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FDA approves new formulation of Hyrimoz adalimumab biosimilar
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a citrate-free, 100 mg/mL formulation of the biosimilar adalimumab-adaz (Hyrimoz), according to a statement from manufacturer Sandoz.
Hyrimoz, a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) blocker that is biosimilar to its reference product Humira, was approved by the FDA in 2018 at a concentration of 50 mg/mL for rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and plaque psoriasis. The high-concentration formula is indicated for these same conditions.
Sandoz said that it intends to launch the citrate-free formulation in the United States on July 1. It will be one of up to nine other adalimumab biosimilars that are expected to launch in July. On January 31, Amjevita (adalimumab-atto) became the first adalimumab biosimilar to launch in the United States.
The current label for Hyrimoz contains a black box warning emphasizing certain risks, notably the increased risk for serious infections, such as tuberculosis or sepsis, and an increased risk of malignancy, particularly lymphomas.
Adverse effects associated with Hyrimoz with an incidence greater than 10% include upper respiratory infections and sinusitis, injection-site reactions, headache, and rash.
The approval for the high-concentration formulation was based on data from a phase 1 pharmacokinetics bridging study that compared Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL and citrate-free Hyrimoz 100 mg/mL.
“This study met all of the primary objectives, demonstrating comparable pharmacokinetics and showing similar safety and immunogenicity of the Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL and Hyrimoz [100 mg/mL],” according to Sandoz, a division of Novartis.
The approval for Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL in 2018 was based on preclinical and clinical research comparing Hyrimoz and Humira. In a phase 3 trial published in the British Journal of Dermatology, which included adults with clinically stable but active moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis, Hyrimoz and Humira showed a similar percentage of patients met the primary endpoint of a 75% reduction or more in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 75) score at 16 weeks, compared with baseline (66.8% and 65%, respectively).
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a citrate-free, 100 mg/mL formulation of the biosimilar adalimumab-adaz (Hyrimoz), according to a statement from manufacturer Sandoz.
Hyrimoz, a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) blocker that is biosimilar to its reference product Humira, was approved by the FDA in 2018 at a concentration of 50 mg/mL for rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and plaque psoriasis. The high-concentration formula is indicated for these same conditions.
Sandoz said that it intends to launch the citrate-free formulation in the United States on July 1. It will be one of up to nine other adalimumab biosimilars that are expected to launch in July. On January 31, Amjevita (adalimumab-atto) became the first adalimumab biosimilar to launch in the United States.
The current label for Hyrimoz contains a black box warning emphasizing certain risks, notably the increased risk for serious infections, such as tuberculosis or sepsis, and an increased risk of malignancy, particularly lymphomas.
Adverse effects associated with Hyrimoz with an incidence greater than 10% include upper respiratory infections and sinusitis, injection-site reactions, headache, and rash.
The approval for the high-concentration formulation was based on data from a phase 1 pharmacokinetics bridging study that compared Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL and citrate-free Hyrimoz 100 mg/mL.
“This study met all of the primary objectives, demonstrating comparable pharmacokinetics and showing similar safety and immunogenicity of the Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL and Hyrimoz [100 mg/mL],” according to Sandoz, a division of Novartis.
The approval for Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL in 2018 was based on preclinical and clinical research comparing Hyrimoz and Humira. In a phase 3 trial published in the British Journal of Dermatology, which included adults with clinically stable but active moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis, Hyrimoz and Humira showed a similar percentage of patients met the primary endpoint of a 75% reduction or more in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 75) score at 16 weeks, compared with baseline (66.8% and 65%, respectively).
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a citrate-free, 100 mg/mL formulation of the biosimilar adalimumab-adaz (Hyrimoz), according to a statement from manufacturer Sandoz.
Hyrimoz, a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) blocker that is biosimilar to its reference product Humira, was approved by the FDA in 2018 at a concentration of 50 mg/mL for rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and plaque psoriasis. The high-concentration formula is indicated for these same conditions.
Sandoz said that it intends to launch the citrate-free formulation in the United States on July 1. It will be one of up to nine other adalimumab biosimilars that are expected to launch in July. On January 31, Amjevita (adalimumab-atto) became the first adalimumab biosimilar to launch in the United States.
The current label for Hyrimoz contains a black box warning emphasizing certain risks, notably the increased risk for serious infections, such as tuberculosis or sepsis, and an increased risk of malignancy, particularly lymphomas.
Adverse effects associated with Hyrimoz with an incidence greater than 10% include upper respiratory infections and sinusitis, injection-site reactions, headache, and rash.
The approval for the high-concentration formulation was based on data from a phase 1 pharmacokinetics bridging study that compared Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL and citrate-free Hyrimoz 100 mg/mL.
“This study met all of the primary objectives, demonstrating comparable pharmacokinetics and showing similar safety and immunogenicity of the Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL and Hyrimoz [100 mg/mL],” according to Sandoz, a division of Novartis.
The approval for Hyrimoz 50 mg/mL in 2018 was based on preclinical and clinical research comparing Hyrimoz and Humira. In a phase 3 trial published in the British Journal of Dermatology, which included adults with clinically stable but active moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis, Hyrimoz and Humira showed a similar percentage of patients met the primary endpoint of a 75% reduction or more in Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI 75) score at 16 weeks, compared with baseline (66.8% and 65%, respectively).
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
eNose knows S. aureus in children with cystic fibrosis
An electronic nose effectively detected Staphylococcus aureus in children with cystic fibrosis, based on data from 100 individuals.
Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen found in children with cystic fibrosis (CF), but current detection strategies are based on microbiology cultures, wrote Johann-Christoph Licht, a medical student at the University of Toronto, and colleagues.
Noninvasive tools are needed to screen children with CF early for respiratory infections, the researchers said.
The electronic Nose (eNose) is a technology that detects volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Although exhaled breath can be used to create distinct profiles, the ability of eNose to identify S. aureus (SA) in the breath of children with CF remains unclear, they wrote.
In a study published in the Journal of Cystic Fibrosis, the researchers analyzed breath profiles data from 100 children with CF. The study population included children aged 5-18 years with clinically stable CF who were recruited from CF clinics during routine visits. Patients with a CF pulmonary exacerbation were excluded.
The children’s median predicted FEV1 was 91%. The researchers collected sputum from 67 patients and throat cultures for 33 patients. A group of 25 age-matched healthy controls served for comparison.
Eighty patients were positive for CF pathogens. Of these, 67 were positive for SA (44 with SA only and 23 with SA and at least one other pathogen).
Overall, patients with any CF pathogen on airway cultures were identified compared to airway cultures with no CF pathogens with an area under the curve accuracy of 79.0%.
Previous studies have shown a high rate of accuracy using eNose to detect Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA). In the current study, the area under the curve accuracy for PA infection compared to no CF pathogens was 78%. Both SA-specific and PA-specific signatures were driven by different sensors in the eNose, which suggests pathogen-specific breath signatures, the researchers wrote.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the small number of patients with positive airway cultures for PA and the lack of data on variability of measures over time or treatment-induced changes, the researchers noted.
However, the results confirm the value of the eNose in real-time point-of-care detection of airway infection in children with CF, and this is the first study known to suggest the potential of an eNose to detect SA infection in particular in a routine clinical setting, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
Other points in favor of eNose compared to current practice include “low cost, ease of use and portability to the point-of-care,” they said. The eNose provides an opportunity for early detection of pathogens that challenges conventional microbiology testing, they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. Two coauthors disclosed fees and/or an interest in the company Breathomix BV.
An electronic nose effectively detected Staphylococcus aureus in children with cystic fibrosis, based on data from 100 individuals.
Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen found in children with cystic fibrosis (CF), but current detection strategies are based on microbiology cultures, wrote Johann-Christoph Licht, a medical student at the University of Toronto, and colleagues.
Noninvasive tools are needed to screen children with CF early for respiratory infections, the researchers said.
The electronic Nose (eNose) is a technology that detects volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Although exhaled breath can be used to create distinct profiles, the ability of eNose to identify S. aureus (SA) in the breath of children with CF remains unclear, they wrote.
In a study published in the Journal of Cystic Fibrosis, the researchers analyzed breath profiles data from 100 children with CF. The study population included children aged 5-18 years with clinically stable CF who were recruited from CF clinics during routine visits. Patients with a CF pulmonary exacerbation were excluded.
The children’s median predicted FEV1 was 91%. The researchers collected sputum from 67 patients and throat cultures for 33 patients. A group of 25 age-matched healthy controls served for comparison.
Eighty patients were positive for CF pathogens. Of these, 67 were positive for SA (44 with SA only and 23 with SA and at least one other pathogen).
Overall, patients with any CF pathogen on airway cultures were identified compared to airway cultures with no CF pathogens with an area under the curve accuracy of 79.0%.
Previous studies have shown a high rate of accuracy using eNose to detect Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA). In the current study, the area under the curve accuracy for PA infection compared to no CF pathogens was 78%. Both SA-specific and PA-specific signatures were driven by different sensors in the eNose, which suggests pathogen-specific breath signatures, the researchers wrote.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the small number of patients with positive airway cultures for PA and the lack of data on variability of measures over time or treatment-induced changes, the researchers noted.
However, the results confirm the value of the eNose in real-time point-of-care detection of airway infection in children with CF, and this is the first study known to suggest the potential of an eNose to detect SA infection in particular in a routine clinical setting, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
Other points in favor of eNose compared to current practice include “low cost, ease of use and portability to the point-of-care,” they said. The eNose provides an opportunity for early detection of pathogens that challenges conventional microbiology testing, they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. Two coauthors disclosed fees and/or an interest in the company Breathomix BV.
An electronic nose effectively detected Staphylococcus aureus in children with cystic fibrosis, based on data from 100 individuals.
Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen found in children with cystic fibrosis (CF), but current detection strategies are based on microbiology cultures, wrote Johann-Christoph Licht, a medical student at the University of Toronto, and colleagues.
Noninvasive tools are needed to screen children with CF early for respiratory infections, the researchers said.
The electronic Nose (eNose) is a technology that detects volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Although exhaled breath can be used to create distinct profiles, the ability of eNose to identify S. aureus (SA) in the breath of children with CF remains unclear, they wrote.
In a study published in the Journal of Cystic Fibrosis, the researchers analyzed breath profiles data from 100 children with CF. The study population included children aged 5-18 years with clinically stable CF who were recruited from CF clinics during routine visits. Patients with a CF pulmonary exacerbation were excluded.
The children’s median predicted FEV1 was 91%. The researchers collected sputum from 67 patients and throat cultures for 33 patients. A group of 25 age-matched healthy controls served for comparison.
Eighty patients were positive for CF pathogens. Of these, 67 were positive for SA (44 with SA only and 23 with SA and at least one other pathogen).
Overall, patients with any CF pathogen on airway cultures were identified compared to airway cultures with no CF pathogens with an area under the curve accuracy of 79.0%.
Previous studies have shown a high rate of accuracy using eNose to detect Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA). In the current study, the area under the curve accuracy for PA infection compared to no CF pathogens was 78%. Both SA-specific and PA-specific signatures were driven by different sensors in the eNose, which suggests pathogen-specific breath signatures, the researchers wrote.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the small number of patients with positive airway cultures for PA and the lack of data on variability of measures over time or treatment-induced changes, the researchers noted.
However, the results confirm the value of the eNose in real-time point-of-care detection of airway infection in children with CF, and this is the first study known to suggest the potential of an eNose to detect SA infection in particular in a routine clinical setting, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
Other points in favor of eNose compared to current practice include “low cost, ease of use and portability to the point-of-care,” they said. The eNose provides an opportunity for early detection of pathogens that challenges conventional microbiology testing, they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. Two coauthors disclosed fees and/or an interest in the company Breathomix BV.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF CYSTIC FIBROSIS
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors – a new weapon against respiratory viruses?
Five different nonreceptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors were effective against viral replication of pandemic viruses and seasonal influenza viruses in an ex vivo lung model.
Influenza viruses remain a high cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide as viral mutations outwit vaccine efficacy, Robert Meineke, PhD, of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover, Germany, and colleagues wrote.
“As with previous influenza pandemics and the current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, effective vaccines are not readily available at early stages of a pandemic,” they noted. To help manage the limitations of timing and effectiveness of current vaccines, the researchers proposed repurposing nonreceptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (NRTKIs) to block seasonal flu and COVID-19 viral replication.
In a study published in iScience, the researchers identified six NRTKIs currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that showed in vitro inhibition of both pandemic viruses (H1N1) and seasonal influenza viruses (H3N2). These included defactinib, acalabrutinib, saracatinib, and bosutinib, all of which reduced hPCLS infectivity by approximately 50%. In addition, ibrutinib and bosutinib had the largest impact on viral titers. The antiviral effects of NRTKIs appeared to be independent of multiplicity of infection.
The researchers then tested the NRIKIs on an ex vivo model of human precision-cut lung slices to validate the effects of NRTKIs as antivirals against influenza A viruses (IAVs).
In this model, the highest peak titers were achieved at 48 hpi following infection with virus strains NL09 and NL11. The hPCLS models also showed consistent tolerability to 1x concentrations. “Our cytotoxicity cut-off was 20% of the positive control treatment; none of the NRTKIs surpassed this cutoff at [1x] max,” the researchers wrote.
Five of the six identified NRTKIs were validated in the ex vivo setting. All five reduced viral titers by at least 10-fold to more than 1,000-fold. Of these, ibrutinib, bosutinib, and bosutinib showed a significant effect at all concentrations, while treatments with acalabrutinib and defactinib were significant at 24 hpi and 48 hpi. The NRTKs also showed a high genetic barrier against emerging resistant virus mutations.
The study demonstrates the ability of NRTKIs to target kinases required for replication of IAV, the researchers wrote, and that NRTKIs “represent promising drugs for the development of the next generation of antivirals.”
More research is needed to determine the therapeutic window given that NRTKIs are targeting host factors versus virus-targeted antivirals, but the advantages of NRTKIs include localized delivery that can limit possible cytotoxic effects, and their safety and bioavailability are well established, they said.
The findings were limited by several factors including the use of lung tissue mainly from older donors with lung cancer, the researchers noted. However, this population could be considered at increased risk for IAVs and therefore the data are more clinically applicable.
In addition, “because many viruses utilize the same (or related) host kinases to facilitate replication and transmission, our studies have broader implications for the potential use of these SMKIs to treat infections by other viruses,” they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Five different nonreceptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors were effective against viral replication of pandemic viruses and seasonal influenza viruses in an ex vivo lung model.
Influenza viruses remain a high cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide as viral mutations outwit vaccine efficacy, Robert Meineke, PhD, of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover, Germany, and colleagues wrote.
“As with previous influenza pandemics and the current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, effective vaccines are not readily available at early stages of a pandemic,” they noted. To help manage the limitations of timing and effectiveness of current vaccines, the researchers proposed repurposing nonreceptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (NRTKIs) to block seasonal flu and COVID-19 viral replication.
In a study published in iScience, the researchers identified six NRTKIs currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that showed in vitro inhibition of both pandemic viruses (H1N1) and seasonal influenza viruses (H3N2). These included defactinib, acalabrutinib, saracatinib, and bosutinib, all of which reduced hPCLS infectivity by approximately 50%. In addition, ibrutinib and bosutinib had the largest impact on viral titers. The antiviral effects of NRTKIs appeared to be independent of multiplicity of infection.
The researchers then tested the NRIKIs on an ex vivo model of human precision-cut lung slices to validate the effects of NRTKIs as antivirals against influenza A viruses (IAVs).
In this model, the highest peak titers were achieved at 48 hpi following infection with virus strains NL09 and NL11. The hPCLS models also showed consistent tolerability to 1x concentrations. “Our cytotoxicity cut-off was 20% of the positive control treatment; none of the NRTKIs surpassed this cutoff at [1x] max,” the researchers wrote.
Five of the six identified NRTKIs were validated in the ex vivo setting. All five reduced viral titers by at least 10-fold to more than 1,000-fold. Of these, ibrutinib, bosutinib, and bosutinib showed a significant effect at all concentrations, while treatments with acalabrutinib and defactinib were significant at 24 hpi and 48 hpi. The NRTKs also showed a high genetic barrier against emerging resistant virus mutations.
The study demonstrates the ability of NRTKIs to target kinases required for replication of IAV, the researchers wrote, and that NRTKIs “represent promising drugs for the development of the next generation of antivirals.”
More research is needed to determine the therapeutic window given that NRTKIs are targeting host factors versus virus-targeted antivirals, but the advantages of NRTKIs include localized delivery that can limit possible cytotoxic effects, and their safety and bioavailability are well established, they said.
The findings were limited by several factors including the use of lung tissue mainly from older donors with lung cancer, the researchers noted. However, this population could be considered at increased risk for IAVs and therefore the data are more clinically applicable.
In addition, “because many viruses utilize the same (or related) host kinases to facilitate replication and transmission, our studies have broader implications for the potential use of these SMKIs to treat infections by other viruses,” they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Five different nonreceptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors were effective against viral replication of pandemic viruses and seasonal influenza viruses in an ex vivo lung model.
Influenza viruses remain a high cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide as viral mutations outwit vaccine efficacy, Robert Meineke, PhD, of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover, Germany, and colleagues wrote.
“As with previous influenza pandemics and the current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, effective vaccines are not readily available at early stages of a pandemic,” they noted. To help manage the limitations of timing and effectiveness of current vaccines, the researchers proposed repurposing nonreceptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (NRTKIs) to block seasonal flu and COVID-19 viral replication.
In a study published in iScience, the researchers identified six NRTKIs currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that showed in vitro inhibition of both pandemic viruses (H1N1) and seasonal influenza viruses (H3N2). These included defactinib, acalabrutinib, saracatinib, and bosutinib, all of which reduced hPCLS infectivity by approximately 50%. In addition, ibrutinib and bosutinib had the largest impact on viral titers. The antiviral effects of NRTKIs appeared to be independent of multiplicity of infection.
The researchers then tested the NRIKIs on an ex vivo model of human precision-cut lung slices to validate the effects of NRTKIs as antivirals against influenza A viruses (IAVs).
In this model, the highest peak titers were achieved at 48 hpi following infection with virus strains NL09 and NL11. The hPCLS models also showed consistent tolerability to 1x concentrations. “Our cytotoxicity cut-off was 20% of the positive control treatment; none of the NRTKIs surpassed this cutoff at [1x] max,” the researchers wrote.
Five of the six identified NRTKIs were validated in the ex vivo setting. All five reduced viral titers by at least 10-fold to more than 1,000-fold. Of these, ibrutinib, bosutinib, and bosutinib showed a significant effect at all concentrations, while treatments with acalabrutinib and defactinib were significant at 24 hpi and 48 hpi. The NRTKs also showed a high genetic barrier against emerging resistant virus mutations.
The study demonstrates the ability of NRTKIs to target kinases required for replication of IAV, the researchers wrote, and that NRTKIs “represent promising drugs for the development of the next generation of antivirals.”
More research is needed to determine the therapeutic window given that NRTKIs are targeting host factors versus virus-targeted antivirals, but the advantages of NRTKIs include localized delivery that can limit possible cytotoxic effects, and their safety and bioavailability are well established, they said.
The findings were limited by several factors including the use of lung tissue mainly from older donors with lung cancer, the researchers noted. However, this population could be considered at increased risk for IAVs and therefore the data are more clinically applicable.
In addition, “because many viruses utilize the same (or related) host kinases to facilitate replication and transmission, our studies have broader implications for the potential use of these SMKIs to treat infections by other viruses,” they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM ISCIENCE
Psoriatic arthritis treatment for women falls short, study suggests
Women with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) presented with more severe disease at baseline and were less likely to achieve favorable outcomes after 12 months of treatment with either ustekinumab (Stelara) or a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor, compared with men, according to a post hoc analysis of data from nearly 1,000 individuals.
Although data suggest that the overall prevalence of PsA is similar across genders, recent studies have identified differences in various aspects of PsA between men and women, wrote Arno W.R. Van Kuijk, MD, of Amsterdam Rheumatology and Immunology Center, and colleagues wrote in a study published in Rheumatology.
“Accumulating evidence in multiple rheumatic diseases indicates that gender may influence the likelihood of achieving the desired outcome with treatment,” but studies of differences in treatment response according to gender are limited, they said.
The researchers conducted a post hoc analysis of women and men with PsA who were part of PsABio, a noninterventional European study of patients with PsA. All participants were starting first-, second-, or third-line treatment with ustekinumab or a TNF inhibitor. The primary outcome was response to treatment at 12 months. Disease activity was assessed using the clinical Disease Activity Index for Psoriatic Arthritis (cDAPSA), the Health Assessment Questionnaire–Disability Index (HAQ-DI), and total score on the 12-item Psoriatic Arthritis Impact of Disease (PsAID-12) questionnaire.
Baseline available data for 512 women and 417 men showed the mean duration of disease was similar between genders (6.7 years for females and 6.9 years for males); body mass index was similar, as was the proportion of male and female patients receiving concomitant conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). Females scored significantly worse than males on disease activity assessments at baseline with mean cDAPSA scores of 32.3 and 26.8, respectively.
The final analysis of 895 patients with baseline data and a postbaseline assessment included 439 who started ustekinumab (247 females, 192 males), and 456 who started a TNF inhibitor (248 females, 208 males).
At 12 months, females showed smaller degrees of improvement than males; 57.8% and 80.3%, respectively, achieved low disease activity based on cDAPSA scores, while 33.7% and 55.5% of females and males, respectively, achieved minimal disease activity. Measures of disability were higher in females than males, with HAQ-DI scores of 0.85 versus 0.50. PsAID-12 scores also were higher for females, compared with males (3.5 vs. 2.4).
A total of 81.7% of patients were on their initial biologic DMARD after 12 months, but more females than males who were taking ustekinumab or a TNF inhibitor changed or discontinued treatment.
Treatment persistence was significantly lower in females than males (P = .01), and lack of effectiveness was the main reason for discontinuation regardless of gender.
“The analysis of gender subgroup results of the PsABio study has expanded previously published observations that men and women with PsA have different experiences with the disease activity, clinical manifestations, impact on health-related quality of life, response to [biologic] DMARDs, and drug persistence,” the researchers wrote.
The lack of a medication protocol in the PsABio study limited the conclusions that could be drawn from the post hoc analysis, but the results were strengthened by the relatively large and diverse sample size and the inclusion of responses to more than one medication, the researchers noted.
The study was supported by Janssen. Dr. Van Kuijk disclosed serving as a consultant and receiving grant support from Janssen and other companies; several coauthors also disclosed relationships with Janssen.
Women with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) presented with more severe disease at baseline and were less likely to achieve favorable outcomes after 12 months of treatment with either ustekinumab (Stelara) or a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor, compared with men, according to a post hoc analysis of data from nearly 1,000 individuals.
Although data suggest that the overall prevalence of PsA is similar across genders, recent studies have identified differences in various aspects of PsA between men and women, wrote Arno W.R. Van Kuijk, MD, of Amsterdam Rheumatology and Immunology Center, and colleagues wrote in a study published in Rheumatology.
“Accumulating evidence in multiple rheumatic diseases indicates that gender may influence the likelihood of achieving the desired outcome with treatment,” but studies of differences in treatment response according to gender are limited, they said.
The researchers conducted a post hoc analysis of women and men with PsA who were part of PsABio, a noninterventional European study of patients with PsA. All participants were starting first-, second-, or third-line treatment with ustekinumab or a TNF inhibitor. The primary outcome was response to treatment at 12 months. Disease activity was assessed using the clinical Disease Activity Index for Psoriatic Arthritis (cDAPSA), the Health Assessment Questionnaire–Disability Index (HAQ-DI), and total score on the 12-item Psoriatic Arthritis Impact of Disease (PsAID-12) questionnaire.
Baseline available data for 512 women and 417 men showed the mean duration of disease was similar between genders (6.7 years for females and 6.9 years for males); body mass index was similar, as was the proportion of male and female patients receiving concomitant conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). Females scored significantly worse than males on disease activity assessments at baseline with mean cDAPSA scores of 32.3 and 26.8, respectively.
The final analysis of 895 patients with baseline data and a postbaseline assessment included 439 who started ustekinumab (247 females, 192 males), and 456 who started a TNF inhibitor (248 females, 208 males).
At 12 months, females showed smaller degrees of improvement than males; 57.8% and 80.3%, respectively, achieved low disease activity based on cDAPSA scores, while 33.7% and 55.5% of females and males, respectively, achieved minimal disease activity. Measures of disability were higher in females than males, with HAQ-DI scores of 0.85 versus 0.50. PsAID-12 scores also were higher for females, compared with males (3.5 vs. 2.4).
A total of 81.7% of patients were on their initial biologic DMARD after 12 months, but more females than males who were taking ustekinumab or a TNF inhibitor changed or discontinued treatment.
Treatment persistence was significantly lower in females than males (P = .01), and lack of effectiveness was the main reason for discontinuation regardless of gender.
“The analysis of gender subgroup results of the PsABio study has expanded previously published observations that men and women with PsA have different experiences with the disease activity, clinical manifestations, impact on health-related quality of life, response to [biologic] DMARDs, and drug persistence,” the researchers wrote.
The lack of a medication protocol in the PsABio study limited the conclusions that could be drawn from the post hoc analysis, but the results were strengthened by the relatively large and diverse sample size and the inclusion of responses to more than one medication, the researchers noted.
The study was supported by Janssen. Dr. Van Kuijk disclosed serving as a consultant and receiving grant support from Janssen and other companies; several coauthors also disclosed relationships with Janssen.
Women with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) presented with more severe disease at baseline and were less likely to achieve favorable outcomes after 12 months of treatment with either ustekinumab (Stelara) or a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor, compared with men, according to a post hoc analysis of data from nearly 1,000 individuals.
Although data suggest that the overall prevalence of PsA is similar across genders, recent studies have identified differences in various aspects of PsA between men and women, wrote Arno W.R. Van Kuijk, MD, of Amsterdam Rheumatology and Immunology Center, and colleagues wrote in a study published in Rheumatology.
“Accumulating evidence in multiple rheumatic diseases indicates that gender may influence the likelihood of achieving the desired outcome with treatment,” but studies of differences in treatment response according to gender are limited, they said.
The researchers conducted a post hoc analysis of women and men with PsA who were part of PsABio, a noninterventional European study of patients with PsA. All participants were starting first-, second-, or third-line treatment with ustekinumab or a TNF inhibitor. The primary outcome was response to treatment at 12 months. Disease activity was assessed using the clinical Disease Activity Index for Psoriatic Arthritis (cDAPSA), the Health Assessment Questionnaire–Disability Index (HAQ-DI), and total score on the 12-item Psoriatic Arthritis Impact of Disease (PsAID-12) questionnaire.
Baseline available data for 512 women and 417 men showed the mean duration of disease was similar between genders (6.7 years for females and 6.9 years for males); body mass index was similar, as was the proportion of male and female patients receiving concomitant conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). Females scored significantly worse than males on disease activity assessments at baseline with mean cDAPSA scores of 32.3 and 26.8, respectively.
The final analysis of 895 patients with baseline data and a postbaseline assessment included 439 who started ustekinumab (247 females, 192 males), and 456 who started a TNF inhibitor (248 females, 208 males).
At 12 months, females showed smaller degrees of improvement than males; 57.8% and 80.3%, respectively, achieved low disease activity based on cDAPSA scores, while 33.7% and 55.5% of females and males, respectively, achieved minimal disease activity. Measures of disability were higher in females than males, with HAQ-DI scores of 0.85 versus 0.50. PsAID-12 scores also were higher for females, compared with males (3.5 vs. 2.4).
A total of 81.7% of patients were on their initial biologic DMARD after 12 months, but more females than males who were taking ustekinumab or a TNF inhibitor changed or discontinued treatment.
Treatment persistence was significantly lower in females than males (P = .01), and lack of effectiveness was the main reason for discontinuation regardless of gender.
“The analysis of gender subgroup results of the PsABio study has expanded previously published observations that men and women with PsA have different experiences with the disease activity, clinical manifestations, impact on health-related quality of life, response to [biologic] DMARDs, and drug persistence,” the researchers wrote.
The lack of a medication protocol in the PsABio study limited the conclusions that could be drawn from the post hoc analysis, but the results were strengthened by the relatively large and diverse sample size and the inclusion of responses to more than one medication, the researchers noted.
The study was supported by Janssen. Dr. Van Kuijk disclosed serving as a consultant and receiving grant support from Janssen and other companies; several coauthors also disclosed relationships with Janssen.
FROM RHEUMATOLOGY
‘Harm avoidance’ temperament predicts depression in adults
Temperament has been defined as “an individual’s propensity to react emotionally, learn behavior and to form attachments without conscious effort by associative conditioning,” wrote Aleksi Ahola, PhD, of the University of Oulu, Finland, and colleagues. “Temperament is a potential endophenotype for depression, as it is inheritable and genetically linked with depression,” they said. The Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI) includes four temperament traits: harm avoidance (HA), novelty seeking (NS), reward dependence (RD), and persistence (P); previous studies have shown associations between higher HA and depression, but long-term data are limited, they wrote.
In a population-based study published in Comprehensive Psychiatry, the researchers followed 3,999 adults from age 31 to 54 years. The participants were part of the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 Study.
The primary outcome was the onset of depression in a previously mentally healthy adult population. Temperament was assessed using the TCI, and depression was based on the Hopkins system checklist-25 (SCL-25). Individuals with previous psychiatric disorders related to depression, bipolar disorder, or psychosis were excluded. Effect size was measured using the Cohen’s d test.
Overall, 240 individuals were diagnosed with depression over the follow-up period. Women later diagnosed with depression had higher baseline TCI scores for HA, compared with those without depression. After controlling for multiple variables, higher TCI scores for HA, NS, and P were significantly associated with increased risk of any depression.
Among men, the TCI HA score was associated with significantly increased risk of any depression after adjustments, but no association appeared for other TCI scores. However, higher RD was associated with a reduced risk of psychotic depression in men (odds ratio, 0.79), although the study was not designed to assess psychotic depression, the researchers noted.
In an additional analysis of temperament cluster groups, shy and pessimistic traits were associated with depression in men (OR, 1.89), but not in women. In women, the cluster group with no specific extreme personality traits (cluster III) appeared to show an association with depression, which may be related to the association of NS and P with depression, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
The study is the first known to show differences between genders in the prediction of depression based on temperament traits, notably the link between high persistence and the onset of any depression in women, they said.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the potential for missed cases of less severe depression not reported in a national register, and by the relatively small number of men in the study, the researchers noted. In addition, the TCI’s three character traits of self-directedness, cooperativeness, and self-transcendence were not part of the current study, they said.
However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size, premorbid temperament assessment, and long follow-up period, although more research is needed in larger populations using real-world personalities to confirm the findings, they said.
“Research regarding temperament is important as it may have clinical significance as predictor of psychiatric morbidity and even suicide risk,” they said.
“Understanding those potentially at risk of depression could help in preventing the onset of the disease, and creating cluster profiles to match real-world personas could offer a clinical tool for this kind of prevention,” they concluded.
The study was supported by the University of Oulu, Oulu University Hospital, the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs, the National Institute for Health and Welfare, and the Regional Institute of Occupational Health. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Temperament has been defined as “an individual’s propensity to react emotionally, learn behavior and to form attachments without conscious effort by associative conditioning,” wrote Aleksi Ahola, PhD, of the University of Oulu, Finland, and colleagues. “Temperament is a potential endophenotype for depression, as it is inheritable and genetically linked with depression,” they said. The Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI) includes four temperament traits: harm avoidance (HA), novelty seeking (NS), reward dependence (RD), and persistence (P); previous studies have shown associations between higher HA and depression, but long-term data are limited, they wrote.
In a population-based study published in Comprehensive Psychiatry, the researchers followed 3,999 adults from age 31 to 54 years. The participants were part of the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 Study.
The primary outcome was the onset of depression in a previously mentally healthy adult population. Temperament was assessed using the TCI, and depression was based on the Hopkins system checklist-25 (SCL-25). Individuals with previous psychiatric disorders related to depression, bipolar disorder, or psychosis were excluded. Effect size was measured using the Cohen’s d test.
Overall, 240 individuals were diagnosed with depression over the follow-up period. Women later diagnosed with depression had higher baseline TCI scores for HA, compared with those without depression. After controlling for multiple variables, higher TCI scores for HA, NS, and P were significantly associated with increased risk of any depression.
Among men, the TCI HA score was associated with significantly increased risk of any depression after adjustments, but no association appeared for other TCI scores. However, higher RD was associated with a reduced risk of psychotic depression in men (odds ratio, 0.79), although the study was not designed to assess psychotic depression, the researchers noted.
In an additional analysis of temperament cluster groups, shy and pessimistic traits were associated with depression in men (OR, 1.89), but not in women. In women, the cluster group with no specific extreme personality traits (cluster III) appeared to show an association with depression, which may be related to the association of NS and P with depression, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
The study is the first known to show differences between genders in the prediction of depression based on temperament traits, notably the link between high persistence and the onset of any depression in women, they said.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the potential for missed cases of less severe depression not reported in a national register, and by the relatively small number of men in the study, the researchers noted. In addition, the TCI’s three character traits of self-directedness, cooperativeness, and self-transcendence were not part of the current study, they said.
However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size, premorbid temperament assessment, and long follow-up period, although more research is needed in larger populations using real-world personalities to confirm the findings, they said.
“Research regarding temperament is important as it may have clinical significance as predictor of psychiatric morbidity and even suicide risk,” they said.
“Understanding those potentially at risk of depression could help in preventing the onset of the disease, and creating cluster profiles to match real-world personas could offer a clinical tool for this kind of prevention,” they concluded.
The study was supported by the University of Oulu, Oulu University Hospital, the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs, the National Institute for Health and Welfare, and the Regional Institute of Occupational Health. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Temperament has been defined as “an individual’s propensity to react emotionally, learn behavior and to form attachments without conscious effort by associative conditioning,” wrote Aleksi Ahola, PhD, of the University of Oulu, Finland, and colleagues. “Temperament is a potential endophenotype for depression, as it is inheritable and genetically linked with depression,” they said. The Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI) includes four temperament traits: harm avoidance (HA), novelty seeking (NS), reward dependence (RD), and persistence (P); previous studies have shown associations between higher HA and depression, but long-term data are limited, they wrote.
In a population-based study published in Comprehensive Psychiatry, the researchers followed 3,999 adults from age 31 to 54 years. The participants were part of the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 Study.
The primary outcome was the onset of depression in a previously mentally healthy adult population. Temperament was assessed using the TCI, and depression was based on the Hopkins system checklist-25 (SCL-25). Individuals with previous psychiatric disorders related to depression, bipolar disorder, or psychosis were excluded. Effect size was measured using the Cohen’s d test.
Overall, 240 individuals were diagnosed with depression over the follow-up period. Women later diagnosed with depression had higher baseline TCI scores for HA, compared with those without depression. After controlling for multiple variables, higher TCI scores for HA, NS, and P were significantly associated with increased risk of any depression.
Among men, the TCI HA score was associated with significantly increased risk of any depression after adjustments, but no association appeared for other TCI scores. However, higher RD was associated with a reduced risk of psychotic depression in men (odds ratio, 0.79), although the study was not designed to assess psychotic depression, the researchers noted.
In an additional analysis of temperament cluster groups, shy and pessimistic traits were associated with depression in men (OR, 1.89), but not in women. In women, the cluster group with no specific extreme personality traits (cluster III) appeared to show an association with depression, which may be related to the association of NS and P with depression, the researchers wrote in their discussion.
The study is the first known to show differences between genders in the prediction of depression based on temperament traits, notably the link between high persistence and the onset of any depression in women, they said.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the potential for missed cases of less severe depression not reported in a national register, and by the relatively small number of men in the study, the researchers noted. In addition, the TCI’s three character traits of self-directedness, cooperativeness, and self-transcendence were not part of the current study, they said.
However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size, premorbid temperament assessment, and long follow-up period, although more research is needed in larger populations using real-world personalities to confirm the findings, they said.
“Research regarding temperament is important as it may have clinical significance as predictor of psychiatric morbidity and even suicide risk,” they said.
“Understanding those potentially at risk of depression could help in preventing the onset of the disease, and creating cluster profiles to match real-world personas could offer a clinical tool for this kind of prevention,” they concluded.
The study was supported by the University of Oulu, Oulu University Hospital, the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs, the National Institute for Health and Welfare, and the Regional Institute of Occupational Health. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM COMPREHENSIVE PSYCHIATRY
Lanolin gets nod for Allergen of the Year
Lanolin is a complex and varying mixture of high molecular weight esters, aliphatic alcohols, sterols, fatty acids, and hydrocarbons, but the allergic components are mainly the free lanolin alcohols, especially alkanediols, said Donald V. Belsito, MD, professor of dermatology, Columbia University, New York, who announced the Allergen of the Year at the society’s annual meeting.
Criteria for selection can include a known allergen with a new twist or increasing frequency or a newly reported allergen with mini-epidemics that may have been missed for years, Dr. Belsito said.
“The prevalence and severity of allergy to ‘lanolin’ have been hotly debated” since a potential case was first reported in the 1920s, wrote Dr. Belsito and Blair A. Jenkins, MD, PhD, a dermatology resident at New York–Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia Campus, in a review published in Dermatitis.
“ ‘Lanolin’ is indeed a paradox allergen,” wrote Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito. “The most appropriate patch test preparation(s) for detecting allergy remain disputed. Detection of lanolin-induced contact dermatitis in diseased skin by patch testing on normal skin may lead to false negative results.”
And those who test positive for a lanolin allergy on diseased skin may be able to use lanolin products on normal skin, they wrote.
“From my perspective, this was a timely year to think about lanolin, as there is significant ongoing controversy about whether it is allergenic,” Dr. Jenkins said in an interview. “Numerous companies market lanolin-containing topicals as safe and effective emollients,” she said.
Medical grade and highly purified anhydrous lanolin, which contain less than 2.5% and less than 1.5% of free alcohols, respectively, can still elicit or induce a contact allergy, Dr. Belsito said in his presentation. Hydrogenated lanolin has shown more allergenicity than lanolin alcohol, while lanolin wax, lanolin acid, and lanolin esters possess lower allergenicity than lanolin alcohol, he said.
Notably, modern wool textiles do not contain lanolin, and lanolin-allergic patients need not avoid wool, Dr. Belsito added.
Amerchol L-101, a common trade name on products containing lanolin, contains 10% wool wax alcohols obtained from the hydrolysis of wool fat dissolved in mineral oil at a 1:1 ratio, said Dr. Belsito. He recommended testing lanolin alcohols (in 30% petrolatum) and Amerchol L-101 (in 50% petrolatum) simultaneously with or without other lanolin derivatives and/or the patient’s products in cases of possible allergy, he said.
Consider high-risk groups
Current evidence suggests that the prevalence of contact allergy in the western European population is 0.4%, wrote Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito.
Although the frequency of lanolin allergy is relatively low, certain conditions convey greater risk, such as stasis dermatitis, leg ulcers, perianal/genital dermatitis, and atopic dermatitis, they wrote. Older adults and children are at increased risk because they are more likely to have these conditions. Demographic data also suggest that lanolin allergy is more common in non-Hispanic Whites than in non-Hispanic Blacks, they wrote.
Looking ahead, “I think further exploration of allergy across different skin types and ethnicities is warranted,” Dr. Jenkins said. “Further investigation of ideal [lanolin] allergens for patch testing is also needed.”
Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito said they had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
Lanolin is a complex and varying mixture of high molecular weight esters, aliphatic alcohols, sterols, fatty acids, and hydrocarbons, but the allergic components are mainly the free lanolin alcohols, especially alkanediols, said Donald V. Belsito, MD, professor of dermatology, Columbia University, New York, who announced the Allergen of the Year at the society’s annual meeting.
Criteria for selection can include a known allergen with a new twist or increasing frequency or a newly reported allergen with mini-epidemics that may have been missed for years, Dr. Belsito said.
“The prevalence and severity of allergy to ‘lanolin’ have been hotly debated” since a potential case was first reported in the 1920s, wrote Dr. Belsito and Blair A. Jenkins, MD, PhD, a dermatology resident at New York–Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia Campus, in a review published in Dermatitis.
“ ‘Lanolin’ is indeed a paradox allergen,” wrote Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito. “The most appropriate patch test preparation(s) for detecting allergy remain disputed. Detection of lanolin-induced contact dermatitis in diseased skin by patch testing on normal skin may lead to false negative results.”
And those who test positive for a lanolin allergy on diseased skin may be able to use lanolin products on normal skin, they wrote.
“From my perspective, this was a timely year to think about lanolin, as there is significant ongoing controversy about whether it is allergenic,” Dr. Jenkins said in an interview. “Numerous companies market lanolin-containing topicals as safe and effective emollients,” she said.
Medical grade and highly purified anhydrous lanolin, which contain less than 2.5% and less than 1.5% of free alcohols, respectively, can still elicit or induce a contact allergy, Dr. Belsito said in his presentation. Hydrogenated lanolin has shown more allergenicity than lanolin alcohol, while lanolin wax, lanolin acid, and lanolin esters possess lower allergenicity than lanolin alcohol, he said.
Notably, modern wool textiles do not contain lanolin, and lanolin-allergic patients need not avoid wool, Dr. Belsito added.
Amerchol L-101, a common trade name on products containing lanolin, contains 10% wool wax alcohols obtained from the hydrolysis of wool fat dissolved in mineral oil at a 1:1 ratio, said Dr. Belsito. He recommended testing lanolin alcohols (in 30% petrolatum) and Amerchol L-101 (in 50% petrolatum) simultaneously with or without other lanolin derivatives and/or the patient’s products in cases of possible allergy, he said.
Consider high-risk groups
Current evidence suggests that the prevalence of contact allergy in the western European population is 0.4%, wrote Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito.
Although the frequency of lanolin allergy is relatively low, certain conditions convey greater risk, such as stasis dermatitis, leg ulcers, perianal/genital dermatitis, and atopic dermatitis, they wrote. Older adults and children are at increased risk because they are more likely to have these conditions. Demographic data also suggest that lanolin allergy is more common in non-Hispanic Whites than in non-Hispanic Blacks, they wrote.
Looking ahead, “I think further exploration of allergy across different skin types and ethnicities is warranted,” Dr. Jenkins said. “Further investigation of ideal [lanolin] allergens for patch testing is also needed.”
Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito said they had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
Lanolin is a complex and varying mixture of high molecular weight esters, aliphatic alcohols, sterols, fatty acids, and hydrocarbons, but the allergic components are mainly the free lanolin alcohols, especially alkanediols, said Donald V. Belsito, MD, professor of dermatology, Columbia University, New York, who announced the Allergen of the Year at the society’s annual meeting.
Criteria for selection can include a known allergen with a new twist or increasing frequency or a newly reported allergen with mini-epidemics that may have been missed for years, Dr. Belsito said.
“The prevalence and severity of allergy to ‘lanolin’ have been hotly debated” since a potential case was first reported in the 1920s, wrote Dr. Belsito and Blair A. Jenkins, MD, PhD, a dermatology resident at New York–Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia Campus, in a review published in Dermatitis.
“ ‘Lanolin’ is indeed a paradox allergen,” wrote Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito. “The most appropriate patch test preparation(s) for detecting allergy remain disputed. Detection of lanolin-induced contact dermatitis in diseased skin by patch testing on normal skin may lead to false negative results.”
And those who test positive for a lanolin allergy on diseased skin may be able to use lanolin products on normal skin, they wrote.
“From my perspective, this was a timely year to think about lanolin, as there is significant ongoing controversy about whether it is allergenic,” Dr. Jenkins said in an interview. “Numerous companies market lanolin-containing topicals as safe and effective emollients,” she said.
Medical grade and highly purified anhydrous lanolin, which contain less than 2.5% and less than 1.5% of free alcohols, respectively, can still elicit or induce a contact allergy, Dr. Belsito said in his presentation. Hydrogenated lanolin has shown more allergenicity than lanolin alcohol, while lanolin wax, lanolin acid, and lanolin esters possess lower allergenicity than lanolin alcohol, he said.
Notably, modern wool textiles do not contain lanolin, and lanolin-allergic patients need not avoid wool, Dr. Belsito added.
Amerchol L-101, a common trade name on products containing lanolin, contains 10% wool wax alcohols obtained from the hydrolysis of wool fat dissolved in mineral oil at a 1:1 ratio, said Dr. Belsito. He recommended testing lanolin alcohols (in 30% petrolatum) and Amerchol L-101 (in 50% petrolatum) simultaneously with or without other lanolin derivatives and/or the patient’s products in cases of possible allergy, he said.
Consider high-risk groups
Current evidence suggests that the prevalence of contact allergy in the western European population is 0.4%, wrote Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito.
Although the frequency of lanolin allergy is relatively low, certain conditions convey greater risk, such as stasis dermatitis, leg ulcers, perianal/genital dermatitis, and atopic dermatitis, they wrote. Older adults and children are at increased risk because they are more likely to have these conditions. Demographic data also suggest that lanolin allergy is more common in non-Hispanic Whites than in non-Hispanic Blacks, they wrote.
Looking ahead, “I think further exploration of allergy across different skin types and ethnicities is warranted,” Dr. Jenkins said. “Further investigation of ideal [lanolin] allergens for patch testing is also needed.”
Dr. Jenkins and Dr. Belsito said they had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM ACDS 2023
Antioxidants may ease anxiety and depression
The prevalence of anxiety and depression has increased worldwide, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Therefore, identifying specific interventions that improve depressive status is critical for public health policy,” wrote Huan Wang, MD, of First Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, China, and colleagues.
Recent evidence suggests that modifiable lifestyle factors, including nutrition, may have a positive impact on symptoms of anxiety and depression, and observational studies have shown that antioxidant supplements affect depressive status, but data from randomized, controlled trials are limited by small sample sizes, they wrote.
In a study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, the researchers conducted a meta-analysis of 52 studies with a total of 4,049 patients. Of these, 2,004 received antioxidant supplements and 2,045 received a placebo supplement or no supplements. The median treatment duration was 11 weeks; treatment durations ranged from 2 weeks to 2 years. All 52 studies addressed the effect of antioxidants on depressive status, and 21 studies also assessed anxiety status. The studies used a range of depression scales, including the Beck Depression Inventory, the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Center for Epidemiologic Studies–Depression, and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.
Overall, the meta-analysis revealed a statistically significant improvement in depressive status associated with antioxidant supplement use (standardized mean difference, 0.60; P < .00001). When broken down by supplement, significant positive effects appeared for magnesium (SMD = 0.16; P = .03), zinc (SMD = 0.59; P = .01), selenium (SMD = 0.33; P = .009), CoQ10 (SMD = 0.97; P = .05), tea and coffee (SMD = 1.15; P = .001) and crocin (MD = 6.04; P < .00001).
As a secondary outcome, antioxidant supplementation had a significantly positive effect on anxiety (SMD = 0.40; P < .00001).
The mechanism of action for the effect of antioxidants remains unclear, the researchers wrote in their discussion, but, “Depriving or boosting the supply of food components with antioxidant capabilities might worsen or lessen oxidative stress,” they said.
The researchers attempted a subgroup analysis across countries, and found that, while antioxidant supplementation improved depressive status in populations from Iran, China, and Italy, “no significant improvement was found in the United States, Australia, Italy and other countries.” The reasons for this difference might be related to fewer studies from these countries, or “the improvement brought about by antioxidants might be particularly pronounced in people with significant depression and higher depression scores,” they wrote. “Studies have shown that Asian countries have fewer psychiatrists and more expensive treatments,” they added.
The findings were limited by several factors including the inability to include all types of antioxidant supplements, the range of depression rating scales, and insufficient subgroup analysis of the range of populations from the included studies, the researchers noted.
“Additional data from large clinical trials are needed to confirm the efficacy and safety of antioxidant supplements in improving depressive status,” they said. However, the results suggest that antioxidants may play a role as an adjunct treatment to conventional antidepressants, they concluded.
The study was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
The prevalence of anxiety and depression has increased worldwide, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Therefore, identifying specific interventions that improve depressive status is critical for public health policy,” wrote Huan Wang, MD, of First Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, China, and colleagues.
Recent evidence suggests that modifiable lifestyle factors, including nutrition, may have a positive impact on symptoms of anxiety and depression, and observational studies have shown that antioxidant supplements affect depressive status, but data from randomized, controlled trials are limited by small sample sizes, they wrote.
In a study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, the researchers conducted a meta-analysis of 52 studies with a total of 4,049 patients. Of these, 2,004 received antioxidant supplements and 2,045 received a placebo supplement or no supplements. The median treatment duration was 11 weeks; treatment durations ranged from 2 weeks to 2 years. All 52 studies addressed the effect of antioxidants on depressive status, and 21 studies also assessed anxiety status. The studies used a range of depression scales, including the Beck Depression Inventory, the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Center for Epidemiologic Studies–Depression, and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.
Overall, the meta-analysis revealed a statistically significant improvement in depressive status associated with antioxidant supplement use (standardized mean difference, 0.60; P < .00001). When broken down by supplement, significant positive effects appeared for magnesium (SMD = 0.16; P = .03), zinc (SMD = 0.59; P = .01), selenium (SMD = 0.33; P = .009), CoQ10 (SMD = 0.97; P = .05), tea and coffee (SMD = 1.15; P = .001) and crocin (MD = 6.04; P < .00001).
As a secondary outcome, antioxidant supplementation had a significantly positive effect on anxiety (SMD = 0.40; P < .00001).
The mechanism of action for the effect of antioxidants remains unclear, the researchers wrote in their discussion, but, “Depriving or boosting the supply of food components with antioxidant capabilities might worsen or lessen oxidative stress,” they said.
The researchers attempted a subgroup analysis across countries, and found that, while antioxidant supplementation improved depressive status in populations from Iran, China, and Italy, “no significant improvement was found in the United States, Australia, Italy and other countries.” The reasons for this difference might be related to fewer studies from these countries, or “the improvement brought about by antioxidants might be particularly pronounced in people with significant depression and higher depression scores,” they wrote. “Studies have shown that Asian countries have fewer psychiatrists and more expensive treatments,” they added.
The findings were limited by several factors including the inability to include all types of antioxidant supplements, the range of depression rating scales, and insufficient subgroup analysis of the range of populations from the included studies, the researchers noted.
“Additional data from large clinical trials are needed to confirm the efficacy and safety of antioxidant supplements in improving depressive status,” they said. However, the results suggest that antioxidants may play a role as an adjunct treatment to conventional antidepressants, they concluded.
The study was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
The prevalence of anxiety and depression has increased worldwide, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Therefore, identifying specific interventions that improve depressive status is critical for public health policy,” wrote Huan Wang, MD, of First Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, China, and colleagues.
Recent evidence suggests that modifiable lifestyle factors, including nutrition, may have a positive impact on symptoms of anxiety and depression, and observational studies have shown that antioxidant supplements affect depressive status, but data from randomized, controlled trials are limited by small sample sizes, they wrote.
In a study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, the researchers conducted a meta-analysis of 52 studies with a total of 4,049 patients. Of these, 2,004 received antioxidant supplements and 2,045 received a placebo supplement or no supplements. The median treatment duration was 11 weeks; treatment durations ranged from 2 weeks to 2 years. All 52 studies addressed the effect of antioxidants on depressive status, and 21 studies also assessed anxiety status. The studies used a range of depression scales, including the Beck Depression Inventory, the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Center for Epidemiologic Studies–Depression, and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.
Overall, the meta-analysis revealed a statistically significant improvement in depressive status associated with antioxidant supplement use (standardized mean difference, 0.60; P < .00001). When broken down by supplement, significant positive effects appeared for magnesium (SMD = 0.16; P = .03), zinc (SMD = 0.59; P = .01), selenium (SMD = 0.33; P = .009), CoQ10 (SMD = 0.97; P = .05), tea and coffee (SMD = 1.15; P = .001) and crocin (MD = 6.04; P < .00001).
As a secondary outcome, antioxidant supplementation had a significantly positive effect on anxiety (SMD = 0.40; P < .00001).
The mechanism of action for the effect of antioxidants remains unclear, the researchers wrote in their discussion, but, “Depriving or boosting the supply of food components with antioxidant capabilities might worsen or lessen oxidative stress,” they said.
The researchers attempted a subgroup analysis across countries, and found that, while antioxidant supplementation improved depressive status in populations from Iran, China, and Italy, “no significant improvement was found in the United States, Australia, Italy and other countries.” The reasons for this difference might be related to fewer studies from these countries, or “the improvement brought about by antioxidants might be particularly pronounced in people with significant depression and higher depression scores,” they wrote. “Studies have shown that Asian countries have fewer psychiatrists and more expensive treatments,” they added.
The findings were limited by several factors including the inability to include all types of antioxidant supplements, the range of depression rating scales, and insufficient subgroup analysis of the range of populations from the included studies, the researchers noted.
“Additional data from large clinical trials are needed to confirm the efficacy and safety of antioxidant supplements in improving depressive status,” they said. However, the results suggest that antioxidants may play a role as an adjunct treatment to conventional antidepressants, they concluded.
The study was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Adherence to DASH diet reduced risk of COPD
Greater adherence to the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet was associated with a significantly reduced risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and improved lung function, based on data from more than 28,000 individuals in the United States.
Mediterranean diet on COPD in particular has not been well studied, Jingli Wen, MD, of Nanjing Medical University, Jiangsu, China, and colleagues wrote.
In a study published in Frontiers in Nutrition, the researchers reviewed data from 28,605 adult participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2018.
The study population included 2,488 individuals with COPD participants and 25,607 individuals without COPD; the mean ages of the COPD and non-COPD groups were 60.2 years and 56.9 years, and the proportion of women was 63.7% and 51.4%, respectively. The primary outcome was the prevalence of COPD, defined as self-reports of a diagnosis of chronic bronchitis or emphysema. DASH diet scores were based on consumption of nine target nutrients: saturated fat, total fat, protein, cholesterol, fiber, magnesium, calcium, potassium, and sodium. Scores for compliance with the Mediterranean diet were based on intake of eight food categories: fruits, vegetables, legumes, fish, red meat, dairy products, alcohol, and olive oil.
Overall, a higher score for adherence to the DASH diet was significantly associated with a lower COPD risk (odds ratio, 0.83; P = .021). This association remained significant in subgroups of younger adults (OR, 0.74), men (OR, 0.73), and smokers (OR, 0.82).
By contrast, adherence to the Mediterranean diet was not significantly associated with COPD prevalence (OR, 1.03; P = .697).
The researchers also found a correlation between DASH diet adherence and improved lung function, especially among individuals without COPD. The risk of FEV1: forced vital capacity decrease, as well as dyspnea, cough, and expectoration, were negatively associated with greater adherence to the DASH diet, but greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet was only negatively associated with cough risk.
The relationship between the DASH diet and reduced COPD risk persisted after adjusting for occupational exposure and excluding participants with cardiovascular disease, cancer, or diabetes.
The current study is the first known to focus on the association between DASH diet and the risk of COPD among adults in the United States, the researchers wrote. The lack of effect of the Mediterranean diet on COPD, in contrast to some studies in other countries, “suggests that regional differences in diet may affect the role of diet in the development of COPD.”
The study findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design that prevented conclusions of causality, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the lack of data of the impact of poor living habits, such as smoking, on food decisions, the use of short-term 24-hour dietary recall, and the reliance of self-reports for a diagnosis of COPD.
However, the results support the role of diet in COPD pathogenesis and expand the knowledge of relationships between the DASH diet and major chronic diseases, the researchers said. More prospective studies and clinical intervention studies are needed, but the findings should encourage clinicians to consider the potential role of a healthy diet in promoting lung health.
The study was supported by the Department of Health, Jiangsu Province, China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Greater adherence to the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet was associated with a significantly reduced risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and improved lung function, based on data from more than 28,000 individuals in the United States.
Mediterranean diet on COPD in particular has not been well studied, Jingli Wen, MD, of Nanjing Medical University, Jiangsu, China, and colleagues wrote.
In a study published in Frontiers in Nutrition, the researchers reviewed data from 28,605 adult participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2018.
The study population included 2,488 individuals with COPD participants and 25,607 individuals without COPD; the mean ages of the COPD and non-COPD groups were 60.2 years and 56.9 years, and the proportion of women was 63.7% and 51.4%, respectively. The primary outcome was the prevalence of COPD, defined as self-reports of a diagnosis of chronic bronchitis or emphysema. DASH diet scores were based on consumption of nine target nutrients: saturated fat, total fat, protein, cholesterol, fiber, magnesium, calcium, potassium, and sodium. Scores for compliance with the Mediterranean diet were based on intake of eight food categories: fruits, vegetables, legumes, fish, red meat, dairy products, alcohol, and olive oil.
Overall, a higher score for adherence to the DASH diet was significantly associated with a lower COPD risk (odds ratio, 0.83; P = .021). This association remained significant in subgroups of younger adults (OR, 0.74), men (OR, 0.73), and smokers (OR, 0.82).
By contrast, adherence to the Mediterranean diet was not significantly associated with COPD prevalence (OR, 1.03; P = .697).
The researchers also found a correlation between DASH diet adherence and improved lung function, especially among individuals without COPD. The risk of FEV1: forced vital capacity decrease, as well as dyspnea, cough, and expectoration, were negatively associated with greater adherence to the DASH diet, but greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet was only negatively associated with cough risk.
The relationship between the DASH diet and reduced COPD risk persisted after adjusting for occupational exposure and excluding participants with cardiovascular disease, cancer, or diabetes.
The current study is the first known to focus on the association between DASH diet and the risk of COPD among adults in the United States, the researchers wrote. The lack of effect of the Mediterranean diet on COPD, in contrast to some studies in other countries, “suggests that regional differences in diet may affect the role of diet in the development of COPD.”
The study findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design that prevented conclusions of causality, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the lack of data of the impact of poor living habits, such as smoking, on food decisions, the use of short-term 24-hour dietary recall, and the reliance of self-reports for a diagnosis of COPD.
However, the results support the role of diet in COPD pathogenesis and expand the knowledge of relationships between the DASH diet and major chronic diseases, the researchers said. More prospective studies and clinical intervention studies are needed, but the findings should encourage clinicians to consider the potential role of a healthy diet in promoting lung health.
The study was supported by the Department of Health, Jiangsu Province, China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Greater adherence to the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet was associated with a significantly reduced risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and improved lung function, based on data from more than 28,000 individuals in the United States.
Mediterranean diet on COPD in particular has not been well studied, Jingli Wen, MD, of Nanjing Medical University, Jiangsu, China, and colleagues wrote.
In a study published in Frontiers in Nutrition, the researchers reviewed data from 28,605 adult participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2018.
The study population included 2,488 individuals with COPD participants and 25,607 individuals without COPD; the mean ages of the COPD and non-COPD groups were 60.2 years and 56.9 years, and the proportion of women was 63.7% and 51.4%, respectively. The primary outcome was the prevalence of COPD, defined as self-reports of a diagnosis of chronic bronchitis or emphysema. DASH diet scores were based on consumption of nine target nutrients: saturated fat, total fat, protein, cholesterol, fiber, magnesium, calcium, potassium, and sodium. Scores for compliance with the Mediterranean diet were based on intake of eight food categories: fruits, vegetables, legumes, fish, red meat, dairy products, alcohol, and olive oil.
Overall, a higher score for adherence to the DASH diet was significantly associated with a lower COPD risk (odds ratio, 0.83; P = .021). This association remained significant in subgroups of younger adults (OR, 0.74), men (OR, 0.73), and smokers (OR, 0.82).
By contrast, adherence to the Mediterranean diet was not significantly associated with COPD prevalence (OR, 1.03; P = .697).
The researchers also found a correlation between DASH diet adherence and improved lung function, especially among individuals without COPD. The risk of FEV1: forced vital capacity decrease, as well as dyspnea, cough, and expectoration, were negatively associated with greater adherence to the DASH diet, but greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet was only negatively associated with cough risk.
The relationship between the DASH diet and reduced COPD risk persisted after adjusting for occupational exposure and excluding participants with cardiovascular disease, cancer, or diabetes.
The current study is the first known to focus on the association between DASH diet and the risk of COPD among adults in the United States, the researchers wrote. The lack of effect of the Mediterranean diet on COPD, in contrast to some studies in other countries, “suggests that regional differences in diet may affect the role of diet in the development of COPD.”
The study findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design that prevented conclusions of causality, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the lack of data of the impact of poor living habits, such as smoking, on food decisions, the use of short-term 24-hour dietary recall, and the reliance of self-reports for a diagnosis of COPD.
However, the results support the role of diet in COPD pathogenesis and expand the knowledge of relationships between the DASH diet and major chronic diseases, the researchers said. More prospective studies and clinical intervention studies are needed, but the findings should encourage clinicians to consider the potential role of a healthy diet in promoting lung health.
The study was supported by the Department of Health, Jiangsu Province, China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM FRONTIERS IN NUTRITION
Gestational diabetes affects fetal lung development
Lung development in the fetus may be adversely affected by a mother’s gestational diabetes, based on data from in vivo, in vitro, and ex vivo studies.
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) has recently been associated with fetal lung underdevelopment (FLUD) and delayed lung maturation that may lead to immediate respiratory distress in newborns and later chronic lung disease, Pengzheng Chen, PhD, of Shandong University, Jinan, China, and colleagues wrote.
Antenatal corticosteroids are considered an effective treatment for gestational fetal lung underdevelopment, but recent studies have shown adverse effects of these medications, and therefore more research is needed to identify the etiology and pathogenesis of FLUD induced by GDM, they said.
In a study published in the International Journal of Nanomedicine, the researchers collected umbilical cord blood samples from patients with GDM and matched controls at a single hospital in China.
“Using an ex vivo exosome exposure model of fetal lung explants, we observed the morphological alteration of lung explants and evaluated the expression of molecules involved in lung development,” the researchers wrote.
Fetal lung underdevelopment was more common after exposure to exosomes from the umbilical cord plasma of individuals with gestational diabetes mellitus, compared with exosomes from healthy controls.
The researchers also used mouse models to examine the effects of exosomes on fetal lung development in vivo. They found that exosomes associated with GDM impeded the growth, branching morphogenesis, and maturation of fetal lungs in mouse models. In addition, the expression of the apoptotic biomarkers known as BAX, BIM, and cleaved CASPASE-3 was up-regulated in GDMUB-exosomes and HG-exos groups, but the antiapoptotic protein BCL-2 was down-regulated; this further supported the negative impact of GDM exomes on fetal lung development, the researchers said.
The researchers then conducted miRNA sequencing, which showed that the miRNA in placenta-derived exosomes from GDM pregnancies were distinct from the miRNA in exosomes from healthy control pregnancies.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the impurity of the isolated placenta-derived exosomes from the umbilical cord blood plasma, which were not placenta specific, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the lack of data on different stages of lung development, and more research is needed to validate miRNAs and to explore the signally pathways involved in fetal lung development.
However, the study is the first known to demonstrate an adverse effect of GDM on fetal lung development via in vitro, ex vivo, and in vitro models, they said.
“These data highlight an emerging role of placenta-derived exosomes in the pathogenesis of fetal lung underdevelopment in GDM pregnancies, and provide a novel strategy for maternal-fetal communication,” they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Lung development in the fetus may be adversely affected by a mother’s gestational diabetes, based on data from in vivo, in vitro, and ex vivo studies.
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) has recently been associated with fetal lung underdevelopment (FLUD) and delayed lung maturation that may lead to immediate respiratory distress in newborns and later chronic lung disease, Pengzheng Chen, PhD, of Shandong University, Jinan, China, and colleagues wrote.
Antenatal corticosteroids are considered an effective treatment for gestational fetal lung underdevelopment, but recent studies have shown adverse effects of these medications, and therefore more research is needed to identify the etiology and pathogenesis of FLUD induced by GDM, they said.
In a study published in the International Journal of Nanomedicine, the researchers collected umbilical cord blood samples from patients with GDM and matched controls at a single hospital in China.
“Using an ex vivo exosome exposure model of fetal lung explants, we observed the morphological alteration of lung explants and evaluated the expression of molecules involved in lung development,” the researchers wrote.
Fetal lung underdevelopment was more common after exposure to exosomes from the umbilical cord plasma of individuals with gestational diabetes mellitus, compared with exosomes from healthy controls.
The researchers also used mouse models to examine the effects of exosomes on fetal lung development in vivo. They found that exosomes associated with GDM impeded the growth, branching morphogenesis, and maturation of fetal lungs in mouse models. In addition, the expression of the apoptotic biomarkers known as BAX, BIM, and cleaved CASPASE-3 was up-regulated in GDMUB-exosomes and HG-exos groups, but the antiapoptotic protein BCL-2 was down-regulated; this further supported the negative impact of GDM exomes on fetal lung development, the researchers said.
The researchers then conducted miRNA sequencing, which showed that the miRNA in placenta-derived exosomes from GDM pregnancies were distinct from the miRNA in exosomes from healthy control pregnancies.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the impurity of the isolated placenta-derived exosomes from the umbilical cord blood plasma, which were not placenta specific, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the lack of data on different stages of lung development, and more research is needed to validate miRNAs and to explore the signally pathways involved in fetal lung development.
However, the study is the first known to demonstrate an adverse effect of GDM on fetal lung development via in vitro, ex vivo, and in vitro models, they said.
“These data highlight an emerging role of placenta-derived exosomes in the pathogenesis of fetal lung underdevelopment in GDM pregnancies, and provide a novel strategy for maternal-fetal communication,” they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Lung development in the fetus may be adversely affected by a mother’s gestational diabetes, based on data from in vivo, in vitro, and ex vivo studies.
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) has recently been associated with fetal lung underdevelopment (FLUD) and delayed lung maturation that may lead to immediate respiratory distress in newborns and later chronic lung disease, Pengzheng Chen, PhD, of Shandong University, Jinan, China, and colleagues wrote.
Antenatal corticosteroids are considered an effective treatment for gestational fetal lung underdevelopment, but recent studies have shown adverse effects of these medications, and therefore more research is needed to identify the etiology and pathogenesis of FLUD induced by GDM, they said.
In a study published in the International Journal of Nanomedicine, the researchers collected umbilical cord blood samples from patients with GDM and matched controls at a single hospital in China.
“Using an ex vivo exosome exposure model of fetal lung explants, we observed the morphological alteration of lung explants and evaluated the expression of molecules involved in lung development,” the researchers wrote.
Fetal lung underdevelopment was more common after exposure to exosomes from the umbilical cord plasma of individuals with gestational diabetes mellitus, compared with exosomes from healthy controls.
The researchers also used mouse models to examine the effects of exosomes on fetal lung development in vivo. They found that exosomes associated with GDM impeded the growth, branching morphogenesis, and maturation of fetal lungs in mouse models. In addition, the expression of the apoptotic biomarkers known as BAX, BIM, and cleaved CASPASE-3 was up-regulated in GDMUB-exosomes and HG-exos groups, but the antiapoptotic protein BCL-2 was down-regulated; this further supported the negative impact of GDM exomes on fetal lung development, the researchers said.
The researchers then conducted miRNA sequencing, which showed that the miRNA in placenta-derived exosomes from GDM pregnancies were distinct from the miRNA in exosomes from healthy control pregnancies.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the impurity of the isolated placenta-derived exosomes from the umbilical cord blood plasma, which were not placenta specific, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the lack of data on different stages of lung development, and more research is needed to validate miRNAs and to explore the signally pathways involved in fetal lung development.
However, the study is the first known to demonstrate an adverse effect of GDM on fetal lung development via in vitro, ex vivo, and in vitro models, they said.
“These data highlight an emerging role of placenta-derived exosomes in the pathogenesis of fetal lung underdevelopment in GDM pregnancies, and provide a novel strategy for maternal-fetal communication,” they concluded.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NANOMEDICINE
FDA warns about anaphylaxis after false-negative allergen tests
The Food and Drug Administration has issued a warning about the potential for patients to experience anaphylactic reactions after a negative skin test with any allergenic extract used to diagnose food allergies.
The FDA is requiring that an anaphylaxis warning after false-negative food allergen skin test results be added to the labels of these products in light of reports to the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), according to a March 3 statement.
The action follows the recognition of an increase in adverse event reports of false-negative test results with specific lots of “ALK-Abello’s Allergenic Extract-Peanut (Arachis hypogaea) – For Diagnostic Use Only.” Some of these reports “were associated with life-threatening anaphylaxis from subsequent exposure to peanut,” according to the statement. “FDA determined that the risk of anaphylaxis following false-negative food allergen skin test results is applicable to all allergenic extracts for the diagnosis of food allergies,” the statement notes.
To date, four lots of allergenic extracts have been voluntarily withdrawn from the market by the manufacturer, in November and December 2022, and should not be used.
Although some allergenic extracts are standardized, those used in the diagnosis of food allergy currently licensed by the FDA for use in the United States are nonstandardized, so potency may vary by lot.
The FDA advises health care professionals to consider confirming a negative skin test with serologic testing for peanut-specific IgE or conducting a medically supervised oral food challenge in patients, “based on the patient’s clinical history and the index of suspicion.”
The FDA also urges patients to discuss negative food allergen skin test results with their health care providers to determine the possible need for additional testing and to review the symptoms of a severe allergic reaction.
Any adverse events or side effects associated with allergenic products should be reported to the FDA via the FDA’s MedWatch Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has issued a warning about the potential for patients to experience anaphylactic reactions after a negative skin test with any allergenic extract used to diagnose food allergies.
The FDA is requiring that an anaphylaxis warning after false-negative food allergen skin test results be added to the labels of these products in light of reports to the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), according to a March 3 statement.
The action follows the recognition of an increase in adverse event reports of false-negative test results with specific lots of “ALK-Abello’s Allergenic Extract-Peanut (Arachis hypogaea) – For Diagnostic Use Only.” Some of these reports “were associated with life-threatening anaphylaxis from subsequent exposure to peanut,” according to the statement. “FDA determined that the risk of anaphylaxis following false-negative food allergen skin test results is applicable to all allergenic extracts for the diagnosis of food allergies,” the statement notes.
To date, four lots of allergenic extracts have been voluntarily withdrawn from the market by the manufacturer, in November and December 2022, and should not be used.
Although some allergenic extracts are standardized, those used in the diagnosis of food allergy currently licensed by the FDA for use in the United States are nonstandardized, so potency may vary by lot.
The FDA advises health care professionals to consider confirming a negative skin test with serologic testing for peanut-specific IgE or conducting a medically supervised oral food challenge in patients, “based on the patient’s clinical history and the index of suspicion.”
The FDA also urges patients to discuss negative food allergen skin test results with their health care providers to determine the possible need for additional testing and to review the symptoms of a severe allergic reaction.
Any adverse events or side effects associated with allergenic products should be reported to the FDA via the FDA’s MedWatch Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has issued a warning about the potential for patients to experience anaphylactic reactions after a negative skin test with any allergenic extract used to diagnose food allergies.
The FDA is requiring that an anaphylaxis warning after false-negative food allergen skin test results be added to the labels of these products in light of reports to the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS), according to a March 3 statement.
The action follows the recognition of an increase in adverse event reports of false-negative test results with specific lots of “ALK-Abello’s Allergenic Extract-Peanut (Arachis hypogaea) – For Diagnostic Use Only.” Some of these reports “were associated with life-threatening anaphylaxis from subsequent exposure to peanut,” according to the statement. “FDA determined that the risk of anaphylaxis following false-negative food allergen skin test results is applicable to all allergenic extracts for the diagnosis of food allergies,” the statement notes.
To date, four lots of allergenic extracts have been voluntarily withdrawn from the market by the manufacturer, in November and December 2022, and should not be used.
Although some allergenic extracts are standardized, those used in the diagnosis of food allergy currently licensed by the FDA for use in the United States are nonstandardized, so potency may vary by lot.
The FDA advises health care professionals to consider confirming a negative skin test with serologic testing for peanut-specific IgE or conducting a medically supervised oral food challenge in patients, “based on the patient’s clinical history and the index of suspicion.”
The FDA also urges patients to discuss negative food allergen skin test results with their health care providers to determine the possible need for additional testing and to review the symptoms of a severe allergic reaction.
Any adverse events or side effects associated with allergenic products should be reported to the FDA via the FDA’s MedWatch Safety Information and Adverse Event Reporting Program.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.