Could Regular, Daytime Naps Increase Glucose Levels?

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Thu, 03/28/2024 - 13:11

 

TOPLINE:

Long naps of an hour or more, naps in the morning, or regular siestas may increase blood glucose levels in older people with type 2 diabetes (T2D).

METHODOLOGY:

  • Napping is common in China and other cultures and may play a role in cardiometabolic health, but previous studies on the relationship between napping and glycemic control in T2D have reported conflicting results.
  • In a cross-sectional study, the researchers assessed 226 individuals with T2D (median age, 67 years; about half women; mostly retired) from two community healthcare centers in China between May 2023 and July 2023.
  • Using questionnaires, the participants were evaluated for A1c levels, as well as frequency, duration (shorter or longer than 1 hour), timing, and type of napping behavior (restorative for lack of sleep vs appetitive by habit or for enjoyment).
  • Multivariate analysis controlled for age, sex, body mass index, T2D treatment regimen, diabetes duration, cognitive impairment, depression, night sleep duration, and insomnia symptoms.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among 180 participants who reported napping, 61 (33.9%) took long naps of 60 minutes and more, 162 (90%) reported afternoon napping, and 131 (72.8%) displayed appetitive napping.
  • Restorative napping was linked to lower A1c levels than appetitive napping (β, −0.176; P = 0.028).
  • Napping frequency was not associated with A1c levels.

IN PRACTICE:

“In clinical practice, healthcare professionals may offer tips about napping, eg, taking a nap less than an hour, taking a nap in the afternoon instead of in the morning, avoiding appetitive napping,” the authors concluded.

SOURCE:

The study, from corresponding author Bingqian Zhu, PhD, of the Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Nursing, Shanghai, was published in Frontiers in Endocrinology.

LIMITATIONS:

The participants were older individuals, mostly retired, who may have had less need for restorative napping and more time for appetitive napping, limiting generalizability. The sample size may have been too small to find a link to napping frequency. Self-reported data could introduce recall bias. Only A1c levels were used as a measure of glycemic control.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and other sources. The authors declared no potential conflict of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Long naps of an hour or more, naps in the morning, or regular siestas may increase blood glucose levels in older people with type 2 diabetes (T2D).

METHODOLOGY:

  • Napping is common in China and other cultures and may play a role in cardiometabolic health, but previous studies on the relationship between napping and glycemic control in T2D have reported conflicting results.
  • In a cross-sectional study, the researchers assessed 226 individuals with T2D (median age, 67 years; about half women; mostly retired) from two community healthcare centers in China between May 2023 and July 2023.
  • Using questionnaires, the participants were evaluated for A1c levels, as well as frequency, duration (shorter or longer than 1 hour), timing, and type of napping behavior (restorative for lack of sleep vs appetitive by habit or for enjoyment).
  • Multivariate analysis controlled for age, sex, body mass index, T2D treatment regimen, diabetes duration, cognitive impairment, depression, night sleep duration, and insomnia symptoms.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among 180 participants who reported napping, 61 (33.9%) took long naps of 60 minutes and more, 162 (90%) reported afternoon napping, and 131 (72.8%) displayed appetitive napping.
  • Restorative napping was linked to lower A1c levels than appetitive napping (β, −0.176; P = 0.028).
  • Napping frequency was not associated with A1c levels.

IN PRACTICE:

“In clinical practice, healthcare professionals may offer tips about napping, eg, taking a nap less than an hour, taking a nap in the afternoon instead of in the morning, avoiding appetitive napping,” the authors concluded.

SOURCE:

The study, from corresponding author Bingqian Zhu, PhD, of the Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Nursing, Shanghai, was published in Frontiers in Endocrinology.

LIMITATIONS:

The participants were older individuals, mostly retired, who may have had less need for restorative napping and more time for appetitive napping, limiting generalizability. The sample size may have been too small to find a link to napping frequency. Self-reported data could introduce recall bias. Only A1c levels were used as a measure of glycemic control.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and other sources. The authors declared no potential conflict of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Long naps of an hour or more, naps in the morning, or regular siestas may increase blood glucose levels in older people with type 2 diabetes (T2D).

METHODOLOGY:

  • Napping is common in China and other cultures and may play a role in cardiometabolic health, but previous studies on the relationship between napping and glycemic control in T2D have reported conflicting results.
  • In a cross-sectional study, the researchers assessed 226 individuals with T2D (median age, 67 years; about half women; mostly retired) from two community healthcare centers in China between May 2023 and July 2023.
  • Using questionnaires, the participants were evaluated for A1c levels, as well as frequency, duration (shorter or longer than 1 hour), timing, and type of napping behavior (restorative for lack of sleep vs appetitive by habit or for enjoyment).
  • Multivariate analysis controlled for age, sex, body mass index, T2D treatment regimen, diabetes duration, cognitive impairment, depression, night sleep duration, and insomnia symptoms.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among 180 participants who reported napping, 61 (33.9%) took long naps of 60 minutes and more, 162 (90%) reported afternoon napping, and 131 (72.8%) displayed appetitive napping.
  • Restorative napping was linked to lower A1c levels than appetitive napping (β, −0.176; P = 0.028).
  • Napping frequency was not associated with A1c levels.

IN PRACTICE:

“In clinical practice, healthcare professionals may offer tips about napping, eg, taking a nap less than an hour, taking a nap in the afternoon instead of in the morning, avoiding appetitive napping,” the authors concluded.

SOURCE:

The study, from corresponding author Bingqian Zhu, PhD, of the Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Nursing, Shanghai, was published in Frontiers in Endocrinology.

LIMITATIONS:

The participants were older individuals, mostly retired, who may have had less need for restorative napping and more time for appetitive napping, limiting generalizability. The sample size may have been too small to find a link to napping frequency. Self-reported data could introduce recall bias. Only A1c levels were used as a measure of glycemic control.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and other sources. The authors declared no potential conflict of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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FDA OKs First-in-Class Agent for Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Article Type
Changed
Sun, 03/31/2024 - 22:50

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved sotatercept (Winrevair, Merck), for the treatment of adults with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), World Health Organization (WHO) Group 1, to increase exercise capacity, improve WHO functional class, and reduce the risk for clinical worsening events.

Sotatercept, which had breakthrough therapy designation, is a first-in-class activin signaling inhibitor that works by improving the balance between pro- and antiproliferative signaling to regulate the vascular cell proliferation that underlies PAH.

“Sotatercept added to background therapy has the potential to become a new standard-of-care option for patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension,” added coinvestigator Aaron B. Waxman, MD, PhD, executive director of the Center for Pulmonary Heart Diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

The approval was based on results of the phase 3 STELLAR study, a global, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter, parallel-group clinical trial in which, 323 patients with PAH (WHO Group 1, functional class II or III) were randomly assigned 1:1 to add sotatercept or placebo to stable background therapy.

The results showed that sotatercept, administered subcutaneously every 3 weeks for 24 weeks, improved average 6-minute walk distance from baseline by a significant and clinically meaningful 40.8 meters compared with placebo for the trial’s primary efficacy endpoint (P < .001).

Sotatercept also led to significant improvement in multiple secondary outcome measures, including:

  • Reduction in the risk for death from any cause or PAH clinical worsening events by 84% vs background therapy alone (number of events: 9 vs 42; hazard ratio [HR], 0.16; P < .001) 
  • Improvement in FC from baseline at 24 weeks in 29% of patients compared with 14% of patients treated with placebo (P < .001) 
  • Improvement in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR), with an average 235 dyn/sec/cm5 reduction in PVR from baseline (P < .001) 
  • Improvement from baseline in N-terminal pro–B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels. The median treatment difference in NT-proBNP between sotatercept and placebo was -442 pg/mL (P < .001) 

The results were reported last year at the joint scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology and the World Heart Federation, with simultaneous publication in The New England Journal of Medicine

Sotatercept injection may be administered by patients or caregivers with guidance, training, and follow-up from a healthcare provider. The recommended starting dose is 0.3 mg/kg. The recommended target dose is 0.7 mg/kg every 3 weeks.

Sotatercept may increase hemoglobin, may lead to erythrocytosis, and may decrease platelet count and lead to severe thrombocytopenia. Treatment should not be initiated if platelet count is < 50,000/mm3

Hemoglobin and platelets should be monitored before each dose of sotatercept for the first five doses, or longer if values are unstable, and periodically thereafter to determine if dose adjustments are required. 

Full prescribing information is available online

Merck estimates that sotatercept will be available for dispensing by select specialty pharmacies in the United States by the end of April 2024.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved sotatercept (Winrevair, Merck), for the treatment of adults with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), World Health Organization (WHO) Group 1, to increase exercise capacity, improve WHO functional class, and reduce the risk for clinical worsening events.

Sotatercept, which had breakthrough therapy designation, is a first-in-class activin signaling inhibitor that works by improving the balance between pro- and antiproliferative signaling to regulate the vascular cell proliferation that underlies PAH.

“Sotatercept added to background therapy has the potential to become a new standard-of-care option for patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension,” added coinvestigator Aaron B. Waxman, MD, PhD, executive director of the Center for Pulmonary Heart Diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

The approval was based on results of the phase 3 STELLAR study, a global, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter, parallel-group clinical trial in which, 323 patients with PAH (WHO Group 1, functional class II or III) were randomly assigned 1:1 to add sotatercept or placebo to stable background therapy.

The results showed that sotatercept, administered subcutaneously every 3 weeks for 24 weeks, improved average 6-minute walk distance from baseline by a significant and clinically meaningful 40.8 meters compared with placebo for the trial’s primary efficacy endpoint (P < .001).

Sotatercept also led to significant improvement in multiple secondary outcome measures, including:

  • Reduction in the risk for death from any cause or PAH clinical worsening events by 84% vs background therapy alone (number of events: 9 vs 42; hazard ratio [HR], 0.16; P < .001) 
  • Improvement in FC from baseline at 24 weeks in 29% of patients compared with 14% of patients treated with placebo (P < .001) 
  • Improvement in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR), with an average 235 dyn/sec/cm5 reduction in PVR from baseline (P < .001) 
  • Improvement from baseline in N-terminal pro–B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels. The median treatment difference in NT-proBNP between sotatercept and placebo was -442 pg/mL (P < .001) 

The results were reported last year at the joint scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology and the World Heart Federation, with simultaneous publication in The New England Journal of Medicine

Sotatercept injection may be administered by patients or caregivers with guidance, training, and follow-up from a healthcare provider. The recommended starting dose is 0.3 mg/kg. The recommended target dose is 0.7 mg/kg every 3 weeks.

Sotatercept may increase hemoglobin, may lead to erythrocytosis, and may decrease platelet count and lead to severe thrombocytopenia. Treatment should not be initiated if platelet count is < 50,000/mm3

Hemoglobin and platelets should be monitored before each dose of sotatercept for the first five doses, or longer if values are unstable, and periodically thereafter to determine if dose adjustments are required. 

Full prescribing information is available online

Merck estimates that sotatercept will be available for dispensing by select specialty pharmacies in the United States by the end of April 2024.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved sotatercept (Winrevair, Merck), for the treatment of adults with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), World Health Organization (WHO) Group 1, to increase exercise capacity, improve WHO functional class, and reduce the risk for clinical worsening events.

Sotatercept, which had breakthrough therapy designation, is a first-in-class activin signaling inhibitor that works by improving the balance between pro- and antiproliferative signaling to regulate the vascular cell proliferation that underlies PAH.

“Sotatercept added to background therapy has the potential to become a new standard-of-care option for patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension,” added coinvestigator Aaron B. Waxman, MD, PhD, executive director of the Center for Pulmonary Heart Diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

The approval was based on results of the phase 3 STELLAR study, a global, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter, parallel-group clinical trial in which, 323 patients with PAH (WHO Group 1, functional class II or III) were randomly assigned 1:1 to add sotatercept or placebo to stable background therapy.

The results showed that sotatercept, administered subcutaneously every 3 weeks for 24 weeks, improved average 6-minute walk distance from baseline by a significant and clinically meaningful 40.8 meters compared with placebo for the trial’s primary efficacy endpoint (P < .001).

Sotatercept also led to significant improvement in multiple secondary outcome measures, including:

  • Reduction in the risk for death from any cause or PAH clinical worsening events by 84% vs background therapy alone (number of events: 9 vs 42; hazard ratio [HR], 0.16; P < .001) 
  • Improvement in FC from baseline at 24 weeks in 29% of patients compared with 14% of patients treated with placebo (P < .001) 
  • Improvement in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR), with an average 235 dyn/sec/cm5 reduction in PVR from baseline (P < .001) 
  • Improvement from baseline in N-terminal pro–B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels. The median treatment difference in NT-proBNP between sotatercept and placebo was -442 pg/mL (P < .001) 

The results were reported last year at the joint scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology and the World Heart Federation, with simultaneous publication in The New England Journal of Medicine

Sotatercept injection may be administered by patients or caregivers with guidance, training, and follow-up from a healthcare provider. The recommended starting dose is 0.3 mg/kg. The recommended target dose is 0.7 mg/kg every 3 weeks.

Sotatercept may increase hemoglobin, may lead to erythrocytosis, and may decrease platelet count and lead to severe thrombocytopenia. Treatment should not be initiated if platelet count is < 50,000/mm3

Hemoglobin and platelets should be monitored before each dose of sotatercept for the first five doses, or longer if values are unstable, and periodically thereafter to determine if dose adjustments are required. 

Full prescribing information is available online

Merck estimates that sotatercept will be available for dispensing by select specialty pharmacies in the United States by the end of April 2024.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Hemorrhagic Stroke a Key Driver of Spike in US Stroke Rates

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 03/27/2024 - 13:37

 

TOPLINE:

Age-standardized stroke rates decreased in the United States between 1990 and 2019, while absolute stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) rates increased, a new study showed. Investigators noted the findings, which also show a significant increase in hemorrhagic stroke and an uptick in stroke among adults under 50 years in the South and Midwest, suggesting a significant shift in the US stroke burden.

METHODOLOGY:

  • This in-depth, cross-sectional analysis of the 2019 Global Burden of Disease study included data on all-cause and ischemic strokes, intracerebral hemorrhages (ICHs), and subarachnoid hemorrhages (SAHs) between 1990 and 2019 in the United States.
  • Researchers focused on both overall and age-standardized estimates, stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, and DALYs per 100,000 people.

TAKEAWAY:

  • In 2019, the United States recorded 7.09 million prevalent strokes, 83% of which were ischemic and 57% of which occurred in women.
  • The absolute numbers of stroke cases, mortality, and DALYs increased from 1990 to 2019, but the age-standardized rates either declined or remained steady.
  • Overall incidence increased by 40% for ICH, 51% for SAH, and 13% for , and stroke mortality increased by 56% for ICH, 72% for SAH, and 5.4% for ischemic stroke.
  • Age-adjusted analyses showed the results were not uniform across all geographical areas, with older adults (ages, 50-74 years) experiencing decreased incidence in coastal areas and younger individuals (ages, 15-49 years) experiencing an uptick in the South and Midwest United States.

IN PRACTICE:

“As the country prepares for an imminent swell in the aging population, coupled with a noticeable plateau in advancements against stroke mortality, it becomes evident that future directions must focus on a multipronged strategy,” the authors wrote. “This involves both embracing precision medicine’s potential and fortifying widespread public health campaigns.”

SOURCE:

Kevin N. Sheth, MD, of the Yale Center for Brain and Mind Health, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, was the senior and corresponding author of the study. It was published online in JAMA Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The accuracy of stroke ascertainment was limited by the data source, which may be prone to misclassification. The data lacked detailed information on race, ethnicity, and stroke characteristics other than stroke type.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the American Heart Association Medical Student Research Fellowship, grants from the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Association, the Yale Pepper Scholar Award, and the Neurocritical Care Society Research fellowship. Sheth reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health, American Heart Association, and Hyperfine; personal fees/monitoring board fees/equity from Astrocyte, CSL Behring, Zoll, Sense, Bexorg, Rhaeos, and Alva and having a patent for Alva licensed. The other authors’ disclosures are listed in the original paper.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Age-standardized stroke rates decreased in the United States between 1990 and 2019, while absolute stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) rates increased, a new study showed. Investigators noted the findings, which also show a significant increase in hemorrhagic stroke and an uptick in stroke among adults under 50 years in the South and Midwest, suggesting a significant shift in the US stroke burden.

METHODOLOGY:

  • This in-depth, cross-sectional analysis of the 2019 Global Burden of Disease study included data on all-cause and ischemic strokes, intracerebral hemorrhages (ICHs), and subarachnoid hemorrhages (SAHs) between 1990 and 2019 in the United States.
  • Researchers focused on both overall and age-standardized estimates, stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, and DALYs per 100,000 people.

TAKEAWAY:

  • In 2019, the United States recorded 7.09 million prevalent strokes, 83% of which were ischemic and 57% of which occurred in women.
  • The absolute numbers of stroke cases, mortality, and DALYs increased from 1990 to 2019, but the age-standardized rates either declined or remained steady.
  • Overall incidence increased by 40% for ICH, 51% for SAH, and 13% for , and stroke mortality increased by 56% for ICH, 72% for SAH, and 5.4% for ischemic stroke.
  • Age-adjusted analyses showed the results were not uniform across all geographical areas, with older adults (ages, 50-74 years) experiencing decreased incidence in coastal areas and younger individuals (ages, 15-49 years) experiencing an uptick in the South and Midwest United States.

IN PRACTICE:

“As the country prepares for an imminent swell in the aging population, coupled with a noticeable plateau in advancements against stroke mortality, it becomes evident that future directions must focus on a multipronged strategy,” the authors wrote. “This involves both embracing precision medicine’s potential and fortifying widespread public health campaigns.”

SOURCE:

Kevin N. Sheth, MD, of the Yale Center for Brain and Mind Health, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, was the senior and corresponding author of the study. It was published online in JAMA Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The accuracy of stroke ascertainment was limited by the data source, which may be prone to misclassification. The data lacked detailed information on race, ethnicity, and stroke characteristics other than stroke type.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the American Heart Association Medical Student Research Fellowship, grants from the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Association, the Yale Pepper Scholar Award, and the Neurocritical Care Society Research fellowship. Sheth reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health, American Heart Association, and Hyperfine; personal fees/monitoring board fees/equity from Astrocyte, CSL Behring, Zoll, Sense, Bexorg, Rhaeos, and Alva and having a patent for Alva licensed. The other authors’ disclosures are listed in the original paper.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Age-standardized stroke rates decreased in the United States between 1990 and 2019, while absolute stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) rates increased, a new study showed. Investigators noted the findings, which also show a significant increase in hemorrhagic stroke and an uptick in stroke among adults under 50 years in the South and Midwest, suggesting a significant shift in the US stroke burden.

METHODOLOGY:

  • This in-depth, cross-sectional analysis of the 2019 Global Burden of Disease study included data on all-cause and ischemic strokes, intracerebral hemorrhages (ICHs), and subarachnoid hemorrhages (SAHs) between 1990 and 2019 in the United States.
  • Researchers focused on both overall and age-standardized estimates, stroke incidence, prevalence, mortality, and DALYs per 100,000 people.

TAKEAWAY:

  • In 2019, the United States recorded 7.09 million prevalent strokes, 83% of which were ischemic and 57% of which occurred in women.
  • The absolute numbers of stroke cases, mortality, and DALYs increased from 1990 to 2019, but the age-standardized rates either declined or remained steady.
  • Overall incidence increased by 40% for ICH, 51% for SAH, and 13% for , and stroke mortality increased by 56% for ICH, 72% for SAH, and 5.4% for ischemic stroke.
  • Age-adjusted analyses showed the results were not uniform across all geographical areas, with older adults (ages, 50-74 years) experiencing decreased incidence in coastal areas and younger individuals (ages, 15-49 years) experiencing an uptick in the South and Midwest United States.

IN PRACTICE:

“As the country prepares for an imminent swell in the aging population, coupled with a noticeable plateau in advancements against stroke mortality, it becomes evident that future directions must focus on a multipronged strategy,” the authors wrote. “This involves both embracing precision medicine’s potential and fortifying widespread public health campaigns.”

SOURCE:

Kevin N. Sheth, MD, of the Yale Center for Brain and Mind Health, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, was the senior and corresponding author of the study. It was published online in JAMA Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The accuracy of stroke ascertainment was limited by the data source, which may be prone to misclassification. The data lacked detailed information on race, ethnicity, and stroke characteristics other than stroke type.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the American Heart Association Medical Student Research Fellowship, grants from the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Association, the Yale Pepper Scholar Award, and the Neurocritical Care Society Research fellowship. Sheth reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health, American Heart Association, and Hyperfine; personal fees/monitoring board fees/equity from Astrocyte, CSL Behring, Zoll, Sense, Bexorg, Rhaeos, and Alva and having a patent for Alva licensed. The other authors’ disclosures are listed in the original paper.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Magnesium and Metabolic Syndrome: Any Connection?

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 03/27/2024 - 14:31

 

TOPLINE:

Higher urinary magnesium loss, as indicated by an elevated magnesium depletion score (MDS), may be an independent risk factor for metabolic syndrome in US adults.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Increasing evidence suggests that chronic hypomagnesemia may play a role in the pathogenesis of metabolic disorders, including overweight and obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia.
  • Researchers examined the relationship between magnesium status and metabolic syndrome in 15,565 US adults (mean age, 47 years; half women) participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2003-2018), of whom 5438 had metabolic syndrome (mean age, 55 years).
  • Magnesium deficiency was predicted by MDS, a four-factor score that aggregates diuretic use (one point), proton pump inhibitor (one point), kidney function (estimated glomerular filtration rate; one or two points), and heavy  (one point).
  • MDS was categorized into six levels (by scores 0-5), with a higher MDS indicating a more severe magnesium deficiency.
  • Metabolic syndrome was defined according to the National Cholesterol Education Program’s Adult Treatment Panel III report.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of patients with MDS ≥ 2 was higher in the group with vs without metabolic syndrome (P < .05).
  • Even after adjusting for potential confounding factors, each 1-unit increase in the MDS increased the odds of metabolic syndrome by about 30% (adjusted odds ratio, 1.31; 95% CI, 1.17-1.45).
  • A dose-response relationship was observed between MDS and metabolic syndrome, with MDS level 1 being associated with 1.28-fold higher odds of metabolic syndrome (95% CI, 1.06-1.55) than MDS level 0; further escalation in the odds was noted for MDS levels 2, 3, and 4.
  • The association between metabolic syndrome and MDS remained consistent across all population subgroups defined by age, gender, race (except Mexican American), body mass index, drinking status, or smoking status.

IN PRACTICE:

“It is possible to prevent and reduce MetS [metabolic syndrome] by supplementing with magnesium supplements or encouraging higher magnesium intake diet because the diet is a factor that can be changed,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Xiaohao Wang, Department of Geriatrics, the First Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Southern University of Science and Technology (Shenzhen People’s Hospital), Shenzhen, China. It was published online in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

LIMITATIONS:

The study found no significant link between MDS level 5 and metabolic syndrome, likely due to the small sample size at this level. The study could not draw any causal relationship between metabolic syndrome and MDS owing to its cross-sectional nature. It also could not determine whether MDS was a better marker of magnesium deficiency than serum magnesium levels. MDS is a categorical, not continuous, variable.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China and the Natural Science Foundation of Shenzhen City, China. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Higher urinary magnesium loss, as indicated by an elevated magnesium depletion score (MDS), may be an independent risk factor for metabolic syndrome in US adults.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Increasing evidence suggests that chronic hypomagnesemia may play a role in the pathogenesis of metabolic disorders, including overweight and obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia.
  • Researchers examined the relationship between magnesium status and metabolic syndrome in 15,565 US adults (mean age, 47 years; half women) participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2003-2018), of whom 5438 had metabolic syndrome (mean age, 55 years).
  • Magnesium deficiency was predicted by MDS, a four-factor score that aggregates diuretic use (one point), proton pump inhibitor (one point), kidney function (estimated glomerular filtration rate; one or two points), and heavy  (one point).
  • MDS was categorized into six levels (by scores 0-5), with a higher MDS indicating a more severe magnesium deficiency.
  • Metabolic syndrome was defined according to the National Cholesterol Education Program’s Adult Treatment Panel III report.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of patients with MDS ≥ 2 was higher in the group with vs without metabolic syndrome (P < .05).
  • Even after adjusting for potential confounding factors, each 1-unit increase in the MDS increased the odds of metabolic syndrome by about 30% (adjusted odds ratio, 1.31; 95% CI, 1.17-1.45).
  • A dose-response relationship was observed between MDS and metabolic syndrome, with MDS level 1 being associated with 1.28-fold higher odds of metabolic syndrome (95% CI, 1.06-1.55) than MDS level 0; further escalation in the odds was noted for MDS levels 2, 3, and 4.
  • The association between metabolic syndrome and MDS remained consistent across all population subgroups defined by age, gender, race (except Mexican American), body mass index, drinking status, or smoking status.

IN PRACTICE:

“It is possible to prevent and reduce MetS [metabolic syndrome] by supplementing with magnesium supplements or encouraging higher magnesium intake diet because the diet is a factor that can be changed,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Xiaohao Wang, Department of Geriatrics, the First Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Southern University of Science and Technology (Shenzhen People’s Hospital), Shenzhen, China. It was published online in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

LIMITATIONS:

The study found no significant link between MDS level 5 and metabolic syndrome, likely due to the small sample size at this level. The study could not draw any causal relationship between metabolic syndrome and MDS owing to its cross-sectional nature. It also could not determine whether MDS was a better marker of magnesium deficiency than serum magnesium levels. MDS is a categorical, not continuous, variable.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China and the Natural Science Foundation of Shenzhen City, China. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Higher urinary magnesium loss, as indicated by an elevated magnesium depletion score (MDS), may be an independent risk factor for metabolic syndrome in US adults.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Increasing evidence suggests that chronic hypomagnesemia may play a role in the pathogenesis of metabolic disorders, including overweight and obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia.
  • Researchers examined the relationship between magnesium status and metabolic syndrome in 15,565 US adults (mean age, 47 years; half women) participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2003-2018), of whom 5438 had metabolic syndrome (mean age, 55 years).
  • Magnesium deficiency was predicted by MDS, a four-factor score that aggregates diuretic use (one point), proton pump inhibitor (one point), kidney function (estimated glomerular filtration rate; one or two points), and heavy  (one point).
  • MDS was categorized into six levels (by scores 0-5), with a higher MDS indicating a more severe magnesium deficiency.
  • Metabolic syndrome was defined according to the National Cholesterol Education Program’s Adult Treatment Panel III report.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of patients with MDS ≥ 2 was higher in the group with vs without metabolic syndrome (P < .05).
  • Even after adjusting for potential confounding factors, each 1-unit increase in the MDS increased the odds of metabolic syndrome by about 30% (adjusted odds ratio, 1.31; 95% CI, 1.17-1.45).
  • A dose-response relationship was observed between MDS and metabolic syndrome, with MDS level 1 being associated with 1.28-fold higher odds of metabolic syndrome (95% CI, 1.06-1.55) than MDS level 0; further escalation in the odds was noted for MDS levels 2, 3, and 4.
  • The association between metabolic syndrome and MDS remained consistent across all population subgroups defined by age, gender, race (except Mexican American), body mass index, drinking status, or smoking status.

IN PRACTICE:

“It is possible to prevent and reduce MetS [metabolic syndrome] by supplementing with magnesium supplements or encouraging higher magnesium intake diet because the diet is a factor that can be changed,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Xiaohao Wang, Department of Geriatrics, the First Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Southern University of Science and Technology (Shenzhen People’s Hospital), Shenzhen, China. It was published online in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

LIMITATIONS:

The study found no significant link between MDS level 5 and metabolic syndrome, likely due to the small sample size at this level. The study could not draw any causal relationship between metabolic syndrome and MDS owing to its cross-sectional nature. It also could not determine whether MDS was a better marker of magnesium deficiency than serum magnesium levels. MDS is a categorical, not continuous, variable.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China and the Natural Science Foundation of Shenzhen City, China. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Statins Tied to Lower Mortality, Even With Comorbid Dementia

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Tue, 03/26/2024 - 12:08

Use of statin drugs was associated with improved mortality in older nursing home residents, regardless of dementia status, a new study showed.

The study is among the first to explore whether statin use in older nursing home residents offers a mortality benefit, especially among individuals with dementia, a group largely excluded from earlier statin trials.

Investigators’ analysis of 4 years of data on nearly 300,000 nursing home residents revealed that statin use was associated with a 40% lower risk for all-cause mortality than statin nonuse in those without dementia and a 20% lower risk in those with dementia.

“These findings may provide evidence that supports the continued use of statins in older nursing home patients with multiple medical conditions,” wrote lead author Julie Lorraine O’Sullivan, PhD, of the Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin, German Center for Mental Health, Berlin, and colleagues.

The study was published online on February 27 in Neurology.
 

Understudied Population

Statins are the first-line treatment for preventing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), but they are also known to carry risks to patients who are frail or care-dependent. Many prior clinical trials excluded older participants with multiple comorbidities, especially those with dementia. So, evidence regarding the drugs’ efficacy in this population was lacking.

Investigators retrospectively examined 5 years of claims data from a German health and long-term care insurance provider on 282,693 nursing home residents (mean age, 83 years) who had used statins consecutively for ≥ 6 months.

Researchers used propensity score matching in 96,162 individuals to adjust for potential imbalances in the distribution of covariates (eg, age, sex, atrial fibrillation, ASCVD, and other conditions, as well as medications) and to reduce bias. Cox regression models were similarly adjusted for these factors, as well as care level. Residents were followed for an average of 2 years.

There were 54,269 recorded deaths during the study period, with most patients requiring a high level of care and 65% with dementia.

Statin use was associated with lower all-cause mortality in residents with dementia (hazard ratio [HR], 0.80, P < .001) and those without dementia (HR, 0.73; P < .001) compared with nonusers. The benefits remained consistent even after excluding participants with a history of ASCVD and across subgroups stratified by age sex, care level, and dementia type.

Limitations included the potential for unknown confounders and a lack of information about previous statin use, smoking and sedentary behavior, and the cause of mortality.

“Although our findings suggest the benefits of statins ... it is vital to acknowledge the need for further research to understand the underlying mechanism and the need for replication of our results to understand the potential risks before making recommendations to clinicians and families regarding statin therapy,” investigators wrote.
 

‘First Step’

In an accompanying editorial, Ariela R. Orkaby, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, called the study a “first step” to a better understanding of statin use in an understudied population.

“These findings build on a limited body of observational evidence for statin use in high-risk older adults, which has generally demonstrated protective associations for statins and mortality, including those with dementia and frailty, although nursing home status has not been specifically explored,” Dr. Orkaby wrote.

Perhaps more important than gaining information about statins’ effect on mortality risk in older people with dementia may be a better understanding of how the drugs might improve quality of life by reducing the risk for stroke or other cardiovascular events.

“It may be time to reconsider the broad recommendations to avoid or deprescribe statins in nursing home residents and rather invest in high-quality evidence to guide the care of this vulnerable population. After all, a lack of evidence does not imply benefit or harm, rather a need for more data,” Dr. Orkaby added.

The research was funded by Stiftung Charité; Dr. O’Sullivan and coauthors reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Orkaby received funding from a VA CSR&D CDA-2 award.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Use of statin drugs was associated with improved mortality in older nursing home residents, regardless of dementia status, a new study showed.

The study is among the first to explore whether statin use in older nursing home residents offers a mortality benefit, especially among individuals with dementia, a group largely excluded from earlier statin trials.

Investigators’ analysis of 4 years of data on nearly 300,000 nursing home residents revealed that statin use was associated with a 40% lower risk for all-cause mortality than statin nonuse in those without dementia and a 20% lower risk in those with dementia.

“These findings may provide evidence that supports the continued use of statins in older nursing home patients with multiple medical conditions,” wrote lead author Julie Lorraine O’Sullivan, PhD, of the Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin, German Center for Mental Health, Berlin, and colleagues.

The study was published online on February 27 in Neurology.
 

Understudied Population

Statins are the first-line treatment for preventing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), but they are also known to carry risks to patients who are frail or care-dependent. Many prior clinical trials excluded older participants with multiple comorbidities, especially those with dementia. So, evidence regarding the drugs’ efficacy in this population was lacking.

Investigators retrospectively examined 5 years of claims data from a German health and long-term care insurance provider on 282,693 nursing home residents (mean age, 83 years) who had used statins consecutively for ≥ 6 months.

Researchers used propensity score matching in 96,162 individuals to adjust for potential imbalances in the distribution of covariates (eg, age, sex, atrial fibrillation, ASCVD, and other conditions, as well as medications) and to reduce bias. Cox regression models were similarly adjusted for these factors, as well as care level. Residents were followed for an average of 2 years.

There were 54,269 recorded deaths during the study period, with most patients requiring a high level of care and 65% with dementia.

Statin use was associated with lower all-cause mortality in residents with dementia (hazard ratio [HR], 0.80, P < .001) and those without dementia (HR, 0.73; P < .001) compared with nonusers. The benefits remained consistent even after excluding participants with a history of ASCVD and across subgroups stratified by age sex, care level, and dementia type.

Limitations included the potential for unknown confounders and a lack of information about previous statin use, smoking and sedentary behavior, and the cause of mortality.

“Although our findings suggest the benefits of statins ... it is vital to acknowledge the need for further research to understand the underlying mechanism and the need for replication of our results to understand the potential risks before making recommendations to clinicians and families regarding statin therapy,” investigators wrote.
 

‘First Step’

In an accompanying editorial, Ariela R. Orkaby, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, called the study a “first step” to a better understanding of statin use in an understudied population.

“These findings build on a limited body of observational evidence for statin use in high-risk older adults, which has generally demonstrated protective associations for statins and mortality, including those with dementia and frailty, although nursing home status has not been specifically explored,” Dr. Orkaby wrote.

Perhaps more important than gaining information about statins’ effect on mortality risk in older people with dementia may be a better understanding of how the drugs might improve quality of life by reducing the risk for stroke or other cardiovascular events.

“It may be time to reconsider the broad recommendations to avoid or deprescribe statins in nursing home residents and rather invest in high-quality evidence to guide the care of this vulnerable population. After all, a lack of evidence does not imply benefit or harm, rather a need for more data,” Dr. Orkaby added.

The research was funded by Stiftung Charité; Dr. O’Sullivan and coauthors reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Orkaby received funding from a VA CSR&D CDA-2 award.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Use of statin drugs was associated with improved mortality in older nursing home residents, regardless of dementia status, a new study showed.

The study is among the first to explore whether statin use in older nursing home residents offers a mortality benefit, especially among individuals with dementia, a group largely excluded from earlier statin trials.

Investigators’ analysis of 4 years of data on nearly 300,000 nursing home residents revealed that statin use was associated with a 40% lower risk for all-cause mortality than statin nonuse in those without dementia and a 20% lower risk in those with dementia.

“These findings may provide evidence that supports the continued use of statins in older nursing home patients with multiple medical conditions,” wrote lead author Julie Lorraine O’Sullivan, PhD, of the Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin, German Center for Mental Health, Berlin, and colleagues.

The study was published online on February 27 in Neurology.
 

Understudied Population

Statins are the first-line treatment for preventing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), but they are also known to carry risks to patients who are frail or care-dependent. Many prior clinical trials excluded older participants with multiple comorbidities, especially those with dementia. So, evidence regarding the drugs’ efficacy in this population was lacking.

Investigators retrospectively examined 5 years of claims data from a German health and long-term care insurance provider on 282,693 nursing home residents (mean age, 83 years) who had used statins consecutively for ≥ 6 months.

Researchers used propensity score matching in 96,162 individuals to adjust for potential imbalances in the distribution of covariates (eg, age, sex, atrial fibrillation, ASCVD, and other conditions, as well as medications) and to reduce bias. Cox regression models were similarly adjusted for these factors, as well as care level. Residents were followed for an average of 2 years.

There were 54,269 recorded deaths during the study period, with most patients requiring a high level of care and 65% with dementia.

Statin use was associated with lower all-cause mortality in residents with dementia (hazard ratio [HR], 0.80, P < .001) and those without dementia (HR, 0.73; P < .001) compared with nonusers. The benefits remained consistent even after excluding participants with a history of ASCVD and across subgroups stratified by age sex, care level, and dementia type.

Limitations included the potential for unknown confounders and a lack of information about previous statin use, smoking and sedentary behavior, and the cause of mortality.

“Although our findings suggest the benefits of statins ... it is vital to acknowledge the need for further research to understand the underlying mechanism and the need for replication of our results to understand the potential risks before making recommendations to clinicians and families regarding statin therapy,” investigators wrote.
 

‘First Step’

In an accompanying editorial, Ariela R. Orkaby, MD, MPH, assistant professor of medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, called the study a “first step” to a better understanding of statin use in an understudied population.

“These findings build on a limited body of observational evidence for statin use in high-risk older adults, which has generally demonstrated protective associations for statins and mortality, including those with dementia and frailty, although nursing home status has not been specifically explored,” Dr. Orkaby wrote.

Perhaps more important than gaining information about statins’ effect on mortality risk in older people with dementia may be a better understanding of how the drugs might improve quality of life by reducing the risk for stroke or other cardiovascular events.

“It may be time to reconsider the broad recommendations to avoid or deprescribe statins in nursing home residents and rather invest in high-quality evidence to guide the care of this vulnerable population. After all, a lack of evidence does not imply benefit or harm, rather a need for more data,” Dr. Orkaby added.

The research was funded by Stiftung Charité; Dr. O’Sullivan and coauthors reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Orkaby received funding from a VA CSR&D CDA-2 award.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Few Childhood Cancer Survivors Get Recommended Screenings

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Mon, 03/25/2024 - 16:35

Most survivors of childhood cancer don’t meet surveillance guidelines that recommend screening for adult cancers or other long-term adverse effects of treatment, according to a new study.

Among childhood cancer survivors in Ontario, Canada, who faced an elevated risk due to chemotherapy or radiation treatments, 53% followed screening recommendations for cardiomyopathy, 13% met colorectal cancer screening guidelines, and 6% adhered to breast cancer screening guidelines.

“Although over 80% of children newly diagnosed with cancer will become long-term survivors, as many as four out of five of these survivors will develop a serious or life-threatening late effect of their cancer therapy by age 45,” lead author Jennifer Shuldiner, PhD, MPH, a scientist at Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health Systems Solutions and Virtual Care in Toronto, told this news organization.

For instance, the risk for colorectal cancer in childhood cancer survivors is two to three times higher than it is among the general population, and the risk for breast cancer is similar between those who underwent chest radiation and those with a BRCA mutation. As many as 50% of those who received anthracycline chemotherapy or radiation involving the heart later develop cardiotoxicity.

The North American Children’s Oncology Group has published long-term follow-up guidelines for survivors of childhood cancer, yet many survivors don’t follow them because of lack of awareness or other barriers, said Dr. Shuldiner.

“Prior research has shown that many survivors do not complete these recommended tests,” she said. “With better knowledge of this at-risk population, we can design, test, and implement appropriate interventions and supports to tackle the issues.”

The study was published online on March 11 in CMAJ
 

Changes in Adherence 

The researchers conducted a retrospective population-based cohort study analyzing Ontario healthcare administrative data for adult survivors of childhood cancer diagnosed between 1986 and 2014 who faced an elevated risk for therapy-related colorectal cancer, breast cancer, or cardiomyopathy. The research team then assessed long-term adherence to the North American Children’s Oncology Group guidelines and predictors of adherence.

Among 3241 survivors, 3205 (99%) were at elevated risk for cardiomyopathy, 327 (10%) were at elevated risk for colorectal cancer, and 234 (7%) were at elevated risk for breast cancer. In addition, 2806 (87%) were at risk for one late effect, 345 (11%) were at risk for two late effects, and 90 (3%) were at risk for three late effects.

Overall, 53%, 13%, and 6% were adherent to their recommended surveillance for cardiomyopathy, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer, respectively. Over time, adherence increased for colorectal cancer and cardiomyopathy but decreased for breast cancer.

In addition, patients who were older at diagnosis were more likely to follow screening guidelines for colorectal and breast cancers, whereas those who were younger at diagnosis were more likely to follow screening guidelines for cardiomyopathy.

During a median follow-up of 7.8 years, the proportion of time spent adherent was 43% for cardiomyopathy, 14% for colorectal cancer, and 10% for breast cancer.

Survivors who attended a long-term follow-up clinic in the previous year had low adherence rates as well, though they were higher than in the rest of the cohort. In this group, the proportion of time that was spent adherent was 71% for cardiomyopathy, 27% for colorectal cancer, and 15% for breast cancer.

Shuldiner and colleagues are launching a research trial to determine whether a provincial support system can help childhood cancer survivors receive the recommended surveillance. The support system provides information about screening recommendations to survivors as well as reminders and sends key information to their family doctors.

“We now understand that childhood cancer survivors need help to complete the recommended tests,” said Dr. Shuldiner. “If the trial is successful, we hope it will be implemented in Ontario.” 
 

 

 

Survivorship Care Plans 

Low screening rates may result from a lack of awareness about screening recommendations and the negative long-term effects of cancer treatments, the study authors wrote. Cancer survivors, caregivers, family physicians, specialists, and survivor support groups can share the responsibility of spreading awareness and adhering to guidelines, they noted. In some cases, a survivorship care plan (SCP) may help.

“SCPs are intended to improve adherence by providing follow-up information and facilitating the transition from cancer treatment to survivorship and from pediatric to adult care,” Adam Yan, MD, a staff oncologist and oncology informatics lead at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, told this news organization.

Dr. Yan, who wasn’t involved with this study, has researched surveillance adherence for secondary cancers and cardiac dysfunction among childhood cancer survivors. He and his colleagues found that screening rates were typically low among survivors who faced high risks for cardiac dysfunction and breast, colorectal, or skin cancers.

However, having a survivorship care plan seemed to help, and survivors treated after 1990 were more likely to have an SCP.

“SCP possession by high-risk survivors was associated with increased breast, skin, and cardiac surveillance,” he said. “It is uncertain whether SCP possession leads to adherence or whether SCP possession is a marker of survivors who are focused on their health and thus likely to adhere to preventive health practices, including surveillance.”

The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and ICES, which receives support from the Ontario Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Shuldiner received a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Health System Impact Postdoctoral Fellowship in support of the work. Dr. Yan disclosed no relevant financial relationships. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Most survivors of childhood cancer don’t meet surveillance guidelines that recommend screening for adult cancers or other long-term adverse effects of treatment, according to a new study.

Among childhood cancer survivors in Ontario, Canada, who faced an elevated risk due to chemotherapy or radiation treatments, 53% followed screening recommendations for cardiomyopathy, 13% met colorectal cancer screening guidelines, and 6% adhered to breast cancer screening guidelines.

“Although over 80% of children newly diagnosed with cancer will become long-term survivors, as many as four out of five of these survivors will develop a serious or life-threatening late effect of their cancer therapy by age 45,” lead author Jennifer Shuldiner, PhD, MPH, a scientist at Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health Systems Solutions and Virtual Care in Toronto, told this news organization.

For instance, the risk for colorectal cancer in childhood cancer survivors is two to three times higher than it is among the general population, and the risk for breast cancer is similar between those who underwent chest radiation and those with a BRCA mutation. As many as 50% of those who received anthracycline chemotherapy or radiation involving the heart later develop cardiotoxicity.

The North American Children’s Oncology Group has published long-term follow-up guidelines for survivors of childhood cancer, yet many survivors don’t follow them because of lack of awareness or other barriers, said Dr. Shuldiner.

“Prior research has shown that many survivors do not complete these recommended tests,” she said. “With better knowledge of this at-risk population, we can design, test, and implement appropriate interventions and supports to tackle the issues.”

The study was published online on March 11 in CMAJ
 

Changes in Adherence 

The researchers conducted a retrospective population-based cohort study analyzing Ontario healthcare administrative data for adult survivors of childhood cancer diagnosed between 1986 and 2014 who faced an elevated risk for therapy-related colorectal cancer, breast cancer, or cardiomyopathy. The research team then assessed long-term adherence to the North American Children’s Oncology Group guidelines and predictors of adherence.

Among 3241 survivors, 3205 (99%) were at elevated risk for cardiomyopathy, 327 (10%) were at elevated risk for colorectal cancer, and 234 (7%) were at elevated risk for breast cancer. In addition, 2806 (87%) were at risk for one late effect, 345 (11%) were at risk for two late effects, and 90 (3%) were at risk for three late effects.

Overall, 53%, 13%, and 6% were adherent to their recommended surveillance for cardiomyopathy, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer, respectively. Over time, adherence increased for colorectal cancer and cardiomyopathy but decreased for breast cancer.

In addition, patients who were older at diagnosis were more likely to follow screening guidelines for colorectal and breast cancers, whereas those who were younger at diagnosis were more likely to follow screening guidelines for cardiomyopathy.

During a median follow-up of 7.8 years, the proportion of time spent adherent was 43% for cardiomyopathy, 14% for colorectal cancer, and 10% for breast cancer.

Survivors who attended a long-term follow-up clinic in the previous year had low adherence rates as well, though they were higher than in the rest of the cohort. In this group, the proportion of time that was spent adherent was 71% for cardiomyopathy, 27% for colorectal cancer, and 15% for breast cancer.

Shuldiner and colleagues are launching a research trial to determine whether a provincial support system can help childhood cancer survivors receive the recommended surveillance. The support system provides information about screening recommendations to survivors as well as reminders and sends key information to their family doctors.

“We now understand that childhood cancer survivors need help to complete the recommended tests,” said Dr. Shuldiner. “If the trial is successful, we hope it will be implemented in Ontario.” 
 

 

 

Survivorship Care Plans 

Low screening rates may result from a lack of awareness about screening recommendations and the negative long-term effects of cancer treatments, the study authors wrote. Cancer survivors, caregivers, family physicians, specialists, and survivor support groups can share the responsibility of spreading awareness and adhering to guidelines, they noted. In some cases, a survivorship care plan (SCP) may help.

“SCPs are intended to improve adherence by providing follow-up information and facilitating the transition from cancer treatment to survivorship and from pediatric to adult care,” Adam Yan, MD, a staff oncologist and oncology informatics lead at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, told this news organization.

Dr. Yan, who wasn’t involved with this study, has researched surveillance adherence for secondary cancers and cardiac dysfunction among childhood cancer survivors. He and his colleagues found that screening rates were typically low among survivors who faced high risks for cardiac dysfunction and breast, colorectal, or skin cancers.

However, having a survivorship care plan seemed to help, and survivors treated after 1990 were more likely to have an SCP.

“SCP possession by high-risk survivors was associated with increased breast, skin, and cardiac surveillance,” he said. “It is uncertain whether SCP possession leads to adherence or whether SCP possession is a marker of survivors who are focused on their health and thus likely to adhere to preventive health practices, including surveillance.”

The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and ICES, which receives support from the Ontario Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Shuldiner received a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Health System Impact Postdoctoral Fellowship in support of the work. Dr. Yan disclosed no relevant financial relationships. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Most survivors of childhood cancer don’t meet surveillance guidelines that recommend screening for adult cancers or other long-term adverse effects of treatment, according to a new study.

Among childhood cancer survivors in Ontario, Canada, who faced an elevated risk due to chemotherapy or radiation treatments, 53% followed screening recommendations for cardiomyopathy, 13% met colorectal cancer screening guidelines, and 6% adhered to breast cancer screening guidelines.

“Although over 80% of children newly diagnosed with cancer will become long-term survivors, as many as four out of five of these survivors will develop a serious or life-threatening late effect of their cancer therapy by age 45,” lead author Jennifer Shuldiner, PhD, MPH, a scientist at Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health Systems Solutions and Virtual Care in Toronto, told this news organization.

For instance, the risk for colorectal cancer in childhood cancer survivors is two to three times higher than it is among the general population, and the risk for breast cancer is similar between those who underwent chest radiation and those with a BRCA mutation. As many as 50% of those who received anthracycline chemotherapy or radiation involving the heart later develop cardiotoxicity.

The North American Children’s Oncology Group has published long-term follow-up guidelines for survivors of childhood cancer, yet many survivors don’t follow them because of lack of awareness or other barriers, said Dr. Shuldiner.

“Prior research has shown that many survivors do not complete these recommended tests,” she said. “With better knowledge of this at-risk population, we can design, test, and implement appropriate interventions and supports to tackle the issues.”

The study was published online on March 11 in CMAJ
 

Changes in Adherence 

The researchers conducted a retrospective population-based cohort study analyzing Ontario healthcare administrative data for adult survivors of childhood cancer diagnosed between 1986 and 2014 who faced an elevated risk for therapy-related colorectal cancer, breast cancer, or cardiomyopathy. The research team then assessed long-term adherence to the North American Children’s Oncology Group guidelines and predictors of adherence.

Among 3241 survivors, 3205 (99%) were at elevated risk for cardiomyopathy, 327 (10%) were at elevated risk for colorectal cancer, and 234 (7%) were at elevated risk for breast cancer. In addition, 2806 (87%) were at risk for one late effect, 345 (11%) were at risk for two late effects, and 90 (3%) were at risk for three late effects.

Overall, 53%, 13%, and 6% were adherent to their recommended surveillance for cardiomyopathy, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer, respectively. Over time, adherence increased for colorectal cancer and cardiomyopathy but decreased for breast cancer.

In addition, patients who were older at diagnosis were more likely to follow screening guidelines for colorectal and breast cancers, whereas those who were younger at diagnosis were more likely to follow screening guidelines for cardiomyopathy.

During a median follow-up of 7.8 years, the proportion of time spent adherent was 43% for cardiomyopathy, 14% for colorectal cancer, and 10% for breast cancer.

Survivors who attended a long-term follow-up clinic in the previous year had low adherence rates as well, though they were higher than in the rest of the cohort. In this group, the proportion of time that was spent adherent was 71% for cardiomyopathy, 27% for colorectal cancer, and 15% for breast cancer.

Shuldiner and colleagues are launching a research trial to determine whether a provincial support system can help childhood cancer survivors receive the recommended surveillance. The support system provides information about screening recommendations to survivors as well as reminders and sends key information to their family doctors.

“We now understand that childhood cancer survivors need help to complete the recommended tests,” said Dr. Shuldiner. “If the trial is successful, we hope it will be implemented in Ontario.” 
 

 

 

Survivorship Care Plans 

Low screening rates may result from a lack of awareness about screening recommendations and the negative long-term effects of cancer treatments, the study authors wrote. Cancer survivors, caregivers, family physicians, specialists, and survivor support groups can share the responsibility of spreading awareness and adhering to guidelines, they noted. In some cases, a survivorship care plan (SCP) may help.

“SCPs are intended to improve adherence by providing follow-up information and facilitating the transition from cancer treatment to survivorship and from pediatric to adult care,” Adam Yan, MD, a staff oncologist and oncology informatics lead at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, told this news organization.

Dr. Yan, who wasn’t involved with this study, has researched surveillance adherence for secondary cancers and cardiac dysfunction among childhood cancer survivors. He and his colleagues found that screening rates were typically low among survivors who faced high risks for cardiac dysfunction and breast, colorectal, or skin cancers.

However, having a survivorship care plan seemed to help, and survivors treated after 1990 were more likely to have an SCP.

“SCP possession by high-risk survivors was associated with increased breast, skin, and cardiac surveillance,” he said. “It is uncertain whether SCP possession leads to adherence or whether SCP possession is a marker of survivors who are focused on their health and thus likely to adhere to preventive health practices, including surveillance.”

The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and ICES, which receives support from the Ontario Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Shuldiner received a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Health System Impact Postdoctoral Fellowship in support of the work. Dr. Yan disclosed no relevant financial relationships. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Lung Cancer Screening Unveils Hidden Health Risks

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Tue, 03/26/2024 - 10:58

Screening for lung cancer can detect other health issues, as well.

The reason is because the low-dose CT scans used for screening cover the lower neck down to the upper abdomen, revealing far more anatomy than simply the lungs.

In fact, lung cancer screening can provide information on three of the top 10 causes of death worldwide: ischemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and, of course, lung cancer.

With lung cancer screening, “we are basically targeting many birds with one low-dose stone,” explained Jelena Spasic MD, PhD, at the European Lung Cancer Congress (ELCC) 2024.

Dr. Spasic, a medical oncologist at the Institute for Oncology and Radiology of Serbia in Belgrade, was the discussant on a study that gave an indication on just how useful screening can be for other diseases.

The study, dubbed 4-IN-THE-LUNG-RUN trial (4ITLR), is an ongoing prospective trial in six European countries that is using lung cancer screening scans to also look for coronary artery calcifications, a marker of atherosclerosis.

Usually, coronary calcifications are considered incidental findings on lung cancer screenings and reported to subjects’ physicians for heart disease risk assessment.

The difference in 4ITLR is that investigators are actively looking for the lesions and quantifying the extent of calcifications.

It’s made possible by the artificial intelligence-based software being used to read the scans. In addition to generating reports on lung nodules, it also automatically calculates an Agatston score, a quantification of the degree of coronary artery calcification for each subject.

At the meeting, which was organized by the European Society for Clinical Oncology, 4ITLR investigator Daiwei Han, MD, PhD, a research associate at the Institute for Diagnostic Accuracy in Groningen, the Netherlands, reported outcomes in the first 2487 of the 24,000 planned subjects.

To be eligible for screening, participants had to be 60-79 years old and either current smokers, past smokers who had quit within 10 years, or people with a 35 or more pack-year history. The median age in the study was 68.1 years.

Overall, 53% of subjects had Agatston scores of 100 or more, indicating the need for treatment to prevent active coronary artery disease, Dr. Han said.

Fifteen percent were at high risk for heart disease with scores of 400-999, indicating extensive coronary artery calcification, and 16.2% were at very high risk, with scores of 1000 or higher. The information is being shared with participants’ physicians.

The risk of heart disease was far higher in men, who made up 56% of the study population. While women had a median Agatston score of 61, the median score for men was 211.1.

The findings illustrate the potential of dedicated cardiovascular screening within lung cancer screening programs, Dr. Han said, noting that 4ITLR will also incorporate COPD risk assessment.

The study also shows the increased impact lung cancer screening programs could have if greater use were made of the CT images to look for other diseases, Dr. Spasic said.

4ITLR is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Program. Dr. Spasic and Dr. Han didn’t have any relevant disclosures.

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Screening for lung cancer can detect other health issues, as well.

The reason is because the low-dose CT scans used for screening cover the lower neck down to the upper abdomen, revealing far more anatomy than simply the lungs.

In fact, lung cancer screening can provide information on three of the top 10 causes of death worldwide: ischemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and, of course, lung cancer.

With lung cancer screening, “we are basically targeting many birds with one low-dose stone,” explained Jelena Spasic MD, PhD, at the European Lung Cancer Congress (ELCC) 2024.

Dr. Spasic, a medical oncologist at the Institute for Oncology and Radiology of Serbia in Belgrade, was the discussant on a study that gave an indication on just how useful screening can be for other diseases.

The study, dubbed 4-IN-THE-LUNG-RUN trial (4ITLR), is an ongoing prospective trial in six European countries that is using lung cancer screening scans to also look for coronary artery calcifications, a marker of atherosclerosis.

Usually, coronary calcifications are considered incidental findings on lung cancer screenings and reported to subjects’ physicians for heart disease risk assessment.

The difference in 4ITLR is that investigators are actively looking for the lesions and quantifying the extent of calcifications.

It’s made possible by the artificial intelligence-based software being used to read the scans. In addition to generating reports on lung nodules, it also automatically calculates an Agatston score, a quantification of the degree of coronary artery calcification for each subject.

At the meeting, which was organized by the European Society for Clinical Oncology, 4ITLR investigator Daiwei Han, MD, PhD, a research associate at the Institute for Diagnostic Accuracy in Groningen, the Netherlands, reported outcomes in the first 2487 of the 24,000 planned subjects.

To be eligible for screening, participants had to be 60-79 years old and either current smokers, past smokers who had quit within 10 years, or people with a 35 or more pack-year history. The median age in the study was 68.1 years.

Overall, 53% of subjects had Agatston scores of 100 or more, indicating the need for treatment to prevent active coronary artery disease, Dr. Han said.

Fifteen percent were at high risk for heart disease with scores of 400-999, indicating extensive coronary artery calcification, and 16.2% were at very high risk, with scores of 1000 or higher. The information is being shared with participants’ physicians.

The risk of heart disease was far higher in men, who made up 56% of the study population. While women had a median Agatston score of 61, the median score for men was 211.1.

The findings illustrate the potential of dedicated cardiovascular screening within lung cancer screening programs, Dr. Han said, noting that 4ITLR will also incorporate COPD risk assessment.

The study also shows the increased impact lung cancer screening programs could have if greater use were made of the CT images to look for other diseases, Dr. Spasic said.

4ITLR is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Program. Dr. Spasic and Dr. Han didn’t have any relevant disclosures.

Screening for lung cancer can detect other health issues, as well.

The reason is because the low-dose CT scans used for screening cover the lower neck down to the upper abdomen, revealing far more anatomy than simply the lungs.

In fact, lung cancer screening can provide information on three of the top 10 causes of death worldwide: ischemic heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and, of course, lung cancer.

With lung cancer screening, “we are basically targeting many birds with one low-dose stone,” explained Jelena Spasic MD, PhD, at the European Lung Cancer Congress (ELCC) 2024.

Dr. Spasic, a medical oncologist at the Institute for Oncology and Radiology of Serbia in Belgrade, was the discussant on a study that gave an indication on just how useful screening can be for other diseases.

The study, dubbed 4-IN-THE-LUNG-RUN trial (4ITLR), is an ongoing prospective trial in six European countries that is using lung cancer screening scans to also look for coronary artery calcifications, a marker of atherosclerosis.

Usually, coronary calcifications are considered incidental findings on lung cancer screenings and reported to subjects’ physicians for heart disease risk assessment.

The difference in 4ITLR is that investigators are actively looking for the lesions and quantifying the extent of calcifications.

It’s made possible by the artificial intelligence-based software being used to read the scans. In addition to generating reports on lung nodules, it also automatically calculates an Agatston score, a quantification of the degree of coronary artery calcification for each subject.

At the meeting, which was organized by the European Society for Clinical Oncology, 4ITLR investigator Daiwei Han, MD, PhD, a research associate at the Institute for Diagnostic Accuracy in Groningen, the Netherlands, reported outcomes in the first 2487 of the 24,000 planned subjects.

To be eligible for screening, participants had to be 60-79 years old and either current smokers, past smokers who had quit within 10 years, or people with a 35 or more pack-year history. The median age in the study was 68.1 years.

Overall, 53% of subjects had Agatston scores of 100 or more, indicating the need for treatment to prevent active coronary artery disease, Dr. Han said.

Fifteen percent were at high risk for heart disease with scores of 400-999, indicating extensive coronary artery calcification, and 16.2% were at very high risk, with scores of 1000 or higher. The information is being shared with participants’ physicians.

The risk of heart disease was far higher in men, who made up 56% of the study population. While women had a median Agatston score of 61, the median score for men was 211.1.

The findings illustrate the potential of dedicated cardiovascular screening within lung cancer screening programs, Dr. Han said, noting that 4ITLR will also incorporate COPD risk assessment.

The study also shows the increased impact lung cancer screening programs could have if greater use were made of the CT images to look for other diseases, Dr. Spasic said.

4ITLR is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Program. Dr. Spasic and Dr. Han didn’t have any relevant disclosures.

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Niacin and CV Risk: Should Advice on Intake Change?

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A recent study linking a niacin derivative to an increased risk for cardiovascular events has raised questions about the safety of this B vitamin, which is added to many food staples in the Western diet and taken in the form of supplements.

The findings, which were published in Nature Medicine, may also help explain why taking niacin, which lowers low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and raises high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, did not lead to a reduction in cardiovascular events in major clinical trials.

But could this essential micronutrient really have an adverse effect on cardiovascular risk, and what are the implications for niacin intake?

Senior author of the new study Stanley Hazen, MD, believes some prudence on excessive niacin intake may be justified.

“I’m not suggesting we should completely avoid niacin — it is an essential nutrient, but our results suggest that too much may be harmful,” Dr. Hazen said.

Niacin supplements are also sold with claims of antiaging effects, arthritis relief, and boosting brain function, although none of these claims have been proven. And the related compound, nicotinamide, is recommended to prevent skin cancer in high-risk patients; however, a recent study questioned that guidance.

“I would say to the general public that avoiding supplements containing niacin or related compounds could be a sensible approach at present, while these findings are investigated further.”

Other experts are unsure if such action is justified on the basis of this single study.
 

Residual Cardiovascular Risk

Dr. Hazen, who is chair of the Department of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences, at the Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, explained to this news organization that they did not set out to study niacin.

“It began as a study to look for novel pathways involved in residual cardiovascular disease risk — the risk for cardiovascular events after adjusting for traditional risk factors such as cholesterol, blood pressure, and diabetes.”

The researchers began looking for compounds in plasma that predicted future adverse cardiovascular events in individuals undergoing elective diagnostic cardiac evaluation. Two of the leading candidates identified were niacin derivatives — 2PY and 4PY — that are only formed in the presence of excess niacin.

They then developed assays to measure 2PY and 4PY and conducted further studies in two validation cohorts — 2331 US individuals and a European cohort of 832 individuals. In both cohorts, elevated plasma levels of 2PY and 4PY predicted future adverse cardiovascular events, with a doubling in cardiovascular risk seen in those with levels in the highest vs the lowest quartile.

To move beyond these observational studies and to explore a potentially causal relationship, Dr. Hazen’s team went on to perform genome-wide association studies and found that genetic variants that tracked with higher levels of 4PY also linked to levels of the inflammatory marker, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1).

And in cell culture and animal studies, they found that 4PY was a driver of inflammation, upregulating VCAM-1 and eliciting vascular inflammation responses.

“So, we have shown in several different ways that the niacin derivative, 4PY, is linked to increased cardiovascular risk,” Dr. Hazen commented.
 

Significant Health Implications?

Dr. Hazen believed these findings could have significant health implications.

He noted that Western populations have been consuming large amounts of niacin ever since World War 2 when we began to fortify many foods with essential vitamins to avoid diseases caused by deficiencies. Niacin was added to foods to prevent pellagra — a disease characterized by inflamed skin, diarrhea, and dementia, that was often fatal.

“While we may have eliminated pellagra, have we, as a consequence, increased the prevalence of cardiovascular disease many years later?” Dr. Hazen asked.

This may be a clue to why niacin does not lower cardiovascular risk as much as would be expected from the degree of cholesterol lowering it brings about. “This is the niacin paradox and has led to the thought that there could be some kind of adverse effect that niacin is promoting. I think we may have found something that contributes to the niacin paradox,” he said.

However, the niacin pathway is complicated. Niacin is the major source of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), an integral molecule that allows cells to create energy. “Because it is so important, our bodies are designed to salvage and retain NADs, but once storage capacity is exceeded, then these 4PY and 2PY derivatives are generated,” Dr. Hazen explained. “But you have to really eat a lot of niacin-rich foods for this to happen.”

He is not claiming that niacin causes cardiovascular disease. “It is 4PY that appears to be the driver of vascular inflammation. And 4PY is a breakdown product of niacin. But there is more than one pathway that could lead to 4PY generation. There is a whole interconnecting network of compounds that interchange with each other — known as the niacin pool — any one or more of these compounds can be ingested and raise pool levels and ultimately 4PY levels. However, by far and away, niacin is one of the major sources,” Dr. Hazen commented.
 

Are High-Protein Diets Also Implicated?

Other sources of NADs include tryptophan, present in protein. And one of the genetic variants linked to changes in 4PY levels is connected to how dietary protein is directed into the niacin pool, raising the possibility that a high-protein diet may also raise cardiovascular risk in some people, Dr. Hazen noted.

Dr. Hazen estimated that about 3% of the niacin pool in a normal diet comes from protein intake, but that the percentage could increase substantially in very high–protein diets.

“Our data support the concept that if we lower our 4PY level long-term, then that would result in a reduction in cardiovascular disease. But this is still just a hypothesis. If we lower niacin intake, we will lower 4PY,” Dr. Hazen stated.

He said that this research is at too early a stage to give firm recommendations in what this means for the consumer.

“Based on these findings, I would advise people to avoid taking niacin or nicotinic acid or nicotinamide supplements and to eat a sensible balanced diet — maybe not to overdo the high protein–type diets. That’s all we can really say at the moment.”

Noting that niacin can also be one of the major components in energy drinks, he suggested it may be prudent to limit consumption of these products.
 

 

 

What Is the Optimum Niacin Intake?

Dr. Hazen noted that the recommended dietary allowance (RDA) for niacin is well known — between 14 and 18 mg, but he said the average American ingests four times that amount, and some people have substantially higher intakes — up to 50 times the RDA if taking supplements.

While food fortification with niacin may have been useful in the past, Dr. Hazen questioned whether it should still be mandated.

“In the US, you cannot buy flour or cereal or rice that is not fortified. And if you look closely, some products have much higher levels than those that are mandated. The food companies advertise this as a benefit, but there is no good data in support of that. What if several decades of eating excessive amounts of niacin has led to an increase in cardiovascular disease?”

He does not propose stopping all niacin fortification, “but maybe, we could have the choice of selecting an unfortified option,” he said.
 

Causal Link Not Proven

Commenting for this news organization, John Guyton, MD, Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, who has been involved in niacin research for many years, said the Nature Medicine study showed “interesting and important results,” but they do not at this point prove a causal link between niacin intake and risk for cardiovascular disease.

“These findings need to be investigated further, and more studies are certainly justified, but I don’t think that this study alone makes an adequate case for restricting niacin intake, or thinking about stopping niacin fortification of foodstuffs,” Dr. Guyton said.

Noting that niacin is present in large quantities in many fast foods, he suggested the researchers may have just picked up the consequences of eating an unhealthy diet.

“If you look at foods that contain high quantities of niacin, red meat is at the top of the list. And if you think of a hamburger, niacin is present in relatively large quantities both the burger and the bun. So, these findings may just be a reflection of an overall unhealthy diet,” he commented.

Dr. Guyton also pointed out that major clinical trials with niacin have shown mixed results, and its effect on cardiovascular risk is still not completely understood. While the HPS2-THRIVE and AIM-HIGH trials did not show benefits in reducing cardiovascular events, an earlier study, the Coronary Drug Project in which the agent was given with food, did show some positive effects with substantial reductions in myocardial infarction and stroke, and there was the suggestion of a reduction in long-term mortality in the niacin group several years after the trial had ended.
 

Nicotinamide in Skin Cancer Prevention

What about the use of nicotinamide in skin cancer prevention?

Addressing this question, Kristin Bibee, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, pointed out that nicotinamide, although closely related to niacin, may have different effects. “This study does not specifically address nicotinamide supplementation and 4PY levels,” she said.

Diona Damian, MD, professor of dermatology at the University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia, told this news organization that it was hard to extrapolate these findings on basal levels of niacin in a cardiac cohort to the administration of supra-physiological doses of nicotinamide for skin cancer prevention.

There may be different effects of supplemental niacin compared to nicotinamide, which lacks the vasodilatory effects seen with niacin, Dr. Damian said, adding that it would be interesting to see the results from higher, therapeutic nicotinamide doses in patients with and without cardiac disease.

She pointed out that high vs low levels of nicotinamide supplementation can have different and even opposite effects on cellular processes, such as upregulating or inhibiting DNA repair enzymes. At high doses, nicotinamide is anti-inflammatory in skin.

Dr. Damian noted that two phase 3 studies (ONTRAC and ONTRANS) of nicotinamide 500 mg twice daily for skin cancer prevention did not find a significant increase in cardiovascular events compared to placebo over 12 months.

“Oral nicotinamide has been shown to reduce nonmelanoma skin cancer by about a quarter in patients with normal immunity and multiple skin cancers. The doses used for skin cancer prevention are well above daily dietary levels, and treatment needs to be ongoing for the protective effects to continue. Nicotinamide should not be recommended as a preventive agent for people who have not had multiple skin cancers but should be reserved for those with a heavy burden of skin cancers,” she commented.

“For now, it would be reasonable to balance the benefits of skin cancer reduction against possible effects on inflammatory markers in patients with cardiac risk factors, when helping patients to decide whether or not nicotinamide therapy is appropriate for them,” she added.

Meanwhile, Dr. Hazen said the most exciting part of this new research is the discovery of a new pathway that contributes to cardiovascular disease and potentially a new target to treat residual cardiovascular risk.

“I believe our results show that we should be measuring 4PY levels and individuals with high levels need to be extra vigilant about lowering their cardiovascular risk.”

The next step will be to confirm these results in other populations and then to develop a diagnostic test to identify people with a high 4PY level, he said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A recent study linking a niacin derivative to an increased risk for cardiovascular events has raised questions about the safety of this B vitamin, which is added to many food staples in the Western diet and taken in the form of supplements.

The findings, which were published in Nature Medicine, may also help explain why taking niacin, which lowers low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and raises high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, did not lead to a reduction in cardiovascular events in major clinical trials.

But could this essential micronutrient really have an adverse effect on cardiovascular risk, and what are the implications for niacin intake?

Senior author of the new study Stanley Hazen, MD, believes some prudence on excessive niacin intake may be justified.

“I’m not suggesting we should completely avoid niacin — it is an essential nutrient, but our results suggest that too much may be harmful,” Dr. Hazen said.

Niacin supplements are also sold with claims of antiaging effects, arthritis relief, and boosting brain function, although none of these claims have been proven. And the related compound, nicotinamide, is recommended to prevent skin cancer in high-risk patients; however, a recent study questioned that guidance.

“I would say to the general public that avoiding supplements containing niacin or related compounds could be a sensible approach at present, while these findings are investigated further.”

Other experts are unsure if such action is justified on the basis of this single study.
 

Residual Cardiovascular Risk

Dr. Hazen, who is chair of the Department of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences, at the Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, explained to this news organization that they did not set out to study niacin.

“It began as a study to look for novel pathways involved in residual cardiovascular disease risk — the risk for cardiovascular events after adjusting for traditional risk factors such as cholesterol, blood pressure, and diabetes.”

The researchers began looking for compounds in plasma that predicted future adverse cardiovascular events in individuals undergoing elective diagnostic cardiac evaluation. Two of the leading candidates identified were niacin derivatives — 2PY and 4PY — that are only formed in the presence of excess niacin.

They then developed assays to measure 2PY and 4PY and conducted further studies in two validation cohorts — 2331 US individuals and a European cohort of 832 individuals. In both cohorts, elevated plasma levels of 2PY and 4PY predicted future adverse cardiovascular events, with a doubling in cardiovascular risk seen in those with levels in the highest vs the lowest quartile.

To move beyond these observational studies and to explore a potentially causal relationship, Dr. Hazen’s team went on to perform genome-wide association studies and found that genetic variants that tracked with higher levels of 4PY also linked to levels of the inflammatory marker, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1).

And in cell culture and animal studies, they found that 4PY was a driver of inflammation, upregulating VCAM-1 and eliciting vascular inflammation responses.

“So, we have shown in several different ways that the niacin derivative, 4PY, is linked to increased cardiovascular risk,” Dr. Hazen commented.
 

Significant Health Implications?

Dr. Hazen believed these findings could have significant health implications.

He noted that Western populations have been consuming large amounts of niacin ever since World War 2 when we began to fortify many foods with essential vitamins to avoid diseases caused by deficiencies. Niacin was added to foods to prevent pellagra — a disease characterized by inflamed skin, diarrhea, and dementia, that was often fatal.

“While we may have eliminated pellagra, have we, as a consequence, increased the prevalence of cardiovascular disease many years later?” Dr. Hazen asked.

This may be a clue to why niacin does not lower cardiovascular risk as much as would be expected from the degree of cholesterol lowering it brings about. “This is the niacin paradox and has led to the thought that there could be some kind of adverse effect that niacin is promoting. I think we may have found something that contributes to the niacin paradox,” he said.

However, the niacin pathway is complicated. Niacin is the major source of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), an integral molecule that allows cells to create energy. “Because it is so important, our bodies are designed to salvage and retain NADs, but once storage capacity is exceeded, then these 4PY and 2PY derivatives are generated,” Dr. Hazen explained. “But you have to really eat a lot of niacin-rich foods for this to happen.”

He is not claiming that niacin causes cardiovascular disease. “It is 4PY that appears to be the driver of vascular inflammation. And 4PY is a breakdown product of niacin. But there is more than one pathway that could lead to 4PY generation. There is a whole interconnecting network of compounds that interchange with each other — known as the niacin pool — any one or more of these compounds can be ingested and raise pool levels and ultimately 4PY levels. However, by far and away, niacin is one of the major sources,” Dr. Hazen commented.
 

Are High-Protein Diets Also Implicated?

Other sources of NADs include tryptophan, present in protein. And one of the genetic variants linked to changes in 4PY levels is connected to how dietary protein is directed into the niacin pool, raising the possibility that a high-protein diet may also raise cardiovascular risk in some people, Dr. Hazen noted.

Dr. Hazen estimated that about 3% of the niacin pool in a normal diet comes from protein intake, but that the percentage could increase substantially in very high–protein diets.

“Our data support the concept that if we lower our 4PY level long-term, then that would result in a reduction in cardiovascular disease. But this is still just a hypothesis. If we lower niacin intake, we will lower 4PY,” Dr. Hazen stated.

He said that this research is at too early a stage to give firm recommendations in what this means for the consumer.

“Based on these findings, I would advise people to avoid taking niacin or nicotinic acid or nicotinamide supplements and to eat a sensible balanced diet — maybe not to overdo the high protein–type diets. That’s all we can really say at the moment.”

Noting that niacin can also be one of the major components in energy drinks, he suggested it may be prudent to limit consumption of these products.
 

 

 

What Is the Optimum Niacin Intake?

Dr. Hazen noted that the recommended dietary allowance (RDA) for niacin is well known — between 14 and 18 mg, but he said the average American ingests four times that amount, and some people have substantially higher intakes — up to 50 times the RDA if taking supplements.

While food fortification with niacin may have been useful in the past, Dr. Hazen questioned whether it should still be mandated.

“In the US, you cannot buy flour or cereal or rice that is not fortified. And if you look closely, some products have much higher levels than those that are mandated. The food companies advertise this as a benefit, but there is no good data in support of that. What if several decades of eating excessive amounts of niacin has led to an increase in cardiovascular disease?”

He does not propose stopping all niacin fortification, “but maybe, we could have the choice of selecting an unfortified option,” he said.
 

Causal Link Not Proven

Commenting for this news organization, John Guyton, MD, Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, who has been involved in niacin research for many years, said the Nature Medicine study showed “interesting and important results,” but they do not at this point prove a causal link between niacin intake and risk for cardiovascular disease.

“These findings need to be investigated further, and more studies are certainly justified, but I don’t think that this study alone makes an adequate case for restricting niacin intake, or thinking about stopping niacin fortification of foodstuffs,” Dr. Guyton said.

Noting that niacin is present in large quantities in many fast foods, he suggested the researchers may have just picked up the consequences of eating an unhealthy diet.

“If you look at foods that contain high quantities of niacin, red meat is at the top of the list. And if you think of a hamburger, niacin is present in relatively large quantities both the burger and the bun. So, these findings may just be a reflection of an overall unhealthy diet,” he commented.

Dr. Guyton also pointed out that major clinical trials with niacin have shown mixed results, and its effect on cardiovascular risk is still not completely understood. While the HPS2-THRIVE and AIM-HIGH trials did not show benefits in reducing cardiovascular events, an earlier study, the Coronary Drug Project in which the agent was given with food, did show some positive effects with substantial reductions in myocardial infarction and stroke, and there was the suggestion of a reduction in long-term mortality in the niacin group several years after the trial had ended.
 

Nicotinamide in Skin Cancer Prevention

What about the use of nicotinamide in skin cancer prevention?

Addressing this question, Kristin Bibee, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, pointed out that nicotinamide, although closely related to niacin, may have different effects. “This study does not specifically address nicotinamide supplementation and 4PY levels,” she said.

Diona Damian, MD, professor of dermatology at the University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia, told this news organization that it was hard to extrapolate these findings on basal levels of niacin in a cardiac cohort to the administration of supra-physiological doses of nicotinamide for skin cancer prevention.

There may be different effects of supplemental niacin compared to nicotinamide, which lacks the vasodilatory effects seen with niacin, Dr. Damian said, adding that it would be interesting to see the results from higher, therapeutic nicotinamide doses in patients with and without cardiac disease.

She pointed out that high vs low levels of nicotinamide supplementation can have different and even opposite effects on cellular processes, such as upregulating or inhibiting DNA repair enzymes. At high doses, nicotinamide is anti-inflammatory in skin.

Dr. Damian noted that two phase 3 studies (ONTRAC and ONTRANS) of nicotinamide 500 mg twice daily for skin cancer prevention did not find a significant increase in cardiovascular events compared to placebo over 12 months.

“Oral nicotinamide has been shown to reduce nonmelanoma skin cancer by about a quarter in patients with normal immunity and multiple skin cancers. The doses used for skin cancer prevention are well above daily dietary levels, and treatment needs to be ongoing for the protective effects to continue. Nicotinamide should not be recommended as a preventive agent for people who have not had multiple skin cancers but should be reserved for those with a heavy burden of skin cancers,” she commented.

“For now, it would be reasonable to balance the benefits of skin cancer reduction against possible effects on inflammatory markers in patients with cardiac risk factors, when helping patients to decide whether or not nicotinamide therapy is appropriate for them,” she added.

Meanwhile, Dr. Hazen said the most exciting part of this new research is the discovery of a new pathway that contributes to cardiovascular disease and potentially a new target to treat residual cardiovascular risk.

“I believe our results show that we should be measuring 4PY levels and individuals with high levels need to be extra vigilant about lowering their cardiovascular risk.”

The next step will be to confirm these results in other populations and then to develop a diagnostic test to identify people with a high 4PY level, he said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

A recent study linking a niacin derivative to an increased risk for cardiovascular events has raised questions about the safety of this B vitamin, which is added to many food staples in the Western diet and taken in the form of supplements.

The findings, which were published in Nature Medicine, may also help explain why taking niacin, which lowers low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and raises high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, did not lead to a reduction in cardiovascular events in major clinical trials.

But could this essential micronutrient really have an adverse effect on cardiovascular risk, and what are the implications for niacin intake?

Senior author of the new study Stanley Hazen, MD, believes some prudence on excessive niacin intake may be justified.

“I’m not suggesting we should completely avoid niacin — it is an essential nutrient, but our results suggest that too much may be harmful,” Dr. Hazen said.

Niacin supplements are also sold with claims of antiaging effects, arthritis relief, and boosting brain function, although none of these claims have been proven. And the related compound, nicotinamide, is recommended to prevent skin cancer in high-risk patients; however, a recent study questioned that guidance.

“I would say to the general public that avoiding supplements containing niacin or related compounds could be a sensible approach at present, while these findings are investigated further.”

Other experts are unsure if such action is justified on the basis of this single study.
 

Residual Cardiovascular Risk

Dr. Hazen, who is chair of the Department of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences, at the Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, explained to this news organization that they did not set out to study niacin.

“It began as a study to look for novel pathways involved in residual cardiovascular disease risk — the risk for cardiovascular events after adjusting for traditional risk factors such as cholesterol, blood pressure, and diabetes.”

The researchers began looking for compounds in plasma that predicted future adverse cardiovascular events in individuals undergoing elective diagnostic cardiac evaluation. Two of the leading candidates identified were niacin derivatives — 2PY and 4PY — that are only formed in the presence of excess niacin.

They then developed assays to measure 2PY and 4PY and conducted further studies in two validation cohorts — 2331 US individuals and a European cohort of 832 individuals. In both cohorts, elevated plasma levels of 2PY and 4PY predicted future adverse cardiovascular events, with a doubling in cardiovascular risk seen in those with levels in the highest vs the lowest quartile.

To move beyond these observational studies and to explore a potentially causal relationship, Dr. Hazen’s team went on to perform genome-wide association studies and found that genetic variants that tracked with higher levels of 4PY also linked to levels of the inflammatory marker, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1).

And in cell culture and animal studies, they found that 4PY was a driver of inflammation, upregulating VCAM-1 and eliciting vascular inflammation responses.

“So, we have shown in several different ways that the niacin derivative, 4PY, is linked to increased cardiovascular risk,” Dr. Hazen commented.
 

Significant Health Implications?

Dr. Hazen believed these findings could have significant health implications.

He noted that Western populations have been consuming large amounts of niacin ever since World War 2 when we began to fortify many foods with essential vitamins to avoid diseases caused by deficiencies. Niacin was added to foods to prevent pellagra — a disease characterized by inflamed skin, diarrhea, and dementia, that was often fatal.

“While we may have eliminated pellagra, have we, as a consequence, increased the prevalence of cardiovascular disease many years later?” Dr. Hazen asked.

This may be a clue to why niacin does not lower cardiovascular risk as much as would be expected from the degree of cholesterol lowering it brings about. “This is the niacin paradox and has led to the thought that there could be some kind of adverse effect that niacin is promoting. I think we may have found something that contributes to the niacin paradox,” he said.

However, the niacin pathway is complicated. Niacin is the major source of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), an integral molecule that allows cells to create energy. “Because it is so important, our bodies are designed to salvage and retain NADs, but once storage capacity is exceeded, then these 4PY and 2PY derivatives are generated,” Dr. Hazen explained. “But you have to really eat a lot of niacin-rich foods for this to happen.”

He is not claiming that niacin causes cardiovascular disease. “It is 4PY that appears to be the driver of vascular inflammation. And 4PY is a breakdown product of niacin. But there is more than one pathway that could lead to 4PY generation. There is a whole interconnecting network of compounds that interchange with each other — known as the niacin pool — any one or more of these compounds can be ingested and raise pool levels and ultimately 4PY levels. However, by far and away, niacin is one of the major sources,” Dr. Hazen commented.
 

Are High-Protein Diets Also Implicated?

Other sources of NADs include tryptophan, present in protein. And one of the genetic variants linked to changes in 4PY levels is connected to how dietary protein is directed into the niacin pool, raising the possibility that a high-protein diet may also raise cardiovascular risk in some people, Dr. Hazen noted.

Dr. Hazen estimated that about 3% of the niacin pool in a normal diet comes from protein intake, but that the percentage could increase substantially in very high–protein diets.

“Our data support the concept that if we lower our 4PY level long-term, then that would result in a reduction in cardiovascular disease. But this is still just a hypothesis. If we lower niacin intake, we will lower 4PY,” Dr. Hazen stated.

He said that this research is at too early a stage to give firm recommendations in what this means for the consumer.

“Based on these findings, I would advise people to avoid taking niacin or nicotinic acid or nicotinamide supplements and to eat a sensible balanced diet — maybe not to overdo the high protein–type diets. That’s all we can really say at the moment.”

Noting that niacin can also be one of the major components in energy drinks, he suggested it may be prudent to limit consumption of these products.
 

 

 

What Is the Optimum Niacin Intake?

Dr. Hazen noted that the recommended dietary allowance (RDA) for niacin is well known — between 14 and 18 mg, but he said the average American ingests four times that amount, and some people have substantially higher intakes — up to 50 times the RDA if taking supplements.

While food fortification with niacin may have been useful in the past, Dr. Hazen questioned whether it should still be mandated.

“In the US, you cannot buy flour or cereal or rice that is not fortified. And if you look closely, some products have much higher levels than those that are mandated. The food companies advertise this as a benefit, but there is no good data in support of that. What if several decades of eating excessive amounts of niacin has led to an increase in cardiovascular disease?”

He does not propose stopping all niacin fortification, “but maybe, we could have the choice of selecting an unfortified option,” he said.
 

Causal Link Not Proven

Commenting for this news organization, John Guyton, MD, Professor Emeritus of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, who has been involved in niacin research for many years, said the Nature Medicine study showed “interesting and important results,” but they do not at this point prove a causal link between niacin intake and risk for cardiovascular disease.

“These findings need to be investigated further, and more studies are certainly justified, but I don’t think that this study alone makes an adequate case for restricting niacin intake, or thinking about stopping niacin fortification of foodstuffs,” Dr. Guyton said.

Noting that niacin is present in large quantities in many fast foods, he suggested the researchers may have just picked up the consequences of eating an unhealthy diet.

“If you look at foods that contain high quantities of niacin, red meat is at the top of the list. And if you think of a hamburger, niacin is present in relatively large quantities both the burger and the bun. So, these findings may just be a reflection of an overall unhealthy diet,” he commented.

Dr. Guyton also pointed out that major clinical trials with niacin have shown mixed results, and its effect on cardiovascular risk is still not completely understood. While the HPS2-THRIVE and AIM-HIGH trials did not show benefits in reducing cardiovascular events, an earlier study, the Coronary Drug Project in which the agent was given with food, did show some positive effects with substantial reductions in myocardial infarction and stroke, and there was the suggestion of a reduction in long-term mortality in the niacin group several years after the trial had ended.
 

Nicotinamide in Skin Cancer Prevention

What about the use of nicotinamide in skin cancer prevention?

Addressing this question, Kristin Bibee, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, pointed out that nicotinamide, although closely related to niacin, may have different effects. “This study does not specifically address nicotinamide supplementation and 4PY levels,” she said.

Diona Damian, MD, professor of dermatology at the University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia, told this news organization that it was hard to extrapolate these findings on basal levels of niacin in a cardiac cohort to the administration of supra-physiological doses of nicotinamide for skin cancer prevention.

There may be different effects of supplemental niacin compared to nicotinamide, which lacks the vasodilatory effects seen with niacin, Dr. Damian said, adding that it would be interesting to see the results from higher, therapeutic nicotinamide doses in patients with and without cardiac disease.

She pointed out that high vs low levels of nicotinamide supplementation can have different and even opposite effects on cellular processes, such as upregulating or inhibiting DNA repair enzymes. At high doses, nicotinamide is anti-inflammatory in skin.

Dr. Damian noted that two phase 3 studies (ONTRAC and ONTRANS) of nicotinamide 500 mg twice daily for skin cancer prevention did not find a significant increase in cardiovascular events compared to placebo over 12 months.

“Oral nicotinamide has been shown to reduce nonmelanoma skin cancer by about a quarter in patients with normal immunity and multiple skin cancers. The doses used for skin cancer prevention are well above daily dietary levels, and treatment needs to be ongoing for the protective effects to continue. Nicotinamide should not be recommended as a preventive agent for people who have not had multiple skin cancers but should be reserved for those with a heavy burden of skin cancers,” she commented.

“For now, it would be reasonable to balance the benefits of skin cancer reduction against possible effects on inflammatory markers in patients with cardiac risk factors, when helping patients to decide whether or not nicotinamide therapy is appropriate for them,” she added.

Meanwhile, Dr. Hazen said the most exciting part of this new research is the discovery of a new pathway that contributes to cardiovascular disease and potentially a new target to treat residual cardiovascular risk.

“I believe our results show that we should be measuring 4PY levels and individuals with high levels need to be extra vigilant about lowering their cardiovascular risk.”

The next step will be to confirm these results in other populations and then to develop a diagnostic test to identify people with a high 4PY level, he said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Intermittent Fasting Linked to Higher CVD Death Risk

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 03/25/2024 - 15:58

A new study raises a cautionary note on time-restricted eating (TRE), a type of intermittent fasting that is gaining popularity.

The observational analysis of over 20,000 US adults showed that those who limited their eating to a period of less than 8 hours per day had a higher risk for cardiovascular mortality compared with peers who ate across the typical 12-16 hours per day. This was the case in the overall sample and in those with cardiovascular disease (CVD) or cancer.

Lead author Victor Wenze Zhong, PhD, cautioned that the findings “require replication and we cannot demonstrate 8-hour TRE causes cardiovascular death in this observational study.

“However, it’s important for patients, particularly those with existing heart conditions or cancer, to be aware of the positive association between an 8-hour eating window and cardiovascular death,” Dr. Zhong, professor and chair, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China, told this news organization. 

The results (Abstract P192) were presented March 18 at the American Heart Association (AHA) Epidemiology and Prevention/Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health Scientific Sessions 2024.
 

‘Provocative’ Results 

Short-term randomized controlled trials have suggested that 8-hour TRE may improve cardiometabolic risk profiles, but the potential long-term effects of this eating pattern are unknown. 

The observation that TRE may have short-term benefits but long-term adverse effects is “interesting and provocative” and needs further study, Christopher D. Gardner, PhD, professor of medicine at Stanford University in California, who wasn’t involved in the study, said in a conference statement, and he agreed that much more research is needed. 

The researchers analyzed data on dietary patterns for 20,078 adults (mean age, 48 years; 50% men; 73% non-Hispanic White) who participated in the 2003-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES). All of them completed two 24-hour dietary recall questionnaires within the first year of enrollment. Deaths through the end of 2019 were determined via the National Death Index.

During a median follow-up of 8 years, there were 2797 deaths due to any cause, including 840 CV deaths and 643 cancer deaths. 

In the overall sample, compared with an eating duration of 12-16 hours, 8-hour TRE was significantly associated with an increased risk for CV mortality (hazard ratio [HR], 1.91; 95% CI, 1.20-3.03).

This association was also observed in adults with CVD (HR, 2.07; 95% CI, 1.14-3.78) and adults with cancer (HR, 3.04; 95% CI, 1.44-6.41). 

Other eating durations were not associated with CV mortality, except for eating duration of 8 to less than 10 hours in people with CVD (HR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.03-2.67). 

No significant associations were found between eating duration and all-cause or cancer mortality in the overall sample and CVD/cancer subsamples, except that eating duration of more than 16 hours was associated with a lower risk for cancer mortality in people with cancer (HR, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.23-0.95).
 

Quality More Important Than Timing 

Dr. Zhong noted that the study doesn’t address the underlying mechanisms driving the observed association between 8-hour TRE and CV death. 

“However, we did observe that people who restricted eating to a period less than 8 hours per day had less lean muscle mass compared with those with typical eating duration of 12-16 hours. Loss of lean body mass has been linked to higher risk of cardiovascular mortality,” Dr. Zhong said. 

“Based on the evidence as of now, focusing on what people eat appears to be more important than focusing on the time when they eat. There are certain dietary approaches with compelling health benefits to choose, such as DASH diet and Mediterranean diet,” Dr. Zhong said.

Intermittent fasting is “certainly an interesting concept and one on which the potential mechanisms underlying the improvements in short outcome studies and preclinical studies in animals are strongly being pursued,” Sean P. Heffron, MD, cardiologist at the Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at NYU Langone Heart, New York, who wasn’t involved in the study, told this news organization. 

Dr. Heffron expressed skepticism about the study results calling them “far from complete” and noted that data on diet was based on only 2-day diet records without correction for confounding variables. 

Dr. Heffron also noted that the restricted diet group has more smokers and more men. “I would “strongly anticipate that once appropriate corrections are made, the findings will no longer persist in statistical significance,” Dr. Heffron said.

He emphasized the need for more rigorous research before making clinical recommendations. When patients ask about intermittent fasting, Dr. Heffron said he tells them, “If it works for you, that’s fine,” but he doesn’t provide a recommendation for or against it. 

Funding for the study was provided by the National Key Research and Development Program of China and the National Science Foundation of China. Zhong, Dr. Heffron and Dr. Gardner have no relevant disclosures.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A new study raises a cautionary note on time-restricted eating (TRE), a type of intermittent fasting that is gaining popularity.

The observational analysis of over 20,000 US adults showed that those who limited their eating to a period of less than 8 hours per day had a higher risk for cardiovascular mortality compared with peers who ate across the typical 12-16 hours per day. This was the case in the overall sample and in those with cardiovascular disease (CVD) or cancer.

Lead author Victor Wenze Zhong, PhD, cautioned that the findings “require replication and we cannot demonstrate 8-hour TRE causes cardiovascular death in this observational study.

“However, it’s important for patients, particularly those with existing heart conditions or cancer, to be aware of the positive association between an 8-hour eating window and cardiovascular death,” Dr. Zhong, professor and chair, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China, told this news organization. 

The results (Abstract P192) were presented March 18 at the American Heart Association (AHA) Epidemiology and Prevention/Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health Scientific Sessions 2024.
 

‘Provocative’ Results 

Short-term randomized controlled trials have suggested that 8-hour TRE may improve cardiometabolic risk profiles, but the potential long-term effects of this eating pattern are unknown. 

The observation that TRE may have short-term benefits but long-term adverse effects is “interesting and provocative” and needs further study, Christopher D. Gardner, PhD, professor of medicine at Stanford University in California, who wasn’t involved in the study, said in a conference statement, and he agreed that much more research is needed. 

The researchers analyzed data on dietary patterns for 20,078 adults (mean age, 48 years; 50% men; 73% non-Hispanic White) who participated in the 2003-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES). All of them completed two 24-hour dietary recall questionnaires within the first year of enrollment. Deaths through the end of 2019 were determined via the National Death Index.

During a median follow-up of 8 years, there were 2797 deaths due to any cause, including 840 CV deaths and 643 cancer deaths. 

In the overall sample, compared with an eating duration of 12-16 hours, 8-hour TRE was significantly associated with an increased risk for CV mortality (hazard ratio [HR], 1.91; 95% CI, 1.20-3.03).

This association was also observed in adults with CVD (HR, 2.07; 95% CI, 1.14-3.78) and adults with cancer (HR, 3.04; 95% CI, 1.44-6.41). 

Other eating durations were not associated with CV mortality, except for eating duration of 8 to less than 10 hours in people with CVD (HR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.03-2.67). 

No significant associations were found between eating duration and all-cause or cancer mortality in the overall sample and CVD/cancer subsamples, except that eating duration of more than 16 hours was associated with a lower risk for cancer mortality in people with cancer (HR, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.23-0.95).
 

Quality More Important Than Timing 

Dr. Zhong noted that the study doesn’t address the underlying mechanisms driving the observed association between 8-hour TRE and CV death. 

“However, we did observe that people who restricted eating to a period less than 8 hours per day had less lean muscle mass compared with those with typical eating duration of 12-16 hours. Loss of lean body mass has been linked to higher risk of cardiovascular mortality,” Dr. Zhong said. 

“Based on the evidence as of now, focusing on what people eat appears to be more important than focusing on the time when they eat. There are certain dietary approaches with compelling health benefits to choose, such as DASH diet and Mediterranean diet,” Dr. Zhong said.

Intermittent fasting is “certainly an interesting concept and one on which the potential mechanisms underlying the improvements in short outcome studies and preclinical studies in animals are strongly being pursued,” Sean P. Heffron, MD, cardiologist at the Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at NYU Langone Heart, New York, who wasn’t involved in the study, told this news organization. 

Dr. Heffron expressed skepticism about the study results calling them “far from complete” and noted that data on diet was based on only 2-day diet records without correction for confounding variables. 

Dr. Heffron also noted that the restricted diet group has more smokers and more men. “I would “strongly anticipate that once appropriate corrections are made, the findings will no longer persist in statistical significance,” Dr. Heffron said.

He emphasized the need for more rigorous research before making clinical recommendations. When patients ask about intermittent fasting, Dr. Heffron said he tells them, “If it works for you, that’s fine,” but he doesn’t provide a recommendation for or against it. 

Funding for the study was provided by the National Key Research and Development Program of China and the National Science Foundation of China. Zhong, Dr. Heffron and Dr. Gardner have no relevant disclosures.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

A new study raises a cautionary note on time-restricted eating (TRE), a type of intermittent fasting that is gaining popularity.

The observational analysis of over 20,000 US adults showed that those who limited their eating to a period of less than 8 hours per day had a higher risk for cardiovascular mortality compared with peers who ate across the typical 12-16 hours per day. This was the case in the overall sample and in those with cardiovascular disease (CVD) or cancer.

Lead author Victor Wenze Zhong, PhD, cautioned that the findings “require replication and we cannot demonstrate 8-hour TRE causes cardiovascular death in this observational study.

“However, it’s important for patients, particularly those with existing heart conditions or cancer, to be aware of the positive association between an 8-hour eating window and cardiovascular death,” Dr. Zhong, professor and chair, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China, told this news organization. 

The results (Abstract P192) were presented March 18 at the American Heart Association (AHA) Epidemiology and Prevention/Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health Scientific Sessions 2024.
 

‘Provocative’ Results 

Short-term randomized controlled trials have suggested that 8-hour TRE may improve cardiometabolic risk profiles, but the potential long-term effects of this eating pattern are unknown. 

The observation that TRE may have short-term benefits but long-term adverse effects is “interesting and provocative” and needs further study, Christopher D. Gardner, PhD, professor of medicine at Stanford University in California, who wasn’t involved in the study, said in a conference statement, and he agreed that much more research is needed. 

The researchers analyzed data on dietary patterns for 20,078 adults (mean age, 48 years; 50% men; 73% non-Hispanic White) who participated in the 2003-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES). All of them completed two 24-hour dietary recall questionnaires within the first year of enrollment. Deaths through the end of 2019 were determined via the National Death Index.

During a median follow-up of 8 years, there were 2797 deaths due to any cause, including 840 CV deaths and 643 cancer deaths. 

In the overall sample, compared with an eating duration of 12-16 hours, 8-hour TRE was significantly associated with an increased risk for CV mortality (hazard ratio [HR], 1.91; 95% CI, 1.20-3.03).

This association was also observed in adults with CVD (HR, 2.07; 95% CI, 1.14-3.78) and adults with cancer (HR, 3.04; 95% CI, 1.44-6.41). 

Other eating durations were not associated with CV mortality, except for eating duration of 8 to less than 10 hours in people with CVD (HR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.03-2.67). 

No significant associations were found between eating duration and all-cause or cancer mortality in the overall sample and CVD/cancer subsamples, except that eating duration of more than 16 hours was associated with a lower risk for cancer mortality in people with cancer (HR, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.23-0.95).
 

Quality More Important Than Timing 

Dr. Zhong noted that the study doesn’t address the underlying mechanisms driving the observed association between 8-hour TRE and CV death. 

“However, we did observe that people who restricted eating to a period less than 8 hours per day had less lean muscle mass compared with those with typical eating duration of 12-16 hours. Loss of lean body mass has been linked to higher risk of cardiovascular mortality,” Dr. Zhong said. 

“Based on the evidence as of now, focusing on what people eat appears to be more important than focusing on the time when they eat. There are certain dietary approaches with compelling health benefits to choose, such as DASH diet and Mediterranean diet,” Dr. Zhong said.

Intermittent fasting is “certainly an interesting concept and one on which the potential mechanisms underlying the improvements in short outcome studies and preclinical studies in animals are strongly being pursued,” Sean P. Heffron, MD, cardiologist at the Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at NYU Langone Heart, New York, who wasn’t involved in the study, told this news organization. 

Dr. Heffron expressed skepticism about the study results calling them “far from complete” and noted that data on diet was based on only 2-day diet records without correction for confounding variables. 

Dr. Heffron also noted that the restricted diet group has more smokers and more men. “I would “strongly anticipate that once appropriate corrections are made, the findings will no longer persist in statistical significance,” Dr. Heffron said.

He emphasized the need for more rigorous research before making clinical recommendations. When patients ask about intermittent fasting, Dr. Heffron said he tells them, “If it works for you, that’s fine,” but he doesn’t provide a recommendation for or against it. 

Funding for the study was provided by the National Key Research and Development Program of China and the National Science Foundation of China. Zhong, Dr. Heffron and Dr. Gardner have no relevant disclosures.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Can Treating Depression Mitigate CVD Risk?

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 03/19/2024 - 15:33

 

TOPLINE:

Depression is linked to a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), particularly in women, new data from a large retrospective cohort study show. Researchers suggest that screening and treating patients for depression may lead to a decreased incidence of CVD.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed health insurance claims from more than 4 million Japanese patients filed between 2005 and 2022.
  • Participants were 18-75 (median age, 44) without a history of CVD or stroke, heart failure, or atrial fibrillation.
  • Investigators followed participants for a mean period of 2.5-3.5 years to observe the number of CVD events in those who had a diagnosis of depression.
  • During the follow-up period, there were 119,000 CVD events in men (14 per 10,000 person-years) and 61,800 CVD events in women (111 per 10,000 person-years).

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with women without depression, those with depression had a 64% higher risk for CVD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.64), while men with depression had a 39% higher risk for CVD vs their counterparts without depression (HR, 1.39; P < .001).
  • This association was significant even after controlling for various factors such as body mass index, diabetes, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity.
  • Investigators offered several theories about the increased risk for CVD in women with depression, including how depression during hormonal shifts can contribute to a greater impact on cardiovascular health.

IN PRACTICE:

“Healthcare professionals must recognize the important role of depression in the development of CVD and emphasize the importance of a comprehensive, patient-centered approach to its prevention and management,” study author Hidehiro Kaneko, MD, said in a press release. “Assessing the risk of CVD in depressed patients and treating and preventing depression may lead to a decrease of CVD cases.”

SOURCE:

Keitaro Senoo, MD, of the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan, led the study, which was published online on March 12 in JACC: Asia.

LIMITATIONS:

The study is observational, so causality between depression and subsequent CVD events cannot be established. In addition, depression severity is unknown.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, Japan, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan. There were no disclosures reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Depression is linked to a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), particularly in women, new data from a large retrospective cohort study show. Researchers suggest that screening and treating patients for depression may lead to a decreased incidence of CVD.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed health insurance claims from more than 4 million Japanese patients filed between 2005 and 2022.
  • Participants were 18-75 (median age, 44) without a history of CVD or stroke, heart failure, or atrial fibrillation.
  • Investigators followed participants for a mean period of 2.5-3.5 years to observe the number of CVD events in those who had a diagnosis of depression.
  • During the follow-up period, there were 119,000 CVD events in men (14 per 10,000 person-years) and 61,800 CVD events in women (111 per 10,000 person-years).

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with women without depression, those with depression had a 64% higher risk for CVD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.64), while men with depression had a 39% higher risk for CVD vs their counterparts without depression (HR, 1.39; P < .001).
  • This association was significant even after controlling for various factors such as body mass index, diabetes, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity.
  • Investigators offered several theories about the increased risk for CVD in women with depression, including how depression during hormonal shifts can contribute to a greater impact on cardiovascular health.

IN PRACTICE:

“Healthcare professionals must recognize the important role of depression in the development of CVD and emphasize the importance of a comprehensive, patient-centered approach to its prevention and management,” study author Hidehiro Kaneko, MD, said in a press release. “Assessing the risk of CVD in depressed patients and treating and preventing depression may lead to a decrease of CVD cases.”

SOURCE:

Keitaro Senoo, MD, of the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan, led the study, which was published online on March 12 in JACC: Asia.

LIMITATIONS:

The study is observational, so causality between depression and subsequent CVD events cannot be established. In addition, depression severity is unknown.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, Japan, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan. There were no disclosures reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Depression is linked to a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), particularly in women, new data from a large retrospective cohort study show. Researchers suggest that screening and treating patients for depression may lead to a decreased incidence of CVD.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed health insurance claims from more than 4 million Japanese patients filed between 2005 and 2022.
  • Participants were 18-75 (median age, 44) without a history of CVD or stroke, heart failure, or atrial fibrillation.
  • Investigators followed participants for a mean period of 2.5-3.5 years to observe the number of CVD events in those who had a diagnosis of depression.
  • During the follow-up period, there were 119,000 CVD events in men (14 per 10,000 person-years) and 61,800 CVD events in women (111 per 10,000 person-years).

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with women without depression, those with depression had a 64% higher risk for CVD (hazard ratio [HR], 1.64), while men with depression had a 39% higher risk for CVD vs their counterparts without depression (HR, 1.39; P < .001).
  • This association was significant even after controlling for various factors such as body mass index, diabetes, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity.
  • Investigators offered several theories about the increased risk for CVD in women with depression, including how depression during hormonal shifts can contribute to a greater impact on cardiovascular health.

IN PRACTICE:

“Healthcare professionals must recognize the important role of depression in the development of CVD and emphasize the importance of a comprehensive, patient-centered approach to its prevention and management,” study author Hidehiro Kaneko, MD, said in a press release. “Assessing the risk of CVD in depressed patients and treating and preventing depression may lead to a decrease of CVD cases.”

SOURCE:

Keitaro Senoo, MD, of the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan, led the study, which was published online on March 12 in JACC: Asia.

LIMITATIONS:

The study is observational, so causality between depression and subsequent CVD events cannot be established. In addition, depression severity is unknown.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, Japan, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan. There were no disclosures reported.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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