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Migraine Linked to Cardiovascular Risk in Veterans Study
SAN DIEGO — , according to results from a retrospective analysis of Veterans Health Administration (VHA) data. Migraine was also linked to greater risk of cardiovascular disease, and the researchers found similar risk among both genders, with the exceptions of a larger stroke risk among women and larger risk of TIA among men.
Gender Matters
The research complements other studies, such as an analysis drawn from the Women’s Health Study, according to Alexandra Schwartz, a doctoral student at Yeshiva University, who presented the research at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society. That study found a 53% increased risk of stroke (hazard ratio [HR], 1.53; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.02-2.31) among 17,531 female subjects between the ages of 25 and 42. Another, smaller study in 1,400 men drawn from the Physicians Health study found an increased risk of major cardiovascular events of 1.24 (P = .008). Previous studies have shown that around two-thirds of VHA patients with migraine are male. “Our population gives us this really unique opportunity to look at men with migraine,” Ms. Schwartz said in an interview.
The differential risk factors among men and women are tantalizing. “Gender likely matters in terms of how migraine and stroke are related, and a number of other cardiovascular diseases,” said Ms. Schwartz.
Migraine has long been considered a disease of women, but 6% of men experience the condition, making it important to understand how migraine might affect cardiovascular result in men. “We would expect that there could be different underlying mechanisms in this kind of relationship ... it is absolutely worth understanding the extent to which this disease might impact their risk of cardiovascular events,” senior author Elizabeth Seng, PhD, said in an interview. She is a professor at Yeshiva University and a research associate at Albert Einstein School of Medicine.
The researchers examined data from 2,006,905 veterans between 2008 and 2021, including 681,784 migraineurs (492,234 men; 189,430 women) and 1,325,121 controls (983,154 men; 341,967 women) that were matched based on age within a 5-year band, gender, race, ethnicity, and VHA site of care.
Among individuals diagnosed with migraine, there was an increased risk of ischemic stroke (odds ratio [OR], 2.7; 95% CI, 2.6-2.7), TIA (OR, 7.3; 95% CI, 6.8-7.7), cardiovascular disease (OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 3.5-3.6), acute myocardial infarction (OR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.6-1.8), heart failure (OR, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.3-1.4), and unstable angina (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 2.5-2.8). There was an association between migraine and a lower risk of hemorrhagic stroke (OR, 0.4; 95% CI, 0.4-0.5), but only in men. When the findings were analyzed by gender, the findings were generally similar with the exception of a statistically significant, larger risk of ischemic stroke in women (OR, 3.0 versus 2.6), and a trend toward greater risk of TIA in men (OR, 7.3 versus 6.5).
While the study lends unique insight due to the high proportion of men, it also comes with the limitation that the participants were veterans, and may therefore differ from the general population with respect to general health status and other characteristics, said Ms. Schwartz.
Another Piece of the Puzzle
The large number of men in the study is important, according to session moderator Laine Green, MD, who was asked for comment. “The biggest population that was studied with respect to cardiovascular risk was the Women’s Health Study, which was predominantly White nurses over time, and it is one of our biggest important pieces of information when it comes to cardiovascular risk, specifically looking at those with migraine who seem to have this doubling of their underlying stroke risk. Trying to get the same type of information from different populations is exquisitely helpful, because it’s long been thought that the risk for stroke and cardiovascular events seems to lie with females with aura. Knowing that there may be risk in other groups is important and part of the overall counseling that we do with patients,” said Dr. Green, assistant professor of neurology at Mayo Clinic Arizona.
The findings could hint at causal mechanisms, according to Dr. Seng. Preliminary analyses, not yet reported, suggest that age also plays a role in the relationship between migraine and cardiovascular risks. “I think that it’s important to [determine] to what extent migraine might back up the curve on the age-related timing of these events. Migraine peaks in the 40s, and that’s well before most of these cardiovascular events peak. We want to understand not just the cross-sectional relationships, which were large, but also the extent to which migraine may be having a differential impact on risk in different age bands,” said Dr. Seng.
Ms. Schwartz, Dr. Seng, and Dr. Green have no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN DIEGO — , according to results from a retrospective analysis of Veterans Health Administration (VHA) data. Migraine was also linked to greater risk of cardiovascular disease, and the researchers found similar risk among both genders, with the exceptions of a larger stroke risk among women and larger risk of TIA among men.
Gender Matters
The research complements other studies, such as an analysis drawn from the Women’s Health Study, according to Alexandra Schwartz, a doctoral student at Yeshiva University, who presented the research at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society. That study found a 53% increased risk of stroke (hazard ratio [HR], 1.53; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.02-2.31) among 17,531 female subjects between the ages of 25 and 42. Another, smaller study in 1,400 men drawn from the Physicians Health study found an increased risk of major cardiovascular events of 1.24 (P = .008). Previous studies have shown that around two-thirds of VHA patients with migraine are male. “Our population gives us this really unique opportunity to look at men with migraine,” Ms. Schwartz said in an interview.
The differential risk factors among men and women are tantalizing. “Gender likely matters in terms of how migraine and stroke are related, and a number of other cardiovascular diseases,” said Ms. Schwartz.
Migraine has long been considered a disease of women, but 6% of men experience the condition, making it important to understand how migraine might affect cardiovascular result in men. “We would expect that there could be different underlying mechanisms in this kind of relationship ... it is absolutely worth understanding the extent to which this disease might impact their risk of cardiovascular events,” senior author Elizabeth Seng, PhD, said in an interview. She is a professor at Yeshiva University and a research associate at Albert Einstein School of Medicine.
The researchers examined data from 2,006,905 veterans between 2008 and 2021, including 681,784 migraineurs (492,234 men; 189,430 women) and 1,325,121 controls (983,154 men; 341,967 women) that were matched based on age within a 5-year band, gender, race, ethnicity, and VHA site of care.
Among individuals diagnosed with migraine, there was an increased risk of ischemic stroke (odds ratio [OR], 2.7; 95% CI, 2.6-2.7), TIA (OR, 7.3; 95% CI, 6.8-7.7), cardiovascular disease (OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 3.5-3.6), acute myocardial infarction (OR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.6-1.8), heart failure (OR, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.3-1.4), and unstable angina (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 2.5-2.8). There was an association between migraine and a lower risk of hemorrhagic stroke (OR, 0.4; 95% CI, 0.4-0.5), but only in men. When the findings were analyzed by gender, the findings were generally similar with the exception of a statistically significant, larger risk of ischemic stroke in women (OR, 3.0 versus 2.6), and a trend toward greater risk of TIA in men (OR, 7.3 versus 6.5).
While the study lends unique insight due to the high proportion of men, it also comes with the limitation that the participants were veterans, and may therefore differ from the general population with respect to general health status and other characteristics, said Ms. Schwartz.
Another Piece of the Puzzle
The large number of men in the study is important, according to session moderator Laine Green, MD, who was asked for comment. “The biggest population that was studied with respect to cardiovascular risk was the Women’s Health Study, which was predominantly White nurses over time, and it is one of our biggest important pieces of information when it comes to cardiovascular risk, specifically looking at those with migraine who seem to have this doubling of their underlying stroke risk. Trying to get the same type of information from different populations is exquisitely helpful, because it’s long been thought that the risk for stroke and cardiovascular events seems to lie with females with aura. Knowing that there may be risk in other groups is important and part of the overall counseling that we do with patients,” said Dr. Green, assistant professor of neurology at Mayo Clinic Arizona.
The findings could hint at causal mechanisms, according to Dr. Seng. Preliminary analyses, not yet reported, suggest that age also plays a role in the relationship between migraine and cardiovascular risks. “I think that it’s important to [determine] to what extent migraine might back up the curve on the age-related timing of these events. Migraine peaks in the 40s, and that’s well before most of these cardiovascular events peak. We want to understand not just the cross-sectional relationships, which were large, but also the extent to which migraine may be having a differential impact on risk in different age bands,” said Dr. Seng.
Ms. Schwartz, Dr. Seng, and Dr. Green have no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN DIEGO — , according to results from a retrospective analysis of Veterans Health Administration (VHA) data. Migraine was also linked to greater risk of cardiovascular disease, and the researchers found similar risk among both genders, with the exceptions of a larger stroke risk among women and larger risk of TIA among men.
Gender Matters
The research complements other studies, such as an analysis drawn from the Women’s Health Study, according to Alexandra Schwartz, a doctoral student at Yeshiva University, who presented the research at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society. That study found a 53% increased risk of stroke (hazard ratio [HR], 1.53; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.02-2.31) among 17,531 female subjects between the ages of 25 and 42. Another, smaller study in 1,400 men drawn from the Physicians Health study found an increased risk of major cardiovascular events of 1.24 (P = .008). Previous studies have shown that around two-thirds of VHA patients with migraine are male. “Our population gives us this really unique opportunity to look at men with migraine,” Ms. Schwartz said in an interview.
The differential risk factors among men and women are tantalizing. “Gender likely matters in terms of how migraine and stroke are related, and a number of other cardiovascular diseases,” said Ms. Schwartz.
Migraine has long been considered a disease of women, but 6% of men experience the condition, making it important to understand how migraine might affect cardiovascular result in men. “We would expect that there could be different underlying mechanisms in this kind of relationship ... it is absolutely worth understanding the extent to which this disease might impact their risk of cardiovascular events,” senior author Elizabeth Seng, PhD, said in an interview. She is a professor at Yeshiva University and a research associate at Albert Einstein School of Medicine.
The researchers examined data from 2,006,905 veterans between 2008 and 2021, including 681,784 migraineurs (492,234 men; 189,430 women) and 1,325,121 controls (983,154 men; 341,967 women) that were matched based on age within a 5-year band, gender, race, ethnicity, and VHA site of care.
Among individuals diagnosed with migraine, there was an increased risk of ischemic stroke (odds ratio [OR], 2.7; 95% CI, 2.6-2.7), TIA (OR, 7.3; 95% CI, 6.8-7.7), cardiovascular disease (OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 3.5-3.6), acute myocardial infarction (OR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.6-1.8), heart failure (OR, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.3-1.4), and unstable angina (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 2.5-2.8). There was an association between migraine and a lower risk of hemorrhagic stroke (OR, 0.4; 95% CI, 0.4-0.5), but only in men. When the findings were analyzed by gender, the findings were generally similar with the exception of a statistically significant, larger risk of ischemic stroke in women (OR, 3.0 versus 2.6), and a trend toward greater risk of TIA in men (OR, 7.3 versus 6.5).
While the study lends unique insight due to the high proportion of men, it also comes with the limitation that the participants were veterans, and may therefore differ from the general population with respect to general health status and other characteristics, said Ms. Schwartz.
Another Piece of the Puzzle
The large number of men in the study is important, according to session moderator Laine Green, MD, who was asked for comment. “The biggest population that was studied with respect to cardiovascular risk was the Women’s Health Study, which was predominantly White nurses over time, and it is one of our biggest important pieces of information when it comes to cardiovascular risk, specifically looking at those with migraine who seem to have this doubling of their underlying stroke risk. Trying to get the same type of information from different populations is exquisitely helpful, because it’s long been thought that the risk for stroke and cardiovascular events seems to lie with females with aura. Knowing that there may be risk in other groups is important and part of the overall counseling that we do with patients,” said Dr. Green, assistant professor of neurology at Mayo Clinic Arizona.
The findings could hint at causal mechanisms, according to Dr. Seng. Preliminary analyses, not yet reported, suggest that age also plays a role in the relationship between migraine and cardiovascular risks. “I think that it’s important to [determine] to what extent migraine might back up the curve on the age-related timing of these events. Migraine peaks in the 40s, and that’s well before most of these cardiovascular events peak. We want to understand not just the cross-sectional relationships, which were large, but also the extent to which migraine may be having a differential impact on risk in different age bands,” said Dr. Seng.
Ms. Schwartz, Dr. Seng, and Dr. Green have no relevant financial disclosures.
FROM AHS 2024
Study Finds Major CV Event Risk in Patients With AD Similar to Controls
The results of the analysis were presented during a poster session at the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis conference in Chicago. “While it is known that atopic dermatitis is associated with some comorbidities, the specific risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with AD, especially those with moderate to severe AD within the US population, is unclear,” the study’s first author Christopher G. Bunick, MD, PhD, said in an interview following the conference.
To characterize the risk for MACE in patients with AD vs matched controls without AD (non-AD) and patients with RA, Dr. Bunick, associate professor of dermatology at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues retrospectively evaluated US claims data from Optum’s Clinformatics Data Mart. The study population consisted of 381,221 patients aged 18 years and older who were diagnosed with AD from March 2017 to March 2023. Comparator groups included 381,221 non-AD controls matched by age, sex, and cohort entry, and 97,445 patients diagnosed with RA based on at least two claims for RA ≥ 7 days apart.
Patients were classified as having moderate to severe disease if they received dupilumab for AD or advanced systemic therapy for RA at any time during the follow-up period. The matched moderate to severe AD and non-AD cohorts were composed of 7134 patients each. The incidence of MACE was defined as inpatient hospitalization with myocardial infarction or stroke. The researchers used multivariable Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for baseline demographics, comorbidities, and medications to calculate the relative risk for MACE.
MACE Incidence, Relative Risk
The mean age of the AD cohort and non-AD matched controls was 58 years, and the mean age of the RA cohort was 67 years. The incidence of MACE per 100 patient-years was 1.78 among patients with AD, 1.83 among non-AD matched controls, and 2.12 among patients with RA. Patients with moderate to severe AD had a MACE incidence of 1.18 per 100 patient-years, which was lower than that of non-AD matched controls (1.52) and patients with moderate to severe RA (1.67).
In other findings, the relative risk for MACE in patients with AD was lower vs non-AD controls (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.91; 95% CI, 0.89-0.93; P < .001) and patients with RA (aHR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.80-0.85; P < .001). Among patients with moderate to severe AD, MACE risk was similar to that of non-AD matched controls (aHR, 0.92; 95% CI, 0.73-1.14) and lower vs those with moderate to severe RA (aHR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.73-0.94; P < .01).
MACE risk associated with AD was greater in patients who were older (per year, aHR, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.05-1.05), male (aHR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.79-0.84), and Black vs White (aHR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.11-1.21), and among those who received systemic corticosteroids in the 3 months before diagnosis (aHR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.06-1.14), were hospitalized in the year before diagnosis (aHR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.30-1.41), and had a history of smoking (aHR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.16-1.24) and drug abuse (aHR, 1.34; 95% CI, 1.25-1.43).
Unexpected Results
“One surprising finding was that the incidence of MACE in patients with moderate to severe AD was actually lower than that in non-AD matched controls and significantly lower compared to patients with moderate to severe RA,” Dr. Bunick said. “This contrasts with the expectation that increased systemic inflammation in moderate to severe AD would correspond with a higher incidence of MACE.”
Another unexpected result, he said, was that, among patients with moderate to severe AD, the risk for MACE was not significantly different from that of non-AD matched controls, suggesting that the inflammatory burden in AD might not translate to as high a cardiovascular risk as previously assumed.
Dr. Bunick noted that advanced treatments for AD such as Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors (upadacitinib and abrocitinib) have a class boxed warning for MACE based on a study of another JAK inhibitor (tofacitinib) in patients with RA, but “this may not apply to AD because patients with AD have a lower risk for MACE.”
In his opinion, he said, the study “underscores the importance of understanding the specific risks associated with different inflammatory conditions.” Moreover, “it emphasizes the potential benefits of newer systemic therapies in potentially mitigating cardiovascular risks in patients with moderate to severe AD.”
Dr. Bunick acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective design and reliance on administrative claims data, which “may introduce coding errors and misclassification,” and the generalizability of the results, which may be limited to the US population.
AbbVie funded the study, and three of the coauthors are employees of the company. Dr. Bunick disclosed that he has served as an investigator and/or a consultant for AbbVie, Almirall, Apogee, Arcutis Biotherapeutics, Connect Biopharma, Daiichi Sankyo, EPI Health/Novan, LEO, Lilly, Novartis, Ortho Dermatologics, Palvella Therapeutics, Pfizer, Sanofi Regeneron, Sun, Takeda, Timber, and UCB.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
The results of the analysis were presented during a poster session at the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis conference in Chicago. “While it is known that atopic dermatitis is associated with some comorbidities, the specific risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with AD, especially those with moderate to severe AD within the US population, is unclear,” the study’s first author Christopher G. Bunick, MD, PhD, said in an interview following the conference.
To characterize the risk for MACE in patients with AD vs matched controls without AD (non-AD) and patients with RA, Dr. Bunick, associate professor of dermatology at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues retrospectively evaluated US claims data from Optum’s Clinformatics Data Mart. The study population consisted of 381,221 patients aged 18 years and older who were diagnosed with AD from March 2017 to March 2023. Comparator groups included 381,221 non-AD controls matched by age, sex, and cohort entry, and 97,445 patients diagnosed with RA based on at least two claims for RA ≥ 7 days apart.
Patients were classified as having moderate to severe disease if they received dupilumab for AD or advanced systemic therapy for RA at any time during the follow-up period. The matched moderate to severe AD and non-AD cohorts were composed of 7134 patients each. The incidence of MACE was defined as inpatient hospitalization with myocardial infarction or stroke. The researchers used multivariable Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for baseline demographics, comorbidities, and medications to calculate the relative risk for MACE.
MACE Incidence, Relative Risk
The mean age of the AD cohort and non-AD matched controls was 58 years, and the mean age of the RA cohort was 67 years. The incidence of MACE per 100 patient-years was 1.78 among patients with AD, 1.83 among non-AD matched controls, and 2.12 among patients with RA. Patients with moderate to severe AD had a MACE incidence of 1.18 per 100 patient-years, which was lower than that of non-AD matched controls (1.52) and patients with moderate to severe RA (1.67).
In other findings, the relative risk for MACE in patients with AD was lower vs non-AD controls (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.91; 95% CI, 0.89-0.93; P < .001) and patients with RA (aHR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.80-0.85; P < .001). Among patients with moderate to severe AD, MACE risk was similar to that of non-AD matched controls (aHR, 0.92; 95% CI, 0.73-1.14) and lower vs those with moderate to severe RA (aHR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.73-0.94; P < .01).
MACE risk associated with AD was greater in patients who were older (per year, aHR, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.05-1.05), male (aHR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.79-0.84), and Black vs White (aHR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.11-1.21), and among those who received systemic corticosteroids in the 3 months before diagnosis (aHR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.06-1.14), were hospitalized in the year before diagnosis (aHR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.30-1.41), and had a history of smoking (aHR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.16-1.24) and drug abuse (aHR, 1.34; 95% CI, 1.25-1.43).
Unexpected Results
“One surprising finding was that the incidence of MACE in patients with moderate to severe AD was actually lower than that in non-AD matched controls and significantly lower compared to patients with moderate to severe RA,” Dr. Bunick said. “This contrasts with the expectation that increased systemic inflammation in moderate to severe AD would correspond with a higher incidence of MACE.”
Another unexpected result, he said, was that, among patients with moderate to severe AD, the risk for MACE was not significantly different from that of non-AD matched controls, suggesting that the inflammatory burden in AD might not translate to as high a cardiovascular risk as previously assumed.
Dr. Bunick noted that advanced treatments for AD such as Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors (upadacitinib and abrocitinib) have a class boxed warning for MACE based on a study of another JAK inhibitor (tofacitinib) in patients with RA, but “this may not apply to AD because patients with AD have a lower risk for MACE.”
In his opinion, he said, the study “underscores the importance of understanding the specific risks associated with different inflammatory conditions.” Moreover, “it emphasizes the potential benefits of newer systemic therapies in potentially mitigating cardiovascular risks in patients with moderate to severe AD.”
Dr. Bunick acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective design and reliance on administrative claims data, which “may introduce coding errors and misclassification,” and the generalizability of the results, which may be limited to the US population.
AbbVie funded the study, and three of the coauthors are employees of the company. Dr. Bunick disclosed that he has served as an investigator and/or a consultant for AbbVie, Almirall, Apogee, Arcutis Biotherapeutics, Connect Biopharma, Daiichi Sankyo, EPI Health/Novan, LEO, Lilly, Novartis, Ortho Dermatologics, Palvella Therapeutics, Pfizer, Sanofi Regeneron, Sun, Takeda, Timber, and UCB.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
The results of the analysis were presented during a poster session at the Revolutionizing Atopic Dermatitis conference in Chicago. “While it is known that atopic dermatitis is associated with some comorbidities, the specific risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with AD, especially those with moderate to severe AD within the US population, is unclear,” the study’s first author Christopher G. Bunick, MD, PhD, said in an interview following the conference.
To characterize the risk for MACE in patients with AD vs matched controls without AD (non-AD) and patients with RA, Dr. Bunick, associate professor of dermatology at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues retrospectively evaluated US claims data from Optum’s Clinformatics Data Mart. The study population consisted of 381,221 patients aged 18 years and older who were diagnosed with AD from March 2017 to March 2023. Comparator groups included 381,221 non-AD controls matched by age, sex, and cohort entry, and 97,445 patients diagnosed with RA based on at least two claims for RA ≥ 7 days apart.
Patients were classified as having moderate to severe disease if they received dupilumab for AD or advanced systemic therapy for RA at any time during the follow-up period. The matched moderate to severe AD and non-AD cohorts were composed of 7134 patients each. The incidence of MACE was defined as inpatient hospitalization with myocardial infarction or stroke. The researchers used multivariable Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for baseline demographics, comorbidities, and medications to calculate the relative risk for MACE.
MACE Incidence, Relative Risk
The mean age of the AD cohort and non-AD matched controls was 58 years, and the mean age of the RA cohort was 67 years. The incidence of MACE per 100 patient-years was 1.78 among patients with AD, 1.83 among non-AD matched controls, and 2.12 among patients with RA. Patients with moderate to severe AD had a MACE incidence of 1.18 per 100 patient-years, which was lower than that of non-AD matched controls (1.52) and patients with moderate to severe RA (1.67).
In other findings, the relative risk for MACE in patients with AD was lower vs non-AD controls (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.91; 95% CI, 0.89-0.93; P < .001) and patients with RA (aHR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.80-0.85; P < .001). Among patients with moderate to severe AD, MACE risk was similar to that of non-AD matched controls (aHR, 0.92; 95% CI, 0.73-1.14) and lower vs those with moderate to severe RA (aHR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.73-0.94; P < .01).
MACE risk associated with AD was greater in patients who were older (per year, aHR, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.05-1.05), male (aHR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.79-0.84), and Black vs White (aHR, 1.16; 95% CI, 1.11-1.21), and among those who received systemic corticosteroids in the 3 months before diagnosis (aHR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.06-1.14), were hospitalized in the year before diagnosis (aHR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.30-1.41), and had a history of smoking (aHR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.16-1.24) and drug abuse (aHR, 1.34; 95% CI, 1.25-1.43).
Unexpected Results
“One surprising finding was that the incidence of MACE in patients with moderate to severe AD was actually lower than that in non-AD matched controls and significantly lower compared to patients with moderate to severe RA,” Dr. Bunick said. “This contrasts with the expectation that increased systemic inflammation in moderate to severe AD would correspond with a higher incidence of MACE.”
Another unexpected result, he said, was that, among patients with moderate to severe AD, the risk for MACE was not significantly different from that of non-AD matched controls, suggesting that the inflammatory burden in AD might not translate to as high a cardiovascular risk as previously assumed.
Dr. Bunick noted that advanced treatments for AD such as Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors (upadacitinib and abrocitinib) have a class boxed warning for MACE based on a study of another JAK inhibitor (tofacitinib) in patients with RA, but “this may not apply to AD because patients with AD have a lower risk for MACE.”
In his opinion, he said, the study “underscores the importance of understanding the specific risks associated with different inflammatory conditions.” Moreover, “it emphasizes the potential benefits of newer systemic therapies in potentially mitigating cardiovascular risks in patients with moderate to severe AD.”
Dr. Bunick acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective design and reliance on administrative claims data, which “may introduce coding errors and misclassification,” and the generalizability of the results, which may be limited to the US population.
AbbVie funded the study, and three of the coauthors are employees of the company. Dr. Bunick disclosed that he has served as an investigator and/or a consultant for AbbVie, Almirall, Apogee, Arcutis Biotherapeutics, Connect Biopharma, Daiichi Sankyo, EPI Health/Novan, LEO, Lilly, Novartis, Ortho Dermatologics, Palvella Therapeutics, Pfizer, Sanofi Regeneron, Sun, Takeda, Timber, and UCB.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Magnesium Sulfate’s Ability to Reduce Cerebral Palsy in Preterm Birth Reaffirmed
An updated Cochrane Systematic Review of magnesium sulfate administered before preterm birth for neuroprotection has reaffirmed that the compound significantly reduces the risk of cerebral palsy and has added the finding that it also may reduce the risk of severe neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage.
Still unknown, however, is whether the effects of magnesium sulfate vary according to patient characteristics such as gestational age, or by treatment characteristics such as timing and dose. “We need further research to determine exactly who to treat, and when and how, to ideally standardize clinical practice recommendations across the world,” said Emily S. Shepherd, PhD, lead author of the review.
Magnesium sulfate is widely used for preterm cerebral palsy prevention but variance in national and local recommendations for its use may impede its optimal uptake in some places, she and her co-investigators wrote in the review.
In the United States, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists advises institutions to develop their own guidelines regarding inclusion criteria and treatment regimens “in accordance with one of the larger trials.” (ACOG’s Committee Opinion on Magnesium Sulfate Before Anticipated Preterm Birth for Neuroprotection was originally published in 2010 and was reaffirmed in 2023.)
In a Master Class column on magnesium sulfate for neuroprotection published earlier this year in Ob.Gyn. News, Irina Burd, MD, PhD, wrote that most hospitals in the United States have chosen a higher dose of magnesium sulfate administered up to 31 weeks’ gestation (6-g bolus, followed by 2 g/hour), in keeping with the protocols used in the BEAM trial published by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). Dr. Burd is the Sylvan Frieman, MD, Endowed Professor and chair of the department of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
The new Cochrane review included six randomized controlled trials (including the NICHD trial) covering 5917 pregnant participants and 6759 fetuses. Eligibility criteria varied, but all the RCTs included patients in preterm labor or with expected or planned imminent preterm birth at less than 34 weeks’ gestation.
Treatment regimens varied: three trials administered a 4-g loading dose only, and three included a maintenance dose (a 4-6-g loading dose and a 1-2 g/hour maintenance dose). “Although we attempted to explore variation through subgroup analyses, the ability to do this was limited,” the researchers wrote.
Up to 2 years of corrected age, magnesium sulfate reduced the risk of cerebral palsy compared with placebo (relative risk, 0.71; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.57-0.89) and death or cerebral palsy (RR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.77-0.98), with a high-certainty grade of evidence. The number needed to treat to prevent one case of cerebral palsy was 60 and the number needed to treat death or cerebral palsy was 56. The impact on severe intracranial hemorrhage (RR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.60-0.98), a secondary outcome, was backed by moderate-certainty evidence.
Compared with the 2009 Cochrane review, the new study includes two new randomized controlled trials. One of which, the MAGENTA trial, administered magnesium sulfate at 30-34 weeks gestation and included new school-age follow-up data from two previously included trials. While the available data suggest little to no difference in outcomes at school age, more follow-up data are needed to assess this with greater certainty, the reviewers wrote.
While severe adverse outcomes (death, cardiac or respiratory arrest) for pregnant individuals appear not to have increased in pregnant patients who received magnesium sulfate (low-certainty evidence), the compound “probably increased maternal adverse effects severe enough to stop treatment,” the reviewers report (average RR, 3.21; 95% CI, 1.88-5.48; moderate-certainty evidence).
Side effects that were more frequent among women receiving magnesium sulfate include hypotension, tachycardia, warmth over body/flushing, nausea or vomiting, sweating, and dizziness.
“Treatment cessation due to such side effects was in the context of trials being conducted to establish benefit,” noted Dr. Shepherd, of the University of Adelaide in Australia. “With benefit now shown, these side effects may be viewed as comparatively minor/generally tolerable considering the potential benefits for children.”
Proving the neuroprotective value of magnesium sulfate took many years, Dr. Burd explained in the Master Class, as none of the randomized controlled trials analyzed in eventual meta-analyses and systematic reviews had reached their primary endpoints. It wasn’t until researchers obtained unpublished data and conducted these analyses and reviews that a significant effect of magnesium sulfate on cerebral palsy could be seen. Dr. Burd and other researchers are now working to better understand its biologic plausibility and precise mechanisms of action.
Dr. Shepherd disclosed that she is a former editor for Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth and current sign-off editor for Cochrane Central Editorial Service but reported having no involvement in the editorial processing of the review. Other authors disclosed that they were investigators for included trials and/or have published opinions in medical journals related to magnesium sulfate to reduce cerebral palsy. Dr. Burd reported no disclosures.
An updated Cochrane Systematic Review of magnesium sulfate administered before preterm birth for neuroprotection has reaffirmed that the compound significantly reduces the risk of cerebral palsy and has added the finding that it also may reduce the risk of severe neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage.
Still unknown, however, is whether the effects of magnesium sulfate vary according to patient characteristics such as gestational age, or by treatment characteristics such as timing and dose. “We need further research to determine exactly who to treat, and when and how, to ideally standardize clinical practice recommendations across the world,” said Emily S. Shepherd, PhD, lead author of the review.
Magnesium sulfate is widely used for preterm cerebral palsy prevention but variance in national and local recommendations for its use may impede its optimal uptake in some places, she and her co-investigators wrote in the review.
In the United States, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists advises institutions to develop their own guidelines regarding inclusion criteria and treatment regimens “in accordance with one of the larger trials.” (ACOG’s Committee Opinion on Magnesium Sulfate Before Anticipated Preterm Birth for Neuroprotection was originally published in 2010 and was reaffirmed in 2023.)
In a Master Class column on magnesium sulfate for neuroprotection published earlier this year in Ob.Gyn. News, Irina Burd, MD, PhD, wrote that most hospitals in the United States have chosen a higher dose of magnesium sulfate administered up to 31 weeks’ gestation (6-g bolus, followed by 2 g/hour), in keeping with the protocols used in the BEAM trial published by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). Dr. Burd is the Sylvan Frieman, MD, Endowed Professor and chair of the department of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
The new Cochrane review included six randomized controlled trials (including the NICHD trial) covering 5917 pregnant participants and 6759 fetuses. Eligibility criteria varied, but all the RCTs included patients in preterm labor or with expected or planned imminent preterm birth at less than 34 weeks’ gestation.
Treatment regimens varied: three trials administered a 4-g loading dose only, and three included a maintenance dose (a 4-6-g loading dose and a 1-2 g/hour maintenance dose). “Although we attempted to explore variation through subgroup analyses, the ability to do this was limited,” the researchers wrote.
Up to 2 years of corrected age, magnesium sulfate reduced the risk of cerebral palsy compared with placebo (relative risk, 0.71; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.57-0.89) and death or cerebral palsy (RR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.77-0.98), with a high-certainty grade of evidence. The number needed to treat to prevent one case of cerebral palsy was 60 and the number needed to treat death or cerebral palsy was 56. The impact on severe intracranial hemorrhage (RR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.60-0.98), a secondary outcome, was backed by moderate-certainty evidence.
Compared with the 2009 Cochrane review, the new study includes two new randomized controlled trials. One of which, the MAGENTA trial, administered magnesium sulfate at 30-34 weeks gestation and included new school-age follow-up data from two previously included trials. While the available data suggest little to no difference in outcomes at school age, more follow-up data are needed to assess this with greater certainty, the reviewers wrote.
While severe adverse outcomes (death, cardiac or respiratory arrest) for pregnant individuals appear not to have increased in pregnant patients who received magnesium sulfate (low-certainty evidence), the compound “probably increased maternal adverse effects severe enough to stop treatment,” the reviewers report (average RR, 3.21; 95% CI, 1.88-5.48; moderate-certainty evidence).
Side effects that were more frequent among women receiving magnesium sulfate include hypotension, tachycardia, warmth over body/flushing, nausea or vomiting, sweating, and dizziness.
“Treatment cessation due to such side effects was in the context of trials being conducted to establish benefit,” noted Dr. Shepherd, of the University of Adelaide in Australia. “With benefit now shown, these side effects may be viewed as comparatively minor/generally tolerable considering the potential benefits for children.”
Proving the neuroprotective value of magnesium sulfate took many years, Dr. Burd explained in the Master Class, as none of the randomized controlled trials analyzed in eventual meta-analyses and systematic reviews had reached their primary endpoints. It wasn’t until researchers obtained unpublished data and conducted these analyses and reviews that a significant effect of magnesium sulfate on cerebral palsy could be seen. Dr. Burd and other researchers are now working to better understand its biologic plausibility and precise mechanisms of action.
Dr. Shepherd disclosed that she is a former editor for Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth and current sign-off editor for Cochrane Central Editorial Service but reported having no involvement in the editorial processing of the review. Other authors disclosed that they were investigators for included trials and/or have published opinions in medical journals related to magnesium sulfate to reduce cerebral palsy. Dr. Burd reported no disclosures.
An updated Cochrane Systematic Review of magnesium sulfate administered before preterm birth for neuroprotection has reaffirmed that the compound significantly reduces the risk of cerebral palsy and has added the finding that it also may reduce the risk of severe neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage.
Still unknown, however, is whether the effects of magnesium sulfate vary according to patient characteristics such as gestational age, or by treatment characteristics such as timing and dose. “We need further research to determine exactly who to treat, and when and how, to ideally standardize clinical practice recommendations across the world,” said Emily S. Shepherd, PhD, lead author of the review.
Magnesium sulfate is widely used for preterm cerebral palsy prevention but variance in national and local recommendations for its use may impede its optimal uptake in some places, she and her co-investigators wrote in the review.
In the United States, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists advises institutions to develop their own guidelines regarding inclusion criteria and treatment regimens “in accordance with one of the larger trials.” (ACOG’s Committee Opinion on Magnesium Sulfate Before Anticipated Preterm Birth for Neuroprotection was originally published in 2010 and was reaffirmed in 2023.)
In a Master Class column on magnesium sulfate for neuroprotection published earlier this year in Ob.Gyn. News, Irina Burd, MD, PhD, wrote that most hospitals in the United States have chosen a higher dose of magnesium sulfate administered up to 31 weeks’ gestation (6-g bolus, followed by 2 g/hour), in keeping with the protocols used in the BEAM trial published by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD). Dr. Burd is the Sylvan Frieman, MD, Endowed Professor and chair of the department of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
The new Cochrane review included six randomized controlled trials (including the NICHD trial) covering 5917 pregnant participants and 6759 fetuses. Eligibility criteria varied, but all the RCTs included patients in preterm labor or with expected or planned imminent preterm birth at less than 34 weeks’ gestation.
Treatment regimens varied: three trials administered a 4-g loading dose only, and three included a maintenance dose (a 4-6-g loading dose and a 1-2 g/hour maintenance dose). “Although we attempted to explore variation through subgroup analyses, the ability to do this was limited,” the researchers wrote.
Up to 2 years of corrected age, magnesium sulfate reduced the risk of cerebral palsy compared with placebo (relative risk, 0.71; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.57-0.89) and death or cerebral palsy (RR, 0.87; 95% CI, 0.77-0.98), with a high-certainty grade of evidence. The number needed to treat to prevent one case of cerebral palsy was 60 and the number needed to treat death or cerebral palsy was 56. The impact on severe intracranial hemorrhage (RR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.60-0.98), a secondary outcome, was backed by moderate-certainty evidence.
Compared with the 2009 Cochrane review, the new study includes two new randomized controlled trials. One of which, the MAGENTA trial, administered magnesium sulfate at 30-34 weeks gestation and included new school-age follow-up data from two previously included trials. While the available data suggest little to no difference in outcomes at school age, more follow-up data are needed to assess this with greater certainty, the reviewers wrote.
While severe adverse outcomes (death, cardiac or respiratory arrest) for pregnant individuals appear not to have increased in pregnant patients who received magnesium sulfate (low-certainty evidence), the compound “probably increased maternal adverse effects severe enough to stop treatment,” the reviewers report (average RR, 3.21; 95% CI, 1.88-5.48; moderate-certainty evidence).
Side effects that were more frequent among women receiving magnesium sulfate include hypotension, tachycardia, warmth over body/flushing, nausea or vomiting, sweating, and dizziness.
“Treatment cessation due to such side effects was in the context of trials being conducted to establish benefit,” noted Dr. Shepherd, of the University of Adelaide in Australia. “With benefit now shown, these side effects may be viewed as comparatively minor/generally tolerable considering the potential benefits for children.”
Proving the neuroprotective value of magnesium sulfate took many years, Dr. Burd explained in the Master Class, as none of the randomized controlled trials analyzed in eventual meta-analyses and systematic reviews had reached their primary endpoints. It wasn’t until researchers obtained unpublished data and conducted these analyses and reviews that a significant effect of magnesium sulfate on cerebral palsy could be seen. Dr. Burd and other researchers are now working to better understand its biologic plausibility and precise mechanisms of action.
Dr. Shepherd disclosed that she is a former editor for Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth and current sign-off editor for Cochrane Central Editorial Service but reported having no involvement in the editorial processing of the review. Other authors disclosed that they were investigators for included trials and/or have published opinions in medical journals related to magnesium sulfate to reduce cerebral palsy. Dr. Burd reported no disclosures.
COCHRANE DATABASE SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
US Hospitals Prone to Cyberattacks Like One That Impacted Patient Care at Ascension, Experts Say
In the wake of a debilitating cyberattack against one of the nation’s largest health care systems, Marvin Ruckle, a nurse at an Ascension hospital in Wichita, Kansas, said he had a frightening experience: He nearly gave a baby “the wrong dose of narcotic” because of confusing paperwork.
A May 8 ransomware attack against Ascension, a Catholic health system with 140 hospitals in at least 10 states, locked providers out of systems that track and coordinate nearly every aspect of patient care. They include its systems for electronic health records, some phones, and ones “utilized to order certain tests, procedures and medications,” the company said in a May 9 statement.
More than a dozen doctors and nurses who work for the sprawling health system told Michigan Public and KFF Health News that patient care at its hospitals across the nation was compromised in the fallout of the cyberattack over the past several weeks. Clinicians working for hospitals in three states described harrowing lapses, including delayed or lost lab results, medication errors, and an absence of routine safety checks via technology to prevent potentially fatal mistakes.
Despite a precipitous rise in cyberattacks against the health sector in recent years, a weeks-long disruption of this magnitude is beyond what most health systems are prepared for, said John S. Clark, an associate chief pharmacy officer at the University of Michigan health system.
“I don’t believe that anyone is fully prepared,” he said. Most emergency management plans “are designed around long-term downtimes that are into one, two, or three days.”
Ascension in a public statement May 9 said its care teams were “trained for these kinds of disruptions,” but did not respond to questions in early June about whether it had prepared for longer periods of downtime. Ascension said June 14 it had restored access to electronic health records across its network, but that patient “medical records and other information collected between May 8” and when the service was restored “may be temporarily inaccessible as we work to update the portal with information collected during the system downtime.”
Ruckle said he “had no training” for the cyberattack.
Back to Paper
Lisa Watson, an intensive care unit nurse at Ascension Via Christi St. Francis hospital in Wichita, described her own close call. She said she nearly administered the wrong medication to a critically ill patient because she couldn’t scan it as she normally would. “My patient probably would have passed away had I not caught it,” she said.
Watson is no stranger to using paper for patients’ medical charts, saying she did so “for probably half of my career,” before electronic health records became ubiquitous in hospitals. What happened after the cyberattack was “by no means the same.”
“When we paper-charted, we had systems in place to get those orders to other departments in a timely manner,” she said, “and those have all gone away.”
Melissa LaRue, an ICU nurse at Ascension Saint Agnes Hospital in Baltimore, described a close call with “administering the wrong dosage” of a patient’s blood pressure medication. “Luckily,” she said, it was “triple-checked and remedied before that could happen. But I think the potential for harm is there when you have so much information and paperwork that you have to go through.”
Clinicians say their hospitals have relied on slapdash workarounds, using handwritten notes, faxes, sticky notes, and basic computer spreadsheets — many devised on the fly by doctors and nurses — to care for patients.
More than a dozen other nurses and doctors, some of them without union protections, at Ascension hospitals in Michigan recounted situations in which they say patient care was compromised. Those clinicians spoke on the condition that they not be named for fear of retaliation by their employer.
An Ascension hospital emergency room doctor in Detroit said a man on the city’s east side was given a dangerous narcotic intended for another patient because of a paperwork mix-up. As a result, the patient’s breathing slowed to the point that he had to be put on a ventilator. “We intubated him and we sent him to the ICU because he got the wrong medication.”
A nurse in a Michigan Ascension hospital ER said a woman with low blood sugar and “altered mental status” went into cardiac arrest and died after staff said they waited four hours for lab results they needed to determine how to treat her, but never received. “If I started having crushing chest pain in the middle of work and thought I was having a big one, I would grab someone to drive me down the street to another hospital,” the same ER nurse said.
Similar concerns reportedly led a travel nurse at an Ascension hospital in Indiana to quit. “I just want to warn those patients that are coming to any of the Ascension facilities that there will be delays in care. There is potential for error and for harm,” Justin Neisser told CBS4 in Indianapolis in May.
Several nurses and doctors at Ascension hospitals said they feared the errors they’ve witnessed since the cyberattack began could threaten their professional licenses. “This is how a RaDonda Vaught happens,” one nurse said, referring to the Tennessee nurse who was convicted of criminally negligent homicide in 2022 for a fatal drug error.
Reporters were not able to review records to verify clinicians’ claims because of privacy laws surrounding patients’ medical information that apply to health care professionals.
Ascension declined to answer questions about claims that care has been affected by the ransomware attack. “As we have made clear throughout this cyber attack which has impacted our system and our dedicated clinical providers, caring for our patients is our highest priority,” Sean Fitzpatrick, Ascension’s vice president of external communications, said via email on June 3. “We are confident that our care providers in our hospitals and facilities continue to provide quality medical care.”
The federal government requires hospitals to protect patients’ sensitive health data, according to cybersecurity experts. However, there are no federal requirements for hospitals to prevent or prepare for cyberattacks that could compromise their electronic systems.
Hospitals: ‘The No.1 Target of Ransomware’
“We’ve started to think about these as public health issues and disasters on the scale of earthquakes or hurricanes,” said Jeff Tully, a co-director of the Center for Healthcare Cybersecurity at the University of California-San Diego. “These types of cybersecurity incidents should be thought of as a matter of when, and not if.”
Josh Corman, a cybersecurity expert and advocate, said ransom crews regard hospitals as the perfect prey: “They have terrible security and they’ll pay. So almost immediately, hospitals went to the No. 1 target of ransomware.”
In 2023, the health sector experienced the largest share of ransomware attacks of 16 infrastructure sectors considered vital to national security or safety, according to an FBI report on internet crimes. In March, the federal Department of Health and Human Services said reported large breaches involving ransomware had jumped by 264% over the past five years.
A cyberattack this year on Change Healthcare, a unit of UnitedHealth Group’s Optum division that processes billions of health care transactions every year, crippled the business of providers, pharmacies, and hospitals.
In May, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty told lawmakers the company paid a $22 million ransom as a result of the Change Healthcare attack — which occurred after hackers accessed a company portal that didn’t have multifactor authentication, a basic cybersecurity tool.
The Biden administration in recent months has pushed to bolster health care cybersecurity standards, but it’s not clear which new measures will be required.
In January, HHS nudged companies to improve email security, add multifactor authentication, and institute cybersecurity training and testing, among other voluntary measures. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is expected to release new requirements for hospitals, but the scope and timing are unclear. The same is true of an update HHS is expected to make to patient privacy regulations.
HHS said the voluntary measures “will inform the creation of new enforceable cybersecurity standards,” department spokesperson Jeff Nesbit said in a statement.
“The recent cyberattack at Ascension only underscores the need for everyone in the health care ecosystem to do their part to secure their systems and protect patients,” Nesbit said.
Meanwhile, lobbyists for the hospital industry contend cybersecurity mandates or penalties are misplaced and would curtail hospitals’ resources to fend off attacks.
“Hospitals and health systems are not the primary source of cyber risk exposure facing the health care sector,” the American Hospital Association, the largest lobbying group for U.S. hospitals, said in an April statement prepared for U.S. House lawmakers. Most large data breaches that hit hospitals in 2023 originated with third-party “business associates” or other health entities, including CMS itself, the AHA statement said.
Hospitals consolidating into large multistate health systems face increased risk of data breaches and ransomware attacks, according to one study. Ascension in 2022 was the third-largest hospital chain in the U.S. by number of beds, according to the most recent data from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
And while cybersecurity regulations can quickly become outdated, they can at least make it clear that if health systems fail to implement basic protections there “should be consequences for that,” Jim Bagian, a former director of the National Center for Patient Safety at the Veterans Health Administration, told Michigan Public’s Stateside.
Patients can pay the price when lapses occur. Those in hospital care face a greater likelihood of death during a cyberattack, according to researchers at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
Workers concerned about patient safety at Ascension hospitals in Michigan have called for the company to make changes.
“We implore Ascension to recognize the internal problems that continue to plague its hospitals, both publicly and transparently,” said Dina Carlisle, a nurse and the president of the OPEIU Local 40 union, which represents nurses at Ascension Providence Rochester. At least 125 staff members at that Ascension hospital have signed a petition asking administrators to temporarily reduce elective surgeries and nonemergency patient admissions, like under the protocols many hospitals adopted early in the covid-19 pandemic.
Watson, the Kansas ICU nurse, said in late May that nurses had urged management to bring in more nurses to help manage the workflow. “Everything that we say has fallen on deaf ears,” she said.
“It is very hard to be a nurse at Ascension right now,” Watson said in late May. “It is very hard to be a patient at Ascension right now.”
If you’re a patient or worker at an Ascension hospital and would like to tell KFF Health News about your experiences, click here to share your story with us.
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.
In the wake of a debilitating cyberattack against one of the nation’s largest health care systems, Marvin Ruckle, a nurse at an Ascension hospital in Wichita, Kansas, said he had a frightening experience: He nearly gave a baby “the wrong dose of narcotic” because of confusing paperwork.
A May 8 ransomware attack against Ascension, a Catholic health system with 140 hospitals in at least 10 states, locked providers out of systems that track and coordinate nearly every aspect of patient care. They include its systems for electronic health records, some phones, and ones “utilized to order certain tests, procedures and medications,” the company said in a May 9 statement.
More than a dozen doctors and nurses who work for the sprawling health system told Michigan Public and KFF Health News that patient care at its hospitals across the nation was compromised in the fallout of the cyberattack over the past several weeks. Clinicians working for hospitals in three states described harrowing lapses, including delayed or lost lab results, medication errors, and an absence of routine safety checks via technology to prevent potentially fatal mistakes.
Despite a precipitous rise in cyberattacks against the health sector in recent years, a weeks-long disruption of this magnitude is beyond what most health systems are prepared for, said John S. Clark, an associate chief pharmacy officer at the University of Michigan health system.
“I don’t believe that anyone is fully prepared,” he said. Most emergency management plans “are designed around long-term downtimes that are into one, two, or three days.”
Ascension in a public statement May 9 said its care teams were “trained for these kinds of disruptions,” but did not respond to questions in early June about whether it had prepared for longer periods of downtime. Ascension said June 14 it had restored access to electronic health records across its network, but that patient “medical records and other information collected between May 8” and when the service was restored “may be temporarily inaccessible as we work to update the portal with information collected during the system downtime.”
Ruckle said he “had no training” for the cyberattack.
Back to Paper
Lisa Watson, an intensive care unit nurse at Ascension Via Christi St. Francis hospital in Wichita, described her own close call. She said she nearly administered the wrong medication to a critically ill patient because she couldn’t scan it as she normally would. “My patient probably would have passed away had I not caught it,” she said.
Watson is no stranger to using paper for patients’ medical charts, saying she did so “for probably half of my career,” before electronic health records became ubiquitous in hospitals. What happened after the cyberattack was “by no means the same.”
“When we paper-charted, we had systems in place to get those orders to other departments in a timely manner,” she said, “and those have all gone away.”
Melissa LaRue, an ICU nurse at Ascension Saint Agnes Hospital in Baltimore, described a close call with “administering the wrong dosage” of a patient’s blood pressure medication. “Luckily,” she said, it was “triple-checked and remedied before that could happen. But I think the potential for harm is there when you have so much information and paperwork that you have to go through.”
Clinicians say their hospitals have relied on slapdash workarounds, using handwritten notes, faxes, sticky notes, and basic computer spreadsheets — many devised on the fly by doctors and nurses — to care for patients.
More than a dozen other nurses and doctors, some of them without union protections, at Ascension hospitals in Michigan recounted situations in which they say patient care was compromised. Those clinicians spoke on the condition that they not be named for fear of retaliation by their employer.
An Ascension hospital emergency room doctor in Detroit said a man on the city’s east side was given a dangerous narcotic intended for another patient because of a paperwork mix-up. As a result, the patient’s breathing slowed to the point that he had to be put on a ventilator. “We intubated him and we sent him to the ICU because he got the wrong medication.”
A nurse in a Michigan Ascension hospital ER said a woman with low blood sugar and “altered mental status” went into cardiac arrest and died after staff said they waited four hours for lab results they needed to determine how to treat her, but never received. “If I started having crushing chest pain in the middle of work and thought I was having a big one, I would grab someone to drive me down the street to another hospital,” the same ER nurse said.
Similar concerns reportedly led a travel nurse at an Ascension hospital in Indiana to quit. “I just want to warn those patients that are coming to any of the Ascension facilities that there will be delays in care. There is potential for error and for harm,” Justin Neisser told CBS4 in Indianapolis in May.
Several nurses and doctors at Ascension hospitals said they feared the errors they’ve witnessed since the cyberattack began could threaten their professional licenses. “This is how a RaDonda Vaught happens,” one nurse said, referring to the Tennessee nurse who was convicted of criminally negligent homicide in 2022 for a fatal drug error.
Reporters were not able to review records to verify clinicians’ claims because of privacy laws surrounding patients’ medical information that apply to health care professionals.
Ascension declined to answer questions about claims that care has been affected by the ransomware attack. “As we have made clear throughout this cyber attack which has impacted our system and our dedicated clinical providers, caring for our patients is our highest priority,” Sean Fitzpatrick, Ascension’s vice president of external communications, said via email on June 3. “We are confident that our care providers in our hospitals and facilities continue to provide quality medical care.”
The federal government requires hospitals to protect patients’ sensitive health data, according to cybersecurity experts. However, there are no federal requirements for hospitals to prevent or prepare for cyberattacks that could compromise their electronic systems.
Hospitals: ‘The No.1 Target of Ransomware’
“We’ve started to think about these as public health issues and disasters on the scale of earthquakes or hurricanes,” said Jeff Tully, a co-director of the Center for Healthcare Cybersecurity at the University of California-San Diego. “These types of cybersecurity incidents should be thought of as a matter of when, and not if.”
Josh Corman, a cybersecurity expert and advocate, said ransom crews regard hospitals as the perfect prey: “They have terrible security and they’ll pay. So almost immediately, hospitals went to the No. 1 target of ransomware.”
In 2023, the health sector experienced the largest share of ransomware attacks of 16 infrastructure sectors considered vital to national security or safety, according to an FBI report on internet crimes. In March, the federal Department of Health and Human Services said reported large breaches involving ransomware had jumped by 264% over the past five years.
A cyberattack this year on Change Healthcare, a unit of UnitedHealth Group’s Optum division that processes billions of health care transactions every year, crippled the business of providers, pharmacies, and hospitals.
In May, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty told lawmakers the company paid a $22 million ransom as a result of the Change Healthcare attack — which occurred after hackers accessed a company portal that didn’t have multifactor authentication, a basic cybersecurity tool.
The Biden administration in recent months has pushed to bolster health care cybersecurity standards, but it’s not clear which new measures will be required.
In January, HHS nudged companies to improve email security, add multifactor authentication, and institute cybersecurity training and testing, among other voluntary measures. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is expected to release new requirements for hospitals, but the scope and timing are unclear. The same is true of an update HHS is expected to make to patient privacy regulations.
HHS said the voluntary measures “will inform the creation of new enforceable cybersecurity standards,” department spokesperson Jeff Nesbit said in a statement.
“The recent cyberattack at Ascension only underscores the need for everyone in the health care ecosystem to do their part to secure their systems and protect patients,” Nesbit said.
Meanwhile, lobbyists for the hospital industry contend cybersecurity mandates or penalties are misplaced and would curtail hospitals’ resources to fend off attacks.
“Hospitals and health systems are not the primary source of cyber risk exposure facing the health care sector,” the American Hospital Association, the largest lobbying group for U.S. hospitals, said in an April statement prepared for U.S. House lawmakers. Most large data breaches that hit hospitals in 2023 originated with third-party “business associates” or other health entities, including CMS itself, the AHA statement said.
Hospitals consolidating into large multistate health systems face increased risk of data breaches and ransomware attacks, according to one study. Ascension in 2022 was the third-largest hospital chain in the U.S. by number of beds, according to the most recent data from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
And while cybersecurity regulations can quickly become outdated, they can at least make it clear that if health systems fail to implement basic protections there “should be consequences for that,” Jim Bagian, a former director of the National Center for Patient Safety at the Veterans Health Administration, told Michigan Public’s Stateside.
Patients can pay the price when lapses occur. Those in hospital care face a greater likelihood of death during a cyberattack, according to researchers at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
Workers concerned about patient safety at Ascension hospitals in Michigan have called for the company to make changes.
“We implore Ascension to recognize the internal problems that continue to plague its hospitals, both publicly and transparently,” said Dina Carlisle, a nurse and the president of the OPEIU Local 40 union, which represents nurses at Ascension Providence Rochester. At least 125 staff members at that Ascension hospital have signed a petition asking administrators to temporarily reduce elective surgeries and nonemergency patient admissions, like under the protocols many hospitals adopted early in the covid-19 pandemic.
Watson, the Kansas ICU nurse, said in late May that nurses had urged management to bring in more nurses to help manage the workflow. “Everything that we say has fallen on deaf ears,” she said.
“It is very hard to be a nurse at Ascension right now,” Watson said in late May. “It is very hard to be a patient at Ascension right now.”
If you’re a patient or worker at an Ascension hospital and would like to tell KFF Health News about your experiences, click here to share your story with us.
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.
In the wake of a debilitating cyberattack against one of the nation’s largest health care systems, Marvin Ruckle, a nurse at an Ascension hospital in Wichita, Kansas, said he had a frightening experience: He nearly gave a baby “the wrong dose of narcotic” because of confusing paperwork.
A May 8 ransomware attack against Ascension, a Catholic health system with 140 hospitals in at least 10 states, locked providers out of systems that track and coordinate nearly every aspect of patient care. They include its systems for electronic health records, some phones, and ones “utilized to order certain tests, procedures and medications,” the company said in a May 9 statement.
More than a dozen doctors and nurses who work for the sprawling health system told Michigan Public and KFF Health News that patient care at its hospitals across the nation was compromised in the fallout of the cyberattack over the past several weeks. Clinicians working for hospitals in three states described harrowing lapses, including delayed or lost lab results, medication errors, and an absence of routine safety checks via technology to prevent potentially fatal mistakes.
Despite a precipitous rise in cyberattacks against the health sector in recent years, a weeks-long disruption of this magnitude is beyond what most health systems are prepared for, said John S. Clark, an associate chief pharmacy officer at the University of Michigan health system.
“I don’t believe that anyone is fully prepared,” he said. Most emergency management plans “are designed around long-term downtimes that are into one, two, or three days.”
Ascension in a public statement May 9 said its care teams were “trained for these kinds of disruptions,” but did not respond to questions in early June about whether it had prepared for longer periods of downtime. Ascension said June 14 it had restored access to electronic health records across its network, but that patient “medical records and other information collected between May 8” and when the service was restored “may be temporarily inaccessible as we work to update the portal with information collected during the system downtime.”
Ruckle said he “had no training” for the cyberattack.
Back to Paper
Lisa Watson, an intensive care unit nurse at Ascension Via Christi St. Francis hospital in Wichita, described her own close call. She said she nearly administered the wrong medication to a critically ill patient because she couldn’t scan it as she normally would. “My patient probably would have passed away had I not caught it,” she said.
Watson is no stranger to using paper for patients’ medical charts, saying she did so “for probably half of my career,” before electronic health records became ubiquitous in hospitals. What happened after the cyberattack was “by no means the same.”
“When we paper-charted, we had systems in place to get those orders to other departments in a timely manner,” she said, “and those have all gone away.”
Melissa LaRue, an ICU nurse at Ascension Saint Agnes Hospital in Baltimore, described a close call with “administering the wrong dosage” of a patient’s blood pressure medication. “Luckily,” she said, it was “triple-checked and remedied before that could happen. But I think the potential for harm is there when you have so much information and paperwork that you have to go through.”
Clinicians say their hospitals have relied on slapdash workarounds, using handwritten notes, faxes, sticky notes, and basic computer spreadsheets — many devised on the fly by doctors and nurses — to care for patients.
More than a dozen other nurses and doctors, some of them without union protections, at Ascension hospitals in Michigan recounted situations in which they say patient care was compromised. Those clinicians spoke on the condition that they not be named for fear of retaliation by their employer.
An Ascension hospital emergency room doctor in Detroit said a man on the city’s east side was given a dangerous narcotic intended for another patient because of a paperwork mix-up. As a result, the patient’s breathing slowed to the point that he had to be put on a ventilator. “We intubated him and we sent him to the ICU because he got the wrong medication.”
A nurse in a Michigan Ascension hospital ER said a woman with low blood sugar and “altered mental status” went into cardiac arrest and died after staff said they waited four hours for lab results they needed to determine how to treat her, but never received. “If I started having crushing chest pain in the middle of work and thought I was having a big one, I would grab someone to drive me down the street to another hospital,” the same ER nurse said.
Similar concerns reportedly led a travel nurse at an Ascension hospital in Indiana to quit. “I just want to warn those patients that are coming to any of the Ascension facilities that there will be delays in care. There is potential for error and for harm,” Justin Neisser told CBS4 in Indianapolis in May.
Several nurses and doctors at Ascension hospitals said they feared the errors they’ve witnessed since the cyberattack began could threaten their professional licenses. “This is how a RaDonda Vaught happens,” one nurse said, referring to the Tennessee nurse who was convicted of criminally negligent homicide in 2022 for a fatal drug error.
Reporters were not able to review records to verify clinicians’ claims because of privacy laws surrounding patients’ medical information that apply to health care professionals.
Ascension declined to answer questions about claims that care has been affected by the ransomware attack. “As we have made clear throughout this cyber attack which has impacted our system and our dedicated clinical providers, caring for our patients is our highest priority,” Sean Fitzpatrick, Ascension’s vice president of external communications, said via email on June 3. “We are confident that our care providers in our hospitals and facilities continue to provide quality medical care.”
The federal government requires hospitals to protect patients’ sensitive health data, according to cybersecurity experts. However, there are no federal requirements for hospitals to prevent or prepare for cyberattacks that could compromise their electronic systems.
Hospitals: ‘The No.1 Target of Ransomware’
“We’ve started to think about these as public health issues and disasters on the scale of earthquakes or hurricanes,” said Jeff Tully, a co-director of the Center for Healthcare Cybersecurity at the University of California-San Diego. “These types of cybersecurity incidents should be thought of as a matter of when, and not if.”
Josh Corman, a cybersecurity expert and advocate, said ransom crews regard hospitals as the perfect prey: “They have terrible security and they’ll pay. So almost immediately, hospitals went to the No. 1 target of ransomware.”
In 2023, the health sector experienced the largest share of ransomware attacks of 16 infrastructure sectors considered vital to national security or safety, according to an FBI report on internet crimes. In March, the federal Department of Health and Human Services said reported large breaches involving ransomware had jumped by 264% over the past five years.
A cyberattack this year on Change Healthcare, a unit of UnitedHealth Group’s Optum division that processes billions of health care transactions every year, crippled the business of providers, pharmacies, and hospitals.
In May, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty told lawmakers the company paid a $22 million ransom as a result of the Change Healthcare attack — which occurred after hackers accessed a company portal that didn’t have multifactor authentication, a basic cybersecurity tool.
The Biden administration in recent months has pushed to bolster health care cybersecurity standards, but it’s not clear which new measures will be required.
In January, HHS nudged companies to improve email security, add multifactor authentication, and institute cybersecurity training and testing, among other voluntary measures. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is expected to release new requirements for hospitals, but the scope and timing are unclear. The same is true of an update HHS is expected to make to patient privacy regulations.
HHS said the voluntary measures “will inform the creation of new enforceable cybersecurity standards,” department spokesperson Jeff Nesbit said in a statement.
“The recent cyberattack at Ascension only underscores the need for everyone in the health care ecosystem to do their part to secure their systems and protect patients,” Nesbit said.
Meanwhile, lobbyists for the hospital industry contend cybersecurity mandates or penalties are misplaced and would curtail hospitals’ resources to fend off attacks.
“Hospitals and health systems are not the primary source of cyber risk exposure facing the health care sector,” the American Hospital Association, the largest lobbying group for U.S. hospitals, said in an April statement prepared for U.S. House lawmakers. Most large data breaches that hit hospitals in 2023 originated with third-party “business associates” or other health entities, including CMS itself, the AHA statement said.
Hospitals consolidating into large multistate health systems face increased risk of data breaches and ransomware attacks, according to one study. Ascension in 2022 was the third-largest hospital chain in the U.S. by number of beds, according to the most recent data from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
And while cybersecurity regulations can quickly become outdated, they can at least make it clear that if health systems fail to implement basic protections there “should be consequences for that,” Jim Bagian, a former director of the National Center for Patient Safety at the Veterans Health Administration, told Michigan Public’s Stateside.
Patients can pay the price when lapses occur. Those in hospital care face a greater likelihood of death during a cyberattack, according to researchers at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
Workers concerned about patient safety at Ascension hospitals in Michigan have called for the company to make changes.
“We implore Ascension to recognize the internal problems that continue to plague its hospitals, both publicly and transparently,” said Dina Carlisle, a nurse and the president of the OPEIU Local 40 union, which represents nurses at Ascension Providence Rochester. At least 125 staff members at that Ascension hospital have signed a petition asking administrators to temporarily reduce elective surgeries and nonemergency patient admissions, like under the protocols many hospitals adopted early in the covid-19 pandemic.
Watson, the Kansas ICU nurse, said in late May that nurses had urged management to bring in more nurses to help manage the workflow. “Everything that we say has fallen on deaf ears,” she said.
“It is very hard to be a nurse at Ascension right now,” Watson said in late May. “It is very hard to be a patient at Ascension right now.”
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New Survey Explores New Daily Persistent Headache
SAN DIEGO —
“There’s just not a lot [of information] about these patients,” Mark Burish, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurology at UT Houston, said in an interview. He presented the results of the survey at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
There have been some retrospective analyses of patient data, but that has a lot of potential for bias. “It’s only the patients who can afford to be there, and who needed those treatments, and so we want to do more of a general survey,” said Dr. Burish.
The results weren’t particularly surprising, and tended to reaffirm what was known anecdotally, including symptoms similar to those of migraine, but it gave some insight into treatments. “Some of the CGRP inhibitors and the onabotulinum toxin seem to be some of the more effective treatments, according to our survey, so those are probably worth looking into for these patients if you can get them approved by insurance, and if you can get patients to accept the idea they might have to give themselves an injection of some sort,” said Dr. Burish.
Despite having some promise, there was variation among CGRP inhibitors. Eptinezumab, rimegepant, and atogepant were commonly reported as effective, but others, such as erenumab and galcanezumab, were less often reported. “None of them were incredibly effective. These were just the best things we have at this time,” said Dr. Burish.
Additional Information on a Rare, Hard-to-Treat Condition
Jason Sico, MD, who moderated the session, was asked for comment. “I’m so appreciative that the team has looked at a new daily persistent headache. It’s a rare type of headache disorder. It’s also one that is notoriously difficult to treat and something that we that we really need to know more about. It is difficult to really get good, robust in-depth information on these patients, and the team did a really nice job with that,” said Dr. Sico, associate professor of neurology and internal medicine at Yale School of Medicine and national director of the Headache Centers of Excellence Program within the Veterans Health Administration.
He noted that the researchers found that opioids were the most commonly used acute treatment. That’s not surprising, but “it would be interesting to see what was tried before someone had gotten to opioids,” he said.
The findings also gave some unexpected insight into the condition. “I really found it striking that an overwhelming majority of patients reported brain fog. Given the context that it is daily persistent headache, one could surmise that they have brain fog a lot of the time,” said Dr. Sico.
‘A Good Data Set’
The researchers analyzed data from 337 international patients who responded to a survey. They also randomly selected 34 patients for an interview, and 32 of those were deemed likely to have NDPH. “So we really spent some effort making sure this was a good data set,” said Dr. Burish. The participant population was 72% female, 83.7% White, and 70.7% were based in the United States, though other countries included Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, Ireland, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland. The mean age was 41.2 years. The peak ages of onset were between 11 and 40 years, though there were a few cases in the 0-5 age range and over 70. Possible triggers that occurred in the 3 months before onset included psychological stressors (34%), infection or inflammation (32%, COVID infection (5%), injury or surgery (8%), or a change in medications (4%). No clear trigger was identified by 22% of respondents.
The survey included information on associated features, and frequently reported issues included brain fog (approximate 75%), sound sensitivity (about 62%), light sensitivity (57%), nausea (39%), smell sensitivity (32%), visual disturbances (28%), vomiting (13%), and chills (9%).
Insights Into Treatment Efficacy
Dr. Burish showed a slide of responses to questions about acute treatments that respondents had tried at least once and viewed as ‘completely effective,’ ‘mostly effective,’ or ‘somewhat effective.’
“No medicine was completely effective, which I think a lot of people know from NDPH. It is notoriously difficult to treat. The things on the top of the list are mostly opioids. There’s one (non-opioid), the DHE (dihydroergotamine) injection. All the way on the other side, you have diphenhydramine. The NSAIDs and triptans are mostly in the middle. We did ask about some of the wearable devices, and we had extra questions about, are you using it appropriately? Those are kind of in the middle or towards the bottom [in frequency],” said Dr. Burish.
There was a similar question regarding effective preventive medications that had been tried for at least 2 months or 3 months in the cause of onabotulinum toxin or CGRP medications. “This one had a little bit more of a pattern to it: A lot of the CGRP medications are up toward the top. It’s not perfect. Erenumab and galcanezumab are closer to the bottom, but it was interesting that a lot of the CGRP medicines were toward the top. Onabotulinum toxin was also somewhat toward the top. We looked at a few different anti-inflammatories. Methylprednisolone is kind of toward the upper half at least, whereas prednisone and montelukast are at the absolute bottom. And the prednisone is a pretty good dose, 50 milligrams or higher. There are some people thinking that this is an inflammation or infectious etiology, (but) it wasn’t that all of the anti-inflammatories were necessarily toward the top of the list,” said Dr. Burish.
Dr. Burish has received funding from Lundbeck. Dr. Sico has no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN DIEGO —
“There’s just not a lot [of information] about these patients,” Mark Burish, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurology at UT Houston, said in an interview. He presented the results of the survey at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
There have been some retrospective analyses of patient data, but that has a lot of potential for bias. “It’s only the patients who can afford to be there, and who needed those treatments, and so we want to do more of a general survey,” said Dr. Burish.
The results weren’t particularly surprising, and tended to reaffirm what was known anecdotally, including symptoms similar to those of migraine, but it gave some insight into treatments. “Some of the CGRP inhibitors and the onabotulinum toxin seem to be some of the more effective treatments, according to our survey, so those are probably worth looking into for these patients if you can get them approved by insurance, and if you can get patients to accept the idea they might have to give themselves an injection of some sort,” said Dr. Burish.
Despite having some promise, there was variation among CGRP inhibitors. Eptinezumab, rimegepant, and atogepant were commonly reported as effective, but others, such as erenumab and galcanezumab, were less often reported. “None of them were incredibly effective. These were just the best things we have at this time,” said Dr. Burish.
Additional Information on a Rare, Hard-to-Treat Condition
Jason Sico, MD, who moderated the session, was asked for comment. “I’m so appreciative that the team has looked at a new daily persistent headache. It’s a rare type of headache disorder. It’s also one that is notoriously difficult to treat and something that we that we really need to know more about. It is difficult to really get good, robust in-depth information on these patients, and the team did a really nice job with that,” said Dr. Sico, associate professor of neurology and internal medicine at Yale School of Medicine and national director of the Headache Centers of Excellence Program within the Veterans Health Administration.
He noted that the researchers found that opioids were the most commonly used acute treatment. That’s not surprising, but “it would be interesting to see what was tried before someone had gotten to opioids,” he said.
The findings also gave some unexpected insight into the condition. “I really found it striking that an overwhelming majority of patients reported brain fog. Given the context that it is daily persistent headache, one could surmise that they have brain fog a lot of the time,” said Dr. Sico.
‘A Good Data Set’
The researchers analyzed data from 337 international patients who responded to a survey. They also randomly selected 34 patients for an interview, and 32 of those were deemed likely to have NDPH. “So we really spent some effort making sure this was a good data set,” said Dr. Burish. The participant population was 72% female, 83.7% White, and 70.7% were based in the United States, though other countries included Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, Ireland, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland. The mean age was 41.2 years. The peak ages of onset were between 11 and 40 years, though there were a few cases in the 0-5 age range and over 70. Possible triggers that occurred in the 3 months before onset included psychological stressors (34%), infection or inflammation (32%, COVID infection (5%), injury or surgery (8%), or a change in medications (4%). No clear trigger was identified by 22% of respondents.
The survey included information on associated features, and frequently reported issues included brain fog (approximate 75%), sound sensitivity (about 62%), light sensitivity (57%), nausea (39%), smell sensitivity (32%), visual disturbances (28%), vomiting (13%), and chills (9%).
Insights Into Treatment Efficacy
Dr. Burish showed a slide of responses to questions about acute treatments that respondents had tried at least once and viewed as ‘completely effective,’ ‘mostly effective,’ or ‘somewhat effective.’
“No medicine was completely effective, which I think a lot of people know from NDPH. It is notoriously difficult to treat. The things on the top of the list are mostly opioids. There’s one (non-opioid), the DHE (dihydroergotamine) injection. All the way on the other side, you have diphenhydramine. The NSAIDs and triptans are mostly in the middle. We did ask about some of the wearable devices, and we had extra questions about, are you using it appropriately? Those are kind of in the middle or towards the bottom [in frequency],” said Dr. Burish.
There was a similar question regarding effective preventive medications that had been tried for at least 2 months or 3 months in the cause of onabotulinum toxin or CGRP medications. “This one had a little bit more of a pattern to it: A lot of the CGRP medications are up toward the top. It’s not perfect. Erenumab and galcanezumab are closer to the bottom, but it was interesting that a lot of the CGRP medicines were toward the top. Onabotulinum toxin was also somewhat toward the top. We looked at a few different anti-inflammatories. Methylprednisolone is kind of toward the upper half at least, whereas prednisone and montelukast are at the absolute bottom. And the prednisone is a pretty good dose, 50 milligrams or higher. There are some people thinking that this is an inflammation or infectious etiology, (but) it wasn’t that all of the anti-inflammatories were necessarily toward the top of the list,” said Dr. Burish.
Dr. Burish has received funding from Lundbeck. Dr. Sico has no relevant financial disclosures.
SAN DIEGO —
“There’s just not a lot [of information] about these patients,” Mark Burish, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurology at UT Houston, said in an interview. He presented the results of the survey at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
There have been some retrospective analyses of patient data, but that has a lot of potential for bias. “It’s only the patients who can afford to be there, and who needed those treatments, and so we want to do more of a general survey,” said Dr. Burish.
The results weren’t particularly surprising, and tended to reaffirm what was known anecdotally, including symptoms similar to those of migraine, but it gave some insight into treatments. “Some of the CGRP inhibitors and the onabotulinum toxin seem to be some of the more effective treatments, according to our survey, so those are probably worth looking into for these patients if you can get them approved by insurance, and if you can get patients to accept the idea they might have to give themselves an injection of some sort,” said Dr. Burish.
Despite having some promise, there was variation among CGRP inhibitors. Eptinezumab, rimegepant, and atogepant were commonly reported as effective, but others, such as erenumab and galcanezumab, were less often reported. “None of them were incredibly effective. These were just the best things we have at this time,” said Dr. Burish.
Additional Information on a Rare, Hard-to-Treat Condition
Jason Sico, MD, who moderated the session, was asked for comment. “I’m so appreciative that the team has looked at a new daily persistent headache. It’s a rare type of headache disorder. It’s also one that is notoriously difficult to treat and something that we that we really need to know more about. It is difficult to really get good, robust in-depth information on these patients, and the team did a really nice job with that,” said Dr. Sico, associate professor of neurology and internal medicine at Yale School of Medicine and national director of the Headache Centers of Excellence Program within the Veterans Health Administration.
He noted that the researchers found that opioids were the most commonly used acute treatment. That’s not surprising, but “it would be interesting to see what was tried before someone had gotten to opioids,” he said.
The findings also gave some unexpected insight into the condition. “I really found it striking that an overwhelming majority of patients reported brain fog. Given the context that it is daily persistent headache, one could surmise that they have brain fog a lot of the time,” said Dr. Sico.
‘A Good Data Set’
The researchers analyzed data from 337 international patients who responded to a survey. They also randomly selected 34 patients for an interview, and 32 of those were deemed likely to have NDPH. “So we really spent some effort making sure this was a good data set,” said Dr. Burish. The participant population was 72% female, 83.7% White, and 70.7% were based in the United States, though other countries included Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, Ireland, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland. The mean age was 41.2 years. The peak ages of onset were between 11 and 40 years, though there were a few cases in the 0-5 age range and over 70. Possible triggers that occurred in the 3 months before onset included psychological stressors (34%), infection or inflammation (32%, COVID infection (5%), injury or surgery (8%), or a change in medications (4%). No clear trigger was identified by 22% of respondents.
The survey included information on associated features, and frequently reported issues included brain fog (approximate 75%), sound sensitivity (about 62%), light sensitivity (57%), nausea (39%), smell sensitivity (32%), visual disturbances (28%), vomiting (13%), and chills (9%).
Insights Into Treatment Efficacy
Dr. Burish showed a slide of responses to questions about acute treatments that respondents had tried at least once and viewed as ‘completely effective,’ ‘mostly effective,’ or ‘somewhat effective.’
“No medicine was completely effective, which I think a lot of people know from NDPH. It is notoriously difficult to treat. The things on the top of the list are mostly opioids. There’s one (non-opioid), the DHE (dihydroergotamine) injection. All the way on the other side, you have diphenhydramine. The NSAIDs and triptans are mostly in the middle. We did ask about some of the wearable devices, and we had extra questions about, are you using it appropriately? Those are kind of in the middle or towards the bottom [in frequency],” said Dr. Burish.
There was a similar question regarding effective preventive medications that had been tried for at least 2 months or 3 months in the cause of onabotulinum toxin or CGRP medications. “This one had a little bit more of a pattern to it: A lot of the CGRP medications are up toward the top. It’s not perfect. Erenumab and galcanezumab are closer to the bottom, but it was interesting that a lot of the CGRP medicines were toward the top. Onabotulinum toxin was also somewhat toward the top. We looked at a few different anti-inflammatories. Methylprednisolone is kind of toward the upper half at least, whereas prednisone and montelukast are at the absolute bottom. And the prednisone is a pretty good dose, 50 milligrams or higher. There are some people thinking that this is an inflammation or infectious etiology, (but) it wasn’t that all of the anti-inflammatories were necessarily toward the top of the list,” said Dr. Burish.
Dr. Burish has received funding from Lundbeck. Dr. Sico has no relevant financial disclosures.
FROM AHS 2024
Should You Offer Medical Credit Cards?
Editor’s note: This is Dr. Eastern’s last “Managing Your Practice” column for Dermatology News. After his first column was published in 1986, Dr. Eastern continued writing his column monthly until the mid-1990s, resuming in 2005. In total, he has written over 300 columns on topics relevant to medical practice, ranging from hiring employees, selling and merging practices, complying with OSHA, and avoiding embezzlement, to electronic health records, burnout, medical assistants, negative online reviews, artificial intelligence in the office, and more. In the future, he will continue to provide commentary on practice issues with an occasional guest editorial.
Medicare reimbursement cuts, increasing overhead and staff salaries, and inflation have made running a profitable private practice increasingly challenging, particularly for rural and smaller offices. Medical credit cards are an increasingly popular choice to fill this gap.
Traditionally, these cards were used to help cover procedures insurance didn’t cover — such as cosmetic procedures — but over the years, they have been expanded to cover other healthcare charges, mostly for patients who are paying out of pocket due to inadequate insurance or other reasons.
Advantages for physicians include immediate payment from the credit card company and reduced billing and collection costs. Patients are also less likely to delay or defer treatment if they can charge the payment and pay it back in installments.
The first step in offering medical credit cards is signing up with one or more third-party card companies. CareCredit is the most common provider in the medical credit card market. Other vendors include Wells Fargo, AccessOne, Alphaeon Credit, and iCare Financial. (As always, I have no financial interest in any product or service mentioned in this column.) A member of your staff signs patients up, and the credit card company checks their credit. If approved, the card company pays you your fee and assumes responsibility for collecting from the patient.
The interest charge on medical credit cards is often deferred for a period of time, typically between 6 and 24 months. If patients pay off the debt within this time, they can avoid paying interest. But, like other credit cards, if they make late payments or have an unpaid balance once the promotional period ends, they may end up with interest and fees totaling 25%-30% or more. It is important to make it very clear to your patients that payments are interest-free only if they are all made on time and within the promotional period.
According to a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau report released earlier this year, deferred interest medical credit cards or loans were used to pay nearly $23 billion in healthcare expenses from 2018 to 2020. Individuals unable to complete payment during the promotional period paid $1 billion in deferred interest payments during that period.
Despite the growing popularity of medical credit cards among physicians, it is worth noting that some consumer groups view them as predatory financial products, marketed toward people in tough financial situations. A coalition of 60 health advocacy groups has urged the Biden Administration to ban deferred interest medical credit cards. So there is that much more reason to choose candidates for medical credit cards carefully, and to make them fully aware of what obligations they are assuming.
Patients who do not think they can pay off the balance within the interest-free time frame should probably be advised to pursue an alternative payment method, such as using a conventional credit card, taking out a personal or home-equity loan, or borrowing from a retirement savings account. Some physicians are willing to negotiate a reduced fee for patients who agree to pay cash at the time of service.
Those who do choose to apply for a medical credit card should be informed of their options, which can vary considerably depending on the product and the third-party vendor. Some medical credit products can be used only for elective procedures, but some can be used more broadly for various medical expenses. Check to make sure that each patient’s financing option can be used for his or her desired medical service.
Some payment products can only be used at specific practices or groups, while others can be used at a variety of medical offices and hospitals. If a patient arrives with a medical credit card already in hand, confirm that it is one that your office accepts.
Interest rates generally vary with each card and vendor. Make patients aware of when interest rates start accruing and if the plan offers a fixed or variable APR, or if it charges compounding interest. Confirm if there is a deferred interest option, and if so, for how long.
Different medical credit products also have varying fees and payment schedules. See that each patient reads the terms of the agreement to understand when interest may start to accrue or change, as well as when certain fees may apply. Understanding when the payments are due will help them avoid additional fees, including late fees. Some medical payment plans may also have administrative or processing fees. If so, patients should be made aware of them.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, New Jersey. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Editor’s note: This is Dr. Eastern’s last “Managing Your Practice” column for Dermatology News. After his first column was published in 1986, Dr. Eastern continued writing his column monthly until the mid-1990s, resuming in 2005. In total, he has written over 300 columns on topics relevant to medical practice, ranging from hiring employees, selling and merging practices, complying with OSHA, and avoiding embezzlement, to electronic health records, burnout, medical assistants, negative online reviews, artificial intelligence in the office, and more. In the future, he will continue to provide commentary on practice issues with an occasional guest editorial.
Medicare reimbursement cuts, increasing overhead and staff salaries, and inflation have made running a profitable private practice increasingly challenging, particularly for rural and smaller offices. Medical credit cards are an increasingly popular choice to fill this gap.
Traditionally, these cards were used to help cover procedures insurance didn’t cover — such as cosmetic procedures — but over the years, they have been expanded to cover other healthcare charges, mostly for patients who are paying out of pocket due to inadequate insurance or other reasons.
Advantages for physicians include immediate payment from the credit card company and reduced billing and collection costs. Patients are also less likely to delay or defer treatment if they can charge the payment and pay it back in installments.
The first step in offering medical credit cards is signing up with one or more third-party card companies. CareCredit is the most common provider in the medical credit card market. Other vendors include Wells Fargo, AccessOne, Alphaeon Credit, and iCare Financial. (As always, I have no financial interest in any product or service mentioned in this column.) A member of your staff signs patients up, and the credit card company checks their credit. If approved, the card company pays you your fee and assumes responsibility for collecting from the patient.
The interest charge on medical credit cards is often deferred for a period of time, typically between 6 and 24 months. If patients pay off the debt within this time, they can avoid paying interest. But, like other credit cards, if they make late payments or have an unpaid balance once the promotional period ends, they may end up with interest and fees totaling 25%-30% or more. It is important to make it very clear to your patients that payments are interest-free only if they are all made on time and within the promotional period.
According to a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau report released earlier this year, deferred interest medical credit cards or loans were used to pay nearly $23 billion in healthcare expenses from 2018 to 2020. Individuals unable to complete payment during the promotional period paid $1 billion in deferred interest payments during that period.
Despite the growing popularity of medical credit cards among physicians, it is worth noting that some consumer groups view them as predatory financial products, marketed toward people in tough financial situations. A coalition of 60 health advocacy groups has urged the Biden Administration to ban deferred interest medical credit cards. So there is that much more reason to choose candidates for medical credit cards carefully, and to make them fully aware of what obligations they are assuming.
Patients who do not think they can pay off the balance within the interest-free time frame should probably be advised to pursue an alternative payment method, such as using a conventional credit card, taking out a personal or home-equity loan, or borrowing from a retirement savings account. Some physicians are willing to negotiate a reduced fee for patients who agree to pay cash at the time of service.
Those who do choose to apply for a medical credit card should be informed of their options, which can vary considerably depending on the product and the third-party vendor. Some medical credit products can be used only for elective procedures, but some can be used more broadly for various medical expenses. Check to make sure that each patient’s financing option can be used for his or her desired medical service.
Some payment products can only be used at specific practices or groups, while others can be used at a variety of medical offices and hospitals. If a patient arrives with a medical credit card already in hand, confirm that it is one that your office accepts.
Interest rates generally vary with each card and vendor. Make patients aware of when interest rates start accruing and if the plan offers a fixed or variable APR, or if it charges compounding interest. Confirm if there is a deferred interest option, and if so, for how long.
Different medical credit products also have varying fees and payment schedules. See that each patient reads the terms of the agreement to understand when interest may start to accrue or change, as well as when certain fees may apply. Understanding when the payments are due will help them avoid additional fees, including late fees. Some medical payment plans may also have administrative or processing fees. If so, patients should be made aware of them.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, New Jersey. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Editor’s note: This is Dr. Eastern’s last “Managing Your Practice” column for Dermatology News. After his first column was published in 1986, Dr. Eastern continued writing his column monthly until the mid-1990s, resuming in 2005. In total, he has written over 300 columns on topics relevant to medical practice, ranging from hiring employees, selling and merging practices, complying with OSHA, and avoiding embezzlement, to electronic health records, burnout, medical assistants, negative online reviews, artificial intelligence in the office, and more. In the future, he will continue to provide commentary on practice issues with an occasional guest editorial.
Medicare reimbursement cuts, increasing overhead and staff salaries, and inflation have made running a profitable private practice increasingly challenging, particularly for rural and smaller offices. Medical credit cards are an increasingly popular choice to fill this gap.
Traditionally, these cards were used to help cover procedures insurance didn’t cover — such as cosmetic procedures — but over the years, they have been expanded to cover other healthcare charges, mostly for patients who are paying out of pocket due to inadequate insurance or other reasons.
Advantages for physicians include immediate payment from the credit card company and reduced billing and collection costs. Patients are also less likely to delay or defer treatment if they can charge the payment and pay it back in installments.
The first step in offering medical credit cards is signing up with one or more third-party card companies. CareCredit is the most common provider in the medical credit card market. Other vendors include Wells Fargo, AccessOne, Alphaeon Credit, and iCare Financial. (As always, I have no financial interest in any product or service mentioned in this column.) A member of your staff signs patients up, and the credit card company checks their credit. If approved, the card company pays you your fee and assumes responsibility for collecting from the patient.
The interest charge on medical credit cards is often deferred for a period of time, typically between 6 and 24 months. If patients pay off the debt within this time, they can avoid paying interest. But, like other credit cards, if they make late payments or have an unpaid balance once the promotional period ends, they may end up with interest and fees totaling 25%-30% or more. It is important to make it very clear to your patients that payments are interest-free only if they are all made on time and within the promotional period.
According to a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau report released earlier this year, deferred interest medical credit cards or loans were used to pay nearly $23 billion in healthcare expenses from 2018 to 2020. Individuals unable to complete payment during the promotional period paid $1 billion in deferred interest payments during that period.
Despite the growing popularity of medical credit cards among physicians, it is worth noting that some consumer groups view them as predatory financial products, marketed toward people in tough financial situations. A coalition of 60 health advocacy groups has urged the Biden Administration to ban deferred interest medical credit cards. So there is that much more reason to choose candidates for medical credit cards carefully, and to make them fully aware of what obligations they are assuming.
Patients who do not think they can pay off the balance within the interest-free time frame should probably be advised to pursue an alternative payment method, such as using a conventional credit card, taking out a personal or home-equity loan, or borrowing from a retirement savings account. Some physicians are willing to negotiate a reduced fee for patients who agree to pay cash at the time of service.
Those who do choose to apply for a medical credit card should be informed of their options, which can vary considerably depending on the product and the third-party vendor. Some medical credit products can be used only for elective procedures, but some can be used more broadly for various medical expenses. Check to make sure that each patient’s financing option can be used for his or her desired medical service.
Some payment products can only be used at specific practices or groups, while others can be used at a variety of medical offices and hospitals. If a patient arrives with a medical credit card already in hand, confirm that it is one that your office accepts.
Interest rates generally vary with each card and vendor. Make patients aware of when interest rates start accruing and if the plan offers a fixed or variable APR, or if it charges compounding interest. Confirm if there is a deferred interest option, and if so, for how long.
Different medical credit products also have varying fees and payment schedules. See that each patient reads the terms of the agreement to understand when interest may start to accrue or change, as well as when certain fees may apply. Understanding when the payments are due will help them avoid additional fees, including late fees. Some medical payment plans may also have administrative or processing fees. If so, patients should be made aware of them.
Dr. Eastern practices dermatology and dermatologic surgery in Belleville, New Jersey. He is the author of numerous articles and textbook chapters, and is a longtime monthly columnist for Dermatology News. Write to him at [email protected].
Shift Needed in Research, Treatment, Care for Aging MS Population
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE — a phenomenon that’s driving a shift in priorities including the creation of MS aging centers and a push for more clinical trials aimed at this growing patient population.
Given typical patterns of MS onset and its rate of progression, disease duration has long been thought to be the key variable driving disability, but Jennifer Graves, MD, PhD, director of the neuroimmunology research program at the University of California, San Diego, said she now believes that “patient age is actually more important.”
Speaking at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC), Dr. Graves noted that it is well known that key MS symptoms increase over time, particularly during the transition from a relapsing to a progressive phenotype.
However, she maintains that, independent of disease progression, the impact of aging on MS has been underappreciated. She cited research showing that, relative to chronological age, biologic age is more robustly correlated with MS outcomes.
In studies evaluating variables such as telomere length, various markers of senescence, and DNA methylation patterns, Dr. Graves and others have shown that biologic versus chronological aging is more rapid in patients with MS than those without the disease. In addition, within the population with MS, there are also data supporting the premise that disease progression is slower in those with a younger versus older biologic age.
“This raises the question of whether biologic age is a driver of MS and whether we can slow the disease trajectory if we slow [biologic] aging,” Dr. Graves said. While she acknowledged that genetics play an important role in the aging process, she pointed to evidence showing exposure to toxins and other biological stressors, as well as poor lifestyle choices, such as lack of exercise and smoking, are modifiable aging variables.
There are already many avenues of research regarding aging processes and their interaction with MS. Dr. Graves spoke briefly about current research into the relationship between declining ovarian function, declining telomere length, and how this might relate to the transition to progressive MS and advancing disability. To date, her research has revealed a correlation between declining ovarian function and increasing MS disability.
Shifting Priorities
The rapid aging of the population with MS in the United States makes research into slowing biologic aging a priority, said Robert Motl, PhD, professor in the department of physical therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham Multiple Sclerosis Center. He reported he was able to secure funding from the National MS Society for the Healthy Aging through LifesTyle MS Research Center 10 years ago.
“We are the first and, so far, the only research center devoted to the study of aging in MS,” said Dr. Motl, another participant in the CMSC aging symposium. Dr. Motl said he and a colleague have been evaluating specific strategies to meet the varied needs of aging patients with MS with a key focus on physical therapy and preserving function.
Yinan Zhang, MD, an assistant professor of neurology at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, recently started a multidisciplinary clinic for the management of older patients with MS and said he hopes these types of clinics will help shed light on the unmet needs of older adults with MS — particularly the need for better therapies to address common types of neurodegeneration in this population.
“We need to move away from immunomodulatory agents [in older patients],” Dr. Zhang said. Older patients are typically excluded from therapeutic MS trials for a number of reasons, not least because trials have been traditionally targeted at relapsing disease, which is less common in older patients with MS. He believes older patients are particularly appropriate candidates for MS therapy trials aimed at progressive neurodegeneration, which is characteristic of late-stage disease. Therapies with the potential to slow, or even reverse, demyelination are among the novel strategies being pursued in progressive MS.
Multidisciplinary Approach
Dr. Zhang acknowledged that his recently established MS clinic is still in the early phases and is largely focused on comprehensive care designed to meet the diverse needs of older individuals who often have advanced disabilities and comorbidities.
Currently, each patient that attends the clinic consults with six different types of providers, including a psychologist, a pharmacist, and a physical therapist — all in a single appointment.
Dr. Zhang said his decision to open a clinic was motivated by the increased volume of older patients with MS and was inspired by similar clinics for other disease states in older individuals.
“The need is already strong and growing,” said Dr. Zhang, who speculated that these types of clinics will become widespread as the need for this care is more broadly recognized and accepted.
As the clinic evolves and matures, Dr. Zhang anticipates there will be a research component to better characterize cell senescence and aging processes that might eventually be modifiable or even reversible. He also speculated that aging in MS might eventually become a subspecialty.
Dr. Graves reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics. Dr. Zhang reported no potential conflicts of interest. Dr. Motl reported financial relationships with Bristol-Myers Squibb.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE — a phenomenon that’s driving a shift in priorities including the creation of MS aging centers and a push for more clinical trials aimed at this growing patient population.
Given typical patterns of MS onset and its rate of progression, disease duration has long been thought to be the key variable driving disability, but Jennifer Graves, MD, PhD, director of the neuroimmunology research program at the University of California, San Diego, said she now believes that “patient age is actually more important.”
Speaking at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC), Dr. Graves noted that it is well known that key MS symptoms increase over time, particularly during the transition from a relapsing to a progressive phenotype.
However, she maintains that, independent of disease progression, the impact of aging on MS has been underappreciated. She cited research showing that, relative to chronological age, biologic age is more robustly correlated with MS outcomes.
In studies evaluating variables such as telomere length, various markers of senescence, and DNA methylation patterns, Dr. Graves and others have shown that biologic versus chronological aging is more rapid in patients with MS than those without the disease. In addition, within the population with MS, there are also data supporting the premise that disease progression is slower in those with a younger versus older biologic age.
“This raises the question of whether biologic age is a driver of MS and whether we can slow the disease trajectory if we slow [biologic] aging,” Dr. Graves said. While she acknowledged that genetics play an important role in the aging process, she pointed to evidence showing exposure to toxins and other biological stressors, as well as poor lifestyle choices, such as lack of exercise and smoking, are modifiable aging variables.
There are already many avenues of research regarding aging processes and their interaction with MS. Dr. Graves spoke briefly about current research into the relationship between declining ovarian function, declining telomere length, and how this might relate to the transition to progressive MS and advancing disability. To date, her research has revealed a correlation between declining ovarian function and increasing MS disability.
Shifting Priorities
The rapid aging of the population with MS in the United States makes research into slowing biologic aging a priority, said Robert Motl, PhD, professor in the department of physical therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham Multiple Sclerosis Center. He reported he was able to secure funding from the National MS Society for the Healthy Aging through LifesTyle MS Research Center 10 years ago.
“We are the first and, so far, the only research center devoted to the study of aging in MS,” said Dr. Motl, another participant in the CMSC aging symposium. Dr. Motl said he and a colleague have been evaluating specific strategies to meet the varied needs of aging patients with MS with a key focus on physical therapy and preserving function.
Yinan Zhang, MD, an assistant professor of neurology at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, recently started a multidisciplinary clinic for the management of older patients with MS and said he hopes these types of clinics will help shed light on the unmet needs of older adults with MS — particularly the need for better therapies to address common types of neurodegeneration in this population.
“We need to move away from immunomodulatory agents [in older patients],” Dr. Zhang said. Older patients are typically excluded from therapeutic MS trials for a number of reasons, not least because trials have been traditionally targeted at relapsing disease, which is less common in older patients with MS. He believes older patients are particularly appropriate candidates for MS therapy trials aimed at progressive neurodegeneration, which is characteristic of late-stage disease. Therapies with the potential to slow, or even reverse, demyelination are among the novel strategies being pursued in progressive MS.
Multidisciplinary Approach
Dr. Zhang acknowledged that his recently established MS clinic is still in the early phases and is largely focused on comprehensive care designed to meet the diverse needs of older individuals who often have advanced disabilities and comorbidities.
Currently, each patient that attends the clinic consults with six different types of providers, including a psychologist, a pharmacist, and a physical therapist — all in a single appointment.
Dr. Zhang said his decision to open a clinic was motivated by the increased volume of older patients with MS and was inspired by similar clinics for other disease states in older individuals.
“The need is already strong and growing,” said Dr. Zhang, who speculated that these types of clinics will become widespread as the need for this care is more broadly recognized and accepted.
As the clinic evolves and matures, Dr. Zhang anticipates there will be a research component to better characterize cell senescence and aging processes that might eventually be modifiable or even reversible. He also speculated that aging in MS might eventually become a subspecialty.
Dr. Graves reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics. Dr. Zhang reported no potential conflicts of interest. Dr. Motl reported financial relationships with Bristol-Myers Squibb.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE — a phenomenon that’s driving a shift in priorities including the creation of MS aging centers and a push for more clinical trials aimed at this growing patient population.
Given typical patterns of MS onset and its rate of progression, disease duration has long been thought to be the key variable driving disability, but Jennifer Graves, MD, PhD, director of the neuroimmunology research program at the University of California, San Diego, said she now believes that “patient age is actually more important.”
Speaking at the annual meeting of the Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers (CMSC), Dr. Graves noted that it is well known that key MS symptoms increase over time, particularly during the transition from a relapsing to a progressive phenotype.
However, she maintains that, independent of disease progression, the impact of aging on MS has been underappreciated. She cited research showing that, relative to chronological age, biologic age is more robustly correlated with MS outcomes.
In studies evaluating variables such as telomere length, various markers of senescence, and DNA methylation patterns, Dr. Graves and others have shown that biologic versus chronological aging is more rapid in patients with MS than those without the disease. In addition, within the population with MS, there are also data supporting the premise that disease progression is slower in those with a younger versus older biologic age.
“This raises the question of whether biologic age is a driver of MS and whether we can slow the disease trajectory if we slow [biologic] aging,” Dr. Graves said. While she acknowledged that genetics play an important role in the aging process, she pointed to evidence showing exposure to toxins and other biological stressors, as well as poor lifestyle choices, such as lack of exercise and smoking, are modifiable aging variables.
There are already many avenues of research regarding aging processes and their interaction with MS. Dr. Graves spoke briefly about current research into the relationship between declining ovarian function, declining telomere length, and how this might relate to the transition to progressive MS and advancing disability. To date, her research has revealed a correlation between declining ovarian function and increasing MS disability.
Shifting Priorities
The rapid aging of the population with MS in the United States makes research into slowing biologic aging a priority, said Robert Motl, PhD, professor in the department of physical therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham Multiple Sclerosis Center. He reported he was able to secure funding from the National MS Society for the Healthy Aging through LifesTyle MS Research Center 10 years ago.
“We are the first and, so far, the only research center devoted to the study of aging in MS,” said Dr. Motl, another participant in the CMSC aging symposium. Dr. Motl said he and a colleague have been evaluating specific strategies to meet the varied needs of aging patients with MS with a key focus on physical therapy and preserving function.
Yinan Zhang, MD, an assistant professor of neurology at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center in Columbus, recently started a multidisciplinary clinic for the management of older patients with MS and said he hopes these types of clinics will help shed light on the unmet needs of older adults with MS — particularly the need for better therapies to address common types of neurodegeneration in this population.
“We need to move away from immunomodulatory agents [in older patients],” Dr. Zhang said. Older patients are typically excluded from therapeutic MS trials for a number of reasons, not least because trials have been traditionally targeted at relapsing disease, which is less common in older patients with MS. He believes older patients are particularly appropriate candidates for MS therapy trials aimed at progressive neurodegeneration, which is characteristic of late-stage disease. Therapies with the potential to slow, or even reverse, demyelination are among the novel strategies being pursued in progressive MS.
Multidisciplinary Approach
Dr. Zhang acknowledged that his recently established MS clinic is still in the early phases and is largely focused on comprehensive care designed to meet the diverse needs of older individuals who often have advanced disabilities and comorbidities.
Currently, each patient that attends the clinic consults with six different types of providers, including a psychologist, a pharmacist, and a physical therapist — all in a single appointment.
Dr. Zhang said his decision to open a clinic was motivated by the increased volume of older patients with MS and was inspired by similar clinics for other disease states in older individuals.
“The need is already strong and growing,” said Dr. Zhang, who speculated that these types of clinics will become widespread as the need for this care is more broadly recognized and accepted.
As the clinic evolves and matures, Dr. Zhang anticipates there will be a research component to better characterize cell senescence and aging processes that might eventually be modifiable or even reversible. He also speculated that aging in MS might eventually become a subspecialty.
Dr. Graves reported financial relationships with Horizon Therapeutics. Dr. Zhang reported no potential conflicts of interest. Dr. Motl reported financial relationships with Bristol-Myers Squibb.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM CMSC 2024
A New Psychotherapeutic ‘Gold Standard’ for Chronic Pain?
, the current psychotherapeutic gold standard, a new study suggested.
Two thirds of the patients who received EAET reported at least a 30% reduction in pain compared with 17% of those who received CBT. The randomized clinical trial also showed that individuals with depression and anxiety responded more favorably to EAET, a novel finding.
The study is one of only a few to directly compare EAET with CBT.
“Most people with chronic pain don’t consider psychotherapy at all,” said study investigator Brandon C. Yarns, MD, a staff psychiatrist at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, and clinical professor of health sciences at the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, UCLA Health.
Although patients were allowed to continue medication for pain and other comorbidities during the study, those who received EAET “had larger improvements in pain, depression, and anxiety,” Dr. Yarns said. “That suggests that the effect was due to the EAET.”
The findings were published online in JAMA Network Open.
‘Gold Standard’
EAET was first used in the early 2010s. In the therapy, patients are asked to recall a difficult or traumatic memory, engage in experiencing how the related emotions feel in the body, express those feelings in words, and release or let them go. They are taught that the brain’s perception of pain is strongly influenced by the evasion of grief, fear, rage, or guilt, Dr. Yarns said.
This contrasts with CBT — considered the current gold standard for chronic pain — which teaches patients to improve the ability to tolerate pain though guided imagery, muscle relaxation, and other exercises and to adapt their thinking to change how they think about pain.
Although prior studies suggested EAET is effective in reducing pain in fibromyalgia and chronic musculoskeletal, pelvic, and head pain, most included primarily younger, female patients.
The research is the “first full-scale evaluation of EAET, to our knowledge, in a medically or psychiatrically complex, racially and ethnically diverse, older sample comprising predominantly men,” investigators wrote.
The trial enrolled 126 veterans (92% men; 55% Black or African American) aged 60-95 years with at least 3 months of musculoskeletal pain. More than two thirds of patients had a psychiatric diagnosis, with about one third having posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Almost all had back pain, and many had pain in multiple locations.
All services were delivered in-person at the US Department of Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles. Half underwent CBT, while the other half received EAET.
Each patient had one 90-minute individual session and eight additional 90-minute group sessions.
Patients were asked to rate their pain using a 0-10 scale in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) before starting treatment, at the end of the nine sessions (at week 10), and 6 months after the sessions ended. Baseline BPI score for both groups was a mean of around 6.
Post treatment, people in the EAET versus CBT group had a mean two-point reduction versus 0.60 reduction, respectively, on the BPI scale. A clinically significant reduction in pain — defined as ≥ 30% decrease — was reported in 63% of EAET patients versus 17% of CBT patients (odds ratio [OR], 21.54; P < .001).
At 6 months, the mean reduction was 1.2 for the EAET group compared with 0.25 for the CBT group, and 40% of the EAET group reported a clinically significant reduction in pain.
A little more than a third (35%) of veterans receiving EAET reported at least a 50% reduction in pain at 10 weeks compared with 7% of those receiving CBT. At 6 months, 16% of the EAET arm reported a halving of their pain.
EAET was also superior to CBT in reducing anxiety, depression, and PTSD symptoms at the 10-week mark.
More Work Needed
In an accompanying editorial, Matthias Karst, MD, PhD, a clinician with the Pain Clinic, Hannover Medical School, in Hannover, Germany, noted that EAET’s effects “are significantly superior to those of CBT in almost all dimensions, even after 6 months.”
EAET “assigns a special place to the integration of the body into the emotional experience,” he wrote.
The study demonstrated that “the evocation and expression of emotions is superior to the mere cognitive discussion of these emotions in therapy of patients with chronic pain.”
Commenting on the findings, Traci J. Speed, MD, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and an attending psychiatrist of the Johns Hopkins Pain Treatment Program at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, called the study “ground-breaking” because it showed effectiveness in people with high rates of PTSD, anxiety, and depression.
“It is a little bit surprising how impressive the study outcomes are in terms of maintaining the effects at the end of the treatment and sustaining some of the effects on pain sensitivity even at the 6-month follow-up,” said Dr. Speed, who was not part of the study.
However, she continued, “I don’t think it changes the current standard of practice yet. CBT has decades of research and evidence that it is effective for chronic pain and that will I think continue to be the standard of care.”
Although EAET is in its infancy, chronic pain experts are interested in learning more about the therapy, Dr. Speed added.
“It blends well with the current techniques and extends the current gold standard treatment approaches,” she said. “We are starting to really appreciate the role that emotions play in pain sensitivity.”
Both Dr. Karst and Dr. Speed noted that more study is needed to determine the sustainability of treatment effects.
Dr. Yarns agreed. “We need more research on what the appropriate dose is and perhaps how one might go about personalizing that for the patient,” he said.
The study was funded by a career development award to Dr. Yarns from the VA Clinical Science Research and Development Service. Dr. Yarns reported receiving grants from the US Department of Veterans Affairs during the study. Other authors’ disclosures are in the original article. Dr. Speed reported no conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, the current psychotherapeutic gold standard, a new study suggested.
Two thirds of the patients who received EAET reported at least a 30% reduction in pain compared with 17% of those who received CBT. The randomized clinical trial also showed that individuals with depression and anxiety responded more favorably to EAET, a novel finding.
The study is one of only a few to directly compare EAET with CBT.
“Most people with chronic pain don’t consider psychotherapy at all,” said study investigator Brandon C. Yarns, MD, a staff psychiatrist at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, and clinical professor of health sciences at the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, UCLA Health.
Although patients were allowed to continue medication for pain and other comorbidities during the study, those who received EAET “had larger improvements in pain, depression, and anxiety,” Dr. Yarns said. “That suggests that the effect was due to the EAET.”
The findings were published online in JAMA Network Open.
‘Gold Standard’
EAET was first used in the early 2010s. In the therapy, patients are asked to recall a difficult or traumatic memory, engage in experiencing how the related emotions feel in the body, express those feelings in words, and release or let them go. They are taught that the brain’s perception of pain is strongly influenced by the evasion of grief, fear, rage, or guilt, Dr. Yarns said.
This contrasts with CBT — considered the current gold standard for chronic pain — which teaches patients to improve the ability to tolerate pain though guided imagery, muscle relaxation, and other exercises and to adapt their thinking to change how they think about pain.
Although prior studies suggested EAET is effective in reducing pain in fibromyalgia and chronic musculoskeletal, pelvic, and head pain, most included primarily younger, female patients.
The research is the “first full-scale evaluation of EAET, to our knowledge, in a medically or psychiatrically complex, racially and ethnically diverse, older sample comprising predominantly men,” investigators wrote.
The trial enrolled 126 veterans (92% men; 55% Black or African American) aged 60-95 years with at least 3 months of musculoskeletal pain. More than two thirds of patients had a psychiatric diagnosis, with about one third having posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Almost all had back pain, and many had pain in multiple locations.
All services were delivered in-person at the US Department of Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles. Half underwent CBT, while the other half received EAET.
Each patient had one 90-minute individual session and eight additional 90-minute group sessions.
Patients were asked to rate their pain using a 0-10 scale in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) before starting treatment, at the end of the nine sessions (at week 10), and 6 months after the sessions ended. Baseline BPI score for both groups was a mean of around 6.
Post treatment, people in the EAET versus CBT group had a mean two-point reduction versus 0.60 reduction, respectively, on the BPI scale. A clinically significant reduction in pain — defined as ≥ 30% decrease — was reported in 63% of EAET patients versus 17% of CBT patients (odds ratio [OR], 21.54; P < .001).
At 6 months, the mean reduction was 1.2 for the EAET group compared with 0.25 for the CBT group, and 40% of the EAET group reported a clinically significant reduction in pain.
A little more than a third (35%) of veterans receiving EAET reported at least a 50% reduction in pain at 10 weeks compared with 7% of those receiving CBT. At 6 months, 16% of the EAET arm reported a halving of their pain.
EAET was also superior to CBT in reducing anxiety, depression, and PTSD symptoms at the 10-week mark.
More Work Needed
In an accompanying editorial, Matthias Karst, MD, PhD, a clinician with the Pain Clinic, Hannover Medical School, in Hannover, Germany, noted that EAET’s effects “are significantly superior to those of CBT in almost all dimensions, even after 6 months.”
EAET “assigns a special place to the integration of the body into the emotional experience,” he wrote.
The study demonstrated that “the evocation and expression of emotions is superior to the mere cognitive discussion of these emotions in therapy of patients with chronic pain.”
Commenting on the findings, Traci J. Speed, MD, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and an attending psychiatrist of the Johns Hopkins Pain Treatment Program at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, called the study “ground-breaking” because it showed effectiveness in people with high rates of PTSD, anxiety, and depression.
“It is a little bit surprising how impressive the study outcomes are in terms of maintaining the effects at the end of the treatment and sustaining some of the effects on pain sensitivity even at the 6-month follow-up,” said Dr. Speed, who was not part of the study.
However, she continued, “I don’t think it changes the current standard of practice yet. CBT has decades of research and evidence that it is effective for chronic pain and that will I think continue to be the standard of care.”
Although EAET is in its infancy, chronic pain experts are interested in learning more about the therapy, Dr. Speed added.
“It blends well with the current techniques and extends the current gold standard treatment approaches,” she said. “We are starting to really appreciate the role that emotions play in pain sensitivity.”
Both Dr. Karst and Dr. Speed noted that more study is needed to determine the sustainability of treatment effects.
Dr. Yarns agreed. “We need more research on what the appropriate dose is and perhaps how one might go about personalizing that for the patient,” he said.
The study was funded by a career development award to Dr. Yarns from the VA Clinical Science Research and Development Service. Dr. Yarns reported receiving grants from the US Department of Veterans Affairs during the study. Other authors’ disclosures are in the original article. Dr. Speed reported no conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, the current psychotherapeutic gold standard, a new study suggested.
Two thirds of the patients who received EAET reported at least a 30% reduction in pain compared with 17% of those who received CBT. The randomized clinical trial also showed that individuals with depression and anxiety responded more favorably to EAET, a novel finding.
The study is one of only a few to directly compare EAET with CBT.
“Most people with chronic pain don’t consider psychotherapy at all,” said study investigator Brandon C. Yarns, MD, a staff psychiatrist at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, and clinical professor of health sciences at the Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, UCLA Health.
Although patients were allowed to continue medication for pain and other comorbidities during the study, those who received EAET “had larger improvements in pain, depression, and anxiety,” Dr. Yarns said. “That suggests that the effect was due to the EAET.”
The findings were published online in JAMA Network Open.
‘Gold Standard’
EAET was first used in the early 2010s. In the therapy, patients are asked to recall a difficult or traumatic memory, engage in experiencing how the related emotions feel in the body, express those feelings in words, and release or let them go. They are taught that the brain’s perception of pain is strongly influenced by the evasion of grief, fear, rage, or guilt, Dr. Yarns said.
This contrasts with CBT — considered the current gold standard for chronic pain — which teaches patients to improve the ability to tolerate pain though guided imagery, muscle relaxation, and other exercises and to adapt their thinking to change how they think about pain.
Although prior studies suggested EAET is effective in reducing pain in fibromyalgia and chronic musculoskeletal, pelvic, and head pain, most included primarily younger, female patients.
The research is the “first full-scale evaluation of EAET, to our knowledge, in a medically or psychiatrically complex, racially and ethnically diverse, older sample comprising predominantly men,” investigators wrote.
The trial enrolled 126 veterans (92% men; 55% Black or African American) aged 60-95 years with at least 3 months of musculoskeletal pain. More than two thirds of patients had a psychiatric diagnosis, with about one third having posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Almost all had back pain, and many had pain in multiple locations.
All services were delivered in-person at the US Department of Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles. Half underwent CBT, while the other half received EAET.
Each patient had one 90-minute individual session and eight additional 90-minute group sessions.
Patients were asked to rate their pain using a 0-10 scale in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) before starting treatment, at the end of the nine sessions (at week 10), and 6 months after the sessions ended. Baseline BPI score for both groups was a mean of around 6.
Post treatment, people in the EAET versus CBT group had a mean two-point reduction versus 0.60 reduction, respectively, on the BPI scale. A clinically significant reduction in pain — defined as ≥ 30% decrease — was reported in 63% of EAET patients versus 17% of CBT patients (odds ratio [OR], 21.54; P < .001).
At 6 months, the mean reduction was 1.2 for the EAET group compared with 0.25 for the CBT group, and 40% of the EAET group reported a clinically significant reduction in pain.
A little more than a third (35%) of veterans receiving EAET reported at least a 50% reduction in pain at 10 weeks compared with 7% of those receiving CBT. At 6 months, 16% of the EAET arm reported a halving of their pain.
EAET was also superior to CBT in reducing anxiety, depression, and PTSD symptoms at the 10-week mark.
More Work Needed
In an accompanying editorial, Matthias Karst, MD, PhD, a clinician with the Pain Clinic, Hannover Medical School, in Hannover, Germany, noted that EAET’s effects “are significantly superior to those of CBT in almost all dimensions, even after 6 months.”
EAET “assigns a special place to the integration of the body into the emotional experience,” he wrote.
The study demonstrated that “the evocation and expression of emotions is superior to the mere cognitive discussion of these emotions in therapy of patients with chronic pain.”
Commenting on the findings, Traci J. Speed, MD, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and an attending psychiatrist of the Johns Hopkins Pain Treatment Program at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, called the study “ground-breaking” because it showed effectiveness in people with high rates of PTSD, anxiety, and depression.
“It is a little bit surprising how impressive the study outcomes are in terms of maintaining the effects at the end of the treatment and sustaining some of the effects on pain sensitivity even at the 6-month follow-up,” said Dr. Speed, who was not part of the study.
However, she continued, “I don’t think it changes the current standard of practice yet. CBT has decades of research and evidence that it is effective for chronic pain and that will I think continue to be the standard of care.”
Although EAET is in its infancy, chronic pain experts are interested in learning more about the therapy, Dr. Speed added.
“It blends well with the current techniques and extends the current gold standard treatment approaches,” she said. “We are starting to really appreciate the role that emotions play in pain sensitivity.”
Both Dr. Karst and Dr. Speed noted that more study is needed to determine the sustainability of treatment effects.
Dr. Yarns agreed. “We need more research on what the appropriate dose is and perhaps how one might go about personalizing that for the patient,” he said.
The study was funded by a career development award to Dr. Yarns from the VA Clinical Science Research and Development Service. Dr. Yarns reported receiving grants from the US Department of Veterans Affairs during the study. Other authors’ disclosures are in the original article. Dr. Speed reported no conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Why Don’t Migraine Patients Seek Treatment?
SAN DIEGO — results of a recent survey showed.
Participants cited concerns that their complaints would be dismissed, a belief that healthcare providers could offer no additional help, and a prior unsuccessful clinician visit as reasons for not seeking care. Survey respondents saw an average of four clinicians before finally receiving a diagnosis.
“I was shocked that a third of patients were reluctant to seek care,” said study investigator Elizabeth K. Seng, PhD, associate professor, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University, and research associate professor, department of neurology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, both in New York City. “That just shows a much higher level of medical distress than I expected from this community of people who are obviously suffering from this significant neurologic disease.”
The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
‘Significant Disease’
The study included 500 adults with migraine (mean age, 40 years) who signed up for a patient support group sponsored by Eli Lilly and completed a comprehensive survey. Respondents were mostly female, White, non-Hispanic, and well-educated individuals.
Half of participants had episodic migraines, and half had chronic migraines; 46% reported experiencing anxiety and 33% reported depression.
Almost all respondents had initiated treatment with a first calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) monoclonal antibody.
“These are people who have significant enough disease that eventually they needed our top-tier preventive medication,” Dr. Seng said.
Participants answered a variety of questions pertaining to disease factors and treatment seeking. Just over 70% said they suspected they had migraine prior to diagnosis, “which means for almost 30%, it was a surprise when they received the diagnosis,” said Dr. Seng.
Nearly 40% reported that a relative first suggested they may have migraine, and 33% suspected it themselves. Only 17.4% said a healthcare provider suggested they may have the condition.
Almost a third of respondents (30.5%) reported they were reluctant to seek medical help.
“Some said they didn’t think their physician could do anything more than they were already doing for themselves, or that they’d be taken seriously, or they had had talked to doctors before and this wasn’t helpful,” said Dr. Seng.
These responses speak to the need for better public health messaging, she said. “People have this idea that migraine attacks aren’t a big deal when, in fact, these attacks area big deal and certainly deserve treatment.”
Family and friends were participants’ most common source of information on migraine, followed by the Internet. “This highlights the importance of getting migraine-related information out there so that when people talk to their friends and family, they’re receiving accurate information,” said Dr. Seng.
When asked about the path to a diagnosis, respondents reported consulting an average of four providers before receiving an accurate diagnosis. “That’s pretty remarkable,” Dr. Seng said.
An increase in frequency or severity of migraine attacks or attacks that interfered with work or school “pushed people over the threshold to seek care,” Dr. Seng said.
A subset of patients was asked about the factors they believed could help with migraine attacks. Of these, 80% cited diet and 70% stress reduction. Supplements, exercise, and relaxation techniques were cited much less frequently, said Dr. Seng.
The mean age of respondents’ migraine diagnosis was 26 years, so there was about 18 years from the time of diagnosis to participation in the survey, which could introduce recall bias. Other potential limitations included the fact that the survey had no open-ended questions, and men and ethnic minorities were underrepresented.
Useful Data
Commenting on the study findings, Nina Riggins, MD, PhD, president, Brain Performance Center and Research Institute, and director of the Headache Center at The Neuron Clinic, San Diego, California, said the survey findings are “very useful” and highlight “significant opportunities for improvement in migraine education for clinicians and people living with migraine disease.”
The fact that participants reported consulting an average of four healthcare providers before receiving an accurate diagnosis underscores the importance of providing clinicians with tools to identify migraine, she said.
This is especially relevant as new migraine therapies that may improve efficacy and have fewer side effects become available, she added.
“It would be interesting to see in future studies if migraine recognition by non-headache specialists improved after CGRP-blocking medications for migraine management became available,” said Dr. Riggins, who is cochair of the AHS First Contact program which is aimed at improving headache management in primary care.
She added that she and her colleagues will keep these survey results in mind when creating future educational materials for clinicians.
The study was supported by Eli Lily. Dr. Seng is a consultant for GlaxoSmithKline, Theranica, and Abbvie, and receives research support from the National Institutes of Health, National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Veterans Health Administration, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, and the American Heart Association. Dr. Riggins reported no relevant conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — results of a recent survey showed.
Participants cited concerns that their complaints would be dismissed, a belief that healthcare providers could offer no additional help, and a prior unsuccessful clinician visit as reasons for not seeking care. Survey respondents saw an average of four clinicians before finally receiving a diagnosis.
“I was shocked that a third of patients were reluctant to seek care,” said study investigator Elizabeth K. Seng, PhD, associate professor, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University, and research associate professor, department of neurology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, both in New York City. “That just shows a much higher level of medical distress than I expected from this community of people who are obviously suffering from this significant neurologic disease.”
The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
‘Significant Disease’
The study included 500 adults with migraine (mean age, 40 years) who signed up for a patient support group sponsored by Eli Lilly and completed a comprehensive survey. Respondents were mostly female, White, non-Hispanic, and well-educated individuals.
Half of participants had episodic migraines, and half had chronic migraines; 46% reported experiencing anxiety and 33% reported depression.
Almost all respondents had initiated treatment with a first calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) monoclonal antibody.
“These are people who have significant enough disease that eventually they needed our top-tier preventive medication,” Dr. Seng said.
Participants answered a variety of questions pertaining to disease factors and treatment seeking. Just over 70% said they suspected they had migraine prior to diagnosis, “which means for almost 30%, it was a surprise when they received the diagnosis,” said Dr. Seng.
Nearly 40% reported that a relative first suggested they may have migraine, and 33% suspected it themselves. Only 17.4% said a healthcare provider suggested they may have the condition.
Almost a third of respondents (30.5%) reported they were reluctant to seek medical help.
“Some said they didn’t think their physician could do anything more than they were already doing for themselves, or that they’d be taken seriously, or they had had talked to doctors before and this wasn’t helpful,” said Dr. Seng.
These responses speak to the need for better public health messaging, she said. “People have this idea that migraine attacks aren’t a big deal when, in fact, these attacks area big deal and certainly deserve treatment.”
Family and friends were participants’ most common source of information on migraine, followed by the Internet. “This highlights the importance of getting migraine-related information out there so that when people talk to their friends and family, they’re receiving accurate information,” said Dr. Seng.
When asked about the path to a diagnosis, respondents reported consulting an average of four providers before receiving an accurate diagnosis. “That’s pretty remarkable,” Dr. Seng said.
An increase in frequency or severity of migraine attacks or attacks that interfered with work or school “pushed people over the threshold to seek care,” Dr. Seng said.
A subset of patients was asked about the factors they believed could help with migraine attacks. Of these, 80% cited diet and 70% stress reduction. Supplements, exercise, and relaxation techniques were cited much less frequently, said Dr. Seng.
The mean age of respondents’ migraine diagnosis was 26 years, so there was about 18 years from the time of diagnosis to participation in the survey, which could introduce recall bias. Other potential limitations included the fact that the survey had no open-ended questions, and men and ethnic minorities were underrepresented.
Useful Data
Commenting on the study findings, Nina Riggins, MD, PhD, president, Brain Performance Center and Research Institute, and director of the Headache Center at The Neuron Clinic, San Diego, California, said the survey findings are “very useful” and highlight “significant opportunities for improvement in migraine education for clinicians and people living with migraine disease.”
The fact that participants reported consulting an average of four healthcare providers before receiving an accurate diagnosis underscores the importance of providing clinicians with tools to identify migraine, she said.
This is especially relevant as new migraine therapies that may improve efficacy and have fewer side effects become available, she added.
“It would be interesting to see in future studies if migraine recognition by non-headache specialists improved after CGRP-blocking medications for migraine management became available,” said Dr. Riggins, who is cochair of the AHS First Contact program which is aimed at improving headache management in primary care.
She added that she and her colleagues will keep these survey results in mind when creating future educational materials for clinicians.
The study was supported by Eli Lily. Dr. Seng is a consultant for GlaxoSmithKline, Theranica, and Abbvie, and receives research support from the National Institutes of Health, National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Veterans Health Administration, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, and the American Heart Association. Dr. Riggins reported no relevant conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
SAN DIEGO — results of a recent survey showed.
Participants cited concerns that their complaints would be dismissed, a belief that healthcare providers could offer no additional help, and a prior unsuccessful clinician visit as reasons for not seeking care. Survey respondents saw an average of four clinicians before finally receiving a diagnosis.
“I was shocked that a third of patients were reluctant to seek care,” said study investigator Elizabeth K. Seng, PhD, associate professor, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University, and research associate professor, department of neurology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, both in New York City. “That just shows a much higher level of medical distress than I expected from this community of people who are obviously suffering from this significant neurologic disease.”
The findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Headache Society.
‘Significant Disease’
The study included 500 adults with migraine (mean age, 40 years) who signed up for a patient support group sponsored by Eli Lilly and completed a comprehensive survey. Respondents were mostly female, White, non-Hispanic, and well-educated individuals.
Half of participants had episodic migraines, and half had chronic migraines; 46% reported experiencing anxiety and 33% reported depression.
Almost all respondents had initiated treatment with a first calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) monoclonal antibody.
“These are people who have significant enough disease that eventually they needed our top-tier preventive medication,” Dr. Seng said.
Participants answered a variety of questions pertaining to disease factors and treatment seeking. Just over 70% said they suspected they had migraine prior to diagnosis, “which means for almost 30%, it was a surprise when they received the diagnosis,” said Dr. Seng.
Nearly 40% reported that a relative first suggested they may have migraine, and 33% suspected it themselves. Only 17.4% said a healthcare provider suggested they may have the condition.
Almost a third of respondents (30.5%) reported they were reluctant to seek medical help.
“Some said they didn’t think their physician could do anything more than they were already doing for themselves, or that they’d be taken seriously, or they had had talked to doctors before and this wasn’t helpful,” said Dr. Seng.
These responses speak to the need for better public health messaging, she said. “People have this idea that migraine attacks aren’t a big deal when, in fact, these attacks area big deal and certainly deserve treatment.”
Family and friends were participants’ most common source of information on migraine, followed by the Internet. “This highlights the importance of getting migraine-related information out there so that when people talk to their friends and family, they’re receiving accurate information,” said Dr. Seng.
When asked about the path to a diagnosis, respondents reported consulting an average of four providers before receiving an accurate diagnosis. “That’s pretty remarkable,” Dr. Seng said.
An increase in frequency or severity of migraine attacks or attacks that interfered with work or school “pushed people over the threshold to seek care,” Dr. Seng said.
A subset of patients was asked about the factors they believed could help with migraine attacks. Of these, 80% cited diet and 70% stress reduction. Supplements, exercise, and relaxation techniques were cited much less frequently, said Dr. Seng.
The mean age of respondents’ migraine diagnosis was 26 years, so there was about 18 years from the time of diagnosis to participation in the survey, which could introduce recall bias. Other potential limitations included the fact that the survey had no open-ended questions, and men and ethnic minorities were underrepresented.
Useful Data
Commenting on the study findings, Nina Riggins, MD, PhD, president, Brain Performance Center and Research Institute, and director of the Headache Center at The Neuron Clinic, San Diego, California, said the survey findings are “very useful” and highlight “significant opportunities for improvement in migraine education for clinicians and people living with migraine disease.”
The fact that participants reported consulting an average of four healthcare providers before receiving an accurate diagnosis underscores the importance of providing clinicians with tools to identify migraine, she said.
This is especially relevant as new migraine therapies that may improve efficacy and have fewer side effects become available, she added.
“It would be interesting to see in future studies if migraine recognition by non-headache specialists improved after CGRP-blocking medications for migraine management became available,” said Dr. Riggins, who is cochair of the AHS First Contact program which is aimed at improving headache management in primary care.
She added that she and her colleagues will keep these survey results in mind when creating future educational materials for clinicians.
The study was supported by Eli Lily. Dr. Seng is a consultant for GlaxoSmithKline, Theranica, and Abbvie, and receives research support from the National Institutes of Health, National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Veterans Health Administration, Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, and the American Heart Association. Dr. Riggins reported no relevant conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM AHS 2024
Intensive Lifestyle Changes May Counter Early Alzheimer’s Symptoms
study was published online in Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy.
, in what authors said is the first randomized controlled trial of intensive lifestyle modification for patients diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Results could help physicians address patients at risk of Alzheimer’s disease who reject relevant testing because they believe nothing can forestall development of the disease, the authors added. TheAlthough technology allows probable Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis years before clinical symptoms appear, wrote investigators led by Dean Ornish, MD, of the Preventive Medicine Research Institute in Sausalito, California, “many people do not want to know if they are likely to get Alzheimer’s disease if they do not believe they can do anything about it. If intensive lifestyle changes may cause improvement in cognition and function in MCI or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease, then it is reasonable to think that these lifestyle changes may also help to prevent MCI or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease.” As with cardiovascular disease, the authors added, preventing Alzheimer’s disease might require less intensive lifestyle modifications than treating it.
Study Methodology
Investigators randomized 26 patients with Montréal Cognitive Assessment scores of 18 or higher to an intensive intervention involving nutrition, exercise, and stress management techniques. To improve adherence, the protocol included participants’ spouses or caregivers.
Two patients, both in the treatment group, withdrew over logistical concerns.
After 20 weeks, treated patients exhibited statistically significant differences in several key measures versus a 25-patient usual-care control group. Scores that improved in the intervention group and worsened among controls included the following:
- Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC, P = .001)
- Clinical Dementia Rating-Global (CDR-Global, -0.04, P = .037)
- Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB, +0.08, P = .032)
- Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog, -1.01, P = .053)
The validity of these changes in cognition and function, and possible biological mechanisms of improvement, were supported by statistically significant improvements in several clinically relevant biomarkers versus controls, the investigators wrote. These biomarkers included Abeta42/40 ratio, HbA1c, insulin, and glycoprotein acetylation. “This information may also help in predicting which patients are more likely to show improvements in cognition and function by making these intensive lifestyle changes,” the authors added.
In primary analysis, the degree of lifestyle changes required to stop progression of MCI ranged from 71.4% (ADAS-Cog) to 120.6% (CDR-SB). “This helps to explain why other studies of less intensive lifestyle interventions may not have been sufficient to stop deterioration or improve cognition and function,” the authors wrote. Moreover, they added, variable adherence might explain why in the intervention group, 10 patients improved their CGIC scores, while the rest held static or worsened.
Caveats
Alzheimer’s Association Vice President of Medical and Scientific Relations Heather M. Snyder, PhD, said, “This is an interesting paper in an important area of research and adds to the growing body of literature on how behavior or lifestyle may be related to cognitive decline. However, because this is a small phase 2 study, it is important for this or similar work to be done in larger, more diverse populations and over a longer duration of the intervention.” She was not involved with the study but was asked to comment.
Investigators chose the 20-week duration, they explained, because control-group patients likely would not refrain from trying the lifestyle intervention beyond that timeframe. Perhaps more importantly, challenges created by the COVID-19 pandemic required researchers to cut planned enrollment in half, eliminate planned MRI and amyloid PET scans, and reduce the number of cognition and function tests.
Such shortcomings limit what neurologists can glean and generalize from the study, said Dr. Snyder. “That said,” she added, “it does demonstrate the potential of an intensive behavior/lifestyle intervention, and the importance of this sort of research in Alzheimer’s and dementia.” Although the complexity of the interventions makes these studies challenging, she added, “it is important that we continue to advance larger, longer studies in more representative study populations to develop specific recommendations.”
Further Study
The Alzheimer’s Association’s U.S. POINTER study is the first large-scale study in the United States to explore the impact of comprehensive lifestyle changes on cognitive health. About 2000 older adults at risk for cognitive decline are participating, from diverse locations across the country. More than 25% of participants come from groups typically underrepresented in dementia research, said Dr. Snyder. Initial results are expected in summer 2025.
Future research also should explore reasons (beyond adherence) why some patients respond to lifestyle interventions better than others, and the potential synergy of lifestyle changes with drug therapies, wrote Dr. Ornish and colleagues.
“For now,” said Dr. Snyder, “there is an opportunity for providers to incorporate or expand messaging with their patients and families about the habits that they can incorporate into their daily lives. The Alzheimer’s Association offers 10 Healthy Habits for Your Brain — everyday actions that can make a difference for your brain health.”
Investigators received study funding from more than two dozen charitable foundations and other organizations. Dr. Snyder is a full-time employee of the Alzheimer’s Association and in this role, serves on the leadership team of the U.S. POINTER study. Her partner works for Abbott in an unrelated field.
study was published online in Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy.
, in what authors said is the first randomized controlled trial of intensive lifestyle modification for patients diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Results could help physicians address patients at risk of Alzheimer’s disease who reject relevant testing because they believe nothing can forestall development of the disease, the authors added. TheAlthough technology allows probable Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis years before clinical symptoms appear, wrote investigators led by Dean Ornish, MD, of the Preventive Medicine Research Institute in Sausalito, California, “many people do not want to know if they are likely to get Alzheimer’s disease if they do not believe they can do anything about it. If intensive lifestyle changes may cause improvement in cognition and function in MCI or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease, then it is reasonable to think that these lifestyle changes may also help to prevent MCI or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease.” As with cardiovascular disease, the authors added, preventing Alzheimer’s disease might require less intensive lifestyle modifications than treating it.
Study Methodology
Investigators randomized 26 patients with Montréal Cognitive Assessment scores of 18 or higher to an intensive intervention involving nutrition, exercise, and stress management techniques. To improve adherence, the protocol included participants’ spouses or caregivers.
Two patients, both in the treatment group, withdrew over logistical concerns.
After 20 weeks, treated patients exhibited statistically significant differences in several key measures versus a 25-patient usual-care control group. Scores that improved in the intervention group and worsened among controls included the following:
- Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC, P = .001)
- Clinical Dementia Rating-Global (CDR-Global, -0.04, P = .037)
- Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB, +0.08, P = .032)
- Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog, -1.01, P = .053)
The validity of these changes in cognition and function, and possible biological mechanisms of improvement, were supported by statistically significant improvements in several clinically relevant biomarkers versus controls, the investigators wrote. These biomarkers included Abeta42/40 ratio, HbA1c, insulin, and glycoprotein acetylation. “This information may also help in predicting which patients are more likely to show improvements in cognition and function by making these intensive lifestyle changes,” the authors added.
In primary analysis, the degree of lifestyle changes required to stop progression of MCI ranged from 71.4% (ADAS-Cog) to 120.6% (CDR-SB). “This helps to explain why other studies of less intensive lifestyle interventions may not have been sufficient to stop deterioration or improve cognition and function,” the authors wrote. Moreover, they added, variable adherence might explain why in the intervention group, 10 patients improved their CGIC scores, while the rest held static or worsened.
Caveats
Alzheimer’s Association Vice President of Medical and Scientific Relations Heather M. Snyder, PhD, said, “This is an interesting paper in an important area of research and adds to the growing body of literature on how behavior or lifestyle may be related to cognitive decline. However, because this is a small phase 2 study, it is important for this or similar work to be done in larger, more diverse populations and over a longer duration of the intervention.” She was not involved with the study but was asked to comment.
Investigators chose the 20-week duration, they explained, because control-group patients likely would not refrain from trying the lifestyle intervention beyond that timeframe. Perhaps more importantly, challenges created by the COVID-19 pandemic required researchers to cut planned enrollment in half, eliminate planned MRI and amyloid PET scans, and reduce the number of cognition and function tests.
Such shortcomings limit what neurologists can glean and generalize from the study, said Dr. Snyder. “That said,” she added, “it does demonstrate the potential of an intensive behavior/lifestyle intervention, and the importance of this sort of research in Alzheimer’s and dementia.” Although the complexity of the interventions makes these studies challenging, she added, “it is important that we continue to advance larger, longer studies in more representative study populations to develop specific recommendations.”
Further Study
The Alzheimer’s Association’s U.S. POINTER study is the first large-scale study in the United States to explore the impact of comprehensive lifestyle changes on cognitive health. About 2000 older adults at risk for cognitive decline are participating, from diverse locations across the country. More than 25% of participants come from groups typically underrepresented in dementia research, said Dr. Snyder. Initial results are expected in summer 2025.
Future research also should explore reasons (beyond adherence) why some patients respond to lifestyle interventions better than others, and the potential synergy of lifestyle changes with drug therapies, wrote Dr. Ornish and colleagues.
“For now,” said Dr. Snyder, “there is an opportunity for providers to incorporate or expand messaging with their patients and families about the habits that they can incorporate into their daily lives. The Alzheimer’s Association offers 10 Healthy Habits for Your Brain — everyday actions that can make a difference for your brain health.”
Investigators received study funding from more than two dozen charitable foundations and other organizations. Dr. Snyder is a full-time employee of the Alzheimer’s Association and in this role, serves on the leadership team of the U.S. POINTER study. Her partner works for Abbott in an unrelated field.
study was published online in Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy.
, in what authors said is the first randomized controlled trial of intensive lifestyle modification for patients diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Results could help physicians address patients at risk of Alzheimer’s disease who reject relevant testing because they believe nothing can forestall development of the disease, the authors added. TheAlthough technology allows probable Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis years before clinical symptoms appear, wrote investigators led by Dean Ornish, MD, of the Preventive Medicine Research Institute in Sausalito, California, “many people do not want to know if they are likely to get Alzheimer’s disease if they do not believe they can do anything about it. If intensive lifestyle changes may cause improvement in cognition and function in MCI or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease, then it is reasonable to think that these lifestyle changes may also help to prevent MCI or early dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease.” As with cardiovascular disease, the authors added, preventing Alzheimer’s disease might require less intensive lifestyle modifications than treating it.
Study Methodology
Investigators randomized 26 patients with Montréal Cognitive Assessment scores of 18 or higher to an intensive intervention involving nutrition, exercise, and stress management techniques. To improve adherence, the protocol included participants’ spouses or caregivers.
Two patients, both in the treatment group, withdrew over logistical concerns.
After 20 weeks, treated patients exhibited statistically significant differences in several key measures versus a 25-patient usual-care control group. Scores that improved in the intervention group and worsened among controls included the following:
- Clinical Global Impression of Change (CGIC, P = .001)
- Clinical Dementia Rating-Global (CDR-Global, -0.04, P = .037)
- Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB, +0.08, P = .032)
- Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale (ADAS-Cog, -1.01, P = .053)
The validity of these changes in cognition and function, and possible biological mechanisms of improvement, were supported by statistically significant improvements in several clinically relevant biomarkers versus controls, the investigators wrote. These biomarkers included Abeta42/40 ratio, HbA1c, insulin, and glycoprotein acetylation. “This information may also help in predicting which patients are more likely to show improvements in cognition and function by making these intensive lifestyle changes,” the authors added.
In primary analysis, the degree of lifestyle changes required to stop progression of MCI ranged from 71.4% (ADAS-Cog) to 120.6% (CDR-SB). “This helps to explain why other studies of less intensive lifestyle interventions may not have been sufficient to stop deterioration or improve cognition and function,” the authors wrote. Moreover, they added, variable adherence might explain why in the intervention group, 10 patients improved their CGIC scores, while the rest held static or worsened.
Caveats
Alzheimer’s Association Vice President of Medical and Scientific Relations Heather M. Snyder, PhD, said, “This is an interesting paper in an important area of research and adds to the growing body of literature on how behavior or lifestyle may be related to cognitive decline. However, because this is a small phase 2 study, it is important for this or similar work to be done in larger, more diverse populations and over a longer duration of the intervention.” She was not involved with the study but was asked to comment.
Investigators chose the 20-week duration, they explained, because control-group patients likely would not refrain from trying the lifestyle intervention beyond that timeframe. Perhaps more importantly, challenges created by the COVID-19 pandemic required researchers to cut planned enrollment in half, eliminate planned MRI and amyloid PET scans, and reduce the number of cognition and function tests.
Such shortcomings limit what neurologists can glean and generalize from the study, said Dr. Snyder. “That said,” she added, “it does demonstrate the potential of an intensive behavior/lifestyle intervention, and the importance of this sort of research in Alzheimer’s and dementia.” Although the complexity of the interventions makes these studies challenging, she added, “it is important that we continue to advance larger, longer studies in more representative study populations to develop specific recommendations.”
Further Study
The Alzheimer’s Association’s U.S. POINTER study is the first large-scale study in the United States to explore the impact of comprehensive lifestyle changes on cognitive health. About 2000 older adults at risk for cognitive decline are participating, from diverse locations across the country. More than 25% of participants come from groups typically underrepresented in dementia research, said Dr. Snyder. Initial results are expected in summer 2025.
Future research also should explore reasons (beyond adherence) why some patients respond to lifestyle interventions better than others, and the potential synergy of lifestyle changes with drug therapies, wrote Dr. Ornish and colleagues.
“For now,” said Dr. Snyder, “there is an opportunity for providers to incorporate or expand messaging with their patients and families about the habits that they can incorporate into their daily lives. The Alzheimer’s Association offers 10 Healthy Habits for Your Brain — everyday actions that can make a difference for your brain health.”
Investigators received study funding from more than two dozen charitable foundations and other organizations. Dr. Snyder is a full-time employee of the Alzheimer’s Association and in this role, serves on the leadership team of the U.S. POINTER study. Her partner works for Abbott in an unrelated field.
FROM ALZHEIMER’S RESEARCH & THERAPY