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Yoga linked with improved gait speed, lower extremity strength in older adults
“Up to 50% of adults aged 80 years or older are estimated to be frail, and the global prevalence is expected to rise given the aging of our population,” therefore more interventions are needed to help with frailty, corresponding author Julia Loewenthal, MD, said in an interview.
Yoga integrates across multiple body systems including the musculoskeletal system, nervous system, and others, said Dr. Loewenthal of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston. Previous research has shown that yoga has a positive effect on cardiovascular risk factors, mood, and quality of life, but the effects of yoga on frailty have not been well studied.
“We wanted to evaluate whether [yoga] might help with frailty, since it touches on so many systems, as frailty does,” she noted.
In a systematic review published in Annals of Internal Medicine, the researchers identified 33 randomized, controlled trials of yoga-based interventions including 2,384 adults aged 65 years and older. The studies mainly involved Iyengar or chair-based yoga methods. The study population included community-dwelling seniors, nursing home residents, and individuals with chronic diseases.
The studies assessed the effect of a range of yoga practices on frailty markers including gait speed, handgrip strength, balance, lower extremity strength and endurance, and multicomponent measures of physical performance.
Overall, individuals who were randomized to engage in a yoga practice showed improved gait speed and lower extremity strength, compared with controls who were inactive or received an education intervention, with moderate-certainty evidence. The researchers also found low-certainty evidence in favor of yoga for improved balance and for a composite measure of physical function, and low-certainty evidence in favor of yoga for improved handgrip strength.
The findings were limited by several factors, mainly the heterogenous study designs, populations, and yoga styles, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the small sample sizes, variation in descriptions of the studies’ randomizations, and a lack of data on race and ethnicity of the participants.
Yoga’s role in healthy aging
“Overall, we were not surprised by the results since we have seen similar findings from other mind-body practices such as tai chi,” Dr. Loewenthal said in an interview. “We were surprised by the degree of improvement many of the participants had with gait speed.
“Yoga practices usually include a mix of poses in the standing, seated, and lying-down positions,” Dr. Loewenthal said. Some of the studies in the review also involved chair-based methods with few standing poses, and some involved gentle or slow-paced practices. “We know that many of the practices helped with leg strength, and perhaps they are also helping with coordination between the brain and body for walking.”
The findings suggest that clinicians can view yoga practice in general as part of a strategy to support healthy aging, Dr. Loewenthal said. “While our work looked at frailty markers and not overall frailty, I think it would be reasonable to offer yoga as a strategy along with already-established interventions such as resistance training and the Mediterranean diet, and if older adults are already practicing yoga, this could help them understand how the practice is impacting the aging process.”
There are many styles of yoga that overlap and are related to one another, so it is hard to make recommendations about a single type, said Dr. Loewenthal. Many of the studies in the review involved Iyengar yoga, named for yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar, which focuses on precise alignment and breath and seems to be conducive for older populations. Iyengar yoga also involves use of props such as blocks, bolsters, straps, and chairs, which makes it well suited for older individuals who may have a chronic condition or other limitations.
“Some styles of yoga are very physical and may reach energy expenditure and cardiovascular effects similar to aerobic exercise, but this is generally not the case for most styles of yoga,” she added.
As for additional research, “I think it is important that trials use a validated definition of frailty as an outcome; all of the trials in our study used markers of frailty but did not look at overall frailty,” said Dr. Loewenthal. In addition, it is important to understand how yoga affects people who have different levels of frailty, since previous research shows that those who are the most frail benefit most from physical activity interventions.
Yoga as an entry point for physical activity
With the increasing population of older adults in the United States and around the world, frailty is a major health concern because its association with significant declines in health and potential loss of independence, Amanda Paluch, PhD, said in an interview.
“Therefore, it is important to identify programs that can prevent frailty to support longevity and living independently for older adults. Yoga can be a feasible solution to promote movement and prevent frailty,” said Dr. Paluch, of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, an assistant professor in the department of kinesiology and Institute for Applied Life Sciences.
“Other studies have demonstrated that light-intensity movement, as in yoga, may be particularly beneficial for older adults,” Dr. Paluch said. “Additionally, research has demonstrated that balance training activities are important to maintain physical function, prevent falls, and maintain their independence for older adults, so it makes sense that yoga was associated with lower likelihood of frailty.”
Although there may be additional benefits with higher intensity activity, “yoga could be a great place to start for older adults who are starting at low activity levels,” she said.
The takeaway for clinicians is to consider encouraging more physical activity for their patients to support healthy aging, including reducing the risk factors for frailty, said Dr. Paluch. “Particularly for older adults, physical activity may not need to be of high intensity for benefits. Activities such as yoga that focus on flexibility, balance, and movement at lower intensities can support healthy aging, and yoga may be a particularly good option for older adults who are least active.”
The study received no outside funding. The researchers and Dr. Paluch had no financial conflicts to disclose.
“Up to 50% of adults aged 80 years or older are estimated to be frail, and the global prevalence is expected to rise given the aging of our population,” therefore more interventions are needed to help with frailty, corresponding author Julia Loewenthal, MD, said in an interview.
Yoga integrates across multiple body systems including the musculoskeletal system, nervous system, and others, said Dr. Loewenthal of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston. Previous research has shown that yoga has a positive effect on cardiovascular risk factors, mood, and quality of life, but the effects of yoga on frailty have not been well studied.
“We wanted to evaluate whether [yoga] might help with frailty, since it touches on so many systems, as frailty does,” she noted.
In a systematic review published in Annals of Internal Medicine, the researchers identified 33 randomized, controlled trials of yoga-based interventions including 2,384 adults aged 65 years and older. The studies mainly involved Iyengar or chair-based yoga methods. The study population included community-dwelling seniors, nursing home residents, and individuals with chronic diseases.
The studies assessed the effect of a range of yoga practices on frailty markers including gait speed, handgrip strength, balance, lower extremity strength and endurance, and multicomponent measures of physical performance.
Overall, individuals who were randomized to engage in a yoga practice showed improved gait speed and lower extremity strength, compared with controls who were inactive or received an education intervention, with moderate-certainty evidence. The researchers also found low-certainty evidence in favor of yoga for improved balance and for a composite measure of physical function, and low-certainty evidence in favor of yoga for improved handgrip strength.
The findings were limited by several factors, mainly the heterogenous study designs, populations, and yoga styles, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the small sample sizes, variation in descriptions of the studies’ randomizations, and a lack of data on race and ethnicity of the participants.
Yoga’s role in healthy aging
“Overall, we were not surprised by the results since we have seen similar findings from other mind-body practices such as tai chi,” Dr. Loewenthal said in an interview. “We were surprised by the degree of improvement many of the participants had with gait speed.
“Yoga practices usually include a mix of poses in the standing, seated, and lying-down positions,” Dr. Loewenthal said. Some of the studies in the review also involved chair-based methods with few standing poses, and some involved gentle or slow-paced practices. “We know that many of the practices helped with leg strength, and perhaps they are also helping with coordination between the brain and body for walking.”
The findings suggest that clinicians can view yoga practice in general as part of a strategy to support healthy aging, Dr. Loewenthal said. “While our work looked at frailty markers and not overall frailty, I think it would be reasonable to offer yoga as a strategy along with already-established interventions such as resistance training and the Mediterranean diet, and if older adults are already practicing yoga, this could help them understand how the practice is impacting the aging process.”
There are many styles of yoga that overlap and are related to one another, so it is hard to make recommendations about a single type, said Dr. Loewenthal. Many of the studies in the review involved Iyengar yoga, named for yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar, which focuses on precise alignment and breath and seems to be conducive for older populations. Iyengar yoga also involves use of props such as blocks, bolsters, straps, and chairs, which makes it well suited for older individuals who may have a chronic condition or other limitations.
“Some styles of yoga are very physical and may reach energy expenditure and cardiovascular effects similar to aerobic exercise, but this is generally not the case for most styles of yoga,” she added.
As for additional research, “I think it is important that trials use a validated definition of frailty as an outcome; all of the trials in our study used markers of frailty but did not look at overall frailty,” said Dr. Loewenthal. In addition, it is important to understand how yoga affects people who have different levels of frailty, since previous research shows that those who are the most frail benefit most from physical activity interventions.
Yoga as an entry point for physical activity
With the increasing population of older adults in the United States and around the world, frailty is a major health concern because its association with significant declines in health and potential loss of independence, Amanda Paluch, PhD, said in an interview.
“Therefore, it is important to identify programs that can prevent frailty to support longevity and living independently for older adults. Yoga can be a feasible solution to promote movement and prevent frailty,” said Dr. Paluch, of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, an assistant professor in the department of kinesiology and Institute for Applied Life Sciences.
“Other studies have demonstrated that light-intensity movement, as in yoga, may be particularly beneficial for older adults,” Dr. Paluch said. “Additionally, research has demonstrated that balance training activities are important to maintain physical function, prevent falls, and maintain their independence for older adults, so it makes sense that yoga was associated with lower likelihood of frailty.”
Although there may be additional benefits with higher intensity activity, “yoga could be a great place to start for older adults who are starting at low activity levels,” she said.
The takeaway for clinicians is to consider encouraging more physical activity for their patients to support healthy aging, including reducing the risk factors for frailty, said Dr. Paluch. “Particularly for older adults, physical activity may not need to be of high intensity for benefits. Activities such as yoga that focus on flexibility, balance, and movement at lower intensities can support healthy aging, and yoga may be a particularly good option for older adults who are least active.”
The study received no outside funding. The researchers and Dr. Paluch had no financial conflicts to disclose.
“Up to 50% of adults aged 80 years or older are estimated to be frail, and the global prevalence is expected to rise given the aging of our population,” therefore more interventions are needed to help with frailty, corresponding author Julia Loewenthal, MD, said in an interview.
Yoga integrates across multiple body systems including the musculoskeletal system, nervous system, and others, said Dr. Loewenthal of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston. Previous research has shown that yoga has a positive effect on cardiovascular risk factors, mood, and quality of life, but the effects of yoga on frailty have not been well studied.
“We wanted to evaluate whether [yoga] might help with frailty, since it touches on so many systems, as frailty does,” she noted.
In a systematic review published in Annals of Internal Medicine, the researchers identified 33 randomized, controlled trials of yoga-based interventions including 2,384 adults aged 65 years and older. The studies mainly involved Iyengar or chair-based yoga methods. The study population included community-dwelling seniors, nursing home residents, and individuals with chronic diseases.
The studies assessed the effect of a range of yoga practices on frailty markers including gait speed, handgrip strength, balance, lower extremity strength and endurance, and multicomponent measures of physical performance.
Overall, individuals who were randomized to engage in a yoga practice showed improved gait speed and lower extremity strength, compared with controls who were inactive or received an education intervention, with moderate-certainty evidence. The researchers also found low-certainty evidence in favor of yoga for improved balance and for a composite measure of physical function, and low-certainty evidence in favor of yoga for improved handgrip strength.
The findings were limited by several factors, mainly the heterogenous study designs, populations, and yoga styles, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the small sample sizes, variation in descriptions of the studies’ randomizations, and a lack of data on race and ethnicity of the participants.
Yoga’s role in healthy aging
“Overall, we were not surprised by the results since we have seen similar findings from other mind-body practices such as tai chi,” Dr. Loewenthal said in an interview. “We were surprised by the degree of improvement many of the participants had with gait speed.
“Yoga practices usually include a mix of poses in the standing, seated, and lying-down positions,” Dr. Loewenthal said. Some of the studies in the review also involved chair-based methods with few standing poses, and some involved gentle or slow-paced practices. “We know that many of the practices helped with leg strength, and perhaps they are also helping with coordination between the brain and body for walking.”
The findings suggest that clinicians can view yoga practice in general as part of a strategy to support healthy aging, Dr. Loewenthal said. “While our work looked at frailty markers and not overall frailty, I think it would be reasonable to offer yoga as a strategy along with already-established interventions such as resistance training and the Mediterranean diet, and if older adults are already practicing yoga, this could help them understand how the practice is impacting the aging process.”
There are many styles of yoga that overlap and are related to one another, so it is hard to make recommendations about a single type, said Dr. Loewenthal. Many of the studies in the review involved Iyengar yoga, named for yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar, which focuses on precise alignment and breath and seems to be conducive for older populations. Iyengar yoga also involves use of props such as blocks, bolsters, straps, and chairs, which makes it well suited for older individuals who may have a chronic condition or other limitations.
“Some styles of yoga are very physical and may reach energy expenditure and cardiovascular effects similar to aerobic exercise, but this is generally not the case for most styles of yoga,” she added.
As for additional research, “I think it is important that trials use a validated definition of frailty as an outcome; all of the trials in our study used markers of frailty but did not look at overall frailty,” said Dr. Loewenthal. In addition, it is important to understand how yoga affects people who have different levels of frailty, since previous research shows that those who are the most frail benefit most from physical activity interventions.
Yoga as an entry point for physical activity
With the increasing population of older adults in the United States and around the world, frailty is a major health concern because its association with significant declines in health and potential loss of independence, Amanda Paluch, PhD, said in an interview.
“Therefore, it is important to identify programs that can prevent frailty to support longevity and living independently for older adults. Yoga can be a feasible solution to promote movement and prevent frailty,” said Dr. Paluch, of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, an assistant professor in the department of kinesiology and Institute for Applied Life Sciences.
“Other studies have demonstrated that light-intensity movement, as in yoga, may be particularly beneficial for older adults,” Dr. Paluch said. “Additionally, research has demonstrated that balance training activities are important to maintain physical function, prevent falls, and maintain their independence for older adults, so it makes sense that yoga was associated with lower likelihood of frailty.”
Although there may be additional benefits with higher intensity activity, “yoga could be a great place to start for older adults who are starting at low activity levels,” she said.
The takeaway for clinicians is to consider encouraging more physical activity for their patients to support healthy aging, including reducing the risk factors for frailty, said Dr. Paluch. “Particularly for older adults, physical activity may not need to be of high intensity for benefits. Activities such as yoga that focus on flexibility, balance, and movement at lower intensities can support healthy aging, and yoga may be a particularly good option for older adults who are least active.”
The study received no outside funding. The researchers and Dr. Paluch had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Buprenorphine proves effective for fentanyl users in the ED
based on data from nearly 900 individuals.
California EDs include a facilitation program known as CA Bridge for the treatment of opioid use disorder. Guidelines for CA Bridge call for high-dose buprenorphine to treat patients in drug withdrawal, with doses starting at 8-16 mg, Hannah Snyder, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, and colleagues wrote.
“Buprenorphine has been repeatedly shown to save lives and prevent overdoses,” Dr. Snyder said in an interview. “We know that emergency department–initiated buprenorphine is an essential tool for increasing access. In the era of fentanyl, both patients and providers have expressed concerns that buprenorphine may not work as well as it did when patients were more likely to be using heroin or opioid pills.
“This retrospective cohort study provides additional information about emergency department buprenorphine as fentanyl becomes increasingly prevalent.”
In a research letter published in JAMA Network Open, the investigators reviewed data from the electronic health records of 896 patients who presented with opioid use disorder (OUD) at 16 CA Bridge EDs between Jan. 1, 2020, and April 30, 2020. All patients with OUD were included regardless of chief concern, current treatment, treatment desires, or withdrawal. A total of 87 individuals reported fentanyl use; if no fentanyl use was reported, the patient was classified as not using fentanyl. The median age of the patients was 35 years, two thirds were male, approximately 46% were White and non-Hispanic, and 30% had unstable housing.
The primary outcome was follow-up engagement at 7-14 days and 25-37 days.
A total of 492 patients received buprenorphine, including 44 fentanyl users, and 439 initiated high doses of 8-32 mg. At a 30-day follow-up, eight patients had precipitated withdrawal, including two cases in fentanyl users; none of these cases required hospital admission.
The follow-up engagement was similar for both groups, with adjusted odds ratios of 0.60 for administered buprenorphine at the initial ED encounter, 1.09 for 7-day follow-up, and 1.33 for 30-day follow-up.
The findings were limited by the retrospective design and use of clinical documentation, which likely resulted in underreporting of fentanyl use and follow-up, the researchers noted. However, the results supported the effectiveness of buprenorphine for ED patients in withdrawal with a history of fentanyl exposure.
“We were pleased to see that precipitated withdrawal was relatively uncommon in this study, and that patients who did and did not use fentanyl followed up at similar rates,” said Dr. Snyder. “This aligns with our clinical experience and prior research showing that emergency department buprenorphine starts continue to be an essential tool.”
The message for clinicians: “If a patient presents to the emergency department in objective opioid withdrawal and desires buprenorphine, they should be offered treatment in that moment,” Dr. Snyder said. “Treatment protocols used by hospitals in this study are available online. Emergency departments can offer compassionate and evidence-based treatment initiation 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.”
More data needed on dosing strategies
“We need additional research to determine best practices for patients who use fentanyl and want to start buprenorphine, but are not yet in withdrawal,” Dr. Snyder said. “Doses of buprenorphine like those in this study are only appropriate for patients who are in withdrawal with objective signs, so some patients may struggle to wait long enough after their last use to go into sufficient withdrawal.”
Precipitated withdrawal does occur in some cases, said Dr. Snyder. “If it does, the emergency department is a very good place to manage it. We need additional research to determine best practices in management to make patients as comfortable as possible, including additional high-dose buprenorphine as well as additional adjunctive agents.”
Findings support buprenorphine
“The classic approach to buprenorphine initiation, which emerged from psychiatry outpatient office visits, is to start with very small doses of buprenorphine [2-4 mg] and titrate up slowly,” Reuben J. Strayer, MD, said in an interview.
“This dose range turns out to be the ‘sour spot’ most likely to cause the most important complication around buprenorphine initiation–precipitated withdrawal,” said Dr. Strayer, the director of addiction medicine in the emergency medicine department at Maimonides Medical Center, New York.
“One of the current focus areas of OUD treatment research is determining how to initiate buprenorphine without entailing a period of spontaneous withdrawal and without causing precipitated withdrawal,” Strayer explained. “The two primary strategies are low-dose buprenorphine initiation [LDBI, less than 2 mg, sometimes called microdosing] and high-dose [HDBI, ≥ 16 mg] buprenorphine initiation. HDBI is attractive because the primary treatment of buprenorphine-precipitated withdrawal is more buprenorphine.
“Additionally, using a high dose up front immediately transitions the patient to therapeutic blood levels, which protects the patient from withdrawal, cravings, and overdose from dangerous opioids (heroin, fentanyl, oxycodone).”
However, “the contamination and now replacement of heroin with fentanyl in the street drug supply has challenged buprenorphine initiation, because fentanyl, when used chronically, accumulates in the body and leaks into the bloodstream slowly over time, preventing the opioid washout that is required to eliminate the risk of precipitated withdrawal when buprenorphine is administered,” said Dr. Strayer.
The current study demonstrates that patients who are initiated with a first dose of 8-16 mg buprenorphine are unlikely to experience precipitated withdrawal and are successfully transitioned to buprenorphine maintenance and clinic follow-up, Dr. Snyder said, but he was surprised by the low rate of precipitated withdrawal in the current study, “which is discordant with what is being anecdotally reported across the country.”
However, the take-home message for clinicians is the support for the initiation of buprenorphine in emergency department settings at a starting dose of 8-16 mg, regardless of reported fentanyl use, he said. “Given the huge impact buprenorphine therapy has on OUD-related mortality, clinicians should make every effort to initiate buprenorphine for OUD patients at every opportunity, and precipitated withdrawal is very unlikely in appropriately selected patients.
“Many clinicians remain reluctant to initiate buprenorphine in ED settings for unfamiliarity with the drug, fear of precipitated withdrawal, or concerns around the certainty of outpatient follow-up,” Dr. Snyder said. “Education, encouragement, systems programming, such as including decision support within the electronic health record, and role-modeling from local champions will promote wider adoption of this lifesaving practice.”
Looking ahead, “more research, including prospective research, is needed to refine best practices around buprenorphine administration,” said Dr. Snyder. Questions to address include which patients are most at risk for precipitated withdrawal and whether there are alternatives to standard initiation dosing that are sufficiently unlikely to cause precipitated withdrawal. “Possibly effective alternatives include buprenorphine initiation by administration of long-acting injectable depot buprenorphine, which accumulates slowly, potentially avoiding precipitated withdrawal, as well as a slow intravenous buprenorphine infusion such as 9 mg given over 12 hours.”
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Snyder disclosed grants from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the California Department of Health Care Services during the study. Dr. Strayer reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
based on data from nearly 900 individuals.
California EDs include a facilitation program known as CA Bridge for the treatment of opioid use disorder. Guidelines for CA Bridge call for high-dose buprenorphine to treat patients in drug withdrawal, with doses starting at 8-16 mg, Hannah Snyder, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, and colleagues wrote.
“Buprenorphine has been repeatedly shown to save lives and prevent overdoses,” Dr. Snyder said in an interview. “We know that emergency department–initiated buprenorphine is an essential tool for increasing access. In the era of fentanyl, both patients and providers have expressed concerns that buprenorphine may not work as well as it did when patients were more likely to be using heroin or opioid pills.
“This retrospective cohort study provides additional information about emergency department buprenorphine as fentanyl becomes increasingly prevalent.”
In a research letter published in JAMA Network Open, the investigators reviewed data from the electronic health records of 896 patients who presented with opioid use disorder (OUD) at 16 CA Bridge EDs between Jan. 1, 2020, and April 30, 2020. All patients with OUD were included regardless of chief concern, current treatment, treatment desires, or withdrawal. A total of 87 individuals reported fentanyl use; if no fentanyl use was reported, the patient was classified as not using fentanyl. The median age of the patients was 35 years, two thirds were male, approximately 46% were White and non-Hispanic, and 30% had unstable housing.
The primary outcome was follow-up engagement at 7-14 days and 25-37 days.
A total of 492 patients received buprenorphine, including 44 fentanyl users, and 439 initiated high doses of 8-32 mg. At a 30-day follow-up, eight patients had precipitated withdrawal, including two cases in fentanyl users; none of these cases required hospital admission.
The follow-up engagement was similar for both groups, with adjusted odds ratios of 0.60 for administered buprenorphine at the initial ED encounter, 1.09 for 7-day follow-up, and 1.33 for 30-day follow-up.
The findings were limited by the retrospective design and use of clinical documentation, which likely resulted in underreporting of fentanyl use and follow-up, the researchers noted. However, the results supported the effectiveness of buprenorphine for ED patients in withdrawal with a history of fentanyl exposure.
“We were pleased to see that precipitated withdrawal was relatively uncommon in this study, and that patients who did and did not use fentanyl followed up at similar rates,” said Dr. Snyder. “This aligns with our clinical experience and prior research showing that emergency department buprenorphine starts continue to be an essential tool.”
The message for clinicians: “If a patient presents to the emergency department in objective opioid withdrawal and desires buprenorphine, they should be offered treatment in that moment,” Dr. Snyder said. “Treatment protocols used by hospitals in this study are available online. Emergency departments can offer compassionate and evidence-based treatment initiation 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.”
More data needed on dosing strategies
“We need additional research to determine best practices for patients who use fentanyl and want to start buprenorphine, but are not yet in withdrawal,” Dr. Snyder said. “Doses of buprenorphine like those in this study are only appropriate for patients who are in withdrawal with objective signs, so some patients may struggle to wait long enough after their last use to go into sufficient withdrawal.”
Precipitated withdrawal does occur in some cases, said Dr. Snyder. “If it does, the emergency department is a very good place to manage it. We need additional research to determine best practices in management to make patients as comfortable as possible, including additional high-dose buprenorphine as well as additional adjunctive agents.”
Findings support buprenorphine
“The classic approach to buprenorphine initiation, which emerged from psychiatry outpatient office visits, is to start with very small doses of buprenorphine [2-4 mg] and titrate up slowly,” Reuben J. Strayer, MD, said in an interview.
“This dose range turns out to be the ‘sour spot’ most likely to cause the most important complication around buprenorphine initiation–precipitated withdrawal,” said Dr. Strayer, the director of addiction medicine in the emergency medicine department at Maimonides Medical Center, New York.
“One of the current focus areas of OUD treatment research is determining how to initiate buprenorphine without entailing a period of spontaneous withdrawal and without causing precipitated withdrawal,” Strayer explained. “The two primary strategies are low-dose buprenorphine initiation [LDBI, less than 2 mg, sometimes called microdosing] and high-dose [HDBI, ≥ 16 mg] buprenorphine initiation. HDBI is attractive because the primary treatment of buprenorphine-precipitated withdrawal is more buprenorphine.
“Additionally, using a high dose up front immediately transitions the patient to therapeutic blood levels, which protects the patient from withdrawal, cravings, and overdose from dangerous opioids (heroin, fentanyl, oxycodone).”
However, “the contamination and now replacement of heroin with fentanyl in the street drug supply has challenged buprenorphine initiation, because fentanyl, when used chronically, accumulates in the body and leaks into the bloodstream slowly over time, preventing the opioid washout that is required to eliminate the risk of precipitated withdrawal when buprenorphine is administered,” said Dr. Strayer.
The current study demonstrates that patients who are initiated with a first dose of 8-16 mg buprenorphine are unlikely to experience precipitated withdrawal and are successfully transitioned to buprenorphine maintenance and clinic follow-up, Dr. Snyder said, but he was surprised by the low rate of precipitated withdrawal in the current study, “which is discordant with what is being anecdotally reported across the country.”
However, the take-home message for clinicians is the support for the initiation of buprenorphine in emergency department settings at a starting dose of 8-16 mg, regardless of reported fentanyl use, he said. “Given the huge impact buprenorphine therapy has on OUD-related mortality, clinicians should make every effort to initiate buprenorphine for OUD patients at every opportunity, and precipitated withdrawal is very unlikely in appropriately selected patients.
“Many clinicians remain reluctant to initiate buprenorphine in ED settings for unfamiliarity with the drug, fear of precipitated withdrawal, or concerns around the certainty of outpatient follow-up,” Dr. Snyder said. “Education, encouragement, systems programming, such as including decision support within the electronic health record, and role-modeling from local champions will promote wider adoption of this lifesaving practice.”
Looking ahead, “more research, including prospective research, is needed to refine best practices around buprenorphine administration,” said Dr. Snyder. Questions to address include which patients are most at risk for precipitated withdrawal and whether there are alternatives to standard initiation dosing that are sufficiently unlikely to cause precipitated withdrawal. “Possibly effective alternatives include buprenorphine initiation by administration of long-acting injectable depot buprenorphine, which accumulates slowly, potentially avoiding precipitated withdrawal, as well as a slow intravenous buprenorphine infusion such as 9 mg given over 12 hours.”
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Snyder disclosed grants from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the California Department of Health Care Services during the study. Dr. Strayer reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
based on data from nearly 900 individuals.
California EDs include a facilitation program known as CA Bridge for the treatment of opioid use disorder. Guidelines for CA Bridge call for high-dose buprenorphine to treat patients in drug withdrawal, with doses starting at 8-16 mg, Hannah Snyder, MD, of the University of California, San Francisco, and colleagues wrote.
“Buprenorphine has been repeatedly shown to save lives and prevent overdoses,” Dr. Snyder said in an interview. “We know that emergency department–initiated buprenorphine is an essential tool for increasing access. In the era of fentanyl, both patients and providers have expressed concerns that buprenorphine may not work as well as it did when patients were more likely to be using heroin or opioid pills.
“This retrospective cohort study provides additional information about emergency department buprenorphine as fentanyl becomes increasingly prevalent.”
In a research letter published in JAMA Network Open, the investigators reviewed data from the electronic health records of 896 patients who presented with opioid use disorder (OUD) at 16 CA Bridge EDs between Jan. 1, 2020, and April 30, 2020. All patients with OUD were included regardless of chief concern, current treatment, treatment desires, or withdrawal. A total of 87 individuals reported fentanyl use; if no fentanyl use was reported, the patient was classified as not using fentanyl. The median age of the patients was 35 years, two thirds were male, approximately 46% were White and non-Hispanic, and 30% had unstable housing.
The primary outcome was follow-up engagement at 7-14 days and 25-37 days.
A total of 492 patients received buprenorphine, including 44 fentanyl users, and 439 initiated high doses of 8-32 mg. At a 30-day follow-up, eight patients had precipitated withdrawal, including two cases in fentanyl users; none of these cases required hospital admission.
The follow-up engagement was similar for both groups, with adjusted odds ratios of 0.60 for administered buprenorphine at the initial ED encounter, 1.09 for 7-day follow-up, and 1.33 for 30-day follow-up.
The findings were limited by the retrospective design and use of clinical documentation, which likely resulted in underreporting of fentanyl use and follow-up, the researchers noted. However, the results supported the effectiveness of buprenorphine for ED patients in withdrawal with a history of fentanyl exposure.
“We were pleased to see that precipitated withdrawal was relatively uncommon in this study, and that patients who did and did not use fentanyl followed up at similar rates,” said Dr. Snyder. “This aligns with our clinical experience and prior research showing that emergency department buprenorphine starts continue to be an essential tool.”
The message for clinicians: “If a patient presents to the emergency department in objective opioid withdrawal and desires buprenorphine, they should be offered treatment in that moment,” Dr. Snyder said. “Treatment protocols used by hospitals in this study are available online. Emergency departments can offer compassionate and evidence-based treatment initiation 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.”
More data needed on dosing strategies
“We need additional research to determine best practices for patients who use fentanyl and want to start buprenorphine, but are not yet in withdrawal,” Dr. Snyder said. “Doses of buprenorphine like those in this study are only appropriate for patients who are in withdrawal with objective signs, so some patients may struggle to wait long enough after their last use to go into sufficient withdrawal.”
Precipitated withdrawal does occur in some cases, said Dr. Snyder. “If it does, the emergency department is a very good place to manage it. We need additional research to determine best practices in management to make patients as comfortable as possible, including additional high-dose buprenorphine as well as additional adjunctive agents.”
Findings support buprenorphine
“The classic approach to buprenorphine initiation, which emerged from psychiatry outpatient office visits, is to start with very small doses of buprenorphine [2-4 mg] and titrate up slowly,” Reuben J. Strayer, MD, said in an interview.
“This dose range turns out to be the ‘sour spot’ most likely to cause the most important complication around buprenorphine initiation–precipitated withdrawal,” said Dr. Strayer, the director of addiction medicine in the emergency medicine department at Maimonides Medical Center, New York.
“One of the current focus areas of OUD treatment research is determining how to initiate buprenorphine without entailing a period of spontaneous withdrawal and without causing precipitated withdrawal,” Strayer explained. “The two primary strategies are low-dose buprenorphine initiation [LDBI, less than 2 mg, sometimes called microdosing] and high-dose [HDBI, ≥ 16 mg] buprenorphine initiation. HDBI is attractive because the primary treatment of buprenorphine-precipitated withdrawal is more buprenorphine.
“Additionally, using a high dose up front immediately transitions the patient to therapeutic blood levels, which protects the patient from withdrawal, cravings, and overdose from dangerous opioids (heroin, fentanyl, oxycodone).”
However, “the contamination and now replacement of heroin with fentanyl in the street drug supply has challenged buprenorphine initiation, because fentanyl, when used chronically, accumulates in the body and leaks into the bloodstream slowly over time, preventing the opioid washout that is required to eliminate the risk of precipitated withdrawal when buprenorphine is administered,” said Dr. Strayer.
The current study demonstrates that patients who are initiated with a first dose of 8-16 mg buprenorphine are unlikely to experience precipitated withdrawal and are successfully transitioned to buprenorphine maintenance and clinic follow-up, Dr. Snyder said, but he was surprised by the low rate of precipitated withdrawal in the current study, “which is discordant with what is being anecdotally reported across the country.”
However, the take-home message for clinicians is the support for the initiation of buprenorphine in emergency department settings at a starting dose of 8-16 mg, regardless of reported fentanyl use, he said. “Given the huge impact buprenorphine therapy has on OUD-related mortality, clinicians should make every effort to initiate buprenorphine for OUD patients at every opportunity, and precipitated withdrawal is very unlikely in appropriately selected patients.
“Many clinicians remain reluctant to initiate buprenorphine in ED settings for unfamiliarity with the drug, fear of precipitated withdrawal, or concerns around the certainty of outpatient follow-up,” Dr. Snyder said. “Education, encouragement, systems programming, such as including decision support within the electronic health record, and role-modeling from local champions will promote wider adoption of this lifesaving practice.”
Looking ahead, “more research, including prospective research, is needed to refine best practices around buprenorphine administration,” said Dr. Snyder. Questions to address include which patients are most at risk for precipitated withdrawal and whether there are alternatives to standard initiation dosing that are sufficiently unlikely to cause precipitated withdrawal. “Possibly effective alternatives include buprenorphine initiation by administration of long-acting injectable depot buprenorphine, which accumulates slowly, potentially avoiding precipitated withdrawal, as well as a slow intravenous buprenorphine infusion such as 9 mg given over 12 hours.”
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Snyder disclosed grants from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the California Department of Health Care Services during the study. Dr. Strayer reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN
In utero exposure to asthma medication not tied to risks of neurodevelopmental disorders
The drugs included in the study were leukotriene-receptor antagonists (LTRAs), which are often used to treat allergic airway diseases, including asthma and allergic rhinitis.
“Over the years, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has monitored post-marketing data about the potential harm of neuropsychiatric events (NEs) associated with montelukast, the first type of LTRAs, and issued boxed warnings about serious mental health side effects for montelukast in 2020,” said corresponding author Tsung-Chieh Yao, MD, of Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taiwan, in an interview.
However, evidence of a link between NEs and LTRA use has been inconsistent, according to Dr. Yao and colleagues.
“To date, it remains totally unknown whether the exposure to LTRAs during pregnancy is associated with the risk of neuropsychiatric events in offspring,” said Dr. Yao.
To address this question, the researchers used data from National Health Insurance Research Database in Taiwan to identify pregnant women and their offspring from 2009 to 2019. The initial study population included 576,157 mother-offspring pairs, including 1,995 LTRA-exposed and 574,162 nonexposed children.
The women had a diagnosis of asthma or allergic rhinitis; multiple births and children with congenital malformations were excluded. LTRA exposure was defined as any dispensed prescription for LTRAs during pregnancy. Approximately two-thirds of the mothers were aged 30-40 years at the time of delivery.
The findings were published in a research letter in JAMA Network Open.
In the study population at large, the incidence of the three neurodevelopmental disorders ADHD, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and Tourette syndrome was not significantly different between those children exposed to LTRAs and those not exposed to LTRAs in utero (1.25% vs. 1.32%; 3.31% vs. 4.36%; and 0.45% vs. 0.83%, respectively).
After propensity score matching, the study population included 1,988 LTRA-exposed children and 19,863 nonexposed children. In this group, no significant associations appeared between prenatal LTRA exposure and the risk of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.03), autism spectrum disorder (AHR, 1.01), and Tourette syndrome (AHR, 0.63).
Neither duration nor cumulative dose of LTRA use during pregnancy showed an association with ADHD, ASD, or Tourette syndrome in offspring. Duration of LTRA use was categorized as shorter or longer periods of 1-4 weeks vs. more than 4 weeks; cumulative dose was categorized as 1-170 mg vs. 170 mg or higher.
The findings were limited by the lack of randomization, inability to detect long-term risk, and potential lack of generalizability to non-Asian populations, and more research is needed to replicate the results, the researchers noted. However, the current findings were strengthened by the large study population, and suggest that LTRA use in pregnancy does not present a significant risk for NEs in children, which should be reassuring to clinicians and patients, they concluded.
The current study is the first to use the whole of Taiwan population data and extends previous studies by examining the association between LTRA use during pregnancy and risk of neuropsychiatric events in offspring, Dr. Yao said in an interview. “The possibly surprising, but reassuring, finding is that prenatal LTRA exposure did not increase risk of ADHD, ASD, and Tourette syndrome in offspring,” he said.
“Clinicians prescribing LTRAs such as montelukast (Singulair and generics) to pregnant women with asthma or allergic rhinitis may be reassured by our findings,” Dr. Yao added. The results offer real-world evidence to help inform decision-making about the use of LTRAs during pregnancy, although additional research is needed to replicate the study findings in other populations, he said.
The study was supported by the National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan, the Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan, the National Science and Technology Council of Taiwan, and the Chang Gung Medical Foundation. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
The drugs included in the study were leukotriene-receptor antagonists (LTRAs), which are often used to treat allergic airway diseases, including asthma and allergic rhinitis.
“Over the years, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has monitored post-marketing data about the potential harm of neuropsychiatric events (NEs) associated with montelukast, the first type of LTRAs, and issued boxed warnings about serious mental health side effects for montelukast in 2020,” said corresponding author Tsung-Chieh Yao, MD, of Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taiwan, in an interview.
However, evidence of a link between NEs and LTRA use has been inconsistent, according to Dr. Yao and colleagues.
“To date, it remains totally unknown whether the exposure to LTRAs during pregnancy is associated with the risk of neuropsychiatric events in offspring,” said Dr. Yao.
To address this question, the researchers used data from National Health Insurance Research Database in Taiwan to identify pregnant women and their offspring from 2009 to 2019. The initial study population included 576,157 mother-offspring pairs, including 1,995 LTRA-exposed and 574,162 nonexposed children.
The women had a diagnosis of asthma or allergic rhinitis; multiple births and children with congenital malformations were excluded. LTRA exposure was defined as any dispensed prescription for LTRAs during pregnancy. Approximately two-thirds of the mothers were aged 30-40 years at the time of delivery.
The findings were published in a research letter in JAMA Network Open.
In the study population at large, the incidence of the three neurodevelopmental disorders ADHD, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and Tourette syndrome was not significantly different between those children exposed to LTRAs and those not exposed to LTRAs in utero (1.25% vs. 1.32%; 3.31% vs. 4.36%; and 0.45% vs. 0.83%, respectively).
After propensity score matching, the study population included 1,988 LTRA-exposed children and 19,863 nonexposed children. In this group, no significant associations appeared between prenatal LTRA exposure and the risk of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.03), autism spectrum disorder (AHR, 1.01), and Tourette syndrome (AHR, 0.63).
Neither duration nor cumulative dose of LTRA use during pregnancy showed an association with ADHD, ASD, or Tourette syndrome in offspring. Duration of LTRA use was categorized as shorter or longer periods of 1-4 weeks vs. more than 4 weeks; cumulative dose was categorized as 1-170 mg vs. 170 mg or higher.
The findings were limited by the lack of randomization, inability to detect long-term risk, and potential lack of generalizability to non-Asian populations, and more research is needed to replicate the results, the researchers noted. However, the current findings were strengthened by the large study population, and suggest that LTRA use in pregnancy does not present a significant risk for NEs in children, which should be reassuring to clinicians and patients, they concluded.
The current study is the first to use the whole of Taiwan population data and extends previous studies by examining the association between LTRA use during pregnancy and risk of neuropsychiatric events in offspring, Dr. Yao said in an interview. “The possibly surprising, but reassuring, finding is that prenatal LTRA exposure did not increase risk of ADHD, ASD, and Tourette syndrome in offspring,” he said.
“Clinicians prescribing LTRAs such as montelukast (Singulair and generics) to pregnant women with asthma or allergic rhinitis may be reassured by our findings,” Dr. Yao added. The results offer real-world evidence to help inform decision-making about the use of LTRAs during pregnancy, although additional research is needed to replicate the study findings in other populations, he said.
The study was supported by the National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan, the Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan, the National Science and Technology Council of Taiwan, and the Chang Gung Medical Foundation. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
The drugs included in the study were leukotriene-receptor antagonists (LTRAs), which are often used to treat allergic airway diseases, including asthma and allergic rhinitis.
“Over the years, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has monitored post-marketing data about the potential harm of neuropsychiatric events (NEs) associated with montelukast, the first type of LTRAs, and issued boxed warnings about serious mental health side effects for montelukast in 2020,” said corresponding author Tsung-Chieh Yao, MD, of Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taiwan, in an interview.
However, evidence of a link between NEs and LTRA use has been inconsistent, according to Dr. Yao and colleagues.
“To date, it remains totally unknown whether the exposure to LTRAs during pregnancy is associated with the risk of neuropsychiatric events in offspring,” said Dr. Yao.
To address this question, the researchers used data from National Health Insurance Research Database in Taiwan to identify pregnant women and their offspring from 2009 to 2019. The initial study population included 576,157 mother-offspring pairs, including 1,995 LTRA-exposed and 574,162 nonexposed children.
The women had a diagnosis of asthma or allergic rhinitis; multiple births and children with congenital malformations were excluded. LTRA exposure was defined as any dispensed prescription for LTRAs during pregnancy. Approximately two-thirds of the mothers were aged 30-40 years at the time of delivery.
The findings were published in a research letter in JAMA Network Open.
In the study population at large, the incidence of the three neurodevelopmental disorders ADHD, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and Tourette syndrome was not significantly different between those children exposed to LTRAs and those not exposed to LTRAs in utero (1.25% vs. 1.32%; 3.31% vs. 4.36%; and 0.45% vs. 0.83%, respectively).
After propensity score matching, the study population included 1,988 LTRA-exposed children and 19,863 nonexposed children. In this group, no significant associations appeared between prenatal LTRA exposure and the risk of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.03), autism spectrum disorder (AHR, 1.01), and Tourette syndrome (AHR, 0.63).
Neither duration nor cumulative dose of LTRA use during pregnancy showed an association with ADHD, ASD, or Tourette syndrome in offspring. Duration of LTRA use was categorized as shorter or longer periods of 1-4 weeks vs. more than 4 weeks; cumulative dose was categorized as 1-170 mg vs. 170 mg or higher.
The findings were limited by the lack of randomization, inability to detect long-term risk, and potential lack of generalizability to non-Asian populations, and more research is needed to replicate the results, the researchers noted. However, the current findings were strengthened by the large study population, and suggest that LTRA use in pregnancy does not present a significant risk for NEs in children, which should be reassuring to clinicians and patients, they concluded.
The current study is the first to use the whole of Taiwan population data and extends previous studies by examining the association between LTRA use during pregnancy and risk of neuropsychiatric events in offspring, Dr. Yao said in an interview. “The possibly surprising, but reassuring, finding is that prenatal LTRA exposure did not increase risk of ADHD, ASD, and Tourette syndrome in offspring,” he said.
“Clinicians prescribing LTRAs such as montelukast (Singulair and generics) to pregnant women with asthma or allergic rhinitis may be reassured by our findings,” Dr. Yao added. The results offer real-world evidence to help inform decision-making about the use of LTRAs during pregnancy, although additional research is needed to replicate the study findings in other populations, he said.
The study was supported by the National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan, the Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan, the National Science and Technology Council of Taiwan, and the Chang Gung Medical Foundation. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN
Cognitive remediation training reduces aggression in schizophrenia
Aggressive behavior, including verbal or physical threats or violent acts, is at least four times more likely among individuals with schizophrenia, compared with the general population, wrote Anzalee Khan, PhD, of the Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Orangeburg, N.Y., and colleagues. Recent studies suggest that psychosocial treatments such as cognitive remediation training (CRT) or social cognition training (SCT) may be helpful, but the potential benefit of combining these strategies has not been explored, they said.
In a study published in Schizophrenia Research , the authors randomized 62 adults with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder to 36 sessions of a combination treatment with cognitive remediation and social cognition; 68 were randomized to cognitive remediation and computer-based control treatment. Participants also had at least one confirmed assault in the past year, or scores of 5 or higher on the Life History of Aggression scale. Complete data were analyzed for 45 patients in the CRT/SRT group and 34 in the CRT control group.
The primary outcome was the measure of aggression using the Modified Overt Aggression Scale (OAS-M) in which higher scores indicate higher levels of aggression. Incidents of aggression were coded based on hospital staff reports and summarized weekly. The mean age of the participants was 34.9 years (ranging from 18 to 60 years), 85% were male, and the mean years of education was 11.5.
At the study’s end (14 weeks), participants in both groups showed significant reductions in measures of aggression from baseline, with the largest effect size for the total global OAS-M score (effect size 1.11 for CRT plus SCT and 0.73 for the CRT plus control group).
The results failed to confirm the hypothesis that the combination of CRT and SCT would significantly increase improvements in aggression compared with CRT alone, the researchers wrote in their discussion. Potential reasons include underdosed SCT intervention (only 12 sessions) and the nature of the SCT used in the study, which had few aggressive social interaction models and more models related to social engagement.
Although adding SCT did not have a significant impact on aggression, patients in the CRT plus SCT group showed greater improvement in cognitive function, emotion recognition, and mentalizing, compared with the controls without SCT, the researchers noted.
“While these findings are not surprising given that participants in the CRT plus SCT group received active social cognition training, they do support the idea that social cognition training may have contributed to further strengthen our effect on cognition,” they wrote.
The findings were limited by several factors including the study population of individuals with chronic schizophrenia and low levels of function in long-term tertiary care, which may limit generalizability, and the inability to control for the effects of pharmacotherapy, the researchers said.
However, the results were strengthened by the multidimensional assessments at both time points and the use of two cognitive and social cognition interventions, and suggest that adding social cognitive training enhanced the effect of CRT on cognitive function, emotion regulation, and mentalizing capacity, they said.
“Future studies are needed to examine the antiaggressive effects of a more intensive and more targeted social cognition intervention combined with CRT,” they concluded.
The study was supported by the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation and the Weill Cornell Clinical and Translational Science Award Program, National Institutes of Health/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Aggressive behavior, including verbal or physical threats or violent acts, is at least four times more likely among individuals with schizophrenia, compared with the general population, wrote Anzalee Khan, PhD, of the Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Orangeburg, N.Y., and colleagues. Recent studies suggest that psychosocial treatments such as cognitive remediation training (CRT) or social cognition training (SCT) may be helpful, but the potential benefit of combining these strategies has not been explored, they said.
In a study published in Schizophrenia Research , the authors randomized 62 adults with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder to 36 sessions of a combination treatment with cognitive remediation and social cognition; 68 were randomized to cognitive remediation and computer-based control treatment. Participants also had at least one confirmed assault in the past year, or scores of 5 or higher on the Life History of Aggression scale. Complete data were analyzed for 45 patients in the CRT/SRT group and 34 in the CRT control group.
The primary outcome was the measure of aggression using the Modified Overt Aggression Scale (OAS-M) in which higher scores indicate higher levels of aggression. Incidents of aggression were coded based on hospital staff reports and summarized weekly. The mean age of the participants was 34.9 years (ranging from 18 to 60 years), 85% were male, and the mean years of education was 11.5.
At the study’s end (14 weeks), participants in both groups showed significant reductions in measures of aggression from baseline, with the largest effect size for the total global OAS-M score (effect size 1.11 for CRT plus SCT and 0.73 for the CRT plus control group).
The results failed to confirm the hypothesis that the combination of CRT and SCT would significantly increase improvements in aggression compared with CRT alone, the researchers wrote in their discussion. Potential reasons include underdosed SCT intervention (only 12 sessions) and the nature of the SCT used in the study, which had few aggressive social interaction models and more models related to social engagement.
Although adding SCT did not have a significant impact on aggression, patients in the CRT plus SCT group showed greater improvement in cognitive function, emotion recognition, and mentalizing, compared with the controls without SCT, the researchers noted.
“While these findings are not surprising given that participants in the CRT plus SCT group received active social cognition training, they do support the idea that social cognition training may have contributed to further strengthen our effect on cognition,” they wrote.
The findings were limited by several factors including the study population of individuals with chronic schizophrenia and low levels of function in long-term tertiary care, which may limit generalizability, and the inability to control for the effects of pharmacotherapy, the researchers said.
However, the results were strengthened by the multidimensional assessments at both time points and the use of two cognitive and social cognition interventions, and suggest that adding social cognitive training enhanced the effect of CRT on cognitive function, emotion regulation, and mentalizing capacity, they said.
“Future studies are needed to examine the antiaggressive effects of a more intensive and more targeted social cognition intervention combined with CRT,” they concluded.
The study was supported by the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation and the Weill Cornell Clinical and Translational Science Award Program, National Institutes of Health/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Aggressive behavior, including verbal or physical threats or violent acts, is at least four times more likely among individuals with schizophrenia, compared with the general population, wrote Anzalee Khan, PhD, of the Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Orangeburg, N.Y., and colleagues. Recent studies suggest that psychosocial treatments such as cognitive remediation training (CRT) or social cognition training (SCT) may be helpful, but the potential benefit of combining these strategies has not been explored, they said.
In a study published in Schizophrenia Research , the authors randomized 62 adults with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder to 36 sessions of a combination treatment with cognitive remediation and social cognition; 68 were randomized to cognitive remediation and computer-based control treatment. Participants also had at least one confirmed assault in the past year, or scores of 5 or higher on the Life History of Aggression scale. Complete data were analyzed for 45 patients in the CRT/SRT group and 34 in the CRT control group.
The primary outcome was the measure of aggression using the Modified Overt Aggression Scale (OAS-M) in which higher scores indicate higher levels of aggression. Incidents of aggression were coded based on hospital staff reports and summarized weekly. The mean age of the participants was 34.9 years (ranging from 18 to 60 years), 85% were male, and the mean years of education was 11.5.
At the study’s end (14 weeks), participants in both groups showed significant reductions in measures of aggression from baseline, with the largest effect size for the total global OAS-M score (effect size 1.11 for CRT plus SCT and 0.73 for the CRT plus control group).
The results failed to confirm the hypothesis that the combination of CRT and SCT would significantly increase improvements in aggression compared with CRT alone, the researchers wrote in their discussion. Potential reasons include underdosed SCT intervention (only 12 sessions) and the nature of the SCT used in the study, which had few aggressive social interaction models and more models related to social engagement.
Although adding SCT did not have a significant impact on aggression, patients in the CRT plus SCT group showed greater improvement in cognitive function, emotion recognition, and mentalizing, compared with the controls without SCT, the researchers noted.
“While these findings are not surprising given that participants in the CRT plus SCT group received active social cognition training, they do support the idea that social cognition training may have contributed to further strengthen our effect on cognition,” they wrote.
The findings were limited by several factors including the study population of individuals with chronic schizophrenia and low levels of function in long-term tertiary care, which may limit generalizability, and the inability to control for the effects of pharmacotherapy, the researchers said.
However, the results were strengthened by the multidimensional assessments at both time points and the use of two cognitive and social cognition interventions, and suggest that adding social cognitive training enhanced the effect of CRT on cognitive function, emotion regulation, and mentalizing capacity, they said.
“Future studies are needed to examine the antiaggressive effects of a more intensive and more targeted social cognition intervention combined with CRT,” they concluded.
The study was supported by the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation and the Weill Cornell Clinical and Translational Science Award Program, National Institutes of Health/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
FDA to review dupilumab for treating chronic spontaneous urticaria
The
that is inadequately controlled by current standard of care.CSU is an inflammatory skin condition that causes sudden hives and angioedema, most often on the face, hands, and feet. However, the throat and upper airways also can be affected. CSU is generally treated with H1 antihistamines, but this strategy is insufficient for approximately 50% of patients, according to a press release from the manufacturer, Regeneron, announcing the FDA acceptance of the application on March 7.
Dupilumab (Dupixent), first approved in 2017 for treating atopic dermatitis in adults, is a fully human monoclonal antibody that inhibits the signaling of the interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-13 pathways.
The application for FDA approval for CSU is based on data from a pair of phase 3 trials in two different populations, LIBERTY-CUPID A and B.
The first study (LIBERTY-CUPID A) randomized 138 CSU patients aged 6 years and older who were uncontrolled on antihistamines to additional treatment with dupilumab or placebo over 24 weeks. The dupilumab-treated patients showed a 63% reduction in itch severity compared with a 35% reduction in patients who received the placebo, measured by changes in a 0-21 itch severity scale, according to data presented at the 2022 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (AAAAI) meeting.
Patients in the dupilumab group also showed a 65% reduction in the severity of urticaria activity (itch and hives) compared with 37% of those on placebo. Overall rates of adverse events were similar between groups; the most common were injection site reactions, according to the company.
The second study (LIBERTY-CUPID B) assessed efficacy and safety of dupilumab in 108 patients with CSU aged 12-80 years who were symptomatic despite standard-of-care treatment and were intolerant or incomplete responders to the anti-IgE antibody omalizumab (Xolair), approved for CSU. Last year, the company announced that this study had been halted after an interim analysis found that while there were positive numerical trends in reducing itch and hives, they “did not meet statistical significance.” In the March 7 press release, the company said that results from this study provide “additional supporting data” for the approval application.
The target date for the FDA’s decision is Oct. 22, 2023, according to Regeneron. Regeneron and Sanofi also are investigating dupilumab for treating chronic inducible urticaria triggered by cold in a phase 3 study.
The
that is inadequately controlled by current standard of care.CSU is an inflammatory skin condition that causes sudden hives and angioedema, most often on the face, hands, and feet. However, the throat and upper airways also can be affected. CSU is generally treated with H1 antihistamines, but this strategy is insufficient for approximately 50% of patients, according to a press release from the manufacturer, Regeneron, announcing the FDA acceptance of the application on March 7.
Dupilumab (Dupixent), first approved in 2017 for treating atopic dermatitis in adults, is a fully human monoclonal antibody that inhibits the signaling of the interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-13 pathways.
The application for FDA approval for CSU is based on data from a pair of phase 3 trials in two different populations, LIBERTY-CUPID A and B.
The first study (LIBERTY-CUPID A) randomized 138 CSU patients aged 6 years and older who were uncontrolled on antihistamines to additional treatment with dupilumab or placebo over 24 weeks. The dupilumab-treated patients showed a 63% reduction in itch severity compared with a 35% reduction in patients who received the placebo, measured by changes in a 0-21 itch severity scale, according to data presented at the 2022 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (AAAAI) meeting.
Patients in the dupilumab group also showed a 65% reduction in the severity of urticaria activity (itch and hives) compared with 37% of those on placebo. Overall rates of adverse events were similar between groups; the most common were injection site reactions, according to the company.
The second study (LIBERTY-CUPID B) assessed efficacy and safety of dupilumab in 108 patients with CSU aged 12-80 years who were symptomatic despite standard-of-care treatment and were intolerant or incomplete responders to the anti-IgE antibody omalizumab (Xolair), approved for CSU. Last year, the company announced that this study had been halted after an interim analysis found that while there were positive numerical trends in reducing itch and hives, they “did not meet statistical significance.” In the March 7 press release, the company said that results from this study provide “additional supporting data” for the approval application.
The target date for the FDA’s decision is Oct. 22, 2023, according to Regeneron. Regeneron and Sanofi also are investigating dupilumab for treating chronic inducible urticaria triggered by cold in a phase 3 study.
The
that is inadequately controlled by current standard of care.CSU is an inflammatory skin condition that causes sudden hives and angioedema, most often on the face, hands, and feet. However, the throat and upper airways also can be affected. CSU is generally treated with H1 antihistamines, but this strategy is insufficient for approximately 50% of patients, according to a press release from the manufacturer, Regeneron, announcing the FDA acceptance of the application on March 7.
Dupilumab (Dupixent), first approved in 2017 for treating atopic dermatitis in adults, is a fully human monoclonal antibody that inhibits the signaling of the interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-13 pathways.
The application for FDA approval for CSU is based on data from a pair of phase 3 trials in two different populations, LIBERTY-CUPID A and B.
The first study (LIBERTY-CUPID A) randomized 138 CSU patients aged 6 years and older who were uncontrolled on antihistamines to additional treatment with dupilumab or placebo over 24 weeks. The dupilumab-treated patients showed a 63% reduction in itch severity compared with a 35% reduction in patients who received the placebo, measured by changes in a 0-21 itch severity scale, according to data presented at the 2022 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (AAAAI) meeting.
Patients in the dupilumab group also showed a 65% reduction in the severity of urticaria activity (itch and hives) compared with 37% of those on placebo. Overall rates of adverse events were similar between groups; the most common were injection site reactions, according to the company.
The second study (LIBERTY-CUPID B) assessed efficacy and safety of dupilumab in 108 patients with CSU aged 12-80 years who were symptomatic despite standard-of-care treatment and were intolerant or incomplete responders to the anti-IgE antibody omalizumab (Xolair), approved for CSU. Last year, the company announced that this study had been halted after an interim analysis found that while there were positive numerical trends in reducing itch and hives, they “did not meet statistical significance.” In the March 7 press release, the company said that results from this study provide “additional supporting data” for the approval application.
The target date for the FDA’s decision is Oct. 22, 2023, according to Regeneron. Regeneron and Sanofi also are investigating dupilumab for treating chronic inducible urticaria triggered by cold in a phase 3 study.
Heart-healthy actions promote longer, disease-free life
Adults who follow a heart-healthy lifestyle are more likely to live longer and to be free of chronic health conditions, based on data from a pair of related studies from the United States and United Kingdom involving nearly 200,000 individuals.
The studies, presented at the Epidemiology and Prevention/Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health meeting in Boston, assessed the impact of cardiovascular health on life expectancy and freedom from chronic diseases. Cardiovascular health (CVH) was based on the Life’s Essential 8 (LE8) score, a composite of health metrics released by the American Heart Association in 2022. The LE8 was developed to guide research and assessment of cardiovascular health, and includes diet, physical activity, tobacco/nicotine exposure, sleep, body mass index, non-HDL cholesterol, blood glucose, and blood pressure.
In one study, Xuan Wang, MD, a postdoctoral fellow and biostatistician in the department of epidemiology at Tulane University, New Orleans, and colleagues reviewed data from 136,599 adults in the United Kingdom Biobank who were free of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, and dementia at baseline, and for whom complete LE8 data were available.
CVH was classified as poor, intermediate, and ideal, defined as LE8 scores of less than 50, 50 to 80, and 80 or higher, respectively.
The goal of the study was to examine the role of CVH based on LE8 scores on the percentage of life expectancy free of chronic diseases.
Men and women with ideal CVH averaged 5.2 years and 6.3 years more of total life expectancy at age 50 years, compared with those with poor CVH. Out of total life expectancy, the percentage of life expectancy free of chronic diseases was 75.9% and 83.4% for men and women, respectively, compared with 64.9% and 69.4%, respectively, for men and women with poor CVH.
The researchers also found that disparities in the percentage of disease-free years for both men and women were reduced in the high CVH groups.
The findings were limited by several factors including the use of only CVD, diabetes, cancer, and dementia in the definition of “disease-free life expectancy,” the researchers noted in a press release accompanying the study. Other limitations include the lack of data on e-cigarettes, and the homogeneous White study population. More research is needed in diverse populations who experience a stronger impact from negative social determinants of health, they said.
In a second study, Hao Ma, MD, and colleagues reviewed data from 23,003 adults who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between 2005 and 2018 with mortality linked to the National Death Index through Dec. 31, 2019. The goal of the second study was to examine the association between CVH based on LE8 scores and life expectancy.
Over a median follow-up of 7.8 years, deaths occurred in 772 men and 587 women, said Dr. Ma, a postdoctoral fellow and biostatistician in epidemiology at Tulane University and coauthor on Dr. Wang’s study.
The estimated life expectancies at age 50 years for men with poor, intermediate, and ideal cardiovascular health based on the LE8 were 25.5 years, 31.2 years, and 33.1 years, respectively.
For women, the corresponding life expectancies for women at age 50 with poor, intermediate, and ideal CVH were 29.5 years, 34.2 years, and 38.4 years, respectively.
Men and women had similar gains in life expectancy from adhering to a heart-healthy lifestyle as defined by the LE8 score that reduced their risk of death from cardiovascular disease (41.8% and 44.1%, respectively).
Associations of cardiovascular health and life expectancy were similar for non-Hispanic Whites and non-Hispanic Blacks, but not among people of Mexican heritage, and more research is needed in diverse populations, the researchers wrote.
The study was limited by several factors including potential changes in cardiovascular health during the follow-up period, and by the limited analysis of racial and ethnic groups to non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic Black, and people of Mexican heritage because of small sample sizes for other racial/ethnic groups, the researchers noted in a press release accompanying the study.
The message for clinicians and their patients is that adherence to cardiovascular health as defined by the LE8 will help not only extend life, but enhance quality of life, Dr. Xang and Dr. Ma said in an interview. “If your overall CVH score is low, we might be able to focus on one element first and improve them one by one,” they said. Sedentary lifestyle and an unhealthy diet are barriers to improving LE8 metrics that can be addressed, they added.
More research is needed to examine the effects of LE8 on high-risk patients, the researchers told this news organization. “No studies have yet focused on these patients with chronic diseases. We suspect that LE8 will play a role even in these high-risk groups,” they said. Further studies should include diverse populations and evaluations of the association between CVH change and health outcomes, they added.
“Overall, we see this 7.5-year difference [in life expectancy] going from poor to high cardiovascular health,” said Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, in a video accompanying the presentation of the study findings. The impact on life expectancy is yet another reason to motivate people to improve their cardiovascular health, said Dr. Lloyd-Jones, immediate past president of the American Heart Association and lead author on the writing group for Life’s Essential 8. “The earlier we do this, the better, and the greater the gains in life expectancy we’re likely to see in the U.S. population,” he said.
People maintaining high cardiovascular health into midlife are avoiding not only cardiovascular disease, but other chronic diseases of aging, Dr. Lloyd-Jones added. These conditions are delayed until much later in the lifespan, which allows people to enjoy better quality of life for more of their remaining years, he said.
The meeting was sponsored by the American Heart Association.
Both studies were supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health; the Fogarty International Center; and the Tulane Research Centers of Excellence Awards. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Adults who follow a heart-healthy lifestyle are more likely to live longer and to be free of chronic health conditions, based on data from a pair of related studies from the United States and United Kingdom involving nearly 200,000 individuals.
The studies, presented at the Epidemiology and Prevention/Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health meeting in Boston, assessed the impact of cardiovascular health on life expectancy and freedom from chronic diseases. Cardiovascular health (CVH) was based on the Life’s Essential 8 (LE8) score, a composite of health metrics released by the American Heart Association in 2022. The LE8 was developed to guide research and assessment of cardiovascular health, and includes diet, physical activity, tobacco/nicotine exposure, sleep, body mass index, non-HDL cholesterol, blood glucose, and blood pressure.
In one study, Xuan Wang, MD, a postdoctoral fellow and biostatistician in the department of epidemiology at Tulane University, New Orleans, and colleagues reviewed data from 136,599 adults in the United Kingdom Biobank who were free of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, and dementia at baseline, and for whom complete LE8 data were available.
CVH was classified as poor, intermediate, and ideal, defined as LE8 scores of less than 50, 50 to 80, and 80 or higher, respectively.
The goal of the study was to examine the role of CVH based on LE8 scores on the percentage of life expectancy free of chronic diseases.
Men and women with ideal CVH averaged 5.2 years and 6.3 years more of total life expectancy at age 50 years, compared with those with poor CVH. Out of total life expectancy, the percentage of life expectancy free of chronic diseases was 75.9% and 83.4% for men and women, respectively, compared with 64.9% and 69.4%, respectively, for men and women with poor CVH.
The researchers also found that disparities in the percentage of disease-free years for both men and women were reduced in the high CVH groups.
The findings were limited by several factors including the use of only CVD, diabetes, cancer, and dementia in the definition of “disease-free life expectancy,” the researchers noted in a press release accompanying the study. Other limitations include the lack of data on e-cigarettes, and the homogeneous White study population. More research is needed in diverse populations who experience a stronger impact from negative social determinants of health, they said.
In a second study, Hao Ma, MD, and colleagues reviewed data from 23,003 adults who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between 2005 and 2018 with mortality linked to the National Death Index through Dec. 31, 2019. The goal of the second study was to examine the association between CVH based on LE8 scores and life expectancy.
Over a median follow-up of 7.8 years, deaths occurred in 772 men and 587 women, said Dr. Ma, a postdoctoral fellow and biostatistician in epidemiology at Tulane University and coauthor on Dr. Wang’s study.
The estimated life expectancies at age 50 years for men with poor, intermediate, and ideal cardiovascular health based on the LE8 were 25.5 years, 31.2 years, and 33.1 years, respectively.
For women, the corresponding life expectancies for women at age 50 with poor, intermediate, and ideal CVH were 29.5 years, 34.2 years, and 38.4 years, respectively.
Men and women had similar gains in life expectancy from adhering to a heart-healthy lifestyle as defined by the LE8 score that reduced their risk of death from cardiovascular disease (41.8% and 44.1%, respectively).
Associations of cardiovascular health and life expectancy were similar for non-Hispanic Whites and non-Hispanic Blacks, but not among people of Mexican heritage, and more research is needed in diverse populations, the researchers wrote.
The study was limited by several factors including potential changes in cardiovascular health during the follow-up period, and by the limited analysis of racial and ethnic groups to non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic Black, and people of Mexican heritage because of small sample sizes for other racial/ethnic groups, the researchers noted in a press release accompanying the study.
The message for clinicians and their patients is that adherence to cardiovascular health as defined by the LE8 will help not only extend life, but enhance quality of life, Dr. Xang and Dr. Ma said in an interview. “If your overall CVH score is low, we might be able to focus on one element first and improve them one by one,” they said. Sedentary lifestyle and an unhealthy diet are barriers to improving LE8 metrics that can be addressed, they added.
More research is needed to examine the effects of LE8 on high-risk patients, the researchers told this news organization. “No studies have yet focused on these patients with chronic diseases. We suspect that LE8 will play a role even in these high-risk groups,” they said. Further studies should include diverse populations and evaluations of the association between CVH change and health outcomes, they added.
“Overall, we see this 7.5-year difference [in life expectancy] going from poor to high cardiovascular health,” said Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, in a video accompanying the presentation of the study findings. The impact on life expectancy is yet another reason to motivate people to improve their cardiovascular health, said Dr. Lloyd-Jones, immediate past president of the American Heart Association and lead author on the writing group for Life’s Essential 8. “The earlier we do this, the better, and the greater the gains in life expectancy we’re likely to see in the U.S. population,” he said.
People maintaining high cardiovascular health into midlife are avoiding not only cardiovascular disease, but other chronic diseases of aging, Dr. Lloyd-Jones added. These conditions are delayed until much later in the lifespan, which allows people to enjoy better quality of life for more of their remaining years, he said.
The meeting was sponsored by the American Heart Association.
Both studies were supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health; the Fogarty International Center; and the Tulane Research Centers of Excellence Awards. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Adults who follow a heart-healthy lifestyle are more likely to live longer and to be free of chronic health conditions, based on data from a pair of related studies from the United States and United Kingdom involving nearly 200,000 individuals.
The studies, presented at the Epidemiology and Prevention/Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health meeting in Boston, assessed the impact of cardiovascular health on life expectancy and freedom from chronic diseases. Cardiovascular health (CVH) was based on the Life’s Essential 8 (LE8) score, a composite of health metrics released by the American Heart Association in 2022. The LE8 was developed to guide research and assessment of cardiovascular health, and includes diet, physical activity, tobacco/nicotine exposure, sleep, body mass index, non-HDL cholesterol, blood glucose, and blood pressure.
In one study, Xuan Wang, MD, a postdoctoral fellow and biostatistician in the department of epidemiology at Tulane University, New Orleans, and colleagues reviewed data from 136,599 adults in the United Kingdom Biobank who were free of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, and dementia at baseline, and for whom complete LE8 data were available.
CVH was classified as poor, intermediate, and ideal, defined as LE8 scores of less than 50, 50 to 80, and 80 or higher, respectively.
The goal of the study was to examine the role of CVH based on LE8 scores on the percentage of life expectancy free of chronic diseases.
Men and women with ideal CVH averaged 5.2 years and 6.3 years more of total life expectancy at age 50 years, compared with those with poor CVH. Out of total life expectancy, the percentage of life expectancy free of chronic diseases was 75.9% and 83.4% for men and women, respectively, compared with 64.9% and 69.4%, respectively, for men and women with poor CVH.
The researchers also found that disparities in the percentage of disease-free years for both men and women were reduced in the high CVH groups.
The findings were limited by several factors including the use of only CVD, diabetes, cancer, and dementia in the definition of “disease-free life expectancy,” the researchers noted in a press release accompanying the study. Other limitations include the lack of data on e-cigarettes, and the homogeneous White study population. More research is needed in diverse populations who experience a stronger impact from negative social determinants of health, they said.
In a second study, Hao Ma, MD, and colleagues reviewed data from 23,003 adults who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between 2005 and 2018 with mortality linked to the National Death Index through Dec. 31, 2019. The goal of the second study was to examine the association between CVH based on LE8 scores and life expectancy.
Over a median follow-up of 7.8 years, deaths occurred in 772 men and 587 women, said Dr. Ma, a postdoctoral fellow and biostatistician in epidemiology at Tulane University and coauthor on Dr. Wang’s study.
The estimated life expectancies at age 50 years for men with poor, intermediate, and ideal cardiovascular health based on the LE8 were 25.5 years, 31.2 years, and 33.1 years, respectively.
For women, the corresponding life expectancies for women at age 50 with poor, intermediate, and ideal CVH were 29.5 years, 34.2 years, and 38.4 years, respectively.
Men and women had similar gains in life expectancy from adhering to a heart-healthy lifestyle as defined by the LE8 score that reduced their risk of death from cardiovascular disease (41.8% and 44.1%, respectively).
Associations of cardiovascular health and life expectancy were similar for non-Hispanic Whites and non-Hispanic Blacks, but not among people of Mexican heritage, and more research is needed in diverse populations, the researchers wrote.
The study was limited by several factors including potential changes in cardiovascular health during the follow-up period, and by the limited analysis of racial and ethnic groups to non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic Black, and people of Mexican heritage because of small sample sizes for other racial/ethnic groups, the researchers noted in a press release accompanying the study.
The message for clinicians and their patients is that adherence to cardiovascular health as defined by the LE8 will help not only extend life, but enhance quality of life, Dr. Xang and Dr. Ma said in an interview. “If your overall CVH score is low, we might be able to focus on one element first and improve them one by one,” they said. Sedentary lifestyle and an unhealthy diet are barriers to improving LE8 metrics that can be addressed, they added.
More research is needed to examine the effects of LE8 on high-risk patients, the researchers told this news organization. “No studies have yet focused on these patients with chronic diseases. We suspect that LE8 will play a role even in these high-risk groups,” they said. Further studies should include diverse populations and evaluations of the association between CVH change and health outcomes, they added.
“Overall, we see this 7.5-year difference [in life expectancy] going from poor to high cardiovascular health,” said Donald M. Lloyd-Jones, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, in a video accompanying the presentation of the study findings. The impact on life expectancy is yet another reason to motivate people to improve their cardiovascular health, said Dr. Lloyd-Jones, immediate past president of the American Heart Association and lead author on the writing group for Life’s Essential 8. “The earlier we do this, the better, and the greater the gains in life expectancy we’re likely to see in the U.S. population,” he said.
People maintaining high cardiovascular health into midlife are avoiding not only cardiovascular disease, but other chronic diseases of aging, Dr. Lloyd-Jones added. These conditions are delayed until much later in the lifespan, which allows people to enjoy better quality of life for more of their remaining years, he said.
The meeting was sponsored by the American Heart Association.
Both studies were supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health; the Fogarty International Center; and the Tulane Research Centers of Excellence Awards. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM EPI/LIFESTYLE 2023
Pulmonary function may predict frailty
Pulmonary function was significantly associated with frailty in community-dwelling older adults over a 5-year period, as indicated by data from more than 1,000 individuals.
The pulmonary function test has been proposed as a predictive tool for clinical outcomes in geriatrics, including hospitalization, mortality, and frailty, but
In an observational study published in Heart and Lung, the researchers reviewed data from adults older than 64 years who were participants in the Toledo Study for Healthy Aging.
The study population included 1,188 older adults (mean age, 74 years; 54% women). The prevalence of frailty at baseline ranged from 7% to 26%.
Frailty was defined using the frailty phenotype (FP) and the Frailty Trait Scale 5 (FTS5). Pulmonary function was determined on the basis of forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC), using spirometry.
Overall, at the 5-year follow-up, FEV1 and FVC were inversely associated with prevalence and incidence of frailty in nonadjusted and adjusted models using FP and FTS5.
In adjusted models, FEV1 and FVC, as well as FEV1 and FVC percent predicted value, were significantly associated with the prevalence of frailty, with odds ratios ranging from 0.53 to 0.99. FEV1 and FVC were significantly associated with increased incidence of frailty, with odds ratios ranging from 0.49 to 0.50 (P < .05 for both).
Pulmonary function also was associated with prevalent and incident frailty, hospitalization, and mortality in regression models, including the whole sample and after respiratory diseases were excluded.
Pulmonary function measures below the cutoff points for FEV1 and FVC were significantly associated with frailty, as well as with hospitalization and mortality. The cutoff points for FEV1 were 1.805 L for men and 1.165 L for women; cutoff points for FVC were 2.385 L for men and 1.585 L for women.
“Pulmonary function should be evaluated not only in frail patients, with the aim of detecting patients with poor prognoses regardless of their comorbidity, but also in individuals who are not frail but have an increased risk of developing frailty, as well as other adverse events,” the researchers write.
The study findings were limited by lack of data on pulmonary function variables outside of spirometry and by the need for data from populations with different characteristics to assess whether the same cutoff points are predictive of frailty, the researchers note.
The results were strengthened by the large sample size and additional analysis that excluded other respiratory diseases. Future research should consider adding pulmonary function assessment to the frailty model, the authors write.
Given the relationship between pulmonary function and physical capacity, the current study supports more frequent evaluation of pulmonary function in clinical practice for older adults, including those with no pulmonary disease, they conclude.
The study was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry, and Competitiveness, financed by the European Regional Development Funds, and the Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red en Fragilidad y Envejecimiento Saludable and the Fundacion Francisco Soria Melguizo. Lead author Dr. Sepulveda-Loyola was supported by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pulmonary function was significantly associated with frailty in community-dwelling older adults over a 5-year period, as indicated by data from more than 1,000 individuals.
The pulmonary function test has been proposed as a predictive tool for clinical outcomes in geriatrics, including hospitalization, mortality, and frailty, but
In an observational study published in Heart and Lung, the researchers reviewed data from adults older than 64 years who were participants in the Toledo Study for Healthy Aging.
The study population included 1,188 older adults (mean age, 74 years; 54% women). The prevalence of frailty at baseline ranged from 7% to 26%.
Frailty was defined using the frailty phenotype (FP) and the Frailty Trait Scale 5 (FTS5). Pulmonary function was determined on the basis of forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC), using spirometry.
Overall, at the 5-year follow-up, FEV1 and FVC were inversely associated with prevalence and incidence of frailty in nonadjusted and adjusted models using FP and FTS5.
In adjusted models, FEV1 and FVC, as well as FEV1 and FVC percent predicted value, were significantly associated with the prevalence of frailty, with odds ratios ranging from 0.53 to 0.99. FEV1 and FVC were significantly associated with increased incidence of frailty, with odds ratios ranging from 0.49 to 0.50 (P < .05 for both).
Pulmonary function also was associated with prevalent and incident frailty, hospitalization, and mortality in regression models, including the whole sample and after respiratory diseases were excluded.
Pulmonary function measures below the cutoff points for FEV1 and FVC were significantly associated with frailty, as well as with hospitalization and mortality. The cutoff points for FEV1 were 1.805 L for men and 1.165 L for women; cutoff points for FVC were 2.385 L for men and 1.585 L for women.
“Pulmonary function should be evaluated not only in frail patients, with the aim of detecting patients with poor prognoses regardless of their comorbidity, but also in individuals who are not frail but have an increased risk of developing frailty, as well as other adverse events,” the researchers write.
The study findings were limited by lack of data on pulmonary function variables outside of spirometry and by the need for data from populations with different characteristics to assess whether the same cutoff points are predictive of frailty, the researchers note.
The results were strengthened by the large sample size and additional analysis that excluded other respiratory diseases. Future research should consider adding pulmonary function assessment to the frailty model, the authors write.
Given the relationship between pulmonary function and physical capacity, the current study supports more frequent evaluation of pulmonary function in clinical practice for older adults, including those with no pulmonary disease, they conclude.
The study was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry, and Competitiveness, financed by the European Regional Development Funds, and the Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red en Fragilidad y Envejecimiento Saludable and the Fundacion Francisco Soria Melguizo. Lead author Dr. Sepulveda-Loyola was supported by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pulmonary function was significantly associated with frailty in community-dwelling older adults over a 5-year period, as indicated by data from more than 1,000 individuals.
The pulmonary function test has been proposed as a predictive tool for clinical outcomes in geriatrics, including hospitalization, mortality, and frailty, but
In an observational study published in Heart and Lung, the researchers reviewed data from adults older than 64 years who were participants in the Toledo Study for Healthy Aging.
The study population included 1,188 older adults (mean age, 74 years; 54% women). The prevalence of frailty at baseline ranged from 7% to 26%.
Frailty was defined using the frailty phenotype (FP) and the Frailty Trait Scale 5 (FTS5). Pulmonary function was determined on the basis of forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC), using spirometry.
Overall, at the 5-year follow-up, FEV1 and FVC were inversely associated with prevalence and incidence of frailty in nonadjusted and adjusted models using FP and FTS5.
In adjusted models, FEV1 and FVC, as well as FEV1 and FVC percent predicted value, were significantly associated with the prevalence of frailty, with odds ratios ranging from 0.53 to 0.99. FEV1 and FVC were significantly associated with increased incidence of frailty, with odds ratios ranging from 0.49 to 0.50 (P < .05 for both).
Pulmonary function also was associated with prevalent and incident frailty, hospitalization, and mortality in regression models, including the whole sample and after respiratory diseases were excluded.
Pulmonary function measures below the cutoff points for FEV1 and FVC were significantly associated with frailty, as well as with hospitalization and mortality. The cutoff points for FEV1 were 1.805 L for men and 1.165 L for women; cutoff points for FVC were 2.385 L for men and 1.585 L for women.
“Pulmonary function should be evaluated not only in frail patients, with the aim of detecting patients with poor prognoses regardless of their comorbidity, but also in individuals who are not frail but have an increased risk of developing frailty, as well as other adverse events,” the researchers write.
The study findings were limited by lack of data on pulmonary function variables outside of spirometry and by the need for data from populations with different characteristics to assess whether the same cutoff points are predictive of frailty, the researchers note.
The results were strengthened by the large sample size and additional analysis that excluded other respiratory diseases. Future research should consider adding pulmonary function assessment to the frailty model, the authors write.
Given the relationship between pulmonary function and physical capacity, the current study supports more frequent evaluation of pulmonary function in clinical practice for older adults, including those with no pulmonary disease, they conclude.
The study was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry, and Competitiveness, financed by the European Regional Development Funds, and the Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red en Fragilidad y Envejecimiento Saludable and the Fundacion Francisco Soria Melguizo. Lead author Dr. Sepulveda-Loyola was supported by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FDA accepts application for topical molluscum treatment
If approved, berdazimer gel would be the first FDA-approved prescription product for molluscum contagiosum in the United States, according to the company, Novan. The active ingredient in berdazimer gel 10.3% is berdazimer sodium, a novel nitric oxide–releasing agent.
Molluscum contagiosum is a benign but contagious skin infection characterized by red papules on the face, trunk, limbs, and axillae that may persist for years if left untreated.
The treatment was evaluated in the B-SIMPLE4 study, a phase 3 clinical trial including 891 individuals with molluscum contagiosum aged 6 months and older, with 3-70 raised lesions The mean age of the patients was approximately 7 years (range, 0.9-47.5 years) and 85.5% were White (4.7% were Black, 21.2% were Hispanic, and 1.4% were Asian). Study participants were randomized to berdazimer gel 10.3% or a vehicle gel applied as a thin layer to all lesions once daily for 12 weeks.
The full results of the B-SIMPLE4 study were published in JAMA Dermatology in July 2022. After 12 weeks of treatment, 32.4% of patients in the berdazimer group met the primary outcome of complete clearance of all lesions, versus 19.7% of those on the vehicle (P < .001). The rates of adverse events were similar and low in both groups. The most common adverse events in both groups were application-site pain and erythema, and most cases were mild or moderate. A total of 4.1% of berdazimer patients and 0.7% of placebo patients experienced adverse events that prompted treatment discontinuation.
The Prescription Drug User Fee goal date for the approval of berdazimer 10.3% for molluscum contagiosum is set for Jan. 5, 2024, according to Novan.
If approved, berdazimer gel would be the first FDA-approved prescription product for molluscum contagiosum in the United States, according to the company, Novan. The active ingredient in berdazimer gel 10.3% is berdazimer sodium, a novel nitric oxide–releasing agent.
Molluscum contagiosum is a benign but contagious skin infection characterized by red papules on the face, trunk, limbs, and axillae that may persist for years if left untreated.
The treatment was evaluated in the B-SIMPLE4 study, a phase 3 clinical trial including 891 individuals with molluscum contagiosum aged 6 months and older, with 3-70 raised lesions The mean age of the patients was approximately 7 years (range, 0.9-47.5 years) and 85.5% were White (4.7% were Black, 21.2% were Hispanic, and 1.4% were Asian). Study participants were randomized to berdazimer gel 10.3% or a vehicle gel applied as a thin layer to all lesions once daily for 12 weeks.
The full results of the B-SIMPLE4 study were published in JAMA Dermatology in July 2022. After 12 weeks of treatment, 32.4% of patients in the berdazimer group met the primary outcome of complete clearance of all lesions, versus 19.7% of those on the vehicle (P < .001). The rates of adverse events were similar and low in both groups. The most common adverse events in both groups were application-site pain and erythema, and most cases were mild or moderate. A total of 4.1% of berdazimer patients and 0.7% of placebo patients experienced adverse events that prompted treatment discontinuation.
The Prescription Drug User Fee goal date for the approval of berdazimer 10.3% for molluscum contagiosum is set for Jan. 5, 2024, according to Novan.
If approved, berdazimer gel would be the first FDA-approved prescription product for molluscum contagiosum in the United States, according to the company, Novan. The active ingredient in berdazimer gel 10.3% is berdazimer sodium, a novel nitric oxide–releasing agent.
Molluscum contagiosum is a benign but contagious skin infection characterized by red papules on the face, trunk, limbs, and axillae that may persist for years if left untreated.
The treatment was evaluated in the B-SIMPLE4 study, a phase 3 clinical trial including 891 individuals with molluscum contagiosum aged 6 months and older, with 3-70 raised lesions The mean age of the patients was approximately 7 years (range, 0.9-47.5 years) and 85.5% were White (4.7% were Black, 21.2% were Hispanic, and 1.4% were Asian). Study participants were randomized to berdazimer gel 10.3% or a vehicle gel applied as a thin layer to all lesions once daily for 12 weeks.
The full results of the B-SIMPLE4 study were published in JAMA Dermatology in July 2022. After 12 weeks of treatment, 32.4% of patients in the berdazimer group met the primary outcome of complete clearance of all lesions, versus 19.7% of those on the vehicle (P < .001). The rates of adverse events were similar and low in both groups. The most common adverse events in both groups were application-site pain and erythema, and most cases were mild or moderate. A total of 4.1% of berdazimer patients and 0.7% of placebo patients experienced adverse events that prompted treatment discontinuation.
The Prescription Drug User Fee goal date for the approval of berdazimer 10.3% for molluscum contagiosum is set for Jan. 5, 2024, according to Novan.
Thyroid hormones predict psychotic depression in MDD patients
Thyroid dysfunction is common among major depressive disorder (MDD) patients, but its relationship with the psychotic depression (PD) subtype has not been well studied, wrote Pu Peng, of The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, China, and colleagues.
Given the significant negative consequences of PD in MDD, including comorbid psychosis, suicidal attempts, and worse prognosis, more ways to identify PD risk factors in MDD are needed, they said. Previous research suggests a role for thyroid hormones in the pathophysiology of PD, but data on specific associations are limited, they noted.
In a study published in Psychiatry Research, the authors recruited 1,718 adults aged 18-60 years with MDD who were treated at a single center. The median age was 34 years, 66% were female, and 10% were identified with PD.
Clinical symptoms were identified using the positive subscale of the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS-P), Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAMA), and Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD). The median PANSS-P score was 7. The researchers measured serum levels of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), anti-thyroglobulin (TgAb), and thyroid peroxidases antibody (TPOAb). Subclinical hyperthyroidism (SCH) was defined as TSH levels greater than 8.0 uIU/L and FT4 within normal values.
Overall, the prevalence of SCH, abnormal TgAb, TPOAb, FT3, and FT4 were 13%, 17%, 25%, <0.1%, and 0.3%, respectively. Serum TSH levels, TgAb levels, and TPOAb levels were significantly higher in PD patients than in non-PD patients. No differences appeared in FT3 and FT4 levels between the two groups.
In a multivariate analysis, subclinical hypothyroidism was associated with a ninefold increased risk of PD (odds ratio, 9.32) as were abnormal TPOAb (OR, 1.89) and abnormal TgAb (OR, 2.09).
The findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design, and the inclusion of participants from only a single center in China, which may limit generalizability, the researchers noted.
In addition, “It should be noted that the association between thyroid hormones and PD was small to moderate and the underlying mechanism remained unexplored,” they said. Other limitations include the use of only 17 of the 20 HAMD items and the lack of data on the relationship between anxiety and depressive features and thyroid dysfunction, they wrote.
More research is needed to confirm the findings in other populations, however; the results suggest that regular thyroid function tests may help with early detection of PD in MDD patients, they concluded.
The study was funded by the CAS Pioneer Hundred Talents Program and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Thyroid dysfunction is common among major depressive disorder (MDD) patients, but its relationship with the psychotic depression (PD) subtype has not been well studied, wrote Pu Peng, of The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, China, and colleagues.
Given the significant negative consequences of PD in MDD, including comorbid psychosis, suicidal attempts, and worse prognosis, more ways to identify PD risk factors in MDD are needed, they said. Previous research suggests a role for thyroid hormones in the pathophysiology of PD, but data on specific associations are limited, they noted.
In a study published in Psychiatry Research, the authors recruited 1,718 adults aged 18-60 years with MDD who were treated at a single center. The median age was 34 years, 66% were female, and 10% were identified with PD.
Clinical symptoms were identified using the positive subscale of the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS-P), Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAMA), and Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD). The median PANSS-P score was 7. The researchers measured serum levels of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), anti-thyroglobulin (TgAb), and thyroid peroxidases antibody (TPOAb). Subclinical hyperthyroidism (SCH) was defined as TSH levels greater than 8.0 uIU/L and FT4 within normal values.
Overall, the prevalence of SCH, abnormal TgAb, TPOAb, FT3, and FT4 were 13%, 17%, 25%, <0.1%, and 0.3%, respectively. Serum TSH levels, TgAb levels, and TPOAb levels were significantly higher in PD patients than in non-PD patients. No differences appeared in FT3 and FT4 levels between the two groups.
In a multivariate analysis, subclinical hypothyroidism was associated with a ninefold increased risk of PD (odds ratio, 9.32) as were abnormal TPOAb (OR, 1.89) and abnormal TgAb (OR, 2.09).
The findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design, and the inclusion of participants from only a single center in China, which may limit generalizability, the researchers noted.
In addition, “It should be noted that the association between thyroid hormones and PD was small to moderate and the underlying mechanism remained unexplored,” they said. Other limitations include the use of only 17 of the 20 HAMD items and the lack of data on the relationship between anxiety and depressive features and thyroid dysfunction, they wrote.
More research is needed to confirm the findings in other populations, however; the results suggest that regular thyroid function tests may help with early detection of PD in MDD patients, they concluded.
The study was funded by the CAS Pioneer Hundred Talents Program and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Thyroid dysfunction is common among major depressive disorder (MDD) patients, but its relationship with the psychotic depression (PD) subtype has not been well studied, wrote Pu Peng, of The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, Hunan, China, and colleagues.
Given the significant negative consequences of PD in MDD, including comorbid psychosis, suicidal attempts, and worse prognosis, more ways to identify PD risk factors in MDD are needed, they said. Previous research suggests a role for thyroid hormones in the pathophysiology of PD, but data on specific associations are limited, they noted.
In a study published in Psychiatry Research, the authors recruited 1,718 adults aged 18-60 years with MDD who were treated at a single center. The median age was 34 years, 66% were female, and 10% were identified with PD.
Clinical symptoms were identified using the positive subscale of the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS-P), Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale (HAMA), and Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD). The median PANSS-P score was 7. The researchers measured serum levels of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), anti-thyroglobulin (TgAb), and thyroid peroxidases antibody (TPOAb). Subclinical hyperthyroidism (SCH) was defined as TSH levels greater than 8.0 uIU/L and FT4 within normal values.
Overall, the prevalence of SCH, abnormal TgAb, TPOAb, FT3, and FT4 were 13%, 17%, 25%, <0.1%, and 0.3%, respectively. Serum TSH levels, TgAb levels, and TPOAb levels were significantly higher in PD patients than in non-PD patients. No differences appeared in FT3 and FT4 levels between the two groups.
In a multivariate analysis, subclinical hypothyroidism was associated with a ninefold increased risk of PD (odds ratio, 9.32) as were abnormal TPOAb (OR, 1.89) and abnormal TgAb (OR, 2.09).
The findings were limited by several factors including the cross-sectional design, and the inclusion of participants from only a single center in China, which may limit generalizability, the researchers noted.
In addition, “It should be noted that the association between thyroid hormones and PD was small to moderate and the underlying mechanism remained unexplored,” they said. Other limitations include the use of only 17 of the 20 HAMD items and the lack of data on the relationship between anxiety and depressive features and thyroid dysfunction, they wrote.
More research is needed to confirm the findings in other populations, however; the results suggest that regular thyroid function tests may help with early detection of PD in MDD patients, they concluded.
The study was funded by the CAS Pioneer Hundred Talents Program and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
Which nonopioid meds are best for easing acute low back pain?
based on data from more than 3,000 individuals.
Acute low back pain (LBP) remains a common cause of disability worldwide, with a high socioeconomic burden, write Alice Baroncini, MD, of RWTH University Hospital, Aachen, Germany, and colleagues.
In an analysis published in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research, a team of investigators from Germany examined which nonopioid drugs are best for treating LBP.
The researchers identified 18 studies totaling 3,478 patients with acute low back pain of less than 12 weeks’ duration. They selected studies that only investigated the lumbar spine, and studies involving opioids were excluded. The mean age of the patients across all the studies was 42.5 years, and 54% were women. The mean duration of symptoms before treatment was 15.1 days.
Overall, muscle relaxants and NSAIDs demonstrated effectiveness in reducing pain and disability for acute LBP patients after about 1 week of use.
In addition, studies of a combination of NSAIDs and paracetamol (also known as acetaminophen) showed a greater improvement than NSAIDs alone, but paracetamol/acetaminophen alone had no significant impact on LBP.
Most patients with acute LBP experience spontaneous recovery and reduction of symptoms, thus the real impact of most medications is uncertain, the researchers write in their discussion. The lack of a placebo effect in the selected studies reinforces the hypothesis that nonopioid medications improve LBP symptoms, they say.
However, “while this work only focuses on the pharmacological management of acute LBP, it is fundamental to highlight that the use of drugs should always be a second-line strategy once other nonpharmacological, noninvasive therapies have proved to be insufficient,” the researchers write.
The study findings were limited by several factors, including the inability to distinguish among different NSAID classes, the inability to conduct a subanalysis of the best drug or treatment protocol for a given drug class, and the short follow-up period for the included studies, the researchers note.
More research is needed to address the effects of different drugs on LBP recurrence, they add.
However, the results support the current opinion that NSAIDs can be effectively used for LBP, strengthened by the large number of studies and relatively low risk of bias, the researchers conclude.
The current study addresses a common cause of morbidity among patients and highlights alternatives to opioid analgesics for its management, Suman Pal, MBBS, a specialist in hospital medicine at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, said in an interview.
Dr. Pal said he was not surprised by the results. “The findings of the study mirror prior studies,” he said. “However, the lack of benefit of paracetamol alone needs to be highlighted as important to clinical practice.”
A key message for clinicians is the role of NSAIDs in LBP, Dr. Pal said. “NSAIDs, either alone or in combination with paracetamol or myorelaxants, can be effective therapy for select patients with acute LBP.” However, “further research is needed to better identify which patients would derive most benefit from this approach,” he said.
Other research needs include more evidence to better understand the appropriate duration of therapy, given the potential for adverse effects with chronic NSAID use, Dr. Pal said.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers and Dr. Pal have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
based on data from more than 3,000 individuals.
Acute low back pain (LBP) remains a common cause of disability worldwide, with a high socioeconomic burden, write Alice Baroncini, MD, of RWTH University Hospital, Aachen, Germany, and colleagues.
In an analysis published in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research, a team of investigators from Germany examined which nonopioid drugs are best for treating LBP.
The researchers identified 18 studies totaling 3,478 patients with acute low back pain of less than 12 weeks’ duration. They selected studies that only investigated the lumbar spine, and studies involving opioids were excluded. The mean age of the patients across all the studies was 42.5 years, and 54% were women. The mean duration of symptoms before treatment was 15.1 days.
Overall, muscle relaxants and NSAIDs demonstrated effectiveness in reducing pain and disability for acute LBP patients after about 1 week of use.
In addition, studies of a combination of NSAIDs and paracetamol (also known as acetaminophen) showed a greater improvement than NSAIDs alone, but paracetamol/acetaminophen alone had no significant impact on LBP.
Most patients with acute LBP experience spontaneous recovery and reduction of symptoms, thus the real impact of most medications is uncertain, the researchers write in their discussion. The lack of a placebo effect in the selected studies reinforces the hypothesis that nonopioid medications improve LBP symptoms, they say.
However, “while this work only focuses on the pharmacological management of acute LBP, it is fundamental to highlight that the use of drugs should always be a second-line strategy once other nonpharmacological, noninvasive therapies have proved to be insufficient,” the researchers write.
The study findings were limited by several factors, including the inability to distinguish among different NSAID classes, the inability to conduct a subanalysis of the best drug or treatment protocol for a given drug class, and the short follow-up period for the included studies, the researchers note.
More research is needed to address the effects of different drugs on LBP recurrence, they add.
However, the results support the current opinion that NSAIDs can be effectively used for LBP, strengthened by the large number of studies and relatively low risk of bias, the researchers conclude.
The current study addresses a common cause of morbidity among patients and highlights alternatives to opioid analgesics for its management, Suman Pal, MBBS, a specialist in hospital medicine at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, said in an interview.
Dr. Pal said he was not surprised by the results. “The findings of the study mirror prior studies,” he said. “However, the lack of benefit of paracetamol alone needs to be highlighted as important to clinical practice.”
A key message for clinicians is the role of NSAIDs in LBP, Dr. Pal said. “NSAIDs, either alone or in combination with paracetamol or myorelaxants, can be effective therapy for select patients with acute LBP.” However, “further research is needed to better identify which patients would derive most benefit from this approach,” he said.
Other research needs include more evidence to better understand the appropriate duration of therapy, given the potential for adverse effects with chronic NSAID use, Dr. Pal said.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers and Dr. Pal have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
based on data from more than 3,000 individuals.
Acute low back pain (LBP) remains a common cause of disability worldwide, with a high socioeconomic burden, write Alice Baroncini, MD, of RWTH University Hospital, Aachen, Germany, and colleagues.
In an analysis published in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research, a team of investigators from Germany examined which nonopioid drugs are best for treating LBP.
The researchers identified 18 studies totaling 3,478 patients with acute low back pain of less than 12 weeks’ duration. They selected studies that only investigated the lumbar spine, and studies involving opioids were excluded. The mean age of the patients across all the studies was 42.5 years, and 54% were women. The mean duration of symptoms before treatment was 15.1 days.
Overall, muscle relaxants and NSAIDs demonstrated effectiveness in reducing pain and disability for acute LBP patients after about 1 week of use.
In addition, studies of a combination of NSAIDs and paracetamol (also known as acetaminophen) showed a greater improvement than NSAIDs alone, but paracetamol/acetaminophen alone had no significant impact on LBP.
Most patients with acute LBP experience spontaneous recovery and reduction of symptoms, thus the real impact of most medications is uncertain, the researchers write in their discussion. The lack of a placebo effect in the selected studies reinforces the hypothesis that nonopioid medications improve LBP symptoms, they say.
However, “while this work only focuses on the pharmacological management of acute LBP, it is fundamental to highlight that the use of drugs should always be a second-line strategy once other nonpharmacological, noninvasive therapies have proved to be insufficient,” the researchers write.
The study findings were limited by several factors, including the inability to distinguish among different NSAID classes, the inability to conduct a subanalysis of the best drug or treatment protocol for a given drug class, and the short follow-up period for the included studies, the researchers note.
More research is needed to address the effects of different drugs on LBP recurrence, they add.
However, the results support the current opinion that NSAIDs can be effectively used for LBP, strengthened by the large number of studies and relatively low risk of bias, the researchers conclude.
The current study addresses a common cause of morbidity among patients and highlights alternatives to opioid analgesics for its management, Suman Pal, MBBS, a specialist in hospital medicine at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, said in an interview.
Dr. Pal said he was not surprised by the results. “The findings of the study mirror prior studies,” he said. “However, the lack of benefit of paracetamol alone needs to be highlighted as important to clinical practice.”
A key message for clinicians is the role of NSAIDs in LBP, Dr. Pal said. “NSAIDs, either alone or in combination with paracetamol or myorelaxants, can be effective therapy for select patients with acute LBP.” However, “further research is needed to better identify which patients would derive most benefit from this approach,” he said.
Other research needs include more evidence to better understand the appropriate duration of therapy, given the potential for adverse effects with chronic NSAID use, Dr. Pal said.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers and Dr. Pal have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH