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Fed Pract
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gaming
gambling
compulsive behaviors
ammunition
assault rifle
black jack
Boko Haram
bondage
child abuse
cocaine
Daech
drug paraphernalia
explosion
gun
human trafficking
ISIL
ISIS
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Islamic state
mixed martial arts
MMA
molestation
national rifle association
NRA
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pedophilia
poker
porn
pornography
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recreational drug
sex slave rings
slot machine
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Texas hold 'em
UFC
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bunges
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butt
butt fuck
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buttfucked
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cock sucker
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A peer-reviewed clinical journal serving healthcare professionals working with the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Defense, and the Public Health Service.

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Testosterone decline after steroid abuse revealed with new biomarker

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Wed, 03/17/2021 - 15:11

Levels of insulinlike factor 3 (INSL3) drop noticeably in men who have abused anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS), even well after stoppage. The results suggest that the effects of AAS use on testosterone-producing Leydig cells may be long-lasting, as some clinicians have suspected. Although there is some variation of INSL3 levels among AAS users, the metric is more accurate than testosterone levels and could be a key element of future diagnostic tests.

Dr. Jon Rasmussen

Those are the conclusions of a new study, led by Jon Jarløv Rasmussen, MD, PhD, of the department of endocrinology at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen*, published March 9, 2021, in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.  

 

Results mirror clinical experience  

The drop in levels, both among current and past users, is in keeping with clinical experience of endocrinologists, according to Channa Jayasena, MD, PhD, a reproductive endocrinologist at Imperial College London. He suspects lasting damage in former and current users who come to him when they discover their sperm count is low. "How long that damage lasts is another matter," Dr. Jayasena, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview.   

Dr. Channa Jayasena

Dr. Jayasena hopes that INSL3 could find use in tracking damage to Leydig cells from AAS use, as well as to monitor improvements in the event that treatments are found, though he noted that the scatter plots in the study showed quite a bit of variation of INSL3 levels. "So it's a great first step showing that these men, users and past users, have lower INSL3 levels, but it's going to have to be part of a broader suite of factors such as the other hormone [levels], testicular volume, duration of steroid use, etc.," said Dr. Jayasena. 

 


In search of a reliable measure  

Low testosterone levels have been shown to be associated with AAS use in some studies, but not in others. That inconsistency led the researchers in search of a more reliable measure. "Serum testosterone is not a stable marker but can fluctuate considerably within minutes to hours, whereas serum insulinlike factor 3 [levels] do not," said Dr. Rasmussen.  
INSL3 appears to be involved in bone metabolism regulation as well as spermatogenesis.  

Dr. Rasmussen agreed that INSL3 levels could be clinically useful for tracking Leydig cell function, especially in combination with other hormone markers like serum testosterone and gonadotropins. The group is now considering a clinical trial for treatment of hypogonadal men following illicit use of anabolic steroids, which will include INSL3 serum levels as a planned endpoint.  

The researchers conducted a cross-sectional study of men aged 18-50 years who had participated in recreational strength training. Cohort 1 included 37 AAS users, 33 former users, and 30 never users. Cohort 2 included 9 current users, 9 former users, and 14 never users. They assigned participant AAS use status based on self-reporting, along with measurement of biomedical parameters including gonadotropins, sexual hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), and hematocrit.  
Compared with never users' median value of 0.59 mcg/L, INSL3 serum levels were lower among current AAS (median, 0.04 mcg/L; P < .001) and former AAS (0.39 mcg/L; P = .005) users. A linear multivariate regression that adjusted for luteinizing hormone, SHBG, age, body-fat percentage, smoking status, use of other illicit drugs found lower levels among former users, compared with never users (mean difference, -0.16 mcg/L; P = .011). 

An analysis of elapsed duration since AAS cessation found longer duration of AAS use was associated with reduced INSL3 levels (mean difference, -0.08; P = .022). 

Although serum inhibin B levels reached the levels of never users after about 21 months, and luteinizing hormone levels recovered in about 12 months, neither serum testosterone nor INSL3 levels recovered in former users. 

The study authors received funding from Anti Doping Denmark. Dr. Jayasena has no relevant financial disclosures. 

*Dr. Rasmussen's affiliation has been corrected.

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Levels of insulinlike factor 3 (INSL3) drop noticeably in men who have abused anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS), even well after stoppage. The results suggest that the effects of AAS use on testosterone-producing Leydig cells may be long-lasting, as some clinicians have suspected. Although there is some variation of INSL3 levels among AAS users, the metric is more accurate than testosterone levels and could be a key element of future diagnostic tests.

Dr. Jon Rasmussen

Those are the conclusions of a new study, led by Jon Jarløv Rasmussen, MD, PhD, of the department of endocrinology at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen*, published March 9, 2021, in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.  

 

Results mirror clinical experience  

The drop in levels, both among current and past users, is in keeping with clinical experience of endocrinologists, according to Channa Jayasena, MD, PhD, a reproductive endocrinologist at Imperial College London. He suspects lasting damage in former and current users who come to him when they discover their sperm count is low. "How long that damage lasts is another matter," Dr. Jayasena, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview.   

Dr. Channa Jayasena

Dr. Jayasena hopes that INSL3 could find use in tracking damage to Leydig cells from AAS use, as well as to monitor improvements in the event that treatments are found, though he noted that the scatter plots in the study showed quite a bit of variation of INSL3 levels. "So it's a great first step showing that these men, users and past users, have lower INSL3 levels, but it's going to have to be part of a broader suite of factors such as the other hormone [levels], testicular volume, duration of steroid use, etc.," said Dr. Jayasena. 

 


In search of a reliable measure  

Low testosterone levels have been shown to be associated with AAS use in some studies, but not in others. That inconsistency led the researchers in search of a more reliable measure. "Serum testosterone is not a stable marker but can fluctuate considerably within minutes to hours, whereas serum insulinlike factor 3 [levels] do not," said Dr. Rasmussen.  
INSL3 appears to be involved in bone metabolism regulation as well as spermatogenesis.  

Dr. Rasmussen agreed that INSL3 levels could be clinically useful for tracking Leydig cell function, especially in combination with other hormone markers like serum testosterone and gonadotropins. The group is now considering a clinical trial for treatment of hypogonadal men following illicit use of anabolic steroids, which will include INSL3 serum levels as a planned endpoint.  

The researchers conducted a cross-sectional study of men aged 18-50 years who had participated in recreational strength training. Cohort 1 included 37 AAS users, 33 former users, and 30 never users. Cohort 2 included 9 current users, 9 former users, and 14 never users. They assigned participant AAS use status based on self-reporting, along with measurement of biomedical parameters including gonadotropins, sexual hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), and hematocrit.  
Compared with never users' median value of 0.59 mcg/L, INSL3 serum levels were lower among current AAS (median, 0.04 mcg/L; P < .001) and former AAS (0.39 mcg/L; P = .005) users. A linear multivariate regression that adjusted for luteinizing hormone, SHBG, age, body-fat percentage, smoking status, use of other illicit drugs found lower levels among former users, compared with never users (mean difference, -0.16 mcg/L; P = .011). 

An analysis of elapsed duration since AAS cessation found longer duration of AAS use was associated with reduced INSL3 levels (mean difference, -0.08; P = .022). 

Although serum inhibin B levels reached the levels of never users after about 21 months, and luteinizing hormone levels recovered in about 12 months, neither serum testosterone nor INSL3 levels recovered in former users. 

The study authors received funding from Anti Doping Denmark. Dr. Jayasena has no relevant financial disclosures. 

*Dr. Rasmussen's affiliation has been corrected.

Levels of insulinlike factor 3 (INSL3) drop noticeably in men who have abused anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS), even well after stoppage. The results suggest that the effects of AAS use on testosterone-producing Leydig cells may be long-lasting, as some clinicians have suspected. Although there is some variation of INSL3 levels among AAS users, the metric is more accurate than testosterone levels and could be a key element of future diagnostic tests.

Dr. Jon Rasmussen

Those are the conclusions of a new study, led by Jon Jarløv Rasmussen, MD, PhD, of the department of endocrinology at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen*, published March 9, 2021, in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.  

 

Results mirror clinical experience  

The drop in levels, both among current and past users, is in keeping with clinical experience of endocrinologists, according to Channa Jayasena, MD, PhD, a reproductive endocrinologist at Imperial College London. He suspects lasting damage in former and current users who come to him when they discover their sperm count is low. "How long that damage lasts is another matter," Dr. Jayasena, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview.   

Dr. Channa Jayasena

Dr. Jayasena hopes that INSL3 could find use in tracking damage to Leydig cells from AAS use, as well as to monitor improvements in the event that treatments are found, though he noted that the scatter plots in the study showed quite a bit of variation of INSL3 levels. "So it's a great first step showing that these men, users and past users, have lower INSL3 levels, but it's going to have to be part of a broader suite of factors such as the other hormone [levels], testicular volume, duration of steroid use, etc.," said Dr. Jayasena. 

 


In search of a reliable measure  

Low testosterone levels have been shown to be associated with AAS use in some studies, but not in others. That inconsistency led the researchers in search of a more reliable measure. "Serum testosterone is not a stable marker but can fluctuate considerably within minutes to hours, whereas serum insulinlike factor 3 [levels] do not," said Dr. Rasmussen.  
INSL3 appears to be involved in bone metabolism regulation as well as spermatogenesis.  

Dr. Rasmussen agreed that INSL3 levels could be clinically useful for tracking Leydig cell function, especially in combination with other hormone markers like serum testosterone and gonadotropins. The group is now considering a clinical trial for treatment of hypogonadal men following illicit use of anabolic steroids, which will include INSL3 serum levels as a planned endpoint.  

The researchers conducted a cross-sectional study of men aged 18-50 years who had participated in recreational strength training. Cohort 1 included 37 AAS users, 33 former users, and 30 never users. Cohort 2 included 9 current users, 9 former users, and 14 never users. They assigned participant AAS use status based on self-reporting, along with measurement of biomedical parameters including gonadotropins, sexual hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), and hematocrit.  
Compared with never users' median value of 0.59 mcg/L, INSL3 serum levels were lower among current AAS (median, 0.04 mcg/L; P < .001) and former AAS (0.39 mcg/L; P = .005) users. A linear multivariate regression that adjusted for luteinizing hormone, SHBG, age, body-fat percentage, smoking status, use of other illicit drugs found lower levels among former users, compared with never users (mean difference, -0.16 mcg/L; P = .011). 

An analysis of elapsed duration since AAS cessation found longer duration of AAS use was associated with reduced INSL3 levels (mean difference, -0.08; P = .022). 

Although serum inhibin B levels reached the levels of never users after about 21 months, and luteinizing hormone levels recovered in about 12 months, neither serum testosterone nor INSL3 levels recovered in former users. 

The study authors received funding from Anti Doping Denmark. Dr. Jayasena has no relevant financial disclosures. 

*Dr. Rasmussen's affiliation has been corrected.

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FROM THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM

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Semaglutide for meaningful weight loss in obesity and diabetes?

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Tue, 05/03/2022 - 15:06

A 2.4-mg weekly injection of the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist semaglutide led to a clinically meaningful 5% loss in weight for roughly two-thirds of patients with both overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes, researchers report.

These findings from the Semaglutide Treatment Effect in People With Obesity 2 (STEP 2) trial, one of four phase 3 trials of this drug, which is currently under regulatory review for weight loss, were published March 2 in The Lancet.

More than 1,000 patients (mean initial weight, 100 kg [220 pounds]) were randomly assigned to receive a lifestyle intervention plus a weekly injection of semaglutide 2.4 mg or semaglutide 1.0 mg or placebo. At 68 weeks, they had lost a mean of 9.6%, 7.0%, and 3.4%, respectively, of their starting weight.

In addition, 69% of patients who had received semaglutide 2.4 mg experienced a clinically meaningful 5% loss of weight, compared with 57% of patients who had received the lower dose and 29% of patients who had received placebo.

The higher dose of semaglutide was associated with a greater improvement in cardiometabolic risk factors. The safety profile was similar to that seen with other drugs in this class.
 

“By far the best results with any weight loss medicine in diabetes”

Importantly, “more than a quarter of participants lost over 15% of their body weight,” senior author Ildiko Lingvay, MD, stressed. This “is by far the best result we had with any weight loss medicine in patients with diabetes,” Dr. Lingvay, of the University of Texas, Dallas, said in a statement from the university.

Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Ildiko Lingvay

“The drug works by suppressing appetite centers in the brain to reduce caloric intake,” she explained. “The medication continually tells the body that you just ate, you’re full.”

Similarly, lead author Melanie J. Davies, MD, said that the STEP 2 results “are exciting and represent a new era in weight management in people with type 2 diabetes.

Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Melanie J. Davies


“They mark a real paradigm shift in our ability to treat obesity,” with results closer to those achieved with bariatric surgery, Dr. Davies, of the University of Leicester, England, said in a statement from her institution.

“It is really encouraging,” she continued, “that along with the weight loss we saw real improvements in general health, with significant improvement in physical functioning scores, blood pressure, and blood glucose control.”

Dr. Lingvay noted that on average, patients in the four STEP clinical trials lost 10%-17% of their body weight, “which is a huge step forward compared with all other medications currently available to treat obesity.” She stressed that these results are comparable to the 20%-30% weight loss seen with bariatric surgery.
 

One of four trials under review

More than 90% of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or have obesity, and more than 20% of people with obesity have diabetes, wrote Dr. Davies and colleagues.

Semaglutide (Ozempic), administered subcutaneously at a dose of 0.5 mg to 1 mg weekly, is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Dosing studies indicated that it is associated with weight loss.

As previously reported, four trials of the use of semaglutide for weight loss (STEP 1, 2, 3, and 4) have been completed. The combined data were submitted to the FDA on Dec. 4, 2020 (a decision is expected within 6 months) and to the European Medicines Agency on Dec. 18, 2020.

The STEP 1 and STEP 3 trials of semaglutide 2.4 mg vs. placebo were recently published. The STEP 1 trial involved 1,961 adults with obesity or overweight; the STEP 3 trial, 611 adults with obesity or overweight. In each of the trials, some patients also underwent an intensive lifestyle intervention, and some did not. In both trials, patients with type 2 diabetes were excluded.

Topline results from STEP 2 were reported in June 2020.
 

STEP 2 enrolled patients with type 2 diabetes

STEP 2 involved 1,210 adults in 149 outpatient clinics in 12 countries in Europe, North America, South America, the Middle East, South Africa, and Asia. All participants had type 2 diabetes.

For all patients, the body mass index was ≥27 kg/m2, and the A1c concentration was 7%-10%. The mean BMI was 35.7 kg/m2, and the mean A1c was 8.1%.

The mean age of the patients was 55 years, and 51% were women; 62% were White, 26% were Asian, 13% were Hispanic, 8% were Black, and 4% were of other ethnicity.

Participants were managed with diet and exercise alone or underwent treatment with a stable dose of up to three oral glucose-lowering agents (metformin, sulfonylureas, SGLT2 inhibitors, or thiazolidinediones) for at least 90 days. They were then randomly assigned in 1:1:1 ratio to receive semaglutide 2.4 mg, semaglutide 1.0 mg, or placebo.

The starting dose of semaglutide was 0.25 mg/wk; the dose was escalated every 4 weeks to reach the target dose.

All patients received monthly counseling from a dietitian about calories (the goal was a 500-calorie/day deficit) and activity (the goal was 150 minutes of walking or stair climbing per week).

The mean A1c dropped by 1.6% and 1.5% in the semaglutide groups and by 0.4% in the placebo group.

Adverse events were more frequent among the patients who received semaglutide (88% and 82%) than in the placebo group (77%).

Gastrointestinal events that were mainly mild to moderate in severity were reported by 64% of patients in the 2.4-mg semaglutide group, 58% in the 1.0-mg semaglutide group, and 34% in the placebo group.

Semaglutide (Rybelsus) is approved in the United States as a once-daily oral agent for use in type 2 diabetes in doses of 7 mg and 14 mg to improve glycemic control along with diet and exercise. It is the first GLP-1 agonist available in tablet form.

The study was supported by Novo Nordisk. The authors’ relevant financial relationships are listed in the original article.

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

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A 2.4-mg weekly injection of the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist semaglutide led to a clinically meaningful 5% loss in weight for roughly two-thirds of patients with both overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes, researchers report.

These findings from the Semaglutide Treatment Effect in People With Obesity 2 (STEP 2) trial, one of four phase 3 trials of this drug, which is currently under regulatory review for weight loss, were published March 2 in The Lancet.

More than 1,000 patients (mean initial weight, 100 kg [220 pounds]) were randomly assigned to receive a lifestyle intervention plus a weekly injection of semaglutide 2.4 mg or semaglutide 1.0 mg or placebo. At 68 weeks, they had lost a mean of 9.6%, 7.0%, and 3.4%, respectively, of their starting weight.

In addition, 69% of patients who had received semaglutide 2.4 mg experienced a clinically meaningful 5% loss of weight, compared with 57% of patients who had received the lower dose and 29% of patients who had received placebo.

The higher dose of semaglutide was associated with a greater improvement in cardiometabolic risk factors. The safety profile was similar to that seen with other drugs in this class.
 

“By far the best results with any weight loss medicine in diabetes”

Importantly, “more than a quarter of participants lost over 15% of their body weight,” senior author Ildiko Lingvay, MD, stressed. This “is by far the best result we had with any weight loss medicine in patients with diabetes,” Dr. Lingvay, of the University of Texas, Dallas, said in a statement from the university.

Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Ildiko Lingvay

“The drug works by suppressing appetite centers in the brain to reduce caloric intake,” she explained. “The medication continually tells the body that you just ate, you’re full.”

Similarly, lead author Melanie J. Davies, MD, said that the STEP 2 results “are exciting and represent a new era in weight management in people with type 2 diabetes.

Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Melanie J. Davies


“They mark a real paradigm shift in our ability to treat obesity,” with results closer to those achieved with bariatric surgery, Dr. Davies, of the University of Leicester, England, said in a statement from her institution.

“It is really encouraging,” she continued, “that along with the weight loss we saw real improvements in general health, with significant improvement in physical functioning scores, blood pressure, and blood glucose control.”

Dr. Lingvay noted that on average, patients in the four STEP clinical trials lost 10%-17% of their body weight, “which is a huge step forward compared with all other medications currently available to treat obesity.” She stressed that these results are comparable to the 20%-30% weight loss seen with bariatric surgery.
 

One of four trials under review

More than 90% of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or have obesity, and more than 20% of people with obesity have diabetes, wrote Dr. Davies and colleagues.

Semaglutide (Ozempic), administered subcutaneously at a dose of 0.5 mg to 1 mg weekly, is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Dosing studies indicated that it is associated with weight loss.

As previously reported, four trials of the use of semaglutide for weight loss (STEP 1, 2, 3, and 4) have been completed. The combined data were submitted to the FDA on Dec. 4, 2020 (a decision is expected within 6 months) and to the European Medicines Agency on Dec. 18, 2020.

The STEP 1 and STEP 3 trials of semaglutide 2.4 mg vs. placebo were recently published. The STEP 1 trial involved 1,961 adults with obesity or overweight; the STEP 3 trial, 611 adults with obesity or overweight. In each of the trials, some patients also underwent an intensive lifestyle intervention, and some did not. In both trials, patients with type 2 diabetes were excluded.

Topline results from STEP 2 were reported in June 2020.
 

STEP 2 enrolled patients with type 2 diabetes

STEP 2 involved 1,210 adults in 149 outpatient clinics in 12 countries in Europe, North America, South America, the Middle East, South Africa, and Asia. All participants had type 2 diabetes.

For all patients, the body mass index was ≥27 kg/m2, and the A1c concentration was 7%-10%. The mean BMI was 35.7 kg/m2, and the mean A1c was 8.1%.

The mean age of the patients was 55 years, and 51% were women; 62% were White, 26% were Asian, 13% were Hispanic, 8% were Black, and 4% were of other ethnicity.

Participants were managed with diet and exercise alone or underwent treatment with a stable dose of up to three oral glucose-lowering agents (metformin, sulfonylureas, SGLT2 inhibitors, or thiazolidinediones) for at least 90 days. They were then randomly assigned in 1:1:1 ratio to receive semaglutide 2.4 mg, semaglutide 1.0 mg, or placebo.

The starting dose of semaglutide was 0.25 mg/wk; the dose was escalated every 4 weeks to reach the target dose.

All patients received monthly counseling from a dietitian about calories (the goal was a 500-calorie/day deficit) and activity (the goal was 150 minutes of walking or stair climbing per week).

The mean A1c dropped by 1.6% and 1.5% in the semaglutide groups and by 0.4% in the placebo group.

Adverse events were more frequent among the patients who received semaglutide (88% and 82%) than in the placebo group (77%).

Gastrointestinal events that were mainly mild to moderate in severity were reported by 64% of patients in the 2.4-mg semaglutide group, 58% in the 1.0-mg semaglutide group, and 34% in the placebo group.

Semaglutide (Rybelsus) is approved in the United States as a once-daily oral agent for use in type 2 diabetes in doses of 7 mg and 14 mg to improve glycemic control along with diet and exercise. It is the first GLP-1 agonist available in tablet form.

The study was supported by Novo Nordisk. The authors’ relevant financial relationships are listed in the original article.

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

A 2.4-mg weekly injection of the glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist semaglutide led to a clinically meaningful 5% loss in weight for roughly two-thirds of patients with both overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes, researchers report.

These findings from the Semaglutide Treatment Effect in People With Obesity 2 (STEP 2) trial, one of four phase 3 trials of this drug, which is currently under regulatory review for weight loss, were published March 2 in The Lancet.

More than 1,000 patients (mean initial weight, 100 kg [220 pounds]) were randomly assigned to receive a lifestyle intervention plus a weekly injection of semaglutide 2.4 mg or semaglutide 1.0 mg or placebo. At 68 weeks, they had lost a mean of 9.6%, 7.0%, and 3.4%, respectively, of their starting weight.

In addition, 69% of patients who had received semaglutide 2.4 mg experienced a clinically meaningful 5% loss of weight, compared with 57% of patients who had received the lower dose and 29% of patients who had received placebo.

The higher dose of semaglutide was associated with a greater improvement in cardiometabolic risk factors. The safety profile was similar to that seen with other drugs in this class.
 

“By far the best results with any weight loss medicine in diabetes”

Importantly, “more than a quarter of participants lost over 15% of their body weight,” senior author Ildiko Lingvay, MD, stressed. This “is by far the best result we had with any weight loss medicine in patients with diabetes,” Dr. Lingvay, of the University of Texas, Dallas, said in a statement from the university.

Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Ildiko Lingvay

“The drug works by suppressing appetite centers in the brain to reduce caloric intake,” she explained. “The medication continually tells the body that you just ate, you’re full.”

Similarly, lead author Melanie J. Davies, MD, said that the STEP 2 results “are exciting and represent a new era in weight management in people with type 2 diabetes.

Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Melanie J. Davies


“They mark a real paradigm shift in our ability to treat obesity,” with results closer to those achieved with bariatric surgery, Dr. Davies, of the University of Leicester, England, said in a statement from her institution.

“It is really encouraging,” she continued, “that along with the weight loss we saw real improvements in general health, with significant improvement in physical functioning scores, blood pressure, and blood glucose control.”

Dr. Lingvay noted that on average, patients in the four STEP clinical trials lost 10%-17% of their body weight, “which is a huge step forward compared with all other medications currently available to treat obesity.” She stressed that these results are comparable to the 20%-30% weight loss seen with bariatric surgery.
 

One of four trials under review

More than 90% of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight or have obesity, and more than 20% of people with obesity have diabetes, wrote Dr. Davies and colleagues.

Semaglutide (Ozempic), administered subcutaneously at a dose of 0.5 mg to 1 mg weekly, is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of type 2 diabetes. Dosing studies indicated that it is associated with weight loss.

As previously reported, four trials of the use of semaglutide for weight loss (STEP 1, 2, 3, and 4) have been completed. The combined data were submitted to the FDA on Dec. 4, 2020 (a decision is expected within 6 months) and to the European Medicines Agency on Dec. 18, 2020.

The STEP 1 and STEP 3 trials of semaglutide 2.4 mg vs. placebo were recently published. The STEP 1 trial involved 1,961 adults with obesity or overweight; the STEP 3 trial, 611 adults with obesity or overweight. In each of the trials, some patients also underwent an intensive lifestyle intervention, and some did not. In both trials, patients with type 2 diabetes were excluded.

Topline results from STEP 2 were reported in June 2020.
 

STEP 2 enrolled patients with type 2 diabetes

STEP 2 involved 1,210 adults in 149 outpatient clinics in 12 countries in Europe, North America, South America, the Middle East, South Africa, and Asia. All participants had type 2 diabetes.

For all patients, the body mass index was ≥27 kg/m2, and the A1c concentration was 7%-10%. The mean BMI was 35.7 kg/m2, and the mean A1c was 8.1%.

The mean age of the patients was 55 years, and 51% were women; 62% were White, 26% were Asian, 13% were Hispanic, 8% were Black, and 4% were of other ethnicity.

Participants were managed with diet and exercise alone or underwent treatment with a stable dose of up to three oral glucose-lowering agents (metformin, sulfonylureas, SGLT2 inhibitors, or thiazolidinediones) for at least 90 days. They were then randomly assigned in 1:1:1 ratio to receive semaglutide 2.4 mg, semaglutide 1.0 mg, or placebo.

The starting dose of semaglutide was 0.25 mg/wk; the dose was escalated every 4 weeks to reach the target dose.

All patients received monthly counseling from a dietitian about calories (the goal was a 500-calorie/day deficit) and activity (the goal was 150 minutes of walking or stair climbing per week).

The mean A1c dropped by 1.6% and 1.5% in the semaglutide groups and by 0.4% in the placebo group.

Adverse events were more frequent among the patients who received semaglutide (88% and 82%) than in the placebo group (77%).

Gastrointestinal events that were mainly mild to moderate in severity were reported by 64% of patients in the 2.4-mg semaglutide group, 58% in the 1.0-mg semaglutide group, and 34% in the placebo group.

Semaglutide (Rybelsus) is approved in the United States as a once-daily oral agent for use in type 2 diabetes in doses of 7 mg and 14 mg to improve glycemic control along with diet and exercise. It is the first GLP-1 agonist available in tablet form.

The study was supported by Novo Nordisk. The authors’ relevant financial relationships are listed in the original article.

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

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Call to action on obesity amid COVID-19 pandemic

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Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:50

Hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide from COVID-19 could have been avoided if obesity rates were lower, a new report says.

An analysis by the World Obesity Federation found that of the 2.5 million COVID-19 deaths reported by the end of February 2021, almost 90% (2.2 million) were in countries where more than half the population is classified as overweight.

The report, released to coincide with World Obesity Day, calls for obesity to be recognized as a disease in its own right around the world, and for people with obesity to be included in priority lists for COVID-19 testing and vaccination.

“Overweight is a highly significant predictor of developing complications from COVID-19, including the need for hospitalization, for intensive care and for mechanical ventilation,” the WOF notes in the report.

It adds that in countries where less than half the adult population is classified as overweight (body mass index > 25 mg/kg2), for example, Vietnam, the likelihood of death from COVID-19 is a small fraction – around one-tenth – of the level seen in countries where more than half the population is classified as overweight.

And while it acknowledges that figures for COVID-19 deaths are affected by the age structure of national populations and a country’s relative wealth and reporting capacity, “our findings appear to be independent of these contributory factors. Furthermore, other studies have found that overweight remains a highly significant predictor of the need for COVID-19 health care after accounting for these other influences.”

As an example, based on the U.K. experience, where an estimated 36% of COVID-19 hospitalizations have been attributed to lack of physical activity and excess body weight, it can be suggested that up to a third of the costs – between $6 trillion and $7 trillion over the longer period – might be attributable to these predisposing risks.

The report said the prevalence of obesity in the United Kingdom is expected to rise from 27.8% in 2016 to more than 35% by 2025.

Rachel Batterham, lead adviser on obesity at the Royal College of Physicians, commented: “The link between high levels of obesity and deaths from COVID-19 in the U.K. is indisputable, as is the urgent need to address the factors that lead so many people to be living with obesity.

“With 30% of COVID-19 hospitalizations in the U.K. directly attributed to overweight and obesity, and three-quarters of all critically ill patients having overweight or obesity, the human and financial costs are high.”
 

Window of opportunity to prioritize obesity as a disease

WOF says that evolving evidence on the close association between COVID-19 and underlying obesity “provides a new urgency … for political and collective action.”

“Obesity is a disease that does not receive prioritization commensurate with its prevalence and impact, which is rising fastest in emerging economies. It is a gateway to many other noncommunicable diseases and mental-health illness and is now a major factor in COVID-19 complications and mortality.”

The WOF also shows that COVID-19 is not a special case, noting that several other respiratory viruses lead to more severe consequences in people living with excess bodyweight, giving good reasons to expect the next pandemic to have similar effects. “For these reasons we need to recognize overweight as a major risk factor for infectious diseases including respiratory viruses.”

“To prevent pandemic health crises in future requires action now: we call on all readers to support the World Obesity Federation’s call for stronger, more resilient economies that prioritize investment in people’s health.”

There is, it stresses, “a window of opportunity to advocate for, fund and implement these actions in all countries to ensure better, more resilient and sustainable health for all, “now and in our postCOVID-19 future.”

It proposes a ROOTS approach:

  • Recognize that obesity is a disease in its own right.
  • Obesity monitoring and surveillance must be enhanced.
  • Obesity prevention strategies must be developed.
  • Treatment of obesity.
  • Systems-based approaches should be applied.

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

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Hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide from COVID-19 could have been avoided if obesity rates were lower, a new report says.

An analysis by the World Obesity Federation found that of the 2.5 million COVID-19 deaths reported by the end of February 2021, almost 90% (2.2 million) were in countries where more than half the population is classified as overweight.

The report, released to coincide with World Obesity Day, calls for obesity to be recognized as a disease in its own right around the world, and for people with obesity to be included in priority lists for COVID-19 testing and vaccination.

“Overweight is a highly significant predictor of developing complications from COVID-19, including the need for hospitalization, for intensive care and for mechanical ventilation,” the WOF notes in the report.

It adds that in countries where less than half the adult population is classified as overweight (body mass index > 25 mg/kg2), for example, Vietnam, the likelihood of death from COVID-19 is a small fraction – around one-tenth – of the level seen in countries where more than half the population is classified as overweight.

And while it acknowledges that figures for COVID-19 deaths are affected by the age structure of national populations and a country’s relative wealth and reporting capacity, “our findings appear to be independent of these contributory factors. Furthermore, other studies have found that overweight remains a highly significant predictor of the need for COVID-19 health care after accounting for these other influences.”

As an example, based on the U.K. experience, where an estimated 36% of COVID-19 hospitalizations have been attributed to lack of physical activity and excess body weight, it can be suggested that up to a third of the costs – between $6 trillion and $7 trillion over the longer period – might be attributable to these predisposing risks.

The report said the prevalence of obesity in the United Kingdom is expected to rise from 27.8% in 2016 to more than 35% by 2025.

Rachel Batterham, lead adviser on obesity at the Royal College of Physicians, commented: “The link between high levels of obesity and deaths from COVID-19 in the U.K. is indisputable, as is the urgent need to address the factors that lead so many people to be living with obesity.

“With 30% of COVID-19 hospitalizations in the U.K. directly attributed to overweight and obesity, and three-quarters of all critically ill patients having overweight or obesity, the human and financial costs are high.”
 

Window of opportunity to prioritize obesity as a disease

WOF says that evolving evidence on the close association between COVID-19 and underlying obesity “provides a new urgency … for political and collective action.”

“Obesity is a disease that does not receive prioritization commensurate with its prevalence and impact, which is rising fastest in emerging economies. It is a gateway to many other noncommunicable diseases and mental-health illness and is now a major factor in COVID-19 complications and mortality.”

The WOF also shows that COVID-19 is not a special case, noting that several other respiratory viruses lead to more severe consequences in people living with excess bodyweight, giving good reasons to expect the next pandemic to have similar effects. “For these reasons we need to recognize overweight as a major risk factor for infectious diseases including respiratory viruses.”

“To prevent pandemic health crises in future requires action now: we call on all readers to support the World Obesity Federation’s call for stronger, more resilient economies that prioritize investment in people’s health.”

There is, it stresses, “a window of opportunity to advocate for, fund and implement these actions in all countries to ensure better, more resilient and sustainable health for all, “now and in our postCOVID-19 future.”

It proposes a ROOTS approach:

  • Recognize that obesity is a disease in its own right.
  • Obesity monitoring and surveillance must be enhanced.
  • Obesity prevention strategies must be developed.
  • Treatment of obesity.
  • Systems-based approaches should be applied.

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

Hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide from COVID-19 could have been avoided if obesity rates were lower, a new report says.

An analysis by the World Obesity Federation found that of the 2.5 million COVID-19 deaths reported by the end of February 2021, almost 90% (2.2 million) were in countries where more than half the population is classified as overweight.

The report, released to coincide with World Obesity Day, calls for obesity to be recognized as a disease in its own right around the world, and for people with obesity to be included in priority lists for COVID-19 testing and vaccination.

“Overweight is a highly significant predictor of developing complications from COVID-19, including the need for hospitalization, for intensive care and for mechanical ventilation,” the WOF notes in the report.

It adds that in countries where less than half the adult population is classified as overweight (body mass index > 25 mg/kg2), for example, Vietnam, the likelihood of death from COVID-19 is a small fraction – around one-tenth – of the level seen in countries where more than half the population is classified as overweight.

And while it acknowledges that figures for COVID-19 deaths are affected by the age structure of national populations and a country’s relative wealth and reporting capacity, “our findings appear to be independent of these contributory factors. Furthermore, other studies have found that overweight remains a highly significant predictor of the need for COVID-19 health care after accounting for these other influences.”

As an example, based on the U.K. experience, where an estimated 36% of COVID-19 hospitalizations have been attributed to lack of physical activity and excess body weight, it can be suggested that up to a third of the costs – between $6 trillion and $7 trillion over the longer period – might be attributable to these predisposing risks.

The report said the prevalence of obesity in the United Kingdom is expected to rise from 27.8% in 2016 to more than 35% by 2025.

Rachel Batterham, lead adviser on obesity at the Royal College of Physicians, commented: “The link between high levels of obesity and deaths from COVID-19 in the U.K. is indisputable, as is the urgent need to address the factors that lead so many people to be living with obesity.

“With 30% of COVID-19 hospitalizations in the U.K. directly attributed to overweight and obesity, and three-quarters of all critically ill patients having overweight or obesity, the human and financial costs are high.”
 

Window of opportunity to prioritize obesity as a disease

WOF says that evolving evidence on the close association between COVID-19 and underlying obesity “provides a new urgency … for political and collective action.”

“Obesity is a disease that does not receive prioritization commensurate with its prevalence and impact, which is rising fastest in emerging economies. It is a gateway to many other noncommunicable diseases and mental-health illness and is now a major factor in COVID-19 complications and mortality.”

The WOF also shows that COVID-19 is not a special case, noting that several other respiratory viruses lead to more severe consequences in people living with excess bodyweight, giving good reasons to expect the next pandemic to have similar effects. “For these reasons we need to recognize overweight as a major risk factor for infectious diseases including respiratory viruses.”

“To prevent pandemic health crises in future requires action now: we call on all readers to support the World Obesity Federation’s call for stronger, more resilient economies that prioritize investment in people’s health.”

There is, it stresses, “a window of opportunity to advocate for, fund and implement these actions in all countries to ensure better, more resilient and sustainable health for all, “now and in our postCOVID-19 future.”

It proposes a ROOTS approach:

  • Recognize that obesity is a disease in its own right.
  • Obesity monitoring and surveillance must be enhanced.
  • Obesity prevention strategies must be developed.
  • Treatment of obesity.
  • Systems-based approaches should be applied.

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

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Federal Government Ramps Up COVID-19 Vaccination Programs

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The launch of the Federally Qualified Health Center Program for COVID-19 Vaccination benefits Native Americans by providing increased funds and vaccine doses to the Indian Health Service and tribal health services.

The Biden Administration launched the first phase of the Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) Program for COVID-19 Vaccination. Beginning February 15, FQHCs (including centers in the Urban Indian Health Program) began directly receiving vaccines.

                The announcement coincided with a boost in vaccine supply for states, Tribes, and territories. In early February, the Biden Administration announced it would expand vaccine supply to 11 million doses nationwide, a 28% increase since January 20, when President Biden took office. According to a White House fact sheet, “The Administration is committing to maintaining this as the minimum supply level for the next three weeks, and we will continue to work with manufacturers in their efforts to ramp up supply.”

                In February, President Biden and Vice President Harris travelled to Arizona and toured a vaccination site at State Farm Stadium in Glendale. Arizona, one of the first states to reach out for federal help from the new administration, has 15 counties and 22 Tribes with sovereign lands in the state. Those 37 entities work collaboratively with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), said Major General Michael McGuire, head of the Arizona National Guard.

                In his remarks during the tour, President Biden addressed equity, saying, “[I]t really does matter that we have access to the people who are most in need [and are] most affected by the COVID crisis, dying at faster rates, getting sick at faster rates, …but not being able to get into the mix. …Equity is a big thing.”

                To that end, one of the programs under way is to stand up four vaccination centers for the Navajo Nation. Tammy Littrell, Acting Regional Administrator for FEMA, said the centers will help increase tribal members’ access to vaccination, as well as take the burden off from having to drive in “austere winter conditions.”

                In addition to more vaccines, Indian Health Services (IHS) is allocating $1 billion it received to help with COVID-19 response. Of the $1 billion, $790 million will go to testing, contact tracing, containment, and mitigation, among other things. Another $210 million will support IHS, tribal, and urban Indian health programs for vaccine-related activities to ensure broad-based distribution, access, and vaccine coverage. The money is part of the fifth round of supplemental COVID-19 funding from the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act. The funds transferred so far amount to nearly $3 billion.

                According to IHS, the money can be used to scale up testing by public health, academic, commercial, and hospital laboratories, as well as community-based testing sites, mobile testing units, healthcare facilities, and other entities engaged in COVID-19 testing. The funds are also legally available to lease or purchase non-federally owned facilities to improve COVID-19 preparedness and response capability.

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The launch of the Federally Qualified Health Center Program for COVID-19 Vaccination benefits Native Americans by providing increased funds and vaccine doses to the Indian Health Service and tribal health services.
The launch of the Federally Qualified Health Center Program for COVID-19 Vaccination benefits Native Americans by providing increased funds and vaccine doses to the Indian Health Service and tribal health services.

The Biden Administration launched the first phase of the Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) Program for COVID-19 Vaccination. Beginning February 15, FQHCs (including centers in the Urban Indian Health Program) began directly receiving vaccines.

                The announcement coincided with a boost in vaccine supply for states, Tribes, and territories. In early February, the Biden Administration announced it would expand vaccine supply to 11 million doses nationwide, a 28% increase since January 20, when President Biden took office. According to a White House fact sheet, “The Administration is committing to maintaining this as the minimum supply level for the next three weeks, and we will continue to work with manufacturers in their efforts to ramp up supply.”

                In February, President Biden and Vice President Harris travelled to Arizona and toured a vaccination site at State Farm Stadium in Glendale. Arizona, one of the first states to reach out for federal help from the new administration, has 15 counties and 22 Tribes with sovereign lands in the state. Those 37 entities work collaboratively with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), said Major General Michael McGuire, head of the Arizona National Guard.

                In his remarks during the tour, President Biden addressed equity, saying, “[I]t really does matter that we have access to the people who are most in need [and are] most affected by the COVID crisis, dying at faster rates, getting sick at faster rates, …but not being able to get into the mix. …Equity is a big thing.”

                To that end, one of the programs under way is to stand up four vaccination centers for the Navajo Nation. Tammy Littrell, Acting Regional Administrator for FEMA, said the centers will help increase tribal members’ access to vaccination, as well as take the burden off from having to drive in “austere winter conditions.”

                In addition to more vaccines, Indian Health Services (IHS) is allocating $1 billion it received to help with COVID-19 response. Of the $1 billion, $790 million will go to testing, contact tracing, containment, and mitigation, among other things. Another $210 million will support IHS, tribal, and urban Indian health programs for vaccine-related activities to ensure broad-based distribution, access, and vaccine coverage. The money is part of the fifth round of supplemental COVID-19 funding from the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act. The funds transferred so far amount to nearly $3 billion.

                According to IHS, the money can be used to scale up testing by public health, academic, commercial, and hospital laboratories, as well as community-based testing sites, mobile testing units, healthcare facilities, and other entities engaged in COVID-19 testing. The funds are also legally available to lease or purchase non-federally owned facilities to improve COVID-19 preparedness and response capability.

The Biden Administration launched the first phase of the Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) Program for COVID-19 Vaccination. Beginning February 15, FQHCs (including centers in the Urban Indian Health Program) began directly receiving vaccines.

                The announcement coincided with a boost in vaccine supply for states, Tribes, and territories. In early February, the Biden Administration announced it would expand vaccine supply to 11 million doses nationwide, a 28% increase since January 20, when President Biden took office. According to a White House fact sheet, “The Administration is committing to maintaining this as the minimum supply level for the next three weeks, and we will continue to work with manufacturers in their efforts to ramp up supply.”

                In February, President Biden and Vice President Harris travelled to Arizona and toured a vaccination site at State Farm Stadium in Glendale. Arizona, one of the first states to reach out for federal help from the new administration, has 15 counties and 22 Tribes with sovereign lands in the state. Those 37 entities work collaboratively with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), said Major General Michael McGuire, head of the Arizona National Guard.

                In his remarks during the tour, President Biden addressed equity, saying, “[I]t really does matter that we have access to the people who are most in need [and are] most affected by the COVID crisis, dying at faster rates, getting sick at faster rates, …but not being able to get into the mix. …Equity is a big thing.”

                To that end, one of the programs under way is to stand up four vaccination centers for the Navajo Nation. Tammy Littrell, Acting Regional Administrator for FEMA, said the centers will help increase tribal members’ access to vaccination, as well as take the burden off from having to drive in “austere winter conditions.”

                In addition to more vaccines, Indian Health Services (IHS) is allocating $1 billion it received to help with COVID-19 response. Of the $1 billion, $790 million will go to testing, contact tracing, containment, and mitigation, among other things. Another $210 million will support IHS, tribal, and urban Indian health programs for vaccine-related activities to ensure broad-based distribution, access, and vaccine coverage. The money is part of the fifth round of supplemental COVID-19 funding from the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act. The funds transferred so far amount to nearly $3 billion.

                According to IHS, the money can be used to scale up testing by public health, academic, commercial, and hospital laboratories, as well as community-based testing sites, mobile testing units, healthcare facilities, and other entities engaged in COVID-19 testing. The funds are also legally available to lease or purchase non-federally owned facilities to improve COVID-19 preparedness and response capability.

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Are long-acting injectables the future of TB treatment?

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Long-acting injectable (LAI) drug formulations represent a promising new strategy for the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis in women and children, according to an online presentation at the Conference on Retroviruses & Opportunistic Infections, held virtually.

“As a delivery strategy, LAIs hold the potential to unlock a vast chemical space of lipophilic compounds with very potent anti-TB activity that would otherwise not be developed due to poor predicted oral bioavailability,” explained presenter Eric Nuermberger, MD.

He summarized current preventive treatment options for TB and reviewed the potential impact of LAI formulations on TB therapy. In addition, he identified key challenges for future LAI development and proposed a new development path for clinical implementation.
 

Current TB preventive therapies

Despite widespread availability, the uptake of TB preventive therapy is poor and currently lags behind global targets. One key barrier to widespread uptake is the long duration of treatment, which may hinder patient adherence to therapy.

While shorter preventive regimens, such as 1 month of daily isoniazid plus rifapentine, show similar efficacy and higher completion rates, further shortening of therapy and reducing clinic visits are the most direct methods to increase adherence and treatment completion rates, Dr. Nuermberger said.
 

LAI drugs

LAI drug formulations allow for slow release of suitable drugs from a depot injected subcutaneously or intramuscularly.

The goal of LAI formulations is to free patients from the daily burden of oral administration. Other potential benefits include better adherence and efficacy, drug exposure, and the potential to overcome intrinsic poor oral bioavailability by bypassing the GI tract entirely.

Potential indications for LAIs include treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI), and as continuous therapy in people living with HIV in high-burden settings. There is also potential for treating younger children, such as household contacts, who have difficulty taking oral medications.

“We’ve already seen LAIs revolutionize other areas, such as psychiatry and contraception, and we appear to have another revolution in HIV prevention and treatment,” Dr. Nuermberger explained.

Not all existing TB drugs are suitable for LAI formulations, but drugs such as rifapentine, rifabutin, delamanid, and bedaquiline, show more promise than isoniazid or rifampin because of their physiochemical composition. Of all, bedaquiline may offer the best profile for LAI formulation, Dr. Nuermberger said.

Early proof-of-concept in vivo studies have shown potential use of LAI bedaquiline for TB prevention in both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB contacts. Translational PK modeling and simulation predicted that a 1-g intramuscular injection of LAI bedaquiline could maintain therapeutic plasma concentrations in humans for greater than 1 month.

Dr. Nuermberger noted that novel diarylquinoline-based therapies, currently in phase 1 studies, may be even better candidates for LAI-based TB preventive therapy. Early data suggests these compounds may be 10-20 times more potent and have a lower CV risk profile than that of bedaquiline.
 

Considerations for development and implementation

“Despite the promising potential of long-acting injectables for TB, we are still in the very early stages,” said Dr. Nuermberger.

Ensuring and optimizing acceptance of LAI formulations, especially in at-risk populations, will be very important, he explained. Early involvement of children and pregnant women in studies of who may benefit most from LAI drugs will also be essential.

Other important considerations include cost-effectiveness, particularly in at-risk and vulnerable populations. Furthermore, new dedicated research and development programs are needed to continue to develop more drug candidates suitable for LAI.

“Long-acting formulations hold enormous promise to be transformative for combating TB, through simplification of delivery and overcoming issues of adherence that can compromise success of current interventions,” said Andrew Owen, PhD, of the University of Liverpool (England).

“The ability to deliver an entire course of drug in a single visit promises to ensure missed doses don’t compromise outcomes or place unnecessary selective pressure in favor of drug resistance,” Dr. Owen said.

“Recent studies showing the value of one-month oral treatment regimens for LTBI make long-acting formulations seem more realistic and drugs such as long-acting bedaquiline put a one-shot regimen within reach,” Charles W. Flexner, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview.

While no LAIs have been approved for TB, Dr. Nuermberger was optimistic that the recent success of LAI formulations for HIV treatment and prevention will catalyze further efforts in the TB landscape.

Dr. Nuermberger disclosed research support from Janssen Pharmaceuticals, TB Alliance, and the Gates Medical Research Institute. The presentation was sponsored by Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Johns Hopkins CFAR, NIH, Unitaid, and the TB Alliance.

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Long-acting injectable (LAI) drug formulations represent a promising new strategy for the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis in women and children, according to an online presentation at the Conference on Retroviruses & Opportunistic Infections, held virtually.

“As a delivery strategy, LAIs hold the potential to unlock a vast chemical space of lipophilic compounds with very potent anti-TB activity that would otherwise not be developed due to poor predicted oral bioavailability,” explained presenter Eric Nuermberger, MD.

He summarized current preventive treatment options for TB and reviewed the potential impact of LAI formulations on TB therapy. In addition, he identified key challenges for future LAI development and proposed a new development path for clinical implementation.
 

Current TB preventive therapies

Despite widespread availability, the uptake of TB preventive therapy is poor and currently lags behind global targets. One key barrier to widespread uptake is the long duration of treatment, which may hinder patient adherence to therapy.

While shorter preventive regimens, such as 1 month of daily isoniazid plus rifapentine, show similar efficacy and higher completion rates, further shortening of therapy and reducing clinic visits are the most direct methods to increase adherence and treatment completion rates, Dr. Nuermberger said.
 

LAI drugs

LAI drug formulations allow for slow release of suitable drugs from a depot injected subcutaneously or intramuscularly.

The goal of LAI formulations is to free patients from the daily burden of oral administration. Other potential benefits include better adherence and efficacy, drug exposure, and the potential to overcome intrinsic poor oral bioavailability by bypassing the GI tract entirely.

Potential indications for LAIs include treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI), and as continuous therapy in people living with HIV in high-burden settings. There is also potential for treating younger children, such as household contacts, who have difficulty taking oral medications.

“We’ve already seen LAIs revolutionize other areas, such as psychiatry and contraception, and we appear to have another revolution in HIV prevention and treatment,” Dr. Nuermberger explained.

Not all existing TB drugs are suitable for LAI formulations, but drugs such as rifapentine, rifabutin, delamanid, and bedaquiline, show more promise than isoniazid or rifampin because of their physiochemical composition. Of all, bedaquiline may offer the best profile for LAI formulation, Dr. Nuermberger said.

Early proof-of-concept in vivo studies have shown potential use of LAI bedaquiline for TB prevention in both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB contacts. Translational PK modeling and simulation predicted that a 1-g intramuscular injection of LAI bedaquiline could maintain therapeutic plasma concentrations in humans for greater than 1 month.

Dr. Nuermberger noted that novel diarylquinoline-based therapies, currently in phase 1 studies, may be even better candidates for LAI-based TB preventive therapy. Early data suggests these compounds may be 10-20 times more potent and have a lower CV risk profile than that of bedaquiline.
 

Considerations for development and implementation

“Despite the promising potential of long-acting injectables for TB, we are still in the very early stages,” said Dr. Nuermberger.

Ensuring and optimizing acceptance of LAI formulations, especially in at-risk populations, will be very important, he explained. Early involvement of children and pregnant women in studies of who may benefit most from LAI drugs will also be essential.

Other important considerations include cost-effectiveness, particularly in at-risk and vulnerable populations. Furthermore, new dedicated research and development programs are needed to continue to develop more drug candidates suitable for LAI.

“Long-acting formulations hold enormous promise to be transformative for combating TB, through simplification of delivery and overcoming issues of adherence that can compromise success of current interventions,” said Andrew Owen, PhD, of the University of Liverpool (England).

“The ability to deliver an entire course of drug in a single visit promises to ensure missed doses don’t compromise outcomes or place unnecessary selective pressure in favor of drug resistance,” Dr. Owen said.

“Recent studies showing the value of one-month oral treatment regimens for LTBI make long-acting formulations seem more realistic and drugs such as long-acting bedaquiline put a one-shot regimen within reach,” Charles W. Flexner, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview.

While no LAIs have been approved for TB, Dr. Nuermberger was optimistic that the recent success of LAI formulations for HIV treatment and prevention will catalyze further efforts in the TB landscape.

Dr. Nuermberger disclosed research support from Janssen Pharmaceuticals, TB Alliance, and the Gates Medical Research Institute. The presentation was sponsored by Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Johns Hopkins CFAR, NIH, Unitaid, and the TB Alliance.

 

Long-acting injectable (LAI) drug formulations represent a promising new strategy for the prevention and treatment of tuberculosis in women and children, according to an online presentation at the Conference on Retroviruses & Opportunistic Infections, held virtually.

“As a delivery strategy, LAIs hold the potential to unlock a vast chemical space of lipophilic compounds with very potent anti-TB activity that would otherwise not be developed due to poor predicted oral bioavailability,” explained presenter Eric Nuermberger, MD.

He summarized current preventive treatment options for TB and reviewed the potential impact of LAI formulations on TB therapy. In addition, he identified key challenges for future LAI development and proposed a new development path for clinical implementation.
 

Current TB preventive therapies

Despite widespread availability, the uptake of TB preventive therapy is poor and currently lags behind global targets. One key barrier to widespread uptake is the long duration of treatment, which may hinder patient adherence to therapy.

While shorter preventive regimens, such as 1 month of daily isoniazid plus rifapentine, show similar efficacy and higher completion rates, further shortening of therapy and reducing clinic visits are the most direct methods to increase adherence and treatment completion rates, Dr. Nuermberger said.
 

LAI drugs

LAI drug formulations allow for slow release of suitable drugs from a depot injected subcutaneously or intramuscularly.

The goal of LAI formulations is to free patients from the daily burden of oral administration. Other potential benefits include better adherence and efficacy, drug exposure, and the potential to overcome intrinsic poor oral bioavailability by bypassing the GI tract entirely.

Potential indications for LAIs include treatment of latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI), and as continuous therapy in people living with HIV in high-burden settings. There is also potential for treating younger children, such as household contacts, who have difficulty taking oral medications.

“We’ve already seen LAIs revolutionize other areas, such as psychiatry and contraception, and we appear to have another revolution in HIV prevention and treatment,” Dr. Nuermberger explained.

Not all existing TB drugs are suitable for LAI formulations, but drugs such as rifapentine, rifabutin, delamanid, and bedaquiline, show more promise than isoniazid or rifampin because of their physiochemical composition. Of all, bedaquiline may offer the best profile for LAI formulation, Dr. Nuermberger said.

Early proof-of-concept in vivo studies have shown potential use of LAI bedaquiline for TB prevention in both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB contacts. Translational PK modeling and simulation predicted that a 1-g intramuscular injection of LAI bedaquiline could maintain therapeutic plasma concentrations in humans for greater than 1 month.

Dr. Nuermberger noted that novel diarylquinoline-based therapies, currently in phase 1 studies, may be even better candidates for LAI-based TB preventive therapy. Early data suggests these compounds may be 10-20 times more potent and have a lower CV risk profile than that of bedaquiline.
 

Considerations for development and implementation

“Despite the promising potential of long-acting injectables for TB, we are still in the very early stages,” said Dr. Nuermberger.

Ensuring and optimizing acceptance of LAI formulations, especially in at-risk populations, will be very important, he explained. Early involvement of children and pregnant women in studies of who may benefit most from LAI drugs will also be essential.

Other important considerations include cost-effectiveness, particularly in at-risk and vulnerable populations. Furthermore, new dedicated research and development programs are needed to continue to develop more drug candidates suitable for LAI.

“Long-acting formulations hold enormous promise to be transformative for combating TB, through simplification of delivery and overcoming issues of adherence that can compromise success of current interventions,” said Andrew Owen, PhD, of the University of Liverpool (England).

“The ability to deliver an entire course of drug in a single visit promises to ensure missed doses don’t compromise outcomes or place unnecessary selective pressure in favor of drug resistance,” Dr. Owen said.

“Recent studies showing the value of one-month oral treatment regimens for LTBI make long-acting formulations seem more realistic and drugs such as long-acting bedaquiline put a one-shot regimen within reach,” Charles W. Flexner, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview.

While no LAIs have been approved for TB, Dr. Nuermberger was optimistic that the recent success of LAI formulations for HIV treatment and prevention will catalyze further efforts in the TB landscape.

Dr. Nuermberger disclosed research support from Janssen Pharmaceuticals, TB Alliance, and the Gates Medical Research Institute. The presentation was sponsored by Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Johns Hopkins CFAR, NIH, Unitaid, and the TB Alliance.

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Potential COVID-19 variant surge looms over U.S.

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:50

 

Another coronavirus surge may be on the way in the United States as daily COVID-19 cases continue to plateau around 60,000, states begin to lift restrictions, and people embark on spring break trips this week, according to CNN.

Outbreaks will likely stem from the B.1.1.7 variant, which was first identified in the United Kingdom, and gain momentum during the next 6-14 weeks.

“Four weeks ago, the B.1.1.7 variant made up about 1%-4% of the virus that we were seeing in communities across the country. Today it’s up to 30%-40%,” Michael Osterholm, PhD, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, told NBC’s Meet the Press on March 7.

Dr. Osterholm compared the current situation with the “eye of the hurricane,” where the skies appear clear but more storms are on the way. Across Europe, 27 countries are seeing significant B.1.1.7 case increases, and 10 are getting hit hard, he said.

“What we’ve seen in Europe, when we hit that 50% mark, you see cases surge,” he said. “So right now, we do have to keep America as safe as we can from this virus by not letting up on any of the public health measures we’ve taken.”

In January, the CDC warned that B.1.1.7 variant cases would increase in 2021 and become the dominant variant in the country by this month. The United States has now reported more than 3,000 cases across 46 states, according to the latest CDC tally updated on March 7. More than 600 cases have been found in Florida, followed by more than 400 in Michigan.

The CDC has said the tally doesn’t represent the total number of B.1.1.7 cases in the United States, only the ones that have been identified by analyzing samples through genomic sequencing.

“Where it has hit in the U.K. and now elsewhere in Europe, it has been catastrophic,” Celine Gounder, MD, an infectious disease specialist with New York University Langone Health, told CNN on March 7.

The variant is more transmissible than the original novel coronavirus, and the cases in the United States are “increasing exponentially,” she said.

“It has driven up rates of hospitalizations and deaths and it’s very difficult to control,” Dr. Gounder said.

Vaccination numbers aren’t yet high enough to stop the predicted surge, she added. The United States has shipped more than 116 million vaccine doses, according to the latest CDC update on March 7. Nearly 59 million people have received at least one dose, and 30.6 million people have received two vaccine doses. About 9% of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated.

States shouldn’t ease restrictions until the vaccination numbers are much higher and daily COVID-19 cases fall below 10,000 – and maybe “considerably less than that,” Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CNN on March 4.

Several states have already begun to lift COVID-19 safety protocols, with Texas and Mississippi removing mask mandates last week. Businesses in Texas will be able to reopen at full capacity on March 10. For now, public health officials are urging Americans to continue to wear masks, avoid crowds, and follow social distancing guidelines as vaccines roll out across the country.

“This is sort of like we’ve been running this really long marathon, and we’re 100 yards from the finish line and we sit down and we give up,” Dr. Gounder told CNN on Sunday. ‘We’re almost there, we just need to give ourselves a bit more time to get a larger proportion of the population covered with vaccines.”

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

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Another coronavirus surge may be on the way in the United States as daily COVID-19 cases continue to plateau around 60,000, states begin to lift restrictions, and people embark on spring break trips this week, according to CNN.

Outbreaks will likely stem from the B.1.1.7 variant, which was first identified in the United Kingdom, and gain momentum during the next 6-14 weeks.

“Four weeks ago, the B.1.1.7 variant made up about 1%-4% of the virus that we were seeing in communities across the country. Today it’s up to 30%-40%,” Michael Osterholm, PhD, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, told NBC’s Meet the Press on March 7.

Dr. Osterholm compared the current situation with the “eye of the hurricane,” where the skies appear clear but more storms are on the way. Across Europe, 27 countries are seeing significant B.1.1.7 case increases, and 10 are getting hit hard, he said.

“What we’ve seen in Europe, when we hit that 50% mark, you see cases surge,” he said. “So right now, we do have to keep America as safe as we can from this virus by not letting up on any of the public health measures we’ve taken.”

In January, the CDC warned that B.1.1.7 variant cases would increase in 2021 and become the dominant variant in the country by this month. The United States has now reported more than 3,000 cases across 46 states, according to the latest CDC tally updated on March 7. More than 600 cases have been found in Florida, followed by more than 400 in Michigan.

The CDC has said the tally doesn’t represent the total number of B.1.1.7 cases in the United States, only the ones that have been identified by analyzing samples through genomic sequencing.

“Where it has hit in the U.K. and now elsewhere in Europe, it has been catastrophic,” Celine Gounder, MD, an infectious disease specialist with New York University Langone Health, told CNN on March 7.

The variant is more transmissible than the original novel coronavirus, and the cases in the United States are “increasing exponentially,” she said.

“It has driven up rates of hospitalizations and deaths and it’s very difficult to control,” Dr. Gounder said.

Vaccination numbers aren’t yet high enough to stop the predicted surge, she added. The United States has shipped more than 116 million vaccine doses, according to the latest CDC update on March 7. Nearly 59 million people have received at least one dose, and 30.6 million people have received two vaccine doses. About 9% of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated.

States shouldn’t ease restrictions until the vaccination numbers are much higher and daily COVID-19 cases fall below 10,000 – and maybe “considerably less than that,” Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CNN on March 4.

Several states have already begun to lift COVID-19 safety protocols, with Texas and Mississippi removing mask mandates last week. Businesses in Texas will be able to reopen at full capacity on March 10. For now, public health officials are urging Americans to continue to wear masks, avoid crowds, and follow social distancing guidelines as vaccines roll out across the country.

“This is sort of like we’ve been running this really long marathon, and we’re 100 yards from the finish line and we sit down and we give up,” Dr. Gounder told CNN on Sunday. ‘We’re almost there, we just need to give ourselves a bit more time to get a larger proportion of the population covered with vaccines.”

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

 

Another coronavirus surge may be on the way in the United States as daily COVID-19 cases continue to plateau around 60,000, states begin to lift restrictions, and people embark on spring break trips this week, according to CNN.

Outbreaks will likely stem from the B.1.1.7 variant, which was first identified in the United Kingdom, and gain momentum during the next 6-14 weeks.

“Four weeks ago, the B.1.1.7 variant made up about 1%-4% of the virus that we were seeing in communities across the country. Today it’s up to 30%-40%,” Michael Osterholm, PhD, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, told NBC’s Meet the Press on March 7.

Dr. Osterholm compared the current situation with the “eye of the hurricane,” where the skies appear clear but more storms are on the way. Across Europe, 27 countries are seeing significant B.1.1.7 case increases, and 10 are getting hit hard, he said.

“What we’ve seen in Europe, when we hit that 50% mark, you see cases surge,” he said. “So right now, we do have to keep America as safe as we can from this virus by not letting up on any of the public health measures we’ve taken.”

In January, the CDC warned that B.1.1.7 variant cases would increase in 2021 and become the dominant variant in the country by this month. The United States has now reported more than 3,000 cases across 46 states, according to the latest CDC tally updated on March 7. More than 600 cases have been found in Florida, followed by more than 400 in Michigan.

The CDC has said the tally doesn’t represent the total number of B.1.1.7 cases in the United States, only the ones that have been identified by analyzing samples through genomic sequencing.

“Where it has hit in the U.K. and now elsewhere in Europe, it has been catastrophic,” Celine Gounder, MD, an infectious disease specialist with New York University Langone Health, told CNN on March 7.

The variant is more transmissible than the original novel coronavirus, and the cases in the United States are “increasing exponentially,” she said.

“It has driven up rates of hospitalizations and deaths and it’s very difficult to control,” Dr. Gounder said.

Vaccination numbers aren’t yet high enough to stop the predicted surge, she added. The United States has shipped more than 116 million vaccine doses, according to the latest CDC update on March 7. Nearly 59 million people have received at least one dose, and 30.6 million people have received two vaccine doses. About 9% of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated.

States shouldn’t ease restrictions until the vaccination numbers are much higher and daily COVID-19 cases fall below 10,000 – and maybe “considerably less than that,” Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CNN on March 4.

Several states have already begun to lift COVID-19 safety protocols, with Texas and Mississippi removing mask mandates last week. Businesses in Texas will be able to reopen at full capacity on March 10. For now, public health officials are urging Americans to continue to wear masks, avoid crowds, and follow social distancing guidelines as vaccines roll out across the country.

“This is sort of like we’ve been running this really long marathon, and we’re 100 yards from the finish line and we sit down and we give up,” Dr. Gounder told CNN on Sunday. ‘We’re almost there, we just need to give ourselves a bit more time to get a larger proportion of the population covered with vaccines.”

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

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DOACs offered after heart valve surgery despite absence of data

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Wed, 03/10/2021 - 10:47

 

Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are used in about 1% of patients undergoing surgical mechanical aortic and mitral valve replacement, but in up to 6% of surgical bioprosthetic valve replacements, according to registry data presented at CRT 2021.

In an analysis of the Society of Thoracic Surgery (STS) registry during 2014-2017, DOAC use increased steadily among those undergoing surgical bioprosthetic valve replacement, reaching a number that is potentially clinically significant, according to Ankur Kalra, MD, an interventional cardiologist at Akron General Hospital who has an academic appointment at the Cleveland Clinic.

There was no increase in the use of DOACs observed among patients undergoing mechanical valve replacement, “but even if the number is 1%, they should probably not be used at all until we accrue more data,” Dr. Kalra said.
 

DOACs discouraged in patients with mechanical or bioprosthetic valves

In Food and Drug Administration labeling, DOACs are contraindicated or not recommended. This can be traced to the randomized RE-ALIGN trial, which was stopped prematurely due to evidence of harm from a DOAC, according to Dr. Kalra.

In RE-ALIGN, which enrolled patients undergoing mechanical aortic or mitral valve replacement, dabigatran was associated not only with more bleeding events than warfarin, but also more thromboembolic events.

There are no randomized data comparing the factor Xa inhibitors rivaroxaban or apixaban to warfarin in heart valve surgery, but Dr. Kalra noted cautionary language is found in the labeling of both, “perhaps due to the RE-ALIGN data.”
 

Registry shows trends in prescribing

In the STS registry data, 193 (1.1%) of the 18,142 patients undergoing mechanical aortic valve surgery, 139 (1.0%) of the 13,942 patients undergoing mechanical mitral valve surgery, 5,625 (4.7%) of the 116,203 patients undergoing aortic bioprosthetic aortic valve surgery, and 2,180 (5.9%) of the 39,243 patients undergoing bioprosthetic mitral valve surgery were on a DOAC at discharge.

Among those receiving a mechanical value and placed on a DOAC, about two-thirds were on a factor Xa inhibitor rather than dabigatran. For those receiving a bioprosthetic value, the proportion was greater than 80%. Dr. Kalra speculated that the RE-ALIGN trial might be the reason factor Xa inhibitors were favored.

In both types of valves, whether mechanical or bioprosthetic, more comorbidities predicted a greater likelihood of receiving a DOAC rather than warfarin. For those receiving mechanical values, the comorbidities with a significant association with greater DOAC use included hypertension (P = .003), dyslipidemia (P = .02), arrhythmia (P < .001), and peripheral arterial disease (P < 0.001).

The same factors were significant for predicting increased likelihood of a DOAC following bioprosthetic valve replacement, but there were additional factors, including atrial fibrillation independent of other types of arrhythmias (P < .001), a factor not significant for mechanical valves, as well as diabetes (P < .001), cerebrovascular disease (P < .001), dialysis (P < .001), and endocarditis (P < .001).

“This is probably intuitive, but patients who were on a factor Xa inhibitor before their valve replacement were also more likely to be discharged on a factor Xa inhibitor,” Dr. Kalra said at the virtual meeting, sponsored by MedStar Heart & Vascular Institute.

The year-to-year increase in DOAC use among those undergoing bioprosthetic valve replacement over the study period, which was a significant trend, was not observed among those undergoing mechanical valve replacement. Rather, the 1% proportion remained stable over the study period.

“We wanted to look at outcomes, but we found that the STS database, which only includes data out to 30 days, is not structured for this type of analysis,” Dr. Kalra said. He was also concerned about the limitations of a comparison in which 1% of the sample was being compared to 99%.
 

 

 

Expert: One percent is ‘very small number’

David J. Cohen, MD, commented on the 1% figure, which was so low that a moderator questioned whether it could be due mostly to coding errors.

“This is a very, very small number so at some level it is reassuring that it is so low in the mechanical valves,” Dr. Cohen said. However, he was more circumspect about the larger number in bioprosthetic valves.

“I have always thought it was a bit strange there was a warning against using them in bioprosthetic valves, especially in the aortic position,” he said.

Dr. David J. Cohen


“The trials that established the benefits of DOACs were all in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, but this did not mean non–aortic stenosis; it meant non–mitral valvular. There have been articles written about how that has been misinterpreted,” said Dr. Cohen, director of clinical and outcomes research at the Cardiovascular Research Foundation and director of academic affairs at St. Francis Hospital, Roslyn, N.Y.

For his part, Dr. Kalra reported that he does not consider DOACs in patients who have undergone a surgical mechanical valve replacement. For bioprosthetic valves, he “prefers” warfarin over DOACs.

Overall, the evidence from the registry led Dr. Kalra to suggest that physicians should continue to “exercise caution” in using DOACs instead of warfarin after any surgical valve replacement “until randomized clinical trials provide sufficient evidence” to make a judgment about relative efficacy and safety.

Results of the study were published online as a research letter in Jama Network Open after Dr. Kalra’s presentation. Dr. Kalra and Dr. Cohen report no potential conflicts of interest.

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Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are used in about 1% of patients undergoing surgical mechanical aortic and mitral valve replacement, but in up to 6% of surgical bioprosthetic valve replacements, according to registry data presented at CRT 2021.

In an analysis of the Society of Thoracic Surgery (STS) registry during 2014-2017, DOAC use increased steadily among those undergoing surgical bioprosthetic valve replacement, reaching a number that is potentially clinically significant, according to Ankur Kalra, MD, an interventional cardiologist at Akron General Hospital who has an academic appointment at the Cleveland Clinic.

There was no increase in the use of DOACs observed among patients undergoing mechanical valve replacement, “but even if the number is 1%, they should probably not be used at all until we accrue more data,” Dr. Kalra said.
 

DOACs discouraged in patients with mechanical or bioprosthetic valves

In Food and Drug Administration labeling, DOACs are contraindicated or not recommended. This can be traced to the randomized RE-ALIGN trial, which was stopped prematurely due to evidence of harm from a DOAC, according to Dr. Kalra.

In RE-ALIGN, which enrolled patients undergoing mechanical aortic or mitral valve replacement, dabigatran was associated not only with more bleeding events than warfarin, but also more thromboembolic events.

There are no randomized data comparing the factor Xa inhibitors rivaroxaban or apixaban to warfarin in heart valve surgery, but Dr. Kalra noted cautionary language is found in the labeling of both, “perhaps due to the RE-ALIGN data.”
 

Registry shows trends in prescribing

In the STS registry data, 193 (1.1%) of the 18,142 patients undergoing mechanical aortic valve surgery, 139 (1.0%) of the 13,942 patients undergoing mechanical mitral valve surgery, 5,625 (4.7%) of the 116,203 patients undergoing aortic bioprosthetic aortic valve surgery, and 2,180 (5.9%) of the 39,243 patients undergoing bioprosthetic mitral valve surgery were on a DOAC at discharge.

Among those receiving a mechanical value and placed on a DOAC, about two-thirds were on a factor Xa inhibitor rather than dabigatran. For those receiving a bioprosthetic value, the proportion was greater than 80%. Dr. Kalra speculated that the RE-ALIGN trial might be the reason factor Xa inhibitors were favored.

In both types of valves, whether mechanical or bioprosthetic, more comorbidities predicted a greater likelihood of receiving a DOAC rather than warfarin. For those receiving mechanical values, the comorbidities with a significant association with greater DOAC use included hypertension (P = .003), dyslipidemia (P = .02), arrhythmia (P < .001), and peripheral arterial disease (P < 0.001).

The same factors were significant for predicting increased likelihood of a DOAC following bioprosthetic valve replacement, but there were additional factors, including atrial fibrillation independent of other types of arrhythmias (P < .001), a factor not significant for mechanical valves, as well as diabetes (P < .001), cerebrovascular disease (P < .001), dialysis (P < .001), and endocarditis (P < .001).

“This is probably intuitive, but patients who were on a factor Xa inhibitor before their valve replacement were also more likely to be discharged on a factor Xa inhibitor,” Dr. Kalra said at the virtual meeting, sponsored by MedStar Heart & Vascular Institute.

The year-to-year increase in DOAC use among those undergoing bioprosthetic valve replacement over the study period, which was a significant trend, was not observed among those undergoing mechanical valve replacement. Rather, the 1% proportion remained stable over the study period.

“We wanted to look at outcomes, but we found that the STS database, which only includes data out to 30 days, is not structured for this type of analysis,” Dr. Kalra said. He was also concerned about the limitations of a comparison in which 1% of the sample was being compared to 99%.
 

 

 

Expert: One percent is ‘very small number’

David J. Cohen, MD, commented on the 1% figure, which was so low that a moderator questioned whether it could be due mostly to coding errors.

“This is a very, very small number so at some level it is reassuring that it is so low in the mechanical valves,” Dr. Cohen said. However, he was more circumspect about the larger number in bioprosthetic valves.

“I have always thought it was a bit strange there was a warning against using them in bioprosthetic valves, especially in the aortic position,” he said.

Dr. David J. Cohen


“The trials that established the benefits of DOACs were all in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, but this did not mean non–aortic stenosis; it meant non–mitral valvular. There have been articles written about how that has been misinterpreted,” said Dr. Cohen, director of clinical and outcomes research at the Cardiovascular Research Foundation and director of academic affairs at St. Francis Hospital, Roslyn, N.Y.

For his part, Dr. Kalra reported that he does not consider DOACs in patients who have undergone a surgical mechanical valve replacement. For bioprosthetic valves, he “prefers” warfarin over DOACs.

Overall, the evidence from the registry led Dr. Kalra to suggest that physicians should continue to “exercise caution” in using DOACs instead of warfarin after any surgical valve replacement “until randomized clinical trials provide sufficient evidence” to make a judgment about relative efficacy and safety.

Results of the study were published online as a research letter in Jama Network Open after Dr. Kalra’s presentation. Dr. Kalra and Dr. Cohen report no potential conflicts of interest.

 

Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) are used in about 1% of patients undergoing surgical mechanical aortic and mitral valve replacement, but in up to 6% of surgical bioprosthetic valve replacements, according to registry data presented at CRT 2021.

In an analysis of the Society of Thoracic Surgery (STS) registry during 2014-2017, DOAC use increased steadily among those undergoing surgical bioprosthetic valve replacement, reaching a number that is potentially clinically significant, according to Ankur Kalra, MD, an interventional cardiologist at Akron General Hospital who has an academic appointment at the Cleveland Clinic.

There was no increase in the use of DOACs observed among patients undergoing mechanical valve replacement, “but even if the number is 1%, they should probably not be used at all until we accrue more data,” Dr. Kalra said.
 

DOACs discouraged in patients with mechanical or bioprosthetic valves

In Food and Drug Administration labeling, DOACs are contraindicated or not recommended. This can be traced to the randomized RE-ALIGN trial, which was stopped prematurely due to evidence of harm from a DOAC, according to Dr. Kalra.

In RE-ALIGN, which enrolled patients undergoing mechanical aortic or mitral valve replacement, dabigatran was associated not only with more bleeding events than warfarin, but also more thromboembolic events.

There are no randomized data comparing the factor Xa inhibitors rivaroxaban or apixaban to warfarin in heart valve surgery, but Dr. Kalra noted cautionary language is found in the labeling of both, “perhaps due to the RE-ALIGN data.”
 

Registry shows trends in prescribing

In the STS registry data, 193 (1.1%) of the 18,142 patients undergoing mechanical aortic valve surgery, 139 (1.0%) of the 13,942 patients undergoing mechanical mitral valve surgery, 5,625 (4.7%) of the 116,203 patients undergoing aortic bioprosthetic aortic valve surgery, and 2,180 (5.9%) of the 39,243 patients undergoing bioprosthetic mitral valve surgery were on a DOAC at discharge.

Among those receiving a mechanical value and placed on a DOAC, about two-thirds were on a factor Xa inhibitor rather than dabigatran. For those receiving a bioprosthetic value, the proportion was greater than 80%. Dr. Kalra speculated that the RE-ALIGN trial might be the reason factor Xa inhibitors were favored.

In both types of valves, whether mechanical or bioprosthetic, more comorbidities predicted a greater likelihood of receiving a DOAC rather than warfarin. For those receiving mechanical values, the comorbidities with a significant association with greater DOAC use included hypertension (P = .003), dyslipidemia (P = .02), arrhythmia (P < .001), and peripheral arterial disease (P < 0.001).

The same factors were significant for predicting increased likelihood of a DOAC following bioprosthetic valve replacement, but there were additional factors, including atrial fibrillation independent of other types of arrhythmias (P < .001), a factor not significant for mechanical valves, as well as diabetes (P < .001), cerebrovascular disease (P < .001), dialysis (P < .001), and endocarditis (P < .001).

“This is probably intuitive, but patients who were on a factor Xa inhibitor before their valve replacement were also more likely to be discharged on a factor Xa inhibitor,” Dr. Kalra said at the virtual meeting, sponsored by MedStar Heart & Vascular Institute.

The year-to-year increase in DOAC use among those undergoing bioprosthetic valve replacement over the study period, which was a significant trend, was not observed among those undergoing mechanical valve replacement. Rather, the 1% proportion remained stable over the study period.

“We wanted to look at outcomes, but we found that the STS database, which only includes data out to 30 days, is not structured for this type of analysis,” Dr. Kalra said. He was also concerned about the limitations of a comparison in which 1% of the sample was being compared to 99%.
 

 

 

Expert: One percent is ‘very small number’

David J. Cohen, MD, commented on the 1% figure, which was so low that a moderator questioned whether it could be due mostly to coding errors.

“This is a very, very small number so at some level it is reassuring that it is so low in the mechanical valves,” Dr. Cohen said. However, he was more circumspect about the larger number in bioprosthetic valves.

“I have always thought it was a bit strange there was a warning against using them in bioprosthetic valves, especially in the aortic position,” he said.

Dr. David J. Cohen


“The trials that established the benefits of DOACs were all in nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, but this did not mean non–aortic stenosis; it meant non–mitral valvular. There have been articles written about how that has been misinterpreted,” said Dr. Cohen, director of clinical and outcomes research at the Cardiovascular Research Foundation and director of academic affairs at St. Francis Hospital, Roslyn, N.Y.

For his part, Dr. Kalra reported that he does not consider DOACs in patients who have undergone a surgical mechanical valve replacement. For bioprosthetic valves, he “prefers” warfarin over DOACs.

Overall, the evidence from the registry led Dr. Kalra to suggest that physicians should continue to “exercise caution” in using DOACs instead of warfarin after any surgical valve replacement “until randomized clinical trials provide sufficient evidence” to make a judgment about relative efficacy and safety.

Results of the study were published online as a research letter in Jama Network Open after Dr. Kalra’s presentation. Dr. Kalra and Dr. Cohen report no potential conflicts of interest.

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Five-day course of oral antiviral appears to stop SARS-CoV-2 in its tracks

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A single pill of the investigational drug molnupiravir taken twice a day for 5 days eliminated SARS-CoV-2 from the nasopharynx of 49 participants.

That led Carlos del Rio, MD, distinguished professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, to suggest a future in which a drug like molnupiravir could be taken in the first few days of symptoms to prevent severe disease, similar to Tamiflu for influenza.

“I think it’s critically important,” he said of the data. Emory University was involved in the trial of molnupiravir but Dr. del Rio was not part of that team. “This drug offers the first antiviral oral drug that then could be used in an outpatient setting.”

Still, Dr. del Rio said it’s too soon to call this particular drug the breakthrough clinicians need to keep people out of the ICU. “It has the potential to be practice changing; it’s not practice changing at the moment.”

Wendy Painter, MD, of Ridgeback Biotherapeutics, who presented the data at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, agreed. While the data are promising, “We will need to see if people get better from actual illness” to assess the real value of the drug in clinical care.

“That’s a phase 3 objective we’ll need to prove,” she said in an interview.

Phase 2/3 efficacy and safety studies of the drug are now underway in hospitalized and nonhospitalized patients.

In a brief prerecorded presentation of the data, Dr. Painter laid out what researchers know so far: Preclinical studies suggest that molnupiravir is effective against a number of viruses, including coronaviruses and specifically SARS-CoV-2. It prevents a virus from replicating by inducing viral error catastrophe (Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Oct 15;99[21]:13374-6) – essentially overloading the virus with replication and mutation until the virus burns itself out and can’t produce replicable copies.

In this phase 2a, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial, researchers recruited 202 adults who were treated at an outpatient clinic with fever or other symptoms of a respiratory virus and confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection by day 4. Participants were randomly assigned to three different groups: 200 mg of molnupiravir, 400 mg, or 800 mg. The 200-mg arm was matched 1:1 with a placebo-controlled group, and the other two groups had three participants in the active group for every one control.

Participants took the pills twice daily for 5 days, and then were followed for a total of 28 days to monitor for complications or adverse events. At days 3, 5, 7, 14, and 28, researchers also took nasopharyngeal swabs for polymerase chain reaction tests, to sequence the virus, and to grow cultures of SARS-CoV-2 to see if the virus that’s present is actually capable of infecting others.

Notably, the pills do not have to be refrigerated at any point in the process, alleviating the cold-chain challenges that have plagued vaccines.

“There’s an urgent need for an easily produced, transported, stored, and administered antiviral drug against SARS-CoV-2,” Dr. Painter said.

Of the 202 people recruited, 182 had swabs that could be evaluated, of which 78 showed infection at baseline. The results are based on labs of those 78 participants.

By day 3, 28% of patients in the placebo arm had SARS-CoV-2 in their nasopharynx, compared with 20.4% of patients receiving any dose of molnupiravir. But by day 5, none of the participants receiving the active drug had evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in their nasopharynx. In comparison, 24% of people in the placebo arm still had detectable virus.

Halfway through the treatment course, differences in the presence of infectious virus were already evident. By day 3 of the 5-day course, 36.4% of participants in the 200-mg group had detectable virus in the nasopharynx, compared with 21% in the 400-mg group and just 12.5% in the 800-mg group. And although the reduction in SARS-CoV-2 was noticeable in the 200-mg and the 400-mg arms, it was only statistically significant in the 800-mg arm.

In contrast, by the end of the 5 days in the placebo groups, infectious virus varied from 18.2% in the 200-mg placebo group to 30% in the 800-mg group. This points out the variability of the disease course of SARS-CoV-2.

“You just don’t know” which infections will lead to serious disease, Dr. Painter said in an interview. “And don’t you wish we did?”

Seven participants discontinued treatment, though only four experienced adverse events. Three of those discontinued the trial because of adverse events. The study is still blinded, so it’s unclear what those events were, but Dr. Painter said that they were not thought to be related to the study drug.

The bottom line, said Dr. Painter, was that people treated with molnupiravir had starkly different outcomes in lab measures during the study.

“An average of 10 days after symptom onset, 24% of placebo patients remained culture positive” for SARS-CoV-2 – meaning there wasn’t just virus in the nasopharynx, but it was capable of replicating, Dr. Painter said. “In contrast, no infectious virus could be recovered at study day 5 in any molnupiravir-treated patients.”

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

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A single pill of the investigational drug molnupiravir taken twice a day for 5 days eliminated SARS-CoV-2 from the nasopharynx of 49 participants.

That led Carlos del Rio, MD, distinguished professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, to suggest a future in which a drug like molnupiravir could be taken in the first few days of symptoms to prevent severe disease, similar to Tamiflu for influenza.

“I think it’s critically important,” he said of the data. Emory University was involved in the trial of molnupiravir but Dr. del Rio was not part of that team. “This drug offers the first antiviral oral drug that then could be used in an outpatient setting.”

Still, Dr. del Rio said it’s too soon to call this particular drug the breakthrough clinicians need to keep people out of the ICU. “It has the potential to be practice changing; it’s not practice changing at the moment.”

Wendy Painter, MD, of Ridgeback Biotherapeutics, who presented the data at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, agreed. While the data are promising, “We will need to see if people get better from actual illness” to assess the real value of the drug in clinical care.

“That’s a phase 3 objective we’ll need to prove,” she said in an interview.

Phase 2/3 efficacy and safety studies of the drug are now underway in hospitalized and nonhospitalized patients.

In a brief prerecorded presentation of the data, Dr. Painter laid out what researchers know so far: Preclinical studies suggest that molnupiravir is effective against a number of viruses, including coronaviruses and specifically SARS-CoV-2. It prevents a virus from replicating by inducing viral error catastrophe (Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Oct 15;99[21]:13374-6) – essentially overloading the virus with replication and mutation until the virus burns itself out and can’t produce replicable copies.

In this phase 2a, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial, researchers recruited 202 adults who were treated at an outpatient clinic with fever or other symptoms of a respiratory virus and confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection by day 4. Participants were randomly assigned to three different groups: 200 mg of molnupiravir, 400 mg, or 800 mg. The 200-mg arm was matched 1:1 with a placebo-controlled group, and the other two groups had three participants in the active group for every one control.

Participants took the pills twice daily for 5 days, and then were followed for a total of 28 days to monitor for complications or adverse events. At days 3, 5, 7, 14, and 28, researchers also took nasopharyngeal swabs for polymerase chain reaction tests, to sequence the virus, and to grow cultures of SARS-CoV-2 to see if the virus that’s present is actually capable of infecting others.

Notably, the pills do not have to be refrigerated at any point in the process, alleviating the cold-chain challenges that have plagued vaccines.

“There’s an urgent need for an easily produced, transported, stored, and administered antiviral drug against SARS-CoV-2,” Dr. Painter said.

Of the 202 people recruited, 182 had swabs that could be evaluated, of which 78 showed infection at baseline. The results are based on labs of those 78 participants.

By day 3, 28% of patients in the placebo arm had SARS-CoV-2 in their nasopharynx, compared with 20.4% of patients receiving any dose of molnupiravir. But by day 5, none of the participants receiving the active drug had evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in their nasopharynx. In comparison, 24% of people in the placebo arm still had detectable virus.

Halfway through the treatment course, differences in the presence of infectious virus were already evident. By day 3 of the 5-day course, 36.4% of participants in the 200-mg group had detectable virus in the nasopharynx, compared with 21% in the 400-mg group and just 12.5% in the 800-mg group. And although the reduction in SARS-CoV-2 was noticeable in the 200-mg and the 400-mg arms, it was only statistically significant in the 800-mg arm.

In contrast, by the end of the 5 days in the placebo groups, infectious virus varied from 18.2% in the 200-mg placebo group to 30% in the 800-mg group. This points out the variability of the disease course of SARS-CoV-2.

“You just don’t know” which infections will lead to serious disease, Dr. Painter said in an interview. “And don’t you wish we did?”

Seven participants discontinued treatment, though only four experienced adverse events. Three of those discontinued the trial because of adverse events. The study is still blinded, so it’s unclear what those events were, but Dr. Painter said that they were not thought to be related to the study drug.

The bottom line, said Dr. Painter, was that people treated with molnupiravir had starkly different outcomes in lab measures during the study.

“An average of 10 days after symptom onset, 24% of placebo patients remained culture positive” for SARS-CoV-2 – meaning there wasn’t just virus in the nasopharynx, but it was capable of replicating, Dr. Painter said. “In contrast, no infectious virus could be recovered at study day 5 in any molnupiravir-treated patients.”

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

A single pill of the investigational drug molnupiravir taken twice a day for 5 days eliminated SARS-CoV-2 from the nasopharynx of 49 participants.

That led Carlos del Rio, MD, distinguished professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, to suggest a future in which a drug like molnupiravir could be taken in the first few days of symptoms to prevent severe disease, similar to Tamiflu for influenza.

“I think it’s critically important,” he said of the data. Emory University was involved in the trial of molnupiravir but Dr. del Rio was not part of that team. “This drug offers the first antiviral oral drug that then could be used in an outpatient setting.”

Still, Dr. del Rio said it’s too soon to call this particular drug the breakthrough clinicians need to keep people out of the ICU. “It has the potential to be practice changing; it’s not practice changing at the moment.”

Wendy Painter, MD, of Ridgeback Biotherapeutics, who presented the data at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, agreed. While the data are promising, “We will need to see if people get better from actual illness” to assess the real value of the drug in clinical care.

“That’s a phase 3 objective we’ll need to prove,” she said in an interview.

Phase 2/3 efficacy and safety studies of the drug are now underway in hospitalized and nonhospitalized patients.

In a brief prerecorded presentation of the data, Dr. Painter laid out what researchers know so far: Preclinical studies suggest that molnupiravir is effective against a number of viruses, including coronaviruses and specifically SARS-CoV-2. It prevents a virus from replicating by inducing viral error catastrophe (Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Oct 15;99[21]:13374-6) – essentially overloading the virus with replication and mutation until the virus burns itself out and can’t produce replicable copies.

In this phase 2a, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial, researchers recruited 202 adults who were treated at an outpatient clinic with fever or other symptoms of a respiratory virus and confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection by day 4. Participants were randomly assigned to three different groups: 200 mg of molnupiravir, 400 mg, or 800 mg. The 200-mg arm was matched 1:1 with a placebo-controlled group, and the other two groups had three participants in the active group for every one control.

Participants took the pills twice daily for 5 days, and then were followed for a total of 28 days to monitor for complications or adverse events. At days 3, 5, 7, 14, and 28, researchers also took nasopharyngeal swabs for polymerase chain reaction tests, to sequence the virus, and to grow cultures of SARS-CoV-2 to see if the virus that’s present is actually capable of infecting others.

Notably, the pills do not have to be refrigerated at any point in the process, alleviating the cold-chain challenges that have plagued vaccines.

“There’s an urgent need for an easily produced, transported, stored, and administered antiviral drug against SARS-CoV-2,” Dr. Painter said.

Of the 202 people recruited, 182 had swabs that could be evaluated, of which 78 showed infection at baseline. The results are based on labs of those 78 participants.

By day 3, 28% of patients in the placebo arm had SARS-CoV-2 in their nasopharynx, compared with 20.4% of patients receiving any dose of molnupiravir. But by day 5, none of the participants receiving the active drug had evidence of SARS-CoV-2 in their nasopharynx. In comparison, 24% of people in the placebo arm still had detectable virus.

Halfway through the treatment course, differences in the presence of infectious virus were already evident. By day 3 of the 5-day course, 36.4% of participants in the 200-mg group had detectable virus in the nasopharynx, compared with 21% in the 400-mg group and just 12.5% in the 800-mg group. And although the reduction in SARS-CoV-2 was noticeable in the 200-mg and the 400-mg arms, it was only statistically significant in the 800-mg arm.

In contrast, by the end of the 5 days in the placebo groups, infectious virus varied from 18.2% in the 200-mg placebo group to 30% in the 800-mg group. This points out the variability of the disease course of SARS-CoV-2.

“You just don’t know” which infections will lead to serious disease, Dr. Painter said in an interview. “And don’t you wish we did?”

Seven participants discontinued treatment, though only four experienced adverse events. Three of those discontinued the trial because of adverse events. The study is still blinded, so it’s unclear what those events were, but Dr. Painter said that they were not thought to be related to the study drug.

The bottom line, said Dr. Painter, was that people treated with molnupiravir had starkly different outcomes in lab measures during the study.

“An average of 10 days after symptom onset, 24% of placebo patients remained culture positive” for SARS-CoV-2 – meaning there wasn’t just virus in the nasopharynx, but it was capable of replicating, Dr. Painter said. “In contrast, no infectious virus could be recovered at study day 5 in any molnupiravir-treated patients.”

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

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Andecaliximab disappoints in advanced gastric cancer

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Tue, 03/09/2021 - 10:53

Adding andecaliximab (ADX) to first-line treatment with modified oxaliplatin, leucovorin, and fluorouracil (mFOLFOX6) provided no survival benefit in patients with advanced HER2-negative gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma in the phase 3 GAMMA-1 study.

Objective response rates were 50.5% in the ADX arm and 41.1% in the placebo arm (stratified odds ratio, 1.47; P = .049), but this did not translate to improved survival.

The median overall survival (OS) was 12.5 months in the ADX arm and 11.8 months in the placebo arm (stratified hazard ratio, 0.93; P = .56). The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 7.5 months and 7.1 months, respectively (stratified HR, 0.84; P = .10).

Manish A. Shah, MD, of Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, and colleagues reported these results in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The lack of improvement when ADX was added to mFOLFOX6 was despite encouraging antitumor activity seen with the combination in a phase 1 and phase 1b study, the authors noted.

“Despite compelling early-phase data, the addition of ADX did not improve outcomes in an unselected patient population,” the authors wrote. “Tissue or blood samples were not available for correlative analyses to understand why ADX was less active than expected or to identify any gastric cancer subset that may derive greater benefit with ADX.”

The researchers did note, however, that subgroup analyses suggested survival benefits with ADX in patients aged 65 years and older.
 

Study details

Participants in the double-blind GAMMA-1 trial were adults with confirmed locally advanced or metastatic adenocarcinoma of the stomach or gastroesophageal junction. They were enrolled at 132 centers worldwide between Oct. 13, 2015, and May 15, 2019.

There were 432 patients randomized to receive mFOLFOX6 plus either 800 mg of ADX (n = 218) or placebo (n = 214) infused on days 1 and 15 of each 28-day cycle until disease progression or intolerance.

As noted before, there was a significant improvement in response rate with the addition of ADX (P = .049) but no significant improvements in PFS (P = .10) or OS (P = .56).

On the other hand, subgroup analyses suggested survival benefits with ADX in patients aged 65 years and older. The authors said this result is intriguing and warrants further study.

Among patients aged 65 and older, the median OS was 13.9 months in the ADX arm and 10.5 months in the placebo arm (stratified HR, 0.64; P = .03). The median PFS was 8.7 months and 5.6 months, respectively (stratified HR, 0.50; P < .001). However, the P values were not adjusted for multiplicity.

No significant differences were seen between the groups with respect to safety outcomes. Serious adverse events occurred in 47.7% of patients in the ADX arm and 51.4% of those in the placebo arm. Nine patients in the ADX arm and 13 in the placebo arm discontinued the study because of adverse events.

The GAMMA-1 trial was sponsored by Gilead Sciences. The authors disclosed relationships with Gilead and many other companies.

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Adding andecaliximab (ADX) to first-line treatment with modified oxaliplatin, leucovorin, and fluorouracil (mFOLFOX6) provided no survival benefit in patients with advanced HER2-negative gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma in the phase 3 GAMMA-1 study.

Objective response rates were 50.5% in the ADX arm and 41.1% in the placebo arm (stratified odds ratio, 1.47; P = .049), but this did not translate to improved survival.

The median overall survival (OS) was 12.5 months in the ADX arm and 11.8 months in the placebo arm (stratified hazard ratio, 0.93; P = .56). The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 7.5 months and 7.1 months, respectively (stratified HR, 0.84; P = .10).

Manish A. Shah, MD, of Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, and colleagues reported these results in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The lack of improvement when ADX was added to mFOLFOX6 was despite encouraging antitumor activity seen with the combination in a phase 1 and phase 1b study, the authors noted.

“Despite compelling early-phase data, the addition of ADX did not improve outcomes in an unselected patient population,” the authors wrote. “Tissue or blood samples were not available for correlative analyses to understand why ADX was less active than expected or to identify any gastric cancer subset that may derive greater benefit with ADX.”

The researchers did note, however, that subgroup analyses suggested survival benefits with ADX in patients aged 65 years and older.
 

Study details

Participants in the double-blind GAMMA-1 trial were adults with confirmed locally advanced or metastatic adenocarcinoma of the stomach or gastroesophageal junction. They were enrolled at 132 centers worldwide between Oct. 13, 2015, and May 15, 2019.

There were 432 patients randomized to receive mFOLFOX6 plus either 800 mg of ADX (n = 218) or placebo (n = 214) infused on days 1 and 15 of each 28-day cycle until disease progression or intolerance.

As noted before, there was a significant improvement in response rate with the addition of ADX (P = .049) but no significant improvements in PFS (P = .10) or OS (P = .56).

On the other hand, subgroup analyses suggested survival benefits with ADX in patients aged 65 years and older. The authors said this result is intriguing and warrants further study.

Among patients aged 65 and older, the median OS was 13.9 months in the ADX arm and 10.5 months in the placebo arm (stratified HR, 0.64; P = .03). The median PFS was 8.7 months and 5.6 months, respectively (stratified HR, 0.50; P < .001). However, the P values were not adjusted for multiplicity.

No significant differences were seen between the groups with respect to safety outcomes. Serious adverse events occurred in 47.7% of patients in the ADX arm and 51.4% of those in the placebo arm. Nine patients in the ADX arm and 13 in the placebo arm discontinued the study because of adverse events.

The GAMMA-1 trial was sponsored by Gilead Sciences. The authors disclosed relationships with Gilead and many other companies.

Adding andecaliximab (ADX) to first-line treatment with modified oxaliplatin, leucovorin, and fluorouracil (mFOLFOX6) provided no survival benefit in patients with advanced HER2-negative gastric or gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma in the phase 3 GAMMA-1 study.

Objective response rates were 50.5% in the ADX arm and 41.1% in the placebo arm (stratified odds ratio, 1.47; P = .049), but this did not translate to improved survival.

The median overall survival (OS) was 12.5 months in the ADX arm and 11.8 months in the placebo arm (stratified hazard ratio, 0.93; P = .56). The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 7.5 months and 7.1 months, respectively (stratified HR, 0.84; P = .10).

Manish A. Shah, MD, of Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, and colleagues reported these results in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The lack of improvement when ADX was added to mFOLFOX6 was despite encouraging antitumor activity seen with the combination in a phase 1 and phase 1b study, the authors noted.

“Despite compelling early-phase data, the addition of ADX did not improve outcomes in an unselected patient population,” the authors wrote. “Tissue or blood samples were not available for correlative analyses to understand why ADX was less active than expected or to identify any gastric cancer subset that may derive greater benefit with ADX.”

The researchers did note, however, that subgroup analyses suggested survival benefits with ADX in patients aged 65 years and older.
 

Study details

Participants in the double-blind GAMMA-1 trial were adults with confirmed locally advanced or metastatic adenocarcinoma of the stomach or gastroesophageal junction. They were enrolled at 132 centers worldwide between Oct. 13, 2015, and May 15, 2019.

There were 432 patients randomized to receive mFOLFOX6 plus either 800 mg of ADX (n = 218) or placebo (n = 214) infused on days 1 and 15 of each 28-day cycle until disease progression or intolerance.

As noted before, there was a significant improvement in response rate with the addition of ADX (P = .049) but no significant improvements in PFS (P = .10) or OS (P = .56).

On the other hand, subgroup analyses suggested survival benefits with ADX in patients aged 65 years and older. The authors said this result is intriguing and warrants further study.

Among patients aged 65 and older, the median OS was 13.9 months in the ADX arm and 10.5 months in the placebo arm (stratified HR, 0.64; P = .03). The median PFS was 8.7 months and 5.6 months, respectively (stratified HR, 0.50; P < .001). However, the P values were not adjusted for multiplicity.

No significant differences were seen between the groups with respect to safety outcomes. Serious adverse events occurred in 47.7% of patients in the ADX arm and 51.4% of those in the placebo arm. Nine patients in the ADX arm and 13 in the placebo arm discontinued the study because of adverse events.

The GAMMA-1 trial was sponsored by Gilead Sciences. The authors disclosed relationships with Gilead and many other companies.

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CDC: Vaccinated people can gather indoors without masks 

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Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:50

People who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can safely gather unmasked and inside with nonvulnerable people who are not yet immunized, according to long-awaited guidance released by the CDC.

“Today’s action represents an important first step. It is not our final destination,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD, said March 8 at a White House briefing. “As more people get vaccinated, levels of COVID-19 infection decline in communities, and as our understanding of COVID immunity improves, we look forward to updating these recommendations to the public.”

According to the new guidance, people who are at least 2 weeks out from their last dose can:

  • Visit with other fully vaccinated people indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing.
  • Visit with unvaccinated people from a single household who are at low risk for severe COVID-19 disease indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing
  • Avoid quarantine and testing following exposure to someone if they remain asymptomatic.

However, there are still restrictions that will remain until further data are collected. Those who are fully vaccinated must still:

  • Wear masks and physically distance in public settings and around people at high risk for severe disease.
  • Wear masks and physically distance when visiting unvaccinated people from more than one household.
  • Avoid medium- and large-sized gatherings.
  • Avoid travel.

People considered at high risk for severe disease include older adults and those with cancer, chronic kidney disease, COPD, Down syndrome, heart disease, heart failure, a weakened immune system, obesity, sickle cell disease, and type 2 diabetes. The category also includes pregnant women and smokers.

“In public spaces, fully vaccinated people should continue to follow guidance to protect themselves and others, including wearing a well-fitted maskphysical distancing (at least 6 feet), avoiding crowds, avoiding poorly ventilated spaces, covering coughs and sneezes, washing hands often, and following any applicable workplace or school guidance,” the guidance says. “Fully vaccinated people should still watch for symptoms of COVID-19, especially following an exposure to someone with suspected or confirmed COVID-19.”

Respecting travel restrictions is still crucial, Dr. Walensky said, given past surges and variants that have emerged after periods of increased travel.

"We would like to give the opportunity for vaccinated grandparents to visit children and grandchildren who are healthy and local,” Dr. Walensky said.

But, she said, “It’s important to realize as we’re working through this that over 90% of the population is not yet vaccinated.”

For now, there are not enough data on transmission rates from those who are vaccinated to the rest of the public. However, Anthony Fauci, MD, said at a briefing last month that preliminary data are “pointing in a very favorable direction.”

Studies from Spain and Israel published last month showed the amount of viral load – or the amount of the COVID-19 virus in someone’s body – is significantly lower if someone gets infected after they’ve been vaccinated, compared with people who get infected and didn’t have the vaccine. Lower viral load means much lower chances of passing the virus to someone else, Dr. Fauci said.

“The science of COVID-19 is complex,” Dr. Walensky said, “and our understanding of it continues to evolve.”

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

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People who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can safely gather unmasked and inside with nonvulnerable people who are not yet immunized, according to long-awaited guidance released by the CDC.

“Today’s action represents an important first step. It is not our final destination,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD, said March 8 at a White House briefing. “As more people get vaccinated, levels of COVID-19 infection decline in communities, and as our understanding of COVID immunity improves, we look forward to updating these recommendations to the public.”

According to the new guidance, people who are at least 2 weeks out from their last dose can:

  • Visit with other fully vaccinated people indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing.
  • Visit with unvaccinated people from a single household who are at low risk for severe COVID-19 disease indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing
  • Avoid quarantine and testing following exposure to someone if they remain asymptomatic.

However, there are still restrictions that will remain until further data are collected. Those who are fully vaccinated must still:

  • Wear masks and physically distance in public settings and around people at high risk for severe disease.
  • Wear masks and physically distance when visiting unvaccinated people from more than one household.
  • Avoid medium- and large-sized gatherings.
  • Avoid travel.

People considered at high risk for severe disease include older adults and those with cancer, chronic kidney disease, COPD, Down syndrome, heart disease, heart failure, a weakened immune system, obesity, sickle cell disease, and type 2 diabetes. The category also includes pregnant women and smokers.

“In public spaces, fully vaccinated people should continue to follow guidance to protect themselves and others, including wearing a well-fitted maskphysical distancing (at least 6 feet), avoiding crowds, avoiding poorly ventilated spaces, covering coughs and sneezes, washing hands often, and following any applicable workplace or school guidance,” the guidance says. “Fully vaccinated people should still watch for symptoms of COVID-19, especially following an exposure to someone with suspected or confirmed COVID-19.”

Respecting travel restrictions is still crucial, Dr. Walensky said, given past surges and variants that have emerged after periods of increased travel.

"We would like to give the opportunity for vaccinated grandparents to visit children and grandchildren who are healthy and local,” Dr. Walensky said.

But, she said, “It’s important to realize as we’re working through this that over 90% of the population is not yet vaccinated.”

For now, there are not enough data on transmission rates from those who are vaccinated to the rest of the public. However, Anthony Fauci, MD, said at a briefing last month that preliminary data are “pointing in a very favorable direction.”

Studies from Spain and Israel published last month showed the amount of viral load – or the amount of the COVID-19 virus in someone’s body – is significantly lower if someone gets infected after they’ve been vaccinated, compared with people who get infected and didn’t have the vaccine. Lower viral load means much lower chances of passing the virus to someone else, Dr. Fauci said.

“The science of COVID-19 is complex,” Dr. Walensky said, “and our understanding of it continues to evolve.”

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

People who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can safely gather unmasked and inside with nonvulnerable people who are not yet immunized, according to long-awaited guidance released by the CDC.

“Today’s action represents an important first step. It is not our final destination,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD, said March 8 at a White House briefing. “As more people get vaccinated, levels of COVID-19 infection decline in communities, and as our understanding of COVID immunity improves, we look forward to updating these recommendations to the public.”

According to the new guidance, people who are at least 2 weeks out from their last dose can:

  • Visit with other fully vaccinated people indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing.
  • Visit with unvaccinated people from a single household who are at low risk for severe COVID-19 disease indoors without wearing masks or physical distancing
  • Avoid quarantine and testing following exposure to someone if they remain asymptomatic.

However, there are still restrictions that will remain until further data are collected. Those who are fully vaccinated must still:

  • Wear masks and physically distance in public settings and around people at high risk for severe disease.
  • Wear masks and physically distance when visiting unvaccinated people from more than one household.
  • Avoid medium- and large-sized gatherings.
  • Avoid travel.

People considered at high risk for severe disease include older adults and those with cancer, chronic kidney disease, COPD, Down syndrome, heart disease, heart failure, a weakened immune system, obesity, sickle cell disease, and type 2 diabetes. The category also includes pregnant women and smokers.

“In public spaces, fully vaccinated people should continue to follow guidance to protect themselves and others, including wearing a well-fitted maskphysical distancing (at least 6 feet), avoiding crowds, avoiding poorly ventilated spaces, covering coughs and sneezes, washing hands often, and following any applicable workplace or school guidance,” the guidance says. “Fully vaccinated people should still watch for symptoms of COVID-19, especially following an exposure to someone with suspected or confirmed COVID-19.”

Respecting travel restrictions is still crucial, Dr. Walensky said, given past surges and variants that have emerged after periods of increased travel.

"We would like to give the opportunity for vaccinated grandparents to visit children and grandchildren who are healthy and local,” Dr. Walensky said.

But, she said, “It’s important to realize as we’re working through this that over 90% of the population is not yet vaccinated.”

For now, there are not enough data on transmission rates from those who are vaccinated to the rest of the public. However, Anthony Fauci, MD, said at a briefing last month that preliminary data are “pointing in a very favorable direction.”

Studies from Spain and Israel published last month showed the amount of viral load – or the amount of the COVID-19 virus in someone’s body – is significantly lower if someone gets infected after they’ve been vaccinated, compared with people who get infected and didn’t have the vaccine. Lower viral load means much lower chances of passing the virus to someone else, Dr. Fauci said.

“The science of COVID-19 is complex,” Dr. Walensky said, “and our understanding of it continues to evolve.”

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

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