosis, it makes sense to initiate treatment at that time,” Dr. Niznik said.
Matters most: Patient input
Clinicians need to educate patients on how long they must undergo a treatment before they experience benefits, according to Sarah D. Berry, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, in Boston.
A meta-analysis of studies that included more than 20,000 women who were randomly assigned to receive bisphosphonate or placebo found that one nonvertebral fracture was avoided during a 12-month period for every 100 persons treated. One hip fracture was avoided during a 20-month period for every 200 patients treated.
“In general, in persons with a 2-year life expectancy, time to benefit favors bisphosphonate use,” Dr. Berry said. “Anabolics may have an even quicker time to benefit.”
Dr. Berry said a shared a decision-making model can help clinicians facilitate discussions that help patients prioritize goals and compare options while considering results, benefits, and harms. And she offered a final tip: Use tools with absolute risk reduction to convey risks and benefits, as the relative risk calculations overestimate how effective treatment will be.
Dr. Rosen has disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Colon-Emeric has received grants from the National Institutes of Health and VA Health Services Research and Development Funding; has served as endpoint adjudication chair for UCB Pharma; and has received royalties from Wolters Kluwer. Dr. Niznik has received funding from the National Institute of Aging and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dr. Berry has received funding from the NIH and royalties from Wolters Kluwer.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
AT AGS 2023
Metabolic abnormalities boost obesity-related cancer risk
, and an even higher risk, two- to threefold higher, for specific cancers, such as endometrial, liver, and renal cell cancers, compared with metabolically healthy normal weight.
Even in people with so-called “metabolically healthy” obesity, the risk for overall obesity-related cancer is increased, compared with normal-weight, metabolically healthy individuals; however, the associations here are weaker than in people with metabolically unhealthy obesity.
“The type of metabolic obesity phenotype is important when assessing obesity-related cancer risk,” lead researcher Ming Sun, PhD, from Lund University, Malmö, Sweden, said in an interview. “In general, metabolic aberrations further increased the obesity-induced cancer risk, suggesting that obesity and metabolic aberrations are useful targets for prevention.”
“This synergy means that when obesity and metabolic unhealth occur together, that’s particularly bad,” added Tanja Stocks, PhD, senior author, also of Lund University.
“But the data also highlight that even obesity and overweight alone comprise an increased risk of cancer,” Dr. Stocks noted.
Dr. Sun said the findings have important public health implications, suggesting that “a significant number of cancer cases could potentially be prevented by targeting the coexistence of metabolic problems and obesity, in particular for obesity-related cancers among men.”
The results will be presented as a poster by Dr. Sun at the European Congress on Obesity 2023, being held in Dublin, and have been published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Metabolically unhealthy obesity worst for cancer risks
Andrew G. Renehan, PhD, FRCS, professor of cancer studies and surgery, University of Manchester, England, welcomed the new work, saying it addresses the issue with very large study numbers. “[It] nicely demonstrates that there are clear examples where metabolically unhealthy overweight and obese phenotypes have increased cancer risk relative to [metabolically] healthy overweight and obese phenotypes,” he said.
“There is a clear need for clinically based research addressing these hypotheses ... but these studies will additionally need to factor in other dimensions such as the selection of treatment for metabolic aberrations, both medical and surgical, and the consequent metabolic control resulting from these interventions,” Dr. Renehan observed.
Vibhu Chittajallu, MD, a gastroenterologist based at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, said it was beneficial to see another study further validating the association of obesity with the development of obesity-associated cancers.
“This is an interesting study [because it focuses] on the role of metabolic syndrome in obesity and how it affects the risk of development of obesity-associated cancers,” he said in an interview.
“I believe that the results of this study further strengthen the need for improved management of obesity and metabolic syndrome to reduce the risk of obesity-associated cancer formation that plays a role in preventable and premature deaths in adult patients with obesity.”
Synergy between metabolic aberrations and obesity, and cancer risk
Dr. Sun and colleagues note that obesity is an established risk factor for several cancers. It is often accompanied by metabolic aberrations, which have been a commonly proposed mechanism to link obesity with cancer. During the last decade, obesity with or without metabolic aberrations – commonly termed “metabolically unhealthy” or “healthy obesity” – has been extensively investigated in the cardiovascular field; however, studies regarding cancer are limited.
According to Dr. Sun, this new study is the first to look at the synergistic effect of unhealthy metabolism and body mass index – the latter was further categorized as normal weight (BMI < 25 kg/m2), overweight (BMI < 30) and obesity (BMI ≤ 30) – and the association with cancer risk, both overall and in relation to site-specific cancers.
Data were drawn from 797,193 European individuals (in Norway, Sweden, and Austria), of whom 23,630 developed an obesity-related cancer during the follow-up period. A metabolic score comprising mid-blood pressure, plasma glucose, and triglycerides was used to provide a measure of healthy or unhealthy metabolic status. Relative risks (hazard ratios) for overall and site-specific cancers were determined. Comparisons were made with metabolically healthy people of normal weight (effectively controls).
When different metabolic scores and BMIs were combined, participants fell into six categories: metabolically unhealthy obesity (6.8% of participants); metabolically healthy obesity (3.4%), metabolically unhealthy overweight (15.4%), metabolically healthy overweight (19.8%), metabolically unhealthy normal weight (12.5%), and metabolically healthy normal weight (42.0%).
Metabolically unhealthy women with obesity had a hazard ratio of 1.43 for overall obesity-related cancers, compared with metabolically healthy women of normal weight. Of particular note were risks of two cancer types in women with metabolically unhealthy obesity: renal cancer, with an HR of 2.43, and endometrial cancer, with an HR of 3.0, compared with controls.
Even in metabolically healthy women with obesity, compared with metabolically healthy women of normal weight, there was an increased risk of endometrial cancer, with an HR of 2.36.
“If you look at individual cancers, in particular endometrial cancer, this seems to be very much driven by obesity and not so much by the metabolic factor,” remarked Dr. Stocks.
In males, compared with metabolically healthy men of normal weight, metabolically unhealthy men with obesity had an overall obesity-related cancer risk HR of 1.91. Specifically, the risk of renal cell cancer was more than doubled, with an HR of 2.59. The HR for colon cancer was 1.85, and that for rectal cancer and pancreatic cancer was similar, both having HRs of 1.32.
Again, risk was lower in metabolically healthy men with obesity, although still higher than for metabolically healthy normal-weight men.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
, and an even higher risk, two- to threefold higher, for specific cancers, such as endometrial, liver, and renal cell cancers, compared with metabolically healthy normal weight.
Even in people with so-called “metabolically healthy” obesity, the risk for overall obesity-related cancer is increased, compared with normal-weight, metabolically healthy individuals; however, the associations here are weaker than in people with metabolically unhealthy obesity.
“The type of metabolic obesity phenotype is important when assessing obesity-related cancer risk,” lead researcher Ming Sun, PhD, from Lund University, Malmö, Sweden, said in an interview. “In general, metabolic aberrations further increased the obesity-induced cancer risk, suggesting that obesity and metabolic aberrations are useful targets for prevention.”
“This synergy means that when obesity and metabolic unhealth occur together, that’s particularly bad,” added Tanja Stocks, PhD, senior author, also of Lund University.
“But the data also highlight that even obesity and overweight alone comprise an increased risk of cancer,” Dr. Stocks noted.
Dr. Sun said the findings have important public health implications, suggesting that “a significant number of cancer cases could potentially be prevented by targeting the coexistence of metabolic problems and obesity, in particular for obesity-related cancers among men.”
The results will be presented as a poster by Dr. Sun at the European Congress on Obesity 2023, being held in Dublin, and have been published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Metabolically unhealthy obesity worst for cancer risks
Andrew G. Renehan, PhD, FRCS, professor of cancer studies and surgery, University of Manchester, England, welcomed the new work, saying it addresses the issue with very large study numbers. “[It] nicely demonstrates that there are clear examples where metabolically unhealthy overweight and obese phenotypes have increased cancer risk relative to [metabolically] healthy overweight and obese phenotypes,” he said.
“There is a clear need for clinically based research addressing these hypotheses ... but these studies will additionally need to factor in other dimensions such as the selection of treatment for metabolic aberrations, both medical and surgical, and the consequent metabolic control resulting from these interventions,” Dr. Renehan observed.
Vibhu Chittajallu, MD, a gastroenterologist based at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, said it was beneficial to see another study further validating the association of obesity with the development of obesity-associated cancers.
“This is an interesting study [because it focuses] on the role of metabolic syndrome in obesity and how it affects the risk of development of obesity-associated cancers,” he said in an interview.
“I believe that the results of this study further strengthen the need for improved management of obesity and metabolic syndrome to reduce the risk of obesity-associated cancer formation that plays a role in preventable and premature deaths in adult patients with obesity.”
Synergy between metabolic aberrations and obesity, and cancer risk
Dr. Sun and colleagues note that obesity is an established risk factor for several cancers. It is often accompanied by metabolic aberrations, which have been a commonly proposed mechanism to link obesity with cancer. During the last decade, obesity with or without metabolic aberrations – commonly termed “metabolically unhealthy” or “healthy obesity” – has been extensively investigated in the cardiovascular field; however, studies regarding cancer are limited.
According to Dr. Sun, this new study is the first to look at the synergistic effect of unhealthy metabolism and body mass index – the latter was further categorized as normal weight (BMI < 25 kg/m2), overweight (BMI < 30) and obesity (BMI ≤ 30) – and the association with cancer risk, both overall and in relation to site-specific cancers.
Data were drawn from 797,193 European individuals (in Norway, Sweden, and Austria), of whom 23,630 developed an obesity-related cancer during the follow-up period. A metabolic score comprising mid-blood pressure, plasma glucose, and triglycerides was used to provide a measure of healthy or unhealthy metabolic status. Relative risks (hazard ratios) for overall and site-specific cancers were determined. Comparisons were made with metabolically healthy people of normal weight (effectively controls).
When different metabolic scores and BMIs were combined, participants fell into six categories: metabolically unhealthy obesity (6.8% of participants); metabolically healthy obesity (3.4%), metabolically unhealthy overweight (15.4%), metabolically healthy overweight (19.8%), metabolically unhealthy normal weight (12.5%), and metabolically healthy normal weight (42.0%).
Metabolically unhealthy women with obesity had a hazard ratio of 1.43 for overall obesity-related cancers, compared with metabolically healthy women of normal weight. Of particular note were risks of two cancer types in women with metabolically unhealthy obesity: renal cancer, with an HR of 2.43, and endometrial cancer, with an HR of 3.0, compared with controls.
Even in metabolically healthy women with obesity, compared with metabolically healthy women of normal weight, there was an increased risk of endometrial cancer, with an HR of 2.36.
“If you look at individual cancers, in particular endometrial cancer, this seems to be very much driven by obesity and not so much by the metabolic factor,” remarked Dr. Stocks.
In males, compared with metabolically healthy men of normal weight, metabolically unhealthy men with obesity had an overall obesity-related cancer risk HR of 1.91. Specifically, the risk of renal cell cancer was more than doubled, with an HR of 2.59. The HR for colon cancer was 1.85, and that for rectal cancer and pancreatic cancer was similar, both having HRs of 1.32.
Again, risk was lower in metabolically healthy men with obesity, although still higher than for metabolically healthy normal-weight men.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
, and an even higher risk, two- to threefold higher, for specific cancers, such as endometrial, liver, and renal cell cancers, compared with metabolically healthy normal weight.
Even in people with so-called “metabolically healthy” obesity, the risk for overall obesity-related cancer is increased, compared with normal-weight, metabolically healthy individuals; however, the associations here are weaker than in people with metabolically unhealthy obesity.
“The type of metabolic obesity phenotype is important when assessing obesity-related cancer risk,” lead researcher Ming Sun, PhD, from Lund University, Malmö, Sweden, said in an interview. “In general, metabolic aberrations further increased the obesity-induced cancer risk, suggesting that obesity and metabolic aberrations are useful targets for prevention.”
“This synergy means that when obesity and metabolic unhealth occur together, that’s particularly bad,” added Tanja Stocks, PhD, senior author, also of Lund University.
“But the data also highlight that even obesity and overweight alone comprise an increased risk of cancer,” Dr. Stocks noted.
Dr. Sun said the findings have important public health implications, suggesting that “a significant number of cancer cases could potentially be prevented by targeting the coexistence of metabolic problems and obesity, in particular for obesity-related cancers among men.”
The results will be presented as a poster by Dr. Sun at the European Congress on Obesity 2023, being held in Dublin, and have been published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Metabolically unhealthy obesity worst for cancer risks
Andrew G. Renehan, PhD, FRCS, professor of cancer studies and surgery, University of Manchester, England, welcomed the new work, saying it addresses the issue with very large study numbers. “[It] nicely demonstrates that there are clear examples where metabolically unhealthy overweight and obese phenotypes have increased cancer risk relative to [metabolically] healthy overweight and obese phenotypes,” he said.
“There is a clear need for clinically based research addressing these hypotheses ... but these studies will additionally need to factor in other dimensions such as the selection of treatment for metabolic aberrations, both medical and surgical, and the consequent metabolic control resulting from these interventions,” Dr. Renehan observed.
Vibhu Chittajallu, MD, a gastroenterologist based at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, said it was beneficial to see another study further validating the association of obesity with the development of obesity-associated cancers.
“This is an interesting study [because it focuses] on the role of metabolic syndrome in obesity and how it affects the risk of development of obesity-associated cancers,” he said in an interview.
“I believe that the results of this study further strengthen the need for improved management of obesity and metabolic syndrome to reduce the risk of obesity-associated cancer formation that plays a role in preventable and premature deaths in adult patients with obesity.”
Synergy between metabolic aberrations and obesity, and cancer risk
Dr. Sun and colleagues note that obesity is an established risk factor for several cancers. It is often accompanied by metabolic aberrations, which have been a commonly proposed mechanism to link obesity with cancer. During the last decade, obesity with or without metabolic aberrations – commonly termed “metabolically unhealthy” or “healthy obesity” – has been extensively investigated in the cardiovascular field; however, studies regarding cancer are limited.
According to Dr. Sun, this new study is the first to look at the synergistic effect of unhealthy metabolism and body mass index – the latter was further categorized as normal weight (BMI < 25 kg/m2), overweight (BMI < 30) and obesity (BMI ≤ 30) – and the association with cancer risk, both overall and in relation to site-specific cancers.
Data were drawn from 797,193 European individuals (in Norway, Sweden, and Austria), of whom 23,630 developed an obesity-related cancer during the follow-up period. A metabolic score comprising mid-blood pressure, plasma glucose, and triglycerides was used to provide a measure of healthy or unhealthy metabolic status. Relative risks (hazard ratios) for overall and site-specific cancers were determined. Comparisons were made with metabolically healthy people of normal weight (effectively controls).
When different metabolic scores and BMIs were combined, participants fell into six categories: metabolically unhealthy obesity (6.8% of participants); metabolically healthy obesity (3.4%), metabolically unhealthy overweight (15.4%), metabolically healthy overweight (19.8%), metabolically unhealthy normal weight (12.5%), and metabolically healthy normal weight (42.0%).
Metabolically unhealthy women with obesity had a hazard ratio of 1.43 for overall obesity-related cancers, compared with metabolically healthy women of normal weight. Of particular note were risks of two cancer types in women with metabolically unhealthy obesity: renal cancer, with an HR of 2.43, and endometrial cancer, with an HR of 3.0, compared with controls.
Even in metabolically healthy women with obesity, compared with metabolically healthy women of normal weight, there was an increased risk of endometrial cancer, with an HR of 2.36.
“If you look at individual cancers, in particular endometrial cancer, this seems to be very much driven by obesity and not so much by the metabolic factor,” remarked Dr. Stocks.
In males, compared with metabolically healthy men of normal weight, metabolically unhealthy men with obesity had an overall obesity-related cancer risk HR of 1.91. Specifically, the risk of renal cell cancer was more than doubled, with an HR of 2.59. The HR for colon cancer was 1.85, and that for rectal cancer and pancreatic cancer was similar, both having HRs of 1.32.
Again, risk was lower in metabolically healthy men with obesity, although still higher than for metabolically healthy normal-weight men.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ECO 2023
Risk for breast cancer reduced after bariatric surgery
In a matched cohort study of more than 69,000 Canadian women, risk for incident breast cancer at 1 year was 40% higher among women who had not undergone bariatric surgery, compared with those who had. The risk remained elevated through 5 years of follow-up.
The findings were “definitely a bit surprising,” study author Aristithes G. Doumouras, MD, MPH, assistant professor of surgery at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., said in an interview. “The patients that underwent bariatric surgery had better cancer outcomes than patients who weighed less than they did, so it showed that there was more at play than just weight loss. This effect was durable [and] shows how powerful the surgery is, [as well as] the fact that we haven’t even explored all of its effects.”
The study was published online in JAMA Surgery.
Protective association
To determine whether there is a residual risk for breast cancer following bariatric surgery for obesity, the investigators analyzed clinical and administrative data collected between 2010 and 2016 in Ontario. They retrospectively matched women with obesity who underwent bariatric surgery with women without a history of bariatric surgery. Participants were matched by age and breast cancer screening status. Covariates included diabetes status, neighborhood income quintile, and measures of health care use. The population included 69,260 women (mean age, 45 years).
Among participants who underwent bariatric surgery for obesity, baseline body mass index was greater than 35 for those with related comorbid conditions, and BMI was greater than 40 for those without comorbid conditions. The investigators categorized nonsurgical control patients in accordance with the following four BMI categories: less than 25, 25-29, 30-34, and greater than or equal to 35. Each control group, as well as the surgical group, included 13,852 women.
Participants in the surgical group were followed for 5 years after bariatric surgery. Those in the nonsurgical group were followed for 5 years after the index date (that is, the date of BMI measurement).
In the overall population, 659 cases of breast cancer were diagnosed in the overall population (0.95%) during the study period. This total included 103 (0.74%) cancers in the surgical cohort; 128 (0.92%) in the group with BMI less than 25; 143 (1.03%) among those with BMI 25-29; 150 (1.08%) in the group with BMI 30-34; and 135 (0.97%) among those with BMI greater than or equal to 35.
Most cancers were stage I. There were 65 cases among those with BMI less than 25; 76 for those with BMI of 25-29; 65 for BMI of 30-34; 67 for BMI greater than or equal to 35, and 60 for the surgery group.
Most tumors were of medium grade and were estrogen receptor positive, progesterone receptor positive, and ERBB2 negative. No significant differences were observed across the groups for stage, grade, or hormone status.
There was an increased hazard for incident breast cancer in the nonsurgical group, compared with the postsurgical group after washout periods of 1 year (hazard ratio, 1.40), 2 years (HR, 1.31), and 5 years (HR, 1.38).
In a comparison of the postsurgical cohort with the nonsurgical cohort with BMI less than 25, the hazard of incident breast cancer was not significantly different for any of the washout periods, but there was a reduced hazard for incident breast cancer among postsurgical patients than among nonsurgical patients in all high BMI categories (BMI ≥ 25).
“Taken together, these results demonstrate that the protective association between substantial weight loss via bariatric surgery and breast cancer risk is sustained after 5 years following surgery and that it is associated with a baseline risk similar to that of women with BMI less than 25,” the investigators write.
Nevertheless, Dr. Doumouras said “the interaction between the surgery and individuals is poorly studied, and this level of personalized medicine is simply not there yet. We are working on developing a prospective cohort that has genetic, protein, and microbiome [data] to help answer these questions.”
There are not enough women in subpopulations such as BRCA carriers to study at this point, he added. “This is where more patients and time will really help the research process.”
A universal benefit?
“Although these findings are important overall for the general population at risk for breast cancer, we raise an important caveat: The benefit of surgical weight loss may not be universal,” write Justin B. Dimick, MD, MPH, surgical innovation editor for JAMA Surgery, and Melissa L. Pilewskie, MD, both of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in an accompanying commentary.
“In addition to lifestyle factors, several nonmodifiable risk factors, such as a genetic predisposition, strong family history, personal history of a high-risk breast lesion, or history of chest wall radiation, impart significant elevation in risk, and the data remain mixed on the impact of weight loss for individuals in these high-risk cohorts,” they add.
“Further study to elucidate the underlying mechanism associated with obesity, weight loss, and breast cancer risk should help guide strategies for risk reduction that are specific to unique high-risk cohorts, because modifiable risk factors may not portend the same benefit among all groups.”
Commenting on the findings, Stephen Edge, MD, breast surgeon and vice president for system quality and outcomes at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, Buffalo, N.Y., said, “The importance of this study is that it shows that weight loss in midlife can reduce breast cancer risk back to or even below the risk of similar people who were not obese. This has major implications for counseling women.”
The investigators did not have information on the extent of weight loss with surgery or on which participants maintained the lower weight, Dr. Edge noted; “However, overall, most people who have weight reduction surgery have major weight loss.”
At this point, he said, “we can now tell women with obesity that in addition to the many other advantages of weight loss, their risk of getting breast cancer will also be reduced.”
The study was supported by the Ontario Bariatric Registry and ICES, which is funded by an annual grant from the Ontario Ministry of Health and the Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Doumouras, Dr. Dimick, Dr. Pilewskie, and Dr. Edge reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In a matched cohort study of more than 69,000 Canadian women, risk for incident breast cancer at 1 year was 40% higher among women who had not undergone bariatric surgery, compared with those who had. The risk remained elevated through 5 years of follow-up.
The findings were “definitely a bit surprising,” study author Aristithes G. Doumouras, MD, MPH, assistant professor of surgery at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., said in an interview. “The patients that underwent bariatric surgery had better cancer outcomes than patients who weighed less than they did, so it showed that there was more at play than just weight loss. This effect was durable [and] shows how powerful the surgery is, [as well as] the fact that we haven’t even explored all of its effects.”
The study was published online in JAMA Surgery.
Protective association
To determine whether there is a residual risk for breast cancer following bariatric surgery for obesity, the investigators analyzed clinical and administrative data collected between 2010 and 2016 in Ontario. They retrospectively matched women with obesity who underwent bariatric surgery with women without a history of bariatric surgery. Participants were matched by age and breast cancer screening status. Covariates included diabetes status, neighborhood income quintile, and measures of health care use. The population included 69,260 women (mean age, 45 years).
Among participants who underwent bariatric surgery for obesity, baseline body mass index was greater than 35 for those with related comorbid conditions, and BMI was greater than 40 for those without comorbid conditions. The investigators categorized nonsurgical control patients in accordance with the following four BMI categories: less than 25, 25-29, 30-34, and greater than or equal to 35. Each control group, as well as the surgical group, included 13,852 women.
Participants in the surgical group were followed for 5 years after bariatric surgery. Those in the nonsurgical group were followed for 5 years after the index date (that is, the date of BMI measurement).
In the overall population, 659 cases of breast cancer were diagnosed in the overall population (0.95%) during the study period. This total included 103 (0.74%) cancers in the surgical cohort; 128 (0.92%) in the group with BMI less than 25; 143 (1.03%) among those with BMI 25-29; 150 (1.08%) in the group with BMI 30-34; and 135 (0.97%) among those with BMI greater than or equal to 35.
Most cancers were stage I. There were 65 cases among those with BMI less than 25; 76 for those with BMI of 25-29; 65 for BMI of 30-34; 67 for BMI greater than or equal to 35, and 60 for the surgery group.
Most tumors were of medium grade and were estrogen receptor positive, progesterone receptor positive, and ERBB2 negative. No significant differences were observed across the groups for stage, grade, or hormone status.
There was an increased hazard for incident breast cancer in the nonsurgical group, compared with the postsurgical group after washout periods of 1 year (hazard ratio, 1.40), 2 years (HR, 1.31), and 5 years (HR, 1.38).
In a comparison of the postsurgical cohort with the nonsurgical cohort with BMI less than 25, the hazard of incident breast cancer was not significantly different for any of the washout periods, but there was a reduced hazard for incident breast cancer among postsurgical patients than among nonsurgical patients in all high BMI categories (BMI ≥ 25).
“Taken together, these results demonstrate that the protective association between substantial weight loss via bariatric surgery and breast cancer risk is sustained after 5 years following surgery and that it is associated with a baseline risk similar to that of women with BMI less than 25,” the investigators write.
Nevertheless, Dr. Doumouras said “the interaction between the surgery and individuals is poorly studied, and this level of personalized medicine is simply not there yet. We are working on developing a prospective cohort that has genetic, protein, and microbiome [data] to help answer these questions.”
There are not enough women in subpopulations such as BRCA carriers to study at this point, he added. “This is where more patients and time will really help the research process.”
A universal benefit?
“Although these findings are important overall for the general population at risk for breast cancer, we raise an important caveat: The benefit of surgical weight loss may not be universal,” write Justin B. Dimick, MD, MPH, surgical innovation editor for JAMA Surgery, and Melissa L. Pilewskie, MD, both of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in an accompanying commentary.
“In addition to lifestyle factors, several nonmodifiable risk factors, such as a genetic predisposition, strong family history, personal history of a high-risk breast lesion, or history of chest wall radiation, impart significant elevation in risk, and the data remain mixed on the impact of weight loss for individuals in these high-risk cohorts,” they add.
“Further study to elucidate the underlying mechanism associated with obesity, weight loss, and breast cancer risk should help guide strategies for risk reduction that are specific to unique high-risk cohorts, because modifiable risk factors may not portend the same benefit among all groups.”
Commenting on the findings, Stephen Edge, MD, breast surgeon and vice president for system quality and outcomes at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, Buffalo, N.Y., said, “The importance of this study is that it shows that weight loss in midlife can reduce breast cancer risk back to or even below the risk of similar people who were not obese. This has major implications for counseling women.”
The investigators did not have information on the extent of weight loss with surgery or on which participants maintained the lower weight, Dr. Edge noted; “However, overall, most people who have weight reduction surgery have major weight loss.”
At this point, he said, “we can now tell women with obesity that in addition to the many other advantages of weight loss, their risk of getting breast cancer will also be reduced.”
The study was supported by the Ontario Bariatric Registry and ICES, which is funded by an annual grant from the Ontario Ministry of Health and the Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Doumouras, Dr. Dimick, Dr. Pilewskie, and Dr. Edge reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In a matched cohort study of more than 69,000 Canadian women, risk for incident breast cancer at 1 year was 40% higher among women who had not undergone bariatric surgery, compared with those who had. The risk remained elevated through 5 years of follow-up.
The findings were “definitely a bit surprising,” study author Aristithes G. Doumouras, MD, MPH, assistant professor of surgery at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., said in an interview. “The patients that underwent bariatric surgery had better cancer outcomes than patients who weighed less than they did, so it showed that there was more at play than just weight loss. This effect was durable [and] shows how powerful the surgery is, [as well as] the fact that we haven’t even explored all of its effects.”
The study was published online in JAMA Surgery.
Protective association
To determine whether there is a residual risk for breast cancer following bariatric surgery for obesity, the investigators analyzed clinical and administrative data collected between 2010 and 2016 in Ontario. They retrospectively matched women with obesity who underwent bariatric surgery with women without a history of bariatric surgery. Participants were matched by age and breast cancer screening status. Covariates included diabetes status, neighborhood income quintile, and measures of health care use. The population included 69,260 women (mean age, 45 years).
Among participants who underwent bariatric surgery for obesity, baseline body mass index was greater than 35 for those with related comorbid conditions, and BMI was greater than 40 for those without comorbid conditions. The investigators categorized nonsurgical control patients in accordance with the following four BMI categories: less than 25, 25-29, 30-34, and greater than or equal to 35. Each control group, as well as the surgical group, included 13,852 women.
Participants in the surgical group were followed for 5 years after bariatric surgery. Those in the nonsurgical group were followed for 5 years after the index date (that is, the date of BMI measurement).
In the overall population, 659 cases of breast cancer were diagnosed in the overall population (0.95%) during the study period. This total included 103 (0.74%) cancers in the surgical cohort; 128 (0.92%) in the group with BMI less than 25; 143 (1.03%) among those with BMI 25-29; 150 (1.08%) in the group with BMI 30-34; and 135 (0.97%) among those with BMI greater than or equal to 35.
Most cancers were stage I. There were 65 cases among those with BMI less than 25; 76 for those with BMI of 25-29; 65 for BMI of 30-34; 67 for BMI greater than or equal to 35, and 60 for the surgery group.
Most tumors were of medium grade and were estrogen receptor positive, progesterone receptor positive, and ERBB2 negative. No significant differences were observed across the groups for stage, grade, or hormone status.
There was an increased hazard for incident breast cancer in the nonsurgical group, compared with the postsurgical group after washout periods of 1 year (hazard ratio, 1.40), 2 years (HR, 1.31), and 5 years (HR, 1.38).
In a comparison of the postsurgical cohort with the nonsurgical cohort with BMI less than 25, the hazard of incident breast cancer was not significantly different for any of the washout periods, but there was a reduced hazard for incident breast cancer among postsurgical patients than among nonsurgical patients in all high BMI categories (BMI ≥ 25).
“Taken together, these results demonstrate that the protective association between substantial weight loss via bariatric surgery and breast cancer risk is sustained after 5 years following surgery and that it is associated with a baseline risk similar to that of women with BMI less than 25,” the investigators write.
Nevertheless, Dr. Doumouras said “the interaction between the surgery and individuals is poorly studied, and this level of personalized medicine is simply not there yet. We are working on developing a prospective cohort that has genetic, protein, and microbiome [data] to help answer these questions.”
There are not enough women in subpopulations such as BRCA carriers to study at this point, he added. “This is where more patients and time will really help the research process.”
A universal benefit?
“Although these findings are important overall for the general population at risk for breast cancer, we raise an important caveat: The benefit of surgical weight loss may not be universal,” write Justin B. Dimick, MD, MPH, surgical innovation editor for JAMA Surgery, and Melissa L. Pilewskie, MD, both of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in an accompanying commentary.
“In addition to lifestyle factors, several nonmodifiable risk factors, such as a genetic predisposition, strong family history, personal history of a high-risk breast lesion, or history of chest wall radiation, impart significant elevation in risk, and the data remain mixed on the impact of weight loss for individuals in these high-risk cohorts,” they add.
“Further study to elucidate the underlying mechanism associated with obesity, weight loss, and breast cancer risk should help guide strategies for risk reduction that are specific to unique high-risk cohorts, because modifiable risk factors may not portend the same benefit among all groups.”
Commenting on the findings, Stephen Edge, MD, breast surgeon and vice president for system quality and outcomes at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, Buffalo, N.Y., said, “The importance of this study is that it shows that weight loss in midlife can reduce breast cancer risk back to or even below the risk of similar people who were not obese. This has major implications for counseling women.”
The investigators did not have information on the extent of weight loss with surgery or on which participants maintained the lower weight, Dr. Edge noted; “However, overall, most people who have weight reduction surgery have major weight loss.”
At this point, he said, “we can now tell women with obesity that in addition to the many other advantages of weight loss, their risk of getting breast cancer will also be reduced.”
The study was supported by the Ontario Bariatric Registry and ICES, which is funded by an annual grant from the Ontario Ministry of Health and the Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Doumouras, Dr. Dimick, Dr. Pilewskie, and Dr. Edge reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM JAMA SURGERY
Evolve your website
The past few years have seen major transformations in the way health care websites operate and interact with patients.
.In mid-2018, a major Google algorithm change, known to the IT community as the “Medic Update,” significantly changed search criteria for most health and wellness websites. Another big update went live in late 2021. Websites that have not evolved with these changes have dropped in search rankings and provide a poorer user experience all around.
Many potential patients are searching for your services online, so your website cannot be an afterthought. Not only does it need to be designed with your target audience in mind, but it is also important to consider the metrics Google and other search engines now use when assessing the quality of your website so that patients will find it in the first place.
Here are some features that you (or your website company) need to prioritize to keep your site current and atop search results in 2023 and beyond.
Begin with an understandable URL. Search engines use URLs to determine how well your site, or a portion of it, matches search criteria. URLs also need to make sense to searchers, especially when they link specific areas of expertise (more on that in a minute). For example, a URL like “jonesdermatology.com/?p=89021” is meaningless to anyone except programmers; but “jonesdermatology.com/psoriasistreatments” obviously leads to a page about psoriasis treatments. Search engines look for not only the most relevant, but also the most helpful and user-friendly answers to a user’s query.
Incidentally, if the URL for your site is not your own name, you should register your name as a separate domain name – even if you never use it – to be sure that a trickster or troll, or someone with the same name but a bad reputation, doesn’t get it.
Continue with a good meta description. That’s the grayish text that follows the title and URL in search results. Searchers will read it to confirm that your site is what they seek, so make sure it describes exactly what you do, including any areas of special expertise.
Make your practice approachable with photos. New patients are more comfortable when they know what you look like, so real photos of you and your staff are always more effective than stock photos of models. Photos or a video tour of your office will reassure prospective patients that they will be visiting a clean, modern, professional facility.
Describe your principal services in detail. You never know which specific service a prospective patient is searching for, so describe everything you offer. Don’t try to summarize everything on a single page; relevance is determined by how deeply a topic is covered, so each principal service should have a detailed description on its own page. Not only will your skills become more visible to search engines, but you can also use the space to enumerate your qualifications and expertise in each area. Whenever possible, write your descriptions in question-and-answer form. Searchers tend to ask questions (“what is the best ... ?”), particularly in voice searches. Search engines increasingly value sites that ask and answer common questions.
Make your site interactive. “Interactivity” is a major buzzword in modern search engine parlance. Once searchers make an appointment, they stop searching. If they have to wait until the next day to call your office, they may keep looking – and might find a competitor with online scheduling. HIPAA-compliant chatbots, secure messaging, and online patient portals to access medical records, lab results, and other important information will also set your site apart.
Testimonials are essential. Amazon.com taught us that candid reviews from customers go a long way toward building the trust necessary to buy products and services, and nowhere is that truer than for medical services. According to one study, when it comes to finding a doctor, 88% of people trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation. Loyal patients will be happy to write you glowing reviews; feature them prominently.
How does your site look on small screens? More than half of all searches are now made on smartphones, so the more mobile-friendly your site is, the higher it will be ranked. Prospective patients who are forced to scroll forever, or zoom in to tap a link, are likely to become frustrated and move on. Mobile searchers prefer sites that provide the best experience for the least amount of effort, and rankings tend to reflect that preference. You can test how easily a visitor can use your website on a mobile device with Google’s free Mobile-Friendly Test..
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
The past few years have seen major transformations in the way health care websites operate and interact with patients.
.In mid-2018, a major Google algorithm change, known to the IT community as the “Medic Update,” significantly changed search criteria for most health and wellness websites. Another big update went live in late 2021. Websites that have not evolved with these changes have dropped in search rankings and provide a poorer user experience all around.
Many potential patients are searching for your services online, so your website cannot be an afterthought. Not only does it need to be designed with your target audience in mind, but it is also important to consider the metrics Google and other search engines now use when assessing the quality of your website so that patients will find it in the first place.
Here are some features that you (or your website company) need to prioritize to keep your site current and atop search results in 2023 and beyond.
Begin with an understandable URL. Search engines use URLs to determine how well your site, or a portion of it, matches search criteria. URLs also need to make sense to searchers, especially when they link specific areas of expertise (more on that in a minute). For example, a URL like “jonesdermatology.com/?p=89021” is meaningless to anyone except programmers; but “jonesdermatology.com/psoriasistreatments” obviously leads to a page about psoriasis treatments. Search engines look for not only the most relevant, but also the most helpful and user-friendly answers to a user’s query.
Incidentally, if the URL for your site is not your own name, you should register your name as a separate domain name – even if you never use it – to be sure that a trickster or troll, or someone with the same name but a bad reputation, doesn’t get it.
Continue with a good meta description. That’s the grayish text that follows the title and URL in search results. Searchers will read it to confirm that your site is what they seek, so make sure it describes exactly what you do, including any areas of special expertise.
Make your practice approachable with photos. New patients are more comfortable when they know what you look like, so real photos of you and your staff are always more effective than stock photos of models. Photos or a video tour of your office will reassure prospective patients that they will be visiting a clean, modern, professional facility.
Describe your principal services in detail. You never know which specific service a prospective patient is searching for, so describe everything you offer. Don’t try to summarize everything on a single page; relevance is determined by how deeply a topic is covered, so each principal service should have a detailed description on its own page. Not only will your skills become more visible to search engines, but you can also use the space to enumerate your qualifications and expertise in each area. Whenever possible, write your descriptions in question-and-answer form. Searchers tend to ask questions (“what is the best ... ?”), particularly in voice searches. Search engines increasingly value sites that ask and answer common questions.
Make your site interactive. “Interactivity” is a major buzzword in modern search engine parlance. Once searchers make an appointment, they stop searching. If they have to wait until the next day to call your office, they may keep looking – and might find a competitor with online scheduling. HIPAA-compliant chatbots, secure messaging, and online patient portals to access medical records, lab results, and other important information will also set your site apart.
Testimonials are essential. Amazon.com taught us that candid reviews from customers go a long way toward building the trust necessary to buy products and services, and nowhere is that truer than for medical services. According to one study, when it comes to finding a doctor, 88% of people trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation. Loyal patients will be happy to write you glowing reviews; feature them prominently.
How does your site look on small screens? More than half of all searches are now made on smartphones, so the more mobile-friendly your site is, the higher it will be ranked. Prospective patients who are forced to scroll forever, or zoom in to tap a link, are likely to become frustrated and move on. Mobile searchers prefer sites that provide the best experience for the least amount of effort, and rankings tend to reflect that preference. You can test how easily a visitor can use your website on a mobile device with Google’s free Mobile-Friendly Test..
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
The past few years have seen major transformations in the way health care websites operate and interact with patients.
.In mid-2018, a major Google algorithm change, known to the IT community as the “Medic Update,” significantly changed search criteria for most health and wellness websites. Another big update went live in late 2021. Websites that have not evolved with these changes have dropped in search rankings and provide a poorer user experience all around.
Many potential patients are searching for your services online, so your website cannot be an afterthought. Not only does it need to be designed with your target audience in mind, but it is also important to consider the metrics Google and other search engines now use when assessing the quality of your website so that patients will find it in the first place.
Here are some features that you (or your website company) need to prioritize to keep your site current and atop search results in 2023 and beyond.
Begin with an understandable URL. Search engines use URLs to determine how well your site, or a portion of it, matches search criteria. URLs also need to make sense to searchers, especially when they link specific areas of expertise (more on that in a minute). For example, a URL like “jonesdermatology.com/?p=89021” is meaningless to anyone except programmers; but “jonesdermatology.com/psoriasistreatments” obviously leads to a page about psoriasis treatments. Search engines look for not only the most relevant, but also the most helpful and user-friendly answers to a user’s query.
Incidentally, if the URL for your site is not your own name, you should register your name as a separate domain name – even if you never use it – to be sure that a trickster or troll, or someone with the same name but a bad reputation, doesn’t get it.
Continue with a good meta description. That’s the grayish text that follows the title and URL in search results. Searchers will read it to confirm that your site is what they seek, so make sure it describes exactly what you do, including any areas of special expertise.
Make your practice approachable with photos. New patients are more comfortable when they know what you look like, so real photos of you and your staff are always more effective than stock photos of models. Photos or a video tour of your office will reassure prospective patients that they will be visiting a clean, modern, professional facility.
Describe your principal services in detail. You never know which specific service a prospective patient is searching for, so describe everything you offer. Don’t try to summarize everything on a single page; relevance is determined by how deeply a topic is covered, so each principal service should have a detailed description on its own page. Not only will your skills become more visible to search engines, but you can also use the space to enumerate your qualifications and expertise in each area. Whenever possible, write your descriptions in question-and-answer form. Searchers tend to ask questions (“what is the best ... ?”), particularly in voice searches. Search engines increasingly value sites that ask and answer common questions.
Make your site interactive. “Interactivity” is a major buzzword in modern search engine parlance. Once searchers make an appointment, they stop searching. If they have to wait until the next day to call your office, they may keep looking – and might find a competitor with online scheduling. HIPAA-compliant chatbots, secure messaging, and online patient portals to access medical records, lab results, and other important information will also set your site apart.
Testimonials are essential. Amazon.com taught us that candid reviews from customers go a long way toward building the trust necessary to buy products and services, and nowhere is that truer than for medical services. According to one study, when it comes to finding a doctor, 88% of people trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation. Loyal patients will be happy to write you glowing reviews; feature them prominently.
How does your site look on small screens? More than half of all searches are now made on smartphones, so the more mobile-friendly your site is, the higher it will be ranked. Prospective patients who are forced to scroll forever, or zoom in to tap a link, are likely to become frustrated and move on. Mobile searchers prefer sites that provide the best experience for the least amount of effort, and rankings tend to reflect that preference. You can test how easily a visitor can use your website on a mobile device with Google’s free Mobile-Friendly Test..
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, N.J. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].