Multidisciplinary Team Develops New Guidelines for Sjögren-Related Neuropathy

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Thu, 05/09/2024 - 12:10

 

New guidelines to manage peripheral neuropathy related to Sjögren disease have been developed by a multidisciplinary team of physicians from across medicine.

The guidelines will provide an evidence-based resource for the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of various peripheral neuropathies related to the disorder.

Up until now, the field has been “haphazard and chaotic,” lead author George Sarka, MD, DrPH, MPH, director of the CME Committee for MemorialCare, Saddleback Medical Center, Laguna Hills, California, and member of the Sjögren Foundation PNS Guidelines Topic Review Group (TRG), told this news organization.

Dr. Sarka discussed the initiative at the American Academy of Neurology 2024 annual meeting.


 

Severe, Complex Illness

Sjögren disease is the second most common autoimmune rheumatic disorder after rheumatoid arthritis, affecting an estimated 4 million Americans. Women make up most of the patient population at a ratio of 9:1.

The condition typically affects the mucous membranes and moisture-secreting glands of the eyes and mouth, resulting in decreased tears and saliva. But peripheral nervous system (PNS) manifestations often precede these symptoms and can occur in up to 60% of Sjögren disease cases.

“Traditionally, Sjögren’s was looked at as a dry eye and dry mouth disease, but we realize now that it’s so much broader than that,” said Dr. Sarka. “It’s a severe, systemic, and complex illness that can affect any body organ or system, and the nervous system is frequently affected.”

PNS manifestations cause more than mere discomfort; they can lead to diagnostic and management challenges, costly treatments, and diminished quality of life.

Getting a proper diagnosis goes a long way toward improving the quality of life for these patients, Steven Mandel, MD, clinical professor of neurology at the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra-Northwell, adjunct clinical professor of medicine at NY Medical College, New York City, and member of the TRG, told this news organization.

The problem is, doctors don’t always think an autoimmune disorder is causing the symptoms, said Dr. Sarka. “There’s an old adage in neurology that if you don’t think about it, you’re going to miss it; you have to ask, and that’s what we’re trying to get people to do.”

The condition often accompanies other immune system disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. But as patients are referred back and forth between ophthalmologists, rheumatologists, and neurologists, the condition is often missed. “It could be 4 or 5 years before a definitive diagnosis of Sjögren’s is made,” said Dr. Sarka.

He believes the education system is partly to blame. “Medical schools have been very deficient in teaching people about recognizing Sjögren disease.”

That leaves many physicians at a loss about “what to do with these patients when they walk in the door,” said Dr. Mandel. “They don’t know how to manage them; they don’t know how to diagnose them; and they don’t know how to treat them.”

Developing guidelines with multispecialty collaboration was “absolutely critical” in addressing this knowledge gap, Dr. Mandel added. That process involved “a very rigorous and transparent methodology so that it would be accepted by all the professionals involved in Sjögren’s,” he said.

The process took 3 years and involved amassing and grading the evidence, getting consensus from committee members, developing recommendations, and getting feedback and external review.
 

 

 

Scant Evidence

An early literature search revealed very little evidence on PNS manifestations in patients with Sjögren disease, so the guideline committee “leaned very heavily on expert opinion” to develop recommendations, Kathy Hammitt, MA, vice president of Medical and Scientific Affairs, Sjögren’s Foundation, told this news organization.

The literature search also showed different terms are used to describe PNS, “which is where the chaos comes in,” said Dr. Sarka.

Experts from different specialties worked together to define and align nomenclature used by various specialists. They developed definitions for seven PNS categories including mononeuropathy, large fiber neuropathy, small fiber neuropathy, demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, ganglionopathy, vasculitis neuropathy, and autoimmune nervous system neuropathy.

The guidelines pertaining to PNS manifestations encompass a spectrum of neurologic abnormalities, including cranial neuropathies (trigeminal neuropathy or acute facial neuropathy), polyneuropathies (large fiber neuropathy, small fiber neuropathy, demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, vasculitis neuropathy, or ganglionopathy), and autonomic nervous system (ANS) neuropathies (postural tachycardia, orthostatic hypotension, or autonomic dysfunction).
 

Key Steps

The guidelines address two key steps for each PNS manifestation — the workup and evaluation of patients with suspected ANS manifestation including standard evaluations, diagnostic tests, and treatment. The experts developed 31 best practices for diagnosis and workup and 20 treatment recommendations.

Initial assessment of potential ANS involvement includes asking patients about orthostatic postural lightheadedness and difficulties with digestion, urination, sweating, and sexual function.

Treatment of autoimmune diseases typically focuses on relieving symptoms and can include steroids, the anticonvulsant gabapentin, the monoclonal antibody rituximab, and intravenous immunoglobulin. “The type of neuropathy will mandate or suggest certain therapies over others,” said Dr. Sarka, adding that a patient can have more than one neuropathy.

Therapeutics for Sjögren disease is another example of an area that has been “very haphazard,” he added.

The guidelines are aimed not just at specialists but also at general practitioners who treat many of these patients. But Dr. Hammitt emphasized that neurologists can be “instrumental” in identifying Sjögren disease in patients with PNS symptoms.

“Our hope is that specialists — in this case, neurologists — will recognize the potential for this condition in their PNS patients and ensure referral to a rheumatologist or knowledgeable family practitioner to manage overall care.”

The committee will soon submit its manuscript to the AAN for publication.

“Once published, we will have a robust dissemination strategy to ensure that providers, patients, and policymakers are aware of, and use, this very valuable resource,” said Dr. Hammitt.

No conflicts of interest were reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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New guidelines to manage peripheral neuropathy related to Sjögren disease have been developed by a multidisciplinary team of physicians from across medicine.

The guidelines will provide an evidence-based resource for the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of various peripheral neuropathies related to the disorder.

Up until now, the field has been “haphazard and chaotic,” lead author George Sarka, MD, DrPH, MPH, director of the CME Committee for MemorialCare, Saddleback Medical Center, Laguna Hills, California, and member of the Sjögren Foundation PNS Guidelines Topic Review Group (TRG), told this news organization.

Dr. Sarka discussed the initiative at the American Academy of Neurology 2024 annual meeting.


 

Severe, Complex Illness

Sjögren disease is the second most common autoimmune rheumatic disorder after rheumatoid arthritis, affecting an estimated 4 million Americans. Women make up most of the patient population at a ratio of 9:1.

The condition typically affects the mucous membranes and moisture-secreting glands of the eyes and mouth, resulting in decreased tears and saliva. But peripheral nervous system (PNS) manifestations often precede these symptoms and can occur in up to 60% of Sjögren disease cases.

“Traditionally, Sjögren’s was looked at as a dry eye and dry mouth disease, but we realize now that it’s so much broader than that,” said Dr. Sarka. “It’s a severe, systemic, and complex illness that can affect any body organ or system, and the nervous system is frequently affected.”

PNS manifestations cause more than mere discomfort; they can lead to diagnostic and management challenges, costly treatments, and diminished quality of life.

Getting a proper diagnosis goes a long way toward improving the quality of life for these patients, Steven Mandel, MD, clinical professor of neurology at the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra-Northwell, adjunct clinical professor of medicine at NY Medical College, New York City, and member of the TRG, told this news organization.

The problem is, doctors don’t always think an autoimmune disorder is causing the symptoms, said Dr. Sarka. “There’s an old adage in neurology that if you don’t think about it, you’re going to miss it; you have to ask, and that’s what we’re trying to get people to do.”

The condition often accompanies other immune system disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. But as patients are referred back and forth between ophthalmologists, rheumatologists, and neurologists, the condition is often missed. “It could be 4 or 5 years before a definitive diagnosis of Sjögren’s is made,” said Dr. Sarka.

He believes the education system is partly to blame. “Medical schools have been very deficient in teaching people about recognizing Sjögren disease.”

That leaves many physicians at a loss about “what to do with these patients when they walk in the door,” said Dr. Mandel. “They don’t know how to manage them; they don’t know how to diagnose them; and they don’t know how to treat them.”

Developing guidelines with multispecialty collaboration was “absolutely critical” in addressing this knowledge gap, Dr. Mandel added. That process involved “a very rigorous and transparent methodology so that it would be accepted by all the professionals involved in Sjögren’s,” he said.

The process took 3 years and involved amassing and grading the evidence, getting consensus from committee members, developing recommendations, and getting feedback and external review.
 

 

 

Scant Evidence

An early literature search revealed very little evidence on PNS manifestations in patients with Sjögren disease, so the guideline committee “leaned very heavily on expert opinion” to develop recommendations, Kathy Hammitt, MA, vice president of Medical and Scientific Affairs, Sjögren’s Foundation, told this news organization.

The literature search also showed different terms are used to describe PNS, “which is where the chaos comes in,” said Dr. Sarka.

Experts from different specialties worked together to define and align nomenclature used by various specialists. They developed definitions for seven PNS categories including mononeuropathy, large fiber neuropathy, small fiber neuropathy, demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, ganglionopathy, vasculitis neuropathy, and autoimmune nervous system neuropathy.

The guidelines pertaining to PNS manifestations encompass a spectrum of neurologic abnormalities, including cranial neuropathies (trigeminal neuropathy or acute facial neuropathy), polyneuropathies (large fiber neuropathy, small fiber neuropathy, demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, vasculitis neuropathy, or ganglionopathy), and autonomic nervous system (ANS) neuropathies (postural tachycardia, orthostatic hypotension, or autonomic dysfunction).
 

Key Steps

The guidelines address two key steps for each PNS manifestation — the workup and evaluation of patients with suspected ANS manifestation including standard evaluations, diagnostic tests, and treatment. The experts developed 31 best practices for diagnosis and workup and 20 treatment recommendations.

Initial assessment of potential ANS involvement includes asking patients about orthostatic postural lightheadedness and difficulties with digestion, urination, sweating, and sexual function.

Treatment of autoimmune diseases typically focuses on relieving symptoms and can include steroids, the anticonvulsant gabapentin, the monoclonal antibody rituximab, and intravenous immunoglobulin. “The type of neuropathy will mandate or suggest certain therapies over others,” said Dr. Sarka, adding that a patient can have more than one neuropathy.

Therapeutics for Sjögren disease is another example of an area that has been “very haphazard,” he added.

The guidelines are aimed not just at specialists but also at general practitioners who treat many of these patients. But Dr. Hammitt emphasized that neurologists can be “instrumental” in identifying Sjögren disease in patients with PNS symptoms.

“Our hope is that specialists — in this case, neurologists — will recognize the potential for this condition in their PNS patients and ensure referral to a rheumatologist or knowledgeable family practitioner to manage overall care.”

The committee will soon submit its manuscript to the AAN for publication.

“Once published, we will have a robust dissemination strategy to ensure that providers, patients, and policymakers are aware of, and use, this very valuable resource,” said Dr. Hammitt.

No conflicts of interest were reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

New guidelines to manage peripheral neuropathy related to Sjögren disease have been developed by a multidisciplinary team of physicians from across medicine.

The guidelines will provide an evidence-based resource for the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of various peripheral neuropathies related to the disorder.

Up until now, the field has been “haphazard and chaotic,” lead author George Sarka, MD, DrPH, MPH, director of the CME Committee for MemorialCare, Saddleback Medical Center, Laguna Hills, California, and member of the Sjögren Foundation PNS Guidelines Topic Review Group (TRG), told this news organization.

Dr. Sarka discussed the initiative at the American Academy of Neurology 2024 annual meeting.


 

Severe, Complex Illness

Sjögren disease is the second most common autoimmune rheumatic disorder after rheumatoid arthritis, affecting an estimated 4 million Americans. Women make up most of the patient population at a ratio of 9:1.

The condition typically affects the mucous membranes and moisture-secreting glands of the eyes and mouth, resulting in decreased tears and saliva. But peripheral nervous system (PNS) manifestations often precede these symptoms and can occur in up to 60% of Sjögren disease cases.

“Traditionally, Sjögren’s was looked at as a dry eye and dry mouth disease, but we realize now that it’s so much broader than that,” said Dr. Sarka. “It’s a severe, systemic, and complex illness that can affect any body organ or system, and the nervous system is frequently affected.”

PNS manifestations cause more than mere discomfort; they can lead to diagnostic and management challenges, costly treatments, and diminished quality of life.

Getting a proper diagnosis goes a long way toward improving the quality of life for these patients, Steven Mandel, MD, clinical professor of neurology at the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra-Northwell, adjunct clinical professor of medicine at NY Medical College, New York City, and member of the TRG, told this news organization.

The problem is, doctors don’t always think an autoimmune disorder is causing the symptoms, said Dr. Sarka. “There’s an old adage in neurology that if you don’t think about it, you’re going to miss it; you have to ask, and that’s what we’re trying to get people to do.”

The condition often accompanies other immune system disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. But as patients are referred back and forth between ophthalmologists, rheumatologists, and neurologists, the condition is often missed. “It could be 4 or 5 years before a definitive diagnosis of Sjögren’s is made,” said Dr. Sarka.

He believes the education system is partly to blame. “Medical schools have been very deficient in teaching people about recognizing Sjögren disease.”

That leaves many physicians at a loss about “what to do with these patients when they walk in the door,” said Dr. Mandel. “They don’t know how to manage them; they don’t know how to diagnose them; and they don’t know how to treat them.”

Developing guidelines with multispecialty collaboration was “absolutely critical” in addressing this knowledge gap, Dr. Mandel added. That process involved “a very rigorous and transparent methodology so that it would be accepted by all the professionals involved in Sjögren’s,” he said.

The process took 3 years and involved amassing and grading the evidence, getting consensus from committee members, developing recommendations, and getting feedback and external review.
 

 

 

Scant Evidence

An early literature search revealed very little evidence on PNS manifestations in patients with Sjögren disease, so the guideline committee “leaned very heavily on expert opinion” to develop recommendations, Kathy Hammitt, MA, vice president of Medical and Scientific Affairs, Sjögren’s Foundation, told this news organization.

The literature search also showed different terms are used to describe PNS, “which is where the chaos comes in,” said Dr. Sarka.

Experts from different specialties worked together to define and align nomenclature used by various specialists. They developed definitions for seven PNS categories including mononeuropathy, large fiber neuropathy, small fiber neuropathy, demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, ganglionopathy, vasculitis neuropathy, and autoimmune nervous system neuropathy.

The guidelines pertaining to PNS manifestations encompass a spectrum of neurologic abnormalities, including cranial neuropathies (trigeminal neuropathy or acute facial neuropathy), polyneuropathies (large fiber neuropathy, small fiber neuropathy, demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, vasculitis neuropathy, or ganglionopathy), and autonomic nervous system (ANS) neuropathies (postural tachycardia, orthostatic hypotension, or autonomic dysfunction).
 

Key Steps

The guidelines address two key steps for each PNS manifestation — the workup and evaluation of patients with suspected ANS manifestation including standard evaluations, diagnostic tests, and treatment. The experts developed 31 best practices for diagnosis and workup and 20 treatment recommendations.

Initial assessment of potential ANS involvement includes asking patients about orthostatic postural lightheadedness and difficulties with digestion, urination, sweating, and sexual function.

Treatment of autoimmune diseases typically focuses on relieving symptoms and can include steroids, the anticonvulsant gabapentin, the monoclonal antibody rituximab, and intravenous immunoglobulin. “The type of neuropathy will mandate or suggest certain therapies over others,” said Dr. Sarka, adding that a patient can have more than one neuropathy.

Therapeutics for Sjögren disease is another example of an area that has been “very haphazard,” he added.

The guidelines are aimed not just at specialists but also at general practitioners who treat many of these patients. But Dr. Hammitt emphasized that neurologists can be “instrumental” in identifying Sjögren disease in patients with PNS symptoms.

“Our hope is that specialists — in this case, neurologists — will recognize the potential for this condition in their PNS patients and ensure referral to a rheumatologist or knowledgeable family practitioner to manage overall care.”

The committee will soon submit its manuscript to the AAN for publication.

“Once published, we will have a robust dissemination strategy to ensure that providers, patients, and policymakers are aware of, and use, this very valuable resource,” said Dr. Hammitt.

No conflicts of interest were reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Updated Sjögren Disease Guideline Advises Doing ‘the Little Things Well’

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Changed
Mon, 05/06/2024 - 09:24

— An updated guideline from the British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) on the management of Sjögren disease asks rheumatologists and other clinicians caring for patients with the condition to “do the little things well” rather than overly focusing on rheumatologic treatments. The guideline’s new format provides recommendations for specific clinical questions and now also includes recommendations for managing the disease in children and adolescents. 

“The original guideline was published in 2017, and things move on very rapidly,” consultant rheumatologist Elizabeth Price, MBBCh, PhD, said ahead of her presentation of the updated guideline at the annual meeting of the British Society for Rheumatology.

Sara Freeman/Medscape Medical News
Dr. Elizabeth Price


“We approached the update in a slightly different way,” said Dr. Price, who works at Great Western Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in Swindon, England. She was the chair of the new guideline’s working group and convenes the BSR’s Special Interest Group for Sjögren disease.

Previously, the approach was to look at the management of Sjögren disease affecting the eyes, mouth, salivary glands, and, in turn, systemic disease. “This time we posed questions that we felt needed to be asked, interrogated the literature, and then used that to come up with our recommendations,” Dr. Price said. 

The answers to those questions were used to form the 19 recommendations that now make up the guideline. These cover four key areas on the management of Sjögren disease: confirming the diagnosis, treating the symptoms, managing systemic disease, and considering special situations such as planned pregnancy and comorbidities. There is also lifestyle advice and information about where to get good patient education. 

What’s in a Name?

The BSR guideline on the management of adult and juvenile onset Sjögren disease is published in Rheumatology and is available via the BSR website, where it is accompanied by a short summary sheet

The most notable change perhaps is the name the guideline now uses, Dr. Price said at BSR 2024. “We have been bold and called it Sjögren disease.” Previously, the guideline used the term primary Sjögren’s syndrome, but there has been a “move away from using eponymous syndromes and dropping s’s and apostrophes,” she explained. 

Another significant change is that advice on managing Sjögren disease in children and adolescents is now included where appropriate, meaning that the British guideline is now the first to cover Sjögren disease “across the ages,” Dr. Price said.

A pediatric/adolescent rheumatologist joined the guideline working group, which already consisted of several adult rheumatologists, ophthalmologists, and a dentistry consultant. The group now comprises 22 members total, including a general practitioner, an oncologist, a renal physician, an occupational therapist, two patients with Sjögren disease, and a librarian.
 

Confirming the Diagnosis

The first questions asked to help form the new recommendations were around confirming a diagnosis of Sjögren disease, such as what is the diagnostic accuracy of antinuclear antibodies (ANAs), extractable nuclear antigens (ENAs), and other novel antigens in Sjögren disease? And what is the diagnostic accuracy of salivary gland ultrasound, imaging in general, and salivary gland or lacrimal gland biopsies? 

The resulting recommendations advised not to measure ANAs in the absence of clinical indicators of Sjögren disease or any other connective tissue disease but to use it to screen if there was a clinical suspicion. And ENAs should be measured even if the ANAs were negative and there is a high index of suspicion. 

In terms of imaging, ultrasound of the salivary glands was thought to be useful, but other imaging was not recommended for routine practice at the current time. Minor lip but not lacrimal gland biopsies were recommended if clinical and serologic features were not enough to make a diagnosis.
 

 

 

Lymphoma Worries

The 2017 version of the guideline did not include information about lymphoma, but this is the thing that most patients with Sjögren disease will worry about, Dr. Price said. “They all look it up on YouTube, they all come back and tell me that they are really worried they’ll develop it.”

The question that was therefore posed was whether there were any measurable biomarkers that could predict the development of lymphoma in adults and children. Seven predictors were found, the strongest being a low level of complement C4 alone or together with low levels of C3. Other predictors were salivary gland enlargement, lymphadenopathy, anti-Ro/La and rheumatoid factor autoantibodies, cryoglobulinemia, monoclonal gammopathy, and a high focus score. 

All of these predictors put someone in a higher risk category for lymphoma. If two or fewer of those features are present, the lifetime risk is “probably below 2%,” Dr. Price said. However, if all seven are present, the lifetime risk is “approaching 100%.”

The recommendation made on the basis of these findings is that people with Sjögren disease need to be offered early further investigation if they present with any new salivary gland swelling or other symptoms that might suggest the development of lymphoma. In this regard, a labial salivary gland biopsy might provide additional prognostic information.
 

‘Do the Little Things Well’

“You have to do the little things well,” Dr. Price said. “Many of the patients [who] come to see me for a second opinion have not been prescribed the right eye drops, have not been given advice on dental care,” with their management taking “too much on the rheumatological treatments.”

Rheumatologists are of course not trained or expected to be experts in ophthalmology or dentistry, but “you need to look at their mouth and you do need to examine their eyes, and you do need to give them some advice,” Dr. Price advised.

Thankfully, that is where the updated guidelines should help, with a recommendation that people with Sjögren disease should use preservative-free eye drops every 2-3 hours.

“It’s vital you avoid preservatives, because preservatives flatten the corneal surface and reduce the surface area and can cause inflammation in their own right,” Dr. Price cautioned, adding that there are plenty of suitable eye drop formulations available. 

In regard to helping with dry mouth symptoms, the recommendation is to use a saliva substitute for symptomatic relief. For vaginal dryness, the recommendation is to consider advising topical nonhormonal vaginal moisturizers plus estrogen creams or pessaries in peri- or postmenopausal women with significant vaginal dryness. 

“Very important, however, is to maintain a neutral pH, an alkaline environment in the mouth because acid damages dental enamel,” Dr. Price said. Conversely, an acidic vaginal moisturizer is needed to treat vaginal dryness. 

Dental hygiene is important. Regular brushing with a fluoride-based toothpaste is advised. The use of xylitol-containing products has been shown to reduce bacteria known to increase the risk for dental decay. Telling patients not to eat between meals is also simple but important advice. 

“We do recommend that patients are assessed holistically,” Dr. Price said, noting that they should be offered access to cognitive-behavioral therapy and exercise therapies to help with the symptoms of fatigue and joint pain.
 

 

 

Watch Out for Comorbidities

Sjögren disease is associated with many comorbidities, some of which might be predicted from the age and demographics of the people who are normally affected. 

“This is on the whole an older, female population, so you see a lot of osteoarthritis, gastroesophageal reflux, and hypertension,” Dr. Price said. “However, you may not be aware that 1 in 5 of these patients develop thyroid disease,” and there is a higher rate of celiac disease and primary biliary cholangitis than is seen in the general background population. 

The recommendation, therefore, is to “be aware of and consider screening for commonly associated conditions, as guided by age and/or clinical presentation.” As such, it’s recommended that baseline and repeated investigations that look for signs of comorbidity are performed, such as thyroid function assessment and liver function tests, to name two.
 

Treatment Recommendations

As in the original guideline, the treatment of systemic disease is discussed, but the advice has been overhauled with the availability of new data. 

The updated guidance notes that a trial of hydroxychloroquine for 6-12 months is the recommended treatment approach for people with fatigue and systemic symptoms. 

Systemic steroids may be used in the short-term for specific indications but should not be offered routinely. 

Conventional immunosuppressive or biologic drugs and immunoglobulins are not currently recommended outside of managing specific systemic complications.

In juvenile cases, the treatment of recurrent swollen parotid glands that are not due to infection or stone disease should include a short course of a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug or a short course of oral steroids. This should be combined with massage followed by washouts with saline or steroids. In refractory cases, escalation to anti–B-cell–targeted therapies may be considered in select situations.
 

View on Updates

Patient advocate Bridget Crampton, who leads the helpline team at Sjögren’s UK (formerly the British Sjögren’s Syndrome Association), commented on the importance of the guidelines during a roundtable held by the BSR

“I think it will help [patients] make better use of their own appointments. So, they’ll know what treatments might be offered. They’ll know what they want to talk about at their appointments,” she said. 

Ms. Crampton, who has lived with Sjögren disease herself for the past 20 years, added: “I think it’s important for patients that we have guidelines like this. It means that all clinicians can easily access information. My hope is that it might standardize care across the UK a little bit more.” 

No specific funding was received to create the guidelines, be that from any bodies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. No conflicts of interests were expressed by any of the experts quoted in this article.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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— An updated guideline from the British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) on the management of Sjögren disease asks rheumatologists and other clinicians caring for patients with the condition to “do the little things well” rather than overly focusing on rheumatologic treatments. The guideline’s new format provides recommendations for specific clinical questions and now also includes recommendations for managing the disease in children and adolescents. 

“The original guideline was published in 2017, and things move on very rapidly,” consultant rheumatologist Elizabeth Price, MBBCh, PhD, said ahead of her presentation of the updated guideline at the annual meeting of the British Society for Rheumatology.

Sara Freeman/Medscape Medical News
Dr. Elizabeth Price


“We approached the update in a slightly different way,” said Dr. Price, who works at Great Western Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in Swindon, England. She was the chair of the new guideline’s working group and convenes the BSR’s Special Interest Group for Sjögren disease.

Previously, the approach was to look at the management of Sjögren disease affecting the eyes, mouth, salivary glands, and, in turn, systemic disease. “This time we posed questions that we felt needed to be asked, interrogated the literature, and then used that to come up with our recommendations,” Dr. Price said. 

The answers to those questions were used to form the 19 recommendations that now make up the guideline. These cover four key areas on the management of Sjögren disease: confirming the diagnosis, treating the symptoms, managing systemic disease, and considering special situations such as planned pregnancy and comorbidities. There is also lifestyle advice and information about where to get good patient education. 

What’s in a Name?

The BSR guideline on the management of adult and juvenile onset Sjögren disease is published in Rheumatology and is available via the BSR website, where it is accompanied by a short summary sheet

The most notable change perhaps is the name the guideline now uses, Dr. Price said at BSR 2024. “We have been bold and called it Sjögren disease.” Previously, the guideline used the term primary Sjögren’s syndrome, but there has been a “move away from using eponymous syndromes and dropping s’s and apostrophes,” she explained. 

Another significant change is that advice on managing Sjögren disease in children and adolescents is now included where appropriate, meaning that the British guideline is now the first to cover Sjögren disease “across the ages,” Dr. Price said.

A pediatric/adolescent rheumatologist joined the guideline working group, which already consisted of several adult rheumatologists, ophthalmologists, and a dentistry consultant. The group now comprises 22 members total, including a general practitioner, an oncologist, a renal physician, an occupational therapist, two patients with Sjögren disease, and a librarian.
 

Confirming the Diagnosis

The first questions asked to help form the new recommendations were around confirming a diagnosis of Sjögren disease, such as what is the diagnostic accuracy of antinuclear antibodies (ANAs), extractable nuclear antigens (ENAs), and other novel antigens in Sjögren disease? And what is the diagnostic accuracy of salivary gland ultrasound, imaging in general, and salivary gland or lacrimal gland biopsies? 

The resulting recommendations advised not to measure ANAs in the absence of clinical indicators of Sjögren disease or any other connective tissue disease but to use it to screen if there was a clinical suspicion. And ENAs should be measured even if the ANAs were negative and there is a high index of suspicion. 

In terms of imaging, ultrasound of the salivary glands was thought to be useful, but other imaging was not recommended for routine practice at the current time. Minor lip but not lacrimal gland biopsies were recommended if clinical and serologic features were not enough to make a diagnosis.
 

 

 

Lymphoma Worries

The 2017 version of the guideline did not include information about lymphoma, but this is the thing that most patients with Sjögren disease will worry about, Dr. Price said. “They all look it up on YouTube, they all come back and tell me that they are really worried they’ll develop it.”

The question that was therefore posed was whether there were any measurable biomarkers that could predict the development of lymphoma in adults and children. Seven predictors were found, the strongest being a low level of complement C4 alone or together with low levels of C3. Other predictors were salivary gland enlargement, lymphadenopathy, anti-Ro/La and rheumatoid factor autoantibodies, cryoglobulinemia, monoclonal gammopathy, and a high focus score. 

All of these predictors put someone in a higher risk category for lymphoma. If two or fewer of those features are present, the lifetime risk is “probably below 2%,” Dr. Price said. However, if all seven are present, the lifetime risk is “approaching 100%.”

The recommendation made on the basis of these findings is that people with Sjögren disease need to be offered early further investigation if they present with any new salivary gland swelling or other symptoms that might suggest the development of lymphoma. In this regard, a labial salivary gland biopsy might provide additional prognostic information.
 

‘Do the Little Things Well’

“You have to do the little things well,” Dr. Price said. “Many of the patients [who] come to see me for a second opinion have not been prescribed the right eye drops, have not been given advice on dental care,” with their management taking “too much on the rheumatological treatments.”

Rheumatologists are of course not trained or expected to be experts in ophthalmology or dentistry, but “you need to look at their mouth and you do need to examine their eyes, and you do need to give them some advice,” Dr. Price advised.

Thankfully, that is where the updated guidelines should help, with a recommendation that people with Sjögren disease should use preservative-free eye drops every 2-3 hours.

“It’s vital you avoid preservatives, because preservatives flatten the corneal surface and reduce the surface area and can cause inflammation in their own right,” Dr. Price cautioned, adding that there are plenty of suitable eye drop formulations available. 

In regard to helping with dry mouth symptoms, the recommendation is to use a saliva substitute for symptomatic relief. For vaginal dryness, the recommendation is to consider advising topical nonhormonal vaginal moisturizers plus estrogen creams or pessaries in peri- or postmenopausal women with significant vaginal dryness. 

“Very important, however, is to maintain a neutral pH, an alkaline environment in the mouth because acid damages dental enamel,” Dr. Price said. Conversely, an acidic vaginal moisturizer is needed to treat vaginal dryness. 

Dental hygiene is important. Regular brushing with a fluoride-based toothpaste is advised. The use of xylitol-containing products has been shown to reduce bacteria known to increase the risk for dental decay. Telling patients not to eat between meals is also simple but important advice. 

“We do recommend that patients are assessed holistically,” Dr. Price said, noting that they should be offered access to cognitive-behavioral therapy and exercise therapies to help with the symptoms of fatigue and joint pain.
 

 

 

Watch Out for Comorbidities

Sjögren disease is associated with many comorbidities, some of which might be predicted from the age and demographics of the people who are normally affected. 

“This is on the whole an older, female population, so you see a lot of osteoarthritis, gastroesophageal reflux, and hypertension,” Dr. Price said. “However, you may not be aware that 1 in 5 of these patients develop thyroid disease,” and there is a higher rate of celiac disease and primary biliary cholangitis than is seen in the general background population. 

The recommendation, therefore, is to “be aware of and consider screening for commonly associated conditions, as guided by age and/or clinical presentation.” As such, it’s recommended that baseline and repeated investigations that look for signs of comorbidity are performed, such as thyroid function assessment and liver function tests, to name two.
 

Treatment Recommendations

As in the original guideline, the treatment of systemic disease is discussed, but the advice has been overhauled with the availability of new data. 

The updated guidance notes that a trial of hydroxychloroquine for 6-12 months is the recommended treatment approach for people with fatigue and systemic symptoms. 

Systemic steroids may be used in the short-term for specific indications but should not be offered routinely. 

Conventional immunosuppressive or biologic drugs and immunoglobulins are not currently recommended outside of managing specific systemic complications.

In juvenile cases, the treatment of recurrent swollen parotid glands that are not due to infection or stone disease should include a short course of a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug or a short course of oral steroids. This should be combined with massage followed by washouts with saline or steroids. In refractory cases, escalation to anti–B-cell–targeted therapies may be considered in select situations.
 

View on Updates

Patient advocate Bridget Crampton, who leads the helpline team at Sjögren’s UK (formerly the British Sjögren’s Syndrome Association), commented on the importance of the guidelines during a roundtable held by the BSR

“I think it will help [patients] make better use of their own appointments. So, they’ll know what treatments might be offered. They’ll know what they want to talk about at their appointments,” she said. 

Ms. Crampton, who has lived with Sjögren disease herself for the past 20 years, added: “I think it’s important for patients that we have guidelines like this. It means that all clinicians can easily access information. My hope is that it might standardize care across the UK a little bit more.” 

No specific funding was received to create the guidelines, be that from any bodies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. No conflicts of interests were expressed by any of the experts quoted in this article.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

— An updated guideline from the British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) on the management of Sjögren disease asks rheumatologists and other clinicians caring for patients with the condition to “do the little things well” rather than overly focusing on rheumatologic treatments. The guideline’s new format provides recommendations for specific clinical questions and now also includes recommendations for managing the disease in children and adolescents. 

“The original guideline was published in 2017, and things move on very rapidly,” consultant rheumatologist Elizabeth Price, MBBCh, PhD, said ahead of her presentation of the updated guideline at the annual meeting of the British Society for Rheumatology.

Sara Freeman/Medscape Medical News
Dr. Elizabeth Price


“We approached the update in a slightly different way,” said Dr. Price, who works at Great Western Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in Swindon, England. She was the chair of the new guideline’s working group and convenes the BSR’s Special Interest Group for Sjögren disease.

Previously, the approach was to look at the management of Sjögren disease affecting the eyes, mouth, salivary glands, and, in turn, systemic disease. “This time we posed questions that we felt needed to be asked, interrogated the literature, and then used that to come up with our recommendations,” Dr. Price said. 

The answers to those questions were used to form the 19 recommendations that now make up the guideline. These cover four key areas on the management of Sjögren disease: confirming the diagnosis, treating the symptoms, managing systemic disease, and considering special situations such as planned pregnancy and comorbidities. There is also lifestyle advice and information about where to get good patient education. 

What’s in a Name?

The BSR guideline on the management of adult and juvenile onset Sjögren disease is published in Rheumatology and is available via the BSR website, where it is accompanied by a short summary sheet

The most notable change perhaps is the name the guideline now uses, Dr. Price said at BSR 2024. “We have been bold and called it Sjögren disease.” Previously, the guideline used the term primary Sjögren’s syndrome, but there has been a “move away from using eponymous syndromes and dropping s’s and apostrophes,” she explained. 

Another significant change is that advice on managing Sjögren disease in children and adolescents is now included where appropriate, meaning that the British guideline is now the first to cover Sjögren disease “across the ages,” Dr. Price said.

A pediatric/adolescent rheumatologist joined the guideline working group, which already consisted of several adult rheumatologists, ophthalmologists, and a dentistry consultant. The group now comprises 22 members total, including a general practitioner, an oncologist, a renal physician, an occupational therapist, two patients with Sjögren disease, and a librarian.
 

Confirming the Diagnosis

The first questions asked to help form the new recommendations were around confirming a diagnosis of Sjögren disease, such as what is the diagnostic accuracy of antinuclear antibodies (ANAs), extractable nuclear antigens (ENAs), and other novel antigens in Sjögren disease? And what is the diagnostic accuracy of salivary gland ultrasound, imaging in general, and salivary gland or lacrimal gland biopsies? 

The resulting recommendations advised not to measure ANAs in the absence of clinical indicators of Sjögren disease or any other connective tissue disease but to use it to screen if there was a clinical suspicion. And ENAs should be measured even if the ANAs were negative and there is a high index of suspicion. 

In terms of imaging, ultrasound of the salivary glands was thought to be useful, but other imaging was not recommended for routine practice at the current time. Minor lip but not lacrimal gland biopsies were recommended if clinical and serologic features were not enough to make a diagnosis.
 

 

 

Lymphoma Worries

The 2017 version of the guideline did not include information about lymphoma, but this is the thing that most patients with Sjögren disease will worry about, Dr. Price said. “They all look it up on YouTube, they all come back and tell me that they are really worried they’ll develop it.”

The question that was therefore posed was whether there were any measurable biomarkers that could predict the development of lymphoma in adults and children. Seven predictors were found, the strongest being a low level of complement C4 alone or together with low levels of C3. Other predictors were salivary gland enlargement, lymphadenopathy, anti-Ro/La and rheumatoid factor autoantibodies, cryoglobulinemia, monoclonal gammopathy, and a high focus score. 

All of these predictors put someone in a higher risk category for lymphoma. If two or fewer of those features are present, the lifetime risk is “probably below 2%,” Dr. Price said. However, if all seven are present, the lifetime risk is “approaching 100%.”

The recommendation made on the basis of these findings is that people with Sjögren disease need to be offered early further investigation if they present with any new salivary gland swelling or other symptoms that might suggest the development of lymphoma. In this regard, a labial salivary gland biopsy might provide additional prognostic information.
 

‘Do the Little Things Well’

“You have to do the little things well,” Dr. Price said. “Many of the patients [who] come to see me for a second opinion have not been prescribed the right eye drops, have not been given advice on dental care,” with their management taking “too much on the rheumatological treatments.”

Rheumatologists are of course not trained or expected to be experts in ophthalmology or dentistry, but “you need to look at their mouth and you do need to examine their eyes, and you do need to give them some advice,” Dr. Price advised.

Thankfully, that is where the updated guidelines should help, with a recommendation that people with Sjögren disease should use preservative-free eye drops every 2-3 hours.

“It’s vital you avoid preservatives, because preservatives flatten the corneal surface and reduce the surface area and can cause inflammation in their own right,” Dr. Price cautioned, adding that there are plenty of suitable eye drop formulations available. 

In regard to helping with dry mouth symptoms, the recommendation is to use a saliva substitute for symptomatic relief. For vaginal dryness, the recommendation is to consider advising topical nonhormonal vaginal moisturizers plus estrogen creams or pessaries in peri- or postmenopausal women with significant vaginal dryness. 

“Very important, however, is to maintain a neutral pH, an alkaline environment in the mouth because acid damages dental enamel,” Dr. Price said. Conversely, an acidic vaginal moisturizer is needed to treat vaginal dryness. 

Dental hygiene is important. Regular brushing with a fluoride-based toothpaste is advised. The use of xylitol-containing products has been shown to reduce bacteria known to increase the risk for dental decay. Telling patients not to eat between meals is also simple but important advice. 

“We do recommend that patients are assessed holistically,” Dr. Price said, noting that they should be offered access to cognitive-behavioral therapy and exercise therapies to help with the symptoms of fatigue and joint pain.
 

 

 

Watch Out for Comorbidities

Sjögren disease is associated with many comorbidities, some of which might be predicted from the age and demographics of the people who are normally affected. 

“This is on the whole an older, female population, so you see a lot of osteoarthritis, gastroesophageal reflux, and hypertension,” Dr. Price said. “However, you may not be aware that 1 in 5 of these patients develop thyroid disease,” and there is a higher rate of celiac disease and primary biliary cholangitis than is seen in the general background population. 

The recommendation, therefore, is to “be aware of and consider screening for commonly associated conditions, as guided by age and/or clinical presentation.” As such, it’s recommended that baseline and repeated investigations that look for signs of comorbidity are performed, such as thyroid function assessment and liver function tests, to name two.
 

Treatment Recommendations

As in the original guideline, the treatment of systemic disease is discussed, but the advice has been overhauled with the availability of new data. 

The updated guidance notes that a trial of hydroxychloroquine for 6-12 months is the recommended treatment approach for people with fatigue and systemic symptoms. 

Systemic steroids may be used in the short-term for specific indications but should not be offered routinely. 

Conventional immunosuppressive or biologic drugs and immunoglobulins are not currently recommended outside of managing specific systemic complications.

In juvenile cases, the treatment of recurrent swollen parotid glands that are not due to infection or stone disease should include a short course of a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug or a short course of oral steroids. This should be combined with massage followed by washouts with saline or steroids. In refractory cases, escalation to anti–B-cell–targeted therapies may be considered in select situations.
 

View on Updates

Patient advocate Bridget Crampton, who leads the helpline team at Sjögren’s UK (formerly the British Sjögren’s Syndrome Association), commented on the importance of the guidelines during a roundtable held by the BSR

“I think it will help [patients] make better use of their own appointments. So, they’ll know what treatments might be offered. They’ll know what they want to talk about at their appointments,” she said. 

Ms. Crampton, who has lived with Sjögren disease herself for the past 20 years, added: “I think it’s important for patients that we have guidelines like this. It means that all clinicians can easily access information. My hope is that it might standardize care across the UK a little bit more.” 

No specific funding was received to create the guidelines, be that from any bodies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. No conflicts of interests were expressed by any of the experts quoted in this article.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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New British Behçet’s Disease Guidelines Emphasize Multidisciplinary Management

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— The British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) and the British Association of Dermatologists (BAD) have joined forces for the first time to develop the first British guidelines for the management of people living with Behçet’s disease.

The guidelines will also be the first “living guidelines” produced by either society, which means they will be regularly revised and updated when new evidence emerges that warrants inclusion.

With more than 90 recommendations being made, the new guidelines promise to be the most comprehensive and most up-to-date yet for what is regarded as a rare disease. Robert Moots, MBBS, PhD, provided a “sneak peek” of the guidelines at the annual meeting of the British Society for Rheumatology.

Dr. Moots, professor of rheumatology at the University of Liverpool and a consultant rheumatologist for Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in England, noted that while the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology has produced a guideline for Behçet’s disease, this was last updated in 2018 and is not specific for the population for patients that is seen in the United Kingdom.

The British recommendations will cover all possible manifestations of Behçet’s disease and give practical advice on how to manage everything from the most common presentations such as skin lesions, mouth ulcers, and genital ulcers, as well as the potentially more serious eye, neurological, and vascular involvement.

Sara Freeman/Medscape Medical News
Dr. Robert Moots

 

Importance of Raising Awareness

“Joint and musculoskeletal problems are actually one of the least complained of symptoms in people with Behçet’s, and they often can’t understand why a rheumatologist is seeing them,” Dr. Moot said. “But of course, people do get joint problems, they can get enthesitis and arthralgia.”

Dr. Moots has been leading one of the three National Health Service (NHS) Centres of Excellence for Behçet’s Syndrome in England for more than a decade and told this news organization that diagnosing patients could be challenging. It can take up to 10 years from the first symptoms appearing to getting a diagnosis, so part of the job of the NHS Centres of Excellence is to raise awareness among both the healthcare profession and the general public.

“It’s a condition that people learn about at medical school. Most doctors will have come across it, but because it was thought to be really rare in the UK, nobody perhaps really expects to see it,” Dr. Moot said.

“But we all have these patients,” he added. “In Liverpool, we’re commissioned to be looking after an anticipated 150 people with Behçet’s — we’ve got 700. With more awareness, there’s more diagnoses being made, and people are being looked after better.”
 

Patient Perspective

Tony Thornburn, OBE, chair of the patient advocacy group Behçet’s UK, agreed in a separate interview that raising awareness of the syndrome was key to improving its management.

“Patients have said that it is a bit like having arthritis, lupus, MS [multiple sclerosis], and Crohn’s [disease] all at once,” Mr. Thorburn said. “So what we need is a guideline to ensure that people know what they’re looking at.”

Mr. Thorburn added, “Guidelines are important for raising awareness but also providing the detailed information that clinicians and GPs [general practitioners] need to have to treat a patient when they come in with this multifaceted condition.”
 

 

 

Multifaceted Means Multidisciplinary Management

Because there can be so many different aspects to managing someone with Behçet’s disease, a multispecialty team that was convened to develop the guidelines agreed that multidisciplinary management should be an overarching theme.

“The guideline development group consisted of all the specialties that you would need for a complex multisystem disease like Behçet’s,” Dr. Moot said. He highlighted that working alongside the consultants in adult and pediatric rheumatology were specialists in dermatology, gastroenterology, neurology, ophthalmology, obstetrics and gynecology, and psychology.

“We’re actually looking at psychological interactions and their impact for the first time,” Dr. Moot said, noting that clinicians needed to “take it seriously, and ask about it.”
 

Management of Manifestations

One of the general principles of the guidelines is to assess the involvement of each organ system and target treatment accordingly.

“One of the problems is that the evidence base to tell us what to do is pretty low,” Dr. Moots acknowledged. There have been few good quality randomized trials, so “treatment tends to be eminence-based rather than evidence-based.”

The recommendation wording bears this in mind, stating whether a treatment should or should not be offered, or just considered if there is no strong evidence to back up its use.

With regard to musculoskeletal manifestations, the recommendations say that colchicine should be offered, perhaps as a first-line option, or an intraarticular steroid injection in the case of monoarthritis. An intramuscular depot steroid may also be appropriate to offer, and there was good evidence to offer azathioprine or, as an alternative in refractory cases, a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, methotrexateapremilast, secukinumab, and referral to a physiotherapist could only be considered, however, based on weaker levels of evidence for their use.

To treat mucocutaneous disease, the guidelines advise offering topical steroids in the form of ointment for genital ulcers or mouthwash or ointment for oral ulcers. For skin lesions, it is recommended to offer colchicine, azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, or TNF inhibitor and to consider the use of apremilast, secukinumab, or dapsone.
 

Future Work and Revision

“One of the key things we would like to see developing is a national registry,” Dr. Moots said. This would include biobanking samples for future research and possible genomic and phenotyping studies.

More work needs to be done in conducting clinical trials in children and young people with Behçet’s disease, studies to find prognostic factors for neurological disease, and clinical trials of potential new drug approaches such as Janus kinase inhibitors. Importantly, an auditing process needs to be set up to see what effect, if any, the guidelines will actually have onpatient management.

“It’s taken 5 years to today” to develop the guidelines, Dr. Moot said. What form the process of updating them will take still has to be decided, he said in the interview. It is likely that the necessary literature searches will be performed every 6 months or so, but it will be a compromise between the ideal situation and having the staffing time to do it.

“It’s a big ask,” Dr. Moot acknowledged, adding that even if updates were only once a year, it would still be much faster than the 5- or 6-year cycle that it traditionally takes for most guidelines to be updated.

The BSR and BAD’s processes for developing guidelines are accredited by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence in England. Dr. Moots is the chief investigator for the Secukinumab in Behçet’s trial, which is sponsored by the Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust via grant funding from Novartis.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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— The British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) and the British Association of Dermatologists (BAD) have joined forces for the first time to develop the first British guidelines for the management of people living with Behçet’s disease.

The guidelines will also be the first “living guidelines” produced by either society, which means they will be regularly revised and updated when new evidence emerges that warrants inclusion.

With more than 90 recommendations being made, the new guidelines promise to be the most comprehensive and most up-to-date yet for what is regarded as a rare disease. Robert Moots, MBBS, PhD, provided a “sneak peek” of the guidelines at the annual meeting of the British Society for Rheumatology.

Dr. Moots, professor of rheumatology at the University of Liverpool and a consultant rheumatologist for Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in England, noted that while the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology has produced a guideline for Behçet’s disease, this was last updated in 2018 and is not specific for the population for patients that is seen in the United Kingdom.

The British recommendations will cover all possible manifestations of Behçet’s disease and give practical advice on how to manage everything from the most common presentations such as skin lesions, mouth ulcers, and genital ulcers, as well as the potentially more serious eye, neurological, and vascular involvement.

Sara Freeman/Medscape Medical News
Dr. Robert Moots

 

Importance of Raising Awareness

“Joint and musculoskeletal problems are actually one of the least complained of symptoms in people with Behçet’s, and they often can’t understand why a rheumatologist is seeing them,” Dr. Moot said. “But of course, people do get joint problems, they can get enthesitis and arthralgia.”

Dr. Moots has been leading one of the three National Health Service (NHS) Centres of Excellence for Behçet’s Syndrome in England for more than a decade and told this news organization that diagnosing patients could be challenging. It can take up to 10 years from the first symptoms appearing to getting a diagnosis, so part of the job of the NHS Centres of Excellence is to raise awareness among both the healthcare profession and the general public.

“It’s a condition that people learn about at medical school. Most doctors will have come across it, but because it was thought to be really rare in the UK, nobody perhaps really expects to see it,” Dr. Moot said.

“But we all have these patients,” he added. “In Liverpool, we’re commissioned to be looking after an anticipated 150 people with Behçet’s — we’ve got 700. With more awareness, there’s more diagnoses being made, and people are being looked after better.”
 

Patient Perspective

Tony Thornburn, OBE, chair of the patient advocacy group Behçet’s UK, agreed in a separate interview that raising awareness of the syndrome was key to improving its management.

“Patients have said that it is a bit like having arthritis, lupus, MS [multiple sclerosis], and Crohn’s [disease] all at once,” Mr. Thorburn said. “So what we need is a guideline to ensure that people know what they’re looking at.”

Mr. Thorburn added, “Guidelines are important for raising awareness but also providing the detailed information that clinicians and GPs [general practitioners] need to have to treat a patient when they come in with this multifaceted condition.”
 

 

 

Multifaceted Means Multidisciplinary Management

Because there can be so many different aspects to managing someone with Behçet’s disease, a multispecialty team that was convened to develop the guidelines agreed that multidisciplinary management should be an overarching theme.

“The guideline development group consisted of all the specialties that you would need for a complex multisystem disease like Behçet’s,” Dr. Moot said. He highlighted that working alongside the consultants in adult and pediatric rheumatology were specialists in dermatology, gastroenterology, neurology, ophthalmology, obstetrics and gynecology, and psychology.

“We’re actually looking at psychological interactions and their impact for the first time,” Dr. Moot said, noting that clinicians needed to “take it seriously, and ask about it.”
 

Management of Manifestations

One of the general principles of the guidelines is to assess the involvement of each organ system and target treatment accordingly.

“One of the problems is that the evidence base to tell us what to do is pretty low,” Dr. Moots acknowledged. There have been few good quality randomized trials, so “treatment tends to be eminence-based rather than evidence-based.”

The recommendation wording bears this in mind, stating whether a treatment should or should not be offered, or just considered if there is no strong evidence to back up its use.

With regard to musculoskeletal manifestations, the recommendations say that colchicine should be offered, perhaps as a first-line option, or an intraarticular steroid injection in the case of monoarthritis. An intramuscular depot steroid may also be appropriate to offer, and there was good evidence to offer azathioprine or, as an alternative in refractory cases, a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, methotrexateapremilast, secukinumab, and referral to a physiotherapist could only be considered, however, based on weaker levels of evidence for their use.

To treat mucocutaneous disease, the guidelines advise offering topical steroids in the form of ointment for genital ulcers or mouthwash or ointment for oral ulcers. For skin lesions, it is recommended to offer colchicine, azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, or TNF inhibitor and to consider the use of apremilast, secukinumab, or dapsone.
 

Future Work and Revision

“One of the key things we would like to see developing is a national registry,” Dr. Moots said. This would include biobanking samples for future research and possible genomic and phenotyping studies.

More work needs to be done in conducting clinical trials in children and young people with Behçet’s disease, studies to find prognostic factors for neurological disease, and clinical trials of potential new drug approaches such as Janus kinase inhibitors. Importantly, an auditing process needs to be set up to see what effect, if any, the guidelines will actually have onpatient management.

“It’s taken 5 years to today” to develop the guidelines, Dr. Moot said. What form the process of updating them will take still has to be decided, he said in the interview. It is likely that the necessary literature searches will be performed every 6 months or so, but it will be a compromise between the ideal situation and having the staffing time to do it.

“It’s a big ask,” Dr. Moot acknowledged, adding that even if updates were only once a year, it would still be much faster than the 5- or 6-year cycle that it traditionally takes for most guidelines to be updated.

The BSR and BAD’s processes for developing guidelines are accredited by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence in England. Dr. Moots is the chief investigator for the Secukinumab in Behçet’s trial, which is sponsored by the Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust via grant funding from Novartis.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

— The British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) and the British Association of Dermatologists (BAD) have joined forces for the first time to develop the first British guidelines for the management of people living with Behçet’s disease.

The guidelines will also be the first “living guidelines” produced by either society, which means they will be regularly revised and updated when new evidence emerges that warrants inclusion.

With more than 90 recommendations being made, the new guidelines promise to be the most comprehensive and most up-to-date yet for what is regarded as a rare disease. Robert Moots, MBBS, PhD, provided a “sneak peek” of the guidelines at the annual meeting of the British Society for Rheumatology.

Dr. Moots, professor of rheumatology at the University of Liverpool and a consultant rheumatologist for Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in England, noted that while the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology has produced a guideline for Behçet’s disease, this was last updated in 2018 and is not specific for the population for patients that is seen in the United Kingdom.

The British recommendations will cover all possible manifestations of Behçet’s disease and give practical advice on how to manage everything from the most common presentations such as skin lesions, mouth ulcers, and genital ulcers, as well as the potentially more serious eye, neurological, and vascular involvement.

Sara Freeman/Medscape Medical News
Dr. Robert Moots

 

Importance of Raising Awareness

“Joint and musculoskeletal problems are actually one of the least complained of symptoms in people with Behçet’s, and they often can’t understand why a rheumatologist is seeing them,” Dr. Moot said. “But of course, people do get joint problems, they can get enthesitis and arthralgia.”

Dr. Moots has been leading one of the three National Health Service (NHS) Centres of Excellence for Behçet’s Syndrome in England for more than a decade and told this news organization that diagnosing patients could be challenging. It can take up to 10 years from the first symptoms appearing to getting a diagnosis, so part of the job of the NHS Centres of Excellence is to raise awareness among both the healthcare profession and the general public.

“It’s a condition that people learn about at medical school. Most doctors will have come across it, but because it was thought to be really rare in the UK, nobody perhaps really expects to see it,” Dr. Moot said.

“But we all have these patients,” he added. “In Liverpool, we’re commissioned to be looking after an anticipated 150 people with Behçet’s — we’ve got 700. With more awareness, there’s more diagnoses being made, and people are being looked after better.”
 

Patient Perspective

Tony Thornburn, OBE, chair of the patient advocacy group Behçet’s UK, agreed in a separate interview that raising awareness of the syndrome was key to improving its management.

“Patients have said that it is a bit like having arthritis, lupus, MS [multiple sclerosis], and Crohn’s [disease] all at once,” Mr. Thorburn said. “So what we need is a guideline to ensure that people know what they’re looking at.”

Mr. Thorburn added, “Guidelines are important for raising awareness but also providing the detailed information that clinicians and GPs [general practitioners] need to have to treat a patient when they come in with this multifaceted condition.”
 

 

 

Multifaceted Means Multidisciplinary Management

Because there can be so many different aspects to managing someone with Behçet’s disease, a multispecialty team that was convened to develop the guidelines agreed that multidisciplinary management should be an overarching theme.

“The guideline development group consisted of all the specialties that you would need for a complex multisystem disease like Behçet’s,” Dr. Moot said. He highlighted that working alongside the consultants in adult and pediatric rheumatology were specialists in dermatology, gastroenterology, neurology, ophthalmology, obstetrics and gynecology, and psychology.

“We’re actually looking at psychological interactions and their impact for the first time,” Dr. Moot said, noting that clinicians needed to “take it seriously, and ask about it.”
 

Management of Manifestations

One of the general principles of the guidelines is to assess the involvement of each organ system and target treatment accordingly.

“One of the problems is that the evidence base to tell us what to do is pretty low,” Dr. Moots acknowledged. There have been few good quality randomized trials, so “treatment tends to be eminence-based rather than evidence-based.”

The recommendation wording bears this in mind, stating whether a treatment should or should not be offered, or just considered if there is no strong evidence to back up its use.

With regard to musculoskeletal manifestations, the recommendations say that colchicine should be offered, perhaps as a first-line option, or an intraarticular steroid injection in the case of monoarthritis. An intramuscular depot steroid may also be appropriate to offer, and there was good evidence to offer azathioprine or, as an alternative in refractory cases, a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, methotrexateapremilast, secukinumab, and referral to a physiotherapist could only be considered, however, based on weaker levels of evidence for their use.

To treat mucocutaneous disease, the guidelines advise offering topical steroids in the form of ointment for genital ulcers or mouthwash or ointment for oral ulcers. For skin lesions, it is recommended to offer colchicine, azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, or TNF inhibitor and to consider the use of apremilast, secukinumab, or dapsone.
 

Future Work and Revision

“One of the key things we would like to see developing is a national registry,” Dr. Moots said. This would include biobanking samples for future research and possible genomic and phenotyping studies.

More work needs to be done in conducting clinical trials in children and young people with Behçet’s disease, studies to find prognostic factors for neurological disease, and clinical trials of potential new drug approaches such as Janus kinase inhibitors. Importantly, an auditing process needs to be set up to see what effect, if any, the guidelines will actually have onpatient management.

“It’s taken 5 years to today” to develop the guidelines, Dr. Moot said. What form the process of updating them will take still has to be decided, he said in the interview. It is likely that the necessary literature searches will be performed every 6 months or so, but it will be a compromise between the ideal situation and having the staffing time to do it.

“It’s a big ask,” Dr. Moot acknowledged, adding that even if updates were only once a year, it would still be much faster than the 5- or 6-year cycle that it traditionally takes for most guidelines to be updated.

The BSR and BAD’s processes for developing guidelines are accredited by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence in England. Dr. Moots is the chief investigator for the Secukinumab in Behçet’s trial, which is sponsored by the Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust via grant funding from Novartis.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Inside the 2024 AAD Acne Guidelines: New Therapies Join Old Standbys

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— Just weeks after the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) published its updated acne management guidelines, a dermatologist who helped write the recommendations provided colleagues with insight into recently approved topical therapies, the importance of multimodal therapy, and a controversial report linking benzoyl peroxide (BP) to the carcinogen benzene.

In regard to topical treatments, the guidelines make a “strong” recommendation for topical retinoids based on “moderate” evidence, Andrea L. Zaenglein, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, Penn State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. The recommendation was based on a pooled analysis of four randomized controlled trials that found patients with acne who used the medications were more likely to have improvement via the Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) scale at 12 weeks than were those treated with a vehicle (risk ratio [RR], 1.57; 1.21-2.04).

The updated guidelines were published on January 30 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. The previous guidelines were issued in 2016.

“We have four current retinoids that we use: adapalene, tretinoin, tazarotene, and trifarotene,” Dr. Zaenglein said. “Typically, when we think about retinoids, we think of adapalene as being more tolerable and tazarotene as being more effective. But we also know that they can work to prevent and treat scarring, and they work against comedonal lesions and inflammatory lesions.”

Newer concentrations include tretinoin 0.05% lotion, tazarotene 0.045% lotion, and trifarotene 0.005% cream. She noted that this trifarotene concentration can be helpful for moderate truncal acne and also referred to evidence that whey protein appears to exacerbate that condition. “I always ask teenage kids about that: Are they using those protein powders?”
 

Recommendations for ‘Multimodal Therapy,’ Especially With Antibiotics

Dr. Zaenglein highlighted a “good practice statement” in the new guidelines that says, “when managing acne with topical medications, we recommend multimodal therapy combining multiple mechanisms of action.”

Topical antibiotics are effective treatments on their own and include erythromycin, clindamycin, and minocycline (Minocin), she said. But the guidelines, which refer to evidence supporting them as “moderate,” do not recommend them as monotherapy because of the risk for antibiotic resistance.

The oral retinoid isotretinoin may be appropriate in conjunction with topical medications, she said, “and we also recommend fixed combination products because they’re associated with increased adherence.”

Dermatologists are familiar with several of these products because “we’ve been using them for years and years,” she said. The guidelines note that “compared to vehicle at 12 weeks, a greater proportion of patients treated with combined BP and topical retinoid achieved IGA success in three RCTs (RR, 2.19; 1.77-2.72).”

Dr. Zaenglein noted that the guidelines recommend that patients taking antibiotics also use benzoyl peroxide, which has “moderate” evidence regarding preventing the development of antibiotic resistance. “Lower strengths tend to be less irritating, and over-the-counter formulations are readily available,” she said, adding that colleagues should make sure to warn patients about the risk of bleaching clothes and towels with BP.

Now, there’s a newly approved treatment, the first fixed-dose triple combination therapy for acne, she said. It combines 1.2% clindamycin, 3.1% benzoyl peroxide, and 0.15% adapalene (Cabtreo) and is Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved for treating acne in patients ages 12 and up.

The new AAD guidelines note that “potential adverse effect profiles of the fixed-dose combinations generally reflect those of the individual agents in summation. Some fixed-dose combination products may be less expensive than prescribing their individual components separately.” The evidence supporting fixed-dose combinations in conjunction with benzoyl peroxide is considered “moderate.”

Dapsone gel, 7.5% (Aczone) is another option for acne. “It’s a topical so you don’t need to do G6PD [glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase] testing,” Dr. Zaenglein said. “It’s well tolerated, and mean total lesions fell by 48.9% vs 43.2% for vehicle,” in a 2018 study, which she said also found that females benefited more than males from this treatment.

Clascoterone 1% cream (Winlevi), approved in 2020, is appropriate for males and females aged 12 and up, Dr. Zaenglein said. She noted that it’s the only topical anti-androgen that can be used in males. However, while it has a “high” level of evidence because of phase 3 clinical trials showing benefits in moderate to severe acne, the AAD guidelines only conditionally recommend this option because the high price of clascoterone “may impact equitable acne treatment access.” The price listed on the website GoodRx (accessed on March 12) lists drugstore prices for a single 60-gram tube as ranging from $590 to $671.

“One of the harder things is trying to figure out where clascoterone fits in our kind of standard combination therapy,” she said. “Much like other hormonal therapies, it works better over the long term.”

Two more topical options per the AAD guidelines are salicylic acid, based on one randomized controlled trial, and azelaic acid (Azelex, Finacea), based on three randomized controlled trials. Both of these recommendations are conditional because of limited evidence: Evidence is considered “low” for salicylic acid and “moderate” for azelaic acid, the guidelines say, and azelaic acid “may be particularly helpful for patients with sensitive skin or darker skin types due to its lightening effect on dyspigmentation.”

As for risk for topical treatments during pregnancy/lactation, the guidelines note that topical therapies other than topical retinoids are “preferred” during pregnancy. Tazarotene is contraindicated during pregnancy, and salicylic acid should be used only in limited areas of exposure. There are no data for dapsone and clascoterone during pregnancy/lactation, and minocycline is “not recommended.”

The guideline authors noted that “available evidence is insufficient to develop a recommendation on the use of topical glycolic acid, sulfur, sodium sulfacetamide, and resorcinol for acne treatment or to make recommendations that compare topical BP, retinoids, antibiotics, and their combinations directly against each other.”
 

 

 

Could BP Post a Risk From Benzene?

Dr. Zaenglein highlighted a recently released report by Valisure, an independent laboratory, which reported finding high levels of the cancer-causing chemical benzene in several acne treatments, including brands such as Clearasil. “They didn’t release all of the ones that they evaluated, but there were a lot ... that we commonly recommend for our patients,” she said.

On March 6, CBS News reported that Valisure “ran tests at various temperatures over 18 days and found some products ‘can form over 800 times the conditionally restricted FDA concentration limit of two parts per million (ppm) for benzene’ in 2 weeks at 50° C (122° F),” but that benzene levels “at room temperature were more modest, ranging from about one to 24 parts per million.”

Dr. Zaenglein said she’s not ready to urge patients to discontinue BP, although in light of the findings, “I will tell them to store it at room temperature or lower.”

For now, it’s important to wait for independent verification of the results, she said. “And then it’s up to the manufacturers to reevaluate the stability of their benzoyl peroxide products with heat.”

Dr. Zaenglein disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Arcutis, Biofrontera, Galderma, and Incyte (grants/research funding), Church & Dwight (consulting fees), and UCB (consulting honoraria).

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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— Just weeks after the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) published its updated acne management guidelines, a dermatologist who helped write the recommendations provided colleagues with insight into recently approved topical therapies, the importance of multimodal therapy, and a controversial report linking benzoyl peroxide (BP) to the carcinogen benzene.

In regard to topical treatments, the guidelines make a “strong” recommendation for topical retinoids based on “moderate” evidence, Andrea L. Zaenglein, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, Penn State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. The recommendation was based on a pooled analysis of four randomized controlled trials that found patients with acne who used the medications were more likely to have improvement via the Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) scale at 12 weeks than were those treated with a vehicle (risk ratio [RR], 1.57; 1.21-2.04).

The updated guidelines were published on January 30 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. The previous guidelines were issued in 2016.

“We have four current retinoids that we use: adapalene, tretinoin, tazarotene, and trifarotene,” Dr. Zaenglein said. “Typically, when we think about retinoids, we think of adapalene as being more tolerable and tazarotene as being more effective. But we also know that they can work to prevent and treat scarring, and they work against comedonal lesions and inflammatory lesions.”

Newer concentrations include tretinoin 0.05% lotion, tazarotene 0.045% lotion, and trifarotene 0.005% cream. She noted that this trifarotene concentration can be helpful for moderate truncal acne and also referred to evidence that whey protein appears to exacerbate that condition. “I always ask teenage kids about that: Are they using those protein powders?”
 

Recommendations for ‘Multimodal Therapy,’ Especially With Antibiotics

Dr. Zaenglein highlighted a “good practice statement” in the new guidelines that says, “when managing acne with topical medications, we recommend multimodal therapy combining multiple mechanisms of action.”

Topical antibiotics are effective treatments on their own and include erythromycin, clindamycin, and minocycline (Minocin), she said. But the guidelines, which refer to evidence supporting them as “moderate,” do not recommend them as monotherapy because of the risk for antibiotic resistance.

The oral retinoid isotretinoin may be appropriate in conjunction with topical medications, she said, “and we also recommend fixed combination products because they’re associated with increased adherence.”

Dermatologists are familiar with several of these products because “we’ve been using them for years and years,” she said. The guidelines note that “compared to vehicle at 12 weeks, a greater proportion of patients treated with combined BP and topical retinoid achieved IGA success in three RCTs (RR, 2.19; 1.77-2.72).”

Dr. Zaenglein noted that the guidelines recommend that patients taking antibiotics also use benzoyl peroxide, which has “moderate” evidence regarding preventing the development of antibiotic resistance. “Lower strengths tend to be less irritating, and over-the-counter formulations are readily available,” she said, adding that colleagues should make sure to warn patients about the risk of bleaching clothes and towels with BP.

Now, there’s a newly approved treatment, the first fixed-dose triple combination therapy for acne, she said. It combines 1.2% clindamycin, 3.1% benzoyl peroxide, and 0.15% adapalene (Cabtreo) and is Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved for treating acne in patients ages 12 and up.

The new AAD guidelines note that “potential adverse effect profiles of the fixed-dose combinations generally reflect those of the individual agents in summation. Some fixed-dose combination products may be less expensive than prescribing their individual components separately.” The evidence supporting fixed-dose combinations in conjunction with benzoyl peroxide is considered “moderate.”

Dapsone gel, 7.5% (Aczone) is another option for acne. “It’s a topical so you don’t need to do G6PD [glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase] testing,” Dr. Zaenglein said. “It’s well tolerated, and mean total lesions fell by 48.9% vs 43.2% for vehicle,” in a 2018 study, which she said also found that females benefited more than males from this treatment.

Clascoterone 1% cream (Winlevi), approved in 2020, is appropriate for males and females aged 12 and up, Dr. Zaenglein said. She noted that it’s the only topical anti-androgen that can be used in males. However, while it has a “high” level of evidence because of phase 3 clinical trials showing benefits in moderate to severe acne, the AAD guidelines only conditionally recommend this option because the high price of clascoterone “may impact equitable acne treatment access.” The price listed on the website GoodRx (accessed on March 12) lists drugstore prices for a single 60-gram tube as ranging from $590 to $671.

“One of the harder things is trying to figure out where clascoterone fits in our kind of standard combination therapy,” she said. “Much like other hormonal therapies, it works better over the long term.”

Two more topical options per the AAD guidelines are salicylic acid, based on one randomized controlled trial, and azelaic acid (Azelex, Finacea), based on three randomized controlled trials. Both of these recommendations are conditional because of limited evidence: Evidence is considered “low” for salicylic acid and “moderate” for azelaic acid, the guidelines say, and azelaic acid “may be particularly helpful for patients with sensitive skin or darker skin types due to its lightening effect on dyspigmentation.”

As for risk for topical treatments during pregnancy/lactation, the guidelines note that topical therapies other than topical retinoids are “preferred” during pregnancy. Tazarotene is contraindicated during pregnancy, and salicylic acid should be used only in limited areas of exposure. There are no data for dapsone and clascoterone during pregnancy/lactation, and minocycline is “not recommended.”

The guideline authors noted that “available evidence is insufficient to develop a recommendation on the use of topical glycolic acid, sulfur, sodium sulfacetamide, and resorcinol for acne treatment or to make recommendations that compare topical BP, retinoids, antibiotics, and their combinations directly against each other.”
 

 

 

Could BP Post a Risk From Benzene?

Dr. Zaenglein highlighted a recently released report by Valisure, an independent laboratory, which reported finding high levels of the cancer-causing chemical benzene in several acne treatments, including brands such as Clearasil. “They didn’t release all of the ones that they evaluated, but there were a lot ... that we commonly recommend for our patients,” she said.

On March 6, CBS News reported that Valisure “ran tests at various temperatures over 18 days and found some products ‘can form over 800 times the conditionally restricted FDA concentration limit of two parts per million (ppm) for benzene’ in 2 weeks at 50° C (122° F),” but that benzene levels “at room temperature were more modest, ranging from about one to 24 parts per million.”

Dr. Zaenglein said she’s not ready to urge patients to discontinue BP, although in light of the findings, “I will tell them to store it at room temperature or lower.”

For now, it’s important to wait for independent verification of the results, she said. “And then it’s up to the manufacturers to reevaluate the stability of their benzoyl peroxide products with heat.”

Dr. Zaenglein disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Arcutis, Biofrontera, Galderma, and Incyte (grants/research funding), Church & Dwight (consulting fees), and UCB (consulting honoraria).

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

— Just weeks after the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) published its updated acne management guidelines, a dermatologist who helped write the recommendations provided colleagues with insight into recently approved topical therapies, the importance of multimodal therapy, and a controversial report linking benzoyl peroxide (BP) to the carcinogen benzene.

In regard to topical treatments, the guidelines make a “strong” recommendation for topical retinoids based on “moderate” evidence, Andrea L. Zaenglein, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, Penn State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. The recommendation was based on a pooled analysis of four randomized controlled trials that found patients with acne who used the medications were more likely to have improvement via the Investigator Global Assessment (IGA) scale at 12 weeks than were those treated with a vehicle (risk ratio [RR], 1.57; 1.21-2.04).

The updated guidelines were published on January 30 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. The previous guidelines were issued in 2016.

“We have four current retinoids that we use: adapalene, tretinoin, tazarotene, and trifarotene,” Dr. Zaenglein said. “Typically, when we think about retinoids, we think of adapalene as being more tolerable and tazarotene as being more effective. But we also know that they can work to prevent and treat scarring, and they work against comedonal lesions and inflammatory lesions.”

Newer concentrations include tretinoin 0.05% lotion, tazarotene 0.045% lotion, and trifarotene 0.005% cream. She noted that this trifarotene concentration can be helpful for moderate truncal acne and also referred to evidence that whey protein appears to exacerbate that condition. “I always ask teenage kids about that: Are they using those protein powders?”
 

Recommendations for ‘Multimodal Therapy,’ Especially With Antibiotics

Dr. Zaenglein highlighted a “good practice statement” in the new guidelines that says, “when managing acne with topical medications, we recommend multimodal therapy combining multiple mechanisms of action.”

Topical antibiotics are effective treatments on their own and include erythromycin, clindamycin, and minocycline (Minocin), she said. But the guidelines, which refer to evidence supporting them as “moderate,” do not recommend them as monotherapy because of the risk for antibiotic resistance.

The oral retinoid isotretinoin may be appropriate in conjunction with topical medications, she said, “and we also recommend fixed combination products because they’re associated with increased adherence.”

Dermatologists are familiar with several of these products because “we’ve been using them for years and years,” she said. The guidelines note that “compared to vehicle at 12 weeks, a greater proportion of patients treated with combined BP and topical retinoid achieved IGA success in three RCTs (RR, 2.19; 1.77-2.72).”

Dr. Zaenglein noted that the guidelines recommend that patients taking antibiotics also use benzoyl peroxide, which has “moderate” evidence regarding preventing the development of antibiotic resistance. “Lower strengths tend to be less irritating, and over-the-counter formulations are readily available,” she said, adding that colleagues should make sure to warn patients about the risk of bleaching clothes and towels with BP.

Now, there’s a newly approved treatment, the first fixed-dose triple combination therapy for acne, she said. It combines 1.2% clindamycin, 3.1% benzoyl peroxide, and 0.15% adapalene (Cabtreo) and is Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved for treating acne in patients ages 12 and up.

The new AAD guidelines note that “potential adverse effect profiles of the fixed-dose combinations generally reflect those of the individual agents in summation. Some fixed-dose combination products may be less expensive than prescribing their individual components separately.” The evidence supporting fixed-dose combinations in conjunction with benzoyl peroxide is considered “moderate.”

Dapsone gel, 7.5% (Aczone) is another option for acne. “It’s a topical so you don’t need to do G6PD [glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase] testing,” Dr. Zaenglein said. “It’s well tolerated, and mean total lesions fell by 48.9% vs 43.2% for vehicle,” in a 2018 study, which she said also found that females benefited more than males from this treatment.

Clascoterone 1% cream (Winlevi), approved in 2020, is appropriate for males and females aged 12 and up, Dr. Zaenglein said. She noted that it’s the only topical anti-androgen that can be used in males. However, while it has a “high” level of evidence because of phase 3 clinical trials showing benefits in moderate to severe acne, the AAD guidelines only conditionally recommend this option because the high price of clascoterone “may impact equitable acne treatment access.” The price listed on the website GoodRx (accessed on March 12) lists drugstore prices for a single 60-gram tube as ranging from $590 to $671.

“One of the harder things is trying to figure out where clascoterone fits in our kind of standard combination therapy,” she said. “Much like other hormonal therapies, it works better over the long term.”

Two more topical options per the AAD guidelines are salicylic acid, based on one randomized controlled trial, and azelaic acid (Azelex, Finacea), based on three randomized controlled trials. Both of these recommendations are conditional because of limited evidence: Evidence is considered “low” for salicylic acid and “moderate” for azelaic acid, the guidelines say, and azelaic acid “may be particularly helpful for patients with sensitive skin or darker skin types due to its lightening effect on dyspigmentation.”

As for risk for topical treatments during pregnancy/lactation, the guidelines note that topical therapies other than topical retinoids are “preferred” during pregnancy. Tazarotene is contraindicated during pregnancy, and salicylic acid should be used only in limited areas of exposure. There are no data for dapsone and clascoterone during pregnancy/lactation, and minocycline is “not recommended.”

The guideline authors noted that “available evidence is insufficient to develop a recommendation on the use of topical glycolic acid, sulfur, sodium sulfacetamide, and resorcinol for acne treatment or to make recommendations that compare topical BP, retinoids, antibiotics, and their combinations directly against each other.”
 

 

 

Could BP Post a Risk From Benzene?

Dr. Zaenglein highlighted a recently released report by Valisure, an independent laboratory, which reported finding high levels of the cancer-causing chemical benzene in several acne treatments, including brands such as Clearasil. “They didn’t release all of the ones that they evaluated, but there were a lot ... that we commonly recommend for our patients,” she said.

On March 6, CBS News reported that Valisure “ran tests at various temperatures over 18 days and found some products ‘can form over 800 times the conditionally restricted FDA concentration limit of two parts per million (ppm) for benzene’ in 2 weeks at 50° C (122° F),” but that benzene levels “at room temperature were more modest, ranging from about one to 24 parts per million.”

Dr. Zaenglein said she’s not ready to urge patients to discontinue BP, although in light of the findings, “I will tell them to store it at room temperature or lower.”

For now, it’s important to wait for independent verification of the results, she said. “And then it’s up to the manufacturers to reevaluate the stability of their benzoyl peroxide products with heat.”

Dr. Zaenglein disclosed relationships with AbbVie, Arcutis, Biofrontera, Galderma, and Incyte (grants/research funding), Church & Dwight (consulting fees), and UCB (consulting honoraria).

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Statement: Prioritize Patient Experience in Diabetes Care

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A new position statement from the Endocrine Society aims to help clinicians prioritize patient experiences in the management of diabetes to optimize outcomes.

The statement reflects consensus from two virtual roundtables held in 2022, with participation from representatives of the American Diabetes Association, the American College of Cardiology, the American College of Physicians, the Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, among others.

“Although we’ve had many new classes of medications and many new technologies introduced into the care of people with diabetes over the past decade, there continues to be significant gaps between what our clinical guidelines recommend needs to be done in order to attain optimal health outcomes and what is actually able to be implemented in practice,” writing panel chair Rita R. Kalyani, MD, told this news organization.

The roundtable discussions addressed existing gaps in diabetes care and available tools to support patient-centered care in practice, focusing on the importance of acknowledging the experience of the person living with diabetes, said Dr. Kalyani, professor of medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore. “What is most important to them? What are the challenges they have in their day-to-day life, and what is being communicated or understood?”

The statement is targeted at all individuals involved in the care of people with diabetes, including endocrinologists, primary care providers, other specialists such as cardiologists and nephrologists, as well as pharmacists, educators, and nutritionists, she noted.

Asked to comment, David T. Ahn, MD, chief of diabetes services at Mary & Dick Allen Diabetes Center at Hoag, Newport Beach, California, said “the statement importantly emphasizes that optimally supporting a person with diabetes is about the entire patient experience and not simply their glycemic performance. People with diabetes are truly the biggest stakeholders in diabetes management, and their perspectives should matter.”

Published on February 21, 2024, in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, the statement covers the following topics in separate sections:

  • The importance of effective patient-provider communication at the time of diagnosis and at every clinic visit
  • Addressing emotional and psychosocial needs, including helping people through diabetes distress or “burnout”
  • Referring patients for diabetes self-management education and support
  • Navigating available therapeutic options and explaining complex regimens to patients
  • Minimizing therapeutic and clinical inertia
  • Reducing cardiovascular, kidney, and other complication risks, including with the use of newer medications
  • Discussing strategies to minimize hypoglycemia when relevant
  • Using telehealth when appropriate
  • Integrating diabetes technologies into routine diabetes management

Each section begins with an illustrative clinical patient vignette. For example, one describes a 42-year-old man with type 2 diabetes on basal insulin who experienced hyperglycemia during illness. His provider advises him to dramatically increase his insulin dose, but he doesn’t because he remembers his father had a severe hypoglycemia episode when he did that. The man ends up hospitalized with dehydration and renal failure.

In another, a doctor hesitates to share test results with a patient during a telehealth visit because family members are in the room. During the same visit, the patient is unable to show the doctor her swollen foot because “If I move from this spot, the Internet connection will be lost.”

Dr. Ahn said, “I like the structure of the statement because the case-based format should help clinicians better identify potential blind spots in their own practice, as sometimes it can be easy to assume that we are immune to these potential pitfalls. I found the vignettes to be very realistic, and the discussions around them were extremely detailed, with many practical suggestions for improvement.”

Also scattered through the document are graphics to help visualize the content. Tables include a list of common psychosocial conditions in diabetes, a list of questions to ask people to help determine if they need additional psychosocial screening or resources, and questionnaires to assess an individual’s risk for hypoglycemia and the appropriateness of telehealth.

However, Dr. Ahn also noted, “I agree with all the major recommendations from the statement. Unfortunately, as the authors point out, practically implementing all the recommendations in this article may not be feasible in a traditional busy clinic, especially for primary care providers managing juggling multiple acute and chronic conditions ... The biggest challenge is being able to have the time and resources to actually implement these suggestions.”

Kalyani said, “tools to support patient-centered care cannot be burdensome for people with diabetes or the healthcare provider who already has limited time in order to be effective. They have to meet the ever-changing demands of new medications, new recommendations, and new technologies. New tools and resources will continue to need to be developed in the future.”

The position statement is a summary of discussions that occurred during two consensus roundtables in 2022 that were supported by educational grants to the Endocrine Society from Abbott, Medtronic, Novo Nordisk, and Vertex. However, this position statement was developed by the authors independently. Dr. Kalyani had no disclosures. Dr. Ahn consults for Lilly Diabetes and Ascensia Diabetes Care and is on the speakers bureau for Abbott, Ascensia, Insulet, Lilly, Mannkind, Novo, and Xeris.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A new position statement from the Endocrine Society aims to help clinicians prioritize patient experiences in the management of diabetes to optimize outcomes.

The statement reflects consensus from two virtual roundtables held in 2022, with participation from representatives of the American Diabetes Association, the American College of Cardiology, the American College of Physicians, the Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, among others.

“Although we’ve had many new classes of medications and many new technologies introduced into the care of people with diabetes over the past decade, there continues to be significant gaps between what our clinical guidelines recommend needs to be done in order to attain optimal health outcomes and what is actually able to be implemented in practice,” writing panel chair Rita R. Kalyani, MD, told this news organization.

The roundtable discussions addressed existing gaps in diabetes care and available tools to support patient-centered care in practice, focusing on the importance of acknowledging the experience of the person living with diabetes, said Dr. Kalyani, professor of medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore. “What is most important to them? What are the challenges they have in their day-to-day life, and what is being communicated or understood?”

The statement is targeted at all individuals involved in the care of people with diabetes, including endocrinologists, primary care providers, other specialists such as cardiologists and nephrologists, as well as pharmacists, educators, and nutritionists, she noted.

Asked to comment, David T. Ahn, MD, chief of diabetes services at Mary & Dick Allen Diabetes Center at Hoag, Newport Beach, California, said “the statement importantly emphasizes that optimally supporting a person with diabetes is about the entire patient experience and not simply their glycemic performance. People with diabetes are truly the biggest stakeholders in diabetes management, and their perspectives should matter.”

Published on February 21, 2024, in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, the statement covers the following topics in separate sections:

  • The importance of effective patient-provider communication at the time of diagnosis and at every clinic visit
  • Addressing emotional and psychosocial needs, including helping people through diabetes distress or “burnout”
  • Referring patients for diabetes self-management education and support
  • Navigating available therapeutic options and explaining complex regimens to patients
  • Minimizing therapeutic and clinical inertia
  • Reducing cardiovascular, kidney, and other complication risks, including with the use of newer medications
  • Discussing strategies to minimize hypoglycemia when relevant
  • Using telehealth when appropriate
  • Integrating diabetes technologies into routine diabetes management

Each section begins with an illustrative clinical patient vignette. For example, one describes a 42-year-old man with type 2 diabetes on basal insulin who experienced hyperglycemia during illness. His provider advises him to dramatically increase his insulin dose, but he doesn’t because he remembers his father had a severe hypoglycemia episode when he did that. The man ends up hospitalized with dehydration and renal failure.

In another, a doctor hesitates to share test results with a patient during a telehealth visit because family members are in the room. During the same visit, the patient is unable to show the doctor her swollen foot because “If I move from this spot, the Internet connection will be lost.”

Dr. Ahn said, “I like the structure of the statement because the case-based format should help clinicians better identify potential blind spots in their own practice, as sometimes it can be easy to assume that we are immune to these potential pitfalls. I found the vignettes to be very realistic, and the discussions around them were extremely detailed, with many practical suggestions for improvement.”

Also scattered through the document are graphics to help visualize the content. Tables include a list of common psychosocial conditions in diabetes, a list of questions to ask people to help determine if they need additional psychosocial screening or resources, and questionnaires to assess an individual’s risk for hypoglycemia and the appropriateness of telehealth.

However, Dr. Ahn also noted, “I agree with all the major recommendations from the statement. Unfortunately, as the authors point out, practically implementing all the recommendations in this article may not be feasible in a traditional busy clinic, especially for primary care providers managing juggling multiple acute and chronic conditions ... The biggest challenge is being able to have the time and resources to actually implement these suggestions.”

Kalyani said, “tools to support patient-centered care cannot be burdensome for people with diabetes or the healthcare provider who already has limited time in order to be effective. They have to meet the ever-changing demands of new medications, new recommendations, and new technologies. New tools and resources will continue to need to be developed in the future.”

The position statement is a summary of discussions that occurred during two consensus roundtables in 2022 that were supported by educational grants to the Endocrine Society from Abbott, Medtronic, Novo Nordisk, and Vertex. However, this position statement was developed by the authors independently. Dr. Kalyani had no disclosures. Dr. Ahn consults for Lilly Diabetes and Ascensia Diabetes Care and is on the speakers bureau for Abbott, Ascensia, Insulet, Lilly, Mannkind, Novo, and Xeris.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

A new position statement from the Endocrine Society aims to help clinicians prioritize patient experiences in the management of diabetes to optimize outcomes.

The statement reflects consensus from two virtual roundtables held in 2022, with participation from representatives of the American Diabetes Association, the American College of Cardiology, the American College of Physicians, the Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, among others.

“Although we’ve had many new classes of medications and many new technologies introduced into the care of people with diabetes over the past decade, there continues to be significant gaps between what our clinical guidelines recommend needs to be done in order to attain optimal health outcomes and what is actually able to be implemented in practice,” writing panel chair Rita R. Kalyani, MD, told this news organization.

The roundtable discussions addressed existing gaps in diabetes care and available tools to support patient-centered care in practice, focusing on the importance of acknowledging the experience of the person living with diabetes, said Dr. Kalyani, professor of medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, & Metabolism, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore. “What is most important to them? What are the challenges they have in their day-to-day life, and what is being communicated or understood?”

The statement is targeted at all individuals involved in the care of people with diabetes, including endocrinologists, primary care providers, other specialists such as cardiologists and nephrologists, as well as pharmacists, educators, and nutritionists, she noted.

Asked to comment, David T. Ahn, MD, chief of diabetes services at Mary & Dick Allen Diabetes Center at Hoag, Newport Beach, California, said “the statement importantly emphasizes that optimally supporting a person with diabetes is about the entire patient experience and not simply their glycemic performance. People with diabetes are truly the biggest stakeholders in diabetes management, and their perspectives should matter.”

Published on February 21, 2024, in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, the statement covers the following topics in separate sections:

  • The importance of effective patient-provider communication at the time of diagnosis and at every clinic visit
  • Addressing emotional and psychosocial needs, including helping people through diabetes distress or “burnout”
  • Referring patients for diabetes self-management education and support
  • Navigating available therapeutic options and explaining complex regimens to patients
  • Minimizing therapeutic and clinical inertia
  • Reducing cardiovascular, kidney, and other complication risks, including with the use of newer medications
  • Discussing strategies to minimize hypoglycemia when relevant
  • Using telehealth when appropriate
  • Integrating diabetes technologies into routine diabetes management

Each section begins with an illustrative clinical patient vignette. For example, one describes a 42-year-old man with type 2 diabetes on basal insulin who experienced hyperglycemia during illness. His provider advises him to dramatically increase his insulin dose, but he doesn’t because he remembers his father had a severe hypoglycemia episode when he did that. The man ends up hospitalized with dehydration and renal failure.

In another, a doctor hesitates to share test results with a patient during a telehealth visit because family members are in the room. During the same visit, the patient is unable to show the doctor her swollen foot because “If I move from this spot, the Internet connection will be lost.”

Dr. Ahn said, “I like the structure of the statement because the case-based format should help clinicians better identify potential blind spots in their own practice, as sometimes it can be easy to assume that we are immune to these potential pitfalls. I found the vignettes to be very realistic, and the discussions around them were extremely detailed, with many practical suggestions for improvement.”

Also scattered through the document are graphics to help visualize the content. Tables include a list of common psychosocial conditions in diabetes, a list of questions to ask people to help determine if they need additional psychosocial screening or resources, and questionnaires to assess an individual’s risk for hypoglycemia and the appropriateness of telehealth.

However, Dr. Ahn also noted, “I agree with all the major recommendations from the statement. Unfortunately, as the authors point out, practically implementing all the recommendations in this article may not be feasible in a traditional busy clinic, especially for primary care providers managing juggling multiple acute and chronic conditions ... The biggest challenge is being able to have the time and resources to actually implement these suggestions.”

Kalyani said, “tools to support patient-centered care cannot be burdensome for people with diabetes or the healthcare provider who already has limited time in order to be effective. They have to meet the ever-changing demands of new medications, new recommendations, and new technologies. New tools and resources will continue to need to be developed in the future.”

The position statement is a summary of discussions that occurred during two consensus roundtables in 2022 that were supported by educational grants to the Endocrine Society from Abbott, Medtronic, Novo Nordisk, and Vertex. However, this position statement was developed by the authors independently. Dr. Kalyani had no disclosures. Dr. Ahn consults for Lilly Diabetes and Ascensia Diabetes Care and is on the speakers bureau for Abbott, Ascensia, Insulet, Lilly, Mannkind, Novo, and Xeris.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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New Guideline Offers Recommendations for Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease

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Wed, 01/31/2024 - 13:40

To curb alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD), alcohol consumption should be avoided among those with underlying obesitychronic hepatitis C infection, hepatitis B virus infection, or a history of gastric bypass, according to a new clinical guideline from the American College of Gastroenterology.

In addition, health systems need to overcome barriers to treating alcohol use disorder (AUD) and commit to creating a multidisciplinary care model with behavioral interventions and pharmacotherapy for patients.

Experts were convened to develop these guidelines because it was “imperative to provide an up-to-date, evidence-based blueprint for how to care for patients, as well as guide prevention and research efforts in the field of ALD for the coming years,” said the first author, Loretta Jophlin, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in gastroenterology, hepatology, and nutrition and medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Louisville in Kentucky.

“In recent years, perhaps fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic, alcohol use has been normalized in an increasing number of situations,” she said. “Drinking was normalized as a coping mechanism to deal with many of the sorrows we experienced during the pandemic, including loss of purposeful work and social isolation, and many more people are struggling with AUD. So many aspects of our culture have been inundated by the presence of alcohol use, and we need to work hard to denormalize this, first focusing on at-risk populations.”

The guideline was published in the January issue of the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
 

Updating ALD Recommendations

With ALD as the most common cause of advanced hepatic disease and a frequent indicator of eventual liver transplantation, the rising incidence of alcohol use during the past decade has led to rapid growth in ALD-related healthcare burdens, the guideline authors wrote.

In particular, those with ALD tend to present at an advanced stage and progress faster, which can lead to progressive fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. This can include alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH), which often presents with a rapid onset or worsening of jaundice and can lead to acute or chronic liver failure.

To update the guideline, Dr. Jophlin and colleagues analyzed data based on a patient-intervention-comparison-outcome format, resulting in 34 key concepts or statements and 21 recommendations.

Among them, the authors recommended screening and treating AUD with the goal of helping patients who have not yet developed significant liver injury and preventing progression to advanced stages of ALD, particularly among at-risk groups who have had an increasing prevalence of severe AUD, including women, younger people, and Hispanic and American Indian patients.

“So many patients are still told to ‘stop drinking’ or ‘cut back’ but are provided no additional resources. Without offering referrals to treatment programs or pharmacologic therapies to assist in abstinence, many patients are not successful,” Dr. Jophlin said. “We hope these guidelines empower providers to consider selected [Food and Drug Administration]-approved medications, well-studied off-label therapies, and nonpharmacologic interventions to aid their patients’ journeys to abstinence and hopefully avert the progression of ALD.”

In addition, the guidelines provide recommendations for AH treatment. In patients with severe AH, the authors offered strong recommendations against the use of pentoxifylline and prophylactic antibiotics, and in support of corticosteroid therapy and intravenous N-acetyl cysteine as an adjuvant to corticosteroids.

Liver transplantation, which may be recommended for carefully selected patients, is being performed at many centers but remains relatively controversial, Dr. Jophlin said.

“Questions remain about ideal patient selection as center practices vary considerably, yet we have started to realize the impacts of relapse after transplantation,” she said. “The guidelines highlight the knowns and unknowns in this area and will hopefully serve as a catalyst for the dissemination of centers’ experiences and the development of a universal set of ethically sound, evidence-based guidelines to be used by all transplant centers.”
 

 

 

Policy Implications

Dr. Jophlin and colleagues noted the importance of policy aimed at alcohol use reduction, multidisciplinary care for AUD and ALD, and additional research around severe AH.

“As a practicing transplant hepatologist and medical director of a liver transplant program in the heart of Bourbon country, I am a part of just one healthcare team experiencing ALD, particularly AH, as a mass casualty event. Healthcare teams are fighting an unrelenting fire that the alcohol industry is pouring gasoline on,” Dr. Jophlin said. “It is imperative that healthcare providers have a voice in the policies that shape this preventable disease. We hope these guidelines inspire practitioners to explore our influence on how alcohol is regulated, marketed, and distributed.”

Additional interventions and public policy considerations could help reduce alcohol-related morbidity and mortality at a moment when the characteristics of those who present with AUD appear to be evolving.

“The typical person I’m seeing now is not someone who has been drinking heavily for decades. Rather, it’s a young person who has been drinking heavily for many months or a couple of years,” said James Burton, MD, a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Colorado Hospital’s Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.

Dr. Burton, who wasn’t involved with the guideline, noted it’s become more common for people to drink multiple alcoholic drinks per day for multiple times per week. Patients often don’t think it’s a problem, even as he discusses their liver-related issues.

“We can’t just keep living and working the way we were 10 years ago,” he said. “We’ve got to change how we approach treatment. We have to treat liver disease and AUD.”

The guideline was supported by several National Institutes of Health grants and an American College of Gastroenterology faculty development grant. The authors declared potential competing interests with various pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Burton reported no financial disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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To curb alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD), alcohol consumption should be avoided among those with underlying obesitychronic hepatitis C infection, hepatitis B virus infection, or a history of gastric bypass, according to a new clinical guideline from the American College of Gastroenterology.

In addition, health systems need to overcome barriers to treating alcohol use disorder (AUD) and commit to creating a multidisciplinary care model with behavioral interventions and pharmacotherapy for patients.

Experts were convened to develop these guidelines because it was “imperative to provide an up-to-date, evidence-based blueprint for how to care for patients, as well as guide prevention and research efforts in the field of ALD for the coming years,” said the first author, Loretta Jophlin, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in gastroenterology, hepatology, and nutrition and medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Louisville in Kentucky.

“In recent years, perhaps fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic, alcohol use has been normalized in an increasing number of situations,” she said. “Drinking was normalized as a coping mechanism to deal with many of the sorrows we experienced during the pandemic, including loss of purposeful work and social isolation, and many more people are struggling with AUD. So many aspects of our culture have been inundated by the presence of alcohol use, and we need to work hard to denormalize this, first focusing on at-risk populations.”

The guideline was published in the January issue of the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
 

Updating ALD Recommendations

With ALD as the most common cause of advanced hepatic disease and a frequent indicator of eventual liver transplantation, the rising incidence of alcohol use during the past decade has led to rapid growth in ALD-related healthcare burdens, the guideline authors wrote.

In particular, those with ALD tend to present at an advanced stage and progress faster, which can lead to progressive fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. This can include alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH), which often presents with a rapid onset or worsening of jaundice and can lead to acute or chronic liver failure.

To update the guideline, Dr. Jophlin and colleagues analyzed data based on a patient-intervention-comparison-outcome format, resulting in 34 key concepts or statements and 21 recommendations.

Among them, the authors recommended screening and treating AUD with the goal of helping patients who have not yet developed significant liver injury and preventing progression to advanced stages of ALD, particularly among at-risk groups who have had an increasing prevalence of severe AUD, including women, younger people, and Hispanic and American Indian patients.

“So many patients are still told to ‘stop drinking’ or ‘cut back’ but are provided no additional resources. Without offering referrals to treatment programs or pharmacologic therapies to assist in abstinence, many patients are not successful,” Dr. Jophlin said. “We hope these guidelines empower providers to consider selected [Food and Drug Administration]-approved medications, well-studied off-label therapies, and nonpharmacologic interventions to aid their patients’ journeys to abstinence and hopefully avert the progression of ALD.”

In addition, the guidelines provide recommendations for AH treatment. In patients with severe AH, the authors offered strong recommendations against the use of pentoxifylline and prophylactic antibiotics, and in support of corticosteroid therapy and intravenous N-acetyl cysteine as an adjuvant to corticosteroids.

Liver transplantation, which may be recommended for carefully selected patients, is being performed at many centers but remains relatively controversial, Dr. Jophlin said.

“Questions remain about ideal patient selection as center practices vary considerably, yet we have started to realize the impacts of relapse after transplantation,” she said. “The guidelines highlight the knowns and unknowns in this area and will hopefully serve as a catalyst for the dissemination of centers’ experiences and the development of a universal set of ethically sound, evidence-based guidelines to be used by all transplant centers.”
 

 

 

Policy Implications

Dr. Jophlin and colleagues noted the importance of policy aimed at alcohol use reduction, multidisciplinary care for AUD and ALD, and additional research around severe AH.

“As a practicing transplant hepatologist and medical director of a liver transplant program in the heart of Bourbon country, I am a part of just one healthcare team experiencing ALD, particularly AH, as a mass casualty event. Healthcare teams are fighting an unrelenting fire that the alcohol industry is pouring gasoline on,” Dr. Jophlin said. “It is imperative that healthcare providers have a voice in the policies that shape this preventable disease. We hope these guidelines inspire practitioners to explore our influence on how alcohol is regulated, marketed, and distributed.”

Additional interventions and public policy considerations could help reduce alcohol-related morbidity and mortality at a moment when the characteristics of those who present with AUD appear to be evolving.

“The typical person I’m seeing now is not someone who has been drinking heavily for decades. Rather, it’s a young person who has been drinking heavily for many months or a couple of years,” said James Burton, MD, a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Colorado Hospital’s Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.

Dr. Burton, who wasn’t involved with the guideline, noted it’s become more common for people to drink multiple alcoholic drinks per day for multiple times per week. Patients often don’t think it’s a problem, even as he discusses their liver-related issues.

“We can’t just keep living and working the way we were 10 years ago,” he said. “We’ve got to change how we approach treatment. We have to treat liver disease and AUD.”

The guideline was supported by several National Institutes of Health grants and an American College of Gastroenterology faculty development grant. The authors declared potential competing interests with various pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Burton reported no financial disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

To curb alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD), alcohol consumption should be avoided among those with underlying obesitychronic hepatitis C infection, hepatitis B virus infection, or a history of gastric bypass, according to a new clinical guideline from the American College of Gastroenterology.

In addition, health systems need to overcome barriers to treating alcohol use disorder (AUD) and commit to creating a multidisciplinary care model with behavioral interventions and pharmacotherapy for patients.

Experts were convened to develop these guidelines because it was “imperative to provide an up-to-date, evidence-based blueprint for how to care for patients, as well as guide prevention and research efforts in the field of ALD for the coming years,” said the first author, Loretta Jophlin, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in gastroenterology, hepatology, and nutrition and medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Louisville in Kentucky.

“In recent years, perhaps fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic, alcohol use has been normalized in an increasing number of situations,” she said. “Drinking was normalized as a coping mechanism to deal with many of the sorrows we experienced during the pandemic, including loss of purposeful work and social isolation, and many more people are struggling with AUD. So many aspects of our culture have been inundated by the presence of alcohol use, and we need to work hard to denormalize this, first focusing on at-risk populations.”

The guideline was published in the January issue of the American Journal of Gastroenterology.
 

Updating ALD Recommendations

With ALD as the most common cause of advanced hepatic disease and a frequent indicator of eventual liver transplantation, the rising incidence of alcohol use during the past decade has led to rapid growth in ALD-related healthcare burdens, the guideline authors wrote.

In particular, those with ALD tend to present at an advanced stage and progress faster, which can lead to progressive fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. This can include alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH), which often presents with a rapid onset or worsening of jaundice and can lead to acute or chronic liver failure.

To update the guideline, Dr. Jophlin and colleagues analyzed data based on a patient-intervention-comparison-outcome format, resulting in 34 key concepts or statements and 21 recommendations.

Among them, the authors recommended screening and treating AUD with the goal of helping patients who have not yet developed significant liver injury and preventing progression to advanced stages of ALD, particularly among at-risk groups who have had an increasing prevalence of severe AUD, including women, younger people, and Hispanic and American Indian patients.

“So many patients are still told to ‘stop drinking’ or ‘cut back’ but are provided no additional resources. Without offering referrals to treatment programs or pharmacologic therapies to assist in abstinence, many patients are not successful,” Dr. Jophlin said. “We hope these guidelines empower providers to consider selected [Food and Drug Administration]-approved medications, well-studied off-label therapies, and nonpharmacologic interventions to aid their patients’ journeys to abstinence and hopefully avert the progression of ALD.”

In addition, the guidelines provide recommendations for AH treatment. In patients with severe AH, the authors offered strong recommendations against the use of pentoxifylline and prophylactic antibiotics, and in support of corticosteroid therapy and intravenous N-acetyl cysteine as an adjuvant to corticosteroids.

Liver transplantation, which may be recommended for carefully selected patients, is being performed at many centers but remains relatively controversial, Dr. Jophlin said.

“Questions remain about ideal patient selection as center practices vary considerably, yet we have started to realize the impacts of relapse after transplantation,” she said. “The guidelines highlight the knowns and unknowns in this area and will hopefully serve as a catalyst for the dissemination of centers’ experiences and the development of a universal set of ethically sound, evidence-based guidelines to be used by all transplant centers.”
 

 

 

Policy Implications

Dr. Jophlin and colleagues noted the importance of policy aimed at alcohol use reduction, multidisciplinary care for AUD and ALD, and additional research around severe AH.

“As a practicing transplant hepatologist and medical director of a liver transplant program in the heart of Bourbon country, I am a part of just one healthcare team experiencing ALD, particularly AH, as a mass casualty event. Healthcare teams are fighting an unrelenting fire that the alcohol industry is pouring gasoline on,” Dr. Jophlin said. “It is imperative that healthcare providers have a voice in the policies that shape this preventable disease. We hope these guidelines inspire practitioners to explore our influence on how alcohol is regulated, marketed, and distributed.”

Additional interventions and public policy considerations could help reduce alcohol-related morbidity and mortality at a moment when the characteristics of those who present with AUD appear to be evolving.

“The typical person I’m seeing now is not someone who has been drinking heavily for decades. Rather, it’s a young person who has been drinking heavily for many months or a couple of years,” said James Burton, MD, a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and medical director of liver transplantation at the University of Colorado Hospital’s Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.

Dr. Burton, who wasn’t involved with the guideline, noted it’s become more common for people to drink multiple alcoholic drinks per day for multiple times per week. Patients often don’t think it’s a problem, even as he discusses their liver-related issues.

“We can’t just keep living and working the way we were 10 years ago,” he said. “We’ve got to change how we approach treatment. We have to treat liver disease and AUD.”

The guideline was supported by several National Institutes of Health grants and an American College of Gastroenterology faculty development grant. The authors declared potential competing interests with various pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Burton reported no financial disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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ADA issues new screening, obesity management recommendations

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Tue, 12/12/2023 - 11:21

New recommendations to screen for heart failureperipheral arterial disease (PAD), and type 1 diabetes risk, along with new obesity management guidance, are among many updates to the American Diabetes Association’s (ADA’s) Standards of Care for 2024.

“The Standards of Care are essentially the global guidelines for the care of individuals with diabetes and those at risk,” ADA chief scientific and medical officer Robert Gabbay, MD, PhD, said during a briefing announcing the new Standards.

The document was developed via a scientific literature review by the ADA’s Professional Practice Committee. The panel comprises 21 professionals, including physicians from many specialties, nurse practitioners, certified diabetes care and education specialists, dietitians, and pharmacists. The chair is Nuha A. El Sayed, MD, ADA’s senior vice president of healthcare improvement.

Specific sections of the 2024 document have been endorsed by the American College of Cardiology, the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research, and the Obesity Society. It was published on December 11, 2023, as a supplement in Diabetes Care.

An introductory section summarizing the changes for 2024 spans six pages. Those addressed during the briefing included the following:

Heart Failure Screening: Two new recommendations have been added to include screening of adults with diabetes for asymptomatic heart failure by measuring natriuretic peptide levels to facilitate the prevention or progression to symptomatic stages of heart failure.

“This is a really important and exciting area. We know that people with type 2 diabetes in particular are at high risk for heart failure,” Dr. Gabbay said, adding that these recommendations “are to really more aggressively screen those at high risk for heart failure with a simple blood test and, based on those values, then be able to move on to further evaluation and echocardiography, for example. The recommendations are really to screen a broad number of individuals with type 2 diabetes because many are at risk, [particularly] those without symptoms.”

PAD Screening: A new strong recommendation is to screen for PAD with ankle-brachial index testing in asymptomatic people with diabetes who are aged ≥ 50 years and have microvascular disease in any location, foot complications, or any end-organ damage from diabetes. The document also advises consideration of PAD screening for all individuals who have had diabetes for ≥ 10 years.

Dr. Gabbay commented, “We know that amputation rates are rising, unlike many other complications. We know that there are incredible health disparities. Blacks are two to four times more likely than Whites to have an amputation.”

Dr. El Sayed added, “Many patients don’t show the common symptoms of peripheral arterial disease. Screening is the most important way to find out if they have it or not because it can be a very devastating disease.”

Type 1 Diabetes Screening: This involves several new recommendations, including a framework for investigating suspected type 1 diabetes in newly diagnosed adults using islet autoantibody tests and diagnostic criteria for preclinical stages based on the recent approval of teplizumab for delaying the onset of type 1 diabetes.

“Screening and capturing disease earlier so that we can intervene is really an important consideration here. That includes screening for type 1 diabetes and thinking about therapeutic options to delay the development of frank type 1 diabetes,” Dr. Gabbay said.

Screening first-degree relatives of people with type 1 diabetes is a high priority because they’re at an elevated risk, he added.

 

 

Obesity Management: New recommendations here include the use of anthropomorphic measurements beyond body mass index to include waist circumference and waist:hip ratio and individual assessment of body fat mass and distribution.

Individualization of obesity management including behavioral, pharmacologic, and surgical approaches is encouraged. The use of a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist or a dual glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide and GLP-1 receptor agonist with greater weight loss efficacy is preferred for obesity management in people with diabetes.

“Obesity management is one of the biggest changes over this last year,” Dr. Gabbay commented.

Other New Recommendations: Among the many other revisions in the 2024 document are new recommendations about regular evaluation and treatment for bone health, assessment of disability and guidance for referral, and alignment of guidance for liver disease screening and management with those of other professional societies. Regarding the last item, Dr. Gabbay noted, “I don’t think it’s gotten the attention it deserves. Diabetes and obesity are becoming the leading causes of liver disease.”

Clinicians can also download the Standards of Care app on their smartphones. “That can be really helpful when questions come up since you can’t remember everything in there. Here you can look it up in a matter of seconds,” Dr. Gabbay said.

Dr. El Sayed added that asking patients about their priorities is also important. “If they aren’t brought up during the visit, it’s unlikely to be as fruitful as it should be.”

Dr. El Sayed has no disclosures. Dr. Gabbay serves as a consultant and/or advisor for HealthReveal, Lark Technologies, Onduo, StartUp Health, Sweetech, and Vida Health.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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New recommendations to screen for heart failureperipheral arterial disease (PAD), and type 1 diabetes risk, along with new obesity management guidance, are among many updates to the American Diabetes Association’s (ADA’s) Standards of Care for 2024.

“The Standards of Care are essentially the global guidelines for the care of individuals with diabetes and those at risk,” ADA chief scientific and medical officer Robert Gabbay, MD, PhD, said during a briefing announcing the new Standards.

The document was developed via a scientific literature review by the ADA’s Professional Practice Committee. The panel comprises 21 professionals, including physicians from many specialties, nurse practitioners, certified diabetes care and education specialists, dietitians, and pharmacists. The chair is Nuha A. El Sayed, MD, ADA’s senior vice president of healthcare improvement.

Specific sections of the 2024 document have been endorsed by the American College of Cardiology, the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research, and the Obesity Society. It was published on December 11, 2023, as a supplement in Diabetes Care.

An introductory section summarizing the changes for 2024 spans six pages. Those addressed during the briefing included the following:

Heart Failure Screening: Two new recommendations have been added to include screening of adults with diabetes for asymptomatic heart failure by measuring natriuretic peptide levels to facilitate the prevention or progression to symptomatic stages of heart failure.

“This is a really important and exciting area. We know that people with type 2 diabetes in particular are at high risk for heart failure,” Dr. Gabbay said, adding that these recommendations “are to really more aggressively screen those at high risk for heart failure with a simple blood test and, based on those values, then be able to move on to further evaluation and echocardiography, for example. The recommendations are really to screen a broad number of individuals with type 2 diabetes because many are at risk, [particularly] those without symptoms.”

PAD Screening: A new strong recommendation is to screen for PAD with ankle-brachial index testing in asymptomatic people with diabetes who are aged ≥ 50 years and have microvascular disease in any location, foot complications, or any end-organ damage from diabetes. The document also advises consideration of PAD screening for all individuals who have had diabetes for ≥ 10 years.

Dr. Gabbay commented, “We know that amputation rates are rising, unlike many other complications. We know that there are incredible health disparities. Blacks are two to four times more likely than Whites to have an amputation.”

Dr. El Sayed added, “Many patients don’t show the common symptoms of peripheral arterial disease. Screening is the most important way to find out if they have it or not because it can be a very devastating disease.”

Type 1 Diabetes Screening: This involves several new recommendations, including a framework for investigating suspected type 1 diabetes in newly diagnosed adults using islet autoantibody tests and diagnostic criteria for preclinical stages based on the recent approval of teplizumab for delaying the onset of type 1 diabetes.

“Screening and capturing disease earlier so that we can intervene is really an important consideration here. That includes screening for type 1 diabetes and thinking about therapeutic options to delay the development of frank type 1 diabetes,” Dr. Gabbay said.

Screening first-degree relatives of people with type 1 diabetes is a high priority because they’re at an elevated risk, he added.

 

 

Obesity Management: New recommendations here include the use of anthropomorphic measurements beyond body mass index to include waist circumference and waist:hip ratio and individual assessment of body fat mass and distribution.

Individualization of obesity management including behavioral, pharmacologic, and surgical approaches is encouraged. The use of a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist or a dual glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide and GLP-1 receptor agonist with greater weight loss efficacy is preferred for obesity management in people with diabetes.

“Obesity management is one of the biggest changes over this last year,” Dr. Gabbay commented.

Other New Recommendations: Among the many other revisions in the 2024 document are new recommendations about regular evaluation and treatment for bone health, assessment of disability and guidance for referral, and alignment of guidance for liver disease screening and management with those of other professional societies. Regarding the last item, Dr. Gabbay noted, “I don’t think it’s gotten the attention it deserves. Diabetes and obesity are becoming the leading causes of liver disease.”

Clinicians can also download the Standards of Care app on their smartphones. “That can be really helpful when questions come up since you can’t remember everything in there. Here you can look it up in a matter of seconds,” Dr. Gabbay said.

Dr. El Sayed added that asking patients about their priorities is also important. “If they aren’t brought up during the visit, it’s unlikely to be as fruitful as it should be.”

Dr. El Sayed has no disclosures. Dr. Gabbay serves as a consultant and/or advisor for HealthReveal, Lark Technologies, Onduo, StartUp Health, Sweetech, and Vida Health.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

New recommendations to screen for heart failureperipheral arterial disease (PAD), and type 1 diabetes risk, along with new obesity management guidance, are among many updates to the American Diabetes Association’s (ADA’s) Standards of Care for 2024.

“The Standards of Care are essentially the global guidelines for the care of individuals with diabetes and those at risk,” ADA chief scientific and medical officer Robert Gabbay, MD, PhD, said during a briefing announcing the new Standards.

The document was developed via a scientific literature review by the ADA’s Professional Practice Committee. The panel comprises 21 professionals, including physicians from many specialties, nurse practitioners, certified diabetes care and education specialists, dietitians, and pharmacists. The chair is Nuha A. El Sayed, MD, ADA’s senior vice president of healthcare improvement.

Specific sections of the 2024 document have been endorsed by the American College of Cardiology, the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research, and the Obesity Society. It was published on December 11, 2023, as a supplement in Diabetes Care.

An introductory section summarizing the changes for 2024 spans six pages. Those addressed during the briefing included the following:

Heart Failure Screening: Two new recommendations have been added to include screening of adults with diabetes for asymptomatic heart failure by measuring natriuretic peptide levels to facilitate the prevention or progression to symptomatic stages of heart failure.

“This is a really important and exciting area. We know that people with type 2 diabetes in particular are at high risk for heart failure,” Dr. Gabbay said, adding that these recommendations “are to really more aggressively screen those at high risk for heart failure with a simple blood test and, based on those values, then be able to move on to further evaluation and echocardiography, for example. The recommendations are really to screen a broad number of individuals with type 2 diabetes because many are at risk, [particularly] those without symptoms.”

PAD Screening: A new strong recommendation is to screen for PAD with ankle-brachial index testing in asymptomatic people with diabetes who are aged ≥ 50 years and have microvascular disease in any location, foot complications, or any end-organ damage from diabetes. The document also advises consideration of PAD screening for all individuals who have had diabetes for ≥ 10 years.

Dr. Gabbay commented, “We know that amputation rates are rising, unlike many other complications. We know that there are incredible health disparities. Blacks are two to four times more likely than Whites to have an amputation.”

Dr. El Sayed added, “Many patients don’t show the common symptoms of peripheral arterial disease. Screening is the most important way to find out if they have it or not because it can be a very devastating disease.”

Type 1 Diabetes Screening: This involves several new recommendations, including a framework for investigating suspected type 1 diabetes in newly diagnosed adults using islet autoantibody tests and diagnostic criteria for preclinical stages based on the recent approval of teplizumab for delaying the onset of type 1 diabetes.

“Screening and capturing disease earlier so that we can intervene is really an important consideration here. That includes screening for type 1 diabetes and thinking about therapeutic options to delay the development of frank type 1 diabetes,” Dr. Gabbay said.

Screening first-degree relatives of people with type 1 diabetes is a high priority because they’re at an elevated risk, he added.

 

 

Obesity Management: New recommendations here include the use of anthropomorphic measurements beyond body mass index to include waist circumference and waist:hip ratio and individual assessment of body fat mass and distribution.

Individualization of obesity management including behavioral, pharmacologic, and surgical approaches is encouraged. The use of a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist or a dual glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide and GLP-1 receptor agonist with greater weight loss efficacy is preferred for obesity management in people with diabetes.

“Obesity management is one of the biggest changes over this last year,” Dr. Gabbay commented.

Other New Recommendations: Among the many other revisions in the 2024 document are new recommendations about regular evaluation and treatment for bone health, assessment of disability and guidance for referral, and alignment of guidance for liver disease screening and management with those of other professional societies. Regarding the last item, Dr. Gabbay noted, “I don’t think it’s gotten the attention it deserves. Diabetes and obesity are becoming the leading causes of liver disease.”

Clinicians can also download the Standards of Care app on their smartphones. “That can be really helpful when questions come up since you can’t remember everything in there. Here you can look it up in a matter of seconds,” Dr. Gabbay said.

Dr. El Sayed added that asking patients about their priorities is also important. “If they aren’t brought up during the visit, it’s unlikely to be as fruitful as it should be.”

Dr. El Sayed has no disclosures. Dr. Gabbay serves as a consultant and/or advisor for HealthReveal, Lark Technologies, Onduo, StartUp Health, Sweetech, and Vida Health.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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AGA clinical practice guideline affirms role of biomarkers in Crohn’s disease management

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A new Clinical Practice Guideline from American Gastroenterological Association points to a stronger and better defined role for fecal and blood biomarkers in the management of Crohn’s disease, offering the most specific evidence-based recommendations yet for the use of fecal calprotectin (FCP) and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) in assessing disease activity.

Repeated monitoring with endoscopy allows for an objective assessment of inflammation and mucosal healing compared with symptoms alone. However, relying solely on endoscopy to guide management is an approach “limited by cost and resource utilization, invasiveness, and reduced patient acceptability,” wrote guideline authors on behalf of the AGA Clinical Guidelines Committee. The guideline was published online Nov. 17 in Gastroenterology.

“Use of biomarkers is no longer considered experimental and should be an integral part of IBD care and monitoring,” said Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, a gastroenterologist with Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and first author of the guideline. “We need further studies to define their optimal longitudinal use, but at a given time point, there is now abundant evidence that biomarkers provide significant incremental benefit over symptoms alone in assessing a patient’s status.”

Using evidence from randomized controlled trials and observational studies, and applying it to common clinical scenarios, there are conditional recommendations on the use of biomarkers in patients with established, diagnosed disease who were asymptomatic, symptomatic, or in surgically induced remission. Those recommendations, laid out in a detailed Clinical Decision Support Tool, include the following:

For asymptomatic patients: Check CRP and FCP every 6-12 months. Patients with normal levels, and who have endoscopically confirmed remission within the last 3 years without any subsequent change in symptoms or treatment, need not undergo endoscopy and can be followed with biomarker and clinical checks alone. If CRP or FCP are elevated (defined as CRP ≥ 5 mg/L, FCP ≥ 150 mcg/g), consider repeating biomarkers and/or performing endoscopic assessment of disease activity before adjusting treatment.

For mildly symptomatic patients: Role of biomarker testing may be limited and endoscopic or radiologic assessment may be required to assess active inflammation given the higher rate of false positive and false negative results with biomarkers in this population.

For patients with more severe symptoms: Elevated CRP or FCP can be used to guide treatment adjustment without endoscopic confirmation in certain situations. Normal levels may be false negative and should be confirmed by endoscopic assessment of disease activity.

For patients in surgically induced remission with a low likelihood of recurrence: FCP levels below 50 mcg/g can be used in lieu of routine endoscopic assessment within the first year after surgery. Higher FCP levels should prompt endoscopic assessment.

For patients in surgically induced remission with a high risk of recurrence: Do not rely on biomarkers. Perform endoscopic assessment.

All recommendations were deemed of low to moderate certainty based on results from randomized clinical trials and observational studies that utilized these biomarkers in patients with Crohn’s disease. Citing a dearth of quality evidence, the guideline authors determined they could not make recommendations on the use of a third proprietary biomarker — the endoscopic healing index (EHI).

Recent AGA Clinical Practice Guidelines on the role of biomarkers in ulcerative colitis, published in March, also support a strong role for fecal and blood biomarkers, determining when these can be used to avoid unneeded endoscopic assessments. However, in patients with Crohn’s disease, symptoms correlate less well with endoscopic activity.

As a result, “biomarker performance was acceptable only in asymptomatic individuals who had recently confirmed endoscopic remission; in those without recent endoscopic assessment, test performance was suboptimal.” In addition, the weaker correlation between symptoms and endoscopic activity in Crohn’s “reduced the utility of biomarker measurement to infer disease activity in those with mild symptoms.”

The guidelines were fully funded by the AGA Institute. The authors disclosed a number of potential conflicts of interest, including receiving research grants, as well as consulting and speaking fees, from pharmaceutical companies.

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A new Clinical Practice Guideline from American Gastroenterological Association points to a stronger and better defined role for fecal and blood biomarkers in the management of Crohn’s disease, offering the most specific evidence-based recommendations yet for the use of fecal calprotectin (FCP) and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) in assessing disease activity.

Repeated monitoring with endoscopy allows for an objective assessment of inflammation and mucosal healing compared with symptoms alone. However, relying solely on endoscopy to guide management is an approach “limited by cost and resource utilization, invasiveness, and reduced patient acceptability,” wrote guideline authors on behalf of the AGA Clinical Guidelines Committee. The guideline was published online Nov. 17 in Gastroenterology.

“Use of biomarkers is no longer considered experimental and should be an integral part of IBD care and monitoring,” said Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, a gastroenterologist with Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and first author of the guideline. “We need further studies to define their optimal longitudinal use, but at a given time point, there is now abundant evidence that biomarkers provide significant incremental benefit over symptoms alone in assessing a patient’s status.”

Using evidence from randomized controlled trials and observational studies, and applying it to common clinical scenarios, there are conditional recommendations on the use of biomarkers in patients with established, diagnosed disease who were asymptomatic, symptomatic, or in surgically induced remission. Those recommendations, laid out in a detailed Clinical Decision Support Tool, include the following:

For asymptomatic patients: Check CRP and FCP every 6-12 months. Patients with normal levels, and who have endoscopically confirmed remission within the last 3 years without any subsequent change in symptoms or treatment, need not undergo endoscopy and can be followed with biomarker and clinical checks alone. If CRP or FCP are elevated (defined as CRP ≥ 5 mg/L, FCP ≥ 150 mcg/g), consider repeating biomarkers and/or performing endoscopic assessment of disease activity before adjusting treatment.

For mildly symptomatic patients: Role of biomarker testing may be limited and endoscopic or radiologic assessment may be required to assess active inflammation given the higher rate of false positive and false negative results with biomarkers in this population.

For patients with more severe symptoms: Elevated CRP or FCP can be used to guide treatment adjustment without endoscopic confirmation in certain situations. Normal levels may be false negative and should be confirmed by endoscopic assessment of disease activity.

For patients in surgically induced remission with a low likelihood of recurrence: FCP levels below 50 mcg/g can be used in lieu of routine endoscopic assessment within the first year after surgery. Higher FCP levels should prompt endoscopic assessment.

For patients in surgically induced remission with a high risk of recurrence: Do not rely on biomarkers. Perform endoscopic assessment.

All recommendations were deemed of low to moderate certainty based on results from randomized clinical trials and observational studies that utilized these biomarkers in patients with Crohn’s disease. Citing a dearth of quality evidence, the guideline authors determined they could not make recommendations on the use of a third proprietary biomarker — the endoscopic healing index (EHI).

Recent AGA Clinical Practice Guidelines on the role of biomarkers in ulcerative colitis, published in March, also support a strong role for fecal and blood biomarkers, determining when these can be used to avoid unneeded endoscopic assessments. However, in patients with Crohn’s disease, symptoms correlate less well with endoscopic activity.

As a result, “biomarker performance was acceptable only in asymptomatic individuals who had recently confirmed endoscopic remission; in those without recent endoscopic assessment, test performance was suboptimal.” In addition, the weaker correlation between symptoms and endoscopic activity in Crohn’s “reduced the utility of biomarker measurement to infer disease activity in those with mild symptoms.”

The guidelines were fully funded by the AGA Institute. The authors disclosed a number of potential conflicts of interest, including receiving research grants, as well as consulting and speaking fees, from pharmaceutical companies.

A new Clinical Practice Guideline from American Gastroenterological Association points to a stronger and better defined role for fecal and blood biomarkers in the management of Crohn’s disease, offering the most specific evidence-based recommendations yet for the use of fecal calprotectin (FCP) and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) in assessing disease activity.

Repeated monitoring with endoscopy allows for an objective assessment of inflammation and mucosal healing compared with symptoms alone. However, relying solely on endoscopy to guide management is an approach “limited by cost and resource utilization, invasiveness, and reduced patient acceptability,” wrote guideline authors on behalf of the AGA Clinical Guidelines Committee. The guideline was published online Nov. 17 in Gastroenterology.

“Use of biomarkers is no longer considered experimental and should be an integral part of IBD care and monitoring,” said Ashwin Ananthakrishnan, MBBS, MPH, a gastroenterologist with Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and first author of the guideline. “We need further studies to define their optimal longitudinal use, but at a given time point, there is now abundant evidence that biomarkers provide significant incremental benefit over symptoms alone in assessing a patient’s status.”

Using evidence from randomized controlled trials and observational studies, and applying it to common clinical scenarios, there are conditional recommendations on the use of biomarkers in patients with established, diagnosed disease who were asymptomatic, symptomatic, or in surgically induced remission. Those recommendations, laid out in a detailed Clinical Decision Support Tool, include the following:

For asymptomatic patients: Check CRP and FCP every 6-12 months. Patients with normal levels, and who have endoscopically confirmed remission within the last 3 years without any subsequent change in symptoms or treatment, need not undergo endoscopy and can be followed with biomarker and clinical checks alone. If CRP or FCP are elevated (defined as CRP ≥ 5 mg/L, FCP ≥ 150 mcg/g), consider repeating biomarkers and/or performing endoscopic assessment of disease activity before adjusting treatment.

For mildly symptomatic patients: Role of biomarker testing may be limited and endoscopic or radiologic assessment may be required to assess active inflammation given the higher rate of false positive and false negative results with biomarkers in this population.

For patients with more severe symptoms: Elevated CRP or FCP can be used to guide treatment adjustment without endoscopic confirmation in certain situations. Normal levels may be false negative and should be confirmed by endoscopic assessment of disease activity.

For patients in surgically induced remission with a low likelihood of recurrence: FCP levels below 50 mcg/g can be used in lieu of routine endoscopic assessment within the first year after surgery. Higher FCP levels should prompt endoscopic assessment.

For patients in surgically induced remission with a high risk of recurrence: Do not rely on biomarkers. Perform endoscopic assessment.

All recommendations were deemed of low to moderate certainty based on results from randomized clinical trials and observational studies that utilized these biomarkers in patients with Crohn’s disease. Citing a dearth of quality evidence, the guideline authors determined they could not make recommendations on the use of a third proprietary biomarker — the endoscopic healing index (EHI).

Recent AGA Clinical Practice Guidelines on the role of biomarkers in ulcerative colitis, published in March, also support a strong role for fecal and blood biomarkers, determining when these can be used to avoid unneeded endoscopic assessments. However, in patients with Crohn’s disease, symptoms correlate less well with endoscopic activity.

As a result, “biomarker performance was acceptable only in asymptomatic individuals who had recently confirmed endoscopic remission; in those without recent endoscopic assessment, test performance was suboptimal.” In addition, the weaker correlation between symptoms and endoscopic activity in Crohn’s “reduced the utility of biomarker measurement to infer disease activity in those with mild symptoms.”

The guidelines were fully funded by the AGA Institute. The authors disclosed a number of potential conflicts of interest, including receiving research grants, as well as consulting and speaking fees, from pharmaceutical companies.

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ASTRO Updates Partial Breast Irradiation Guidance in Early Breast Cancer

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Mon, 12/04/2023 - 14:07

The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) has issued an updated clinical practice guideline on partial breast irradiation for women with early-stage invasive breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). The 2023 guideline, which replaces the 2017 recommendations, factors in new clinical trial data that consistently show no significant differences in overall survival, cancer-free survival, and recurrence in the same breast among patients who receive partial breast irradiation compared with whole breast irradiation. The data also indicate similar or improved side effects with partial vs whole breast irradiation.

To develop the 2023 recommendations, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) conducted a systematic review assessing the latest clinical trial evidence, and ASTRO assembled an expert task force to determine best practices for using partial breast irradiation.

“There have been more than 10,000 women included in these randomized controlled trials, with 10 years of follow-up showing equivalency in tumor control between partial breast and whole breast radiation for appropriately selected patients,” Simona Shaitelman, MD, vice chair of the guideline task force, said in a news release.

“These data should be driving a change in practice, and partial breast radiation should be a larger part of the dialogue when we consult with patients on decisions about how best to treat their early-stage breast cancer,” added Dr. Shaitelman, professor of breast radiation oncology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

What’s in the New Guidelines?

For patients with early-stage, node-negative invasive breast cancer, the updated guideline strongly recommends partial breast irradiation instead of whole breast irradiation if the patient has favorable clinical features and tumor characteristics, including grade 1 or 2 disease, estrogen receptor (ER)-positive status, small tumor size, and age 40 or older.

In contrast, the 2017 guideline considered patients aged 50 and older suitable for partial breast irradiation and considered those in their 40s who met certain pathologic criteria “cautionary.”The updated guideline also conditionally recommends partial over whole breast irradiation if the patient has risk factors that indicate a higher likelihood of recurrence, such as grade 3 disease, ER-negative histology, or larger tumor size.

The task force does not recommend partial breast irradiation for patients with positive lymph nodes, positive surgical margins, or germline BRCA1/2 mutations or patients under 40.

Given the lack of robust data in patients with less favorable risk features, such as lymphovascular invasion or lobular histology, partial breast irradiation is conditionally not recommended for these patients.

For DCIS, the updated recommendations mirror those for early-stage breast cancer, with partial breast irradiation strongly recommended as an alternative to whole breast irradiation among patients with favorable clinical and tumor features, such as grade 1 or 2 disease and ER-positive status. Partial breast irradiation is conditionally recommended for higher grade disease or larger tumors, and not recommended for patients with positive surgical margins, BRCA mutations or those younger than 40.

In addition to relevant patient populations, the updated guidelines also address techniques and best practices for delivering partial breast irradiation.

Recommended partial breast irradiation techniques include 3-D conformal radiation therapy, intensity modulated radiation therapy, and multicatheter interstitial brachytherapy, given the evidence showing similar long-term rates of ipsilateral breast recurrence compared with whole breast irradiation.

Single-entry catheter brachytherapy is conditionally recommended, and intraoperative radiation therapy techniques are not recommended unless integrated into a prospective clinical trial or multi-institutional registry.

The guideline also outlines optimal dose, fractionation, target volume, and treatment modality with different partial breast irradiation techniques, taking toxicities and cosmesis into consideration.

“We hope that by laying out the evidence from these major trials and providing guidance on how to administer partial breast radiation, the guideline can help more oncologists feel comfortable offering this option to their patients as an alternative to whole breast radiation,” Janice Lyons, MD, of University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, Cleveland, Ohio, and chair of the guideline task force, said in the news release.

The guideline, developed in collaboration with the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the Society of Surgical Oncology, has been endorsed by the Canadian Association of Radiation Oncology, the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology, and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists. Guideline development was funded by ASTRO and the systematic evidence review was funded by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Disclosures for the task force are available with the original article.
 

A version of this article was first published on Medscape.com.

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The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) has issued an updated clinical practice guideline on partial breast irradiation for women with early-stage invasive breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). The 2023 guideline, which replaces the 2017 recommendations, factors in new clinical trial data that consistently show no significant differences in overall survival, cancer-free survival, and recurrence in the same breast among patients who receive partial breast irradiation compared with whole breast irradiation. The data also indicate similar or improved side effects with partial vs whole breast irradiation.

To develop the 2023 recommendations, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) conducted a systematic review assessing the latest clinical trial evidence, and ASTRO assembled an expert task force to determine best practices for using partial breast irradiation.

“There have been more than 10,000 women included in these randomized controlled trials, with 10 years of follow-up showing equivalency in tumor control between partial breast and whole breast radiation for appropriately selected patients,” Simona Shaitelman, MD, vice chair of the guideline task force, said in a news release.

“These data should be driving a change in practice, and partial breast radiation should be a larger part of the dialogue when we consult with patients on decisions about how best to treat their early-stage breast cancer,” added Dr. Shaitelman, professor of breast radiation oncology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

What’s in the New Guidelines?

For patients with early-stage, node-negative invasive breast cancer, the updated guideline strongly recommends partial breast irradiation instead of whole breast irradiation if the patient has favorable clinical features and tumor characteristics, including grade 1 or 2 disease, estrogen receptor (ER)-positive status, small tumor size, and age 40 or older.

In contrast, the 2017 guideline considered patients aged 50 and older suitable for partial breast irradiation and considered those in their 40s who met certain pathologic criteria “cautionary.”The updated guideline also conditionally recommends partial over whole breast irradiation if the patient has risk factors that indicate a higher likelihood of recurrence, such as grade 3 disease, ER-negative histology, or larger tumor size.

The task force does not recommend partial breast irradiation for patients with positive lymph nodes, positive surgical margins, or germline BRCA1/2 mutations or patients under 40.

Given the lack of robust data in patients with less favorable risk features, such as lymphovascular invasion or lobular histology, partial breast irradiation is conditionally not recommended for these patients.

For DCIS, the updated recommendations mirror those for early-stage breast cancer, with partial breast irradiation strongly recommended as an alternative to whole breast irradiation among patients with favorable clinical and tumor features, such as grade 1 or 2 disease and ER-positive status. Partial breast irradiation is conditionally recommended for higher grade disease or larger tumors, and not recommended for patients with positive surgical margins, BRCA mutations or those younger than 40.

In addition to relevant patient populations, the updated guidelines also address techniques and best practices for delivering partial breast irradiation.

Recommended partial breast irradiation techniques include 3-D conformal radiation therapy, intensity modulated radiation therapy, and multicatheter interstitial brachytherapy, given the evidence showing similar long-term rates of ipsilateral breast recurrence compared with whole breast irradiation.

Single-entry catheter brachytherapy is conditionally recommended, and intraoperative radiation therapy techniques are not recommended unless integrated into a prospective clinical trial or multi-institutional registry.

The guideline also outlines optimal dose, fractionation, target volume, and treatment modality with different partial breast irradiation techniques, taking toxicities and cosmesis into consideration.

“We hope that by laying out the evidence from these major trials and providing guidance on how to administer partial breast radiation, the guideline can help more oncologists feel comfortable offering this option to their patients as an alternative to whole breast radiation,” Janice Lyons, MD, of University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, Cleveland, Ohio, and chair of the guideline task force, said in the news release.

The guideline, developed in collaboration with the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the Society of Surgical Oncology, has been endorsed by the Canadian Association of Radiation Oncology, the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology, and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists. Guideline development was funded by ASTRO and the systematic evidence review was funded by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Disclosures for the task force are available with the original article.
 

A version of this article was first published on Medscape.com.

The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) has issued an updated clinical practice guideline on partial breast irradiation for women with early-stage invasive breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). The 2023 guideline, which replaces the 2017 recommendations, factors in new clinical trial data that consistently show no significant differences in overall survival, cancer-free survival, and recurrence in the same breast among patients who receive partial breast irradiation compared with whole breast irradiation. The data also indicate similar or improved side effects with partial vs whole breast irradiation.

To develop the 2023 recommendations, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) conducted a systematic review assessing the latest clinical trial evidence, and ASTRO assembled an expert task force to determine best practices for using partial breast irradiation.

“There have been more than 10,000 women included in these randomized controlled trials, with 10 years of follow-up showing equivalency in tumor control between partial breast and whole breast radiation for appropriately selected patients,” Simona Shaitelman, MD, vice chair of the guideline task force, said in a news release.

“These data should be driving a change in practice, and partial breast radiation should be a larger part of the dialogue when we consult with patients on decisions about how best to treat their early-stage breast cancer,” added Dr. Shaitelman, professor of breast radiation oncology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

What’s in the New Guidelines?

For patients with early-stage, node-negative invasive breast cancer, the updated guideline strongly recommends partial breast irradiation instead of whole breast irradiation if the patient has favorable clinical features and tumor characteristics, including grade 1 or 2 disease, estrogen receptor (ER)-positive status, small tumor size, and age 40 or older.

In contrast, the 2017 guideline considered patients aged 50 and older suitable for partial breast irradiation and considered those in their 40s who met certain pathologic criteria “cautionary.”The updated guideline also conditionally recommends partial over whole breast irradiation if the patient has risk factors that indicate a higher likelihood of recurrence, such as grade 3 disease, ER-negative histology, or larger tumor size.

The task force does not recommend partial breast irradiation for patients with positive lymph nodes, positive surgical margins, or germline BRCA1/2 mutations or patients under 40.

Given the lack of robust data in patients with less favorable risk features, such as lymphovascular invasion or lobular histology, partial breast irradiation is conditionally not recommended for these patients.

For DCIS, the updated recommendations mirror those for early-stage breast cancer, with partial breast irradiation strongly recommended as an alternative to whole breast irradiation among patients with favorable clinical and tumor features, such as grade 1 or 2 disease and ER-positive status. Partial breast irradiation is conditionally recommended for higher grade disease or larger tumors, and not recommended for patients with positive surgical margins, BRCA mutations or those younger than 40.

In addition to relevant patient populations, the updated guidelines also address techniques and best practices for delivering partial breast irradiation.

Recommended partial breast irradiation techniques include 3-D conformal radiation therapy, intensity modulated radiation therapy, and multicatheter interstitial brachytherapy, given the evidence showing similar long-term rates of ipsilateral breast recurrence compared with whole breast irradiation.

Single-entry catheter brachytherapy is conditionally recommended, and intraoperative radiation therapy techniques are not recommended unless integrated into a prospective clinical trial or multi-institutional registry.

The guideline also outlines optimal dose, fractionation, target volume, and treatment modality with different partial breast irradiation techniques, taking toxicities and cosmesis into consideration.

“We hope that by laying out the evidence from these major trials and providing guidance on how to administer partial breast radiation, the guideline can help more oncologists feel comfortable offering this option to their patients as an alternative to whole breast radiation,” Janice Lyons, MD, of University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, Cleveland, Ohio, and chair of the guideline task force, said in the news release.

The guideline, developed in collaboration with the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the Society of Surgical Oncology, has been endorsed by the Canadian Association of Radiation Oncology, the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology, and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists. Guideline development was funded by ASTRO and the systematic evidence review was funded by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Disclosures for the task force are available with the original article.
 

A version of this article was first published on Medscape.com.

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AHA, AAP update neonatal resuscitation guidelines

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Fri, 12/01/2023 - 17:04

The American Heart Association (AHA) and American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) have issued a focused update to the 2020 neonatal resuscitation guidelines.

The 2023 focused update was prompted by four systematic literature reviews by the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) Neonatal Life Support Task Force.

“Evidence evaluations by the ILCOR play a large role in the group’s process and timing of updates,” Henry Lee, MD, co-chair of the writing group, said in an interview.

He noted that updated recommendations do not change prior recommendations from the 2020 guidelines.

“However, they provide additional details to consider in neonatal resuscitation that could lead to changes in some practice in various settings,” said Dr. Lee, medical director of the University of California San Diego neonatal intensive care unit. 

The focused update was simultaneously published online November 16 in Circulation and in Pediatrics.

Dr. Lee noted that effective positive-pressure ventilation (PPV) is the priority in newborn infants who need support after birth.

And while the 2020 update provided some details on devices to be used for PPV, the 2023 focused update gives guidance on use of T-piece resuscitators for providing PPV, which may be particularly helpful for preterm infants, and the use of supraglottic airways as a primary interface to deliver PPV, he explained.

Specifically, the updated guidelines state that use of a T-piece resuscitator to deliver PPV is preferred to the use of a self-inflating bag.

Because both T-piece resuscitators and flow-inflating bags require a compressed gas source to function, a self-inflating bag should be available as a backup in the event of compressed gas failure when using either of these devices.

Use of a supraglottic airway may be considered as the primary interface to administer PPV instead of a face mask for newborn infants delivered at 34 0/7 weeks’ gestation or later.


 

Continued Emphasis on Delayed Cord Clamping

The updated guidelines “continue to emphasize delayed cord clamping for both term and preterm newborn infants when clinically possible. There is also a new recommendation for nonvigorous infants born 35-42 weeks’ gestational age to consider umbilical cord milking,” Dr. Lee said in an interview.

Specifically, the guidelines state: 

  • For term and late preterm newborn infants ≥34 weeks’ gestation, and preterm newborn infants <34 weeks’ gestation, who do not require resuscitation, delayed cord clamping (≥30 seconds) can be beneficial compared with early cord clamping (<30 seconds).
  • For term and late preterm newborn infants ≥34 weeks’ gestation who do not require resuscitation, intact cord milking is not known to be beneficial compared with delayed cord clamping (≥30 seconds).
  • For preterm newborn infants between 28- and 34-weeks’ gestation who do not require resuscitation and in whom delayed cord clamping cannot be performed, intact cord milking may be reasonable.
  • For preterm newborn infants <28 weeks’ gestation, intact cord milking is not recommended.
  • For nonvigorous term and late preterm infants (35-42 weeks’ gestation), intact cord milking may be reasonable compared with early cord clamping (<30 seconds).

The guidelines also highlight the following knowledge gaps that require further research:

  • Optimal management of the umbilical cord in term, late preterm, and preterm infants who require resuscitation at delivery
  • Longer-term outcome data, such as anemia during infancy and neurodevelopmental outcomes, for all umbilical cord management strategies
  • Cost-effectiveness of a T-piece resuscitator compared with a self-inflating bag
  • The effect of a self-inflating bag with a positive end-expiratory pressure valve on outcomes in preterm newborn infants
  • Comparison of either a T-piece resuscitator or a self-inflating bag with a flow-inflating bag for administering PPV
  • Comparison of clinical outcomes by gestational age for any PPV device
  • Comparison of supraglottic airway devices and face masks as the primary interface for PPV in high-resourced settings
  • The amount and type of training required for successful supraglottic airway insertion and the potential for skill decay
  • The utility of supraglottic airway devices for suctioning secretions from the airway
  • The efficacy of a supraglottic airway during advanced neonatal resuscitation requiring chest compressions or the delivery of intratracheal medications

This research had no commercial funding. The authors report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The American Heart Association (AHA) and American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) have issued a focused update to the 2020 neonatal resuscitation guidelines.

The 2023 focused update was prompted by four systematic literature reviews by the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) Neonatal Life Support Task Force.

“Evidence evaluations by the ILCOR play a large role in the group’s process and timing of updates,” Henry Lee, MD, co-chair of the writing group, said in an interview.

He noted that updated recommendations do not change prior recommendations from the 2020 guidelines.

“However, they provide additional details to consider in neonatal resuscitation that could lead to changes in some practice in various settings,” said Dr. Lee, medical director of the University of California San Diego neonatal intensive care unit. 

The focused update was simultaneously published online November 16 in Circulation and in Pediatrics.

Dr. Lee noted that effective positive-pressure ventilation (PPV) is the priority in newborn infants who need support after birth.

And while the 2020 update provided some details on devices to be used for PPV, the 2023 focused update gives guidance on use of T-piece resuscitators for providing PPV, which may be particularly helpful for preterm infants, and the use of supraglottic airways as a primary interface to deliver PPV, he explained.

Specifically, the updated guidelines state that use of a T-piece resuscitator to deliver PPV is preferred to the use of a self-inflating bag.

Because both T-piece resuscitators and flow-inflating bags require a compressed gas source to function, a self-inflating bag should be available as a backup in the event of compressed gas failure when using either of these devices.

Use of a supraglottic airway may be considered as the primary interface to administer PPV instead of a face mask for newborn infants delivered at 34 0/7 weeks’ gestation or later.


 

Continued Emphasis on Delayed Cord Clamping

The updated guidelines “continue to emphasize delayed cord clamping for both term and preterm newborn infants when clinically possible. There is also a new recommendation for nonvigorous infants born 35-42 weeks’ gestational age to consider umbilical cord milking,” Dr. Lee said in an interview.

Specifically, the guidelines state: 

  • For term and late preterm newborn infants ≥34 weeks’ gestation, and preterm newborn infants <34 weeks’ gestation, who do not require resuscitation, delayed cord clamping (≥30 seconds) can be beneficial compared with early cord clamping (<30 seconds).
  • For term and late preterm newborn infants ≥34 weeks’ gestation who do not require resuscitation, intact cord milking is not known to be beneficial compared with delayed cord clamping (≥30 seconds).
  • For preterm newborn infants between 28- and 34-weeks’ gestation who do not require resuscitation and in whom delayed cord clamping cannot be performed, intact cord milking may be reasonable.
  • For preterm newborn infants <28 weeks’ gestation, intact cord milking is not recommended.
  • For nonvigorous term and late preterm infants (35-42 weeks’ gestation), intact cord milking may be reasonable compared with early cord clamping (<30 seconds).

The guidelines also highlight the following knowledge gaps that require further research:

  • Optimal management of the umbilical cord in term, late preterm, and preterm infants who require resuscitation at delivery
  • Longer-term outcome data, such as anemia during infancy and neurodevelopmental outcomes, for all umbilical cord management strategies
  • Cost-effectiveness of a T-piece resuscitator compared with a self-inflating bag
  • The effect of a self-inflating bag with a positive end-expiratory pressure valve on outcomes in preterm newborn infants
  • Comparison of either a T-piece resuscitator or a self-inflating bag with a flow-inflating bag for administering PPV
  • Comparison of clinical outcomes by gestational age for any PPV device
  • Comparison of supraglottic airway devices and face masks as the primary interface for PPV in high-resourced settings
  • The amount and type of training required for successful supraglottic airway insertion and the potential for skill decay
  • The utility of supraglottic airway devices for suctioning secretions from the airway
  • The efficacy of a supraglottic airway during advanced neonatal resuscitation requiring chest compressions or the delivery of intratracheal medications

This research had no commercial funding. The authors report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The American Heart Association (AHA) and American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) have issued a focused update to the 2020 neonatal resuscitation guidelines.

The 2023 focused update was prompted by four systematic literature reviews by the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) Neonatal Life Support Task Force.

“Evidence evaluations by the ILCOR play a large role in the group’s process and timing of updates,” Henry Lee, MD, co-chair of the writing group, said in an interview.

He noted that updated recommendations do not change prior recommendations from the 2020 guidelines.

“However, they provide additional details to consider in neonatal resuscitation that could lead to changes in some practice in various settings,” said Dr. Lee, medical director of the University of California San Diego neonatal intensive care unit. 

The focused update was simultaneously published online November 16 in Circulation and in Pediatrics.

Dr. Lee noted that effective positive-pressure ventilation (PPV) is the priority in newborn infants who need support after birth.

And while the 2020 update provided some details on devices to be used for PPV, the 2023 focused update gives guidance on use of T-piece resuscitators for providing PPV, which may be particularly helpful for preterm infants, and the use of supraglottic airways as a primary interface to deliver PPV, he explained.

Specifically, the updated guidelines state that use of a T-piece resuscitator to deliver PPV is preferred to the use of a self-inflating bag.

Because both T-piece resuscitators and flow-inflating bags require a compressed gas source to function, a self-inflating bag should be available as a backup in the event of compressed gas failure when using either of these devices.

Use of a supraglottic airway may be considered as the primary interface to administer PPV instead of a face mask for newborn infants delivered at 34 0/7 weeks’ gestation or later.


 

Continued Emphasis on Delayed Cord Clamping

The updated guidelines “continue to emphasize delayed cord clamping for both term and preterm newborn infants when clinically possible. There is also a new recommendation for nonvigorous infants born 35-42 weeks’ gestational age to consider umbilical cord milking,” Dr. Lee said in an interview.

Specifically, the guidelines state: 

  • For term and late preterm newborn infants ≥34 weeks’ gestation, and preterm newborn infants <34 weeks’ gestation, who do not require resuscitation, delayed cord clamping (≥30 seconds) can be beneficial compared with early cord clamping (<30 seconds).
  • For term and late preterm newborn infants ≥34 weeks’ gestation who do not require resuscitation, intact cord milking is not known to be beneficial compared with delayed cord clamping (≥30 seconds).
  • For preterm newborn infants between 28- and 34-weeks’ gestation who do not require resuscitation and in whom delayed cord clamping cannot be performed, intact cord milking may be reasonable.
  • For preterm newborn infants <28 weeks’ gestation, intact cord milking is not recommended.
  • For nonvigorous term and late preterm infants (35-42 weeks’ gestation), intact cord milking may be reasonable compared with early cord clamping (<30 seconds).

The guidelines also highlight the following knowledge gaps that require further research:

  • Optimal management of the umbilical cord in term, late preterm, and preterm infants who require resuscitation at delivery
  • Longer-term outcome data, such as anemia during infancy and neurodevelopmental outcomes, for all umbilical cord management strategies
  • Cost-effectiveness of a T-piece resuscitator compared with a self-inflating bag
  • The effect of a self-inflating bag with a positive end-expiratory pressure valve on outcomes in preterm newborn infants
  • Comparison of either a T-piece resuscitator or a self-inflating bag with a flow-inflating bag for administering PPV
  • Comparison of clinical outcomes by gestational age for any PPV device
  • Comparison of supraglottic airway devices and face masks as the primary interface for PPV in high-resourced settings
  • The amount and type of training required for successful supraglottic airway insertion and the potential for skill decay
  • The utility of supraglottic airway devices for suctioning secretions from the airway
  • The efficacy of a supraglottic airway during advanced neonatal resuscitation requiring chest compressions or the delivery of intratracheal medications

This research had no commercial funding. The authors report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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