Drug abusers will find a way

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Recently, when I logged on to see what medication refills had come in, I was greeted with a notice that Walgreens would no longer carry promethazine/codeine cough syrup. It wouldn’t surprise me if other pharmacies follow.

This doesn’t affect me much. As a neurologist I’ve never prescribed it, and as a patient I’ve never used it.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

The unwritten reason was likely because of its popularity for abuse. It is often mixed with various beverages and called “purple drank.” It has both social, and legal, consequences that can come back and bite the pharmacy.

A friend of mine commented that if everything that can be abused gets banned, all we’ll be left with are Tylenol and Preparation H. Another friend made the comment that it’s a shame, because codeine is a remarkably effective antitussive.

I agree with both of them, but Walgreens is pulling only the combo preparation off the shelves. Codeine and promethazine are still available. The former is on WHO’s list of essential medications.

Even if every pharmacy were to drop promethazine/codeine cough syrup, and it was withdrawn from the market, it wouldn’t keep people from abusing it. They’d still find a way to get the components and whip up some equivalent. Human innovation can be remarkable. All of us who trained in the inner city (which is pretty much all of us at some point) have seen people who drank mouthwash, hairspray, and who knows what else in desperation.

No one believes it’s going to stop drug abuse, but it will make it harder to have purple drank, which is often passed around as a low-level drug at parties. Putting Sudafed behind the counter has reduced, though not stopped, meth. Walter White can tell you that.

A patient of mine who’s a pharmacist also was talking about this. He’s in favor of it, as he’s tired of dealing with people trying to get it through faked prescriptions and bogus visits to urgent care pretending to have a cough, not to mention the additional paperwork and reporting requirements that a controlled drug carries.

I agree with it, mostly, but there are those who truly do need it at times, and who now will have to take it as individual components, or find a pharmacy that does carry it. The issue here becomes that, by punishing the abusers, you’re also punishing the responsible.

The vast majority of alcohol users are responsible drinkers. I have the occasional beer myself. Unfortunately, there are a comparative few who aren’t, and their actions can bring tremendous grief to many others. So we have tougher laws all around that we all have to follow.

I agree with Walgreens actions on this, but still find myself wondering how much of a difference it will make.

Probably not as much as I hope.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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Recently, when I logged on to see what medication refills had come in, I was greeted with a notice that Walgreens would no longer carry promethazine/codeine cough syrup. It wouldn’t surprise me if other pharmacies follow.

This doesn’t affect me much. As a neurologist I’ve never prescribed it, and as a patient I’ve never used it.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

The unwritten reason was likely because of its popularity for abuse. It is often mixed with various beverages and called “purple drank.” It has both social, and legal, consequences that can come back and bite the pharmacy.

A friend of mine commented that if everything that can be abused gets banned, all we’ll be left with are Tylenol and Preparation H. Another friend made the comment that it’s a shame, because codeine is a remarkably effective antitussive.

I agree with both of them, but Walgreens is pulling only the combo preparation off the shelves. Codeine and promethazine are still available. The former is on WHO’s list of essential medications.

Even if every pharmacy were to drop promethazine/codeine cough syrup, and it was withdrawn from the market, it wouldn’t keep people from abusing it. They’d still find a way to get the components and whip up some equivalent. Human innovation can be remarkable. All of us who trained in the inner city (which is pretty much all of us at some point) have seen people who drank mouthwash, hairspray, and who knows what else in desperation.

No one believes it’s going to stop drug abuse, but it will make it harder to have purple drank, which is often passed around as a low-level drug at parties. Putting Sudafed behind the counter has reduced, though not stopped, meth. Walter White can tell you that.

A patient of mine who’s a pharmacist also was talking about this. He’s in favor of it, as he’s tired of dealing with people trying to get it through faked prescriptions and bogus visits to urgent care pretending to have a cough, not to mention the additional paperwork and reporting requirements that a controlled drug carries.

I agree with it, mostly, but there are those who truly do need it at times, and who now will have to take it as individual components, or find a pharmacy that does carry it. The issue here becomes that, by punishing the abusers, you’re also punishing the responsible.

The vast majority of alcohol users are responsible drinkers. I have the occasional beer myself. Unfortunately, there are a comparative few who aren’t, and their actions can bring tremendous grief to many others. So we have tougher laws all around that we all have to follow.

I agree with Walgreens actions on this, but still find myself wondering how much of a difference it will make.

Probably not as much as I hope.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Recently, when I logged on to see what medication refills had come in, I was greeted with a notice that Walgreens would no longer carry promethazine/codeine cough syrup. It wouldn’t surprise me if other pharmacies follow.

This doesn’t affect me much. As a neurologist I’ve never prescribed it, and as a patient I’ve never used it.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

The unwritten reason was likely because of its popularity for abuse. It is often mixed with various beverages and called “purple drank.” It has both social, and legal, consequences that can come back and bite the pharmacy.

A friend of mine commented that if everything that can be abused gets banned, all we’ll be left with are Tylenol and Preparation H. Another friend made the comment that it’s a shame, because codeine is a remarkably effective antitussive.

I agree with both of them, but Walgreens is pulling only the combo preparation off the shelves. Codeine and promethazine are still available. The former is on WHO’s list of essential medications.

Even if every pharmacy were to drop promethazine/codeine cough syrup, and it was withdrawn from the market, it wouldn’t keep people from abusing it. They’d still find a way to get the components and whip up some equivalent. Human innovation can be remarkable. All of us who trained in the inner city (which is pretty much all of us at some point) have seen people who drank mouthwash, hairspray, and who knows what else in desperation.

No one believes it’s going to stop drug abuse, but it will make it harder to have purple drank, which is often passed around as a low-level drug at parties. Putting Sudafed behind the counter has reduced, though not stopped, meth. Walter White can tell you that.

A patient of mine who’s a pharmacist also was talking about this. He’s in favor of it, as he’s tired of dealing with people trying to get it through faked prescriptions and bogus visits to urgent care pretending to have a cough, not to mention the additional paperwork and reporting requirements that a controlled drug carries.

I agree with it, mostly, but there are those who truly do need it at times, and who now will have to take it as individual components, or find a pharmacy that does carry it. The issue here becomes that, by punishing the abusers, you’re also punishing the responsible.

The vast majority of alcohol users are responsible drinkers. I have the occasional beer myself. Unfortunately, there are a comparative few who aren’t, and their actions can bring tremendous grief to many others. So we have tougher laws all around that we all have to follow.

I agree with Walgreens actions on this, but still find myself wondering how much of a difference it will make.

Probably not as much as I hope.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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Sacral blistering

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Sacral blistering

Sacral blistering
Courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD

This patient had sustained multiple pressure injuries. The superior aspect of this image shows bullous change with intact dermis, which would classify that area of injury as a Stage 2 pressure injury.1 An older injury in the coccygeal area was through the dermis (Stage 3), with some eschar seen at the base, making that area unstageable.1 (There may have been deeper injury under the eschar.)

This patient was at heightened risk for pressure injury because of his paraplegia.2 Fortunately, he had some preserved sensation. However, his rotator cuff surgery made it harder for him to smoothly transfer to and from the wheelchair, leading to sheer forces against his skin. Social determinates of health care pose an additional risk for pressure injuries. Without a properly fitted wheelchair and cushion, there is an increased risk of localized pressure over both bony prominences and parts of the body that come into contact with mechanical elements of the wheelchair.

Treatment for all pressure injuries includes relief of pressure on the affected area. In this patient’s case, he had to stay in bed (and out of the wheelchair) so that he could heal.

This patient was very knowledgeable about his condition and pressure injuries. He had already arranged for a wheelchair fitting and a visit with the wound care team. His Stage 2 injury had a bullous change instead of absent epithelium, so rather than an adherent hydrocolloid dressing (which would likely remove the loosened epithelium), he was provided with a nonadherent dressing to the area, then an absorbent foam overdressing.

An image of the patient’s deeper sacral injury was shared with the wound care team, which recommended filling the area with a silver rope dressing for its absorptive filler and antibacterial properties. The area was then covered with an absorbent foam. The patient planned to follow up with the Wound Care Clinic for reevaluation and ongoing treatment.

Images and text courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD, FAAFP, Professor and Chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker, MD School of Medicine Kalamazoo.

References

1. 2019 Guideline. The National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel. Accessed October 9, 2022. https://npiap.com/page/2019Guideline

2. Ricci JA, Bayer LR, Orgill DP. Evidence-based medicine: the evaluation and treatment of pressure injuries. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2017;139:275e-286e. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000002850

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Sacral blistering
Courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD

This patient had sustained multiple pressure injuries. The superior aspect of this image shows bullous change with intact dermis, which would classify that area of injury as a Stage 2 pressure injury.1 An older injury in the coccygeal area was through the dermis (Stage 3), with some eschar seen at the base, making that area unstageable.1 (There may have been deeper injury under the eschar.)

This patient was at heightened risk for pressure injury because of his paraplegia.2 Fortunately, he had some preserved sensation. However, his rotator cuff surgery made it harder for him to smoothly transfer to and from the wheelchair, leading to sheer forces against his skin. Social determinates of health care pose an additional risk for pressure injuries. Without a properly fitted wheelchair and cushion, there is an increased risk of localized pressure over both bony prominences and parts of the body that come into contact with mechanical elements of the wheelchair.

Treatment for all pressure injuries includes relief of pressure on the affected area. In this patient’s case, he had to stay in bed (and out of the wheelchair) so that he could heal.

This patient was very knowledgeable about his condition and pressure injuries. He had already arranged for a wheelchair fitting and a visit with the wound care team. His Stage 2 injury had a bullous change instead of absent epithelium, so rather than an adherent hydrocolloid dressing (which would likely remove the loosened epithelium), he was provided with a nonadherent dressing to the area, then an absorbent foam overdressing.

An image of the patient’s deeper sacral injury was shared with the wound care team, which recommended filling the area with a silver rope dressing for its absorptive filler and antibacterial properties. The area was then covered with an absorbent foam. The patient planned to follow up with the Wound Care Clinic for reevaluation and ongoing treatment.

Images and text courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD, FAAFP, Professor and Chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker, MD School of Medicine Kalamazoo.

Sacral blistering
Courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD

This patient had sustained multiple pressure injuries. The superior aspect of this image shows bullous change with intact dermis, which would classify that area of injury as a Stage 2 pressure injury.1 An older injury in the coccygeal area was through the dermis (Stage 3), with some eschar seen at the base, making that area unstageable.1 (There may have been deeper injury under the eschar.)

This patient was at heightened risk for pressure injury because of his paraplegia.2 Fortunately, he had some preserved sensation. However, his rotator cuff surgery made it harder for him to smoothly transfer to and from the wheelchair, leading to sheer forces against his skin. Social determinates of health care pose an additional risk for pressure injuries. Without a properly fitted wheelchair and cushion, there is an increased risk of localized pressure over both bony prominences and parts of the body that come into contact with mechanical elements of the wheelchair.

Treatment for all pressure injuries includes relief of pressure on the affected area. In this patient’s case, he had to stay in bed (and out of the wheelchair) so that he could heal.

This patient was very knowledgeable about his condition and pressure injuries. He had already arranged for a wheelchair fitting and a visit with the wound care team. His Stage 2 injury had a bullous change instead of absent epithelium, so rather than an adherent hydrocolloid dressing (which would likely remove the loosened epithelium), he was provided with a nonadherent dressing to the area, then an absorbent foam overdressing.

An image of the patient’s deeper sacral injury was shared with the wound care team, which recommended filling the area with a silver rope dressing for its absorptive filler and antibacterial properties. The area was then covered with an absorbent foam. The patient planned to follow up with the Wound Care Clinic for reevaluation and ongoing treatment.

Images and text courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD, FAAFP, Professor and Chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker, MD School of Medicine Kalamazoo.

References

1. 2019 Guideline. The National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel. Accessed October 9, 2022. https://npiap.com/page/2019Guideline

2. Ricci JA, Bayer LR, Orgill DP. Evidence-based medicine: the evaluation and treatment of pressure injuries. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2017;139:275e-286e. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000002850

References

1. 2019 Guideline. The National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel. Accessed October 9, 2022. https://npiap.com/page/2019Guideline

2. Ricci JA, Bayer LR, Orgill DP. Evidence-based medicine: the evaluation and treatment of pressure injuries. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2017;139:275e-286e. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000002850

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Cerebral palsy: Video clues suggest dystonia

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CINCINNATI – Dystonia is a frequent complication seen in cerebral palsy, but it often goes undiagnosed. Using a unique video analysis, researchers have identified some movement features that have the potential to simplify diagnosis.

“[We have] previously demonstrated that by the age of 5 years, only 30% of children seen in a clinical setting have had their predominant motor phenotype identified, including dystonia. This helps demonstrate a broad diagnostic gap and the need for novel solutions,” said Laura Gilbert, DO, during her presentation of the results at the 2022 annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society.

Diagnosis of dystonia is challenging because of its clinical variability, and diagnostic tools often require a trained physician, which limits access to diagnoses. Expert clinician consensus therefore remains the gold standard for diagnosis of dystonia.

Another clinical need is that specific features of dystonia have not been well described in the upper extremities, and the research suggests there could be differences in brain injuries contributing to dystonia in the two domains.

The researchers set out to discover expert-identified features of patient videos that could be used to allow nonexperts to make a diagnosis of dystonia.

The researchers analyzed 26 videos with upper extremity exam maneuvers performed on children with periventricular leukomalacia at St. Louis Children’s Hospital Cerebral Palsy Center from 2005 to 2018. Among the study cohort, 65% of patients were male, 77% were White, and 11% were Black; 24% of patients were Gross Motor Function Classification Scale I, 24% were GMFCS II, 24% were GMFCS III, 16% were GMFCS IV, and 12% were GMFCS V. A total of 12% of patients were older than 20, 11% were aged 15-20, 38% were aged 10-15, 31% were aged 5-10, and 8% were age 5 or younger.
 

Video clues aid diagnosis

Three pediatric movement disorder specialists independently reviewed each video and assessed severity of dystonia. They then met over Zoom to reach a diagnostic consensus for each case.

The research team performed a content analysis of the experts’ discussions and identified specific statement fragments. The frequency of these fragments was then linked to severity of dystonia.

A total of 45% of the statement fragments referenced movement codes, which in turn comprised five content areas: 33% referenced a body part, 24% focused on laterality, 22% described movement features, 18% an action, and 3% described exam maneuvers. Examples included shoulder as a body part, flexion as an action descriptor, brisk as a movement feature, unilateral, and finger-nose-finger for exam maneuver.

With increasing dystonia severity, the shoulder was more often cited and hand was cited less often. Mirror movements, defined as involuntary, contralateral movements that are similar to the voluntary action, occurred more often in patients with no dystonia or only mild dystonia. Variability of movement over time, which is a distinguishing feature found in lower extremities, was not significantly associated with dystonia severity.

Within the category of exam maneuver, hand opening and closing was the most commonly cited, and it was cited more frequently among individuals with mild dystonia (70% vs. about 10% for both no dystonia and moderate to severe dystonia; P < .005).

“So how can we adopt this clinically? First, we can add in a very brief exam maneuver of hand opening and closing that can help assess for mild dystonia. Shoulder involvement may suggest more severe dystonia, and we must recognize the dystonia features seem to differ by body region and the triggering task. Overall, to help improve dystonia diagnosis, we must continue to work towards understanding these salient features to fully grasp the breadth of dystonia manifestations in people with [cerebral palsy],” said Dr. Gilbert, who is a pediatric movements disorder fellow at Washington University in St. Louis.
 

 

 

Key features help determine dystonia severity

The study is particularly interesting for its different findings in upper extremities versus lower extremities, according to Keith Coffman, MD, who comoderated the session where the study was presented. “That same group showed that there are very clear differences in lower-extremity function, but when they looked at upper extremity, there really weren’t robust differences. What it may show is that the features of cerebral palsy regarding dystonia may be very dependent on what type of injury you have to your brain. Because when you think about where the motor fibers that provide leg function, they live along the medial walls of the brain right along the midline, whereas the representation of the hand and arm are more out on the lateral side of the brain. So it may be that those regional anatomy differences and where the injury occurred could be at the baseline of why they had such differences in motor function,” said Dr. Coffman, who is a professor of pediatrics at University of Missouri–Kansas City and director of the movement disorders program at Children’s Mercy Hospital, also in Kansas City, Mo.

He suggested that the researchers might also do kinematic analysis of the videos to make predictions using quantitative differences in movement.

The research has the potential to improve dystonia diagnosis, according to comoderator Marc Patterson, MD, professor of neurology, pediatrics, and medical genetics at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. “I think they really pointed to some key features that can help clinicians distinguish [dystonia severity]. Something like the speed of opening and closing the hands [is a] fairly simple thing. That was to me the chief value of that study,” Dr. Patterson said.

Dr. Gilbert reported no relevant disclosures.

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CINCINNATI – Dystonia is a frequent complication seen in cerebral palsy, but it often goes undiagnosed. Using a unique video analysis, researchers have identified some movement features that have the potential to simplify diagnosis.

“[We have] previously demonstrated that by the age of 5 years, only 30% of children seen in a clinical setting have had their predominant motor phenotype identified, including dystonia. This helps demonstrate a broad diagnostic gap and the need for novel solutions,” said Laura Gilbert, DO, during her presentation of the results at the 2022 annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society.

Diagnosis of dystonia is challenging because of its clinical variability, and diagnostic tools often require a trained physician, which limits access to diagnoses. Expert clinician consensus therefore remains the gold standard for diagnosis of dystonia.

Another clinical need is that specific features of dystonia have not been well described in the upper extremities, and the research suggests there could be differences in brain injuries contributing to dystonia in the two domains.

The researchers set out to discover expert-identified features of patient videos that could be used to allow nonexperts to make a diagnosis of dystonia.

The researchers analyzed 26 videos with upper extremity exam maneuvers performed on children with periventricular leukomalacia at St. Louis Children’s Hospital Cerebral Palsy Center from 2005 to 2018. Among the study cohort, 65% of patients were male, 77% were White, and 11% were Black; 24% of patients were Gross Motor Function Classification Scale I, 24% were GMFCS II, 24% were GMFCS III, 16% were GMFCS IV, and 12% were GMFCS V. A total of 12% of patients were older than 20, 11% were aged 15-20, 38% were aged 10-15, 31% were aged 5-10, and 8% were age 5 or younger.
 

Video clues aid diagnosis

Three pediatric movement disorder specialists independently reviewed each video and assessed severity of dystonia. They then met over Zoom to reach a diagnostic consensus for each case.

The research team performed a content analysis of the experts’ discussions and identified specific statement fragments. The frequency of these fragments was then linked to severity of dystonia.

A total of 45% of the statement fragments referenced movement codes, which in turn comprised five content areas: 33% referenced a body part, 24% focused on laterality, 22% described movement features, 18% an action, and 3% described exam maneuvers. Examples included shoulder as a body part, flexion as an action descriptor, brisk as a movement feature, unilateral, and finger-nose-finger for exam maneuver.

With increasing dystonia severity, the shoulder was more often cited and hand was cited less often. Mirror movements, defined as involuntary, contralateral movements that are similar to the voluntary action, occurred more often in patients with no dystonia or only mild dystonia. Variability of movement over time, which is a distinguishing feature found in lower extremities, was not significantly associated with dystonia severity.

Within the category of exam maneuver, hand opening and closing was the most commonly cited, and it was cited more frequently among individuals with mild dystonia (70% vs. about 10% for both no dystonia and moderate to severe dystonia; P < .005).

“So how can we adopt this clinically? First, we can add in a very brief exam maneuver of hand opening and closing that can help assess for mild dystonia. Shoulder involvement may suggest more severe dystonia, and we must recognize the dystonia features seem to differ by body region and the triggering task. Overall, to help improve dystonia diagnosis, we must continue to work towards understanding these salient features to fully grasp the breadth of dystonia manifestations in people with [cerebral palsy],” said Dr. Gilbert, who is a pediatric movements disorder fellow at Washington University in St. Louis.
 

 

 

Key features help determine dystonia severity

The study is particularly interesting for its different findings in upper extremities versus lower extremities, according to Keith Coffman, MD, who comoderated the session where the study was presented. “That same group showed that there are very clear differences in lower-extremity function, but when they looked at upper extremity, there really weren’t robust differences. What it may show is that the features of cerebral palsy regarding dystonia may be very dependent on what type of injury you have to your brain. Because when you think about where the motor fibers that provide leg function, they live along the medial walls of the brain right along the midline, whereas the representation of the hand and arm are more out on the lateral side of the brain. So it may be that those regional anatomy differences and where the injury occurred could be at the baseline of why they had such differences in motor function,” said Dr. Coffman, who is a professor of pediatrics at University of Missouri–Kansas City and director of the movement disorders program at Children’s Mercy Hospital, also in Kansas City, Mo.

He suggested that the researchers might also do kinematic analysis of the videos to make predictions using quantitative differences in movement.

The research has the potential to improve dystonia diagnosis, according to comoderator Marc Patterson, MD, professor of neurology, pediatrics, and medical genetics at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. “I think they really pointed to some key features that can help clinicians distinguish [dystonia severity]. Something like the speed of opening and closing the hands [is a] fairly simple thing. That was to me the chief value of that study,” Dr. Patterson said.

Dr. Gilbert reported no relevant disclosures.

CINCINNATI – Dystonia is a frequent complication seen in cerebral palsy, but it often goes undiagnosed. Using a unique video analysis, researchers have identified some movement features that have the potential to simplify diagnosis.

“[We have] previously demonstrated that by the age of 5 years, only 30% of children seen in a clinical setting have had their predominant motor phenotype identified, including dystonia. This helps demonstrate a broad diagnostic gap and the need for novel solutions,” said Laura Gilbert, DO, during her presentation of the results at the 2022 annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society.

Diagnosis of dystonia is challenging because of its clinical variability, and diagnostic tools often require a trained physician, which limits access to diagnoses. Expert clinician consensus therefore remains the gold standard for diagnosis of dystonia.

Another clinical need is that specific features of dystonia have not been well described in the upper extremities, and the research suggests there could be differences in brain injuries contributing to dystonia in the two domains.

The researchers set out to discover expert-identified features of patient videos that could be used to allow nonexperts to make a diagnosis of dystonia.

The researchers analyzed 26 videos with upper extremity exam maneuvers performed on children with periventricular leukomalacia at St. Louis Children’s Hospital Cerebral Palsy Center from 2005 to 2018. Among the study cohort, 65% of patients were male, 77% were White, and 11% were Black; 24% of patients were Gross Motor Function Classification Scale I, 24% were GMFCS II, 24% were GMFCS III, 16% were GMFCS IV, and 12% were GMFCS V. A total of 12% of patients were older than 20, 11% were aged 15-20, 38% were aged 10-15, 31% were aged 5-10, and 8% were age 5 or younger.
 

Video clues aid diagnosis

Three pediatric movement disorder specialists independently reviewed each video and assessed severity of dystonia. They then met over Zoom to reach a diagnostic consensus for each case.

The research team performed a content analysis of the experts’ discussions and identified specific statement fragments. The frequency of these fragments was then linked to severity of dystonia.

A total of 45% of the statement fragments referenced movement codes, which in turn comprised five content areas: 33% referenced a body part, 24% focused on laterality, 22% described movement features, 18% an action, and 3% described exam maneuvers. Examples included shoulder as a body part, flexion as an action descriptor, brisk as a movement feature, unilateral, and finger-nose-finger for exam maneuver.

With increasing dystonia severity, the shoulder was more often cited and hand was cited less often. Mirror movements, defined as involuntary, contralateral movements that are similar to the voluntary action, occurred more often in patients with no dystonia or only mild dystonia. Variability of movement over time, which is a distinguishing feature found in lower extremities, was not significantly associated with dystonia severity.

Within the category of exam maneuver, hand opening and closing was the most commonly cited, and it was cited more frequently among individuals with mild dystonia (70% vs. about 10% for both no dystonia and moderate to severe dystonia; P < .005).

“So how can we adopt this clinically? First, we can add in a very brief exam maneuver of hand opening and closing that can help assess for mild dystonia. Shoulder involvement may suggest more severe dystonia, and we must recognize the dystonia features seem to differ by body region and the triggering task. Overall, to help improve dystonia diagnosis, we must continue to work towards understanding these salient features to fully grasp the breadth of dystonia manifestations in people with [cerebral palsy],” said Dr. Gilbert, who is a pediatric movements disorder fellow at Washington University in St. Louis.
 

 

 

Key features help determine dystonia severity

The study is particularly interesting for its different findings in upper extremities versus lower extremities, according to Keith Coffman, MD, who comoderated the session where the study was presented. “That same group showed that there are very clear differences in lower-extremity function, but when they looked at upper extremity, there really weren’t robust differences. What it may show is that the features of cerebral palsy regarding dystonia may be very dependent on what type of injury you have to your brain. Because when you think about where the motor fibers that provide leg function, they live along the medial walls of the brain right along the midline, whereas the representation of the hand and arm are more out on the lateral side of the brain. So it may be that those regional anatomy differences and where the injury occurred could be at the baseline of why they had such differences in motor function,” said Dr. Coffman, who is a professor of pediatrics at University of Missouri–Kansas City and director of the movement disorders program at Children’s Mercy Hospital, also in Kansas City, Mo.

He suggested that the researchers might also do kinematic analysis of the videos to make predictions using quantitative differences in movement.

The research has the potential to improve dystonia diagnosis, according to comoderator Marc Patterson, MD, professor of neurology, pediatrics, and medical genetics at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. “I think they really pointed to some key features that can help clinicians distinguish [dystonia severity]. Something like the speed of opening and closing the hands [is a] fairly simple thing. That was to me the chief value of that study,” Dr. Patterson said.

Dr. Gilbert reported no relevant disclosures.

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Newborn with white oral lesions

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Newborn with white oral lesions
Courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD

These lesions, called Bohn nodules, manifest on the buccal or lingual portion of the maxillary alveolar ridge and, less frequently, on the mandibular alveolar ridge. Because Bohn nodules are white and have a firm consistency, they are often confused with teeth. They can be differentiated by location, as teeth usually erupt from the distal aspect of the alveolar ridge.

Bohn nodules are epithelial cysts that are filled with keratin, which gives them their white color. They are caused by portions of epithelium that get trapped under surrounding epithelial cells. Bohn nodules usually resolve when the overlying epithelium ruptures and releases the keratinaceous material (usually by the time the child is 3 months of age).1

These nodules can be confused with neonatal or supernumerary teeth. Neonatal teeth can be abnormally small and pointed; they are true deciduous teeth that have erupted early. If they are removed, the child will not replace them until the time of their adult tooth eruption. Additionally, there are supernumerary teeth, which are extra teeth that are often abnormally shaped and loosely adherent. These abnormal teeth warrant extraction to avoid trauma to the tongue or aspiration.2

In this case, the family was advised regarding the benign nature of the nodules and the expectation that they would spontaneously resolve.

Images and text courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD, FAAFP, Professor and Chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker, MD School of Medicine Kalamazoo.

References

1. Gupta N, Ramji S. Bohn's nodules: an under-recognised entity. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2013;98:F464. doi: 10.1136/archdischild-2012-302922

2. DeSeta M, Holden E, Siddik D, et al. Natal and neonatal teeth: a review and case series. Br Dent J. 2022;232:449-453. doi: 10.1038/s41415-022-4091-3

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Newborn with white oral lesions
Courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD

These lesions, called Bohn nodules, manifest on the buccal or lingual portion of the maxillary alveolar ridge and, less frequently, on the mandibular alveolar ridge. Because Bohn nodules are white and have a firm consistency, they are often confused with teeth. They can be differentiated by location, as teeth usually erupt from the distal aspect of the alveolar ridge.

Bohn nodules are epithelial cysts that are filled with keratin, which gives them their white color. They are caused by portions of epithelium that get trapped under surrounding epithelial cells. Bohn nodules usually resolve when the overlying epithelium ruptures and releases the keratinaceous material (usually by the time the child is 3 months of age).1

These nodules can be confused with neonatal or supernumerary teeth. Neonatal teeth can be abnormally small and pointed; they are true deciduous teeth that have erupted early. If they are removed, the child will not replace them until the time of their adult tooth eruption. Additionally, there are supernumerary teeth, which are extra teeth that are often abnormally shaped and loosely adherent. These abnormal teeth warrant extraction to avoid trauma to the tongue or aspiration.2

In this case, the family was advised regarding the benign nature of the nodules and the expectation that they would spontaneously resolve.

Images and text courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD, FAAFP, Professor and Chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker, MD School of Medicine Kalamazoo.

Newborn with white oral lesions
Courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD

These lesions, called Bohn nodules, manifest on the buccal or lingual portion of the maxillary alveolar ridge and, less frequently, on the mandibular alveolar ridge. Because Bohn nodules are white and have a firm consistency, they are often confused with teeth. They can be differentiated by location, as teeth usually erupt from the distal aspect of the alveolar ridge.

Bohn nodules are epithelial cysts that are filled with keratin, which gives them their white color. They are caused by portions of epithelium that get trapped under surrounding epithelial cells. Bohn nodules usually resolve when the overlying epithelium ruptures and releases the keratinaceous material (usually by the time the child is 3 months of age).1

These nodules can be confused with neonatal or supernumerary teeth. Neonatal teeth can be abnormally small and pointed; they are true deciduous teeth that have erupted early. If they are removed, the child will not replace them until the time of their adult tooth eruption. Additionally, there are supernumerary teeth, which are extra teeth that are often abnormally shaped and loosely adherent. These abnormal teeth warrant extraction to avoid trauma to the tongue or aspiration.2

In this case, the family was advised regarding the benign nature of the nodules and the expectation that they would spontaneously resolve.

Images and text courtesy of Daniel Stulberg, MD, FAAFP, Professor and Chair, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker, MD School of Medicine Kalamazoo.

References

1. Gupta N, Ramji S. Bohn's nodules: an under-recognised entity. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2013;98:F464. doi: 10.1136/archdischild-2012-302922

2. DeSeta M, Holden E, Siddik D, et al. Natal and neonatal teeth: a review and case series. Br Dent J. 2022;232:449-453. doi: 10.1038/s41415-022-4091-3

References

1. Gupta N, Ramji S. Bohn's nodules: an under-recognised entity. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2013;98:F464. doi: 10.1136/archdischild-2012-302922

2. DeSeta M, Holden E, Siddik D, et al. Natal and neonatal teeth: a review and case series. Br Dent J. 2022;232:449-453. doi: 10.1038/s41415-022-4091-3

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Self-worth training boosts ketamine’s effects in severe depression

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Changed
Wed, 10/19/2022 - 11:57

A simple computer-based neurocognitive training program that emphasizes self-worth can extend the antidepressant effects of ketamine for up to 30 days in patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), new research suggests.

Dr. Rebecca B. Price

The double-blind, randomized clinical trial is the first to assess combining ketamine with a low-cost protective learning program, researchers note.

They add that the findings are an important step toward long-lasting depression treatment for millions of patients whose depression does not improve following first-line therapies.

“One of the biggest challenges in psychiatry and psychology is seeing evidence of longer-term benefits and longer-term compliance,” lead investigator Rebecca B. Price, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and psychology, University of Pittsburgh, told this news organization.

Dr. Gerard Sanacora

“Anything that can get somebody well quickly and keep them well for some length of time is really exciting – and a whole paradigm shift for how things have been done up to now,” Dr. Price said.

The findings were published online in the American Journal of Psychiatry.
 

Promoting self-worth

About one-third of patients with depression remain treatment-resistant even after trying different medications at different doses and at different combinations, the investigators note.

Ketamine and esketamine, a nasal spray formulation of the drug, have been shown previously to improve symptoms in patients with TRD. While the benefits are evident within a few hours of treatment, the effects often wane after just a few weeks.

Ketamine and esketamine must be administered in a clinical setting and patients must be monitored for at least 2 hours after treatment. Repeat dosing is costly, both in time and expense, so clinical researchers have been studying ways to extend the drug’s effects without additional treatments.

The new study combined ketamine treatment with a computer-based active automated self-association training (ASAT) program that the researchers developed. It uses positive words and imagery to promote positive self-image and self-worth.

The trial included 154 adults with treatment-resistant unipolar depression whose symptoms persisted after therapy with at least two medications. Participants received an IV infusion of ketamine 0.5 mg/kg plus active ASAT (n = 53), saline plus active ASAT (n = 51), or ketamine plus sham ASAT (n = 50).

The active program used words like “sweet,” “lovable,” and “worthy” that appeared on the screen interspersed with images of people smiling and the patient’s own photo. Participants were also asked to complete certain mouse-tracking tasks during the session.

The sham ASAT was similar but included neutral words and images. ASAT and sham ASAT were delivered twice daily over 4 consecutive days for 20 minutes.
 

Clear benefit

Results showed that ketamine rapidly and significantly reduced depression scores within 24 hours of treatment (group-by-time interaction: standardized beta, –1.30; 95% confidence interval, –1.89 to –0.70).

Depression scores in the ketamine-plus-ASAT group remained low and stable over a 30-day period, compared with the saline-plus-ASAT group (standardized beta, –0.61; 95% CI, –0.95 to –0.28).

Participants who received ketamine plus sham ASAT saw initial improvement in symptoms immediately following infusion, but depression symptoms returned after a few weeks.

While researchers hoped to see positive effects from ASAT, “I certainly did not expect to see something so clear to jump right out,” Dr. Price said.

The investigators are now examining whether the computer program can be administered effectively remotely and whether its effects are equally beneficial following treatment with esketamine.
 

 

 

Greatest unmet need

Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry, and director, Yale Depression Research Program, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., said that extending the effects of ketamine or esketamine without additional dosing is “probably the greatest unmet need in relation to treatments with ketamine and esketamine.”

He added that there are large economic, time, and access burdens associated with the treatment of ketamine.

“Anything we can do to reduce the number of treatments needed or increase the sustainability or the duration of effect would be a tremendous benefit,” said Dr. Sanacora, who was not involved with the research.

Adding an easily accessible, nonpharmacological therapeutic approach to ketamine treatment could be valuable, he said – but more research is needed.

“I’m not sure that this specific associated positive thinking is really the critical component. I think we still have some work to do there. But it does demonstrate that we can use ancillary or augmenting nonpharmacological treatments to extend the effect,” Dr. Sanacora said.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and Clinical and Translational Science Institute at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Price is the named inventor on a University of Pittsburgh–owned provisional patent filing related to the combination intervention described in this report. Dr. Sanacora reports no relevant financial relationships.

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

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A simple computer-based neurocognitive training program that emphasizes self-worth can extend the antidepressant effects of ketamine for up to 30 days in patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), new research suggests.

Dr. Rebecca B. Price

The double-blind, randomized clinical trial is the first to assess combining ketamine with a low-cost protective learning program, researchers note.

They add that the findings are an important step toward long-lasting depression treatment for millions of patients whose depression does not improve following first-line therapies.

“One of the biggest challenges in psychiatry and psychology is seeing evidence of longer-term benefits and longer-term compliance,” lead investigator Rebecca B. Price, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and psychology, University of Pittsburgh, told this news organization.

Dr. Gerard Sanacora

“Anything that can get somebody well quickly and keep them well for some length of time is really exciting – and a whole paradigm shift for how things have been done up to now,” Dr. Price said.

The findings were published online in the American Journal of Psychiatry.
 

Promoting self-worth

About one-third of patients with depression remain treatment-resistant even after trying different medications at different doses and at different combinations, the investigators note.

Ketamine and esketamine, a nasal spray formulation of the drug, have been shown previously to improve symptoms in patients with TRD. While the benefits are evident within a few hours of treatment, the effects often wane after just a few weeks.

Ketamine and esketamine must be administered in a clinical setting and patients must be monitored for at least 2 hours after treatment. Repeat dosing is costly, both in time and expense, so clinical researchers have been studying ways to extend the drug’s effects without additional treatments.

The new study combined ketamine treatment with a computer-based active automated self-association training (ASAT) program that the researchers developed. It uses positive words and imagery to promote positive self-image and self-worth.

The trial included 154 adults with treatment-resistant unipolar depression whose symptoms persisted after therapy with at least two medications. Participants received an IV infusion of ketamine 0.5 mg/kg plus active ASAT (n = 53), saline plus active ASAT (n = 51), or ketamine plus sham ASAT (n = 50).

The active program used words like “sweet,” “lovable,” and “worthy” that appeared on the screen interspersed with images of people smiling and the patient’s own photo. Participants were also asked to complete certain mouse-tracking tasks during the session.

The sham ASAT was similar but included neutral words and images. ASAT and sham ASAT were delivered twice daily over 4 consecutive days for 20 minutes.
 

Clear benefit

Results showed that ketamine rapidly and significantly reduced depression scores within 24 hours of treatment (group-by-time interaction: standardized beta, –1.30; 95% confidence interval, –1.89 to –0.70).

Depression scores in the ketamine-plus-ASAT group remained low and stable over a 30-day period, compared with the saline-plus-ASAT group (standardized beta, –0.61; 95% CI, –0.95 to –0.28).

Participants who received ketamine plus sham ASAT saw initial improvement in symptoms immediately following infusion, but depression symptoms returned after a few weeks.

While researchers hoped to see positive effects from ASAT, “I certainly did not expect to see something so clear to jump right out,” Dr. Price said.

The investigators are now examining whether the computer program can be administered effectively remotely and whether its effects are equally beneficial following treatment with esketamine.
 

 

 

Greatest unmet need

Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry, and director, Yale Depression Research Program, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., said that extending the effects of ketamine or esketamine without additional dosing is “probably the greatest unmet need in relation to treatments with ketamine and esketamine.”

He added that there are large economic, time, and access burdens associated with the treatment of ketamine.

“Anything we can do to reduce the number of treatments needed or increase the sustainability or the duration of effect would be a tremendous benefit,” said Dr. Sanacora, who was not involved with the research.

Adding an easily accessible, nonpharmacological therapeutic approach to ketamine treatment could be valuable, he said – but more research is needed.

“I’m not sure that this specific associated positive thinking is really the critical component. I think we still have some work to do there. But it does demonstrate that we can use ancillary or augmenting nonpharmacological treatments to extend the effect,” Dr. Sanacora said.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and Clinical and Translational Science Institute at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Price is the named inventor on a University of Pittsburgh–owned provisional patent filing related to the combination intervention described in this report. Dr. Sanacora reports no relevant financial relationships.

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

A simple computer-based neurocognitive training program that emphasizes self-worth can extend the antidepressant effects of ketamine for up to 30 days in patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), new research suggests.

Dr. Rebecca B. Price

The double-blind, randomized clinical trial is the first to assess combining ketamine with a low-cost protective learning program, researchers note.

They add that the findings are an important step toward long-lasting depression treatment for millions of patients whose depression does not improve following first-line therapies.

“One of the biggest challenges in psychiatry and psychology is seeing evidence of longer-term benefits and longer-term compliance,” lead investigator Rebecca B. Price, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and psychology, University of Pittsburgh, told this news organization.

Dr. Gerard Sanacora

“Anything that can get somebody well quickly and keep them well for some length of time is really exciting – and a whole paradigm shift for how things have been done up to now,” Dr. Price said.

The findings were published online in the American Journal of Psychiatry.
 

Promoting self-worth

About one-third of patients with depression remain treatment-resistant even after trying different medications at different doses and at different combinations, the investigators note.

Ketamine and esketamine, a nasal spray formulation of the drug, have been shown previously to improve symptoms in patients with TRD. While the benefits are evident within a few hours of treatment, the effects often wane after just a few weeks.

Ketamine and esketamine must be administered in a clinical setting and patients must be monitored for at least 2 hours after treatment. Repeat dosing is costly, both in time and expense, so clinical researchers have been studying ways to extend the drug’s effects without additional treatments.

The new study combined ketamine treatment with a computer-based active automated self-association training (ASAT) program that the researchers developed. It uses positive words and imagery to promote positive self-image and self-worth.

The trial included 154 adults with treatment-resistant unipolar depression whose symptoms persisted after therapy with at least two medications. Participants received an IV infusion of ketamine 0.5 mg/kg plus active ASAT (n = 53), saline plus active ASAT (n = 51), or ketamine plus sham ASAT (n = 50).

The active program used words like “sweet,” “lovable,” and “worthy” that appeared on the screen interspersed with images of people smiling and the patient’s own photo. Participants were also asked to complete certain mouse-tracking tasks during the session.

The sham ASAT was similar but included neutral words and images. ASAT and sham ASAT were delivered twice daily over 4 consecutive days for 20 minutes.
 

Clear benefit

Results showed that ketamine rapidly and significantly reduced depression scores within 24 hours of treatment (group-by-time interaction: standardized beta, –1.30; 95% confidence interval, –1.89 to –0.70).

Depression scores in the ketamine-plus-ASAT group remained low and stable over a 30-day period, compared with the saline-plus-ASAT group (standardized beta, –0.61; 95% CI, –0.95 to –0.28).

Participants who received ketamine plus sham ASAT saw initial improvement in symptoms immediately following infusion, but depression symptoms returned after a few weeks.

While researchers hoped to see positive effects from ASAT, “I certainly did not expect to see something so clear to jump right out,” Dr. Price said.

The investigators are now examining whether the computer program can be administered effectively remotely and whether its effects are equally beneficial following treatment with esketamine.
 

 

 

Greatest unmet need

Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry, and director, Yale Depression Research Program, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., said that extending the effects of ketamine or esketamine without additional dosing is “probably the greatest unmet need in relation to treatments with ketamine and esketamine.”

He added that there are large economic, time, and access burdens associated with the treatment of ketamine.

“Anything we can do to reduce the number of treatments needed or increase the sustainability or the duration of effect would be a tremendous benefit,” said Dr. Sanacora, who was not involved with the research.

Adding an easily accessible, nonpharmacological therapeutic approach to ketamine treatment could be valuable, he said – but more research is needed.

“I’m not sure that this specific associated positive thinking is really the critical component. I think we still have some work to do there. But it does demonstrate that we can use ancillary or augmenting nonpharmacological treatments to extend the effect,” Dr. Sanacora said.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and Clinical and Translational Science Institute at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Price is the named inventor on a University of Pittsburgh–owned provisional patent filing related to the combination intervention described in this report. Dr. Sanacora reports no relevant financial relationships.

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

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‘Disturbing’ lack of follow-up care after psychiatric crises

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 10/19/2022 - 09:37

There is a concerning lack of follow-up care for young people who experience a mental health crisis, new research suggests.

Results from a large database study showed less than half of youth and young adults hospitalized for a psychiatric event received follow-up care within 7 days. The follow-up rate was less than 30% for those who had visited an ED.

The strongest predictor of follow-up was having received both primary and mental health care during the 6 months prior to using the acute service.

“For people discharging folks after a psychiatric crisis, whether it be in a hospital or emergency room setting, connecting them with their outpatient provider to ensure the transfer of care and continuity of care is vitally important to reduce risks for this population,” coinvestigator Brian Skehan, MD, PhD, assistant professor and psychiatrist, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, said during a press briefing.

If these discharged patients do not have a provider, “make sure they get one,” Lisa Dixon, MD, editor-in-chief of Psychiatric Services, added during the same briefing. “That’s the gift of life potentially for these young people.”

The findings were published online  in Psychiatric Services.
 

Alarming trends

The alarming suicide trends among youths were exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Skehan noted.

He cited a 2021 study that showed more than 44% of high school students experienced persistent sadness or hopelessness over the previous year, 1 in 5 seriously considered suicide, and almost 1 in 10 actually attempted suicide.

“When we look at the number of young adults and adolescents struggling with behavioral health issues, the data trend is disturbing nationwide,” Dr. Skehan said.

The current study included participants aged 12-27 years who had private insurance. Many youth in this age category are experiencing significant changes, such as moving from high school to college and from pediatric providers to adult providers – and some “get lost in this transition,” said Dr. Skehan.

He noted many inpatient psychiatric units are not geared to young adults. “They may miss out on some aspects of inpatient care because it’s not geared to their developmental stage,” he said.

Assessing U.S. patient data in the IBM MarketScan commercial database (2013-2018), the researchers created two study samples: 95,153 inpatients and 108,576 patients who used the ED. All had an acute event stemming from a mental health condition.

The investigators explored the role of “established” outpatient care, defined as having had at least one visit with a provider of primary or mental health care in the 6 months prior to the acute psychiatric event.

Covariates included age at time of service (aged 12-17 years or 18-27 years), gender, health care plan type, psychiatric diagnosis, whether the acute event was self-harm or suicide related, and medical complexity.
 

Low follow-up rates

In the inpatient group, the average age was 18.9 years, the most common length of hospital stay was 4-6 days, and 1.5% left against medical advice. The most common primary diagnosis was major depression (53.7%), followed by bipolar disorder (22.3%). The least common disorders were PTSD, comorbid eating disorders, and disruptive disorders.

About one-third of participants had used both primary and mental health care during the 6 months before hospitalization, whereas 22.8% had no established outpatient care. Established care was most common among those with comorbid eating disorders and least common among those with psychotic disorders.

Results showed 42.7% of the hospitalized patients received follow up within 7 days and 67.4% received follow up within 30 days.

The strongest predictor of mental health follow-up care was established outpatient care. Compared with those who had no such care, those who had received both primary care and mental health care before the acute event had the highest odds of receiving follow-up (within 7 days, adjusted odds ratio, 2.81; 95% confidence interval, 2.68-2.94).

Older age and leaving against medical advice were associated with decreased likelihood of follow-up. Female sex, hospitalizations related to self-harm or suicidality, and longer length of stay were associated with increased likelihood of mental health follow-up care.

Compared with those hospitalized for major depression, those hospitalized for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, PTSD, disruptive disorders, or comorbid substance use disorder were less likely to receive mental health follow-up. For example, only 23.7% of youth with comorbid substance use discharged from the hospital had follow-up within 7 days.

Similar patterns were observed for 30-day follow-up care.
 

 

 

‘Accessible and appealing’ options needed

In the ED-visit group, the average age was 19.5 years (58% female). Most (70.4%) had no chronic health conditions other than a psychiatric disorder. The primary diagnoses were anxiety disorders or phobias (44.1%) and major depression (23%).

One in four visits included a code for self-harm, suicidal ideation, or suicide attempt. And almost one third lacked established outpatient care before the ED visit.

Results showed 28.6% of the ED group received mental health care follow-up within 7 days and 46.4% received it within 30 days.

Again, the strongest predictor of mental health follow-up was prior outpatient care. For example, compared with participants with no established outpatient care, those with both primary care and mental health care were the most likely to receive follow-up within 7 days (aOR, 4.06; 95% CI, 3.72-4.42).

These numbers “are far from the goal of making sure everybody is getting follow-up care within 7 days of an acute psychiatric event,” Dr. Skehan said.

He stressed the need for “accessible and appealing options for youth.” These could include telehealth services, improved communication among health care providers in the ED, and reducing barriers to access follow-up care.

“This probably highlights the need to have more case management and referral services, and maybe make sure patients have a follow-up appointment before they leave the emergency room,” said Dr. Skehan. “This doesn’t necessarily guarantee they’ll get there but hopefully it makes it more likely they will have that access should they need it.”

The study was funded by grants from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, from the National Institutes of Health. The investigators reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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There is a concerning lack of follow-up care for young people who experience a mental health crisis, new research suggests.

Results from a large database study showed less than half of youth and young adults hospitalized for a psychiatric event received follow-up care within 7 days. The follow-up rate was less than 30% for those who had visited an ED.

The strongest predictor of follow-up was having received both primary and mental health care during the 6 months prior to using the acute service.

“For people discharging folks after a psychiatric crisis, whether it be in a hospital or emergency room setting, connecting them with their outpatient provider to ensure the transfer of care and continuity of care is vitally important to reduce risks for this population,” coinvestigator Brian Skehan, MD, PhD, assistant professor and psychiatrist, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, said during a press briefing.

If these discharged patients do not have a provider, “make sure they get one,” Lisa Dixon, MD, editor-in-chief of Psychiatric Services, added during the same briefing. “That’s the gift of life potentially for these young people.”

The findings were published online  in Psychiatric Services.
 

Alarming trends

The alarming suicide trends among youths were exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Skehan noted.

He cited a 2021 study that showed more than 44% of high school students experienced persistent sadness or hopelessness over the previous year, 1 in 5 seriously considered suicide, and almost 1 in 10 actually attempted suicide.

“When we look at the number of young adults and adolescents struggling with behavioral health issues, the data trend is disturbing nationwide,” Dr. Skehan said.

The current study included participants aged 12-27 years who had private insurance. Many youth in this age category are experiencing significant changes, such as moving from high school to college and from pediatric providers to adult providers – and some “get lost in this transition,” said Dr. Skehan.

He noted many inpatient psychiatric units are not geared to young adults. “They may miss out on some aspects of inpatient care because it’s not geared to their developmental stage,” he said.

Assessing U.S. patient data in the IBM MarketScan commercial database (2013-2018), the researchers created two study samples: 95,153 inpatients and 108,576 patients who used the ED. All had an acute event stemming from a mental health condition.

The investigators explored the role of “established” outpatient care, defined as having had at least one visit with a provider of primary or mental health care in the 6 months prior to the acute psychiatric event.

Covariates included age at time of service (aged 12-17 years or 18-27 years), gender, health care plan type, psychiatric diagnosis, whether the acute event was self-harm or suicide related, and medical complexity.
 

Low follow-up rates

In the inpatient group, the average age was 18.9 years, the most common length of hospital stay was 4-6 days, and 1.5% left against medical advice. The most common primary diagnosis was major depression (53.7%), followed by bipolar disorder (22.3%). The least common disorders were PTSD, comorbid eating disorders, and disruptive disorders.

About one-third of participants had used both primary and mental health care during the 6 months before hospitalization, whereas 22.8% had no established outpatient care. Established care was most common among those with comorbid eating disorders and least common among those with psychotic disorders.

Results showed 42.7% of the hospitalized patients received follow up within 7 days and 67.4% received follow up within 30 days.

The strongest predictor of mental health follow-up care was established outpatient care. Compared with those who had no such care, those who had received both primary care and mental health care before the acute event had the highest odds of receiving follow-up (within 7 days, adjusted odds ratio, 2.81; 95% confidence interval, 2.68-2.94).

Older age and leaving against medical advice were associated with decreased likelihood of follow-up. Female sex, hospitalizations related to self-harm or suicidality, and longer length of stay were associated with increased likelihood of mental health follow-up care.

Compared with those hospitalized for major depression, those hospitalized for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, PTSD, disruptive disorders, or comorbid substance use disorder were less likely to receive mental health follow-up. For example, only 23.7% of youth with comorbid substance use discharged from the hospital had follow-up within 7 days.

Similar patterns were observed for 30-day follow-up care.
 

 

 

‘Accessible and appealing’ options needed

In the ED-visit group, the average age was 19.5 years (58% female). Most (70.4%) had no chronic health conditions other than a psychiatric disorder. The primary diagnoses were anxiety disorders or phobias (44.1%) and major depression (23%).

One in four visits included a code for self-harm, suicidal ideation, or suicide attempt. And almost one third lacked established outpatient care before the ED visit.

Results showed 28.6% of the ED group received mental health care follow-up within 7 days and 46.4% received it within 30 days.

Again, the strongest predictor of mental health follow-up was prior outpatient care. For example, compared with participants with no established outpatient care, those with both primary care and mental health care were the most likely to receive follow-up within 7 days (aOR, 4.06; 95% CI, 3.72-4.42).

These numbers “are far from the goal of making sure everybody is getting follow-up care within 7 days of an acute psychiatric event,” Dr. Skehan said.

He stressed the need for “accessible and appealing options for youth.” These could include telehealth services, improved communication among health care providers in the ED, and reducing barriers to access follow-up care.

“This probably highlights the need to have more case management and referral services, and maybe make sure patients have a follow-up appointment before they leave the emergency room,” said Dr. Skehan. “This doesn’t necessarily guarantee they’ll get there but hopefully it makes it more likely they will have that access should they need it.”

The study was funded by grants from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, from the National Institutes of Health. The investigators reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

There is a concerning lack of follow-up care for young people who experience a mental health crisis, new research suggests.

Results from a large database study showed less than half of youth and young adults hospitalized for a psychiatric event received follow-up care within 7 days. The follow-up rate was less than 30% for those who had visited an ED.

The strongest predictor of follow-up was having received both primary and mental health care during the 6 months prior to using the acute service.

“For people discharging folks after a psychiatric crisis, whether it be in a hospital or emergency room setting, connecting them with their outpatient provider to ensure the transfer of care and continuity of care is vitally important to reduce risks for this population,” coinvestigator Brian Skehan, MD, PhD, assistant professor and psychiatrist, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, said during a press briefing.

If these discharged patients do not have a provider, “make sure they get one,” Lisa Dixon, MD, editor-in-chief of Psychiatric Services, added during the same briefing. “That’s the gift of life potentially for these young people.”

The findings were published online  in Psychiatric Services.
 

Alarming trends

The alarming suicide trends among youths were exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Skehan noted.

He cited a 2021 study that showed more than 44% of high school students experienced persistent sadness or hopelessness over the previous year, 1 in 5 seriously considered suicide, and almost 1 in 10 actually attempted suicide.

“When we look at the number of young adults and adolescents struggling with behavioral health issues, the data trend is disturbing nationwide,” Dr. Skehan said.

The current study included participants aged 12-27 years who had private insurance. Many youth in this age category are experiencing significant changes, such as moving from high school to college and from pediatric providers to adult providers – and some “get lost in this transition,” said Dr. Skehan.

He noted many inpatient psychiatric units are not geared to young adults. “They may miss out on some aspects of inpatient care because it’s not geared to their developmental stage,” he said.

Assessing U.S. patient data in the IBM MarketScan commercial database (2013-2018), the researchers created two study samples: 95,153 inpatients and 108,576 patients who used the ED. All had an acute event stemming from a mental health condition.

The investigators explored the role of “established” outpatient care, defined as having had at least one visit with a provider of primary or mental health care in the 6 months prior to the acute psychiatric event.

Covariates included age at time of service (aged 12-17 years or 18-27 years), gender, health care plan type, psychiatric diagnosis, whether the acute event was self-harm or suicide related, and medical complexity.
 

Low follow-up rates

In the inpatient group, the average age was 18.9 years, the most common length of hospital stay was 4-6 days, and 1.5% left against medical advice. The most common primary diagnosis was major depression (53.7%), followed by bipolar disorder (22.3%). The least common disorders were PTSD, comorbid eating disorders, and disruptive disorders.

About one-third of participants had used both primary and mental health care during the 6 months before hospitalization, whereas 22.8% had no established outpatient care. Established care was most common among those with comorbid eating disorders and least common among those with psychotic disorders.

Results showed 42.7% of the hospitalized patients received follow up within 7 days and 67.4% received follow up within 30 days.

The strongest predictor of mental health follow-up care was established outpatient care. Compared with those who had no such care, those who had received both primary care and mental health care before the acute event had the highest odds of receiving follow-up (within 7 days, adjusted odds ratio, 2.81; 95% confidence interval, 2.68-2.94).

Older age and leaving against medical advice were associated with decreased likelihood of follow-up. Female sex, hospitalizations related to self-harm or suicidality, and longer length of stay were associated with increased likelihood of mental health follow-up care.

Compared with those hospitalized for major depression, those hospitalized for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, PTSD, disruptive disorders, or comorbid substance use disorder were less likely to receive mental health follow-up. For example, only 23.7% of youth with comorbid substance use discharged from the hospital had follow-up within 7 days.

Similar patterns were observed for 30-day follow-up care.
 

 

 

‘Accessible and appealing’ options needed

In the ED-visit group, the average age was 19.5 years (58% female). Most (70.4%) had no chronic health conditions other than a psychiatric disorder. The primary diagnoses were anxiety disorders or phobias (44.1%) and major depression (23%).

One in four visits included a code for self-harm, suicidal ideation, or suicide attempt. And almost one third lacked established outpatient care before the ED visit.

Results showed 28.6% of the ED group received mental health care follow-up within 7 days and 46.4% received it within 30 days.

Again, the strongest predictor of mental health follow-up was prior outpatient care. For example, compared with participants with no established outpatient care, those with both primary care and mental health care were the most likely to receive follow-up within 7 days (aOR, 4.06; 95% CI, 3.72-4.42).

These numbers “are far from the goal of making sure everybody is getting follow-up care within 7 days of an acute psychiatric event,” Dr. Skehan said.

He stressed the need for “accessible and appealing options for youth.” These could include telehealth services, improved communication among health care providers in the ED, and reducing barriers to access follow-up care.

“This probably highlights the need to have more case management and referral services, and maybe make sure patients have a follow-up appointment before they leave the emergency room,” said Dr. Skehan. “This doesn’t necessarily guarantee they’ll get there but hopefully it makes it more likely they will have that access should they need it.”

The study was funded by grants from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, from the National Institutes of Health. The investigators reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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One-third of pancreatic cancer diagnoses missed on scans

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Signs of pancreatic cancer that were missed on earlier imaging scans represent a “huge window of lost opportunity,” say United Kingdom researchers who report a novel analysis. 

The study set out to identify the incidence and root causes of missed pancreatic cancer diagnoses on CT and MRI scans, the investigators explained at the United European Gastroenterology Week 2022.

The team studied 600 pancreatic cancer cases, including 46 cases (7.7%) categorized as postimaging pancreatic cancer (PIPC) – cases not detected on imaging performed 3-18 months prior to diagnosis.

They also reviewed 46 CT scans and 4 MRI scans performed in PIPC patients.

The detailed analysis showed that 36% of cases of PIPC were potentially avoidable, reported first author Nosheen Umar, MD, a gastroenterology research fellow at the University of Birmingham (England).

In 10% of PIPC patients, imaging signs associated with pancreatic cancer, such as dilated bile or pancreatic ducts, were not recognized as such and were not investigated further. In 26% of scans, the signs of a mass lesion were not picked up by the radiologist.

The findings are notable as the time window for curative PC surgery is often short, and missing the diagnosis on cross-sectional imaging can result in worse clinical outcomes for patients already dealing with a challenging cancer that has generally poor outcomes, Dr. Umar said in an interview.

In fact, pancreatic cancer has the lowest survival rate of all cancers in Europe, the UEG noted in a press release. Life expectancy at the time of diagnosis is just 4.6 months, and 5-year survival is less than 10%, Dr. Umar said.

Pancreatic cancer causes 95,000 deaths in the European Union each year, the UEG noted, adding that by 2035 the number of cases is predicted to rise by almost 40%.
 

Details of missed imaging signs

The aim of this study was to establish the most plausible explanations for missed imaging signs of PC, Dr. Umar explained, adding that early diagnosis is vitally important for offering patients the best chance of survival.

Cases analyzed for the study were identified from electronic medical records of adults diagnosed with PC between 2016 and 2021 at two National Health Service providers. An algorithm was developed to categorize PIPC and assess potential causes of the missed diagnoses.

The PIPC cases were categorized by type:

  • Type 1 – A focal lesion on previous imaging reported in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC (0% of cases)
  • Type 2 – Imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging (20% of cases)
  • Type 3 – No lesion or imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC, but lesion or imaging changes noted on review after PIPC diagnosis (26% of cases)
  • Type 4 – No lesion or imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC and no lesion or imaging changes on review after PIPC diagnosis (54% of cases)

“We hope this study will raise awareness of the issue of postimaging pancreatic cancer and common reasons why pancreatic cancer can be initially missed,” Dr. Umar stated in the UEG press release. “This will help to standardize future studies of this issue and guide quality improvement efforts so we can increase the likelihood of an early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, increase the chances of patient survival and, ultimately, save lives.”

The authors reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Signs of pancreatic cancer that were missed on earlier imaging scans represent a “huge window of lost opportunity,” say United Kingdom researchers who report a novel analysis. 

The study set out to identify the incidence and root causes of missed pancreatic cancer diagnoses on CT and MRI scans, the investigators explained at the United European Gastroenterology Week 2022.

The team studied 600 pancreatic cancer cases, including 46 cases (7.7%) categorized as postimaging pancreatic cancer (PIPC) – cases not detected on imaging performed 3-18 months prior to diagnosis.

They also reviewed 46 CT scans and 4 MRI scans performed in PIPC patients.

The detailed analysis showed that 36% of cases of PIPC were potentially avoidable, reported first author Nosheen Umar, MD, a gastroenterology research fellow at the University of Birmingham (England).

In 10% of PIPC patients, imaging signs associated with pancreatic cancer, such as dilated bile or pancreatic ducts, were not recognized as such and were not investigated further. In 26% of scans, the signs of a mass lesion were not picked up by the radiologist.

The findings are notable as the time window for curative PC surgery is often short, and missing the diagnosis on cross-sectional imaging can result in worse clinical outcomes for patients already dealing with a challenging cancer that has generally poor outcomes, Dr. Umar said in an interview.

In fact, pancreatic cancer has the lowest survival rate of all cancers in Europe, the UEG noted in a press release. Life expectancy at the time of diagnosis is just 4.6 months, and 5-year survival is less than 10%, Dr. Umar said.

Pancreatic cancer causes 95,000 deaths in the European Union each year, the UEG noted, adding that by 2035 the number of cases is predicted to rise by almost 40%.
 

Details of missed imaging signs

The aim of this study was to establish the most plausible explanations for missed imaging signs of PC, Dr. Umar explained, adding that early diagnosis is vitally important for offering patients the best chance of survival.

Cases analyzed for the study were identified from electronic medical records of adults diagnosed with PC between 2016 and 2021 at two National Health Service providers. An algorithm was developed to categorize PIPC and assess potential causes of the missed diagnoses.

The PIPC cases were categorized by type:

  • Type 1 – A focal lesion on previous imaging reported in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC (0% of cases)
  • Type 2 – Imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging (20% of cases)
  • Type 3 – No lesion or imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC, but lesion or imaging changes noted on review after PIPC diagnosis (26% of cases)
  • Type 4 – No lesion or imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC and no lesion or imaging changes on review after PIPC diagnosis (54% of cases)

“We hope this study will raise awareness of the issue of postimaging pancreatic cancer and common reasons why pancreatic cancer can be initially missed,” Dr. Umar stated in the UEG press release. “This will help to standardize future studies of this issue and guide quality improvement efforts so we can increase the likelihood of an early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, increase the chances of patient survival and, ultimately, save lives.”

The authors reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

Signs of pancreatic cancer that were missed on earlier imaging scans represent a “huge window of lost opportunity,” say United Kingdom researchers who report a novel analysis. 

The study set out to identify the incidence and root causes of missed pancreatic cancer diagnoses on CT and MRI scans, the investigators explained at the United European Gastroenterology Week 2022.

The team studied 600 pancreatic cancer cases, including 46 cases (7.7%) categorized as postimaging pancreatic cancer (PIPC) – cases not detected on imaging performed 3-18 months prior to diagnosis.

They also reviewed 46 CT scans and 4 MRI scans performed in PIPC patients.

The detailed analysis showed that 36% of cases of PIPC were potentially avoidable, reported first author Nosheen Umar, MD, a gastroenterology research fellow at the University of Birmingham (England).

In 10% of PIPC patients, imaging signs associated with pancreatic cancer, such as dilated bile or pancreatic ducts, were not recognized as such and were not investigated further. In 26% of scans, the signs of a mass lesion were not picked up by the radiologist.

The findings are notable as the time window for curative PC surgery is often short, and missing the diagnosis on cross-sectional imaging can result in worse clinical outcomes for patients already dealing with a challenging cancer that has generally poor outcomes, Dr. Umar said in an interview.

In fact, pancreatic cancer has the lowest survival rate of all cancers in Europe, the UEG noted in a press release. Life expectancy at the time of diagnosis is just 4.6 months, and 5-year survival is less than 10%, Dr. Umar said.

Pancreatic cancer causes 95,000 deaths in the European Union each year, the UEG noted, adding that by 2035 the number of cases is predicted to rise by almost 40%.
 

Details of missed imaging signs

The aim of this study was to establish the most plausible explanations for missed imaging signs of PC, Dr. Umar explained, adding that early diagnosis is vitally important for offering patients the best chance of survival.

Cases analyzed for the study were identified from electronic medical records of adults diagnosed with PC between 2016 and 2021 at two National Health Service providers. An algorithm was developed to categorize PIPC and assess potential causes of the missed diagnoses.

The PIPC cases were categorized by type:

  • Type 1 – A focal lesion on previous imaging reported in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC (0% of cases)
  • Type 2 – Imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging (20% of cases)
  • Type 3 – No lesion or imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC, but lesion or imaging changes noted on review after PIPC diagnosis (26% of cases)
  • Type 4 – No lesion or imaging changes that can be associated with PC reported on previous imaging in the same pancreatic segment as PIPC and no lesion or imaging changes on review after PIPC diagnosis (54% of cases)

“We hope this study will raise awareness of the issue of postimaging pancreatic cancer and common reasons why pancreatic cancer can be initially missed,” Dr. Umar stated in the UEG press release. “This will help to standardize future studies of this issue and guide quality improvement efforts so we can increase the likelihood of an early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, increase the chances of patient survival and, ultimately, save lives.”

The authors reported no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Hospitalizations for VAP rose prior to pandemic

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The number of adults hospitalized with ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in the United States increased by 50% from 2013 to 2019, based on data from the National Inpatient Sample.

Health care–associated infections are a significant burden, and “ventilator associated-pneumonia is a contributor to that,” said Namratha S. Meda, MBBS, in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians.

VAP can affect length of stay and other costs, but factors related to VAP hospitalization have not been well studied, said Dr. Meda, of Medstar Health/Georgetown University Hospital, Washington.

To examine trends in hospitalization for VAP, Dr. Meda and colleagues reviewed data from the National Inpatient Sample from January 2013 to December 2019. The study population included adult patients with VAP as a primary or secondary diagnosis based on ICD-9 or ICD-10 codes.

Overall, the trend in hospitalizations showed a consistent increase, said Dr. Meda.

The researchers identified 128,025 adult hospitalizations with VAP during the study period, with an increase from 50 VAP cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2013 to 75 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2019.

A total of 42,120 hospitalizations were associated with tracheostomy, ventilator dependence, or both. Hospitalizations in these categories increased by 80% during the study period, from 15 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2013 to 27 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2019.

The median cost for each hospitalization was $83,311, and showed a 2.9% increase from 2013 to 2019. The estimated annual cost of VAP hospitalizations was approximately $2.8 billion in 2019, Dr. Meda emphasized. However, all-cause hospital mortality remained unchanged over the study period, at approximately 20%.

The mean age of the hospitalized VAP patients was 58 years across all VAP-related hospitalizations, and 36.5% were women. More than half (58%) were White, 21% were Black, and 12% were Hispanic.

The researchers noted some sex and racial disparities; the median age was lower for Black and Hispanic patients, compared with White patients, but all-cause mortality was lower. Men had a significantly longer median length of stay, compared with women (21 days vs. 19 days), and higher median costs ($87,981 vs. $74,889) with a P <.001 for both, but the all-cause in-hospital mortality was not significantly different between sexes.

The steady increase in hospitalization for VAP without a significant change in all-cause mortality, might be driven by hospitals with higher levels of tracheostomy and ventilator dependence, but more research is needed, Dr. Meda noted.

The study was limited by the observational design, which allowed the researchers to report an association, but not causality, said Dr. Meda. However, the results reflect the ongoing financial burden of VAP on the health care system, although “it would be interesting to see how the trend might change if we just looked at the clinical definition versus billing data,” she noted.

The study did not include data since the advent of COVID-19, but COVID is likely to drive the trend of increasing VAP hospitalization higher, Dr. Meda added.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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The number of adults hospitalized with ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in the United States increased by 50% from 2013 to 2019, based on data from the National Inpatient Sample.

Health care–associated infections are a significant burden, and “ventilator associated-pneumonia is a contributor to that,” said Namratha S. Meda, MBBS, in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians.

VAP can affect length of stay and other costs, but factors related to VAP hospitalization have not been well studied, said Dr. Meda, of Medstar Health/Georgetown University Hospital, Washington.

To examine trends in hospitalization for VAP, Dr. Meda and colleagues reviewed data from the National Inpatient Sample from January 2013 to December 2019. The study population included adult patients with VAP as a primary or secondary diagnosis based on ICD-9 or ICD-10 codes.

Overall, the trend in hospitalizations showed a consistent increase, said Dr. Meda.

The researchers identified 128,025 adult hospitalizations with VAP during the study period, with an increase from 50 VAP cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2013 to 75 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2019.

A total of 42,120 hospitalizations were associated with tracheostomy, ventilator dependence, or both. Hospitalizations in these categories increased by 80% during the study period, from 15 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2013 to 27 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2019.

The median cost for each hospitalization was $83,311, and showed a 2.9% increase from 2013 to 2019. The estimated annual cost of VAP hospitalizations was approximately $2.8 billion in 2019, Dr. Meda emphasized. However, all-cause hospital mortality remained unchanged over the study period, at approximately 20%.

The mean age of the hospitalized VAP patients was 58 years across all VAP-related hospitalizations, and 36.5% were women. More than half (58%) were White, 21% were Black, and 12% were Hispanic.

The researchers noted some sex and racial disparities; the median age was lower for Black and Hispanic patients, compared with White patients, but all-cause mortality was lower. Men had a significantly longer median length of stay, compared with women (21 days vs. 19 days), and higher median costs ($87,981 vs. $74,889) with a P <.001 for both, but the all-cause in-hospital mortality was not significantly different between sexes.

The steady increase in hospitalization for VAP without a significant change in all-cause mortality, might be driven by hospitals with higher levels of tracheostomy and ventilator dependence, but more research is needed, Dr. Meda noted.

The study was limited by the observational design, which allowed the researchers to report an association, but not causality, said Dr. Meda. However, the results reflect the ongoing financial burden of VAP on the health care system, although “it would be interesting to see how the trend might change if we just looked at the clinical definition versus billing data,” she noted.

The study did not include data since the advent of COVID-19, but COVID is likely to drive the trend of increasing VAP hospitalization higher, Dr. Meda added.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

The number of adults hospitalized with ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in the United States increased by 50% from 2013 to 2019, based on data from the National Inpatient Sample.

Health care–associated infections are a significant burden, and “ventilator associated-pneumonia is a contributor to that,” said Namratha S. Meda, MBBS, in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians.

VAP can affect length of stay and other costs, but factors related to VAP hospitalization have not been well studied, said Dr. Meda, of Medstar Health/Georgetown University Hospital, Washington.

To examine trends in hospitalization for VAP, Dr. Meda and colleagues reviewed data from the National Inpatient Sample from January 2013 to December 2019. The study population included adult patients with VAP as a primary or secondary diagnosis based on ICD-9 or ICD-10 codes.

Overall, the trend in hospitalizations showed a consistent increase, said Dr. Meda.

The researchers identified 128,025 adult hospitalizations with VAP during the study period, with an increase from 50 VAP cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2013 to 75 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2019.

A total of 42,120 hospitalizations were associated with tracheostomy, ventilator dependence, or both. Hospitalizations in these categories increased by 80% during the study period, from 15 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2013 to 27 cases per 100,000 hospitalizations in 2019.

The median cost for each hospitalization was $83,311, and showed a 2.9% increase from 2013 to 2019. The estimated annual cost of VAP hospitalizations was approximately $2.8 billion in 2019, Dr. Meda emphasized. However, all-cause hospital mortality remained unchanged over the study period, at approximately 20%.

The mean age of the hospitalized VAP patients was 58 years across all VAP-related hospitalizations, and 36.5% were women. More than half (58%) were White, 21% were Black, and 12% were Hispanic.

The researchers noted some sex and racial disparities; the median age was lower for Black and Hispanic patients, compared with White patients, but all-cause mortality was lower. Men had a significantly longer median length of stay, compared with women (21 days vs. 19 days), and higher median costs ($87,981 vs. $74,889) with a P <.001 for both, but the all-cause in-hospital mortality was not significantly different between sexes.

The steady increase in hospitalization for VAP without a significant change in all-cause mortality, might be driven by hospitals with higher levels of tracheostomy and ventilator dependence, but more research is needed, Dr. Meda noted.

The study was limited by the observational design, which allowed the researchers to report an association, but not causality, said Dr. Meda. However, the results reflect the ongoing financial burden of VAP on the health care system, although “it would be interesting to see how the trend might change if we just looked at the clinical definition versus billing data,” she noted.

The study did not include data since the advent of COVID-19, but COVID is likely to drive the trend of increasing VAP hospitalization higher, Dr. Meda added.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Finerenone benefits T2D across spectrum of renal function

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Treatment with finerenone produced roughly similar reductions in heart failure–related outcomes in people with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease (CKD) across the spectrum of kidney function, compared with placebo, including those who had albuminuria but a preserved estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), in a post hoc analysis of pooled data from more than 13,000 people.

The findings, from the two pivotal trials for the agent, “reinforce the importance of routine eGFR and UACR [urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio] screening” in people with type 2 diabetes to identify new candidates for treatment with finerenone (Kerendia), Gerasimos Filippatos, MD, and coauthors said in a report published online in JACC: Heart Failure.

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Dr. Gerasimos Filippatos

Among the 13,026 patients in the two combined trials, 40% had a preserved eGFR of greater than 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2 despite also having albuminuria with a UACR of at least 30 mg/g, showing how often this combination occurs. But many clinicians “do not follow the guidelines” and fail to measure the UACR in these patients in routine practice, noted Dr. Filippatos at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology in August.

“We now have something to do for these patients,” treat them with finerenone, said Dr. Filippatos, professor and director of heart failure at the Attikon University Hospital, Athens.



The availability of finerenone following its U.S. approval in 2021 means clinicians “must get used to measuring UACR” in people with type 2 diabetes even when their eGFR is normal, especially people with type 2 diabetes plus high cardiovascular disease risk, he said.

The Food and Drug Administration approved finerenone, a nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, for treating people with type 2 diabetes and CKD in July 2021, but its uptake has been slow, experts say. In a talk in September 2022 during the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, Jennifer B. Green, MD, estimated that U.S. uptake of finerenone for appropriate people with type 2 diabetes had not advanced beyond 10%.

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Dr. Jennifer B. Green

A recent review also noted that uptake of screening for elevated UACR in U.S. patients with type 2 diabetes was in the range of 10%-40% during 2017-2019, a “shockingly low rate,” said Dr. Green, a professor and diabetes specialist at Duke University, Durham, N.C.
 

A new reason to screen for albuminuria

“It’s an extremely important message,” Johann Bauersachs, MD, commented in an interview. Results from “many studies have shown that albuminuria is an excellent additional marker for cardiovascular disease risk. But measurement of albuminuria is not widely done, despite guidelines that recommend annual albuminuria testing in people with type 2 diabetes,” said Dr. Bauersachs, professor and head of the department of cardiology at Hannover (Germany) Medical School.

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Dr. Johann Bauersachs

“Even before there was finerenone, there were reasons to measure UACR, but I hope adding finerenone will help, and more clinicians will incorporate UACR into their routine practice,” said Dr. Bauersachs, who was not involved with the finerenone studies.

The analyses reported by Dr. Filippatos and coauthors used data from two related trials of finerenone, FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD, combined by prespecified design into a single dataset, FIDELITY, with a total of 13,026 participants eligible for analysis and followed for a median of 3 years. All had type 2 diabetes and CKD based on having a UACR of at least 30 mg/g. Their eGFR levels could run as high as 74 mL/min per 1.73 m2 in FIDELIO-DKD, and as high as 90 mL/min/1.73m2 in FIGARO-DKD. The two trials excluded people with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, and those with a serum potassium greater than 4.8 mmol/L.

In the FIDELITY dataset treatment with finerenone led to a significant 17% reduction in the combined incidence of cardiovascular death or first hospitalization for heart failure relative to those who received placebo. This relative risk reduction was not affected by either eGFR or UACR values at baseline, the new analysis showed.

The analysis also demonstrated a nonsignificant trend toward greater reductions in heart failure–related outcomes among study participants who began with an eGFR in the normal range of at least 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2. The researchers also found a nonsignificant trend to a greater reduction in heart failure–related events among those with a UACR of less than 300 mg/g.
 

 

 

Finerenone favors patients with less advanced CKD

In short “the magnitude of the treatment benefit tended to favor patients with less advanced CKD,” concluded the researchers, suggesting that “earlier intervention [with finerenone] in the CKD course is likely to provide the greatest long-term benefit on heart failure–related outcomes.” This led them to further infer “the importance of not only routine assessing eGFR, but also perhaps more importantly, routinely screening for UACR to facilitate early diagnosis and early intervention in patients with type 2 diabetes.”

Findings from FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD led to recent guideline additions for finerenone by several medical groups. In August 2022, the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists released an update to its guideline for managing people with diabetes that recommended treating people with type 2 diabetes with finerenone when they have a UACR of at least 30 mg/g if they are already treated with a maximum-tolerated dose of a renin-angiotensin system inhibitor, have a normal serum potassium level, and have an eGFR of at least 25 mL/min per 1.73 m2. The identical recommendation also appeared in a Consensus Report from the American Diabetes Association and KDIGO, an international organization promoting evidence-based management of patients with CKD.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge news
Dr. Lars Rydén

“Finerenone provides a very important contribution because it improves prognosis even in very well managed patients” with type 2 diabetes, commented Lars Rydén, MD, professor of cardiology at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, as designated discussant for the report by Dr. Filippatos at the ESC congress.

The findings from the FIDELITY analysis are “trustworthy, and clinically important,” Dr. Rydén said. When left untreated, diabetic kidney disease “reduces life expectancy by an average of 16 years.”

The finerenone trials were sponsored by Bayer, which markets finerenone (Kerendia). Dr. Filippatos has received lecture fees from Bayer as well as from Amgen, Medtronic, Novartis, Servier, and Vifor. Dr. Green has financial ties to Bayer as well as to Anji, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim/Lilly, Hawthorne Effect/Omada, Merck, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi/Lexicon, and Valo. Dr. Bauersachs has been a consultant to Bayer as well as to Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cardior, Cervia, CVRx, Novartis, Pfizer, and Vifor, and he has received research funding from Abiomed. Dr. Rydén has financial ties to Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, and Novo Nordisk.

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Treatment with finerenone produced roughly similar reductions in heart failure–related outcomes in people with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease (CKD) across the spectrum of kidney function, compared with placebo, including those who had albuminuria but a preserved estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), in a post hoc analysis of pooled data from more than 13,000 people.

The findings, from the two pivotal trials for the agent, “reinforce the importance of routine eGFR and UACR [urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio] screening” in people with type 2 diabetes to identify new candidates for treatment with finerenone (Kerendia), Gerasimos Filippatos, MD, and coauthors said in a report published online in JACC: Heart Failure.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge news
Dr. Gerasimos Filippatos

Among the 13,026 patients in the two combined trials, 40% had a preserved eGFR of greater than 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2 despite also having albuminuria with a UACR of at least 30 mg/g, showing how often this combination occurs. But many clinicians “do not follow the guidelines” and fail to measure the UACR in these patients in routine practice, noted Dr. Filippatos at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology in August.

“We now have something to do for these patients,” treat them with finerenone, said Dr. Filippatos, professor and director of heart failure at the Attikon University Hospital, Athens.



The availability of finerenone following its U.S. approval in 2021 means clinicians “must get used to measuring UACR” in people with type 2 diabetes even when their eGFR is normal, especially people with type 2 diabetes plus high cardiovascular disease risk, he said.

The Food and Drug Administration approved finerenone, a nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, for treating people with type 2 diabetes and CKD in July 2021, but its uptake has been slow, experts say. In a talk in September 2022 during the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, Jennifer B. Green, MD, estimated that U.S. uptake of finerenone for appropriate people with type 2 diabetes had not advanced beyond 10%.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Jennifer B. Green

A recent review also noted that uptake of screening for elevated UACR in U.S. patients with type 2 diabetes was in the range of 10%-40% during 2017-2019, a “shockingly low rate,” said Dr. Green, a professor and diabetes specialist at Duke University, Durham, N.C.
 

A new reason to screen for albuminuria

“It’s an extremely important message,” Johann Bauersachs, MD, commented in an interview. Results from “many studies have shown that albuminuria is an excellent additional marker for cardiovascular disease risk. But measurement of albuminuria is not widely done, despite guidelines that recommend annual albuminuria testing in people with type 2 diabetes,” said Dr. Bauersachs, professor and head of the department of cardiology at Hannover (Germany) Medical School.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Johann Bauersachs

“Even before there was finerenone, there were reasons to measure UACR, but I hope adding finerenone will help, and more clinicians will incorporate UACR into their routine practice,” said Dr. Bauersachs, who was not involved with the finerenone studies.

The analyses reported by Dr. Filippatos and coauthors used data from two related trials of finerenone, FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD, combined by prespecified design into a single dataset, FIDELITY, with a total of 13,026 participants eligible for analysis and followed for a median of 3 years. All had type 2 diabetes and CKD based on having a UACR of at least 30 mg/g. Their eGFR levels could run as high as 74 mL/min per 1.73 m2 in FIDELIO-DKD, and as high as 90 mL/min/1.73m2 in FIGARO-DKD. The two trials excluded people with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, and those with a serum potassium greater than 4.8 mmol/L.

In the FIDELITY dataset treatment with finerenone led to a significant 17% reduction in the combined incidence of cardiovascular death or first hospitalization for heart failure relative to those who received placebo. This relative risk reduction was not affected by either eGFR or UACR values at baseline, the new analysis showed.

The analysis also demonstrated a nonsignificant trend toward greater reductions in heart failure–related outcomes among study participants who began with an eGFR in the normal range of at least 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2. The researchers also found a nonsignificant trend to a greater reduction in heart failure–related events among those with a UACR of less than 300 mg/g.
 

 

 

Finerenone favors patients with less advanced CKD

In short “the magnitude of the treatment benefit tended to favor patients with less advanced CKD,” concluded the researchers, suggesting that “earlier intervention [with finerenone] in the CKD course is likely to provide the greatest long-term benefit on heart failure–related outcomes.” This led them to further infer “the importance of not only routine assessing eGFR, but also perhaps more importantly, routinely screening for UACR to facilitate early diagnosis and early intervention in patients with type 2 diabetes.”

Findings from FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD led to recent guideline additions for finerenone by several medical groups. In August 2022, the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists released an update to its guideline for managing people with diabetes that recommended treating people with type 2 diabetes with finerenone when they have a UACR of at least 30 mg/g if they are already treated with a maximum-tolerated dose of a renin-angiotensin system inhibitor, have a normal serum potassium level, and have an eGFR of at least 25 mL/min per 1.73 m2. The identical recommendation also appeared in a Consensus Report from the American Diabetes Association and KDIGO, an international organization promoting evidence-based management of patients with CKD.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge news
Dr. Lars Rydén

“Finerenone provides a very important contribution because it improves prognosis even in very well managed patients” with type 2 diabetes, commented Lars Rydén, MD, professor of cardiology at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, as designated discussant for the report by Dr. Filippatos at the ESC congress.

The findings from the FIDELITY analysis are “trustworthy, and clinically important,” Dr. Rydén said. When left untreated, diabetic kidney disease “reduces life expectancy by an average of 16 years.”

The finerenone trials were sponsored by Bayer, which markets finerenone (Kerendia). Dr. Filippatos has received lecture fees from Bayer as well as from Amgen, Medtronic, Novartis, Servier, and Vifor. Dr. Green has financial ties to Bayer as well as to Anji, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim/Lilly, Hawthorne Effect/Omada, Merck, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi/Lexicon, and Valo. Dr. Bauersachs has been a consultant to Bayer as well as to Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cardior, Cervia, CVRx, Novartis, Pfizer, and Vifor, and he has received research funding from Abiomed. Dr. Rydén has financial ties to Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, and Novo Nordisk.

Treatment with finerenone produced roughly similar reductions in heart failure–related outcomes in people with type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease (CKD) across the spectrum of kidney function, compared with placebo, including those who had albuminuria but a preserved estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), in a post hoc analysis of pooled data from more than 13,000 people.

The findings, from the two pivotal trials for the agent, “reinforce the importance of routine eGFR and UACR [urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio] screening” in people with type 2 diabetes to identify new candidates for treatment with finerenone (Kerendia), Gerasimos Filippatos, MD, and coauthors said in a report published online in JACC: Heart Failure.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge news
Dr. Gerasimos Filippatos

Among the 13,026 patients in the two combined trials, 40% had a preserved eGFR of greater than 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2 despite also having albuminuria with a UACR of at least 30 mg/g, showing how often this combination occurs. But many clinicians “do not follow the guidelines” and fail to measure the UACR in these patients in routine practice, noted Dr. Filippatos at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology in August.

“We now have something to do for these patients,” treat them with finerenone, said Dr. Filippatos, professor and director of heart failure at the Attikon University Hospital, Athens.



The availability of finerenone following its U.S. approval in 2021 means clinicians “must get used to measuring UACR” in people with type 2 diabetes even when their eGFR is normal, especially people with type 2 diabetes plus high cardiovascular disease risk, he said.

The Food and Drug Administration approved finerenone, a nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, for treating people with type 2 diabetes and CKD in July 2021, but its uptake has been slow, experts say. In a talk in September 2022 during the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, Jennifer B. Green, MD, estimated that U.S. uptake of finerenone for appropriate people with type 2 diabetes had not advanced beyond 10%.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Jennifer B. Green

A recent review also noted that uptake of screening for elevated UACR in U.S. patients with type 2 diabetes was in the range of 10%-40% during 2017-2019, a “shockingly low rate,” said Dr. Green, a professor and diabetes specialist at Duke University, Durham, N.C.
 

A new reason to screen for albuminuria

“It’s an extremely important message,” Johann Bauersachs, MD, commented in an interview. Results from “many studies have shown that albuminuria is an excellent additional marker for cardiovascular disease risk. But measurement of albuminuria is not widely done, despite guidelines that recommend annual albuminuria testing in people with type 2 diabetes,” said Dr. Bauersachs, professor and head of the department of cardiology at Hannover (Germany) Medical School.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Johann Bauersachs

“Even before there was finerenone, there were reasons to measure UACR, but I hope adding finerenone will help, and more clinicians will incorporate UACR into their routine practice,” said Dr. Bauersachs, who was not involved with the finerenone studies.

The analyses reported by Dr. Filippatos and coauthors used data from two related trials of finerenone, FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD, combined by prespecified design into a single dataset, FIDELITY, with a total of 13,026 participants eligible for analysis and followed for a median of 3 years. All had type 2 diabetes and CKD based on having a UACR of at least 30 mg/g. Their eGFR levels could run as high as 74 mL/min per 1.73 m2 in FIDELIO-DKD, and as high as 90 mL/min/1.73m2 in FIGARO-DKD. The two trials excluded people with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, and those with a serum potassium greater than 4.8 mmol/L.

In the FIDELITY dataset treatment with finerenone led to a significant 17% reduction in the combined incidence of cardiovascular death or first hospitalization for heart failure relative to those who received placebo. This relative risk reduction was not affected by either eGFR or UACR values at baseline, the new analysis showed.

The analysis also demonstrated a nonsignificant trend toward greater reductions in heart failure–related outcomes among study participants who began with an eGFR in the normal range of at least 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2. The researchers also found a nonsignificant trend to a greater reduction in heart failure–related events among those with a UACR of less than 300 mg/g.
 

 

 

Finerenone favors patients with less advanced CKD

In short “the magnitude of the treatment benefit tended to favor patients with less advanced CKD,” concluded the researchers, suggesting that “earlier intervention [with finerenone] in the CKD course is likely to provide the greatest long-term benefit on heart failure–related outcomes.” This led them to further infer “the importance of not only routine assessing eGFR, but also perhaps more importantly, routinely screening for UACR to facilitate early diagnosis and early intervention in patients with type 2 diabetes.”

Findings from FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD led to recent guideline additions for finerenone by several medical groups. In August 2022, the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists released an update to its guideline for managing people with diabetes that recommended treating people with type 2 diabetes with finerenone when they have a UACR of at least 30 mg/g if they are already treated with a maximum-tolerated dose of a renin-angiotensin system inhibitor, have a normal serum potassium level, and have an eGFR of at least 25 mL/min per 1.73 m2. The identical recommendation also appeared in a Consensus Report from the American Diabetes Association and KDIGO, an international organization promoting evidence-based management of patients with CKD.

Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge news
Dr. Lars Rydén

“Finerenone provides a very important contribution because it improves prognosis even in very well managed patients” with type 2 diabetes, commented Lars Rydén, MD, professor of cardiology at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, as designated discussant for the report by Dr. Filippatos at the ESC congress.

The findings from the FIDELITY analysis are “trustworthy, and clinically important,” Dr. Rydén said. When left untreated, diabetic kidney disease “reduces life expectancy by an average of 16 years.”

The finerenone trials were sponsored by Bayer, which markets finerenone (Kerendia). Dr. Filippatos has received lecture fees from Bayer as well as from Amgen, Medtronic, Novartis, Servier, and Vifor. Dr. Green has financial ties to Bayer as well as to Anji, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim/Lilly, Hawthorne Effect/Omada, Merck, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Roche, Sanofi/Lexicon, and Valo. Dr. Bauersachs has been a consultant to Bayer as well as to Amgen, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cardior, Cervia, CVRx, Novartis, Pfizer, and Vifor, and he has received research funding from Abiomed. Dr. Rydén has financial ties to Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, and Novo Nordisk.

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