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Contraceptive Users in the United States Show Preference for Alternative Sources

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Changed
Tue, 10/22/2024 - 11:39

 

TOPLINE:

Individuals using contraceptive pills, patches, and rings must frequently interact with the healthcare system for continued use. More than half of US contraceptive users prefer alternative sources over traditional in-person care. Only 35.6% of respondents selected in-person care as their most preferred source.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a cross-sectional nationally representative survey in the United States in 2022 through NORC’s AmeriSpeak panel.
  • A total of 3059 eligible panelists, aged 15-44 years, completed the survey, with 595 individuals currently using a pill, patch, or ring contraceptive included in the analysis.
  • Primary outcomes measured were the use of any preferred source and the most preferred source when obtaining contraception.
  • Sources included in-person care, telehealth, pharmacist-prescribed, online service, and over the counter.
  • Data were analyzed from January 25, 2023, to August 15, 2024.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Only 35.6% of respondents selected in-person care as their most preferred source of contraception.
  • Only 49.7% of respondents obtained their method from a preferred source, while 39.8% received it from their most preferred source.
  • Respondents who previously reported being unable to get their method on time had higher odds of preferring an alternative source (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 2.57; 95% CI, 1.36-4.87).
  • Those who recently received person-centered contraceptive counseling had lower odds of preferring an alternative source (AOR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.35-0.98).

IN PRACTICE:

“The low level of preference for in-person care suggests that expanding contraceptive sources outside of traditional healthcare settings has a role in ameliorating barriers to access and can promote reproductive autonomy,” wrote the authors of the study.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Anu Manchikanti Gómez, PhD, Sexual Health and Reproductive Equity Program, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley. It was published online in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s cross-sectional design limited the ability to establish causality. The sample was limited to individuals aged 15-44 years, which may not represent all contraceptive users. Self-reported data may be subject to recall bias. The study did not distinguish between synchronous and asynchronous telehealth preferences.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Arnold Ventures. Gómez disclosed receiving personal fees from various organizations outside the submitted work. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Individuals using contraceptive pills, patches, and rings must frequently interact with the healthcare system for continued use. More than half of US contraceptive users prefer alternative sources over traditional in-person care. Only 35.6% of respondents selected in-person care as their most preferred source.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a cross-sectional nationally representative survey in the United States in 2022 through NORC’s AmeriSpeak panel.
  • A total of 3059 eligible panelists, aged 15-44 years, completed the survey, with 595 individuals currently using a pill, patch, or ring contraceptive included in the analysis.
  • Primary outcomes measured were the use of any preferred source and the most preferred source when obtaining contraception.
  • Sources included in-person care, telehealth, pharmacist-prescribed, online service, and over the counter.
  • Data were analyzed from January 25, 2023, to August 15, 2024.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Only 35.6% of respondents selected in-person care as their most preferred source of contraception.
  • Only 49.7% of respondents obtained their method from a preferred source, while 39.8% received it from their most preferred source.
  • Respondents who previously reported being unable to get their method on time had higher odds of preferring an alternative source (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 2.57; 95% CI, 1.36-4.87).
  • Those who recently received person-centered contraceptive counseling had lower odds of preferring an alternative source (AOR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.35-0.98).

IN PRACTICE:

“The low level of preference for in-person care suggests that expanding contraceptive sources outside of traditional healthcare settings has a role in ameliorating barriers to access and can promote reproductive autonomy,” wrote the authors of the study.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Anu Manchikanti Gómez, PhD, Sexual Health and Reproductive Equity Program, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley. It was published online in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s cross-sectional design limited the ability to establish causality. The sample was limited to individuals aged 15-44 years, which may not represent all contraceptive users. Self-reported data may be subject to recall bias. The study did not distinguish between synchronous and asynchronous telehealth preferences.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Arnold Ventures. Gómez disclosed receiving personal fees from various organizations outside the submitted work. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Individuals using contraceptive pills, patches, and rings must frequently interact with the healthcare system for continued use. More than half of US contraceptive users prefer alternative sources over traditional in-person care. Only 35.6% of respondents selected in-person care as their most preferred source.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a cross-sectional nationally representative survey in the United States in 2022 through NORC’s AmeriSpeak panel.
  • A total of 3059 eligible panelists, aged 15-44 years, completed the survey, with 595 individuals currently using a pill, patch, or ring contraceptive included in the analysis.
  • Primary outcomes measured were the use of any preferred source and the most preferred source when obtaining contraception.
  • Sources included in-person care, telehealth, pharmacist-prescribed, online service, and over the counter.
  • Data were analyzed from January 25, 2023, to August 15, 2024.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Only 35.6% of respondents selected in-person care as their most preferred source of contraception.
  • Only 49.7% of respondents obtained their method from a preferred source, while 39.8% received it from their most preferred source.
  • Respondents who previously reported being unable to get their method on time had higher odds of preferring an alternative source (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 2.57; 95% CI, 1.36-4.87).
  • Those who recently received person-centered contraceptive counseling had lower odds of preferring an alternative source (AOR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.35-0.98).

IN PRACTICE:

“The low level of preference for in-person care suggests that expanding contraceptive sources outside of traditional healthcare settings has a role in ameliorating barriers to access and can promote reproductive autonomy,” wrote the authors of the study.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Anu Manchikanti Gómez, PhD, Sexual Health and Reproductive Equity Program, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley. It was published online in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s cross-sectional design limited the ability to establish causality. The sample was limited to individuals aged 15-44 years, which may not represent all contraceptive users. Self-reported data may be subject to recall bias. The study did not distinguish between synchronous and asynchronous telehealth preferences.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Arnold Ventures. Gómez disclosed receiving personal fees from various organizations outside the submitted work. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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PCOS Linked to Hypertensive Blood Pressure in Teens

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 10/22/2024 - 11:35

 

TOPLINE:

Adolescent girls with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) have an increased risk for hypertension, according to a new study which underscores the importance of blood pressure surveillance in this population.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The retrospective cohort study examined the association between PCOS and hypertension in adolescent girls within a diverse community-based US healthcare population.
  • The researchers analyzed data from 224,418 adolescent girls (mean age at index visit, 14.9 years; 15.8% classified as having obesity) who had a well-child visit between 2013 and 2019, during which their systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure were measured.
  • Blood pressure in the hypertensive range was classified using the 2017 American Academy of Pediatrics Practice Guideline, with thresholds of 130/80 mm Hg or greater.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of adolescent girls with high blood pressure was significantly greater among those with PCOS than among those without the condition (18.2% vs 7.1%; P < .001).
  • Adolescent girls with PCOS had a 25% higher risk for hypertension than those without the disorder (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.25; 95% CI, 1.10-1.42).
  • Similarly, adolescent girls with obesity and PCOS had a 23% higher risk for high blood pressure than those without PCOS (aOR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.06-1.42).

IN PRACTICE:

“The high prevalence of [hypertension] associated with PCOS emphasizes the key role of early [blood pressure] monitoring in this high-risk group,” the authors of the study wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Sherry Zhang, MD, Kaiser Permanente Oakland Medical Center, Oakland, California, and was published online in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on coded diagnoses of PCOS from clinical settings, which may have led to detection and referral biases. The findings may not be generalizable to an unselected population in which adolescent girls are systematically screened for both PCOS and hypertension.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was funded by the Cardiovascular and Metabolic Conditions Research Section and the Biostatistical Consulting Unit at the Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California and by the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Community Health Program. The authors declared having no conflicts of interest.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Adolescent girls with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) have an increased risk for hypertension, according to a new study which underscores the importance of blood pressure surveillance in this population.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The retrospective cohort study examined the association between PCOS and hypertension in adolescent girls within a diverse community-based US healthcare population.
  • The researchers analyzed data from 224,418 adolescent girls (mean age at index visit, 14.9 years; 15.8% classified as having obesity) who had a well-child visit between 2013 and 2019, during which their systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure were measured.
  • Blood pressure in the hypertensive range was classified using the 2017 American Academy of Pediatrics Practice Guideline, with thresholds of 130/80 mm Hg or greater.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of adolescent girls with high blood pressure was significantly greater among those with PCOS than among those without the condition (18.2% vs 7.1%; P < .001).
  • Adolescent girls with PCOS had a 25% higher risk for hypertension than those without the disorder (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.25; 95% CI, 1.10-1.42).
  • Similarly, adolescent girls with obesity and PCOS had a 23% higher risk for high blood pressure than those without PCOS (aOR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.06-1.42).

IN PRACTICE:

“The high prevalence of [hypertension] associated with PCOS emphasizes the key role of early [blood pressure] monitoring in this high-risk group,” the authors of the study wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Sherry Zhang, MD, Kaiser Permanente Oakland Medical Center, Oakland, California, and was published online in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on coded diagnoses of PCOS from clinical settings, which may have led to detection and referral biases. The findings may not be generalizable to an unselected population in which adolescent girls are systematically screened for both PCOS and hypertension.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was funded by the Cardiovascular and Metabolic Conditions Research Section and the Biostatistical Consulting Unit at the Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California and by the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Community Health Program. The authors declared having no conflicts of interest.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Adolescent girls with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) have an increased risk for hypertension, according to a new study which underscores the importance of blood pressure surveillance in this population.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The retrospective cohort study examined the association between PCOS and hypertension in adolescent girls within a diverse community-based US healthcare population.
  • The researchers analyzed data from 224,418 adolescent girls (mean age at index visit, 14.9 years; 15.8% classified as having obesity) who had a well-child visit between 2013 and 2019, during which their systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure were measured.
  • Blood pressure in the hypertensive range was classified using the 2017 American Academy of Pediatrics Practice Guideline, with thresholds of 130/80 mm Hg or greater.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of adolescent girls with high blood pressure was significantly greater among those with PCOS than among those without the condition (18.2% vs 7.1%; P < .001).
  • Adolescent girls with PCOS had a 25% higher risk for hypertension than those without the disorder (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.25; 95% CI, 1.10-1.42).
  • Similarly, adolescent girls with obesity and PCOS had a 23% higher risk for high blood pressure than those without PCOS (aOR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.06-1.42).

IN PRACTICE:

“The high prevalence of [hypertension] associated with PCOS emphasizes the key role of early [blood pressure] monitoring in this high-risk group,” the authors of the study wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Sherry Zhang, MD, Kaiser Permanente Oakland Medical Center, Oakland, California, and was published online in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on coded diagnoses of PCOS from clinical settings, which may have led to detection and referral biases. The findings may not be generalizable to an unselected population in which adolescent girls are systematically screened for both PCOS and hypertension.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was funded by the Cardiovascular and Metabolic Conditions Research Section and the Biostatistical Consulting Unit at the Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California and by the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Community Health Program. The authors declared having no conflicts of interest.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The Heavy Physical and Psychological Burden of Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder

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Changed
Fri, 10/18/2024 - 14:15

 

Premenstrual disorders (PMDs), including premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), adversely affect the lives of millions of women worldwide. Most girls and women — as many as 80%-90%— will experience some premenstrual discomfort such as irritability, depressed mood, food or alcohol cravings, bloating, body aches, breast pain, constipation, or fatigue.

Diagnosable menstrual disorders include, collectively, premenstrual syndrome (PMS); PMDD, formerly called late luteal phase dysphoric disorder; and premenstrual worsening of another medical condition.

The most debilitating of these is PMDD, which has an estimated prevalence of about 4%-8% in women of reproductive age, according to obstetrician/gynecologist Hoosna Haque, MD, assistant professor of medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City.

“It’s difficult to be sure because this condition is underreported,” said Luu D. Ireland, MD, MPH, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, Massachusetts. “But more women are coming forward, and there’s more discussion and media coverage of this condition.”

Occurring in the same post-follicular timeframe as PMS, PMDD takes cyclical discomfort to a more intense level, with a trifecta of affective comorbidities, somatic manifestations, and behavioral changes, all of which can seriously impair daily functioning, including work, physical activities, and personal relationships. Romantic and marital relationships can be particularly impaired.

Although recent cost figures are lacking, PMDs exact a considerable economic toll with increased direct healthcare costs from doctor visits and pharmaceuticals. A 2010 study found that US women with PMS were more likely to accrue in excess of $500 in healthcare visit costs over 2 years, and the figure would likely be higher today. PMDs also increase work/school absenteeism and reduce productivity.
 

Etiology

Brain areas that regulate emotion and behavior contain receptors for estrogen, progesterone, and other sex hormones, which affect the functioning of neurotransmitter systems influencing mood and thinking. Although the precise pathophysiology remains unclear, PMDD is likely multifactorial and results in a heightened sensitivity to normal fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and dysfunction of the serotonin and gamma-aminobutyric acid neurotransmitter systems.

Patients with PMDD have lower levels of cortisol and beta-endorphins during both the follicular and luteal phases, suggesting abnormalities in the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis (HPGA), which is consistent with dysregulation in mood disorders.
 

Risk Factors

These include family history, past traumatic events, smoking, chronic pain syndrome, and obesity. There may be a genetic component as recent studies have suggested the involvement of the gene that codes for the serotonergic 5HT1A receptor and allelic variants of ESR1 in the development of PMS/PMDD.

A particularly concerning aspect of PMDs of any sort is their possible association with a higher risk for death from non-natural causes. In a recent Swedish study, which did not distinguish between PMDs in general and PMDD in particular, patients had an almost 60% greater risk for death from non-natural causes and nearly twice the risk for death by suicide compared with women without PMDs.

Those diagnosed with a PMD at an early age showed excess mortality, and the risk for suicide was elevated regardless of age. “These findings support the need for careful follow-up for young women with PMDs and the need for suicide prevention strategies,” wrote lead author Marion Opatowski, PhD, a medical epidemiologist at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden. “Women with severe PMDD should definitely be monitored for suicidal thoughts or behavior and they should have an emergency outreach plan in place,” Haque added.
 

 

 

Diagnosis

Although the somatic manifestations of PMDD resemble those of PMS, they are more severe and associated psychological symptoms are greater. “In my experience, PMDD symptoms can last the whole 2 weeks of the luteal phase, whereas PMS might occur a couple of days before menstruation,” said Ireland.

Symptoms include labile mood, nervousness, hopelessness, anger and aggressiveness, as well as tension and irritability. Those affected may have suicidal thoughts or even behaviors. In addition to a lethargic loss of interest in normal activities, patients with PMDD may feel paranoid, confused, exhausted, or out of control and experience insomnia or hypersomnia. They may have trouble concentrating or remembering. Some patients with PMDD may already be prone to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and non–cycle-related depression, anxiety, and panic attacks.

Diagnosis is based on the presence of any five of the typical affective, somatic, or behavioral symptoms outlined above in the week before onset of menses.

“It’s important to do a careful diagnosis for PMDD and rule out other underlying conditions such as existing depressive or anxiety disorders,” said Haque. “Symptoms tend to be more intense in periods of high hormonal fluctuation such as in the postpartum and perimenopause periods. Women with PMDD should be monitored for postpartum depression.”

PMDD is considered both a gynecologic-genitourinary disorder and an affective condition.

In 2013, it was controversially included as a depressive disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition. Strongly advocated by some patients, psychiatrists, and pharmaceutical companies, its inclusion was criticized by psychologists and generalists, who feared it would lead to overdiagnosis and pathologization of normal female hormonal changes. Women’s advocates protested that this inclusion would stigmatize female biology and harm their advance in society and the workplace, while some doctors continued to dismiss PMDD as not a serious concern.
 

Treatments

In its latest clinical practice guideline on PMDs, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), for which Ireland served as the lead author, recommends that most patients with PMDD get medical treatment and outlines the following therapies, based on varying degrees of evidence strength.

Antidepressants. These may benefit patients with strong affective symptoms. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors such as sertraline (Zoloft), citalopram (Celexa), escitalopram (Lexapro), or fluoxetine (Prozac) are first choices.

Antidepressants may interrupt aberrant signaling in the HPGA, the circuit linking brain and ovaries and regulating the reproductive cycle. Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor venlafaxine (Effexor) may also improve symptoms, but other types of antidepressants have not proven effective.

“The response to these well-tolerated drugs is rapid and can happen in the first 2 days,” said Ireland. The drugs may be taken either just in the luteal period or over the month, especially by patients with chronic depression or anxiety.

Hormonal therapy. ACOG recommends the use of combined oral contraceptives (COCs), gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists to induce anovulation (with combined add-back hormones), progestin-only methods, and noncontraceptive continuous estrogen formulations. It notes, however, that COCs have not been more effective than placebo in reducing depressive symptom scores.

If symptoms do not improve over two to three cycles, an alternate therapy should be considered. Haque recommends an assessment after three cycles and then yearly.

Some women in her practice take both antidepressant and hormone therapy. “Unfortunately, there are no new pharmaceutical treatments on the horizon, but we have good ones already and we would love for patients to utilize them more often,” Ireland said.

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Limited evidence shows these may reduce physical symptoms such as abdominal cramps, headaches, and general body aches, as well as some mood-related symptoms, which may be an indirect effect of pain alleviation.

Surgery. For women with the most severe intractable symptoms, bilateral oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy may be a last-resort option when medical management has failed. A trial period of GnRH agonist therapy (with or without adjunctive estrogen add-back treatment) is advised before surgery to predict a patient’s response to surgical management.

Acupuncture. ACOG suggests that acupuncture may help manage physical and affective premenstrual symptoms.

Diet. The usual dietary advice for premenstrual symptoms — such as consuming less caffeine, sugar, or alcohol and eating smaller, more frequent meals — is unlikely to help women with PMDD.

Exercise. Although it has not been well studied for PMDD, aerobic exercises such as walking, swimming, and biking tend to improve mood and energy levels in general. Exercise may reduce symptoms through several pathways, including effects on beta-endorphin, cortisol, and ovarian hormone levels.

Supplements. Vitamin B6, calcium and magnesium supplements, and herbal remedies are not supported by consistent or compelling evidence of efficacy. ACOG conditionally recommends calcium supplementation of 100-200 mg/d in adults to help manage physical and affective symptoms.

A small study suggested that supplemental zinc may improve both physical and psychological symptoms.

Cognitive-behavioral therapy. This treatment aims to interrupt negative and irrational thought patterns and may include awareness and education, as well as relaxation techniques, problem-solving and coping skills, and stress management. It has been associated with small to moderate improvement in anxiety and depression, said Ireland.

Peer support. Patients should consider joining a support group. The International Association for Premenstrual Disorders can help patients connect and develop coping skills.

The bottom line is that people with strong symptomatic evidence of PMDD should have medical intervention — to the benefit of their health and quality of life. Screening for PMDD should be part of women’s wellness examinations, said Ireland. “The impact of PMDD should not be minimized or dismissed,” said Haque. “And patients need to know there are very effective treatments.”

Ireland and Haque had no competing interests with regard to their comments.
 

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

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Premenstrual disorders (PMDs), including premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), adversely affect the lives of millions of women worldwide. Most girls and women — as many as 80%-90%— will experience some premenstrual discomfort such as irritability, depressed mood, food or alcohol cravings, bloating, body aches, breast pain, constipation, or fatigue.

Diagnosable menstrual disorders include, collectively, premenstrual syndrome (PMS); PMDD, formerly called late luteal phase dysphoric disorder; and premenstrual worsening of another medical condition.

The most debilitating of these is PMDD, which has an estimated prevalence of about 4%-8% in women of reproductive age, according to obstetrician/gynecologist Hoosna Haque, MD, assistant professor of medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City.

“It’s difficult to be sure because this condition is underreported,” said Luu D. Ireland, MD, MPH, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, Massachusetts. “But more women are coming forward, and there’s more discussion and media coverage of this condition.”

Occurring in the same post-follicular timeframe as PMS, PMDD takes cyclical discomfort to a more intense level, with a trifecta of affective comorbidities, somatic manifestations, and behavioral changes, all of which can seriously impair daily functioning, including work, physical activities, and personal relationships. Romantic and marital relationships can be particularly impaired.

Although recent cost figures are lacking, PMDs exact a considerable economic toll with increased direct healthcare costs from doctor visits and pharmaceuticals. A 2010 study found that US women with PMS were more likely to accrue in excess of $500 in healthcare visit costs over 2 years, and the figure would likely be higher today. PMDs also increase work/school absenteeism and reduce productivity.
 

Etiology

Brain areas that regulate emotion and behavior contain receptors for estrogen, progesterone, and other sex hormones, which affect the functioning of neurotransmitter systems influencing mood and thinking. Although the precise pathophysiology remains unclear, PMDD is likely multifactorial and results in a heightened sensitivity to normal fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and dysfunction of the serotonin and gamma-aminobutyric acid neurotransmitter systems.

Patients with PMDD have lower levels of cortisol and beta-endorphins during both the follicular and luteal phases, suggesting abnormalities in the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis (HPGA), which is consistent with dysregulation in mood disorders.
 

Risk Factors

These include family history, past traumatic events, smoking, chronic pain syndrome, and obesity. There may be a genetic component as recent studies have suggested the involvement of the gene that codes for the serotonergic 5HT1A receptor and allelic variants of ESR1 in the development of PMS/PMDD.

A particularly concerning aspect of PMDs of any sort is their possible association with a higher risk for death from non-natural causes. In a recent Swedish study, which did not distinguish between PMDs in general and PMDD in particular, patients had an almost 60% greater risk for death from non-natural causes and nearly twice the risk for death by suicide compared with women without PMDs.

Those diagnosed with a PMD at an early age showed excess mortality, and the risk for suicide was elevated regardless of age. “These findings support the need for careful follow-up for young women with PMDs and the need for suicide prevention strategies,” wrote lead author Marion Opatowski, PhD, a medical epidemiologist at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden. “Women with severe PMDD should definitely be monitored for suicidal thoughts or behavior and they should have an emergency outreach plan in place,” Haque added.
 

 

 

Diagnosis

Although the somatic manifestations of PMDD resemble those of PMS, they are more severe and associated psychological symptoms are greater. “In my experience, PMDD symptoms can last the whole 2 weeks of the luteal phase, whereas PMS might occur a couple of days before menstruation,” said Ireland.

Symptoms include labile mood, nervousness, hopelessness, anger and aggressiveness, as well as tension and irritability. Those affected may have suicidal thoughts or even behaviors. In addition to a lethargic loss of interest in normal activities, patients with PMDD may feel paranoid, confused, exhausted, or out of control and experience insomnia or hypersomnia. They may have trouble concentrating or remembering. Some patients with PMDD may already be prone to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and non–cycle-related depression, anxiety, and panic attacks.

Diagnosis is based on the presence of any five of the typical affective, somatic, or behavioral symptoms outlined above in the week before onset of menses.

“It’s important to do a careful diagnosis for PMDD and rule out other underlying conditions such as existing depressive or anxiety disorders,” said Haque. “Symptoms tend to be more intense in periods of high hormonal fluctuation such as in the postpartum and perimenopause periods. Women with PMDD should be monitored for postpartum depression.”

PMDD is considered both a gynecologic-genitourinary disorder and an affective condition.

In 2013, it was controversially included as a depressive disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition. Strongly advocated by some patients, psychiatrists, and pharmaceutical companies, its inclusion was criticized by psychologists and generalists, who feared it would lead to overdiagnosis and pathologization of normal female hormonal changes. Women’s advocates protested that this inclusion would stigmatize female biology and harm their advance in society and the workplace, while some doctors continued to dismiss PMDD as not a serious concern.
 

Treatments

In its latest clinical practice guideline on PMDs, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), for which Ireland served as the lead author, recommends that most patients with PMDD get medical treatment and outlines the following therapies, based on varying degrees of evidence strength.

Antidepressants. These may benefit patients with strong affective symptoms. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors such as sertraline (Zoloft), citalopram (Celexa), escitalopram (Lexapro), or fluoxetine (Prozac) are first choices.

Antidepressants may interrupt aberrant signaling in the HPGA, the circuit linking brain and ovaries and regulating the reproductive cycle. Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor venlafaxine (Effexor) may also improve symptoms, but other types of antidepressants have not proven effective.

“The response to these well-tolerated drugs is rapid and can happen in the first 2 days,” said Ireland. The drugs may be taken either just in the luteal period or over the month, especially by patients with chronic depression or anxiety.

Hormonal therapy. ACOG recommends the use of combined oral contraceptives (COCs), gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists to induce anovulation (with combined add-back hormones), progestin-only methods, and noncontraceptive continuous estrogen formulations. It notes, however, that COCs have not been more effective than placebo in reducing depressive symptom scores.

If symptoms do not improve over two to three cycles, an alternate therapy should be considered. Haque recommends an assessment after three cycles and then yearly.

Some women in her practice take both antidepressant and hormone therapy. “Unfortunately, there are no new pharmaceutical treatments on the horizon, but we have good ones already and we would love for patients to utilize them more often,” Ireland said.

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Limited evidence shows these may reduce physical symptoms such as abdominal cramps, headaches, and general body aches, as well as some mood-related symptoms, which may be an indirect effect of pain alleviation.

Surgery. For women with the most severe intractable symptoms, bilateral oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy may be a last-resort option when medical management has failed. A trial period of GnRH agonist therapy (with or without adjunctive estrogen add-back treatment) is advised before surgery to predict a patient’s response to surgical management.

Acupuncture. ACOG suggests that acupuncture may help manage physical and affective premenstrual symptoms.

Diet. The usual dietary advice for premenstrual symptoms — such as consuming less caffeine, sugar, or alcohol and eating smaller, more frequent meals — is unlikely to help women with PMDD.

Exercise. Although it has not been well studied for PMDD, aerobic exercises such as walking, swimming, and biking tend to improve mood and energy levels in general. Exercise may reduce symptoms through several pathways, including effects on beta-endorphin, cortisol, and ovarian hormone levels.

Supplements. Vitamin B6, calcium and magnesium supplements, and herbal remedies are not supported by consistent or compelling evidence of efficacy. ACOG conditionally recommends calcium supplementation of 100-200 mg/d in adults to help manage physical and affective symptoms.

A small study suggested that supplemental zinc may improve both physical and psychological symptoms.

Cognitive-behavioral therapy. This treatment aims to interrupt negative and irrational thought patterns and may include awareness and education, as well as relaxation techniques, problem-solving and coping skills, and stress management. It has been associated with small to moderate improvement in anxiety and depression, said Ireland.

Peer support. Patients should consider joining a support group. The International Association for Premenstrual Disorders can help patients connect and develop coping skills.

The bottom line is that people with strong symptomatic evidence of PMDD should have medical intervention — to the benefit of their health and quality of life. Screening for PMDD should be part of women’s wellness examinations, said Ireland. “The impact of PMDD should not be minimized or dismissed,” said Haque. “And patients need to know there are very effective treatments.”

Ireland and Haque had no competing interests with regard to their comments.
 

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

 

Premenstrual disorders (PMDs), including premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), adversely affect the lives of millions of women worldwide. Most girls and women — as many as 80%-90%— will experience some premenstrual discomfort such as irritability, depressed mood, food or alcohol cravings, bloating, body aches, breast pain, constipation, or fatigue.

Diagnosable menstrual disorders include, collectively, premenstrual syndrome (PMS); PMDD, formerly called late luteal phase dysphoric disorder; and premenstrual worsening of another medical condition.

The most debilitating of these is PMDD, which has an estimated prevalence of about 4%-8% in women of reproductive age, according to obstetrician/gynecologist Hoosna Haque, MD, assistant professor of medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City.

“It’s difficult to be sure because this condition is underreported,” said Luu D. Ireland, MD, MPH, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, Massachusetts. “But more women are coming forward, and there’s more discussion and media coverage of this condition.”

Occurring in the same post-follicular timeframe as PMS, PMDD takes cyclical discomfort to a more intense level, with a trifecta of affective comorbidities, somatic manifestations, and behavioral changes, all of which can seriously impair daily functioning, including work, physical activities, and personal relationships. Romantic and marital relationships can be particularly impaired.

Although recent cost figures are lacking, PMDs exact a considerable economic toll with increased direct healthcare costs from doctor visits and pharmaceuticals. A 2010 study found that US women with PMS were more likely to accrue in excess of $500 in healthcare visit costs over 2 years, and the figure would likely be higher today. PMDs also increase work/school absenteeism and reduce productivity.
 

Etiology

Brain areas that regulate emotion and behavior contain receptors for estrogen, progesterone, and other sex hormones, which affect the functioning of neurotransmitter systems influencing mood and thinking. Although the precise pathophysiology remains unclear, PMDD is likely multifactorial and results in a heightened sensitivity to normal fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and dysfunction of the serotonin and gamma-aminobutyric acid neurotransmitter systems.

Patients with PMDD have lower levels of cortisol and beta-endorphins during both the follicular and luteal phases, suggesting abnormalities in the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis (HPGA), which is consistent with dysregulation in mood disorders.
 

Risk Factors

These include family history, past traumatic events, smoking, chronic pain syndrome, and obesity. There may be a genetic component as recent studies have suggested the involvement of the gene that codes for the serotonergic 5HT1A receptor and allelic variants of ESR1 in the development of PMS/PMDD.

A particularly concerning aspect of PMDs of any sort is their possible association with a higher risk for death from non-natural causes. In a recent Swedish study, which did not distinguish between PMDs in general and PMDD in particular, patients had an almost 60% greater risk for death from non-natural causes and nearly twice the risk for death by suicide compared with women without PMDs.

Those diagnosed with a PMD at an early age showed excess mortality, and the risk for suicide was elevated regardless of age. “These findings support the need for careful follow-up for young women with PMDs and the need for suicide prevention strategies,” wrote lead author Marion Opatowski, PhD, a medical epidemiologist at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden. “Women with severe PMDD should definitely be monitored for suicidal thoughts or behavior and they should have an emergency outreach plan in place,” Haque added.
 

 

 

Diagnosis

Although the somatic manifestations of PMDD resemble those of PMS, they are more severe and associated psychological symptoms are greater. “In my experience, PMDD symptoms can last the whole 2 weeks of the luteal phase, whereas PMS might occur a couple of days before menstruation,” said Ireland.

Symptoms include labile mood, nervousness, hopelessness, anger and aggressiveness, as well as tension and irritability. Those affected may have suicidal thoughts or even behaviors. In addition to a lethargic loss of interest in normal activities, patients with PMDD may feel paranoid, confused, exhausted, or out of control and experience insomnia or hypersomnia. They may have trouble concentrating or remembering. Some patients with PMDD may already be prone to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and non–cycle-related depression, anxiety, and panic attacks.

Diagnosis is based on the presence of any five of the typical affective, somatic, or behavioral symptoms outlined above in the week before onset of menses.

“It’s important to do a careful diagnosis for PMDD and rule out other underlying conditions such as existing depressive or anxiety disorders,” said Haque. “Symptoms tend to be more intense in periods of high hormonal fluctuation such as in the postpartum and perimenopause periods. Women with PMDD should be monitored for postpartum depression.”

PMDD is considered both a gynecologic-genitourinary disorder and an affective condition.

In 2013, it was controversially included as a depressive disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition. Strongly advocated by some patients, psychiatrists, and pharmaceutical companies, its inclusion was criticized by psychologists and generalists, who feared it would lead to overdiagnosis and pathologization of normal female hormonal changes. Women’s advocates protested that this inclusion would stigmatize female biology and harm their advance in society and the workplace, while some doctors continued to dismiss PMDD as not a serious concern.
 

Treatments

In its latest clinical practice guideline on PMDs, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), for which Ireland served as the lead author, recommends that most patients with PMDD get medical treatment and outlines the following therapies, based on varying degrees of evidence strength.

Antidepressants. These may benefit patients with strong affective symptoms. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors such as sertraline (Zoloft), citalopram (Celexa), escitalopram (Lexapro), or fluoxetine (Prozac) are first choices.

Antidepressants may interrupt aberrant signaling in the HPGA, the circuit linking brain and ovaries and regulating the reproductive cycle. Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor venlafaxine (Effexor) may also improve symptoms, but other types of antidepressants have not proven effective.

“The response to these well-tolerated drugs is rapid and can happen in the first 2 days,” said Ireland. The drugs may be taken either just in the luteal period or over the month, especially by patients with chronic depression or anxiety.

Hormonal therapy. ACOG recommends the use of combined oral contraceptives (COCs), gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists to induce anovulation (with combined add-back hormones), progestin-only methods, and noncontraceptive continuous estrogen formulations. It notes, however, that COCs have not been more effective than placebo in reducing depressive symptom scores.

If symptoms do not improve over two to three cycles, an alternate therapy should be considered. Haque recommends an assessment after three cycles and then yearly.

Some women in her practice take both antidepressant and hormone therapy. “Unfortunately, there are no new pharmaceutical treatments on the horizon, but we have good ones already and we would love for patients to utilize them more often,” Ireland said.

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Limited evidence shows these may reduce physical symptoms such as abdominal cramps, headaches, and general body aches, as well as some mood-related symptoms, which may be an indirect effect of pain alleviation.

Surgery. For women with the most severe intractable symptoms, bilateral oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy may be a last-resort option when medical management has failed. A trial period of GnRH agonist therapy (with or without adjunctive estrogen add-back treatment) is advised before surgery to predict a patient’s response to surgical management.

Acupuncture. ACOG suggests that acupuncture may help manage physical and affective premenstrual symptoms.

Diet. The usual dietary advice for premenstrual symptoms — such as consuming less caffeine, sugar, or alcohol and eating smaller, more frequent meals — is unlikely to help women with PMDD.

Exercise. Although it has not been well studied for PMDD, aerobic exercises such as walking, swimming, and biking tend to improve mood and energy levels in general. Exercise may reduce symptoms through several pathways, including effects on beta-endorphin, cortisol, and ovarian hormone levels.

Supplements. Vitamin B6, calcium and magnesium supplements, and herbal remedies are not supported by consistent or compelling evidence of efficacy. ACOG conditionally recommends calcium supplementation of 100-200 mg/d in adults to help manage physical and affective symptoms.

A small study suggested that supplemental zinc may improve both physical and psychological symptoms.

Cognitive-behavioral therapy. This treatment aims to interrupt negative and irrational thought patterns and may include awareness and education, as well as relaxation techniques, problem-solving and coping skills, and stress management. It has been associated with small to moderate improvement in anxiety and depression, said Ireland.

Peer support. Patients should consider joining a support group. The International Association for Premenstrual Disorders can help patients connect and develop coping skills.

The bottom line is that people with strong symptomatic evidence of PMDD should have medical intervention — to the benefit of their health and quality of life. Screening for PMDD should be part of women’s wellness examinations, said Ireland. “The impact of PMDD should not be minimized or dismissed,” said Haque. “And patients need to know there are very effective treatments.”

Ireland and Haque had no competing interests with regard to their comments.
 

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

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The New Cancer Stats Might Look Like a Death Sentence. They Aren’t.

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Changed
Wed, 10/23/2024 - 08:13

Cancer is becoming more common in younger generations. Data show that people under 50 are experiencing higher rates of cancer than any generation before them. As a genetic counselor, I hoped these upward trends in early-onset malignancies would slow with a better understanding of risk factors and prevention strategies. Unfortunately, the opposite is happening. Recent findings from the American Cancer Society reveal that the incidence of at least 17 of 34 cancer types is rising among GenX and Millennials. 

These statistics are alarming. I appreciate how easy it is for patients to get lost in the headlines about cancer, which may shape how they approach their healthcare. Each year, millions of Americans miss critical cancer screenings, with many citing fear of a positive test result as a leading reason. Others believe, despite the statistics, that cancer is not something they need to worry about until they are older. And then, of course, getting screened is not as easy as it should be. 

In my work, I meet with people from both younger and older generations who have either faced cancer themselves or witnessed a loved one experience the disease. One of the most common sentiments I hear from these patients is the desire to catch cancer earlier. My answer is always this: The first and most important step everyone can take is understanding their risk. 

For some, knowing they are at increased risk for cancer means starting screenings earlier — sometimes as early as age 25 — or getting screened with a more sensitive test. 

This proactive approach is the right one. Early detection can dramatically increase survival rates, sometimes by up to eightfold, depending on the type of cancer. It also significantly reduces the burden of total and cancer-specific healthcare costs. While screening may carry some potential risks, clinicians can minimize these risks by adhering to evidence-based guidelines, such as those from the American Cancer Society, and ensuring there is appropriate discussion of treatment options when a diagnosis is made.
 

Normalizing Cancer Risk Assessment and Screening 

A detailed cancer risk assessment and education about signs and symptoms should be part of every preventive care visit, regardless of someone’s age. Further, that cancer risk assessment should lead to clear recommendations and support for taking the next steps. 

This is where care advocacy and patient navigation come in. Care advocacy can improve outcomes at every stage of the cancer journey, from increasing screening rates to improving quality of life for survivors. I’ve seen first-hand how care advocates help patients overcome hurdles like long wait times for appointments they need, making both screening and diagnostic care easier to access. 

Now, with the finalization of a new rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, providers can bill for oncology navigation services that occur under their supervision. This formal recognition of care navigation affirms the value of these services not just clinically but financially as well. It will be through methods like care navigation, targeted outreach, and engaging educational resources — built into and covered by health plans — that patients will feel more in control over their health and have tools to help minimize the effects of cancer on the rest of their lives. 

These services benefit healthcare providers as well. Care navigation supports clinical care teams, from primary care providers to oncologists, by ensuring patients are seen before their cancer progresses to a more advanced stage. And even if patients follow screening recommendations for the rest of their lives and never get a positive result, they’ve still gained something invaluable: peace of mind, knowing they’ve taken an active role in their health. 
 

 

 

Fighting Fear With Routine

Treating cancer as a normal part of young people’s healthcare means helping them envision the disease as a condition that can be treated, much like a diagnosis of diabetes or high cholesterol. This mindset shift means quickly following up on a concerning symptom or screening result and reducing the time to start treatment if needed. And with treatment options and success rates for some cancers being better than ever, survivorship support must be built into every treatment plan from the start. Before treatment begins, healthcare providers should make time to talk about sometimes-overlooked key topics, such as reproductive options for people whose fertility may be affected by their cancer treatment, about plans for returning to work during or after treatment, and finding the right mental health support. 

Where we can’t prevent cancer, both primary care providers and oncologists can work together to help patients receive the right diagnosis and treatment as quickly as possible. Knowing insurance coverage has a direct effect on how early cancer is caught, for example, younger people need support in understanding and accessing benefits and resources that may be available through their existing healthcare channels, like some employer-sponsored health plans. Even if getting treated for cancer is inevitable for some, taking immediate action to get screened when it’s appropriate is the best thing we can do to lessen the impact of these rising cancer incidences across the country. At the end of the day, being afraid of cancer doesn’t decrease the chances of getting sick or dying from it. Proactive screening and early detection do. 
 

Brockman, Genetic Counselor, Color Health, Buffalo, New York, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Cancer is becoming more common in younger generations. Data show that people under 50 are experiencing higher rates of cancer than any generation before them. As a genetic counselor, I hoped these upward trends in early-onset malignancies would slow with a better understanding of risk factors and prevention strategies. Unfortunately, the opposite is happening. Recent findings from the American Cancer Society reveal that the incidence of at least 17 of 34 cancer types is rising among GenX and Millennials. 

These statistics are alarming. I appreciate how easy it is for patients to get lost in the headlines about cancer, which may shape how they approach their healthcare. Each year, millions of Americans miss critical cancer screenings, with many citing fear of a positive test result as a leading reason. Others believe, despite the statistics, that cancer is not something they need to worry about until they are older. And then, of course, getting screened is not as easy as it should be. 

In my work, I meet with people from both younger and older generations who have either faced cancer themselves or witnessed a loved one experience the disease. One of the most common sentiments I hear from these patients is the desire to catch cancer earlier. My answer is always this: The first and most important step everyone can take is understanding their risk. 

For some, knowing they are at increased risk for cancer means starting screenings earlier — sometimes as early as age 25 — or getting screened with a more sensitive test. 

This proactive approach is the right one. Early detection can dramatically increase survival rates, sometimes by up to eightfold, depending on the type of cancer. It also significantly reduces the burden of total and cancer-specific healthcare costs. While screening may carry some potential risks, clinicians can minimize these risks by adhering to evidence-based guidelines, such as those from the American Cancer Society, and ensuring there is appropriate discussion of treatment options when a diagnosis is made.
 

Normalizing Cancer Risk Assessment and Screening 

A detailed cancer risk assessment and education about signs and symptoms should be part of every preventive care visit, regardless of someone’s age. Further, that cancer risk assessment should lead to clear recommendations and support for taking the next steps. 

This is where care advocacy and patient navigation come in. Care advocacy can improve outcomes at every stage of the cancer journey, from increasing screening rates to improving quality of life for survivors. I’ve seen first-hand how care advocates help patients overcome hurdles like long wait times for appointments they need, making both screening and diagnostic care easier to access. 

Now, with the finalization of a new rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, providers can bill for oncology navigation services that occur under their supervision. This formal recognition of care navigation affirms the value of these services not just clinically but financially as well. It will be through methods like care navigation, targeted outreach, and engaging educational resources — built into and covered by health plans — that patients will feel more in control over their health and have tools to help minimize the effects of cancer on the rest of their lives. 

These services benefit healthcare providers as well. Care navigation supports clinical care teams, from primary care providers to oncologists, by ensuring patients are seen before their cancer progresses to a more advanced stage. And even if patients follow screening recommendations for the rest of their lives and never get a positive result, they’ve still gained something invaluable: peace of mind, knowing they’ve taken an active role in their health. 
 

 

 

Fighting Fear With Routine

Treating cancer as a normal part of young people’s healthcare means helping them envision the disease as a condition that can be treated, much like a diagnosis of diabetes or high cholesterol. This mindset shift means quickly following up on a concerning symptom or screening result and reducing the time to start treatment if needed. And with treatment options and success rates for some cancers being better than ever, survivorship support must be built into every treatment plan from the start. Before treatment begins, healthcare providers should make time to talk about sometimes-overlooked key topics, such as reproductive options for people whose fertility may be affected by their cancer treatment, about plans for returning to work during or after treatment, and finding the right mental health support. 

Where we can’t prevent cancer, both primary care providers and oncologists can work together to help patients receive the right diagnosis and treatment as quickly as possible. Knowing insurance coverage has a direct effect on how early cancer is caught, for example, younger people need support in understanding and accessing benefits and resources that may be available through their existing healthcare channels, like some employer-sponsored health plans. Even if getting treated for cancer is inevitable for some, taking immediate action to get screened when it’s appropriate is the best thing we can do to lessen the impact of these rising cancer incidences across the country. At the end of the day, being afraid of cancer doesn’t decrease the chances of getting sick or dying from it. Proactive screening and early detection do. 
 

Brockman, Genetic Counselor, Color Health, Buffalo, New York, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Cancer is becoming more common in younger generations. Data show that people under 50 are experiencing higher rates of cancer than any generation before them. As a genetic counselor, I hoped these upward trends in early-onset malignancies would slow with a better understanding of risk factors and prevention strategies. Unfortunately, the opposite is happening. Recent findings from the American Cancer Society reveal that the incidence of at least 17 of 34 cancer types is rising among GenX and Millennials. 

These statistics are alarming. I appreciate how easy it is for patients to get lost in the headlines about cancer, which may shape how they approach their healthcare. Each year, millions of Americans miss critical cancer screenings, with many citing fear of a positive test result as a leading reason. Others believe, despite the statistics, that cancer is not something they need to worry about until they are older. And then, of course, getting screened is not as easy as it should be. 

In my work, I meet with people from both younger and older generations who have either faced cancer themselves or witnessed a loved one experience the disease. One of the most common sentiments I hear from these patients is the desire to catch cancer earlier. My answer is always this: The first and most important step everyone can take is understanding their risk. 

For some, knowing they are at increased risk for cancer means starting screenings earlier — sometimes as early as age 25 — or getting screened with a more sensitive test. 

This proactive approach is the right one. Early detection can dramatically increase survival rates, sometimes by up to eightfold, depending on the type of cancer. It also significantly reduces the burden of total and cancer-specific healthcare costs. While screening may carry some potential risks, clinicians can minimize these risks by adhering to evidence-based guidelines, such as those from the American Cancer Society, and ensuring there is appropriate discussion of treatment options when a diagnosis is made.
 

Normalizing Cancer Risk Assessment and Screening 

A detailed cancer risk assessment and education about signs and symptoms should be part of every preventive care visit, regardless of someone’s age. Further, that cancer risk assessment should lead to clear recommendations and support for taking the next steps. 

This is where care advocacy and patient navigation come in. Care advocacy can improve outcomes at every stage of the cancer journey, from increasing screening rates to improving quality of life for survivors. I’ve seen first-hand how care advocates help patients overcome hurdles like long wait times for appointments they need, making both screening and diagnostic care easier to access. 

Now, with the finalization of a new rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, providers can bill for oncology navigation services that occur under their supervision. This formal recognition of care navigation affirms the value of these services not just clinically but financially as well. It will be through methods like care navigation, targeted outreach, and engaging educational resources — built into and covered by health plans — that patients will feel more in control over their health and have tools to help minimize the effects of cancer on the rest of their lives. 

These services benefit healthcare providers as well. Care navigation supports clinical care teams, from primary care providers to oncologists, by ensuring patients are seen before their cancer progresses to a more advanced stage. And even if patients follow screening recommendations for the rest of their lives and never get a positive result, they’ve still gained something invaluable: peace of mind, knowing they’ve taken an active role in their health. 
 

 

 

Fighting Fear With Routine

Treating cancer as a normal part of young people’s healthcare means helping them envision the disease as a condition that can be treated, much like a diagnosis of diabetes or high cholesterol. This mindset shift means quickly following up on a concerning symptom or screening result and reducing the time to start treatment if needed. And with treatment options and success rates for some cancers being better than ever, survivorship support must be built into every treatment plan from the start. Before treatment begins, healthcare providers should make time to talk about sometimes-overlooked key topics, such as reproductive options for people whose fertility may be affected by their cancer treatment, about plans for returning to work during or after treatment, and finding the right mental health support. 

Where we can’t prevent cancer, both primary care providers and oncologists can work together to help patients receive the right diagnosis and treatment as quickly as possible. Knowing insurance coverage has a direct effect on how early cancer is caught, for example, younger people need support in understanding and accessing benefits and resources that may be available through their existing healthcare channels, like some employer-sponsored health plans. Even if getting treated for cancer is inevitable for some, taking immediate action to get screened when it’s appropriate is the best thing we can do to lessen the impact of these rising cancer incidences across the country. At the end of the day, being afraid of cancer doesn’t decrease the chances of getting sick or dying from it. Proactive screening and early detection do. 
 

Brockman, Genetic Counselor, Color Health, Buffalo, New York, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Increasing Non–Candida albicans Yeasts in Vulvovaginal Candidiasis and Fluconazole Resistance in Leeds

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Changed
Fri, 10/11/2024 - 12:28
Display Headline
Increasing Non–Candida albicans Yeasts in Vulvovaginal Candidiasis and Fluconazole Resistance in Leeds

 

TOPLINE:

Fluconazole resistance in yeast isolates from women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis in Leeds, England, increased from 3.5% to 9.6% over 3 years. Non–Candida albicans yeasts also rose from 6.0% to 12.6% during the same period.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a retrospective data search of vaginal cultures from adult women in Leeds, England, between April 2018 and March 2021.
  • A total of 5461 vaginal samples from women with clinical information indicating complicated/recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis were included.
  • Samples were processed on the WASPLAB automated platform, and species identification and antifungal susceptibility testing were performed in the Mycology Reference Centre by Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time-of-flight mass spectrometry.
  • Susceptibility to fluconazole was determined using disc diffusion and the Sensititre YeastOne microbroth dilution assay.
  •  

TAKEAWAY:

According to the authors, the prevalence of non–C albicans yeasts increased from 6.0% in 2018-2019 to 12.6% in 2020-2021 (P = .0003).

Fluconazole-sensitive (dose-dependent) and fluconazole-resistant isolates increased from 3.5% in 2018-2019 to 9.6% in 2020-2021 (P = .0001).

Most fluconazole resistance was observed in C albicans, with other species such as Nakaseomyces glabrata and Pichia kudriavzevii also showing resistance.

The authors state that the increase in fluconazole resistance and non–C albicans yeasts may be linked to a policy change encouraging empirical treatment of vulvovaginal candidiasis in primary care.

IN PRACTICE:

“This study shows that the rates of non–Candida albicans and fluconazole-resistant C albicans have increased year on year in the 3 years studied. The exact reasons for this increase remain unclear, but it follows the introduction of restricted access to fungal cultures for the diagnosis of vulvovaginal candidiasis by those working in primary care. A clinical diagnosis, followed by empirical treatment, has been recommended instead. Consequently, we believe this policy of encouraging empirical vaginitis treatment based on nonspecific symptoms and signs needs revisiting,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Jennifer C. Ratner, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, England. It was published online in Sexually Transmitted Infections.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s limitations included a potential bias introduced by the reduced number of samples received from specialist sexual health clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, the study could not distinguish between cases of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis with complete resolution of symptoms and those with persistent symptoms despite treatment.

DISCLOSURES:

One coauthor disclosed receiving fees from Pfizer for contributing to webinar presentations in 2023. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Fluconazole resistance in yeast isolates from women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis in Leeds, England, increased from 3.5% to 9.6% over 3 years. Non–Candida albicans yeasts also rose from 6.0% to 12.6% during the same period.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a retrospective data search of vaginal cultures from adult women in Leeds, England, between April 2018 and March 2021.
  • A total of 5461 vaginal samples from women with clinical information indicating complicated/recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis were included.
  • Samples were processed on the WASPLAB automated platform, and species identification and antifungal susceptibility testing were performed in the Mycology Reference Centre by Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time-of-flight mass spectrometry.
  • Susceptibility to fluconazole was determined using disc diffusion and the Sensititre YeastOne microbroth dilution assay.
  •  

TAKEAWAY:

According to the authors, the prevalence of non–C albicans yeasts increased from 6.0% in 2018-2019 to 12.6% in 2020-2021 (P = .0003).

Fluconazole-sensitive (dose-dependent) and fluconazole-resistant isolates increased from 3.5% in 2018-2019 to 9.6% in 2020-2021 (P = .0001).

Most fluconazole resistance was observed in C albicans, with other species such as Nakaseomyces glabrata and Pichia kudriavzevii also showing resistance.

The authors state that the increase in fluconazole resistance and non–C albicans yeasts may be linked to a policy change encouraging empirical treatment of vulvovaginal candidiasis in primary care.

IN PRACTICE:

“This study shows that the rates of non–Candida albicans and fluconazole-resistant C albicans have increased year on year in the 3 years studied. The exact reasons for this increase remain unclear, but it follows the introduction of restricted access to fungal cultures for the diagnosis of vulvovaginal candidiasis by those working in primary care. A clinical diagnosis, followed by empirical treatment, has been recommended instead. Consequently, we believe this policy of encouraging empirical vaginitis treatment based on nonspecific symptoms and signs needs revisiting,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Jennifer C. Ratner, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, England. It was published online in Sexually Transmitted Infections.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s limitations included a potential bias introduced by the reduced number of samples received from specialist sexual health clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, the study could not distinguish between cases of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis with complete resolution of symptoms and those with persistent symptoms despite treatment.

DISCLOSURES:

One coauthor disclosed receiving fees from Pfizer for contributing to webinar presentations in 2023. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Fluconazole resistance in yeast isolates from women with recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis in Leeds, England, increased from 3.5% to 9.6% over 3 years. Non–Candida albicans yeasts also rose from 6.0% to 12.6% during the same period.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a retrospective data search of vaginal cultures from adult women in Leeds, England, between April 2018 and March 2021.
  • A total of 5461 vaginal samples from women with clinical information indicating complicated/recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis were included.
  • Samples were processed on the WASPLAB automated platform, and species identification and antifungal susceptibility testing were performed in the Mycology Reference Centre by Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time-of-flight mass spectrometry.
  • Susceptibility to fluconazole was determined using disc diffusion and the Sensititre YeastOne microbroth dilution assay.
  •  

TAKEAWAY:

According to the authors, the prevalence of non–C albicans yeasts increased from 6.0% in 2018-2019 to 12.6% in 2020-2021 (P = .0003).

Fluconazole-sensitive (dose-dependent) and fluconazole-resistant isolates increased from 3.5% in 2018-2019 to 9.6% in 2020-2021 (P = .0001).

Most fluconazole resistance was observed in C albicans, with other species such as Nakaseomyces glabrata and Pichia kudriavzevii also showing resistance.

The authors state that the increase in fluconazole resistance and non–C albicans yeasts may be linked to a policy change encouraging empirical treatment of vulvovaginal candidiasis in primary care.

IN PRACTICE:

“This study shows that the rates of non–Candida albicans and fluconazole-resistant C albicans have increased year on year in the 3 years studied. The exact reasons for this increase remain unclear, but it follows the introduction of restricted access to fungal cultures for the diagnosis of vulvovaginal candidiasis by those working in primary care. A clinical diagnosis, followed by empirical treatment, has been recommended instead. Consequently, we believe this policy of encouraging empirical vaginitis treatment based on nonspecific symptoms and signs needs revisiting,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Jennifer C. Ratner, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, England. It was published online in Sexually Transmitted Infections.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s limitations included a potential bias introduced by the reduced number of samples received from specialist sexual health clinics during the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, the study could not distinguish between cases of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis with complete resolution of symptoms and those with persistent symptoms despite treatment.

DISCLOSURES:

One coauthor disclosed receiving fees from Pfizer for contributing to webinar presentations in 2023. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Diabetes Treatment May Lower Incidence of Uterine Fibroids

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 09/30/2024 - 12:19

 

TOPLINE:

Diabetes is associated with a lower incidence of uterine fibroids in midlife women receiving diabetes treatment, especially metformin. The association between diabetes and the risk for uterine fibroids may vary based on menopausal status.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Previous studies have provided inconsistent evidence regarding associations between the risk for uterine fibroids and markers of cardiometabolic health, such as fasting insulin, fasting glucose, and diabetes.
  • Researchers conducted a prospective cohort study to examine the association of fasting levels of cardiometabolic blood biomarkers, diabetes, and diabetes treatment with the incidence of new fibroid diagnoses in midlife women.
  • They included participants from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation cohort who reported fibroid diagnoses at enrollment and during 13 follow-up visits.
  • At all visits, levels of glucose, insulin, and sex hormone–binding globulin (SHBG) were measured in fasting blood samples, and homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) was calculated.
  • Discrete-time survival models were used to estimate the hazard ratios (HRs) for the associations of biomarkers and diabetes with fibroid diagnoses, adjusted for demographics and healthcare utilization.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Researchers identified 2570 eligible women (median age, 45 years; 45% perimenopausal women), among whom approximately 3% had diabetes at baseline.
  • Diabetes was associated with a 28% lower incidence of new fibroid diagnosis (adjusted HR, 0.72).
  • This association was particularly strong among participants with treated diabetes, especially those on metformin, who had a 51% lower incidence of self-reported fibroids than those without diabetes. The estimates, however, had wide CIs suggesting uncertainty.
  • Time-varying HOMA-IR and SHBG, insulin, and glucose levels were not significantly associated with the new fibroid diagnosis.
  • When stratified by menopausal status, higher HOMA-IR and insulin levels were associated with a greater incidence of fibroid diagnosis during premenopause but not during perimenopause.

IN PRACTICE:

“Our findings contribute to preliminary evidence indicating a protective association between diabetes and risk of incident fibroids,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Susanna D. Mitro, Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Pleasanton, California, and was published online in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on self-reported fibroid diagnoses, which may result in the misclassification of cases. The sample size of participants with diabetes was small, which resulted in reduced precision and confidence in the findings. The baseline eligibility criteria (midlife participants with an intact uterus and no history of fibroid incidence) may have limited the generalizability of the findings to the wider population at risk for fibroids.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), through the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Nursing Research, and the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health. One author reported being a consultant and adviser for various pharmaceutical companies. Two other authors reported receiving salary support and royalties from various pharmaceutical companies and organizations.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Diabetes is associated with a lower incidence of uterine fibroids in midlife women receiving diabetes treatment, especially metformin. The association between diabetes and the risk for uterine fibroids may vary based on menopausal status.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Previous studies have provided inconsistent evidence regarding associations between the risk for uterine fibroids and markers of cardiometabolic health, such as fasting insulin, fasting glucose, and diabetes.
  • Researchers conducted a prospective cohort study to examine the association of fasting levels of cardiometabolic blood biomarkers, diabetes, and diabetes treatment with the incidence of new fibroid diagnoses in midlife women.
  • They included participants from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation cohort who reported fibroid diagnoses at enrollment and during 13 follow-up visits.
  • At all visits, levels of glucose, insulin, and sex hormone–binding globulin (SHBG) were measured in fasting blood samples, and homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) was calculated.
  • Discrete-time survival models were used to estimate the hazard ratios (HRs) for the associations of biomarkers and diabetes with fibroid diagnoses, adjusted for demographics and healthcare utilization.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Researchers identified 2570 eligible women (median age, 45 years; 45% perimenopausal women), among whom approximately 3% had diabetes at baseline.
  • Diabetes was associated with a 28% lower incidence of new fibroid diagnosis (adjusted HR, 0.72).
  • This association was particularly strong among participants with treated diabetes, especially those on metformin, who had a 51% lower incidence of self-reported fibroids than those without diabetes. The estimates, however, had wide CIs suggesting uncertainty.
  • Time-varying HOMA-IR and SHBG, insulin, and glucose levels were not significantly associated with the new fibroid diagnosis.
  • When stratified by menopausal status, higher HOMA-IR and insulin levels were associated with a greater incidence of fibroid diagnosis during premenopause but not during perimenopause.

IN PRACTICE:

“Our findings contribute to preliminary evidence indicating a protective association between diabetes and risk of incident fibroids,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Susanna D. Mitro, Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Pleasanton, California, and was published online in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on self-reported fibroid diagnoses, which may result in the misclassification of cases. The sample size of participants with diabetes was small, which resulted in reduced precision and confidence in the findings. The baseline eligibility criteria (midlife participants with an intact uterus and no history of fibroid incidence) may have limited the generalizability of the findings to the wider population at risk for fibroids.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), through the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Nursing Research, and the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health. One author reported being a consultant and adviser for various pharmaceutical companies. Two other authors reported receiving salary support and royalties from various pharmaceutical companies and organizations.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Diabetes is associated with a lower incidence of uterine fibroids in midlife women receiving diabetes treatment, especially metformin. The association between diabetes and the risk for uterine fibroids may vary based on menopausal status.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Previous studies have provided inconsistent evidence regarding associations between the risk for uterine fibroids and markers of cardiometabolic health, such as fasting insulin, fasting glucose, and diabetes.
  • Researchers conducted a prospective cohort study to examine the association of fasting levels of cardiometabolic blood biomarkers, diabetes, and diabetes treatment with the incidence of new fibroid diagnoses in midlife women.
  • They included participants from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation cohort who reported fibroid diagnoses at enrollment and during 13 follow-up visits.
  • At all visits, levels of glucose, insulin, and sex hormone–binding globulin (SHBG) were measured in fasting blood samples, and homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) was calculated.
  • Discrete-time survival models were used to estimate the hazard ratios (HRs) for the associations of biomarkers and diabetes with fibroid diagnoses, adjusted for demographics and healthcare utilization.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Researchers identified 2570 eligible women (median age, 45 years; 45% perimenopausal women), among whom approximately 3% had diabetes at baseline.
  • Diabetes was associated with a 28% lower incidence of new fibroid diagnosis (adjusted HR, 0.72).
  • This association was particularly strong among participants with treated diabetes, especially those on metformin, who had a 51% lower incidence of self-reported fibroids than those without diabetes. The estimates, however, had wide CIs suggesting uncertainty.
  • Time-varying HOMA-IR and SHBG, insulin, and glucose levels were not significantly associated with the new fibroid diagnosis.
  • When stratified by menopausal status, higher HOMA-IR and insulin levels were associated with a greater incidence of fibroid diagnosis during premenopause but not during perimenopause.

IN PRACTICE:

“Our findings contribute to preliminary evidence indicating a protective association between diabetes and risk of incident fibroids,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Susanna D. Mitro, Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Pleasanton, California, and was published online in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on self-reported fibroid diagnoses, which may result in the misclassification of cases. The sample size of participants with diabetes was small, which resulted in reduced precision and confidence in the findings. The baseline eligibility criteria (midlife participants with an intact uterus and no history of fibroid incidence) may have limited the generalizability of the findings to the wider population at risk for fibroids.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), through the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Nursing Research, and the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health. One author reported being a consultant and adviser for various pharmaceutical companies. Two other authors reported receiving salary support and royalties from various pharmaceutical companies and organizations.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Hormone Therapy for Menopause Remains at Historic Lows Despite Effectiveness and Safety Profile

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 09/23/2024 - 09:35

Less than 4% of American women aged 50-59 years use hormone therapy (HT) to treat menopausal symptoms today, approximately 10 times lower than the peak use of HT before the publication of the 2002 Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study that misguidedly cast doubt on the safety of HT. Though subsequent research has addressed the flaws of the WHI study and supports the use of HT in most menopausal women younger than 60 years, use of this therapy has never recovered, according to research presented at the annual meeting of The Menopause Society (formerly The North American Menopause Society).

“Despite evidence supporting the efficacy and safety of HT, usage rates of US Food and Drug Administration–approved HT remain low,” Stephanie Faubion, MD, MBA, director of the Mayo Clinic Women’s Health in Jacksonville, Florida, and medical director of The Menopause Society, told attendees. “Improved education of clinicians and patients is critically needed.”

Today, “there is more clarity on the risk/benefit ratio of HT use with the benefits typically outweighing the risks in women who initiate therapy under the age of 60 years and within 10 years of menopause onset.”

Using medical and pharmacy claims data from OptumLabs, Dr. Faubion and her colleagues examined utilization rates from 2007 to 2023 of transdermal vs oral estrogen and of conjugated estrogen vs estradiol in women aged 40 years or older. The data included more than 200 million people throughout the United States covered by commercial insurance or Medicare Advantage. The researchers defined annual rate of HT use as the proportion of women who had at least 180 days of a filled prescription for a systemic HT preparation with estrogen.

The study population increased from an estimated 2 million women in 2007 to 4.5 million women in 2023, and the average age of enrollees increased from 53 in 2007 to 66 in 2023. Starting at 4.6% in 2007, HT use steadily declined to a low of 1.8% in 2023 for the whole cohort of women aged 40 years or older.

Though rates remained highest in women aged 50-64 years, it still declined within each age group: From 6% in 2007 to 3.6% in 2023 among women aged 50-54 years, from 7.3% to 3.8% among women aged 55-59 years, and from 7.5% to 2.9% among women aged 60-64 years. It also declined in younger women, from 3.2% in 2007 to 1.5% in 2023 in those aged 45-50 years. Estradiol was the most common formulation used, and oral administration was the most common route.

The researchers also saw a gradual decline during the study period in the use of high-dose oral HT and an increase in the use of low-dose oral HT, whereas standard dosages remained fairly consistent as the most common dose prescribed. Similarly, the use of high transdermal doses declined, whereas low transdermal doses increased and surpassed the use of standard doses. Conjugated estrogen use plummeted during the study period across all age groups, from 2%-5% in most age groups to < 1% in all age groups by 2023.

One limitation of the study was that it could not examine rates of compounded HT use because those would not be reflected in insurance claims, pointed out JoAnn Pinkerton, MD, a professor of ob.gyn. at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, who was not involved in the study. Dr. Pinkerton found it surprising that the numbers were so low, despite the fact that research estimates suggest less than 15% of menopausal women are receiving adequate treatment, she told this news organization. “You can see there’s a large unmet need to get treatment,” she said. “All major medical societies say the same thing: For healthy, symptomatic menopausal women, you can use hormone therapy safely and effectively.” 

The lack of education among providers is likely the biggest reason for the decline, Dr. Pinkerton says. “I think it’s because there’s a whole group of providers that did not receive any training, and that’s OB/GYNs, internal medicine, family practice, endocrinologists,” she said. “Now that people are starting to feel more confident that we can use it safely, we’re trying to get that training out to people about vasomotor symptoms, about hormone therapy, and now about new nonhormone therapies.”

Dr. Pinkerton noted that The Menopause Society has begun a new teaching program, Menopause Step-by-Step, aimed at providing short articles on the basics of menopause, HT, non-HT, and vaginal issues.

A separate poster presented at the conference provides insight into another potential factor contributing to low HT rates. A survey of 1050 American and Canadian women found that 90% discussed their symptoms with their healthcare providers, yet only 25% said their doctor identified the symptoms as likely due to perimenopause or menopause on their first visit — and only 10% of respondents said their doctor was the one to bring up perimenopause/menopause.

The respondents comprised a convenience sample of those who saw the survey on social media, in an email, or on the website of Morphus, a Toronto-based company aimed at providing support, information, and products related to menopause. Though the survey is ongoing, the analyzed responses are from March to May 2024.

Though 40% of the women said their provider attributed their symptoms to perimenopause or menopause on the second or third visit, 18% saw a provider four to five times, and 17% saw a provider more than five times before the provider considered menopause as a cause. About a third of the women (35%) brought it up to their doctor themselves and found their provider receptive, but 40% said the response was dismissive when they brought it up, and 15% said the topic was never broached at all.

Andrea Donsky, RHN, founder of Morphus who conducted the study, found these numbers surprising because she would have hoped that more doctors would have brought up perimenopause/menopause sooner. “We still have a lot of work to do to help educate women and healthcare providers,” Ms. Donsky told this news organization. “A lot of women spend years not knowing they’re in this phase of life, so they visit their doctors/HCPs [healthcare providers] many times because the connection isn’t made on the first visit.”

Danielle Meitiv, MS, a study co-author and health coach based in Silver Spring, Maryland, added, “Everyone wonders why we end up with Dr. Google; that’s the only doctor who’s talking to us about menopause.”

Dr. Pinkerton was less surprised by these survey findings. “As a menopause specialist, my most common new patient is a perimenopausal woman who feels like she hasn’t been listened to,” whether it’s her primary care doctor, her ob.gyn., or another clinician. “If the provider doesn’t ask or if the women doesn’t tell, then you don’t have the conversation,” Dr. Pinkerton said. “So many women in perimenopause are busy with work, families, partnerships, aging parents — all of the issues that they’re dealing with — that when they start to have sleep issues or mood issues or easy crying, they relate it to their life stressors, instead of recognizing that it’s fluctuating hormones.”

When Ms. Donsky examined the 1223 responses they had received through August 2024, the most common treatments advised for symptoms were antidepressants and HT, both recommended by 38% of providers. Other common recommendations were to “lose weight,” “eat less and exercise more,” supplements, or birth control pills.

Dr. Faubion had no disclosures, and her study used no external funding. Dr. Pinkerton has run a trial funded by Bayer and is a consultant for Bayer and Pfizer. Ms. Donsky is the owner of Morphus. Ms. Meitiv had no disclosures. The poster on women’s experiences with providers was funded by Morphus Inc.

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

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Less than 4% of American women aged 50-59 years use hormone therapy (HT) to treat menopausal symptoms today, approximately 10 times lower than the peak use of HT before the publication of the 2002 Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study that misguidedly cast doubt on the safety of HT. Though subsequent research has addressed the flaws of the WHI study and supports the use of HT in most menopausal women younger than 60 years, use of this therapy has never recovered, according to research presented at the annual meeting of The Menopause Society (formerly The North American Menopause Society).

“Despite evidence supporting the efficacy and safety of HT, usage rates of US Food and Drug Administration–approved HT remain low,” Stephanie Faubion, MD, MBA, director of the Mayo Clinic Women’s Health in Jacksonville, Florida, and medical director of The Menopause Society, told attendees. “Improved education of clinicians and patients is critically needed.”

Today, “there is more clarity on the risk/benefit ratio of HT use with the benefits typically outweighing the risks in women who initiate therapy under the age of 60 years and within 10 years of menopause onset.”

Using medical and pharmacy claims data from OptumLabs, Dr. Faubion and her colleagues examined utilization rates from 2007 to 2023 of transdermal vs oral estrogen and of conjugated estrogen vs estradiol in women aged 40 years or older. The data included more than 200 million people throughout the United States covered by commercial insurance or Medicare Advantage. The researchers defined annual rate of HT use as the proportion of women who had at least 180 days of a filled prescription for a systemic HT preparation with estrogen.

The study population increased from an estimated 2 million women in 2007 to 4.5 million women in 2023, and the average age of enrollees increased from 53 in 2007 to 66 in 2023. Starting at 4.6% in 2007, HT use steadily declined to a low of 1.8% in 2023 for the whole cohort of women aged 40 years or older.

Though rates remained highest in women aged 50-64 years, it still declined within each age group: From 6% in 2007 to 3.6% in 2023 among women aged 50-54 years, from 7.3% to 3.8% among women aged 55-59 years, and from 7.5% to 2.9% among women aged 60-64 years. It also declined in younger women, from 3.2% in 2007 to 1.5% in 2023 in those aged 45-50 years. Estradiol was the most common formulation used, and oral administration was the most common route.

The researchers also saw a gradual decline during the study period in the use of high-dose oral HT and an increase in the use of low-dose oral HT, whereas standard dosages remained fairly consistent as the most common dose prescribed. Similarly, the use of high transdermal doses declined, whereas low transdermal doses increased and surpassed the use of standard doses. Conjugated estrogen use plummeted during the study period across all age groups, from 2%-5% in most age groups to < 1% in all age groups by 2023.

One limitation of the study was that it could not examine rates of compounded HT use because those would not be reflected in insurance claims, pointed out JoAnn Pinkerton, MD, a professor of ob.gyn. at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, who was not involved in the study. Dr. Pinkerton found it surprising that the numbers were so low, despite the fact that research estimates suggest less than 15% of menopausal women are receiving adequate treatment, she told this news organization. “You can see there’s a large unmet need to get treatment,” she said. “All major medical societies say the same thing: For healthy, symptomatic menopausal women, you can use hormone therapy safely and effectively.” 

The lack of education among providers is likely the biggest reason for the decline, Dr. Pinkerton says. “I think it’s because there’s a whole group of providers that did not receive any training, and that’s OB/GYNs, internal medicine, family practice, endocrinologists,” she said. “Now that people are starting to feel more confident that we can use it safely, we’re trying to get that training out to people about vasomotor symptoms, about hormone therapy, and now about new nonhormone therapies.”

Dr. Pinkerton noted that The Menopause Society has begun a new teaching program, Menopause Step-by-Step, aimed at providing short articles on the basics of menopause, HT, non-HT, and vaginal issues.

A separate poster presented at the conference provides insight into another potential factor contributing to low HT rates. A survey of 1050 American and Canadian women found that 90% discussed their symptoms with their healthcare providers, yet only 25% said their doctor identified the symptoms as likely due to perimenopause or menopause on their first visit — and only 10% of respondents said their doctor was the one to bring up perimenopause/menopause.

The respondents comprised a convenience sample of those who saw the survey on social media, in an email, or on the website of Morphus, a Toronto-based company aimed at providing support, information, and products related to menopause. Though the survey is ongoing, the analyzed responses are from March to May 2024.

Though 40% of the women said their provider attributed their symptoms to perimenopause or menopause on the second or third visit, 18% saw a provider four to five times, and 17% saw a provider more than five times before the provider considered menopause as a cause. About a third of the women (35%) brought it up to their doctor themselves and found their provider receptive, but 40% said the response was dismissive when they brought it up, and 15% said the topic was never broached at all.

Andrea Donsky, RHN, founder of Morphus who conducted the study, found these numbers surprising because she would have hoped that more doctors would have brought up perimenopause/menopause sooner. “We still have a lot of work to do to help educate women and healthcare providers,” Ms. Donsky told this news organization. “A lot of women spend years not knowing they’re in this phase of life, so they visit their doctors/HCPs [healthcare providers] many times because the connection isn’t made on the first visit.”

Danielle Meitiv, MS, a study co-author and health coach based in Silver Spring, Maryland, added, “Everyone wonders why we end up with Dr. Google; that’s the only doctor who’s talking to us about menopause.”

Dr. Pinkerton was less surprised by these survey findings. “As a menopause specialist, my most common new patient is a perimenopausal woman who feels like she hasn’t been listened to,” whether it’s her primary care doctor, her ob.gyn., or another clinician. “If the provider doesn’t ask or if the women doesn’t tell, then you don’t have the conversation,” Dr. Pinkerton said. “So many women in perimenopause are busy with work, families, partnerships, aging parents — all of the issues that they’re dealing with — that when they start to have sleep issues or mood issues or easy crying, they relate it to their life stressors, instead of recognizing that it’s fluctuating hormones.”

When Ms. Donsky examined the 1223 responses they had received through August 2024, the most common treatments advised for symptoms were antidepressants and HT, both recommended by 38% of providers. Other common recommendations were to “lose weight,” “eat less and exercise more,” supplements, or birth control pills.

Dr. Faubion had no disclosures, and her study used no external funding. Dr. Pinkerton has run a trial funded by Bayer and is a consultant for Bayer and Pfizer. Ms. Donsky is the owner of Morphus. Ms. Meitiv had no disclosures. The poster on women’s experiences with providers was funded by Morphus Inc.

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

Less than 4% of American women aged 50-59 years use hormone therapy (HT) to treat menopausal symptoms today, approximately 10 times lower than the peak use of HT before the publication of the 2002 Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study that misguidedly cast doubt on the safety of HT. Though subsequent research has addressed the flaws of the WHI study and supports the use of HT in most menopausal women younger than 60 years, use of this therapy has never recovered, according to research presented at the annual meeting of The Menopause Society (formerly The North American Menopause Society).

“Despite evidence supporting the efficacy and safety of HT, usage rates of US Food and Drug Administration–approved HT remain low,” Stephanie Faubion, MD, MBA, director of the Mayo Clinic Women’s Health in Jacksonville, Florida, and medical director of The Menopause Society, told attendees. “Improved education of clinicians and patients is critically needed.”

Today, “there is more clarity on the risk/benefit ratio of HT use with the benefits typically outweighing the risks in women who initiate therapy under the age of 60 years and within 10 years of menopause onset.”

Using medical and pharmacy claims data from OptumLabs, Dr. Faubion and her colleagues examined utilization rates from 2007 to 2023 of transdermal vs oral estrogen and of conjugated estrogen vs estradiol in women aged 40 years or older. The data included more than 200 million people throughout the United States covered by commercial insurance or Medicare Advantage. The researchers defined annual rate of HT use as the proportion of women who had at least 180 days of a filled prescription for a systemic HT preparation with estrogen.

The study population increased from an estimated 2 million women in 2007 to 4.5 million women in 2023, and the average age of enrollees increased from 53 in 2007 to 66 in 2023. Starting at 4.6% in 2007, HT use steadily declined to a low of 1.8% in 2023 for the whole cohort of women aged 40 years or older.

Though rates remained highest in women aged 50-64 years, it still declined within each age group: From 6% in 2007 to 3.6% in 2023 among women aged 50-54 years, from 7.3% to 3.8% among women aged 55-59 years, and from 7.5% to 2.9% among women aged 60-64 years. It also declined in younger women, from 3.2% in 2007 to 1.5% in 2023 in those aged 45-50 years. Estradiol was the most common formulation used, and oral administration was the most common route.

The researchers also saw a gradual decline during the study period in the use of high-dose oral HT and an increase in the use of low-dose oral HT, whereas standard dosages remained fairly consistent as the most common dose prescribed. Similarly, the use of high transdermal doses declined, whereas low transdermal doses increased and surpassed the use of standard doses. Conjugated estrogen use plummeted during the study period across all age groups, from 2%-5% in most age groups to < 1% in all age groups by 2023.

One limitation of the study was that it could not examine rates of compounded HT use because those would not be reflected in insurance claims, pointed out JoAnn Pinkerton, MD, a professor of ob.gyn. at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, who was not involved in the study. Dr. Pinkerton found it surprising that the numbers were so low, despite the fact that research estimates suggest less than 15% of menopausal women are receiving adequate treatment, she told this news organization. “You can see there’s a large unmet need to get treatment,” she said. “All major medical societies say the same thing: For healthy, symptomatic menopausal women, you can use hormone therapy safely and effectively.” 

The lack of education among providers is likely the biggest reason for the decline, Dr. Pinkerton says. “I think it’s because there’s a whole group of providers that did not receive any training, and that’s OB/GYNs, internal medicine, family practice, endocrinologists,” she said. “Now that people are starting to feel more confident that we can use it safely, we’re trying to get that training out to people about vasomotor symptoms, about hormone therapy, and now about new nonhormone therapies.”

Dr. Pinkerton noted that The Menopause Society has begun a new teaching program, Menopause Step-by-Step, aimed at providing short articles on the basics of menopause, HT, non-HT, and vaginal issues.

A separate poster presented at the conference provides insight into another potential factor contributing to low HT rates. A survey of 1050 American and Canadian women found that 90% discussed their symptoms with their healthcare providers, yet only 25% said their doctor identified the symptoms as likely due to perimenopause or menopause on their first visit — and only 10% of respondents said their doctor was the one to bring up perimenopause/menopause.

The respondents comprised a convenience sample of those who saw the survey on social media, in an email, or on the website of Morphus, a Toronto-based company aimed at providing support, information, and products related to menopause. Though the survey is ongoing, the analyzed responses are from March to May 2024.

Though 40% of the women said their provider attributed their symptoms to perimenopause or menopause on the second or third visit, 18% saw a provider four to five times, and 17% saw a provider more than five times before the provider considered menopause as a cause. About a third of the women (35%) brought it up to their doctor themselves and found their provider receptive, but 40% said the response was dismissive when they brought it up, and 15% said the topic was never broached at all.

Andrea Donsky, RHN, founder of Morphus who conducted the study, found these numbers surprising because she would have hoped that more doctors would have brought up perimenopause/menopause sooner. “We still have a lot of work to do to help educate women and healthcare providers,” Ms. Donsky told this news organization. “A lot of women spend years not knowing they’re in this phase of life, so they visit their doctors/HCPs [healthcare providers] many times because the connection isn’t made on the first visit.”

Danielle Meitiv, MS, a study co-author and health coach based in Silver Spring, Maryland, added, “Everyone wonders why we end up with Dr. Google; that’s the only doctor who’s talking to us about menopause.”

Dr. Pinkerton was less surprised by these survey findings. “As a menopause specialist, my most common new patient is a perimenopausal woman who feels like she hasn’t been listened to,” whether it’s her primary care doctor, her ob.gyn., or another clinician. “If the provider doesn’t ask or if the women doesn’t tell, then you don’t have the conversation,” Dr. Pinkerton said. “So many women in perimenopause are busy with work, families, partnerships, aging parents — all of the issues that they’re dealing with — that when they start to have sleep issues or mood issues or easy crying, they relate it to their life stressors, instead of recognizing that it’s fluctuating hormones.”

When Ms. Donsky examined the 1223 responses they had received through August 2024, the most common treatments advised for symptoms were antidepressants and HT, both recommended by 38% of providers. Other common recommendations were to “lose weight,” “eat less and exercise more,” supplements, or birth control pills.

Dr. Faubion had no disclosures, and her study used no external funding. Dr. Pinkerton has run a trial funded by Bayer and is a consultant for Bayer and Pfizer. Ms. Donsky is the owner of Morphus. Ms. Meitiv had no disclosures. The poster on women’s experiences with providers was funded by Morphus Inc.

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

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Laser, Radiofrequency Therapies Offer Little Benefit for Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause

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Thu, 09/19/2024 - 14:09

CHICAGO — Use of CO2 lasers and similar “energy-based” treatments result in little to no benefit for genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) symptoms, according to research presented at the The Menopause Society 2024 Annual Meeting in Chicago on September 12.

“There was a concern that menopausal women are being targeted for treatments that may not have a lot of benefit and might have significant harms,” Elisheva Danan, MD, MPH, a physician at the Minneapolis VA Health Care System and an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis, told this news organization. While she was not surprised to find little evidence of benefit, “we were a little bit surprised that we also didn’t find significant evidence of harms.”

The study was unable to evaluate the potential for financial harms, but Dr. Danan noted that these therapies are often expensive and not typically covered by insurance. The treatments appear to be used primarily in private practice, she said, while “most academic clinicians were not familiar with these and do not use these lasers.”

The American Urological Association had requested the review, Dr. Danan said, “to inform clinical guidelines that they could put out for practitioners about treating genital urinary syndrome from menopause.” Yet the evidence available remains slim. “There’s a lot of outcomes that were not looked at by most of these [trials], or they were looked at in a way that we couldn’t separate out,” she said.

Kamalini Das, MD, a professor of ob.gyn. at the University of Minnesota who was not involved in the research, was surprised by the findings because studies to date have been variable, “but since this looks at multiple studies and they find no benefits, I would take these results as more significant than any of the small studies,” she told this news organization.

Dr. Das said she has patients who ask about using these therapies and have had them done. “So far, I’ve told them the jury is out on whether it will help or not, that there are some studies that say they’re beneficial and some studies that they’re not,” Dr. Das said.

But this new review changes what she will tell patients going forward, she said. “This is a good study because it consolidates lots of little studies, so I think I would use this to say, looking at all the studies together, this treatment is not beneficial.”

GSM occurs due to the body’s reduced production of estrogen and affects anywhere from 27% to 84% of postmenopausal women. It can involve a constellation of symptoms ranging from vaginal discomfort and irritation to painful urination or intercourse. Typical recommended treatments for GSM include systemic hormone therapy, localized hormonal treatments such as vaginal estrogen or dehydroepiandrosterone, nonhormonal creams and moisturizers, and the prescription drug ospemifene.

Most of these have been found effective, according to a recent systematic review  Dr. Danan published in the Annals of Internal Medicine that this news organization covered. But recent years have also seen a rapid increase in interest and the availability of energy-based treatments for GSM, such as CO2 laser and radiofrequency interventions, particularly for those who cannot or do not want to use hormonal treatments. The idea behind these newer therapies is that they “heat tissue to cause a denaturation of collagen fibers and induce a wound-healing response,” with the aim of “enhancement of vaginal elasticity, restoration of premenopausal epithelial function, and symptom improvement,” the authors wrote.

Evidence has been scant and uneven for the safety and effectiveness of these treatments, and they have not been evaluated by the US Food and Drug Administration. The agency issued a warning in 2018 with remarks from then Commissioner Scott Gottlieb that the “products have serious risks and don’t have adequate evidence to support their use for these purposes.”

Much of the evidence has focused on CO2 lasers instead of other energy-based treatments, however, and a raft of new studies have been published on these interventions in the past 2 years. Dr. Danan and colleagues, therefore, assessed the most current state of the research with a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and prospective observational studies with control groups published through December 11, 2023.

Included studies needed to evaluate an energy-based treatment for at least 8 weeks in a minimum of 40 postmenopausal women (20 in each group) who had one or more GSM symptoms. The authors also included nonrandomized and uncontrolled studies with a follow-up of a year or more to assess possible adverse events. The studies also needed to assess at least one of eight core outcomes: Dyspareunia; vulvovaginal dryness; vulvovaginal discomfort/irritation; dysuria; change in most bothersome symptom; treatment satisfaction; adverse events; and distress, bother, or interference associated with genitourinary symptoms.

The authors identified 32 studies, including 16 RCTs, one quasi-RCT, and 15 nonrandomized studies. The researchers extracted and analyzed data from the 10 RCTs and one quasi-RCT that were rated as having low to moderate risk for bias.

Most of these studies assessed CO2 lasers alone, while three assessed erbium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Er:YAG) laser, and one looked at CO2 lasers vs radiofrequency treatments.

The average age of participants ranged from 56 to 64 years, and most trials were in the United States. Results showed that CO2 lasers led to little or no difference in dysuria, dyspareunia, or quality of life when compared with sham lasers. The CO2 laser therapy also showed little to no difference compared with vaginal estrogen creams for dyspareunia, dryness, discomfort/irritation, dysuria, or quality of life.

Most CO2 laser studies reported on most outcomes, but the Er:YAG studies tended to report only on quality of life and/or one or two other outcomes. The radiofrequency study only assessed dyspareunia and quality of life.

“Treatment effects on other outcomes and effects of Er:YAG laser or radiofrequency on any outcomes are very uncertain,” the authors reported. Few adverse events and no serious adverse events were reported based on 15 studies, including the additional non-RCTs that had follow-up for at least a year.

“There are case reports and other types of studies that have shown some bad outcomes using laser therapies, and we really wanted to be expansive and include anything, especially because this is such a new treatment and all these trials were in the last couple of years,” Dr. Danan said. 

The review was limited by inconsistent or nonvalidated outcome reporting in the studies as well as small populations and short follow-up, typically less than 3 months.

The research was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Danan and Dr. Das had no disclosures.
 

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

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CHICAGO — Use of CO2 lasers and similar “energy-based” treatments result in little to no benefit for genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) symptoms, according to research presented at the The Menopause Society 2024 Annual Meeting in Chicago on September 12.

“There was a concern that menopausal women are being targeted for treatments that may not have a lot of benefit and might have significant harms,” Elisheva Danan, MD, MPH, a physician at the Minneapolis VA Health Care System and an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis, told this news organization. While she was not surprised to find little evidence of benefit, “we were a little bit surprised that we also didn’t find significant evidence of harms.”

The study was unable to evaluate the potential for financial harms, but Dr. Danan noted that these therapies are often expensive and not typically covered by insurance. The treatments appear to be used primarily in private practice, she said, while “most academic clinicians were not familiar with these and do not use these lasers.”

The American Urological Association had requested the review, Dr. Danan said, “to inform clinical guidelines that they could put out for practitioners about treating genital urinary syndrome from menopause.” Yet the evidence available remains slim. “There’s a lot of outcomes that were not looked at by most of these [trials], or they were looked at in a way that we couldn’t separate out,” she said.

Kamalini Das, MD, a professor of ob.gyn. at the University of Minnesota who was not involved in the research, was surprised by the findings because studies to date have been variable, “but since this looks at multiple studies and they find no benefits, I would take these results as more significant than any of the small studies,” she told this news organization.

Dr. Das said she has patients who ask about using these therapies and have had them done. “So far, I’ve told them the jury is out on whether it will help or not, that there are some studies that say they’re beneficial and some studies that they’re not,” Dr. Das said.

But this new review changes what she will tell patients going forward, she said. “This is a good study because it consolidates lots of little studies, so I think I would use this to say, looking at all the studies together, this treatment is not beneficial.”

GSM occurs due to the body’s reduced production of estrogen and affects anywhere from 27% to 84% of postmenopausal women. It can involve a constellation of symptoms ranging from vaginal discomfort and irritation to painful urination or intercourse. Typical recommended treatments for GSM include systemic hormone therapy, localized hormonal treatments such as vaginal estrogen or dehydroepiandrosterone, nonhormonal creams and moisturizers, and the prescription drug ospemifene.

Most of these have been found effective, according to a recent systematic review  Dr. Danan published in the Annals of Internal Medicine that this news organization covered. But recent years have also seen a rapid increase in interest and the availability of energy-based treatments for GSM, such as CO2 laser and radiofrequency interventions, particularly for those who cannot or do not want to use hormonal treatments. The idea behind these newer therapies is that they “heat tissue to cause a denaturation of collagen fibers and induce a wound-healing response,” with the aim of “enhancement of vaginal elasticity, restoration of premenopausal epithelial function, and symptom improvement,” the authors wrote.

Evidence has been scant and uneven for the safety and effectiveness of these treatments, and they have not been evaluated by the US Food and Drug Administration. The agency issued a warning in 2018 with remarks from then Commissioner Scott Gottlieb that the “products have serious risks and don’t have adequate evidence to support their use for these purposes.”

Much of the evidence has focused on CO2 lasers instead of other energy-based treatments, however, and a raft of new studies have been published on these interventions in the past 2 years. Dr. Danan and colleagues, therefore, assessed the most current state of the research with a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and prospective observational studies with control groups published through December 11, 2023.

Included studies needed to evaluate an energy-based treatment for at least 8 weeks in a minimum of 40 postmenopausal women (20 in each group) who had one or more GSM symptoms. The authors also included nonrandomized and uncontrolled studies with a follow-up of a year or more to assess possible adverse events. The studies also needed to assess at least one of eight core outcomes: Dyspareunia; vulvovaginal dryness; vulvovaginal discomfort/irritation; dysuria; change in most bothersome symptom; treatment satisfaction; adverse events; and distress, bother, or interference associated with genitourinary symptoms.

The authors identified 32 studies, including 16 RCTs, one quasi-RCT, and 15 nonrandomized studies. The researchers extracted and analyzed data from the 10 RCTs and one quasi-RCT that were rated as having low to moderate risk for bias.

Most of these studies assessed CO2 lasers alone, while three assessed erbium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Er:YAG) laser, and one looked at CO2 lasers vs radiofrequency treatments.

The average age of participants ranged from 56 to 64 years, and most trials were in the United States. Results showed that CO2 lasers led to little or no difference in dysuria, dyspareunia, or quality of life when compared with sham lasers. The CO2 laser therapy also showed little to no difference compared with vaginal estrogen creams for dyspareunia, dryness, discomfort/irritation, dysuria, or quality of life.

Most CO2 laser studies reported on most outcomes, but the Er:YAG studies tended to report only on quality of life and/or one or two other outcomes. The radiofrequency study only assessed dyspareunia and quality of life.

“Treatment effects on other outcomes and effects of Er:YAG laser or radiofrequency on any outcomes are very uncertain,” the authors reported. Few adverse events and no serious adverse events were reported based on 15 studies, including the additional non-RCTs that had follow-up for at least a year.

“There are case reports and other types of studies that have shown some bad outcomes using laser therapies, and we really wanted to be expansive and include anything, especially because this is such a new treatment and all these trials were in the last couple of years,” Dr. Danan said. 

The review was limited by inconsistent or nonvalidated outcome reporting in the studies as well as small populations and short follow-up, typically less than 3 months.

The research was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Danan and Dr. Das had no disclosures.
 

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

CHICAGO — Use of CO2 lasers and similar “energy-based” treatments result in little to no benefit for genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) symptoms, according to research presented at the The Menopause Society 2024 Annual Meeting in Chicago on September 12.

“There was a concern that menopausal women are being targeted for treatments that may not have a lot of benefit and might have significant harms,” Elisheva Danan, MD, MPH, a physician at the Minneapolis VA Health Care System and an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis, told this news organization. While she was not surprised to find little evidence of benefit, “we were a little bit surprised that we also didn’t find significant evidence of harms.”

The study was unable to evaluate the potential for financial harms, but Dr. Danan noted that these therapies are often expensive and not typically covered by insurance. The treatments appear to be used primarily in private practice, she said, while “most academic clinicians were not familiar with these and do not use these lasers.”

The American Urological Association had requested the review, Dr. Danan said, “to inform clinical guidelines that they could put out for practitioners about treating genital urinary syndrome from menopause.” Yet the evidence available remains slim. “There’s a lot of outcomes that were not looked at by most of these [trials], or they were looked at in a way that we couldn’t separate out,” she said.

Kamalini Das, MD, a professor of ob.gyn. at the University of Minnesota who was not involved in the research, was surprised by the findings because studies to date have been variable, “but since this looks at multiple studies and they find no benefits, I would take these results as more significant than any of the small studies,” she told this news organization.

Dr. Das said she has patients who ask about using these therapies and have had them done. “So far, I’ve told them the jury is out on whether it will help or not, that there are some studies that say they’re beneficial and some studies that they’re not,” Dr. Das said.

But this new review changes what she will tell patients going forward, she said. “This is a good study because it consolidates lots of little studies, so I think I would use this to say, looking at all the studies together, this treatment is not beneficial.”

GSM occurs due to the body’s reduced production of estrogen and affects anywhere from 27% to 84% of postmenopausal women. It can involve a constellation of symptoms ranging from vaginal discomfort and irritation to painful urination or intercourse. Typical recommended treatments for GSM include systemic hormone therapy, localized hormonal treatments such as vaginal estrogen or dehydroepiandrosterone, nonhormonal creams and moisturizers, and the prescription drug ospemifene.

Most of these have been found effective, according to a recent systematic review  Dr. Danan published in the Annals of Internal Medicine that this news organization covered. But recent years have also seen a rapid increase in interest and the availability of energy-based treatments for GSM, such as CO2 laser and radiofrequency interventions, particularly for those who cannot or do not want to use hormonal treatments. The idea behind these newer therapies is that they “heat tissue to cause a denaturation of collagen fibers and induce a wound-healing response,” with the aim of “enhancement of vaginal elasticity, restoration of premenopausal epithelial function, and symptom improvement,” the authors wrote.

Evidence has been scant and uneven for the safety and effectiveness of these treatments, and they have not been evaluated by the US Food and Drug Administration. The agency issued a warning in 2018 with remarks from then Commissioner Scott Gottlieb that the “products have serious risks and don’t have adequate evidence to support their use for these purposes.”

Much of the evidence has focused on CO2 lasers instead of other energy-based treatments, however, and a raft of new studies have been published on these interventions in the past 2 years. Dr. Danan and colleagues, therefore, assessed the most current state of the research with a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and prospective observational studies with control groups published through December 11, 2023.

Included studies needed to evaluate an energy-based treatment for at least 8 weeks in a minimum of 40 postmenopausal women (20 in each group) who had one or more GSM symptoms. The authors also included nonrandomized and uncontrolled studies with a follow-up of a year or more to assess possible adverse events. The studies also needed to assess at least one of eight core outcomes: Dyspareunia; vulvovaginal dryness; vulvovaginal discomfort/irritation; dysuria; change in most bothersome symptom; treatment satisfaction; adverse events; and distress, bother, or interference associated with genitourinary symptoms.

The authors identified 32 studies, including 16 RCTs, one quasi-RCT, and 15 nonrandomized studies. The researchers extracted and analyzed data from the 10 RCTs and one quasi-RCT that were rated as having low to moderate risk for bias.

Most of these studies assessed CO2 lasers alone, while three assessed erbium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Er:YAG) laser, and one looked at CO2 lasers vs radiofrequency treatments.

The average age of participants ranged from 56 to 64 years, and most trials were in the United States. Results showed that CO2 lasers led to little or no difference in dysuria, dyspareunia, or quality of life when compared with sham lasers. The CO2 laser therapy also showed little to no difference compared with vaginal estrogen creams for dyspareunia, dryness, discomfort/irritation, dysuria, or quality of life.

Most CO2 laser studies reported on most outcomes, but the Er:YAG studies tended to report only on quality of life and/or one or two other outcomes. The radiofrequency study only assessed dyspareunia and quality of life.

“Treatment effects on other outcomes and effects of Er:YAG laser or radiofrequency on any outcomes are very uncertain,” the authors reported. Few adverse events and no serious adverse events were reported based on 15 studies, including the additional non-RCTs that had follow-up for at least a year.

“There are case reports and other types of studies that have shown some bad outcomes using laser therapies, and we really wanted to be expansive and include anything, especially because this is such a new treatment and all these trials were in the last couple of years,” Dr. Danan said. 

The review was limited by inconsistent or nonvalidated outcome reporting in the studies as well as small populations and short follow-up, typically less than 3 months.

The research was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Danan and Dr. Das had no disclosures.
 

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

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NSAIDs Offer No Relief for Pain From IUD Placement

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 09/16/2024 - 12:55

Research on pain management during placement of intrauterine devices (IUD) is lacking, but most studies so far indicate that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are not effective, according to a poster presented at Pain Week 2024 in Las Vegas.

Roughly 79% of the 14 studies included in the systematic review found NSAIDs — one of the most common drugs clinicians advise patients to take before placement — did not diminish discomfort.

“We’re challenging the current practice of using just NSAIDs as a first-line of treatment,” said Kevin Rowland, PhD, professor and chair of biomedical sciences at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine in Houston, who helped conduct the meta-analysis. “We need additional measures.”

Some studies found the drugs offered virtually no improvement for patients, while the biggest drop in pain shown in one study was about 40%. The range of pain levels women reported while using NSAIDs was between 1.8 and 7.3 on the visual analog scale (VAS), with an average score of 4.25.

The review included 10 types of NSAIDs and dosages administered to patients before the procedure. One intramuscular NSAID was included while the remaining were oral. All studies were peer-reviewed, used the VAS pain scale, and were not limited to any specific population.

The findings highlight a longstanding but unresolved problem in reproductive health: An overall lack of effective pain management strategies for gynecologic procedures.

“We went into this having a pretty good idea of what we were going to find because [the lack of NSAID efficacy] has been shown before, it’s been talked about before, and we’re just not listening as a medical community,” said Isabella D. Martingano, an MD candidate at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine, who led the review.

The research also points to a lack of robust studies on pain during IUD placement, said Emma Lakey, a coauthor and medical student at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine.

“We were only able to review 14 studies, which was enough to go off of, but considering we were looking for trials about pain control for a procedure that helps prevent pregnancy, that’s just not enough research,” Ms. Lakey said.

Discomfort associated with IUD placement ranges from mild to severe, can last for over a week, and includes cramping, bleeding, lightheadedness, nausea, and fainting. Some research suggests that providers may underestimate the level of pain the procedures cause.

“Unfortunately, the pain associated with IUD insertion and removal has been underplayed for a long time and many practitioners in the field likely haven’t counseled patients fully on what the procedure will feel like,” said Jennifer Chin, MD, an ob.gyn. and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington in Seattle.

NSAIDs are not mentioned in the recently expanded guidelines on IUD placement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC recommends lidocaine paracervical blocks, gels, sprays, and creams, plus counseling women about pain ahead of the procedures.

IUDs are one of the most effective forms of birth control, with a failure rate below 1%.

Yet hearing about painful placement keeps many women from seeking out an IUD or replacing an existing device, Dr. Rowland said. The review adds to the body of evidence that current strategies are not working and that more research is needed, he said.

According to Dr. Chin, making IUDs more accessible means taking a more personalized approach to pain management while understanding that what may be a painless procedure for one patient may be excruciating for another.

Dr. Chin offers a range of options for her patients, including NSAIDs, lorazepam for anxiety, paracervical blocks, lidocaine jelly and spray, intravenous sedation, and general anesthesia. She also talks to her patients through the procedure and provides guided imagery and meditation.

“We should always make sure we’re prioritizing the patients and providing evidence-based, compassionate, and individualized care,” said Dr. Chin. “Each patient comes to us in a particular context and with a specific set of experiences and history that will make a difference in how we’re best able to take care of them.”

The authors reported no disclosures and no sources of funding. Dr. Chin reported no disclosures.
 

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

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Research on pain management during placement of intrauterine devices (IUD) is lacking, but most studies so far indicate that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are not effective, according to a poster presented at Pain Week 2024 in Las Vegas.

Roughly 79% of the 14 studies included in the systematic review found NSAIDs — one of the most common drugs clinicians advise patients to take before placement — did not diminish discomfort.

“We’re challenging the current practice of using just NSAIDs as a first-line of treatment,” said Kevin Rowland, PhD, professor and chair of biomedical sciences at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine in Houston, who helped conduct the meta-analysis. “We need additional measures.”

Some studies found the drugs offered virtually no improvement for patients, while the biggest drop in pain shown in one study was about 40%. The range of pain levels women reported while using NSAIDs was between 1.8 and 7.3 on the visual analog scale (VAS), with an average score of 4.25.

The review included 10 types of NSAIDs and dosages administered to patients before the procedure. One intramuscular NSAID was included while the remaining were oral. All studies were peer-reviewed, used the VAS pain scale, and were not limited to any specific population.

The findings highlight a longstanding but unresolved problem in reproductive health: An overall lack of effective pain management strategies for gynecologic procedures.

“We went into this having a pretty good idea of what we were going to find because [the lack of NSAID efficacy] has been shown before, it’s been talked about before, and we’re just not listening as a medical community,” said Isabella D. Martingano, an MD candidate at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine, who led the review.

The research also points to a lack of robust studies on pain during IUD placement, said Emma Lakey, a coauthor and medical student at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine.

“We were only able to review 14 studies, which was enough to go off of, but considering we were looking for trials about pain control for a procedure that helps prevent pregnancy, that’s just not enough research,” Ms. Lakey said.

Discomfort associated with IUD placement ranges from mild to severe, can last for over a week, and includes cramping, bleeding, lightheadedness, nausea, and fainting. Some research suggests that providers may underestimate the level of pain the procedures cause.

“Unfortunately, the pain associated with IUD insertion and removal has been underplayed for a long time and many practitioners in the field likely haven’t counseled patients fully on what the procedure will feel like,” said Jennifer Chin, MD, an ob.gyn. and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington in Seattle.

NSAIDs are not mentioned in the recently expanded guidelines on IUD placement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC recommends lidocaine paracervical blocks, gels, sprays, and creams, plus counseling women about pain ahead of the procedures.

IUDs are one of the most effective forms of birth control, with a failure rate below 1%.

Yet hearing about painful placement keeps many women from seeking out an IUD or replacing an existing device, Dr. Rowland said. The review adds to the body of evidence that current strategies are not working and that more research is needed, he said.

According to Dr. Chin, making IUDs more accessible means taking a more personalized approach to pain management while understanding that what may be a painless procedure for one patient may be excruciating for another.

Dr. Chin offers a range of options for her patients, including NSAIDs, lorazepam for anxiety, paracervical blocks, lidocaine jelly and spray, intravenous sedation, and general anesthesia. She also talks to her patients through the procedure and provides guided imagery and meditation.

“We should always make sure we’re prioritizing the patients and providing evidence-based, compassionate, and individualized care,” said Dr. Chin. “Each patient comes to us in a particular context and with a specific set of experiences and history that will make a difference in how we’re best able to take care of them.”

The authors reported no disclosures and no sources of funding. Dr. Chin reported no disclosures.
 

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

Research on pain management during placement of intrauterine devices (IUD) is lacking, but most studies so far indicate that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are not effective, according to a poster presented at Pain Week 2024 in Las Vegas.

Roughly 79% of the 14 studies included in the systematic review found NSAIDs — one of the most common drugs clinicians advise patients to take before placement — did not diminish discomfort.

“We’re challenging the current practice of using just NSAIDs as a first-line of treatment,” said Kevin Rowland, PhD, professor and chair of biomedical sciences at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine in Houston, who helped conduct the meta-analysis. “We need additional measures.”

Some studies found the drugs offered virtually no improvement for patients, while the biggest drop in pain shown in one study was about 40%. The range of pain levels women reported while using NSAIDs was between 1.8 and 7.3 on the visual analog scale (VAS), with an average score of 4.25.

The review included 10 types of NSAIDs and dosages administered to patients before the procedure. One intramuscular NSAID was included while the remaining were oral. All studies were peer-reviewed, used the VAS pain scale, and were not limited to any specific population.

The findings highlight a longstanding but unresolved problem in reproductive health: An overall lack of effective pain management strategies for gynecologic procedures.

“We went into this having a pretty good idea of what we were going to find because [the lack of NSAID efficacy] has been shown before, it’s been talked about before, and we’re just not listening as a medical community,” said Isabella D. Martingano, an MD candidate at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine, who led the review.

The research also points to a lack of robust studies on pain during IUD placement, said Emma Lakey, a coauthor and medical student at Tilman J. Fertitta Family College of Medicine.

“We were only able to review 14 studies, which was enough to go off of, but considering we were looking for trials about pain control for a procedure that helps prevent pregnancy, that’s just not enough research,” Ms. Lakey said.

Discomfort associated with IUD placement ranges from mild to severe, can last for over a week, and includes cramping, bleeding, lightheadedness, nausea, and fainting. Some research suggests that providers may underestimate the level of pain the procedures cause.

“Unfortunately, the pain associated with IUD insertion and removal has been underplayed for a long time and many practitioners in the field likely haven’t counseled patients fully on what the procedure will feel like,” said Jennifer Chin, MD, an ob.gyn. and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington in Seattle.

NSAIDs are not mentioned in the recently expanded guidelines on IUD placement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC recommends lidocaine paracervical blocks, gels, sprays, and creams, plus counseling women about pain ahead of the procedures.

IUDs are one of the most effective forms of birth control, with a failure rate below 1%.

Yet hearing about painful placement keeps many women from seeking out an IUD or replacing an existing device, Dr. Rowland said. The review adds to the body of evidence that current strategies are not working and that more research is needed, he said.

According to Dr. Chin, making IUDs more accessible means taking a more personalized approach to pain management while understanding that what may be a painless procedure for one patient may be excruciating for another.

Dr. Chin offers a range of options for her patients, including NSAIDs, lorazepam for anxiety, paracervical blocks, lidocaine jelly and spray, intravenous sedation, and general anesthesia. She also talks to her patients through the procedure and provides guided imagery and meditation.

“We should always make sure we’re prioritizing the patients and providing evidence-based, compassionate, and individualized care,” said Dr. Chin. “Each patient comes to us in a particular context and with a specific set of experiences and history that will make a difference in how we’re best able to take care of them.”

The authors reported no disclosures and no sources of funding. Dr. Chin reported no disclosures.
 

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

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FDA Investigates Tampons for Potential Lead and Metal Risks

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Fri, 09/13/2024 - 12:34

 

The FDA has launched an investigation of the potential exposure to heavy metals when using tampons, the agency announced.

The move follows the publication earlier this year of concerning laboratory test results that detected the presence of more than a dozen metals in a variety of popular nonorganic and organic tampon products. That small study was a combined effort by researchers from Columbia University, Michigan State University, and the University of California, Berkeley.

“We want the public to know that before tampons can be legally sold in the US, they must meet FDA requirements for safety and effectiveness. Manufacturers must test the product and its component materials before, during, and after manufacturing,” the FDA wrote in the announcement of its own upcoming study. “Before a product is allowed onto the market, biocompatibility testing is undertaken by the manufacturing company, which is part of safety testing, and is reviewed by the FDA prior to market authorization.”

There will be two studies, the FDA said. One of the studies will involve laboratory tests to evaluate metals in tampons and potential exposure people may experience when using them. The other study will be a review of current research regarding the health effects of metals that may be found in tampons.

The earlier study, published by the journal Environment International, found levels of lead in every product the researchers tested and detectable levels of more than a dozen other metals like arsenic and cadmium.

The researchers tested 24 tampon products from a range of major brands as well as store brands. The tampons were purchased at stores and online between September 2022 and March 2023. Metal content tended to differ by whether or not a product was labeled as organic, the researchers reported. Lead concentrations were higher in nonorganic tampons, and organic tampons had higher levels of arsenic.

There is no safe level of lead exposure, the US Environmental Protection Agency says, and the effects are cumulative throughout the course of life. The study authors noted that the average age that girls begin menstruation is 12 years old, and the onset of menopause occurs, on average, at age 51. One study mentioned by the researchers estimated that between 52% and 86% of people who menstruate use tampons.

The FDA plans a more expansive set of analyses than the earlier study, the agency announced.

“While the study found metals in some tampons, the study did not test whether metals are released from tampons when used. It also did not test for metals being released, absorbed into the vaginal lining, and getting into the bloodstream during tampon use,” the FDA announcement stated. “The FDA’s laboratory study will measure the amount of metals that come out of tampons under conditions that more closely mimic normal use.”

The absorbent materials in tampons, like cotton, rayon, and viscose, are potential sources of the metals. Cotton plants are particularly known to readily take up metals from the soil, although there are other ways that metals may enter the products, like during the manufacturing process.

Exposure to metals found in the initial analysis can affect a range of body systems and processes, including the brain, the kidneys, the heart, blood, and the reproductive and immune systems.

The vagina, the researchers noted, is highly permeable and substances absorbed there do not get filtered for toxins, such as by being metabolized or passing through the liver, before entering the body’s circulatory system.

The FDA announcement did not specify a timeframe for the completion of its investigation.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.

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The FDA has launched an investigation of the potential exposure to heavy metals when using tampons, the agency announced.

The move follows the publication earlier this year of concerning laboratory test results that detected the presence of more than a dozen metals in a variety of popular nonorganic and organic tampon products. That small study was a combined effort by researchers from Columbia University, Michigan State University, and the University of California, Berkeley.

“We want the public to know that before tampons can be legally sold in the US, they must meet FDA requirements for safety and effectiveness. Manufacturers must test the product and its component materials before, during, and after manufacturing,” the FDA wrote in the announcement of its own upcoming study. “Before a product is allowed onto the market, biocompatibility testing is undertaken by the manufacturing company, which is part of safety testing, and is reviewed by the FDA prior to market authorization.”

There will be two studies, the FDA said. One of the studies will involve laboratory tests to evaluate metals in tampons and potential exposure people may experience when using them. The other study will be a review of current research regarding the health effects of metals that may be found in tampons.

The earlier study, published by the journal Environment International, found levels of lead in every product the researchers tested and detectable levels of more than a dozen other metals like arsenic and cadmium.

The researchers tested 24 tampon products from a range of major brands as well as store brands. The tampons were purchased at stores and online between September 2022 and March 2023. Metal content tended to differ by whether or not a product was labeled as organic, the researchers reported. Lead concentrations were higher in nonorganic tampons, and organic tampons had higher levels of arsenic.

There is no safe level of lead exposure, the US Environmental Protection Agency says, and the effects are cumulative throughout the course of life. The study authors noted that the average age that girls begin menstruation is 12 years old, and the onset of menopause occurs, on average, at age 51. One study mentioned by the researchers estimated that between 52% and 86% of people who menstruate use tampons.

The FDA plans a more expansive set of analyses than the earlier study, the agency announced.

“While the study found metals in some tampons, the study did not test whether metals are released from tampons when used. It also did not test for metals being released, absorbed into the vaginal lining, and getting into the bloodstream during tampon use,” the FDA announcement stated. “The FDA’s laboratory study will measure the amount of metals that come out of tampons under conditions that more closely mimic normal use.”

The absorbent materials in tampons, like cotton, rayon, and viscose, are potential sources of the metals. Cotton plants are particularly known to readily take up metals from the soil, although there are other ways that metals may enter the products, like during the manufacturing process.

Exposure to metals found in the initial analysis can affect a range of body systems and processes, including the brain, the kidneys, the heart, blood, and the reproductive and immune systems.

The vagina, the researchers noted, is highly permeable and substances absorbed there do not get filtered for toxins, such as by being metabolized or passing through the liver, before entering the body’s circulatory system.

The FDA announcement did not specify a timeframe for the completion of its investigation.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.

 

The FDA has launched an investigation of the potential exposure to heavy metals when using tampons, the agency announced.

The move follows the publication earlier this year of concerning laboratory test results that detected the presence of more than a dozen metals in a variety of popular nonorganic and organic tampon products. That small study was a combined effort by researchers from Columbia University, Michigan State University, and the University of California, Berkeley.

“We want the public to know that before tampons can be legally sold in the US, they must meet FDA requirements for safety and effectiveness. Manufacturers must test the product and its component materials before, during, and after manufacturing,” the FDA wrote in the announcement of its own upcoming study. “Before a product is allowed onto the market, biocompatibility testing is undertaken by the manufacturing company, which is part of safety testing, and is reviewed by the FDA prior to market authorization.”

There will be two studies, the FDA said. One of the studies will involve laboratory tests to evaluate metals in tampons and potential exposure people may experience when using them. The other study will be a review of current research regarding the health effects of metals that may be found in tampons.

The earlier study, published by the journal Environment International, found levels of lead in every product the researchers tested and detectable levels of more than a dozen other metals like arsenic and cadmium.

The researchers tested 24 tampon products from a range of major brands as well as store brands. The tampons were purchased at stores and online between September 2022 and March 2023. Metal content tended to differ by whether or not a product was labeled as organic, the researchers reported. Lead concentrations were higher in nonorganic tampons, and organic tampons had higher levels of arsenic.

There is no safe level of lead exposure, the US Environmental Protection Agency says, and the effects are cumulative throughout the course of life. The study authors noted that the average age that girls begin menstruation is 12 years old, and the onset of menopause occurs, on average, at age 51. One study mentioned by the researchers estimated that between 52% and 86% of people who menstruate use tampons.

The FDA plans a more expansive set of analyses than the earlier study, the agency announced.

“While the study found metals in some tampons, the study did not test whether metals are released from tampons when used. It also did not test for metals being released, absorbed into the vaginal lining, and getting into the bloodstream during tampon use,” the FDA announcement stated. “The FDA’s laboratory study will measure the amount of metals that come out of tampons under conditions that more closely mimic normal use.”

The absorbent materials in tampons, like cotton, rayon, and viscose, are potential sources of the metals. Cotton plants are particularly known to readily take up metals from the soil, although there are other ways that metals may enter the products, like during the manufacturing process.

Exposure to metals found in the initial analysis can affect a range of body systems and processes, including the brain, the kidneys, the heart, blood, and the reproductive and immune systems.

The vagina, the researchers noted, is highly permeable and substances absorbed there do not get filtered for toxins, such as by being metabolized or passing through the liver, before entering the body’s circulatory system.

The FDA announcement did not specify a timeframe for the completion of its investigation.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.

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