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Asthma not an independent risk factor for severe COVID-19, hospitalization
Asthma is not an independent risk factor for more severe disease or hospitalization due to COVID-19, according to recent research presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, held virtually this year.
“In our cohort of patients tested for SARS-CoV-2 at Stanford between March and September, asthma was not an independent risk factor in and of itself for hospitalization or more severe disease from COVID,” Lauren E. Eggert, MD, of the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy and Asthma Research at Stanford (Calif.) University, said in a poster presentation at the meeting. “What’s more, allergic asthma actually decreased the risk of hospitalization by nearly half.”
Dr. Eggert noted that there have been conflicting data on whether comorbid asthma is or is not a risk factor for more severe COVID-19. “The general thought at the beginning of the pandemic was that because COVID-19 is predominantly a viral respiratory illness, and viral illnesses are known to cause asthma exacerbations, that patients with asthma may be at higher risk if they got COVID infection,” she explained. “But some of the data also showed that Th2 inflammation downregulates ACE2 receptor [expression], which has been shown to be the port of entry for the SARS-CoV-2 virus, so maybe allergy might have a protective effect.”
The researchers at Stanford University identified 168,190 patients at Stanford Health Care who had a positive real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test for SARS-CoV-2 between March and September 2020 and collected data from their electronic medical records on their history of asthma, if they were hospitalized, comorbid conditions, and laboratory values. Patients who had no other data available except for a positive SARS-CoV-2 result, or were younger than 28 days, were excluded from the study. Dr. Eggert and colleagues used COVID-19 treatment guidelines from the National Institutes of Health to assess disease severity, which grades COVID-19 severity as asymptomatic or presymptomatic infection, mild illness, moderate illness, severe illness, and critical illness.
In total, the researchers analyzed 5,596 patients who were SARS-CoV-2 positive, with 605 patients (10.8%) hospitalized within 14 days of receiving a positive test. Of these, 100 patients (16.5%) were patients with asthma. There were no significant differences between groups hospitalized and not hospitalized due to COVID-19 in patients with asthma and with no asthma.
Among patients with asthma and COVID-19, 28.0% had asymptomatic illness, 19.0% had moderate disease, 33.0% had severe disease, and 20.0% had critical COVID-19, compared with 36.0% of patients without asthma who had asymptomatic illness, 12.0% with moderate disease, 30.0% with severe disease, and 21.0% with critical COVID-19. Dr. Eggert and colleagues performed a univariate analysis, which showed a significant association between asthma and COVID-19 related hospitalization (odds ratio, 1.53; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-1.93; P < .001), but when adjusting for factors such as diabetes, obesity coronary heart disease, and hypertension, they found there was not a significant association between asthma and hospitalization due to COVID-19 (OR, 1.12; 95% CI, 0.86-1.45; P < .40).
In a univariate analysis, asthma was associated with more severe disease in patients hospitalized for COVID-19, but the results were not significant (OR, 1.21; 95% CI, 0.8-1.85; P = .37). When analyzing allergic asthma alone in a univariate analysis, the researchers found a significant association between allergic asthma and lower hospitalization risk, compared with patients who had nonallergic asthma (OR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.31-0.92; P = .029), and this association remained after they performed a multivariate analysis as well.
“When we stratified by allergic asthma versus nonallergic asthma, we found that having a diagnosis of allergic asthma actually conferred a protective effect, and there was almost half the risk of hospitalization in asthmatics with allergic asthma as compared to others, which we thought was very interesting,” Dr. Eggert said.
“Eosinophil levels during hospitalization, even when adjusted for systemic steroid use – and we followed patients out through September, when dexamethasone was standard of care – also correlated with better outcomes,” she explained. “This is independent of asthmatic status.”
The researchers noted that confirmation of these results are needed through large, multicenter cohort studies, particularly with regard to how allergic asthma might have a protective effect against SARS-CoV-2 infection. “I think going forward, these findings are very interesting and need to be looked at further to explain the mechanism behind them better,” Dr. Eggert said.
“I think there is also a lot of interest in how this might affect our patients on biologics, which deplete the eosinophils and get rid of that allergic phenotype,” she added. “Does that have any effect on disease severity? Unfortunately, the number of patents on biologics was very small in our cohort, but I do think this is an interesting area for exploration.”
This study was funded in part by the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy & Asthma Research, Stanford University, Sunshine Foundation, Crown Foundation, and the Parker Foundation.
Asthma is not an independent risk factor for more severe disease or hospitalization due to COVID-19, according to recent research presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, held virtually this year.
“In our cohort of patients tested for SARS-CoV-2 at Stanford between March and September, asthma was not an independent risk factor in and of itself for hospitalization or more severe disease from COVID,” Lauren E. Eggert, MD, of the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy and Asthma Research at Stanford (Calif.) University, said in a poster presentation at the meeting. “What’s more, allergic asthma actually decreased the risk of hospitalization by nearly half.”
Dr. Eggert noted that there have been conflicting data on whether comorbid asthma is or is not a risk factor for more severe COVID-19. “The general thought at the beginning of the pandemic was that because COVID-19 is predominantly a viral respiratory illness, and viral illnesses are known to cause asthma exacerbations, that patients with asthma may be at higher risk if they got COVID infection,” she explained. “But some of the data also showed that Th2 inflammation downregulates ACE2 receptor [expression], which has been shown to be the port of entry for the SARS-CoV-2 virus, so maybe allergy might have a protective effect.”
The researchers at Stanford University identified 168,190 patients at Stanford Health Care who had a positive real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test for SARS-CoV-2 between March and September 2020 and collected data from their electronic medical records on their history of asthma, if they were hospitalized, comorbid conditions, and laboratory values. Patients who had no other data available except for a positive SARS-CoV-2 result, or were younger than 28 days, were excluded from the study. Dr. Eggert and colleagues used COVID-19 treatment guidelines from the National Institutes of Health to assess disease severity, which grades COVID-19 severity as asymptomatic or presymptomatic infection, mild illness, moderate illness, severe illness, and critical illness.
In total, the researchers analyzed 5,596 patients who were SARS-CoV-2 positive, with 605 patients (10.8%) hospitalized within 14 days of receiving a positive test. Of these, 100 patients (16.5%) were patients with asthma. There were no significant differences between groups hospitalized and not hospitalized due to COVID-19 in patients with asthma and with no asthma.
Among patients with asthma and COVID-19, 28.0% had asymptomatic illness, 19.0% had moderate disease, 33.0% had severe disease, and 20.0% had critical COVID-19, compared with 36.0% of patients without asthma who had asymptomatic illness, 12.0% with moderate disease, 30.0% with severe disease, and 21.0% with critical COVID-19. Dr. Eggert and colleagues performed a univariate analysis, which showed a significant association between asthma and COVID-19 related hospitalization (odds ratio, 1.53; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-1.93; P < .001), but when adjusting for factors such as diabetes, obesity coronary heart disease, and hypertension, they found there was not a significant association between asthma and hospitalization due to COVID-19 (OR, 1.12; 95% CI, 0.86-1.45; P < .40).
In a univariate analysis, asthma was associated with more severe disease in patients hospitalized for COVID-19, but the results were not significant (OR, 1.21; 95% CI, 0.8-1.85; P = .37). When analyzing allergic asthma alone in a univariate analysis, the researchers found a significant association between allergic asthma and lower hospitalization risk, compared with patients who had nonallergic asthma (OR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.31-0.92; P = .029), and this association remained after they performed a multivariate analysis as well.
“When we stratified by allergic asthma versus nonallergic asthma, we found that having a diagnosis of allergic asthma actually conferred a protective effect, and there was almost half the risk of hospitalization in asthmatics with allergic asthma as compared to others, which we thought was very interesting,” Dr. Eggert said.
“Eosinophil levels during hospitalization, even when adjusted for systemic steroid use – and we followed patients out through September, when dexamethasone was standard of care – also correlated with better outcomes,” she explained. “This is independent of asthmatic status.”
The researchers noted that confirmation of these results are needed through large, multicenter cohort studies, particularly with regard to how allergic asthma might have a protective effect against SARS-CoV-2 infection. “I think going forward, these findings are very interesting and need to be looked at further to explain the mechanism behind them better,” Dr. Eggert said.
“I think there is also a lot of interest in how this might affect our patients on biologics, which deplete the eosinophils and get rid of that allergic phenotype,” she added. “Does that have any effect on disease severity? Unfortunately, the number of patents on biologics was very small in our cohort, but I do think this is an interesting area for exploration.”
This study was funded in part by the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy & Asthma Research, Stanford University, Sunshine Foundation, Crown Foundation, and the Parker Foundation.
Asthma is not an independent risk factor for more severe disease or hospitalization due to COVID-19, according to recent research presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, held virtually this year.
“In our cohort of patients tested for SARS-CoV-2 at Stanford between March and September, asthma was not an independent risk factor in and of itself for hospitalization or more severe disease from COVID,” Lauren E. Eggert, MD, of the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy and Asthma Research at Stanford (Calif.) University, said in a poster presentation at the meeting. “What’s more, allergic asthma actually decreased the risk of hospitalization by nearly half.”
Dr. Eggert noted that there have been conflicting data on whether comorbid asthma is or is not a risk factor for more severe COVID-19. “The general thought at the beginning of the pandemic was that because COVID-19 is predominantly a viral respiratory illness, and viral illnesses are known to cause asthma exacerbations, that patients with asthma may be at higher risk if they got COVID infection,” she explained. “But some of the data also showed that Th2 inflammation downregulates ACE2 receptor [expression], which has been shown to be the port of entry for the SARS-CoV-2 virus, so maybe allergy might have a protective effect.”
The researchers at Stanford University identified 168,190 patients at Stanford Health Care who had a positive real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test for SARS-CoV-2 between March and September 2020 and collected data from their electronic medical records on their history of asthma, if they were hospitalized, comorbid conditions, and laboratory values. Patients who had no other data available except for a positive SARS-CoV-2 result, or were younger than 28 days, were excluded from the study. Dr. Eggert and colleagues used COVID-19 treatment guidelines from the National Institutes of Health to assess disease severity, which grades COVID-19 severity as asymptomatic or presymptomatic infection, mild illness, moderate illness, severe illness, and critical illness.
In total, the researchers analyzed 5,596 patients who were SARS-CoV-2 positive, with 605 patients (10.8%) hospitalized within 14 days of receiving a positive test. Of these, 100 patients (16.5%) were patients with asthma. There were no significant differences between groups hospitalized and not hospitalized due to COVID-19 in patients with asthma and with no asthma.
Among patients with asthma and COVID-19, 28.0% had asymptomatic illness, 19.0% had moderate disease, 33.0% had severe disease, and 20.0% had critical COVID-19, compared with 36.0% of patients without asthma who had asymptomatic illness, 12.0% with moderate disease, 30.0% with severe disease, and 21.0% with critical COVID-19. Dr. Eggert and colleagues performed a univariate analysis, which showed a significant association between asthma and COVID-19 related hospitalization (odds ratio, 1.53; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-1.93; P < .001), but when adjusting for factors such as diabetes, obesity coronary heart disease, and hypertension, they found there was not a significant association between asthma and hospitalization due to COVID-19 (OR, 1.12; 95% CI, 0.86-1.45; P < .40).
In a univariate analysis, asthma was associated with more severe disease in patients hospitalized for COVID-19, but the results were not significant (OR, 1.21; 95% CI, 0.8-1.85; P = .37). When analyzing allergic asthma alone in a univariate analysis, the researchers found a significant association between allergic asthma and lower hospitalization risk, compared with patients who had nonallergic asthma (OR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.31-0.92; P = .029), and this association remained after they performed a multivariate analysis as well.
“When we stratified by allergic asthma versus nonallergic asthma, we found that having a diagnosis of allergic asthma actually conferred a protective effect, and there was almost half the risk of hospitalization in asthmatics with allergic asthma as compared to others, which we thought was very interesting,” Dr. Eggert said.
“Eosinophil levels during hospitalization, even when adjusted for systemic steroid use – and we followed patients out through September, when dexamethasone was standard of care – also correlated with better outcomes,” she explained. “This is independent of asthmatic status.”
The researchers noted that confirmation of these results are needed through large, multicenter cohort studies, particularly with regard to how allergic asthma might have a protective effect against SARS-CoV-2 infection. “I think going forward, these findings are very interesting and need to be looked at further to explain the mechanism behind them better,” Dr. Eggert said.
“I think there is also a lot of interest in how this might affect our patients on biologics, which deplete the eosinophils and get rid of that allergic phenotype,” she added. “Does that have any effect on disease severity? Unfortunately, the number of patents on biologics was very small in our cohort, but I do think this is an interesting area for exploration.”
This study was funded in part by the Sean N. Parker Center for Allergy & Asthma Research, Stanford University, Sunshine Foundation, Crown Foundation, and the Parker Foundation.
FROM AAAAI
Frequent medication refills show some patients not achieving asthma control
While most commercially insured patients with asthma have good disease control, some patients may not, according to a recent review of U.S. administrative claims data.
The results of the retrospective analysis, presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, held virtually this year, showed some patients with asthma had two or more refills for prescribed systemic corticosteroids (SCS) or short-acting beta agonists (SABA) within a period of 12 months.
“ ,” Randall Brown, MD, MPH, pulmonologist and senior director of Global Respiratory Medical Affairs at Teva Pharmaceuticals in West Chester, Penn., said in a presentation at the meeting. “Understanding the extent of systemic steroid and SABA prescriptions among patients with asthma and the distribution of those prescriptions across disease severity can be useful in determining the degree of disease control.”
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guidelines consider factors such as symptom control and risk of exacerbation when determining asthma severity, but uncontrolled asthma can still be difficult to assess. Dr. Brown and colleagues set out to determine the prevalence of uncontrolled asthma for patients in the IBM/Watson MarketScan U.S. claims database as well as the rate of uncontrolled asthma by GINA classification. In total, 597,955 patients who had an asthma diagnosis between 12 months before or up to 3 months after the index data of filling a SABA prescription were included for analysis. Patients were at least 12 years old with commercial insurance for at least 12 months, and had no other respiratory diseases other than asthma during the 12 months prior to the index date and during the study period.
The researchers then measured each patient’s 2018 GINA classification of asthma severity based on the number of SCS and SABA prescription claims made between January and December 2017. Overall, 54.3% patients were GINA Step 1, 14.6% were Step 2, 10.2% were Step 3, 19.8% were Step 4, and 1.1% were Step 5.
Dr. Brown and colleagues found that, regardless of GINA disease severity, 18.8% of patients filled two or more SCS prescriptions in 1 year, 27.4% filled three or more SABA prescriptions in 1 year, and 38.7% filled two or more SCS and/or three or more SABA prescriptions in 1 year. “[A] large proportion of these patients did not meet the GINA goal of disease control,” Dr. Brown said.
The researchers found 13% of patients with uncontrolled asthma categorized as GINA Step 1, 20% of patients categorized as GINA Step 2, 19% of patients who were GINA Step 3, 31% of patients who were GINA Step 4, and 54% of patients categorized as GINA Step 5 filled two or more two or more SCS prescriptions per year.
The proportion of patients with uncontrolled asthma who filled three or more SABA prescriptions per year included 19% in GINA Step 1, 29% in GINA Step 2, 35% in GINA Step 3, 44% in GINA Step 4, and 57% in GINA Step 5 groups. For patients who filled both two or more SCS and/or three or more SABA prescriptions per year, the proportion of patients with uncontrolled asthma by GINA category was 29% in GINA Step 1, 42% in GINA Step 2, 46% in GINA Step 3, 58% in GINA Step 4, and 76% of patients in GINA Step 5.
While “poor control was seen across all of the GINA disease severity classifications, the greatest proportion of uncontrolled disease was seen at the highest disease severity, which was also true when we used a stricter definition of uncontrolled disease,” Dr. Brown said. When the researchers applied stricter criteria for patients categorized as GINA Step 5, 39% of patients filled three or more SCS, 41% filled four or more SABA, and 60% filled three or more SCS and/or four or more SABA prescriptions over 12 months.
Dr. Brown said that the analysis “highlights the need for improved asthma management strategies within each of the asthma GINA classification steps.”
“While this population that was studied may be reflective of the wider insured U.S. population, the proportions of uncontrolled asthma may be even greater in non–commercially insured patients within the United States,” he said. “Updates to GINA guidelines incorporate recent consensus [and] recent scientific information and therapies, but many patients in the U.S. are not meeting the GINA goal of disease control. Newer paradigms for systemic corticosteroid-free asthma control as a target of disease ‘remission’ are becoming more commonplace. Such changes and goals may lead to improved asthma management strategies and advancement in treatment.”
This study was funded in part by Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products R&D, which also provided funding for medical writing assistance from Ashfield MedComms. The authors report being employees of Teva Pharmaceuticals.
While most commercially insured patients with asthma have good disease control, some patients may not, according to a recent review of U.S. administrative claims data.
The results of the retrospective analysis, presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, held virtually this year, showed some patients with asthma had two or more refills for prescribed systemic corticosteroids (SCS) or short-acting beta agonists (SABA) within a period of 12 months.
“ ,” Randall Brown, MD, MPH, pulmonologist and senior director of Global Respiratory Medical Affairs at Teva Pharmaceuticals in West Chester, Penn., said in a presentation at the meeting. “Understanding the extent of systemic steroid and SABA prescriptions among patients with asthma and the distribution of those prescriptions across disease severity can be useful in determining the degree of disease control.”
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guidelines consider factors such as symptom control and risk of exacerbation when determining asthma severity, but uncontrolled asthma can still be difficult to assess. Dr. Brown and colleagues set out to determine the prevalence of uncontrolled asthma for patients in the IBM/Watson MarketScan U.S. claims database as well as the rate of uncontrolled asthma by GINA classification. In total, 597,955 patients who had an asthma diagnosis between 12 months before or up to 3 months after the index data of filling a SABA prescription were included for analysis. Patients were at least 12 years old with commercial insurance for at least 12 months, and had no other respiratory diseases other than asthma during the 12 months prior to the index date and during the study period.
The researchers then measured each patient’s 2018 GINA classification of asthma severity based on the number of SCS and SABA prescription claims made between January and December 2017. Overall, 54.3% patients were GINA Step 1, 14.6% were Step 2, 10.2% were Step 3, 19.8% were Step 4, and 1.1% were Step 5.
Dr. Brown and colleagues found that, regardless of GINA disease severity, 18.8% of patients filled two or more SCS prescriptions in 1 year, 27.4% filled three or more SABA prescriptions in 1 year, and 38.7% filled two or more SCS and/or three or more SABA prescriptions in 1 year. “[A] large proportion of these patients did not meet the GINA goal of disease control,” Dr. Brown said.
The researchers found 13% of patients with uncontrolled asthma categorized as GINA Step 1, 20% of patients categorized as GINA Step 2, 19% of patients who were GINA Step 3, 31% of patients who were GINA Step 4, and 54% of patients categorized as GINA Step 5 filled two or more two or more SCS prescriptions per year.
The proportion of patients with uncontrolled asthma who filled three or more SABA prescriptions per year included 19% in GINA Step 1, 29% in GINA Step 2, 35% in GINA Step 3, 44% in GINA Step 4, and 57% in GINA Step 5 groups. For patients who filled both two or more SCS and/or three or more SABA prescriptions per year, the proportion of patients with uncontrolled asthma by GINA category was 29% in GINA Step 1, 42% in GINA Step 2, 46% in GINA Step 3, 58% in GINA Step 4, and 76% of patients in GINA Step 5.
While “poor control was seen across all of the GINA disease severity classifications, the greatest proportion of uncontrolled disease was seen at the highest disease severity, which was also true when we used a stricter definition of uncontrolled disease,” Dr. Brown said. When the researchers applied stricter criteria for patients categorized as GINA Step 5, 39% of patients filled three or more SCS, 41% filled four or more SABA, and 60% filled three or more SCS and/or four or more SABA prescriptions over 12 months.
Dr. Brown said that the analysis “highlights the need for improved asthma management strategies within each of the asthma GINA classification steps.”
“While this population that was studied may be reflective of the wider insured U.S. population, the proportions of uncontrolled asthma may be even greater in non–commercially insured patients within the United States,” he said. “Updates to GINA guidelines incorporate recent consensus [and] recent scientific information and therapies, but many patients in the U.S. are not meeting the GINA goal of disease control. Newer paradigms for systemic corticosteroid-free asthma control as a target of disease ‘remission’ are becoming more commonplace. Such changes and goals may lead to improved asthma management strategies and advancement in treatment.”
This study was funded in part by Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products R&D, which also provided funding for medical writing assistance from Ashfield MedComms. The authors report being employees of Teva Pharmaceuticals.
While most commercially insured patients with asthma have good disease control, some patients may not, according to a recent review of U.S. administrative claims data.
The results of the retrospective analysis, presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, held virtually this year, showed some patients with asthma had two or more refills for prescribed systemic corticosteroids (SCS) or short-acting beta agonists (SABA) within a period of 12 months.
“ ,” Randall Brown, MD, MPH, pulmonologist and senior director of Global Respiratory Medical Affairs at Teva Pharmaceuticals in West Chester, Penn., said in a presentation at the meeting. “Understanding the extent of systemic steroid and SABA prescriptions among patients with asthma and the distribution of those prescriptions across disease severity can be useful in determining the degree of disease control.”
Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) guidelines consider factors such as symptom control and risk of exacerbation when determining asthma severity, but uncontrolled asthma can still be difficult to assess. Dr. Brown and colleagues set out to determine the prevalence of uncontrolled asthma for patients in the IBM/Watson MarketScan U.S. claims database as well as the rate of uncontrolled asthma by GINA classification. In total, 597,955 patients who had an asthma diagnosis between 12 months before or up to 3 months after the index data of filling a SABA prescription were included for analysis. Patients were at least 12 years old with commercial insurance for at least 12 months, and had no other respiratory diseases other than asthma during the 12 months prior to the index date and during the study period.
The researchers then measured each patient’s 2018 GINA classification of asthma severity based on the number of SCS and SABA prescription claims made between January and December 2017. Overall, 54.3% patients were GINA Step 1, 14.6% were Step 2, 10.2% were Step 3, 19.8% were Step 4, and 1.1% were Step 5.
Dr. Brown and colleagues found that, regardless of GINA disease severity, 18.8% of patients filled two or more SCS prescriptions in 1 year, 27.4% filled three or more SABA prescriptions in 1 year, and 38.7% filled two or more SCS and/or three or more SABA prescriptions in 1 year. “[A] large proportion of these patients did not meet the GINA goal of disease control,” Dr. Brown said.
The researchers found 13% of patients with uncontrolled asthma categorized as GINA Step 1, 20% of patients categorized as GINA Step 2, 19% of patients who were GINA Step 3, 31% of patients who were GINA Step 4, and 54% of patients categorized as GINA Step 5 filled two or more two or more SCS prescriptions per year.
The proportion of patients with uncontrolled asthma who filled three or more SABA prescriptions per year included 19% in GINA Step 1, 29% in GINA Step 2, 35% in GINA Step 3, 44% in GINA Step 4, and 57% in GINA Step 5 groups. For patients who filled both two or more SCS and/or three or more SABA prescriptions per year, the proportion of patients with uncontrolled asthma by GINA category was 29% in GINA Step 1, 42% in GINA Step 2, 46% in GINA Step 3, 58% in GINA Step 4, and 76% of patients in GINA Step 5.
While “poor control was seen across all of the GINA disease severity classifications, the greatest proportion of uncontrolled disease was seen at the highest disease severity, which was also true when we used a stricter definition of uncontrolled disease,” Dr. Brown said. When the researchers applied stricter criteria for patients categorized as GINA Step 5, 39% of patients filled three or more SCS, 41% filled four or more SABA, and 60% filled three or more SCS and/or four or more SABA prescriptions over 12 months.
Dr. Brown said that the analysis “highlights the need for improved asthma management strategies within each of the asthma GINA classification steps.”
“While this population that was studied may be reflective of the wider insured U.S. population, the proportions of uncontrolled asthma may be even greater in non–commercially insured patients within the United States,” he said. “Updates to GINA guidelines incorporate recent consensus [and] recent scientific information and therapies, but many patients in the U.S. are not meeting the GINA goal of disease control. Newer paradigms for systemic corticosteroid-free asthma control as a target of disease ‘remission’ are becoming more commonplace. Such changes and goals may lead to improved asthma management strategies and advancement in treatment.”
This study was funded in part by Teva Branded Pharmaceutical Products R&D, which also provided funding for medical writing assistance from Ashfield MedComms. The authors report being employees of Teva Pharmaceuticals.
FROM AAAAI
Masks don’t affect oxygen saturation in people with asthma
Wearing a mask to protect against transmission of COVID-19 does not decrease oxygen saturation, according to a new study.
Oxygen saturation did not decline in more than 200 mask-wearing individuals attending an asthma and allergy clinic, regardless of the type of mask they were wearing and how long they had been wearing the mask.
The study was presented in a late breaking poster session by Marisa Hodges, MD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, at the virtual annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
“In patients with or without asthma, wearing a mask does not decrease your oxygen level,” coauthor Alan P. Baptist, MD, MPH, director of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Asthma Program, said in an interview.
“Some of my asthma patients had called me requesting an exemption from wearing a mask because they feared that their oxygen intake may be affected, and that got me thinking,” said Malika Gupta, MD, assistant professor, division of allergy and immunology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and the study’s lead investigator.
“We say masks are safe, but I couldn’t find any data to support that statement, and we wanted to provide them with evidence, so they could feel comfortable about wearing their masks,” Dr. Gupta added.
The study collected 223 surveys from adult and pediatric patients presenting to the University of Michigan Medicine Allergy Clinic between Sept. 10 and Oct. 23, 2020.
The patients were asked whether they had a diagnosis of asthma, their degree of perceived control if they did have asthma, the type of mask they were wearing, and how long they had been wearing it.
Investigators obtained resting pulse oximetry readings to measure oxygen saturation (SpO2) from all study participants.
Forty percent of the participants were male, 46% reported having asthma, and 27% were age 19 years or younger.
Overall, the mean SpO2 was 98% (range, 93%-100%) in both asthma and nonasthma groups.
The study also looked at SpO2 with 3 different types of masks: fabric, surgical, and N95.
The mean SpO2 for a fabric mask was 98% (119 patients), for a surgical mask it was also 98% (83 patients), and for the N95 mask it was 99% (3 patients).
Similar results were found with duration of mask use, with the mean SpO2 98% in those wearing a mask for 1 hour or less and 99% in those wearing a mask for 1 hour or longer.
People with asthma who reported they were well controlled showed similar mean SpO2 levels (98%) compared with those who reported they were not well controlled (96.5%)
“No effect on oxygen saturation was noted in any patients, whether they had asthma or not, whether it was well controlled or not, and this was also true regardless of what masks they wore and how long they wore the masks for. So our data reinforce that wearing a mask, whether it be a surgical mask, cloth mask, or N95, is completely safe,” Dr. Baptist said.
“We know wearing a mask is an essential step we can all take to reduce the spread of COVID-19, and we hope these data will give peace of mind to individuals who fear that wearing a mask will adversely affect their oxygen levels,” Dr. Gupta added.
Leonard B. Bacharier, MD, professor of pediatrics and director of the Center for Pediatric Asthma, Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn., agreed with the investigators’ conclusions.
“The authors found no differences in oxygen saturations between asthmatic and nonasthmatic patients, nor was there a difference based upon mask use or type,” Dr. Bacharier, who was not part of the study, said in an interview.
“These findings provide reassurance that patients, including those with stable asthma, do not experience impaired oxygenation while wearing a mask.”
Dr. Hodges, Dr. Baptist, and Dr. Bacharier have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
This article was updated 3/11/21.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Wearing a mask to protect against transmission of COVID-19 does not decrease oxygen saturation, according to a new study.
Oxygen saturation did not decline in more than 200 mask-wearing individuals attending an asthma and allergy clinic, regardless of the type of mask they were wearing and how long they had been wearing the mask.
The study was presented in a late breaking poster session by Marisa Hodges, MD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, at the virtual annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
“In patients with or without asthma, wearing a mask does not decrease your oxygen level,” coauthor Alan P. Baptist, MD, MPH, director of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Asthma Program, said in an interview.
“Some of my asthma patients had called me requesting an exemption from wearing a mask because they feared that their oxygen intake may be affected, and that got me thinking,” said Malika Gupta, MD, assistant professor, division of allergy and immunology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and the study’s lead investigator.
“We say masks are safe, but I couldn’t find any data to support that statement, and we wanted to provide them with evidence, so they could feel comfortable about wearing their masks,” Dr. Gupta added.
The study collected 223 surveys from adult and pediatric patients presenting to the University of Michigan Medicine Allergy Clinic between Sept. 10 and Oct. 23, 2020.
The patients were asked whether they had a diagnosis of asthma, their degree of perceived control if they did have asthma, the type of mask they were wearing, and how long they had been wearing it.
Investigators obtained resting pulse oximetry readings to measure oxygen saturation (SpO2) from all study participants.
Forty percent of the participants were male, 46% reported having asthma, and 27% were age 19 years or younger.
Overall, the mean SpO2 was 98% (range, 93%-100%) in both asthma and nonasthma groups.
The study also looked at SpO2 with 3 different types of masks: fabric, surgical, and N95.
The mean SpO2 for a fabric mask was 98% (119 patients), for a surgical mask it was also 98% (83 patients), and for the N95 mask it was 99% (3 patients).
Similar results were found with duration of mask use, with the mean SpO2 98% in those wearing a mask for 1 hour or less and 99% in those wearing a mask for 1 hour or longer.
People with asthma who reported they were well controlled showed similar mean SpO2 levels (98%) compared with those who reported they were not well controlled (96.5%)
“No effect on oxygen saturation was noted in any patients, whether they had asthma or not, whether it was well controlled or not, and this was also true regardless of what masks they wore and how long they wore the masks for. So our data reinforce that wearing a mask, whether it be a surgical mask, cloth mask, or N95, is completely safe,” Dr. Baptist said.
“We know wearing a mask is an essential step we can all take to reduce the spread of COVID-19, and we hope these data will give peace of mind to individuals who fear that wearing a mask will adversely affect their oxygen levels,” Dr. Gupta added.
Leonard B. Bacharier, MD, professor of pediatrics and director of the Center for Pediatric Asthma, Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn., agreed with the investigators’ conclusions.
“The authors found no differences in oxygen saturations between asthmatic and nonasthmatic patients, nor was there a difference based upon mask use or type,” Dr. Bacharier, who was not part of the study, said in an interview.
“These findings provide reassurance that patients, including those with stable asthma, do not experience impaired oxygenation while wearing a mask.”
Dr. Hodges, Dr. Baptist, and Dr. Bacharier have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
This article was updated 3/11/21.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Wearing a mask to protect against transmission of COVID-19 does not decrease oxygen saturation, according to a new study.
Oxygen saturation did not decline in more than 200 mask-wearing individuals attending an asthma and allergy clinic, regardless of the type of mask they were wearing and how long they had been wearing the mask.
The study was presented in a late breaking poster session by Marisa Hodges, MD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, at the virtual annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
“In patients with or without asthma, wearing a mask does not decrease your oxygen level,” coauthor Alan P. Baptist, MD, MPH, director of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Asthma Program, said in an interview.
“Some of my asthma patients had called me requesting an exemption from wearing a mask because they feared that their oxygen intake may be affected, and that got me thinking,” said Malika Gupta, MD, assistant professor, division of allergy and immunology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and the study’s lead investigator.
“We say masks are safe, but I couldn’t find any data to support that statement, and we wanted to provide them with evidence, so they could feel comfortable about wearing their masks,” Dr. Gupta added.
The study collected 223 surveys from adult and pediatric patients presenting to the University of Michigan Medicine Allergy Clinic between Sept. 10 and Oct. 23, 2020.
The patients were asked whether they had a diagnosis of asthma, their degree of perceived control if they did have asthma, the type of mask they were wearing, and how long they had been wearing it.
Investigators obtained resting pulse oximetry readings to measure oxygen saturation (SpO2) from all study participants.
Forty percent of the participants were male, 46% reported having asthma, and 27% were age 19 years or younger.
Overall, the mean SpO2 was 98% (range, 93%-100%) in both asthma and nonasthma groups.
The study also looked at SpO2 with 3 different types of masks: fabric, surgical, and N95.
The mean SpO2 for a fabric mask was 98% (119 patients), for a surgical mask it was also 98% (83 patients), and for the N95 mask it was 99% (3 patients).
Similar results were found with duration of mask use, with the mean SpO2 98% in those wearing a mask for 1 hour or less and 99% in those wearing a mask for 1 hour or longer.
People with asthma who reported they were well controlled showed similar mean SpO2 levels (98%) compared with those who reported they were not well controlled (96.5%)
“No effect on oxygen saturation was noted in any patients, whether they had asthma or not, whether it was well controlled or not, and this was also true regardless of what masks they wore and how long they wore the masks for. So our data reinforce that wearing a mask, whether it be a surgical mask, cloth mask, or N95, is completely safe,” Dr. Baptist said.
“We know wearing a mask is an essential step we can all take to reduce the spread of COVID-19, and we hope these data will give peace of mind to individuals who fear that wearing a mask will adversely affect their oxygen levels,” Dr. Gupta added.
Leonard B. Bacharier, MD, professor of pediatrics and director of the Center for Pediatric Asthma, Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn., agreed with the investigators’ conclusions.
“The authors found no differences in oxygen saturations between asthmatic and nonasthmatic patients, nor was there a difference based upon mask use or type,” Dr. Bacharier, who was not part of the study, said in an interview.
“These findings provide reassurance that patients, including those with stable asthma, do not experience impaired oxygenation while wearing a mask.”
Dr. Hodges, Dr. Baptist, and Dr. Bacharier have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
This article was updated 3/11/21.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM AAAAI
Hospitalizations for food anaphylaxis triple, but deaths down in United Kingdom
The rate of hospital admissions in the United Kingdom for food-induced anaphylaxis more than tripled over the 20 years from 1998 to 2018, but the case fatality rate fell by more than half, researchers report in BMJ.
“Cow’s milk is increasingly identified as the culprit allergen for fatal food reactions and is now the commonest cause of fatal anaphylaxis in children,” write Alessia Baseggio Conrado, PhD, a biochemist with the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial College London, and colleagues. “More education is needed to highlight the specific risks posed by cow’s milk to people who are allergic to increase awareness among food businesses.”
Whereas recognition of the risks posed by nut allergies has increased, people think milk allergy is mild, says senior author Paul. J. Turner, BMBCh, PhD, an allergist/immunologist at Imperial College. “This is often true in very young children, but school-aged children who still have milk allergy tend to have a more allergic profile, often with other allergies, including asthma,” Dr. Turner told this news organization. “Also, milk is very common in our diet, and you don’t need much milk to achieve a decent dose of allergen.”
During the study period, 101,891 people were hospitalized for anaphylaxis; 30,700 cases (30%) were coded as having been triggered by food.
These food-related admissions represent an increase from 1.23 to 4.04 per 100,000 population per year, for an annual increase of 5.7% (95% confidence interval, 5.5-5.9; P < .001), the authors write.
The largest jump occurred among children younger than 15 years, for whom admissions rose from 2.1 to 9.2 per 100,000 population per year, an annual increase of 6.6% (95% CI, 6.3-7.0). The annual increases were 5.9% (95% CI, 5.6-6.2) among persons aged 15 to 59 years and 2.1% (95% CI, 1.8-3.1) among those aged 60 years and older.
The investigators used data from England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland to track temporal trends and age and sex distributions for hospital admissions for which the primary diagnosis was anaphylaxis attributable to both food and nonfood triggers. These data were compared with nationally reported fatalities.
Over the 20-year period, 152 deaths were attributed to likely food-induced anaphylaxis. During that time, the case fatality rate for confirmed fatal food anaphylaxis fell from 0.7% to 0.19% (rate ratio, 0.931; 95% CI, 0.904-0.959; P < .001) and declined to 0.30% for suspected fatal food anaphylaxis (rate ratio, 0.970; 95% CI, 0.945-0.996; P = .024).
Between 1992 and 2018, at least 46% of all anaphylactic fatalities were deemed to be triggered by peanut or tree nut. Among school-aged children, 26% of anaphylactic fatalities were attributed to cow’s milk.
Not surprisingly, during the study period, there was an increase of 336% in prescriptions for adrenaline autoinjectors. Such prescriptions increased 11% per year.
Global trend
The data extend findings Dr. Turner and colleagues reported for England and Wales in 2014 regarding the entire United Kingdom population and align with epidemiologic trends in hospital admissions for anaphylaxis in the United States and Australia.
The researchers say better recognition and management of anaphylaxis could partly explain the decrease in fatalities, but the rise in hospitalizations remains puzzling. “Whether a true increase in the prevalence of anaphylaxis has occurred (rather than a reduction in the threshold to admit patients presenting with anaphylaxis) is unclear because evidence is lacking for an increase in prevalence of food allergy in the [United Kingdom] (and elsewhere) over the same time period,” they write.
Ronna L. Campbell, MD, PhD, an emergency physician at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., has noted similar trends in the United States. “It may be that anaphylaxis recognition and diagnosis have improved, resulting in earlier administration of epinephrine,” Dr. Campbell said in an interview. “So while cases are increasing, earlier recognition and treatment result in decreased fatalities.” She is unaware of any new guidelines recommending increased hospitalization that would explain the puzzling rise in admissions.
According to the study authors, the clinical criteria used to diagnose anaphylaxis in the United Kingdom did not change during the study period. Although national guidance recommending the hospitalization of children younger than 16 who are suspected of having anaphylaxis was introduced in 2011 and may have boosted admissions, the year-on-year rate of increase has persisted since 2014. “Therefore the increase over the past 5 years cannot be attributed to the impact of the guidance,” they write.
The study was funded by grants from the U.K. Medical Research Council and U.K. Food Standards Agency. Two coauthors have disclosed financial relationships with industry outside of the submitted work. Dr. Conrado has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com
The rate of hospital admissions in the United Kingdom for food-induced anaphylaxis more than tripled over the 20 years from 1998 to 2018, but the case fatality rate fell by more than half, researchers report in BMJ.
“Cow’s milk is increasingly identified as the culprit allergen for fatal food reactions and is now the commonest cause of fatal anaphylaxis in children,” write Alessia Baseggio Conrado, PhD, a biochemist with the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial College London, and colleagues. “More education is needed to highlight the specific risks posed by cow’s milk to people who are allergic to increase awareness among food businesses.”
Whereas recognition of the risks posed by nut allergies has increased, people think milk allergy is mild, says senior author Paul. J. Turner, BMBCh, PhD, an allergist/immunologist at Imperial College. “This is often true in very young children, but school-aged children who still have milk allergy tend to have a more allergic profile, often with other allergies, including asthma,” Dr. Turner told this news organization. “Also, milk is very common in our diet, and you don’t need much milk to achieve a decent dose of allergen.”
During the study period, 101,891 people were hospitalized for anaphylaxis; 30,700 cases (30%) were coded as having been triggered by food.
These food-related admissions represent an increase from 1.23 to 4.04 per 100,000 population per year, for an annual increase of 5.7% (95% confidence interval, 5.5-5.9; P < .001), the authors write.
The largest jump occurred among children younger than 15 years, for whom admissions rose from 2.1 to 9.2 per 100,000 population per year, an annual increase of 6.6% (95% CI, 6.3-7.0). The annual increases were 5.9% (95% CI, 5.6-6.2) among persons aged 15 to 59 years and 2.1% (95% CI, 1.8-3.1) among those aged 60 years and older.
The investigators used data from England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland to track temporal trends and age and sex distributions for hospital admissions for which the primary diagnosis was anaphylaxis attributable to both food and nonfood triggers. These data were compared with nationally reported fatalities.
Over the 20-year period, 152 deaths were attributed to likely food-induced anaphylaxis. During that time, the case fatality rate for confirmed fatal food anaphylaxis fell from 0.7% to 0.19% (rate ratio, 0.931; 95% CI, 0.904-0.959; P < .001) and declined to 0.30% for suspected fatal food anaphylaxis (rate ratio, 0.970; 95% CI, 0.945-0.996; P = .024).
Between 1992 and 2018, at least 46% of all anaphylactic fatalities were deemed to be triggered by peanut or tree nut. Among school-aged children, 26% of anaphylactic fatalities were attributed to cow’s milk.
Not surprisingly, during the study period, there was an increase of 336% in prescriptions for adrenaline autoinjectors. Such prescriptions increased 11% per year.
Global trend
The data extend findings Dr. Turner and colleagues reported for England and Wales in 2014 regarding the entire United Kingdom population and align with epidemiologic trends in hospital admissions for anaphylaxis in the United States and Australia.
The researchers say better recognition and management of anaphylaxis could partly explain the decrease in fatalities, but the rise in hospitalizations remains puzzling. “Whether a true increase in the prevalence of anaphylaxis has occurred (rather than a reduction in the threshold to admit patients presenting with anaphylaxis) is unclear because evidence is lacking for an increase in prevalence of food allergy in the [United Kingdom] (and elsewhere) over the same time period,” they write.
Ronna L. Campbell, MD, PhD, an emergency physician at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., has noted similar trends in the United States. “It may be that anaphylaxis recognition and diagnosis have improved, resulting in earlier administration of epinephrine,” Dr. Campbell said in an interview. “So while cases are increasing, earlier recognition and treatment result in decreased fatalities.” She is unaware of any new guidelines recommending increased hospitalization that would explain the puzzling rise in admissions.
According to the study authors, the clinical criteria used to diagnose anaphylaxis in the United Kingdom did not change during the study period. Although national guidance recommending the hospitalization of children younger than 16 who are suspected of having anaphylaxis was introduced in 2011 and may have boosted admissions, the year-on-year rate of increase has persisted since 2014. “Therefore the increase over the past 5 years cannot be attributed to the impact of the guidance,” they write.
The study was funded by grants from the U.K. Medical Research Council and U.K. Food Standards Agency. Two coauthors have disclosed financial relationships with industry outside of the submitted work. Dr. Conrado has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com
The rate of hospital admissions in the United Kingdom for food-induced anaphylaxis more than tripled over the 20 years from 1998 to 2018, but the case fatality rate fell by more than half, researchers report in BMJ.
“Cow’s milk is increasingly identified as the culprit allergen for fatal food reactions and is now the commonest cause of fatal anaphylaxis in children,” write Alessia Baseggio Conrado, PhD, a biochemist with the National Heart and Lung Institute at Imperial College London, and colleagues. “More education is needed to highlight the specific risks posed by cow’s milk to people who are allergic to increase awareness among food businesses.”
Whereas recognition of the risks posed by nut allergies has increased, people think milk allergy is mild, says senior author Paul. J. Turner, BMBCh, PhD, an allergist/immunologist at Imperial College. “This is often true in very young children, but school-aged children who still have milk allergy tend to have a more allergic profile, often with other allergies, including asthma,” Dr. Turner told this news organization. “Also, milk is very common in our diet, and you don’t need much milk to achieve a decent dose of allergen.”
During the study period, 101,891 people were hospitalized for anaphylaxis; 30,700 cases (30%) were coded as having been triggered by food.
These food-related admissions represent an increase from 1.23 to 4.04 per 100,000 population per year, for an annual increase of 5.7% (95% confidence interval, 5.5-5.9; P < .001), the authors write.
The largest jump occurred among children younger than 15 years, for whom admissions rose from 2.1 to 9.2 per 100,000 population per year, an annual increase of 6.6% (95% CI, 6.3-7.0). The annual increases were 5.9% (95% CI, 5.6-6.2) among persons aged 15 to 59 years and 2.1% (95% CI, 1.8-3.1) among those aged 60 years and older.
The investigators used data from England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland to track temporal trends and age and sex distributions for hospital admissions for which the primary diagnosis was anaphylaxis attributable to both food and nonfood triggers. These data were compared with nationally reported fatalities.
Over the 20-year period, 152 deaths were attributed to likely food-induced anaphylaxis. During that time, the case fatality rate for confirmed fatal food anaphylaxis fell from 0.7% to 0.19% (rate ratio, 0.931; 95% CI, 0.904-0.959; P < .001) and declined to 0.30% for suspected fatal food anaphylaxis (rate ratio, 0.970; 95% CI, 0.945-0.996; P = .024).
Between 1992 and 2018, at least 46% of all anaphylactic fatalities were deemed to be triggered by peanut or tree nut. Among school-aged children, 26% of anaphylactic fatalities were attributed to cow’s milk.
Not surprisingly, during the study period, there was an increase of 336% in prescriptions for adrenaline autoinjectors. Such prescriptions increased 11% per year.
Global trend
The data extend findings Dr. Turner and colleagues reported for England and Wales in 2014 regarding the entire United Kingdom population and align with epidemiologic trends in hospital admissions for anaphylaxis in the United States and Australia.
The researchers say better recognition and management of anaphylaxis could partly explain the decrease in fatalities, but the rise in hospitalizations remains puzzling. “Whether a true increase in the prevalence of anaphylaxis has occurred (rather than a reduction in the threshold to admit patients presenting with anaphylaxis) is unclear because evidence is lacking for an increase in prevalence of food allergy in the [United Kingdom] (and elsewhere) over the same time period,” they write.
Ronna L. Campbell, MD, PhD, an emergency physician at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., has noted similar trends in the United States. “It may be that anaphylaxis recognition and diagnosis have improved, resulting in earlier administration of epinephrine,” Dr. Campbell said in an interview. “So while cases are increasing, earlier recognition and treatment result in decreased fatalities.” She is unaware of any new guidelines recommending increased hospitalization that would explain the puzzling rise in admissions.
According to the study authors, the clinical criteria used to diagnose anaphylaxis in the United Kingdom did not change during the study period. Although national guidance recommending the hospitalization of children younger than 16 who are suspected of having anaphylaxis was introduced in 2011 and may have boosted admissions, the year-on-year rate of increase has persisted since 2014. “Therefore the increase over the past 5 years cannot be attributed to the impact of the guidance,” they write.
The study was funded by grants from the U.K. Medical Research Council and U.K. Food Standards Agency. Two coauthors have disclosed financial relationships with industry outside of the submitted work. Dr. Conrado has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com
Patients with asthma and COPD lost ground in accessing care
Over the past 20 years, patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have seen next to no improvement in problems of delayed care because of cost or unaffordable medications, despite wider insurance coverage since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, a new analysis shows.
The long-view analysis illuminates the ongoing problem for people with these chronic diseases despite health care legislation that was considered historic.
“That long-term scope puts recent improvements in better context – whereas we have made improvements in coverage in recent years due to the Affordable Care Act, the longer-term picture is that people with asthma and COPD are struggling to obtain needed medical care and medications despite a substantial reduction in the uninsurance rate,” said Adam Gaffney, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston who authored the paper with David Himmelstein, MD, professor of public health at City University of New York–Hunter College. The findings were published in Chest.
Researchers examined data from 1997 to 2018 for 76,843 adults with asthma and 30,548 adults with COPD, from the National Health Interview Survey, an annual survey by the Centers for Disease Control that is based on in-person interviews and health questionnaires completed by an adult in each family.
Insurance coverage up, patients losing ground
During 1997 and 2018, there was an overall 9.3% decrease in the rate of adults with asthma who were uninsured, a significant improvement (P < .001). Between the pre- and post-ACA years, there was modest improvement in those putting off care because of cost, a drop of 3.8%, or going without prescriptions, a drop of 4.0%. But those improvements didn’t correspond to the 7.2% drop in the uninsured rate after the AC , contributing to the finding that there was no significant improvement over the 20 years.
For adults with COPD, it was a slightly different story. Over those 2 decades, the uninsured rate dropped by 9.5%. But the number of patients foregoing care due to cost actually rose by 3.4%, which wasn’t statistically significant, but the rate of those unable to afford needed medications rose significantly by 7.8%.
Researchers found there was improvement between the pre- and post-ACA years among COPD patients putting off care and going without medications (decreases of 6.9% and 4.5%, respectively). That adhered fairly closely with the improvement in the uninsured rate, which fell by 7.1%. But over the 20-year study period, the percentage of those needing medications they couldn’t afford increased significantly by 7.8%. The rate of those delaying or foregoing care also increased, though this amount was not statistically significant.
After the ACA was created, Blacks and Hispanics with asthma had greater improvement in obtaining insurance, compared with other racial and ethnic groups. But over the 20 years, like all racial and ethnic groups, they saw no statistically significant improvement in rates of “inadequate coverage,” defined in this study as either being uninsured, having to delay care because of cost, or being unable to afford needed medications.
For those with COPD, only Whites had statistically significant improvement in the number of patients with inadequate coverage after the ACA, researchers found.
So despite obtaining insurance, patients lost ground in managing their disease because of the growing cost of care and medication.
“Medication affordability has actually worsened for those with COPD – a worrisome development given that medication nonadherence worsens outcomes for these vulnerable patients,” Dr. Gaffney said. “Policy makers should return to the issue of national health care reform. Both uninsurance and underinsurance undermines pulmonologists’ ability to care for their patients with chronic disease. A health care system without financial barriers, in contrast, might well improve these patients’ outcomes, and advance health equity.”
Insurance is no guarantee to access
Daniel Ouellette, MD, FCCP, a pulmonary and critical care specialist at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, said it’s not surprising that access to care remains a problem despite the Affordable Care Act.
“It covers the hospitalizations and ER visits – patients in this segment of society were getting cared for there anyway,” he said. “And what the ACA didn’t always do was provide adequate prescription coverage or cover these outpatient gaps. So even though the patients have the ACA they still have unaffordable prescriptions, they still can’t buy them, and they still can’t pay for their outpatient clinic if they have a $500 or $1,000 deductible.” These patients also continue to struggle with more fundamental issues that affect access to care, such as lack of transportation and poor health literacy.
At Henry Ford, pharmacists work with patients to identify medications covered by their insurance and work to find discounts and coupons, he said. As for the ACA, “it’s a good first start, but we really need to identify what its limitations are.” Locally driven, less expensive solutions might be a better way forward than costly federal initiatives.
Brandon M. Seay, MD, a pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, said the findings dovetail with what he has seen in the pediatric population.
“From my experience, the ACA has helped patients get their foot in the door and has helped patients decrease the possibility of serious financial burden in emergency situations, but the ability to afford medications has not changed very much,” he said. When patients struggle with sufficient prescription coverage, he helps patients fight for coverage and connects them with prescription assistance programs such as GoodRx.
“Instead of focusing on the access of insurance to patients, the goal of the system should be to make care as affordable as possible,” Dr. Seay said. “Access does not meet the needs of a patient if they cannot afford what they have access to. Transition to a nationalized health system where there is no question of access could help to drive down prescription drug prices by allowing the government to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies more adequately by removing the ‘middle man’ of the private insurance industry.”
The investigators reported no financial conflicts. Dr. Ouellette and Dr. Seay reported no financial conflicts.
Over the past 20 years, patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have seen next to no improvement in problems of delayed care because of cost or unaffordable medications, despite wider insurance coverage since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, a new analysis shows.
The long-view analysis illuminates the ongoing problem for people with these chronic diseases despite health care legislation that was considered historic.
“That long-term scope puts recent improvements in better context – whereas we have made improvements in coverage in recent years due to the Affordable Care Act, the longer-term picture is that people with asthma and COPD are struggling to obtain needed medical care and medications despite a substantial reduction in the uninsurance rate,” said Adam Gaffney, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston who authored the paper with David Himmelstein, MD, professor of public health at City University of New York–Hunter College. The findings were published in Chest.
Researchers examined data from 1997 to 2018 for 76,843 adults with asthma and 30,548 adults with COPD, from the National Health Interview Survey, an annual survey by the Centers for Disease Control that is based on in-person interviews and health questionnaires completed by an adult in each family.
Insurance coverage up, patients losing ground
During 1997 and 2018, there was an overall 9.3% decrease in the rate of adults with asthma who were uninsured, a significant improvement (P < .001). Between the pre- and post-ACA years, there was modest improvement in those putting off care because of cost, a drop of 3.8%, or going without prescriptions, a drop of 4.0%. But those improvements didn’t correspond to the 7.2% drop in the uninsured rate after the AC , contributing to the finding that there was no significant improvement over the 20 years.
For adults with COPD, it was a slightly different story. Over those 2 decades, the uninsured rate dropped by 9.5%. But the number of patients foregoing care due to cost actually rose by 3.4%, which wasn’t statistically significant, but the rate of those unable to afford needed medications rose significantly by 7.8%.
Researchers found there was improvement between the pre- and post-ACA years among COPD patients putting off care and going without medications (decreases of 6.9% and 4.5%, respectively). That adhered fairly closely with the improvement in the uninsured rate, which fell by 7.1%. But over the 20-year study period, the percentage of those needing medications they couldn’t afford increased significantly by 7.8%. The rate of those delaying or foregoing care also increased, though this amount was not statistically significant.
After the ACA was created, Blacks and Hispanics with asthma had greater improvement in obtaining insurance, compared with other racial and ethnic groups. But over the 20 years, like all racial and ethnic groups, they saw no statistically significant improvement in rates of “inadequate coverage,” defined in this study as either being uninsured, having to delay care because of cost, or being unable to afford needed medications.
For those with COPD, only Whites had statistically significant improvement in the number of patients with inadequate coverage after the ACA, researchers found.
So despite obtaining insurance, patients lost ground in managing their disease because of the growing cost of care and medication.
“Medication affordability has actually worsened for those with COPD – a worrisome development given that medication nonadherence worsens outcomes for these vulnerable patients,” Dr. Gaffney said. “Policy makers should return to the issue of national health care reform. Both uninsurance and underinsurance undermines pulmonologists’ ability to care for their patients with chronic disease. A health care system without financial barriers, in contrast, might well improve these patients’ outcomes, and advance health equity.”
Insurance is no guarantee to access
Daniel Ouellette, MD, FCCP, a pulmonary and critical care specialist at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, said it’s not surprising that access to care remains a problem despite the Affordable Care Act.
“It covers the hospitalizations and ER visits – patients in this segment of society were getting cared for there anyway,” he said. “And what the ACA didn’t always do was provide adequate prescription coverage or cover these outpatient gaps. So even though the patients have the ACA they still have unaffordable prescriptions, they still can’t buy them, and they still can’t pay for their outpatient clinic if they have a $500 or $1,000 deductible.” These patients also continue to struggle with more fundamental issues that affect access to care, such as lack of transportation and poor health literacy.
At Henry Ford, pharmacists work with patients to identify medications covered by their insurance and work to find discounts and coupons, he said. As for the ACA, “it’s a good first start, but we really need to identify what its limitations are.” Locally driven, less expensive solutions might be a better way forward than costly federal initiatives.
Brandon M. Seay, MD, a pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, said the findings dovetail with what he has seen in the pediatric population.
“From my experience, the ACA has helped patients get their foot in the door and has helped patients decrease the possibility of serious financial burden in emergency situations, but the ability to afford medications has not changed very much,” he said. When patients struggle with sufficient prescription coverage, he helps patients fight for coverage and connects them with prescription assistance programs such as GoodRx.
“Instead of focusing on the access of insurance to patients, the goal of the system should be to make care as affordable as possible,” Dr. Seay said. “Access does not meet the needs of a patient if they cannot afford what they have access to. Transition to a nationalized health system where there is no question of access could help to drive down prescription drug prices by allowing the government to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies more adequately by removing the ‘middle man’ of the private insurance industry.”
The investigators reported no financial conflicts. Dr. Ouellette and Dr. Seay reported no financial conflicts.
Over the past 20 years, patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have seen next to no improvement in problems of delayed care because of cost or unaffordable medications, despite wider insurance coverage since the passage of the Affordable Care Act, a new analysis shows.
The long-view analysis illuminates the ongoing problem for people with these chronic diseases despite health care legislation that was considered historic.
“That long-term scope puts recent improvements in better context – whereas we have made improvements in coverage in recent years due to the Affordable Care Act, the longer-term picture is that people with asthma and COPD are struggling to obtain needed medical care and medications despite a substantial reduction in the uninsurance rate,” said Adam Gaffney, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston who authored the paper with David Himmelstein, MD, professor of public health at City University of New York–Hunter College. The findings were published in Chest.
Researchers examined data from 1997 to 2018 for 76,843 adults with asthma and 30,548 adults with COPD, from the National Health Interview Survey, an annual survey by the Centers for Disease Control that is based on in-person interviews and health questionnaires completed by an adult in each family.
Insurance coverage up, patients losing ground
During 1997 and 2018, there was an overall 9.3% decrease in the rate of adults with asthma who were uninsured, a significant improvement (P < .001). Between the pre- and post-ACA years, there was modest improvement in those putting off care because of cost, a drop of 3.8%, or going without prescriptions, a drop of 4.0%. But those improvements didn’t correspond to the 7.2% drop in the uninsured rate after the AC , contributing to the finding that there was no significant improvement over the 20 years.
For adults with COPD, it was a slightly different story. Over those 2 decades, the uninsured rate dropped by 9.5%. But the number of patients foregoing care due to cost actually rose by 3.4%, which wasn’t statistically significant, but the rate of those unable to afford needed medications rose significantly by 7.8%.
Researchers found there was improvement between the pre- and post-ACA years among COPD patients putting off care and going without medications (decreases of 6.9% and 4.5%, respectively). That adhered fairly closely with the improvement in the uninsured rate, which fell by 7.1%. But over the 20-year study period, the percentage of those needing medications they couldn’t afford increased significantly by 7.8%. The rate of those delaying or foregoing care also increased, though this amount was not statistically significant.
After the ACA was created, Blacks and Hispanics with asthma had greater improvement in obtaining insurance, compared with other racial and ethnic groups. But over the 20 years, like all racial and ethnic groups, they saw no statistically significant improvement in rates of “inadequate coverage,” defined in this study as either being uninsured, having to delay care because of cost, or being unable to afford needed medications.
For those with COPD, only Whites had statistically significant improvement in the number of patients with inadequate coverage after the ACA, researchers found.
So despite obtaining insurance, patients lost ground in managing their disease because of the growing cost of care and medication.
“Medication affordability has actually worsened for those with COPD – a worrisome development given that medication nonadherence worsens outcomes for these vulnerable patients,” Dr. Gaffney said. “Policy makers should return to the issue of national health care reform. Both uninsurance and underinsurance undermines pulmonologists’ ability to care for their patients with chronic disease. A health care system without financial barriers, in contrast, might well improve these patients’ outcomes, and advance health equity.”
Insurance is no guarantee to access
Daniel Ouellette, MD, FCCP, a pulmonary and critical care specialist at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, said it’s not surprising that access to care remains a problem despite the Affordable Care Act.
“It covers the hospitalizations and ER visits – patients in this segment of society were getting cared for there anyway,” he said. “And what the ACA didn’t always do was provide adequate prescription coverage or cover these outpatient gaps. So even though the patients have the ACA they still have unaffordable prescriptions, they still can’t buy them, and they still can’t pay for their outpatient clinic if they have a $500 or $1,000 deductible.” These patients also continue to struggle with more fundamental issues that affect access to care, such as lack of transportation and poor health literacy.
At Henry Ford, pharmacists work with patients to identify medications covered by their insurance and work to find discounts and coupons, he said. As for the ACA, “it’s a good first start, but we really need to identify what its limitations are.” Locally driven, less expensive solutions might be a better way forward than costly federal initiatives.
Brandon M. Seay, MD, a pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, said the findings dovetail with what he has seen in the pediatric population.
“From my experience, the ACA has helped patients get their foot in the door and has helped patients decrease the possibility of serious financial burden in emergency situations, but the ability to afford medications has not changed very much,” he said. When patients struggle with sufficient prescription coverage, he helps patients fight for coverage and connects them with prescription assistance programs such as GoodRx.
“Instead of focusing on the access of insurance to patients, the goal of the system should be to make care as affordable as possible,” Dr. Seay said. “Access does not meet the needs of a patient if they cannot afford what they have access to. Transition to a nationalized health system where there is no question of access could help to drive down prescription drug prices by allowing the government to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies more adequately by removing the ‘middle man’ of the private insurance industry.”
The investigators reported no financial conflicts. Dr. Ouellette and Dr. Seay reported no financial conflicts.
FROM CHEST
Antibiotic exposure in pregnancy linked to childhood asthma risk in study
in a Danish birth cohort study.
The reason behind the correlation is unclear. Maternal infections, rather than antibiotics, “could explain the observed association,” said study author Cecilie Skaarup Uldbjerg, a researcher in the department of public health at Aarhus University in Denmark.
Still, the “results are in keeping with the hypothesis that effects of antibiotics impact the maternally derived microbiome in vaginally born children and that this may increase the odds of childhood asthma,” Ms. Uldbjerg and coauthors wrote in their study, which was published online Feb. 9 in Archives of Disease in Childhood . “However, this observational study did not address underlying mechanisms, and this interpretation, while plausible, remains speculative.”
Antibiotic use in pregnancy likely to continue
Patrick Duff, MD, who was not involved in the research, does not expect the findings will alter clinical practice.
The association was relatively weak, and the study does not account for factors such as antibiotic exposure during early childhood or tobacco smoke in the house, said Dr. Duff, professor of maternal-fetal medicine at University of Florida, Gainesville.
“Although I agree that we should not use antibiotics indiscriminately during pregnancy, we definitely need to treat certain infections,” Dr. Duff said. “Thus we cannot avoid some degree of antibiotic exposure.”
Although prior research has indicated that antibiotic use in pregnancy may increase the risk of asthma in children, results have been inconsistent.
To study whether antibiotic exposure during pregnancy is associated with childhood asthma and whether the timing of antibiotic exposure or mode of delivery influence the relationship, the investigators analyzed data from more than 32,000 children in the Danish National Birth Cohort, which was established in 1996.
Children of mothers who took and did not take antibiotics compared
In all, 17% of the children were born to mothers who used antibiotics during pregnancy. Compared with mothers who did not take antibiotics, those who did reported more maternal asthma, smoking during pregnancy, and having overweight or obesity. In addition, they were less likely to have been in their first pregnancy.
During follow-up at age 11 years, 4,238 children (13%) had asthma, including 12.7% of those whose mothers had not been exposed to antibiotics, and 14.6% of those whose mothers had used antibiotics during pregnancy.
In adjusted analyses, children born to mothers who received antibiotics were more likely to have asthma (OR, 1.14).
Antibiotic exposure in the second to third trimester, but not in the first trimester, was associated with asthma. The association was observed in vaginally born children, but not in children born by cesarean section.
The study is limited by its reliance on maternal reporting for data about antibiotics and asthma diagnoses, the authors noted. Mothers completed telephone interviews twice during pregnancy and once at 6 months postpartum. They completed online questionnaires to provide follow-up information at 11 years.
Mode of delivery may matter
The researchers said their analysis indicates that mode of delivery may modify the association between antibiotic exposure during pregnancy and childhood asthma.
Fourteen percent of the children in the study were delivered by cesarean section. Further research may clarify the relationship between antibiotics in pregnancy, mode of delivery, and asthma risk, another doctor who was not involved the study added.
“I do not think that the evidence indicates that mode of delivery clearly has an impact,” said Santina J. G. Wheat, MD, MPH, associate professor of family and community medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, “as the number of cesarean deliveries was not large enough to fully support such a statement.
“It will be interesting to see if an association holds in future studies with increased cesarean deliveries,” Dr. Wheat said.
How and why antibiotics were used may be other important factors to investigate, Dr. Duff suggested.
“The authors did not provide any specific information about which antibiotics were used by the mothers, duration of use, and indication for use. Those are very important confounders,” Dr. Duff said. “Perhaps the key exposure is to a particular maternal infection rather than to the antibiotic per se.”
The Danish National Birth Cohort was established with a grant from the Danish National Research Foundation and support from regional committees and other organizations. Its biobank has been supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and the Lundbeck Foundation, and follow-up of mothers and children has been supported by the Danish Medical Research Council, the Lundbeck Foundation, Innovation Fund Denmark, the Nordea Foundation, Aarhus Ideas, a University of Copenhagen strategic grant, and the Danish Council for Independent Research. The study was partially funded by the Health Research Fund of Central Denmark Region, which supported one of the authors. Other authors were supported by the DHB Foundation and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council. One author is affiliated with Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Australia, where the Victorian Government’s Operational Infrastructure Support Program supports research.
The authors had no competing interests. Dr. Wheat serves on the editorial advisory board of Family Practice News. Dr. Duff had no relevant financial disclosures.
in a Danish birth cohort study.
The reason behind the correlation is unclear. Maternal infections, rather than antibiotics, “could explain the observed association,” said study author Cecilie Skaarup Uldbjerg, a researcher in the department of public health at Aarhus University in Denmark.
Still, the “results are in keeping with the hypothesis that effects of antibiotics impact the maternally derived microbiome in vaginally born children and that this may increase the odds of childhood asthma,” Ms. Uldbjerg and coauthors wrote in their study, which was published online Feb. 9 in Archives of Disease in Childhood . “However, this observational study did not address underlying mechanisms, and this interpretation, while plausible, remains speculative.”
Antibiotic use in pregnancy likely to continue
Patrick Duff, MD, who was not involved in the research, does not expect the findings will alter clinical practice.
The association was relatively weak, and the study does not account for factors such as antibiotic exposure during early childhood or tobacco smoke in the house, said Dr. Duff, professor of maternal-fetal medicine at University of Florida, Gainesville.
“Although I agree that we should not use antibiotics indiscriminately during pregnancy, we definitely need to treat certain infections,” Dr. Duff said. “Thus we cannot avoid some degree of antibiotic exposure.”
Although prior research has indicated that antibiotic use in pregnancy may increase the risk of asthma in children, results have been inconsistent.
To study whether antibiotic exposure during pregnancy is associated with childhood asthma and whether the timing of antibiotic exposure or mode of delivery influence the relationship, the investigators analyzed data from more than 32,000 children in the Danish National Birth Cohort, which was established in 1996.
Children of mothers who took and did not take antibiotics compared
In all, 17% of the children were born to mothers who used antibiotics during pregnancy. Compared with mothers who did not take antibiotics, those who did reported more maternal asthma, smoking during pregnancy, and having overweight or obesity. In addition, they were less likely to have been in their first pregnancy.
During follow-up at age 11 years, 4,238 children (13%) had asthma, including 12.7% of those whose mothers had not been exposed to antibiotics, and 14.6% of those whose mothers had used antibiotics during pregnancy.
In adjusted analyses, children born to mothers who received antibiotics were more likely to have asthma (OR, 1.14).
Antibiotic exposure in the second to third trimester, but not in the first trimester, was associated with asthma. The association was observed in vaginally born children, but not in children born by cesarean section.
The study is limited by its reliance on maternal reporting for data about antibiotics and asthma diagnoses, the authors noted. Mothers completed telephone interviews twice during pregnancy and once at 6 months postpartum. They completed online questionnaires to provide follow-up information at 11 years.
Mode of delivery may matter
The researchers said their analysis indicates that mode of delivery may modify the association between antibiotic exposure during pregnancy and childhood asthma.
Fourteen percent of the children in the study were delivered by cesarean section. Further research may clarify the relationship between antibiotics in pregnancy, mode of delivery, and asthma risk, another doctor who was not involved the study added.
“I do not think that the evidence indicates that mode of delivery clearly has an impact,” said Santina J. G. Wheat, MD, MPH, associate professor of family and community medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, “as the number of cesarean deliveries was not large enough to fully support such a statement.
“It will be interesting to see if an association holds in future studies with increased cesarean deliveries,” Dr. Wheat said.
How and why antibiotics were used may be other important factors to investigate, Dr. Duff suggested.
“The authors did not provide any specific information about which antibiotics were used by the mothers, duration of use, and indication for use. Those are very important confounders,” Dr. Duff said. “Perhaps the key exposure is to a particular maternal infection rather than to the antibiotic per se.”
The Danish National Birth Cohort was established with a grant from the Danish National Research Foundation and support from regional committees and other organizations. Its biobank has been supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and the Lundbeck Foundation, and follow-up of mothers and children has been supported by the Danish Medical Research Council, the Lundbeck Foundation, Innovation Fund Denmark, the Nordea Foundation, Aarhus Ideas, a University of Copenhagen strategic grant, and the Danish Council for Independent Research. The study was partially funded by the Health Research Fund of Central Denmark Region, which supported one of the authors. Other authors were supported by the DHB Foundation and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council. One author is affiliated with Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Australia, where the Victorian Government’s Operational Infrastructure Support Program supports research.
The authors had no competing interests. Dr. Wheat serves on the editorial advisory board of Family Practice News. Dr. Duff had no relevant financial disclosures.
in a Danish birth cohort study.
The reason behind the correlation is unclear. Maternal infections, rather than antibiotics, “could explain the observed association,” said study author Cecilie Skaarup Uldbjerg, a researcher in the department of public health at Aarhus University in Denmark.
Still, the “results are in keeping with the hypothesis that effects of antibiotics impact the maternally derived microbiome in vaginally born children and that this may increase the odds of childhood asthma,” Ms. Uldbjerg and coauthors wrote in their study, which was published online Feb. 9 in Archives of Disease in Childhood . “However, this observational study did not address underlying mechanisms, and this interpretation, while plausible, remains speculative.”
Antibiotic use in pregnancy likely to continue
Patrick Duff, MD, who was not involved in the research, does not expect the findings will alter clinical practice.
The association was relatively weak, and the study does not account for factors such as antibiotic exposure during early childhood or tobacco smoke in the house, said Dr. Duff, professor of maternal-fetal medicine at University of Florida, Gainesville.
“Although I agree that we should not use antibiotics indiscriminately during pregnancy, we definitely need to treat certain infections,” Dr. Duff said. “Thus we cannot avoid some degree of antibiotic exposure.”
Although prior research has indicated that antibiotic use in pregnancy may increase the risk of asthma in children, results have been inconsistent.
To study whether antibiotic exposure during pregnancy is associated with childhood asthma and whether the timing of antibiotic exposure or mode of delivery influence the relationship, the investigators analyzed data from more than 32,000 children in the Danish National Birth Cohort, which was established in 1996.
Children of mothers who took and did not take antibiotics compared
In all, 17% of the children were born to mothers who used antibiotics during pregnancy. Compared with mothers who did not take antibiotics, those who did reported more maternal asthma, smoking during pregnancy, and having overweight or obesity. In addition, they were less likely to have been in their first pregnancy.
During follow-up at age 11 years, 4,238 children (13%) had asthma, including 12.7% of those whose mothers had not been exposed to antibiotics, and 14.6% of those whose mothers had used antibiotics during pregnancy.
In adjusted analyses, children born to mothers who received antibiotics were more likely to have asthma (OR, 1.14).
Antibiotic exposure in the second to third trimester, but not in the first trimester, was associated with asthma. The association was observed in vaginally born children, but not in children born by cesarean section.
The study is limited by its reliance on maternal reporting for data about antibiotics and asthma diagnoses, the authors noted. Mothers completed telephone interviews twice during pregnancy and once at 6 months postpartum. They completed online questionnaires to provide follow-up information at 11 years.
Mode of delivery may matter
The researchers said their analysis indicates that mode of delivery may modify the association between antibiotic exposure during pregnancy and childhood asthma.
Fourteen percent of the children in the study were delivered by cesarean section. Further research may clarify the relationship between antibiotics in pregnancy, mode of delivery, and asthma risk, another doctor who was not involved the study added.
“I do not think that the evidence indicates that mode of delivery clearly has an impact,” said Santina J. G. Wheat, MD, MPH, associate professor of family and community medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, “as the number of cesarean deliveries was not large enough to fully support such a statement.
“It will be interesting to see if an association holds in future studies with increased cesarean deliveries,” Dr. Wheat said.
How and why antibiotics were used may be other important factors to investigate, Dr. Duff suggested.
“The authors did not provide any specific information about which antibiotics were used by the mothers, duration of use, and indication for use. Those are very important confounders,” Dr. Duff said. “Perhaps the key exposure is to a particular maternal infection rather than to the antibiotic per se.”
The Danish National Birth Cohort was established with a grant from the Danish National Research Foundation and support from regional committees and other organizations. Its biobank has been supported by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and the Lundbeck Foundation, and follow-up of mothers and children has been supported by the Danish Medical Research Council, the Lundbeck Foundation, Innovation Fund Denmark, the Nordea Foundation, Aarhus Ideas, a University of Copenhagen strategic grant, and the Danish Council for Independent Research. The study was partially funded by the Health Research Fund of Central Denmark Region, which supported one of the authors. Other authors were supported by the DHB Foundation and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council. One author is affiliated with Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Australia, where the Victorian Government’s Operational Infrastructure Support Program supports research.
The authors had no competing interests. Dr. Wheat serves on the editorial advisory board of Family Practice News. Dr. Duff had no relevant financial disclosures.
FROM ARCHIVES OF DISEASE IN CHILDHOOD
Asthma-COPD overlap: Patients have high disease burden
Patients with asthma–chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap (ACO) experienced a higher burden of disease than patients with either asthma or COPD alone, a recent study has found.
Approximately 20% of chronic obstructive airway disease cases are ACO, but data on these patients are limited, as they are often excluded from clinical trials, wrote Sarah A. Hiles, MD, of the University of Newcastle (Australia) and colleagues.
“Comparing the burden of eosinophilic ACO, eosinophilic severe asthma, and eosinophilic COPD may also help contextualize findings from phenotype-targeted treatments in different diagnostic groups, such as the limited success of anti-IL [interleukin]–5 monoclonal antibodies as therapy in eosinophilic COPD,” they said.
In a cross-sectional, observational study published in Respirology the researchers recruited patients aged 18 years and older with a confirmed diagnosis of COPD only (153) severe asthma only (64), or ACO (106). Patients were assessed for demographic and clinical factors including health-related quality of life, past-year exacerbation, and other indicators of disease burden. In addition, patients were identified as having eosinophilic airway disease based on a blood eosinophil count of at least 0.3x109/L.
Overall, eosinophilic airway disease was present in 41% of the patients; 55%, 44%, and 29% for those with ACO, severe asthma, and COPD, respectively. Reports of poor health-related quality of life and past-year exacerbations were similar for eosinophilic patients across all three conditions.
However, patients with eosinophilic ACO experienced significantly more past-year exacerbations, notably those requiring oral corticosteroids, compared with patients with asthma alone. In addition, the cumulative number of past-year exacerbations in patient with eosinophilic disease was 164 in those with ACO, compared with severe asthma alone (44) and COPD alone (59).
Patients with ACO also had significantly higher disease burden based on the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), which assessed functional limitation. “For 100 patients, the cumulative SGRQ score attributable to eosinophilic airways disease in ACO was 2,872.8, which was higher than in severe asthma (1,942.5) or COPD (1,638.1),” the researchers said.
The study was limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design and use of a single measurement to classify eosinophilia, the researchers noted. “The non-eosinophilic group likely included a mix of patients with treated eosinophilia and patients without eosinophilia, regardless of treatment, which is a limitation to consider when interpreting the disease burden estimates in this group,” they added.
However, the results add to the understanding of blood eosinophils in airway disease and the study “supports eosinophilia as a phenotype that spans across disease labels of severe asthma and COPD, and their overlap,” they concluded.
The study was supported by AstraZeneca; lead author Dr. Hiles received a salary through a grant from AstraZeneca to the University of Newcastle while conducting the study. Other coauthors disclosed relationships with companies including AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Menarini, and Novartis.
Patients with asthma–chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap (ACO) experienced a higher burden of disease than patients with either asthma or COPD alone, a recent study has found.
Approximately 20% of chronic obstructive airway disease cases are ACO, but data on these patients are limited, as they are often excluded from clinical trials, wrote Sarah A. Hiles, MD, of the University of Newcastle (Australia) and colleagues.
“Comparing the burden of eosinophilic ACO, eosinophilic severe asthma, and eosinophilic COPD may also help contextualize findings from phenotype-targeted treatments in different diagnostic groups, such as the limited success of anti-IL [interleukin]–5 monoclonal antibodies as therapy in eosinophilic COPD,” they said.
In a cross-sectional, observational study published in Respirology the researchers recruited patients aged 18 years and older with a confirmed diagnosis of COPD only (153) severe asthma only (64), or ACO (106). Patients were assessed for demographic and clinical factors including health-related quality of life, past-year exacerbation, and other indicators of disease burden. In addition, patients were identified as having eosinophilic airway disease based on a blood eosinophil count of at least 0.3x109/L.
Overall, eosinophilic airway disease was present in 41% of the patients; 55%, 44%, and 29% for those with ACO, severe asthma, and COPD, respectively. Reports of poor health-related quality of life and past-year exacerbations were similar for eosinophilic patients across all three conditions.
However, patients with eosinophilic ACO experienced significantly more past-year exacerbations, notably those requiring oral corticosteroids, compared with patients with asthma alone. In addition, the cumulative number of past-year exacerbations in patient with eosinophilic disease was 164 in those with ACO, compared with severe asthma alone (44) and COPD alone (59).
Patients with ACO also had significantly higher disease burden based on the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), which assessed functional limitation. “For 100 patients, the cumulative SGRQ score attributable to eosinophilic airways disease in ACO was 2,872.8, which was higher than in severe asthma (1,942.5) or COPD (1,638.1),” the researchers said.
The study was limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design and use of a single measurement to classify eosinophilia, the researchers noted. “The non-eosinophilic group likely included a mix of patients with treated eosinophilia and patients without eosinophilia, regardless of treatment, which is a limitation to consider when interpreting the disease burden estimates in this group,” they added.
However, the results add to the understanding of blood eosinophils in airway disease and the study “supports eosinophilia as a phenotype that spans across disease labels of severe asthma and COPD, and their overlap,” they concluded.
The study was supported by AstraZeneca; lead author Dr. Hiles received a salary through a grant from AstraZeneca to the University of Newcastle while conducting the study. Other coauthors disclosed relationships with companies including AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Menarini, and Novartis.
Patients with asthma–chronic obstructive pulmonary disease overlap (ACO) experienced a higher burden of disease than patients with either asthma or COPD alone, a recent study has found.
Approximately 20% of chronic obstructive airway disease cases are ACO, but data on these patients are limited, as they are often excluded from clinical trials, wrote Sarah A. Hiles, MD, of the University of Newcastle (Australia) and colleagues.
“Comparing the burden of eosinophilic ACO, eosinophilic severe asthma, and eosinophilic COPD may also help contextualize findings from phenotype-targeted treatments in different diagnostic groups, such as the limited success of anti-IL [interleukin]–5 monoclonal antibodies as therapy in eosinophilic COPD,” they said.
In a cross-sectional, observational study published in Respirology the researchers recruited patients aged 18 years and older with a confirmed diagnosis of COPD only (153) severe asthma only (64), or ACO (106). Patients were assessed for demographic and clinical factors including health-related quality of life, past-year exacerbation, and other indicators of disease burden. In addition, patients were identified as having eosinophilic airway disease based on a blood eosinophil count of at least 0.3x109/L.
Overall, eosinophilic airway disease was present in 41% of the patients; 55%, 44%, and 29% for those with ACO, severe asthma, and COPD, respectively. Reports of poor health-related quality of life and past-year exacerbations were similar for eosinophilic patients across all three conditions.
However, patients with eosinophilic ACO experienced significantly more past-year exacerbations, notably those requiring oral corticosteroids, compared with patients with asthma alone. In addition, the cumulative number of past-year exacerbations in patient with eosinophilic disease was 164 in those with ACO, compared with severe asthma alone (44) and COPD alone (59).
Patients with ACO also had significantly higher disease burden based on the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), which assessed functional limitation. “For 100 patients, the cumulative SGRQ score attributable to eosinophilic airways disease in ACO was 2,872.8, which was higher than in severe asthma (1,942.5) or COPD (1,638.1),” the researchers said.
The study was limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design and use of a single measurement to classify eosinophilia, the researchers noted. “The non-eosinophilic group likely included a mix of patients with treated eosinophilia and patients without eosinophilia, regardless of treatment, which is a limitation to consider when interpreting the disease burden estimates in this group,” they added.
However, the results add to the understanding of blood eosinophils in airway disease and the study “supports eosinophilia as a phenotype that spans across disease labels of severe asthma and COPD, and their overlap,” they concluded.
The study was supported by AstraZeneca; lead author Dr. Hiles received a salary through a grant from AstraZeneca to the University of Newcastle while conducting the study. Other coauthors disclosed relationships with companies including AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Menarini, and Novartis.
FROM RESPIROLOGY
Annual WCC visits significantly limit asthma worsening
There is a significant association between routine attendance at annual well-child care visits and a reduction in both total asthma exacerbations and severe exacerbations, Jason E. Lang, MD, MPH, of Duke University, Durham, N.C. reported in a study published in Pediatrics.
In a retrospective cohort study of 5,656 pediatric asthma patients under care at the Duke University Health System, Dr. Lang and colleagues sought to determine the effect yearly well-child care (WCC) visits have on the hazard rate of asthma exacerbations occurring during the following year. Patients included in the study were aged 5-17 years and had been receiving care between Jan. 1, 2014, and Dec. 31, 2019.
WCC visits demonstrate reduced exacerbations and hospitalizations
Nearly one-third of patients were found to have full WCC visit attendance, half were partially compliant, and 14% did not attend at all. A total of 2,974 asthma exacerbations were reported during the study period. Of those with a WCC visit during the previous year, exacerbations were reduced by 10% and asthma hospitalizations were lowered by 47%. Children with recent WCC visits were also more likely to be prescribed daily preventive medication and to experience an exacerbation in ambulatory care, which could play a crucial role in preventing further progression of the disease.
Of the WCC visits reported, 9.9% represented prescribing of new or changed asthma medication, 28.2% represented delivery of seasonal influenza vaccine, and 11% addressed assessment or management of asthma-related comorbidities. There was no observed difference in attendance between younger and older children.
Given that pediatric WCC visit attendance is “far from optimal,” with attendance improving from 46% in 1996-1998 to almost 60% in 2007-2008, “improving access to and attendance of WCC visits (especially from previously low-adhering families) may be an important public health intervention to reduce the problems of severe exacerbations and outcome disparities,” observed Dr. Lang and colleagues. The Abdus study also found that low WCC attendance appeared to be more common in those with lower income, lower parental education, and African American race.
Continuity of care providers across WCC visits plays a crucial role
Primary care pediatricians play a key role in successful management of chronic asthma, as evidenced in several studies showing the importance of continuity of care with the same provider for WCC. Such continuity encourages ongoing dialogue about asthma, and as the researchers speculated, may even reduce asthma hospitalization through better parental understanding of disease management, prevention, and management of comorbid conditions.
Although the study did not include measures of health literacy, the authors did conclude that pediatric asthma patients seen annually are more likely to be more knowledgeable about asthma and in a better position to recognize symptom exacerbation so they can seek timely care. In the past, lower health literacy has demonstrated both lower WCC visit attendance and increased emergency care visits and hospitalizations.
Because the study was conducted in a single university-based health system, the researchers were not able to capture fragmented care data. They also acknowledged the possible omission of confounding factors, especially those related to parental influence behaviors affecting daily disease management. One strength of the study was the ability researchers had to abstract granular data from their EHR system to document the time-varying effects that insurance status, obesity status, and WCC visits may have played. Given that they were able to assess effects according to sociodemographic factors, such as race and insurance status, the results should prove very helpful to other cities and health systems aiming to improve pediatric asthma control, observed Dr. Lang and colleagues.
Future studies should seek to further evaluate the role of WCC visits in promoting asthma control. Making WCC visits a renewed public health priority offers the possibility to limit severe asthma exacerbations, the researchers advised.
In a separate interview, Sydney Leibel, MD, MPH, a pediatric allergist/immunologist at Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego, noted: “The outcomes of this study shine a light on the importance of regular primary care pediatrician follow-up in decreasing asthma-related health care utilization. Childhood asthma is a dynamic condition and follow-up with the pediatrician allows for modification of the treatment plan and reinforcement of good inhaler technique. It also allows for patients to express their concerns and gives the opportunity for subspecialty referral, if symptoms remain uncontrolled.
“This article also highlights the health disparities that exist in pediatric asthma in the United States. In our experience, treating children from lower-socioeconomic communities with difficult-to-control and severe asthma, case management has been very important in making sure our patient population understands our instructions, pick up their medications, and make their scheduled follow-up appointments,” Dr. Leibel continued.
“Regardless of the patient’s background, efforts to improve attendance of WCC visits, where good asthma control can be promoted, would be in our patient’s best interest and could go a long way in preventing unnecessary asthma exacerbations that require an ED visit or hospitalization,” the specialist concluded.
The study was funded by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Duke Children’s Health & Discovery Initiative, and the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Lang and colleagues had no conflicts of interest and no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Leibel said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Lang JE et al. Pediatrics. 2020. doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-1023.
There is a significant association between routine attendance at annual well-child care visits and a reduction in both total asthma exacerbations and severe exacerbations, Jason E. Lang, MD, MPH, of Duke University, Durham, N.C. reported in a study published in Pediatrics.
In a retrospective cohort study of 5,656 pediatric asthma patients under care at the Duke University Health System, Dr. Lang and colleagues sought to determine the effect yearly well-child care (WCC) visits have on the hazard rate of asthma exacerbations occurring during the following year. Patients included in the study were aged 5-17 years and had been receiving care between Jan. 1, 2014, and Dec. 31, 2019.
WCC visits demonstrate reduced exacerbations and hospitalizations
Nearly one-third of patients were found to have full WCC visit attendance, half were partially compliant, and 14% did not attend at all. A total of 2,974 asthma exacerbations were reported during the study period. Of those with a WCC visit during the previous year, exacerbations were reduced by 10% and asthma hospitalizations were lowered by 47%. Children with recent WCC visits were also more likely to be prescribed daily preventive medication and to experience an exacerbation in ambulatory care, which could play a crucial role in preventing further progression of the disease.
Of the WCC visits reported, 9.9% represented prescribing of new or changed asthma medication, 28.2% represented delivery of seasonal influenza vaccine, and 11% addressed assessment or management of asthma-related comorbidities. There was no observed difference in attendance between younger and older children.
Given that pediatric WCC visit attendance is “far from optimal,” with attendance improving from 46% in 1996-1998 to almost 60% in 2007-2008, “improving access to and attendance of WCC visits (especially from previously low-adhering families) may be an important public health intervention to reduce the problems of severe exacerbations and outcome disparities,” observed Dr. Lang and colleagues. The Abdus study also found that low WCC attendance appeared to be more common in those with lower income, lower parental education, and African American race.
Continuity of care providers across WCC visits plays a crucial role
Primary care pediatricians play a key role in successful management of chronic asthma, as evidenced in several studies showing the importance of continuity of care with the same provider for WCC. Such continuity encourages ongoing dialogue about asthma, and as the researchers speculated, may even reduce asthma hospitalization through better parental understanding of disease management, prevention, and management of comorbid conditions.
Although the study did not include measures of health literacy, the authors did conclude that pediatric asthma patients seen annually are more likely to be more knowledgeable about asthma and in a better position to recognize symptom exacerbation so they can seek timely care. In the past, lower health literacy has demonstrated both lower WCC visit attendance and increased emergency care visits and hospitalizations.
Because the study was conducted in a single university-based health system, the researchers were not able to capture fragmented care data. They also acknowledged the possible omission of confounding factors, especially those related to parental influence behaviors affecting daily disease management. One strength of the study was the ability researchers had to abstract granular data from their EHR system to document the time-varying effects that insurance status, obesity status, and WCC visits may have played. Given that they were able to assess effects according to sociodemographic factors, such as race and insurance status, the results should prove very helpful to other cities and health systems aiming to improve pediatric asthma control, observed Dr. Lang and colleagues.
Future studies should seek to further evaluate the role of WCC visits in promoting asthma control. Making WCC visits a renewed public health priority offers the possibility to limit severe asthma exacerbations, the researchers advised.
In a separate interview, Sydney Leibel, MD, MPH, a pediatric allergist/immunologist at Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego, noted: “The outcomes of this study shine a light on the importance of regular primary care pediatrician follow-up in decreasing asthma-related health care utilization. Childhood asthma is a dynamic condition and follow-up with the pediatrician allows for modification of the treatment plan and reinforcement of good inhaler technique. It also allows for patients to express their concerns and gives the opportunity for subspecialty referral, if symptoms remain uncontrolled.
“This article also highlights the health disparities that exist in pediatric asthma in the United States. In our experience, treating children from lower-socioeconomic communities with difficult-to-control and severe asthma, case management has been very important in making sure our patient population understands our instructions, pick up their medications, and make their scheduled follow-up appointments,” Dr. Leibel continued.
“Regardless of the patient’s background, efforts to improve attendance of WCC visits, where good asthma control can be promoted, would be in our patient’s best interest and could go a long way in preventing unnecessary asthma exacerbations that require an ED visit or hospitalization,” the specialist concluded.
The study was funded by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Duke Children’s Health & Discovery Initiative, and the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Lang and colleagues had no conflicts of interest and no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Leibel said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Lang JE et al. Pediatrics. 2020. doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-1023.
There is a significant association between routine attendance at annual well-child care visits and a reduction in both total asthma exacerbations and severe exacerbations, Jason E. Lang, MD, MPH, of Duke University, Durham, N.C. reported in a study published in Pediatrics.
In a retrospective cohort study of 5,656 pediatric asthma patients under care at the Duke University Health System, Dr. Lang and colleagues sought to determine the effect yearly well-child care (WCC) visits have on the hazard rate of asthma exacerbations occurring during the following year. Patients included in the study were aged 5-17 years and had been receiving care between Jan. 1, 2014, and Dec. 31, 2019.
WCC visits demonstrate reduced exacerbations and hospitalizations
Nearly one-third of patients were found to have full WCC visit attendance, half were partially compliant, and 14% did not attend at all. A total of 2,974 asthma exacerbations were reported during the study period. Of those with a WCC visit during the previous year, exacerbations were reduced by 10% and asthma hospitalizations were lowered by 47%. Children with recent WCC visits were also more likely to be prescribed daily preventive medication and to experience an exacerbation in ambulatory care, which could play a crucial role in preventing further progression of the disease.
Of the WCC visits reported, 9.9% represented prescribing of new or changed asthma medication, 28.2% represented delivery of seasonal influenza vaccine, and 11% addressed assessment or management of asthma-related comorbidities. There was no observed difference in attendance between younger and older children.
Given that pediatric WCC visit attendance is “far from optimal,” with attendance improving from 46% in 1996-1998 to almost 60% in 2007-2008, “improving access to and attendance of WCC visits (especially from previously low-adhering families) may be an important public health intervention to reduce the problems of severe exacerbations and outcome disparities,” observed Dr. Lang and colleagues. The Abdus study also found that low WCC attendance appeared to be more common in those with lower income, lower parental education, and African American race.
Continuity of care providers across WCC visits plays a crucial role
Primary care pediatricians play a key role in successful management of chronic asthma, as evidenced in several studies showing the importance of continuity of care with the same provider for WCC. Such continuity encourages ongoing dialogue about asthma, and as the researchers speculated, may even reduce asthma hospitalization through better parental understanding of disease management, prevention, and management of comorbid conditions.
Although the study did not include measures of health literacy, the authors did conclude that pediatric asthma patients seen annually are more likely to be more knowledgeable about asthma and in a better position to recognize symptom exacerbation so they can seek timely care. In the past, lower health literacy has demonstrated both lower WCC visit attendance and increased emergency care visits and hospitalizations.
Because the study was conducted in a single university-based health system, the researchers were not able to capture fragmented care data. They also acknowledged the possible omission of confounding factors, especially those related to parental influence behaviors affecting daily disease management. One strength of the study was the ability researchers had to abstract granular data from their EHR system to document the time-varying effects that insurance status, obesity status, and WCC visits may have played. Given that they were able to assess effects according to sociodemographic factors, such as race and insurance status, the results should prove very helpful to other cities and health systems aiming to improve pediatric asthma control, observed Dr. Lang and colleagues.
Future studies should seek to further evaluate the role of WCC visits in promoting asthma control. Making WCC visits a renewed public health priority offers the possibility to limit severe asthma exacerbations, the researchers advised.
In a separate interview, Sydney Leibel, MD, MPH, a pediatric allergist/immunologist at Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego, noted: “The outcomes of this study shine a light on the importance of regular primary care pediatrician follow-up in decreasing asthma-related health care utilization. Childhood asthma is a dynamic condition and follow-up with the pediatrician allows for modification of the treatment plan and reinforcement of good inhaler technique. It also allows for patients to express their concerns and gives the opportunity for subspecialty referral, if symptoms remain uncontrolled.
“This article also highlights the health disparities that exist in pediatric asthma in the United States. In our experience, treating children from lower-socioeconomic communities with difficult-to-control and severe asthma, case management has been very important in making sure our patient population understands our instructions, pick up their medications, and make their scheduled follow-up appointments,” Dr. Leibel continued.
“Regardless of the patient’s background, efforts to improve attendance of WCC visits, where good asthma control can be promoted, would be in our patient’s best interest and could go a long way in preventing unnecessary asthma exacerbations that require an ED visit or hospitalization,” the specialist concluded.
The study was funded by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Duke Children’s Health & Discovery Initiative, and the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Lang and colleagues had no conflicts of interest and no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Leibel said he had no relevant financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Lang JE et al. Pediatrics. 2020. doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-1023.
FROM PEDIATRICS
Does daily inhaler monitoring improve asthma outcomes in children?
Among children with moderate or severe persistent asthma,
a randomized trial suggests.But the intervention also may lead to more ED visits and increased hospitalization rates.
“We improved asthma symptom control but did not reduce health care use,” Ruchi S. Gupta, MD, MPH, and colleagues, wrote in a study published in Pediatrics.
The monitoring system alerted clinicians when a patient used a short-acting beta-agonist more than four times in a day. It could be that the “alerts enabled providers to detect asthma exacerbation virtually and refer for clinically appropriate care that included directing children to the ED,” the authors suggested. It also is possible that the intervention led caregivers to be more vigilant about symptoms and more empowered to seek care.
Adherence to preventive regimens
Many patients with asthma need to use preventive medications such as daily inhaled corticosteroids to control symptoms. Researchers have developed sensor-based inhaler monitoring interventions to improve treatment adherence, but the effectiveness of these interventions in improving asthma outcomes in urban and minority populations is unclear.
To assess the effectiveness of a clinically integrated, sensor-based inhaler monitoring intervention on improving asthma symptom control and related outcomes in children, Dr. Gupta, of Northwestern University and Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, and colleagues conducted a randomized, unblinded study, known as the Improving Technology-Assisted Recording of Asthma Control in Children (iTRACC) trial. They included 252 children: 127 in the control group and 125 in the intervention group.
Patients in the intervention group received Propeller Health’s Food and Drug Administration–cleared inhaler sensors for inhaled corticosteroids and short-acting beta-agonists. Caregivers could use a mobile application and clinicians could use a Web portal to track patients’ medication use. The app featured personalized insights, educational content, encouragement, surveys, and care team services.
Researchers recruited caregivers and children from five Chicago clinics for the study, which was conducted between 2016 and 2018. They included children aged 4-17 years who had a prescription for daily inhaled corticosteroids for at least 1 year before enrollment. In addition, participants had at least 1 exacerbation requiring oral corticosteroids in the previous year. They excluded children with other respiratory conditions. They also excluded participants who did not speak English because the app was available only in English.
“Sensors monitored inhaled medication use, capturing the date, time, and number of uses, and transmitted this information via Bluetooth to a paired smartphone and the provider portal in real-time,” the authors said.
Clinicians were alerted to call participants if a patient missed inhaled corticosteroid doses for 4 continuous days or used more than 4 short-acting beta-agonist doses per day. Clinicians could help guide asthma management, schedule an appointment, refill medications, and address technical difficulties with the sensors.
The intervention and control groups had similar baseline characteristics. About one-third of the patients were female, and the mean age was 9.3 years. In the control group, 28% identified as Hispanic, and 33% identified as non-Hispanic Black. In the intervention group, 40% identified as Hispanic, and 23% identified as non-Hispanic Black. About 59% reported Medicaid insurance. The intervention and control arms completed electronic surveys at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months.
Average Asthma Control Test score increased from 19 to 22 in the intervention group, compared with an increase from 19 to 20 in the control group. Adjusted rates of emergency department visits and hospitalizations were greater in the intervention group (incidence rate ratios, 2.2 and 3.4, respectively). A measure of caregiver quality of life was greater in the intervention group, although the difference was not significant.
During the trial, more caregivers in the intervention group reported asthma attacks for which steroids were prescribed by a medical office (73% vs. 35%).
Some participants had to manually enter the number of daily puffs into the app because their inhalers were incompatible with the sensors. In addition, some data were missing because of incomplete or missing survey responses and sensor failure over time. “The number of intervention participants with actively transmitting sensors decreased from 102 at baseline to 56 at 12 months,” Dr. Gupta and associates noted.
Important area of research
“One interesting finding of this study is the increase in health care use in the intervention group to nearly twice as many emergency department (ED) visits and three times as many hospitalizations as the control group over 12 months,” Rachelle R. Ramsey, PhD, and Theresa W. Guilbert, MD, MS, of the University of Cincinnati, wrote in a related commentary. “Although it is plausible that, as the authors suggest, greater asthma knowledge and monitoring may have led to increased vigilance of asthma symptoms, it seems that this would have only led to an increase in ED visits but not hospitalizations.”
The mixture of objective electronic monitoring and subjective self-reported adherence may complicate interpretation of the results, they added.
“Overall, this article underscores the feasibility and importance of sensor-based electronic monitoring of adherence in pediatric asthma and encourages future research in this area,” Dr. Ramsey and Dr. Guilbert said.
The trial was supported by the UnitedHealth Group. Dr. Gupta has received grants from the National Institutes of Health, Rho, and other organizations, and has served as a medical consultant and adviser for a variety of companies. Dr. Ramsey is supported by the NIH. Dr. Guilbert reported fees from the American Board of Pediatrics, the Pediatric Pulmonary Subboard, and some pharmaceutical companies, plus grants from the NIH, grants and personal fees from Sanofi, Regeneron, and AstraZeneca, and royalties from UpToDate.
SOURCE: Gupta RS et al. Pediatrics. 2020 Dec 22. doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-1330.
Among children with moderate or severe persistent asthma,
a randomized trial suggests.But the intervention also may lead to more ED visits and increased hospitalization rates.
“We improved asthma symptom control but did not reduce health care use,” Ruchi S. Gupta, MD, MPH, and colleagues, wrote in a study published in Pediatrics.
The monitoring system alerted clinicians when a patient used a short-acting beta-agonist more than four times in a day. It could be that the “alerts enabled providers to detect asthma exacerbation virtually and refer for clinically appropriate care that included directing children to the ED,” the authors suggested. It also is possible that the intervention led caregivers to be more vigilant about symptoms and more empowered to seek care.
Adherence to preventive regimens
Many patients with asthma need to use preventive medications such as daily inhaled corticosteroids to control symptoms. Researchers have developed sensor-based inhaler monitoring interventions to improve treatment adherence, but the effectiveness of these interventions in improving asthma outcomes in urban and minority populations is unclear.
To assess the effectiveness of a clinically integrated, sensor-based inhaler monitoring intervention on improving asthma symptom control and related outcomes in children, Dr. Gupta, of Northwestern University and Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, and colleagues conducted a randomized, unblinded study, known as the Improving Technology-Assisted Recording of Asthma Control in Children (iTRACC) trial. They included 252 children: 127 in the control group and 125 in the intervention group.
Patients in the intervention group received Propeller Health’s Food and Drug Administration–cleared inhaler sensors for inhaled corticosteroids and short-acting beta-agonists. Caregivers could use a mobile application and clinicians could use a Web portal to track patients’ medication use. The app featured personalized insights, educational content, encouragement, surveys, and care team services.
Researchers recruited caregivers and children from five Chicago clinics for the study, which was conducted between 2016 and 2018. They included children aged 4-17 years who had a prescription for daily inhaled corticosteroids for at least 1 year before enrollment. In addition, participants had at least 1 exacerbation requiring oral corticosteroids in the previous year. They excluded children with other respiratory conditions. They also excluded participants who did not speak English because the app was available only in English.
“Sensors monitored inhaled medication use, capturing the date, time, and number of uses, and transmitted this information via Bluetooth to a paired smartphone and the provider portal in real-time,” the authors said.
Clinicians were alerted to call participants if a patient missed inhaled corticosteroid doses for 4 continuous days or used more than 4 short-acting beta-agonist doses per day. Clinicians could help guide asthma management, schedule an appointment, refill medications, and address technical difficulties with the sensors.
The intervention and control groups had similar baseline characteristics. About one-third of the patients were female, and the mean age was 9.3 years. In the control group, 28% identified as Hispanic, and 33% identified as non-Hispanic Black. In the intervention group, 40% identified as Hispanic, and 23% identified as non-Hispanic Black. About 59% reported Medicaid insurance. The intervention and control arms completed electronic surveys at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months.
Average Asthma Control Test score increased from 19 to 22 in the intervention group, compared with an increase from 19 to 20 in the control group. Adjusted rates of emergency department visits and hospitalizations were greater in the intervention group (incidence rate ratios, 2.2 and 3.4, respectively). A measure of caregiver quality of life was greater in the intervention group, although the difference was not significant.
During the trial, more caregivers in the intervention group reported asthma attacks for which steroids were prescribed by a medical office (73% vs. 35%).
Some participants had to manually enter the number of daily puffs into the app because their inhalers were incompatible with the sensors. In addition, some data were missing because of incomplete or missing survey responses and sensor failure over time. “The number of intervention participants with actively transmitting sensors decreased from 102 at baseline to 56 at 12 months,” Dr. Gupta and associates noted.
Important area of research
“One interesting finding of this study is the increase in health care use in the intervention group to nearly twice as many emergency department (ED) visits and three times as many hospitalizations as the control group over 12 months,” Rachelle R. Ramsey, PhD, and Theresa W. Guilbert, MD, MS, of the University of Cincinnati, wrote in a related commentary. “Although it is plausible that, as the authors suggest, greater asthma knowledge and monitoring may have led to increased vigilance of asthma symptoms, it seems that this would have only led to an increase in ED visits but not hospitalizations.”
The mixture of objective electronic monitoring and subjective self-reported adherence may complicate interpretation of the results, they added.
“Overall, this article underscores the feasibility and importance of sensor-based electronic monitoring of adherence in pediatric asthma and encourages future research in this area,” Dr. Ramsey and Dr. Guilbert said.
The trial was supported by the UnitedHealth Group. Dr. Gupta has received grants from the National Institutes of Health, Rho, and other organizations, and has served as a medical consultant and adviser for a variety of companies. Dr. Ramsey is supported by the NIH. Dr. Guilbert reported fees from the American Board of Pediatrics, the Pediatric Pulmonary Subboard, and some pharmaceutical companies, plus grants from the NIH, grants and personal fees from Sanofi, Regeneron, and AstraZeneca, and royalties from UpToDate.
SOURCE: Gupta RS et al. Pediatrics. 2020 Dec 22. doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-1330.
Among children with moderate or severe persistent asthma,
a randomized trial suggests.But the intervention also may lead to more ED visits and increased hospitalization rates.
“We improved asthma symptom control but did not reduce health care use,” Ruchi S. Gupta, MD, MPH, and colleagues, wrote in a study published in Pediatrics.
The monitoring system alerted clinicians when a patient used a short-acting beta-agonist more than four times in a day. It could be that the “alerts enabled providers to detect asthma exacerbation virtually and refer for clinically appropriate care that included directing children to the ED,” the authors suggested. It also is possible that the intervention led caregivers to be more vigilant about symptoms and more empowered to seek care.
Adherence to preventive regimens
Many patients with asthma need to use preventive medications such as daily inhaled corticosteroids to control symptoms. Researchers have developed sensor-based inhaler monitoring interventions to improve treatment adherence, but the effectiveness of these interventions in improving asthma outcomes in urban and minority populations is unclear.
To assess the effectiveness of a clinically integrated, sensor-based inhaler monitoring intervention on improving asthma symptom control and related outcomes in children, Dr. Gupta, of Northwestern University and Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, and colleagues conducted a randomized, unblinded study, known as the Improving Technology-Assisted Recording of Asthma Control in Children (iTRACC) trial. They included 252 children: 127 in the control group and 125 in the intervention group.
Patients in the intervention group received Propeller Health’s Food and Drug Administration–cleared inhaler sensors for inhaled corticosteroids and short-acting beta-agonists. Caregivers could use a mobile application and clinicians could use a Web portal to track patients’ medication use. The app featured personalized insights, educational content, encouragement, surveys, and care team services.
Researchers recruited caregivers and children from five Chicago clinics for the study, which was conducted between 2016 and 2018. They included children aged 4-17 years who had a prescription for daily inhaled corticosteroids for at least 1 year before enrollment. In addition, participants had at least 1 exacerbation requiring oral corticosteroids in the previous year. They excluded children with other respiratory conditions. They also excluded participants who did not speak English because the app was available only in English.
“Sensors monitored inhaled medication use, capturing the date, time, and number of uses, and transmitted this information via Bluetooth to a paired smartphone and the provider portal in real-time,” the authors said.
Clinicians were alerted to call participants if a patient missed inhaled corticosteroid doses for 4 continuous days or used more than 4 short-acting beta-agonist doses per day. Clinicians could help guide asthma management, schedule an appointment, refill medications, and address technical difficulties with the sensors.
The intervention and control groups had similar baseline characteristics. About one-third of the patients were female, and the mean age was 9.3 years. In the control group, 28% identified as Hispanic, and 33% identified as non-Hispanic Black. In the intervention group, 40% identified as Hispanic, and 23% identified as non-Hispanic Black. About 59% reported Medicaid insurance. The intervention and control arms completed electronic surveys at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months.
Average Asthma Control Test score increased from 19 to 22 in the intervention group, compared with an increase from 19 to 20 in the control group. Adjusted rates of emergency department visits and hospitalizations were greater in the intervention group (incidence rate ratios, 2.2 and 3.4, respectively). A measure of caregiver quality of life was greater in the intervention group, although the difference was not significant.
During the trial, more caregivers in the intervention group reported asthma attacks for which steroids were prescribed by a medical office (73% vs. 35%).
Some participants had to manually enter the number of daily puffs into the app because their inhalers were incompatible with the sensors. In addition, some data were missing because of incomplete or missing survey responses and sensor failure over time. “The number of intervention participants with actively transmitting sensors decreased from 102 at baseline to 56 at 12 months,” Dr. Gupta and associates noted.
Important area of research
“One interesting finding of this study is the increase in health care use in the intervention group to nearly twice as many emergency department (ED) visits and three times as many hospitalizations as the control group over 12 months,” Rachelle R. Ramsey, PhD, and Theresa W. Guilbert, MD, MS, of the University of Cincinnati, wrote in a related commentary. “Although it is plausible that, as the authors suggest, greater asthma knowledge and monitoring may have led to increased vigilance of asthma symptoms, it seems that this would have only led to an increase in ED visits but not hospitalizations.”
The mixture of objective electronic monitoring and subjective self-reported adherence may complicate interpretation of the results, they added.
“Overall, this article underscores the feasibility and importance of sensor-based electronic monitoring of adherence in pediatric asthma and encourages future research in this area,” Dr. Ramsey and Dr. Guilbert said.
The trial was supported by the UnitedHealth Group. Dr. Gupta has received grants from the National Institutes of Health, Rho, and other organizations, and has served as a medical consultant and adviser for a variety of companies. Dr. Ramsey is supported by the NIH. Dr. Guilbert reported fees from the American Board of Pediatrics, the Pediatric Pulmonary Subboard, and some pharmaceutical companies, plus grants from the NIH, grants and personal fees from Sanofi, Regeneron, and AstraZeneca, and royalties from UpToDate.
SOURCE: Gupta RS et al. Pediatrics. 2020 Dec 22. doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-1330.
FROM PEDIATRICS
E-cigarette use tied to increased COPD, asthma risk
Results from a large national prospective cohort study of adults demonstrated that the use of electronic cigarettes is associated with an increased risk of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), emphysema, and chronic bronchitis – independent of cigarette smoking and other combustible tobacco product use.
“Our longitudinal results are consistent with the findings of prior population studies,” researchers led by Wubin Xie, DrPH, MPH, wrote in a study published online in JAMA Network Open. “With a more refined study design assessing multiple respiratory conditions and extensive sensitivity checks to mitigate bias from reverse causation and residual confounding by cigarette smoking and other tobacco product use, our results strengthen the evidence of the potential role of e-cigarette use in pulmonary disease pathogenesis. The findings may be used to inform counseling of patients on the potential risks of e-cigarette use.”
Dr. Xie of Boston University, and colleagues used data from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) study waves 1-4 to examine the association of e-cigarette use with incident respiratory conditions, including COPD, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and asthma. An earlier analysis of PATH data found an association between e-cigarette use with a composite respiratory disease outcome, but it did not consider the timing of respiratory events over follow-up and was underpowered to evaluate specific respiratory conditions.
The current analysis included data from 21,618 U.S. adults who were surveyed in four waves of PATH between 2013 and 2018. Of these, 49% were men, 65% were non-Hispanic White, 12% were non-Hispanic Black, 16% were Hispanic, and the remainder were non-Hispanic other. Their mean pack-years was 6.7 at baseline, 26% had self-reported hypertension, and their mean body mass index was 27.8 kg/m2. The analysis was limited to data from the wave 1 cohort of adults and the prospective follow-up at waves 2-4 from public use files. It excluded adults who reported a history of a respiratory condition such as COPD, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, or asthma at wave 1 (baseline).
Two-thirds of respondents (66%) were never e-cigarette users, 12% were former e-cigarette users, and 5% were current e-cigarette users. After the researchers adjusted for cigarette and other combustible tobacco product use, demographic characteristics, and chronic health conditions, they observed an increased risk of respiratory disease among former e-cigarette users (incidence rate ratio, 1.28) and current e-cigarette users (IRR, 1.31). Among respondents with good self-reported health, the IRR for former e-cigarette users was 1.21 and the IRR for current e-cigarette users was 1.43. As for specific respiratory diseases among current e-cigarette users, the IRR was 1.33 for chronic bronchitis, 1.69 for emphysema, 1.57 for COPD, and 1.31 for asthma.
“Our findings on clinical outcome were consistent with studies assessing in vivo biomarkers of e-cigarette exposure in animal subjects, human participants, and population studies,” the authors wrote. “Studies have documented that exclusive e-cigarette use may be associated with higher exposure to harmful and potentially harmful constituents, compared with tobacco nonuse. The potential mechanisms of the association of e-cigarette exposure with pulmonary diseases include pulmonary inflammation, increased oxidative stress, and inhibited immune response. Animal studies have generated substantial evidence on e-cigarette exposure and emphysematous lung destruction, loss of pulmonary capillaries, reduced small airway function, and airway hyperresponsiveness, suggesting the plausibility of e-cigarettes causing chronic lung diseases.”
They acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its reliance on self-reported measures of e-cigarette and other tobacco product use and its reliance on self-reported diagnoses of respiratory diseases.
The study was supported by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; the Food and Drug Administration Center for Tobacco Products; and the American Lung Association Public Policy Research Award. Dr. Xie reported having no financial disclosures. His coauthors reported having received research grants and personal fees from a variety of sources.
SOURCE: Xie W et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Nov 12. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.20816
Results from a large national prospective cohort study of adults demonstrated that the use of electronic cigarettes is associated with an increased risk of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), emphysema, and chronic bronchitis – independent of cigarette smoking and other combustible tobacco product use.
“Our longitudinal results are consistent with the findings of prior population studies,” researchers led by Wubin Xie, DrPH, MPH, wrote in a study published online in JAMA Network Open. “With a more refined study design assessing multiple respiratory conditions and extensive sensitivity checks to mitigate bias from reverse causation and residual confounding by cigarette smoking and other tobacco product use, our results strengthen the evidence of the potential role of e-cigarette use in pulmonary disease pathogenesis. The findings may be used to inform counseling of patients on the potential risks of e-cigarette use.”
Dr. Xie of Boston University, and colleagues used data from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) study waves 1-4 to examine the association of e-cigarette use with incident respiratory conditions, including COPD, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and asthma. An earlier analysis of PATH data found an association between e-cigarette use with a composite respiratory disease outcome, but it did not consider the timing of respiratory events over follow-up and was underpowered to evaluate specific respiratory conditions.
The current analysis included data from 21,618 U.S. adults who were surveyed in four waves of PATH between 2013 and 2018. Of these, 49% were men, 65% were non-Hispanic White, 12% were non-Hispanic Black, 16% were Hispanic, and the remainder were non-Hispanic other. Their mean pack-years was 6.7 at baseline, 26% had self-reported hypertension, and their mean body mass index was 27.8 kg/m2. The analysis was limited to data from the wave 1 cohort of adults and the prospective follow-up at waves 2-4 from public use files. It excluded adults who reported a history of a respiratory condition such as COPD, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, or asthma at wave 1 (baseline).
Two-thirds of respondents (66%) were never e-cigarette users, 12% were former e-cigarette users, and 5% were current e-cigarette users. After the researchers adjusted for cigarette and other combustible tobacco product use, demographic characteristics, and chronic health conditions, they observed an increased risk of respiratory disease among former e-cigarette users (incidence rate ratio, 1.28) and current e-cigarette users (IRR, 1.31). Among respondents with good self-reported health, the IRR for former e-cigarette users was 1.21 and the IRR for current e-cigarette users was 1.43. As for specific respiratory diseases among current e-cigarette users, the IRR was 1.33 for chronic bronchitis, 1.69 for emphysema, 1.57 for COPD, and 1.31 for asthma.
“Our findings on clinical outcome were consistent with studies assessing in vivo biomarkers of e-cigarette exposure in animal subjects, human participants, and population studies,” the authors wrote. “Studies have documented that exclusive e-cigarette use may be associated with higher exposure to harmful and potentially harmful constituents, compared with tobacco nonuse. The potential mechanisms of the association of e-cigarette exposure with pulmonary diseases include pulmonary inflammation, increased oxidative stress, and inhibited immune response. Animal studies have generated substantial evidence on e-cigarette exposure and emphysematous lung destruction, loss of pulmonary capillaries, reduced small airway function, and airway hyperresponsiveness, suggesting the plausibility of e-cigarettes causing chronic lung diseases.”
They acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its reliance on self-reported measures of e-cigarette and other tobacco product use and its reliance on self-reported diagnoses of respiratory diseases.
The study was supported by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; the Food and Drug Administration Center for Tobacco Products; and the American Lung Association Public Policy Research Award. Dr. Xie reported having no financial disclosures. His coauthors reported having received research grants and personal fees from a variety of sources.
SOURCE: Xie W et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Nov 12. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.20816
Results from a large national prospective cohort study of adults demonstrated that the use of electronic cigarettes is associated with an increased risk of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), emphysema, and chronic bronchitis – independent of cigarette smoking and other combustible tobacco product use.
“Our longitudinal results are consistent with the findings of prior population studies,” researchers led by Wubin Xie, DrPH, MPH, wrote in a study published online in JAMA Network Open. “With a more refined study design assessing multiple respiratory conditions and extensive sensitivity checks to mitigate bias from reverse causation and residual confounding by cigarette smoking and other tobacco product use, our results strengthen the evidence of the potential role of e-cigarette use in pulmonary disease pathogenesis. The findings may be used to inform counseling of patients on the potential risks of e-cigarette use.”
Dr. Xie of Boston University, and colleagues used data from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) study waves 1-4 to examine the association of e-cigarette use with incident respiratory conditions, including COPD, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and asthma. An earlier analysis of PATH data found an association between e-cigarette use with a composite respiratory disease outcome, but it did not consider the timing of respiratory events over follow-up and was underpowered to evaluate specific respiratory conditions.
The current analysis included data from 21,618 U.S. adults who were surveyed in four waves of PATH between 2013 and 2018. Of these, 49% were men, 65% were non-Hispanic White, 12% were non-Hispanic Black, 16% were Hispanic, and the remainder were non-Hispanic other. Their mean pack-years was 6.7 at baseline, 26% had self-reported hypertension, and their mean body mass index was 27.8 kg/m2. The analysis was limited to data from the wave 1 cohort of adults and the prospective follow-up at waves 2-4 from public use files. It excluded adults who reported a history of a respiratory condition such as COPD, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, or asthma at wave 1 (baseline).
Two-thirds of respondents (66%) were never e-cigarette users, 12% were former e-cigarette users, and 5% were current e-cigarette users. After the researchers adjusted for cigarette and other combustible tobacco product use, demographic characteristics, and chronic health conditions, they observed an increased risk of respiratory disease among former e-cigarette users (incidence rate ratio, 1.28) and current e-cigarette users (IRR, 1.31). Among respondents with good self-reported health, the IRR for former e-cigarette users was 1.21 and the IRR for current e-cigarette users was 1.43. As for specific respiratory diseases among current e-cigarette users, the IRR was 1.33 for chronic bronchitis, 1.69 for emphysema, 1.57 for COPD, and 1.31 for asthma.
“Our findings on clinical outcome were consistent with studies assessing in vivo biomarkers of e-cigarette exposure in animal subjects, human participants, and population studies,” the authors wrote. “Studies have documented that exclusive e-cigarette use may be associated with higher exposure to harmful and potentially harmful constituents, compared with tobacco nonuse. The potential mechanisms of the association of e-cigarette exposure with pulmonary diseases include pulmonary inflammation, increased oxidative stress, and inhibited immune response. Animal studies have generated substantial evidence on e-cigarette exposure and emphysematous lung destruction, loss of pulmonary capillaries, reduced small airway function, and airway hyperresponsiveness, suggesting the plausibility of e-cigarettes causing chronic lung diseases.”
They acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its reliance on self-reported measures of e-cigarette and other tobacco product use and its reliance on self-reported diagnoses of respiratory diseases.
The study was supported by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; the Food and Drug Administration Center for Tobacco Products; and the American Lung Association Public Policy Research Award. Dr. Xie reported having no financial disclosures. His coauthors reported having received research grants and personal fees from a variety of sources.
SOURCE: Xie W et al. JAMA Netw Open. 2020 Nov 12. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.20816
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN