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Gabapentin: The Hope, the Harm, the Myth, the Reality

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Since gabapentin was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treatment of partial-onset seizures and postherpetic neuralgia, it has been used in many different ways, many off-label indications, and with several recent safety warnings.

Early Problems

After FDA approval in 1993 (for partial seizures), gabapentin was promoted by its maker (Park-Davis) for off-label indications, especially for pain. There was no FDA approval for that indication and the studies the company had done were deemed to have been manipulated in a subsequent lawsuit.1 Gabapentin became the nonopioid go-to medication for treatment of pain despite underwhelming evidence.
 

Studies on Neuropathy

In the largest trial of gabapentin for diabetic peripheral neuropathy, Rauck and colleagues found no significant difference in pain relief between gabapentin and placebo.2 A Cochrane review of gabapentin for neuropathic pain concluded that about 30%-40% of patients taking gabapentin for diabetic neuropathy achieved meaningful pain relief with gabapentin use, with a number needed to treat (NNT) of 6.6.3 The review also concluded that for postherpetic neuralgia (an FDA-approved indication) 78% of patients had moderate to substantial benefit with gabapentin (NNT 4.8 for moderate benefit).

Dr. Douglas S. Paauw

Side Effects of Gabapentin

From the Cochrane review, the most common side effects were:  dizziness (19%), somnolence (14%), peripheral edema (7%), and gait disturbance (14%). The number needed to harm for gabapentin was 7.5 The two side effects listed here that are often overlooked that I want to highlight are peripheral edema and gait disturbance. I have seen these both fairly frequently over the years. A side effect not found in the Cochrane review was weight gain. Weight gain with gabapentin was reported in a meta-analysis of drugs that can cause weight gain.4

New Warnings

In December 2019, the FDA released a warning on the potential for serious respiratory problems with gabapentin and pregabalin in patients with certain risk factors: opioid use or use of other drugs that depress the central nervous system, COPD, and other severe lung diseases.5 Rahman and colleagues found that compared with nonuse, gabapentinoid use was associated with increased risk for severe COPD exacerbation (hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 1.29-1.50).6

Off-Label Uses

Primary care professionals frequently use gabapentin for two off-label indications that are incorporated into practice guidelines. Ryan et al. studied gabapentin in patients with refractory, unexplained chronic cough.7 In a randomized, placebo-controlled trial, gabapentin improved cough-specific quality of life compared with placebo (P = .004; NNT 3.58). Use of gabapentin for treatment of unexplained, refractory cough has been included in several chronic cough practice guidelines.8,9

Gabapentin has been studied for the treatment of restless legs syndrome and has been recommended as an option to treat moderate to severe restless legs syndrome in the American Academy of Sleep Medicine Guidelines.10

Pearl of the Month:

Gabapentin is used widely for many different pain syndromes. The best evidence is for postherpetic neuralgia and diabetic neuropathy. Be aware of the side effects and risks of use in patients with pulmonary disease and who are taking CNS-depressant medications.

Dr. Paauw is professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and he serves as third-year medical student clerkship director at the University of Washington. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News. Dr. Paauw has no conflicts to disclose. Contact him at imnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Landefeld CS, Steinman MA. The Neurontin legacy: marketing through misinformation and manipulation. N Engl J Med. 2009;360(2):103-6.

2. Rauck R et al. A randomized, controlled trial of gabapentin enacarbil in subjects with neuropathic pain associated with diabetic peripheral neuropathy. Pain Pract. 2013;13(6):485-96.

3. Wiffen PJ et al. Gabapentin for chronic neuropathic pain in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;6(6):CD007938.

4. Domecq JP et al. Clinical review: Drugs commonly associated with weight change: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2015 Feb;100(2):363-70.

5. 12-19-2019 FDA Drug Safety Communication. FDA warns about serious breathing problems with seizure and nerve pain medicines gabapentin (Neurontin, Gralise, Horizant) and pregabalin (Lyrica, Lyrica CR).

6. Rahman AA et al. Gabapentinoids and risk for severe exacerbation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A population-based cohort study. Ann Intern Med. 2024 Feb;177(2):144-54.

7. Ryan NM et al. Gabapentin for refractory chronic cough: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 2012;380(9853):1583-9.

8. Gibson P et al. Treatment of unexplained chronic cough: CHEST guideline and expert panel report. Chest. 2016 Jan;149(1):27-44.

9. De Vincentis A et al. Chronic cough in adults: recommendations from an Italian intersociety consensus. Aging Clin Exp Res 2022;34:1529.

10. Aurora RN et al. The treatment of restless legs syndrome and periodic limb movement disorder in adults — an update for 2012: Practice parameters with an evidence-based systematic review and meta-analyses: An American Academy of Sleep Medicine Clinical Practice Guideline. Sleep 2012;35:1039.

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Since gabapentin was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treatment of partial-onset seizures and postherpetic neuralgia, it has been used in many different ways, many off-label indications, and with several recent safety warnings.

Early Problems

After FDA approval in 1993 (for partial seizures), gabapentin was promoted by its maker (Park-Davis) for off-label indications, especially for pain. There was no FDA approval for that indication and the studies the company had done were deemed to have been manipulated in a subsequent lawsuit.1 Gabapentin became the nonopioid go-to medication for treatment of pain despite underwhelming evidence.
 

Studies on Neuropathy

In the largest trial of gabapentin for diabetic peripheral neuropathy, Rauck and colleagues found no significant difference in pain relief between gabapentin and placebo.2 A Cochrane review of gabapentin for neuropathic pain concluded that about 30%-40% of patients taking gabapentin for diabetic neuropathy achieved meaningful pain relief with gabapentin use, with a number needed to treat (NNT) of 6.6.3 The review also concluded that for postherpetic neuralgia (an FDA-approved indication) 78% of patients had moderate to substantial benefit with gabapentin (NNT 4.8 for moderate benefit).

Dr. Douglas S. Paauw

Side Effects of Gabapentin

From the Cochrane review, the most common side effects were:  dizziness (19%), somnolence (14%), peripheral edema (7%), and gait disturbance (14%). The number needed to harm for gabapentin was 7.5 The two side effects listed here that are often overlooked that I want to highlight are peripheral edema and gait disturbance. I have seen these both fairly frequently over the years. A side effect not found in the Cochrane review was weight gain. Weight gain with gabapentin was reported in a meta-analysis of drugs that can cause weight gain.4

New Warnings

In December 2019, the FDA released a warning on the potential for serious respiratory problems with gabapentin and pregabalin in patients with certain risk factors: opioid use or use of other drugs that depress the central nervous system, COPD, and other severe lung diseases.5 Rahman and colleagues found that compared with nonuse, gabapentinoid use was associated with increased risk for severe COPD exacerbation (hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 1.29-1.50).6

Off-Label Uses

Primary care professionals frequently use gabapentin for two off-label indications that are incorporated into practice guidelines. Ryan et al. studied gabapentin in patients with refractory, unexplained chronic cough.7 In a randomized, placebo-controlled trial, gabapentin improved cough-specific quality of life compared with placebo (P = .004; NNT 3.58). Use of gabapentin for treatment of unexplained, refractory cough has been included in several chronic cough practice guidelines.8,9

Gabapentin has been studied for the treatment of restless legs syndrome and has been recommended as an option to treat moderate to severe restless legs syndrome in the American Academy of Sleep Medicine Guidelines.10

Pearl of the Month:

Gabapentin is used widely for many different pain syndromes. The best evidence is for postherpetic neuralgia and diabetic neuropathy. Be aware of the side effects and risks of use in patients with pulmonary disease and who are taking CNS-depressant medications.

Dr. Paauw is professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and he serves as third-year medical student clerkship director at the University of Washington. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News. Dr. Paauw has no conflicts to disclose. Contact him at imnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Landefeld CS, Steinman MA. The Neurontin legacy: marketing through misinformation and manipulation. N Engl J Med. 2009;360(2):103-6.

2. Rauck R et al. A randomized, controlled trial of gabapentin enacarbil in subjects with neuropathic pain associated with diabetic peripheral neuropathy. Pain Pract. 2013;13(6):485-96.

3. Wiffen PJ et al. Gabapentin for chronic neuropathic pain in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;6(6):CD007938.

4. Domecq JP et al. Clinical review: Drugs commonly associated with weight change: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2015 Feb;100(2):363-70.

5. 12-19-2019 FDA Drug Safety Communication. FDA warns about serious breathing problems with seizure and nerve pain medicines gabapentin (Neurontin, Gralise, Horizant) and pregabalin (Lyrica, Lyrica CR).

6. Rahman AA et al. Gabapentinoids and risk for severe exacerbation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A population-based cohort study. Ann Intern Med. 2024 Feb;177(2):144-54.

7. Ryan NM et al. Gabapentin for refractory chronic cough: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 2012;380(9853):1583-9.

8. Gibson P et al. Treatment of unexplained chronic cough: CHEST guideline and expert panel report. Chest. 2016 Jan;149(1):27-44.

9. De Vincentis A et al. Chronic cough in adults: recommendations from an Italian intersociety consensus. Aging Clin Exp Res 2022;34:1529.

10. Aurora RN et al. The treatment of restless legs syndrome and periodic limb movement disorder in adults — an update for 2012: Practice parameters with an evidence-based systematic review and meta-analyses: An American Academy of Sleep Medicine Clinical Practice Guideline. Sleep 2012;35:1039.

Since gabapentin was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treatment of partial-onset seizures and postherpetic neuralgia, it has been used in many different ways, many off-label indications, and with several recent safety warnings.

Early Problems

After FDA approval in 1993 (for partial seizures), gabapentin was promoted by its maker (Park-Davis) for off-label indications, especially for pain. There was no FDA approval for that indication and the studies the company had done were deemed to have been manipulated in a subsequent lawsuit.1 Gabapentin became the nonopioid go-to medication for treatment of pain despite underwhelming evidence.
 

Studies on Neuropathy

In the largest trial of gabapentin for diabetic peripheral neuropathy, Rauck and colleagues found no significant difference in pain relief between gabapentin and placebo.2 A Cochrane review of gabapentin for neuropathic pain concluded that about 30%-40% of patients taking gabapentin for diabetic neuropathy achieved meaningful pain relief with gabapentin use, with a number needed to treat (NNT) of 6.6.3 The review also concluded that for postherpetic neuralgia (an FDA-approved indication) 78% of patients had moderate to substantial benefit with gabapentin (NNT 4.8 for moderate benefit).

Dr. Douglas S. Paauw

Side Effects of Gabapentin

From the Cochrane review, the most common side effects were:  dizziness (19%), somnolence (14%), peripheral edema (7%), and gait disturbance (14%). The number needed to harm for gabapentin was 7.5 The two side effects listed here that are often overlooked that I want to highlight are peripheral edema and gait disturbance. I have seen these both fairly frequently over the years. A side effect not found in the Cochrane review was weight gain. Weight gain with gabapentin was reported in a meta-analysis of drugs that can cause weight gain.4

New Warnings

In December 2019, the FDA released a warning on the potential for serious respiratory problems with gabapentin and pregabalin in patients with certain risk factors: opioid use or use of other drugs that depress the central nervous system, COPD, and other severe lung diseases.5 Rahman and colleagues found that compared with nonuse, gabapentinoid use was associated with increased risk for severe COPD exacerbation (hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 1.29-1.50).6

Off-Label Uses

Primary care professionals frequently use gabapentin for two off-label indications that are incorporated into practice guidelines. Ryan et al. studied gabapentin in patients with refractory, unexplained chronic cough.7 In a randomized, placebo-controlled trial, gabapentin improved cough-specific quality of life compared with placebo (P = .004; NNT 3.58). Use of gabapentin for treatment of unexplained, refractory cough has been included in several chronic cough practice guidelines.8,9

Gabapentin has been studied for the treatment of restless legs syndrome and has been recommended as an option to treat moderate to severe restless legs syndrome in the American Academy of Sleep Medicine Guidelines.10

Pearl of the Month:

Gabapentin is used widely for many different pain syndromes. The best evidence is for postherpetic neuralgia and diabetic neuropathy. Be aware of the side effects and risks of use in patients with pulmonary disease and who are taking CNS-depressant medications.

Dr. Paauw is professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and he serves as third-year medical student clerkship director at the University of Washington. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News. Dr. Paauw has no conflicts to disclose. Contact him at imnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Landefeld CS, Steinman MA. The Neurontin legacy: marketing through misinformation and manipulation. N Engl J Med. 2009;360(2):103-6.

2. Rauck R et al. A randomized, controlled trial of gabapentin enacarbil in subjects with neuropathic pain associated with diabetic peripheral neuropathy. Pain Pract. 2013;13(6):485-96.

3. Wiffen PJ et al. Gabapentin for chronic neuropathic pain in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;6(6):CD007938.

4. Domecq JP et al. Clinical review: Drugs commonly associated with weight change: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2015 Feb;100(2):363-70.

5. 12-19-2019 FDA Drug Safety Communication. FDA warns about serious breathing problems with seizure and nerve pain medicines gabapentin (Neurontin, Gralise, Horizant) and pregabalin (Lyrica, Lyrica CR).

6. Rahman AA et al. Gabapentinoids and risk for severe exacerbation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A population-based cohort study. Ann Intern Med. 2024 Feb;177(2):144-54.

7. Ryan NM et al. Gabapentin for refractory chronic cough: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 2012;380(9853):1583-9.

8. Gibson P et al. Treatment of unexplained chronic cough: CHEST guideline and expert panel report. Chest. 2016 Jan;149(1):27-44.

9. De Vincentis A et al. Chronic cough in adults: recommendations from an Italian intersociety consensus. Aging Clin Exp Res 2022;34:1529.

10. Aurora RN et al. The treatment of restless legs syndrome and periodic limb movement disorder in adults — an update for 2012: Practice parameters with an evidence-based systematic review and meta-analyses: An American Academy of Sleep Medicine Clinical Practice Guideline. Sleep 2012;35:1039.

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Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease’s Changing Demographics

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Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is a significant global health concernaccounting for approximately 5% of all disease and injury. In the United States, the prevalence of ALD has increased since 2014, and the trajectory accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic.

ALD encompasses a spectrum of diseases that includes steatosis, fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma, as well as related complications. Although earlier stages of ALD may be asymptomatic, hepatologists and gastroenterologists rarely see patients at this point.

“Unfortunately, patients with ALD more often present in late stages of disease (decompensated cirrhosis) as compared with other chronic liver diseases, such as metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease or hepatitis C,” Doug A. Simonetto, MD, associate professor of medicine and director of the Gastroenterology and Hepatology Fellowship Program at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, told this news organization.

Recent data have identified three demographic groups experiencing higher rates of ALD relative to previous periods and who may therefore require special attention. Understanding what makes these groups increasingly susceptible to ALD may allow for improved screening, earlier diagnosis, and potentially the prevention of its most dire consequences.
 

As Women Consume More Alcohol, ALD Follows

Historically, men have had higher rates of alcohol use, heavy drinking, and alcohol disorders than women. But this gender gap has begun to narrow.

Men born in the early 1900s were 2.2 times more likely to drink alcohol and 3.6 times more likely to experience alcohol-related harms than women, according to a 2016 meta-analysis. By the end of the 1990s, however, women’s drinking had begun to catch up. Men still led in these categories, but only by 1.1 and 1.3 times, respectively.

Rates of binge drinking (defined as at least five drinks in men or at least four drinks in women in an approximately 2-hour period) are also converging between the sexes. The authors of a longitudinal analysis hypothesized that an uptick in young women reporting drinking for social reasons — from 53% in 1987 to 87% in 2020 — was a possible cause.

Greater alcohol consumption among women has translated into higher rates of ALD. Analyzing data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019, which looked at hundreds of diseases across 204 countries and territories, researchers reported that the worldwide prevalence of ALD among young women (15-49 years) rose within the past decade. Those in the 20- to 24-year-old age group had the most significant increases in ALD prevalence rates.

Recent US statistics highlight the relative imbalance in ALD’s impact on women, according to George F. Koob, PhD, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA).

“The age-adjusted death rate from alcohol-associated liver cirrhosis increased by 47% between 2000 and 2019, with larger increases for females than for males (83.5% compared to 33%),” Dr. Koob told this news organization. “Larger increases for women are consistent with a general increase in alcohol use among adult women and larger increases in alcohol-related emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths.”

Physiologically, women have a higher risk than men of developing ALD and more severe disease, even at lower levels of alcohol exposure. According to a 2021 review, several proposed mechanisms might play a role, including differences in alcohol metabolism and first-pass metabolism, hormones, and endotoxin and Kupffer cell activation.

Crucially, women are less likely than men to receive in-person therapy or approved medications for alcohol use disorder, according to a 2019 analysis of over 66,000 privately insured adult patients.
 

 

 

Certain Ethnic, Racial Minorities Have Higher Rates of ALD

In the United States, rates of ALD and associated complications are higher among certain minority groups, most prominently Hispanic and Native American individuals.

2021 analysis of three large US databases found that Hispanic ethnicity was associated with a 17% increased risk for acute-on-chronic liver failure in patients with ALD-related admissions.

Data also show that Hispanic and White patients have a higher proportion of alcoholic hepatitis than African American patients. And for Hispanic patients admitted for alcoholic hepatitis, they incur significantly more total hospital costs despite having similar mortality rates as White patients.

ALD-related mortality appears higher within certain subgroups of Hispanic patient populations. NIAAA surveillance reports track deaths resulting from cirrhosis in the White, Black, and Hispanic populations. From 2000 to 2019, these statistics show that although death rates from cirrhosis decreased for Hispanic White men, they increased for Hispanic White women, Dr. Koob said.

The latest data show that Native American populations are experiencing ALD at relatively higher rates than other racial/ethnic groups as well. An analysis of nearly 200,000 cirrhosis-related hospitalizations found that ALD, including alcoholic hepatitis, was the most common etiology in American Indian/Alaska Native patients. A separate analysis of the National Inpatient Sample database revealed that discharges resulting from ALD were disproportionately higher among Native American women.

As with Hispanic populations, ALD-associated mortality rates are also higher in Native American populations. The death rate from ALD increased for all racial and ethnic groups by 23.4% from 2019 to 2020, but the biggest increase occurred in the American Indian or Alaska Native populations (34.3% increase, from 20.1 to 27 per 100,000 people). Additionally, over the first two decades of the 21st century, mortality rates resulting from cirrhosis were highest among the American Indian and Alaska Native populations, according to a recently published systematic analysis of US health disparities across five racial/ethnic groups.

Discrepancies in these and other minority groups may be due partly to genetic mechanisms, such as the relatively higher frequency of the PNPLA3 G/G polymorphism, a known risk factor for the development of advanced ALD, among those with Native American ancestry. A host of complex socioeconomic factors, such as income discrepancies and access to care, likely contribute too.

Evidence suggests that alcohol screening interventions are not applied equally across various racial and ethnic groups, Dr. Koob noted.

“For instance, Subbaraman and colleagues reported that, compared to non-Hispanic White patients, those who identify as Hispanic, Black, or other race or ethnicity were less likely to be screened for alcohol use during visits to healthcare providers. This was particularly true for those with a high school education or less,” he told this news organization. “However, other studies have not found such disparities.”
 

ALD Rates High in Young Adults, but the Tide May Be Changing

Globally, the prevalence of ALD has increased among both adolescents and young adults since the beginning of the 21st century. The global incidence of alcohol-associated hepatitis in recent years has been greatest among those aged 15-44 years.

In the United States, the increasing rate of ALD-related hospitalizations is primarily driven by the rise in cases of alcoholic hepatitis and acute-on-chronic liver failure among those aged 35 years and younger.

ALD is now the most common indication for liver transplant in those younger than 40 years of age, having increased fourfold between 2003 and 2018.

From 2009 to 2016, people aged 25-34 years experienced the highest average annual increase in cirrhosis-related mortality (10.5%), a trend the authors noted was “driven entirely by alcohol-related liver disease.”

Younger adults may be more susceptible to ALD due to the way they drink.

In a 2021 analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey database, the weighted prevalence of harmful alcohol use was 29.3% in those younger than 35 years, compared with 16.9% in those aged 35-64 years. Higher blood alcohol levels resulting from binge drinking may make patients more susceptible to bacterial translocation and liver fibrosis and can increase the likelihood of cirrhosis in those with an underlying metabolic syndrome.

Yet, Dr. Koob said, thinking of “young adults” as one cohort may be misguided because he’s found very different attitudes toward alcohol within that population. Cross-sectional survey data obtained from more than 180,000 young adults indicated that alcohol abstinence increased between 2002 and 2018. Young adults report various reasons for not drinking, ranging from lack of interest to financial and situational barriers (eg, not wanting to interfere with school or work).

“The tide is coming in and out at the same time,” he said. “Younger people under the age of 25 are drinking less each year, are increasingly interested in things like Dry January, and more than half view moderate levels of consumption as unhealthy. People who are 26 years and older are drinking more, are not as interested in cutting back or taking breaks, and are less likely to consider 1 or 2 drinks per day as potentially unhealthy.”

Dr. Koob would like to believe the positive trends around alcohol in the under-25 set prove not only resilient, but someday, dominant.

“We have seen historic increases in alcohol consumption in the last few years — the largest increases in more than 50 years. But we are hopeful that, as the younger cohorts age, we will see lower levels of drinking by adults in mid-life and beyond.”
 

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

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Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is a significant global health concernaccounting for approximately 5% of all disease and injury. In the United States, the prevalence of ALD has increased since 2014, and the trajectory accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic.

ALD encompasses a spectrum of diseases that includes steatosis, fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma, as well as related complications. Although earlier stages of ALD may be asymptomatic, hepatologists and gastroenterologists rarely see patients at this point.

“Unfortunately, patients with ALD more often present in late stages of disease (decompensated cirrhosis) as compared with other chronic liver diseases, such as metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease or hepatitis C,” Doug A. Simonetto, MD, associate professor of medicine and director of the Gastroenterology and Hepatology Fellowship Program at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, told this news organization.

Recent data have identified three demographic groups experiencing higher rates of ALD relative to previous periods and who may therefore require special attention. Understanding what makes these groups increasingly susceptible to ALD may allow for improved screening, earlier diagnosis, and potentially the prevention of its most dire consequences.
 

As Women Consume More Alcohol, ALD Follows

Historically, men have had higher rates of alcohol use, heavy drinking, and alcohol disorders than women. But this gender gap has begun to narrow.

Men born in the early 1900s were 2.2 times more likely to drink alcohol and 3.6 times more likely to experience alcohol-related harms than women, according to a 2016 meta-analysis. By the end of the 1990s, however, women’s drinking had begun to catch up. Men still led in these categories, but only by 1.1 and 1.3 times, respectively.

Rates of binge drinking (defined as at least five drinks in men or at least four drinks in women in an approximately 2-hour period) are also converging between the sexes. The authors of a longitudinal analysis hypothesized that an uptick in young women reporting drinking for social reasons — from 53% in 1987 to 87% in 2020 — was a possible cause.

Greater alcohol consumption among women has translated into higher rates of ALD. Analyzing data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019, which looked at hundreds of diseases across 204 countries and territories, researchers reported that the worldwide prevalence of ALD among young women (15-49 years) rose within the past decade. Those in the 20- to 24-year-old age group had the most significant increases in ALD prevalence rates.

Recent US statistics highlight the relative imbalance in ALD’s impact on women, according to George F. Koob, PhD, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA).

“The age-adjusted death rate from alcohol-associated liver cirrhosis increased by 47% between 2000 and 2019, with larger increases for females than for males (83.5% compared to 33%),” Dr. Koob told this news organization. “Larger increases for women are consistent with a general increase in alcohol use among adult women and larger increases in alcohol-related emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths.”

Physiologically, women have a higher risk than men of developing ALD and more severe disease, even at lower levels of alcohol exposure. According to a 2021 review, several proposed mechanisms might play a role, including differences in alcohol metabolism and first-pass metabolism, hormones, and endotoxin and Kupffer cell activation.

Crucially, women are less likely than men to receive in-person therapy or approved medications for alcohol use disorder, according to a 2019 analysis of over 66,000 privately insured adult patients.
 

 

 

Certain Ethnic, Racial Minorities Have Higher Rates of ALD

In the United States, rates of ALD and associated complications are higher among certain minority groups, most prominently Hispanic and Native American individuals.

2021 analysis of three large US databases found that Hispanic ethnicity was associated with a 17% increased risk for acute-on-chronic liver failure in patients with ALD-related admissions.

Data also show that Hispanic and White patients have a higher proportion of alcoholic hepatitis than African American patients. And for Hispanic patients admitted for alcoholic hepatitis, they incur significantly more total hospital costs despite having similar mortality rates as White patients.

ALD-related mortality appears higher within certain subgroups of Hispanic patient populations. NIAAA surveillance reports track deaths resulting from cirrhosis in the White, Black, and Hispanic populations. From 2000 to 2019, these statistics show that although death rates from cirrhosis decreased for Hispanic White men, they increased for Hispanic White women, Dr. Koob said.

The latest data show that Native American populations are experiencing ALD at relatively higher rates than other racial/ethnic groups as well. An analysis of nearly 200,000 cirrhosis-related hospitalizations found that ALD, including alcoholic hepatitis, was the most common etiology in American Indian/Alaska Native patients. A separate analysis of the National Inpatient Sample database revealed that discharges resulting from ALD were disproportionately higher among Native American women.

As with Hispanic populations, ALD-associated mortality rates are also higher in Native American populations. The death rate from ALD increased for all racial and ethnic groups by 23.4% from 2019 to 2020, but the biggest increase occurred in the American Indian or Alaska Native populations (34.3% increase, from 20.1 to 27 per 100,000 people). Additionally, over the first two decades of the 21st century, mortality rates resulting from cirrhosis were highest among the American Indian and Alaska Native populations, according to a recently published systematic analysis of US health disparities across five racial/ethnic groups.

Discrepancies in these and other minority groups may be due partly to genetic mechanisms, such as the relatively higher frequency of the PNPLA3 G/G polymorphism, a known risk factor for the development of advanced ALD, among those with Native American ancestry. A host of complex socioeconomic factors, such as income discrepancies and access to care, likely contribute too.

Evidence suggests that alcohol screening interventions are not applied equally across various racial and ethnic groups, Dr. Koob noted.

“For instance, Subbaraman and colleagues reported that, compared to non-Hispanic White patients, those who identify as Hispanic, Black, or other race or ethnicity were less likely to be screened for alcohol use during visits to healthcare providers. This was particularly true for those with a high school education or less,” he told this news organization. “However, other studies have not found such disparities.”
 

ALD Rates High in Young Adults, but the Tide May Be Changing

Globally, the prevalence of ALD has increased among both adolescents and young adults since the beginning of the 21st century. The global incidence of alcohol-associated hepatitis in recent years has been greatest among those aged 15-44 years.

In the United States, the increasing rate of ALD-related hospitalizations is primarily driven by the rise in cases of alcoholic hepatitis and acute-on-chronic liver failure among those aged 35 years and younger.

ALD is now the most common indication for liver transplant in those younger than 40 years of age, having increased fourfold between 2003 and 2018.

From 2009 to 2016, people aged 25-34 years experienced the highest average annual increase in cirrhosis-related mortality (10.5%), a trend the authors noted was “driven entirely by alcohol-related liver disease.”

Younger adults may be more susceptible to ALD due to the way they drink.

In a 2021 analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey database, the weighted prevalence of harmful alcohol use was 29.3% in those younger than 35 years, compared with 16.9% in those aged 35-64 years. Higher blood alcohol levels resulting from binge drinking may make patients more susceptible to bacterial translocation and liver fibrosis and can increase the likelihood of cirrhosis in those with an underlying metabolic syndrome.

Yet, Dr. Koob said, thinking of “young adults” as one cohort may be misguided because he’s found very different attitudes toward alcohol within that population. Cross-sectional survey data obtained from more than 180,000 young adults indicated that alcohol abstinence increased between 2002 and 2018. Young adults report various reasons for not drinking, ranging from lack of interest to financial and situational barriers (eg, not wanting to interfere with school or work).

“The tide is coming in and out at the same time,” he said. “Younger people under the age of 25 are drinking less each year, are increasingly interested in things like Dry January, and more than half view moderate levels of consumption as unhealthy. People who are 26 years and older are drinking more, are not as interested in cutting back or taking breaks, and are less likely to consider 1 or 2 drinks per day as potentially unhealthy.”

Dr. Koob would like to believe the positive trends around alcohol in the under-25 set prove not only resilient, but someday, dominant.

“We have seen historic increases in alcohol consumption in the last few years — the largest increases in more than 50 years. But we are hopeful that, as the younger cohorts age, we will see lower levels of drinking by adults in mid-life and beyond.”
 

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

 

Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is a significant global health concernaccounting for approximately 5% of all disease and injury. In the United States, the prevalence of ALD has increased since 2014, and the trajectory accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic.

ALD encompasses a spectrum of diseases that includes steatosis, fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma, as well as related complications. Although earlier stages of ALD may be asymptomatic, hepatologists and gastroenterologists rarely see patients at this point.

“Unfortunately, patients with ALD more often present in late stages of disease (decompensated cirrhosis) as compared with other chronic liver diseases, such as metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease or hepatitis C,” Doug A. Simonetto, MD, associate professor of medicine and director of the Gastroenterology and Hepatology Fellowship Program at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, told this news organization.

Recent data have identified three demographic groups experiencing higher rates of ALD relative to previous periods and who may therefore require special attention. Understanding what makes these groups increasingly susceptible to ALD may allow for improved screening, earlier diagnosis, and potentially the prevention of its most dire consequences.
 

As Women Consume More Alcohol, ALD Follows

Historically, men have had higher rates of alcohol use, heavy drinking, and alcohol disorders than women. But this gender gap has begun to narrow.

Men born in the early 1900s were 2.2 times more likely to drink alcohol and 3.6 times more likely to experience alcohol-related harms than women, according to a 2016 meta-analysis. By the end of the 1990s, however, women’s drinking had begun to catch up. Men still led in these categories, but only by 1.1 and 1.3 times, respectively.

Rates of binge drinking (defined as at least five drinks in men or at least four drinks in women in an approximately 2-hour period) are also converging between the sexes. The authors of a longitudinal analysis hypothesized that an uptick in young women reporting drinking for social reasons — from 53% in 1987 to 87% in 2020 — was a possible cause.

Greater alcohol consumption among women has translated into higher rates of ALD. Analyzing data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019, which looked at hundreds of diseases across 204 countries and territories, researchers reported that the worldwide prevalence of ALD among young women (15-49 years) rose within the past decade. Those in the 20- to 24-year-old age group had the most significant increases in ALD prevalence rates.

Recent US statistics highlight the relative imbalance in ALD’s impact on women, according to George F. Koob, PhD, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA).

“The age-adjusted death rate from alcohol-associated liver cirrhosis increased by 47% between 2000 and 2019, with larger increases for females than for males (83.5% compared to 33%),” Dr. Koob told this news organization. “Larger increases for women are consistent with a general increase in alcohol use among adult women and larger increases in alcohol-related emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and deaths.”

Physiologically, women have a higher risk than men of developing ALD and more severe disease, even at lower levels of alcohol exposure. According to a 2021 review, several proposed mechanisms might play a role, including differences in alcohol metabolism and first-pass metabolism, hormones, and endotoxin and Kupffer cell activation.

Crucially, women are less likely than men to receive in-person therapy or approved medications for alcohol use disorder, according to a 2019 analysis of over 66,000 privately insured adult patients.
 

 

 

Certain Ethnic, Racial Minorities Have Higher Rates of ALD

In the United States, rates of ALD and associated complications are higher among certain minority groups, most prominently Hispanic and Native American individuals.

2021 analysis of three large US databases found that Hispanic ethnicity was associated with a 17% increased risk for acute-on-chronic liver failure in patients with ALD-related admissions.

Data also show that Hispanic and White patients have a higher proportion of alcoholic hepatitis than African American patients. And for Hispanic patients admitted for alcoholic hepatitis, they incur significantly more total hospital costs despite having similar mortality rates as White patients.

ALD-related mortality appears higher within certain subgroups of Hispanic patient populations. NIAAA surveillance reports track deaths resulting from cirrhosis in the White, Black, and Hispanic populations. From 2000 to 2019, these statistics show that although death rates from cirrhosis decreased for Hispanic White men, they increased for Hispanic White women, Dr. Koob said.

The latest data show that Native American populations are experiencing ALD at relatively higher rates than other racial/ethnic groups as well. An analysis of nearly 200,000 cirrhosis-related hospitalizations found that ALD, including alcoholic hepatitis, was the most common etiology in American Indian/Alaska Native patients. A separate analysis of the National Inpatient Sample database revealed that discharges resulting from ALD were disproportionately higher among Native American women.

As with Hispanic populations, ALD-associated mortality rates are also higher in Native American populations. The death rate from ALD increased for all racial and ethnic groups by 23.4% from 2019 to 2020, but the biggest increase occurred in the American Indian or Alaska Native populations (34.3% increase, from 20.1 to 27 per 100,000 people). Additionally, over the first two decades of the 21st century, mortality rates resulting from cirrhosis were highest among the American Indian and Alaska Native populations, according to a recently published systematic analysis of US health disparities across five racial/ethnic groups.

Discrepancies in these and other minority groups may be due partly to genetic mechanisms, such as the relatively higher frequency of the PNPLA3 G/G polymorphism, a known risk factor for the development of advanced ALD, among those with Native American ancestry. A host of complex socioeconomic factors, such as income discrepancies and access to care, likely contribute too.

Evidence suggests that alcohol screening interventions are not applied equally across various racial and ethnic groups, Dr. Koob noted.

“For instance, Subbaraman and colleagues reported that, compared to non-Hispanic White patients, those who identify as Hispanic, Black, or other race or ethnicity were less likely to be screened for alcohol use during visits to healthcare providers. This was particularly true for those with a high school education or less,” he told this news organization. “However, other studies have not found such disparities.”
 

ALD Rates High in Young Adults, but the Tide May Be Changing

Globally, the prevalence of ALD has increased among both adolescents and young adults since the beginning of the 21st century. The global incidence of alcohol-associated hepatitis in recent years has been greatest among those aged 15-44 years.

In the United States, the increasing rate of ALD-related hospitalizations is primarily driven by the rise in cases of alcoholic hepatitis and acute-on-chronic liver failure among those aged 35 years and younger.

ALD is now the most common indication for liver transplant in those younger than 40 years of age, having increased fourfold between 2003 and 2018.

From 2009 to 2016, people aged 25-34 years experienced the highest average annual increase in cirrhosis-related mortality (10.5%), a trend the authors noted was “driven entirely by alcohol-related liver disease.”

Younger adults may be more susceptible to ALD due to the way they drink.

In a 2021 analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey database, the weighted prevalence of harmful alcohol use was 29.3% in those younger than 35 years, compared with 16.9% in those aged 35-64 years. Higher blood alcohol levels resulting from binge drinking may make patients more susceptible to bacterial translocation and liver fibrosis and can increase the likelihood of cirrhosis in those with an underlying metabolic syndrome.

Yet, Dr. Koob said, thinking of “young adults” as one cohort may be misguided because he’s found very different attitudes toward alcohol within that population. Cross-sectional survey data obtained from more than 180,000 young adults indicated that alcohol abstinence increased between 2002 and 2018. Young adults report various reasons for not drinking, ranging from lack of interest to financial and situational barriers (eg, not wanting to interfere with school or work).

“The tide is coming in and out at the same time,” he said. “Younger people under the age of 25 are drinking less each year, are increasingly interested in things like Dry January, and more than half view moderate levels of consumption as unhealthy. People who are 26 years and older are drinking more, are not as interested in cutting back or taking breaks, and are less likely to consider 1 or 2 drinks per day as potentially unhealthy.”

Dr. Koob would like to believe the positive trends around alcohol in the under-25 set prove not only resilient, but someday, dominant.

“We have seen historic increases in alcohol consumption in the last few years — the largest increases in more than 50 years. But we are hopeful that, as the younger cohorts age, we will see lower levels of drinking by adults in mid-life and beyond.”
 

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

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Signal of Suicide Ideation With GLP-1 RA Semaglutide, but Experts Urge Caution

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Tue, 09/03/2024 - 10:48

A new analysis has detected a signal of suicidal ideation associated with the glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) semaglutide, especially among individuals concurrently using antidepressants or benzodiazepines. 

However, the investigators and outside experts urge caution in drawing any firm conclusions based on the study’s observations. 

“Clinicians should not interpret these results as proof of causal relationship between suicidal ideation and semaglutide, as our pharmacovigilance study showed an association between the use of semaglutide and reports of suicidal ideation,” study investigator Georgios Schoretsanitis, MD, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, The Zucker Hillside Hospital, Northwell Health, Glen Oaks, New York, told this news organization.

Nonetheless, “physicians prescribing semaglutide should inform their patients about the medications’ risks and assess the psychiatric history and evaluate the mental state of patients before starting treatment with semaglutide,” Dr. Schoretsanitis said. 

“For patients with history of mental disorders or suicidal ideation/behaviors/attempts, physicians should be cautious and regularly monitor their mental state while taking semaglutide. If needed, the treating physician should involve different specialists, including a psychiatrist and/or clinical psychologists,” he added. 

The study was published online on August 20 in JAMA Network Open
 

Emerging Concerns

GLP-1 RAs are increasingly prescribed not only for type 2 diabetes but also for weight loss. However, concerns have emerged about a potential association with suicidality, which has prompted a closer look by regulators in the United States and Europe. 

Dr. Schoretsanitis and colleagues evaluated potential signals of suicidality related to semaglutide and liraglutide using data from global World Health Organization database of suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs). 

They conducted sensitivity analyses including patients with co-reported use of antidepressants and benzodiazepines and using dapagliflozinmetformin, and orlistat as comparators. 

Between November 2000 and August 2023, there were 107 cases of suicidal and/or self-injurious ADRs reported with semaglutide (median age, 48 years; 55% women) and 162 reported with liraglutide (median age 47 years; 61% women). 

The researchers noted that a “significant disproportionality” signal emerged for semaglutide-associated suicidal ideation (reporting odds ratio [ROR], 1.45), when compared with comparator drugs. 

This signal remained significant in sensitivity analyses that included patients on concurrent antidepressants (ROR, 4.45) and benzodiazepines (ROR, 4.07), “suggesting that people with anxiety and depressive disorders may be at higher probability of reporting suicidal ideation when medicated with semaglutide,” the authors wrote. 

No significant disproportionality signal was detected for liraglutide regarding suicidal ideation (ROR, 1.04). 

However, the authors noted that pooled data from previous phase 2 and 3 trials on liraglutide vs placebo for weight management identified a potential risk for suicidal ideation, with nine of 3384 participants in the liraglutide group vs two of 1941 in the placebo group reporting suicidal ideation or behavior during the trial (0.27% vs 0.10%). 
 

More Research Needed 

GLP-1 RAs “should be used cautiously until further data are available on this topic,” Dr. Schoretsanitis said. 

“Further real-world studies should investigate the risk of suicidal ideation or behavior in people treated with these drugs in every-day clinical practice. We categorically discourage off-label use of GLP1-RA and without any medical supervision,” he added.

The coauthors of an invited commentary published with the study note that between 2020 and 2023, GLP-1 RA use rose 594% in younger people, particularly in women.

This “timely and well-conducted study” by Dr. Schoretsanitis and colleagues adds “an important piece to the very relevant safety issue” related to GLP-1 RAs, wrote Francesco Salvo, MD, PhD, with Université de Bordeaux, and Jean-Luc Faillie, MD, PhD, with Université de Montpellier, both in France. 

Pending further studies, the position of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommending caution “continues to be reasonable. Whatever the cause, depression or suicidality are rare but extremely severe events and need to be prevented and managed as much as possible. 

“Waiting for more precise data, GPL-1 receptor agonists, and appetite suppressants in general, should be prescribed with great caution in patients with a history of depression or suicidal attempts, while in patients with new onset of depression without other apparent precipitants, immediate discontinuation of GLP-1 receptor agonists should be considered,” wrote Dr. Salvo and Dr. Faillie. 

Outside experts also weighed in on the study in a statement from the UK nonprofit Science Media Centre. 

The paper presents, “at best, weak evidence of an association between semaglutide and suicidality,” Ian Douglas, PhD, professor of pharmacoepidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, United Kingdom, said in the statement. “Signal detection studies in pharmacovigilance databases are good for generating hypotheses but are not suitable for assessing whether there is a causal association between a drug and an outcome.”

Stephen Evans, MSc, emeritus professor of pharmacoepidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, cautioned that the study has “major limitations.”

“This paper is based just on spontaneous reports which are sent to regulatory authorities in the country of the person reporting a suspected adverse reaction. These are sent by health professionals and patients to authorities, but are very subject to bias, including effects of media reporting. The evidence is extremely weak for a genuine effect in this instance,” Mr. Evans said. 

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Schoretsanitis reported receiving personal fees from HLS, Dexcel, Saladax, and Thermo Fisher outside the submitted work. Dr. Salvo and Dr. Faillie have no conflicts of interest. Dr. Douglas has received research grants from GSK and AstraZeneca. Mr. Evans has no conflicts of interest. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A new analysis has detected a signal of suicidal ideation associated with the glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) semaglutide, especially among individuals concurrently using antidepressants or benzodiazepines. 

However, the investigators and outside experts urge caution in drawing any firm conclusions based on the study’s observations. 

“Clinicians should not interpret these results as proof of causal relationship between suicidal ideation and semaglutide, as our pharmacovigilance study showed an association between the use of semaglutide and reports of suicidal ideation,” study investigator Georgios Schoretsanitis, MD, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, The Zucker Hillside Hospital, Northwell Health, Glen Oaks, New York, told this news organization.

Nonetheless, “physicians prescribing semaglutide should inform their patients about the medications’ risks and assess the psychiatric history and evaluate the mental state of patients before starting treatment with semaglutide,” Dr. Schoretsanitis said. 

“For patients with history of mental disorders or suicidal ideation/behaviors/attempts, physicians should be cautious and regularly monitor their mental state while taking semaglutide. If needed, the treating physician should involve different specialists, including a psychiatrist and/or clinical psychologists,” he added. 

The study was published online on August 20 in JAMA Network Open
 

Emerging Concerns

GLP-1 RAs are increasingly prescribed not only for type 2 diabetes but also for weight loss. However, concerns have emerged about a potential association with suicidality, which has prompted a closer look by regulators in the United States and Europe. 

Dr. Schoretsanitis and colleagues evaluated potential signals of suicidality related to semaglutide and liraglutide using data from global World Health Organization database of suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs). 

They conducted sensitivity analyses including patients with co-reported use of antidepressants and benzodiazepines and using dapagliflozinmetformin, and orlistat as comparators. 

Between November 2000 and August 2023, there were 107 cases of suicidal and/or self-injurious ADRs reported with semaglutide (median age, 48 years; 55% women) and 162 reported with liraglutide (median age 47 years; 61% women). 

The researchers noted that a “significant disproportionality” signal emerged for semaglutide-associated suicidal ideation (reporting odds ratio [ROR], 1.45), when compared with comparator drugs. 

This signal remained significant in sensitivity analyses that included patients on concurrent antidepressants (ROR, 4.45) and benzodiazepines (ROR, 4.07), “suggesting that people with anxiety and depressive disorders may be at higher probability of reporting suicidal ideation when medicated with semaglutide,” the authors wrote. 

No significant disproportionality signal was detected for liraglutide regarding suicidal ideation (ROR, 1.04). 

However, the authors noted that pooled data from previous phase 2 and 3 trials on liraglutide vs placebo for weight management identified a potential risk for suicidal ideation, with nine of 3384 participants in the liraglutide group vs two of 1941 in the placebo group reporting suicidal ideation or behavior during the trial (0.27% vs 0.10%). 
 

More Research Needed 

GLP-1 RAs “should be used cautiously until further data are available on this topic,” Dr. Schoretsanitis said. 

“Further real-world studies should investigate the risk of suicidal ideation or behavior in people treated with these drugs in every-day clinical practice. We categorically discourage off-label use of GLP1-RA and without any medical supervision,” he added.

The coauthors of an invited commentary published with the study note that between 2020 and 2023, GLP-1 RA use rose 594% in younger people, particularly in women.

This “timely and well-conducted study” by Dr. Schoretsanitis and colleagues adds “an important piece to the very relevant safety issue” related to GLP-1 RAs, wrote Francesco Salvo, MD, PhD, with Université de Bordeaux, and Jean-Luc Faillie, MD, PhD, with Université de Montpellier, both in France. 

Pending further studies, the position of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommending caution “continues to be reasonable. Whatever the cause, depression or suicidality are rare but extremely severe events and need to be prevented and managed as much as possible. 

“Waiting for more precise data, GPL-1 receptor agonists, and appetite suppressants in general, should be prescribed with great caution in patients with a history of depression or suicidal attempts, while in patients with new onset of depression without other apparent precipitants, immediate discontinuation of GLP-1 receptor agonists should be considered,” wrote Dr. Salvo and Dr. Faillie. 

Outside experts also weighed in on the study in a statement from the UK nonprofit Science Media Centre. 

The paper presents, “at best, weak evidence of an association between semaglutide and suicidality,” Ian Douglas, PhD, professor of pharmacoepidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, United Kingdom, said in the statement. “Signal detection studies in pharmacovigilance databases are good for generating hypotheses but are not suitable for assessing whether there is a causal association between a drug and an outcome.”

Stephen Evans, MSc, emeritus professor of pharmacoepidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, cautioned that the study has “major limitations.”

“This paper is based just on spontaneous reports which are sent to regulatory authorities in the country of the person reporting a suspected adverse reaction. These are sent by health professionals and patients to authorities, but are very subject to bias, including effects of media reporting. The evidence is extremely weak for a genuine effect in this instance,” Mr. Evans said. 

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Schoretsanitis reported receiving personal fees from HLS, Dexcel, Saladax, and Thermo Fisher outside the submitted work. Dr. Salvo and Dr. Faillie have no conflicts of interest. Dr. Douglas has received research grants from GSK and AstraZeneca. Mr. Evans has no conflicts of interest. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

A new analysis has detected a signal of suicidal ideation associated with the glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) semaglutide, especially among individuals concurrently using antidepressants or benzodiazepines. 

However, the investigators and outside experts urge caution in drawing any firm conclusions based on the study’s observations. 

“Clinicians should not interpret these results as proof of causal relationship between suicidal ideation and semaglutide, as our pharmacovigilance study showed an association between the use of semaglutide and reports of suicidal ideation,” study investigator Georgios Schoretsanitis, MD, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, The Zucker Hillside Hospital, Northwell Health, Glen Oaks, New York, told this news organization.

Nonetheless, “physicians prescribing semaglutide should inform their patients about the medications’ risks and assess the psychiatric history and evaluate the mental state of patients before starting treatment with semaglutide,” Dr. Schoretsanitis said. 

“For patients with history of mental disorders or suicidal ideation/behaviors/attempts, physicians should be cautious and regularly monitor their mental state while taking semaglutide. If needed, the treating physician should involve different specialists, including a psychiatrist and/or clinical psychologists,” he added. 

The study was published online on August 20 in JAMA Network Open
 

Emerging Concerns

GLP-1 RAs are increasingly prescribed not only for type 2 diabetes but also for weight loss. However, concerns have emerged about a potential association with suicidality, which has prompted a closer look by regulators in the United States and Europe. 

Dr. Schoretsanitis and colleagues evaluated potential signals of suicidality related to semaglutide and liraglutide using data from global World Health Organization database of suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs). 

They conducted sensitivity analyses including patients with co-reported use of antidepressants and benzodiazepines and using dapagliflozinmetformin, and orlistat as comparators. 

Between November 2000 and August 2023, there were 107 cases of suicidal and/or self-injurious ADRs reported with semaglutide (median age, 48 years; 55% women) and 162 reported with liraglutide (median age 47 years; 61% women). 

The researchers noted that a “significant disproportionality” signal emerged for semaglutide-associated suicidal ideation (reporting odds ratio [ROR], 1.45), when compared with comparator drugs. 

This signal remained significant in sensitivity analyses that included patients on concurrent antidepressants (ROR, 4.45) and benzodiazepines (ROR, 4.07), “suggesting that people with anxiety and depressive disorders may be at higher probability of reporting suicidal ideation when medicated with semaglutide,” the authors wrote. 

No significant disproportionality signal was detected for liraglutide regarding suicidal ideation (ROR, 1.04). 

However, the authors noted that pooled data from previous phase 2 and 3 trials on liraglutide vs placebo for weight management identified a potential risk for suicidal ideation, with nine of 3384 participants in the liraglutide group vs two of 1941 in the placebo group reporting suicidal ideation or behavior during the trial (0.27% vs 0.10%). 
 

More Research Needed 

GLP-1 RAs “should be used cautiously until further data are available on this topic,” Dr. Schoretsanitis said. 

“Further real-world studies should investigate the risk of suicidal ideation or behavior in people treated with these drugs in every-day clinical practice. We categorically discourage off-label use of GLP1-RA and without any medical supervision,” he added.

The coauthors of an invited commentary published with the study note that between 2020 and 2023, GLP-1 RA use rose 594% in younger people, particularly in women.

This “timely and well-conducted study” by Dr. Schoretsanitis and colleagues adds “an important piece to the very relevant safety issue” related to GLP-1 RAs, wrote Francesco Salvo, MD, PhD, with Université de Bordeaux, and Jean-Luc Faillie, MD, PhD, with Université de Montpellier, both in France. 

Pending further studies, the position of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommending caution “continues to be reasonable. Whatever the cause, depression or suicidality are rare but extremely severe events and need to be prevented and managed as much as possible. 

“Waiting for more precise data, GPL-1 receptor agonists, and appetite suppressants in general, should be prescribed with great caution in patients with a history of depression or suicidal attempts, while in patients with new onset of depression without other apparent precipitants, immediate discontinuation of GLP-1 receptor agonists should be considered,” wrote Dr. Salvo and Dr. Faillie. 

Outside experts also weighed in on the study in a statement from the UK nonprofit Science Media Centre. 

The paper presents, “at best, weak evidence of an association between semaglutide and suicidality,” Ian Douglas, PhD, professor of pharmacoepidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, United Kingdom, said in the statement. “Signal detection studies in pharmacovigilance databases are good for generating hypotheses but are not suitable for assessing whether there is a causal association between a drug and an outcome.”

Stephen Evans, MSc, emeritus professor of pharmacoepidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, cautioned that the study has “major limitations.”

“This paper is based just on spontaneous reports which are sent to regulatory authorities in the country of the person reporting a suspected adverse reaction. These are sent by health professionals and patients to authorities, but are very subject to bias, including effects of media reporting. The evidence is extremely weak for a genuine effect in this instance,” Mr. Evans said. 

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Schoretsanitis reported receiving personal fees from HLS, Dexcel, Saladax, and Thermo Fisher outside the submitted work. Dr. Salvo and Dr. Faillie have no conflicts of interest. Dr. Douglas has received research grants from GSK and AstraZeneca. Mr. Evans has no conflicts of interest. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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First Non-Prescription Continuous Glucose Monitor Launches

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Changed
Tue, 08/27/2024 - 09:26

The first — but not the last — over-the-counter continuous glucose monitor (CGM) is now available for people older than 18 years who don’t use insulin and who aren’t at a risk for hypoglycemia.

Dexcom’s Stelo is designed specifically for people with type 2 diabetes who don’t use insulin or who have prediabetes but is now available over the counter for anyone for $99 a month or $89 per month with a subscription. It won’t be covered by insurance and there are no financial assistance programs as of now, but people can use healthcare spending accounts to pay for the devices.

As with current CGMs used by people with diabetes who take insulin, the waterproof device is worn on the back of the upper arm and sends real-time glucose values to a smartphone. No finger sticks are required. Each sensor lasts 15 days. Unlike current CGMs, Stelo does not issue low blood sugar alarms.

“We’re excited to empower people to have access to their glucose readings, which we know studies have been done time and time again that giving people continuous glucose monitors helps improve their time in range, their A1c, and their sense of well-being living with diabetes. ... We expect the same improvements with this product that we’ve had with the G series products,” Thomas Grace, MD, Dexcom’s head of Clinical Advocacy and Outcomes, said in an interview at a product launch event held on August 21, 2024.

Dr. Grace is a family physician and medical director of the Diabetes Center, Blanchard Valley Health System, in Findlay, Ohio, where he uses technology extensively in managing patients with diabetes, prediabetes, and obesity. For example, he always starts patients on a CGM before prescribing a glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist to help them see the effects of both type and quantity of the food they’re eating. “On the back end of that, people are more successful getting off of medications when they have data to support their behaviors and decisions,” he said.

He anticipates the availability of Stelo will help make inroads in bringing CGM technology to primary care. “My hope is that for the places where it hasn’t taken off yet, that patients that now have access to this are the cornerstone for clinicians to see how well people can do when they have the access to that data and that will lead to some impetus for change. In the United States, roughly less than 10% of people with diabetes have CGMs right now.”

The Stelo will soon have competition, as Abbott Diabetes Care will be launching two new over-the-counter CGMs in the coming months. “Since there isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach to glucose monitoring, Abbott has designed two different products. Lingo is designed for general consumers looking to enhance their overall health and wellness, while Libre Rio is designed for people with type 2 diabetes who do not use insulin and typically manage their condition through lifestyle changes,” an Abbott spokesperson said in an interview.

Aaron Neinstein, MD, chief medical officer of Notable, a company that applies artificial intelligence to healthcare, sees a “diminishing debate” regarding the value of CGMs for people beyond those who use insulin. “Metabolic health exists on a wide spectrum, from people who are completely healthy to those at high risk for diabetes due to family history or other medical conditions, to those with insulin resistance, those with prediabetes, those with diabetes not on insulin, and those with diabetes on insulin. So when we talk and think about CGM, we need to consider this wide range of people. The question is in which specific population do the benefits of CGM outweigh costs and any potential harms? Clearly, the farther you go into poor metabolic health, the stronger is the case for CGM.” 

Dr. Neinstein added that “thankfully,” there is no more debate about the value of CGM use for people who use insulin and are therefore at a risk for hypoglycemia. But there is less debate now about even those who don’t take insulin, with emerging evidence that a “CGM provides biofeedback and helps them as a tool to support behavior changes and learning. I hope we will see insurance coverage broaden over time to cover CGM for more of these people who can benefit and who can improve their metabolic health through the use of CGM.”

However, Dr. Neinstein cautioned, “If you go to people who have no medical problems, no insulin resistance, no family history of diabetes, at that point, we do not have evidence that CGM is of health benefit.”

Moreover, he said, “ultimately if you have to choose whether a healthcare dollar goes to CGM or a GLP-1, the GLP-1 is a more impactful choice. In an ideal world, we would be able to support patients in having both, but with the profound benefits from GLP-1s on weight loss, cardiovascular outcomes, and [hemoglobin] A1c reduction and more, they are more potent than using a CGM.”

Dr. Grace is a Dexcom employee. Dr. Neinstein is a full-time employee at Notable, with no current further disclosures.

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

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The first — but not the last — over-the-counter continuous glucose monitor (CGM) is now available for people older than 18 years who don’t use insulin and who aren’t at a risk for hypoglycemia.

Dexcom’s Stelo is designed specifically for people with type 2 diabetes who don’t use insulin or who have prediabetes but is now available over the counter for anyone for $99 a month or $89 per month with a subscription. It won’t be covered by insurance and there are no financial assistance programs as of now, but people can use healthcare spending accounts to pay for the devices.

As with current CGMs used by people with diabetes who take insulin, the waterproof device is worn on the back of the upper arm and sends real-time glucose values to a smartphone. No finger sticks are required. Each sensor lasts 15 days. Unlike current CGMs, Stelo does not issue low blood sugar alarms.

“We’re excited to empower people to have access to their glucose readings, which we know studies have been done time and time again that giving people continuous glucose monitors helps improve their time in range, their A1c, and their sense of well-being living with diabetes. ... We expect the same improvements with this product that we’ve had with the G series products,” Thomas Grace, MD, Dexcom’s head of Clinical Advocacy and Outcomes, said in an interview at a product launch event held on August 21, 2024.

Dr. Grace is a family physician and medical director of the Diabetes Center, Blanchard Valley Health System, in Findlay, Ohio, where he uses technology extensively in managing patients with diabetes, prediabetes, and obesity. For example, he always starts patients on a CGM before prescribing a glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist to help them see the effects of both type and quantity of the food they’re eating. “On the back end of that, people are more successful getting off of medications when they have data to support their behaviors and decisions,” he said.

He anticipates the availability of Stelo will help make inroads in bringing CGM technology to primary care. “My hope is that for the places where it hasn’t taken off yet, that patients that now have access to this are the cornerstone for clinicians to see how well people can do when they have the access to that data and that will lead to some impetus for change. In the United States, roughly less than 10% of people with diabetes have CGMs right now.”

The Stelo will soon have competition, as Abbott Diabetes Care will be launching two new over-the-counter CGMs in the coming months. “Since there isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach to glucose monitoring, Abbott has designed two different products. Lingo is designed for general consumers looking to enhance their overall health and wellness, while Libre Rio is designed for people with type 2 diabetes who do not use insulin and typically manage their condition through lifestyle changes,” an Abbott spokesperson said in an interview.

Aaron Neinstein, MD, chief medical officer of Notable, a company that applies artificial intelligence to healthcare, sees a “diminishing debate” regarding the value of CGMs for people beyond those who use insulin. “Metabolic health exists on a wide spectrum, from people who are completely healthy to those at high risk for diabetes due to family history or other medical conditions, to those with insulin resistance, those with prediabetes, those with diabetes not on insulin, and those with diabetes on insulin. So when we talk and think about CGM, we need to consider this wide range of people. The question is in which specific population do the benefits of CGM outweigh costs and any potential harms? Clearly, the farther you go into poor metabolic health, the stronger is the case for CGM.” 

Dr. Neinstein added that “thankfully,” there is no more debate about the value of CGM use for people who use insulin and are therefore at a risk for hypoglycemia. But there is less debate now about even those who don’t take insulin, with emerging evidence that a “CGM provides biofeedback and helps them as a tool to support behavior changes and learning. I hope we will see insurance coverage broaden over time to cover CGM for more of these people who can benefit and who can improve their metabolic health through the use of CGM.”

However, Dr. Neinstein cautioned, “If you go to people who have no medical problems, no insulin resistance, no family history of diabetes, at that point, we do not have evidence that CGM is of health benefit.”

Moreover, he said, “ultimately if you have to choose whether a healthcare dollar goes to CGM or a GLP-1, the GLP-1 is a more impactful choice. In an ideal world, we would be able to support patients in having both, but with the profound benefits from GLP-1s on weight loss, cardiovascular outcomes, and [hemoglobin] A1c reduction and more, they are more potent than using a CGM.”

Dr. Grace is a Dexcom employee. Dr. Neinstein is a full-time employee at Notable, with no current further disclosures.

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

The first — but not the last — over-the-counter continuous glucose monitor (CGM) is now available for people older than 18 years who don’t use insulin and who aren’t at a risk for hypoglycemia.

Dexcom’s Stelo is designed specifically for people with type 2 diabetes who don’t use insulin or who have prediabetes but is now available over the counter for anyone for $99 a month or $89 per month with a subscription. It won’t be covered by insurance and there are no financial assistance programs as of now, but people can use healthcare spending accounts to pay for the devices.

As with current CGMs used by people with diabetes who take insulin, the waterproof device is worn on the back of the upper arm and sends real-time glucose values to a smartphone. No finger sticks are required. Each sensor lasts 15 days. Unlike current CGMs, Stelo does not issue low blood sugar alarms.

“We’re excited to empower people to have access to their glucose readings, which we know studies have been done time and time again that giving people continuous glucose monitors helps improve their time in range, their A1c, and their sense of well-being living with diabetes. ... We expect the same improvements with this product that we’ve had with the G series products,” Thomas Grace, MD, Dexcom’s head of Clinical Advocacy and Outcomes, said in an interview at a product launch event held on August 21, 2024.

Dr. Grace is a family physician and medical director of the Diabetes Center, Blanchard Valley Health System, in Findlay, Ohio, where he uses technology extensively in managing patients with diabetes, prediabetes, and obesity. For example, he always starts patients on a CGM before prescribing a glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist to help them see the effects of both type and quantity of the food they’re eating. “On the back end of that, people are more successful getting off of medications when they have data to support their behaviors and decisions,” he said.

He anticipates the availability of Stelo will help make inroads in bringing CGM technology to primary care. “My hope is that for the places where it hasn’t taken off yet, that patients that now have access to this are the cornerstone for clinicians to see how well people can do when they have the access to that data and that will lead to some impetus for change. In the United States, roughly less than 10% of people with diabetes have CGMs right now.”

The Stelo will soon have competition, as Abbott Diabetes Care will be launching two new over-the-counter CGMs in the coming months. “Since there isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach to glucose monitoring, Abbott has designed two different products. Lingo is designed for general consumers looking to enhance their overall health and wellness, while Libre Rio is designed for people with type 2 diabetes who do not use insulin and typically manage their condition through lifestyle changes,” an Abbott spokesperson said in an interview.

Aaron Neinstein, MD, chief medical officer of Notable, a company that applies artificial intelligence to healthcare, sees a “diminishing debate” regarding the value of CGMs for people beyond those who use insulin. “Metabolic health exists on a wide spectrum, from people who are completely healthy to those at high risk for diabetes due to family history or other medical conditions, to those with insulin resistance, those with prediabetes, those with diabetes not on insulin, and those with diabetes on insulin. So when we talk and think about CGM, we need to consider this wide range of people. The question is in which specific population do the benefits of CGM outweigh costs and any potential harms? Clearly, the farther you go into poor metabolic health, the stronger is the case for CGM.” 

Dr. Neinstein added that “thankfully,” there is no more debate about the value of CGM use for people who use insulin and are therefore at a risk for hypoglycemia. But there is less debate now about even those who don’t take insulin, with emerging evidence that a “CGM provides biofeedback and helps them as a tool to support behavior changes and learning. I hope we will see insurance coverage broaden over time to cover CGM for more of these people who can benefit and who can improve their metabolic health through the use of CGM.”

However, Dr. Neinstein cautioned, “If you go to people who have no medical problems, no insulin resistance, no family history of diabetes, at that point, we do not have evidence that CGM is of health benefit.”

Moreover, he said, “ultimately if you have to choose whether a healthcare dollar goes to CGM or a GLP-1, the GLP-1 is a more impactful choice. In an ideal world, we would be able to support patients in having both, but with the profound benefits from GLP-1s on weight loss, cardiovascular outcomes, and [hemoglobin] A1c reduction and more, they are more potent than using a CGM.”

Dr. Grace is a Dexcom employee. Dr. Neinstein is a full-time employee at Notable, with no current further disclosures.

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

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Evidence Growing for Inflammation’s Role in Elevating Risk for Psychiatric Illness

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Tue, 08/27/2024 - 09:27

New research provides more evidence that inflammation may contribute to the development of psychiatric disorders and suggests that measuring certain inflammatory biomarkers may aid in the early identification of individuals at high risk.

Using large-scale datasets, researchers found that elevated levels of certain inflammatory biomarkers, particularly leukocytes, haptoglobin, and C-reactive protein (CRP), and lower levels of anti-inflammatory immunoglobulin G (IgG) were associated with an increased risk for psychiatric disorders. 

Individuals with psychiatric disorders had persistently higher levels of leukocytes and haptoglobin, as well as persistently lower levels of IgG, than controls during the 30 years before diagnosis, which suggest “long-term processes and may aid in the identification of individuals at high risk,” the researchers wrote. 

In addition, a higher level of leukocytes was consistently associated with increased odds of depression across different methods of Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis, “indicating a possible causal relationship between leukocytes and depression,” they said. 

The study, with first author Yu Zeng, MSc, with the Mental Health Center and West China Biomedical Big Data Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China, was published online on August 21 in JAMA Psychiatry
 

Inflammatory Phenotype

Individuals with psychiatric disorders have been found to have elevated levels of inflammatory biomarkers, but prospective evidence is limited regarding the association between inflammatory biomarkers and subsequent psychiatric disorders risk. 

To investigate further, the researchers employed a “triangulation” approach consisting of an exploration dataset of 585,279 adults in the Swedish AMORIS cohort with no prior psychiatric diagnoses and a measurement of at least one inflammatory biomarker, a validation dataset of 485,620 UK Biobank participants, and genetic and MR analyses using genome-wide association study summary statistics.

In the AMORIS cohort, individuals with a higher than median level of leukocytes (hazard ratio [HR], 1.11), haptoglobin (HR, 1.13), or CRP (HR, 1.02) had an elevated risk for any psychiatric disorder. In contrast, there was an inverse association for IgG level (HR, 0.92). 

“The estimates were comparable for depression, anxiety, and stress-related disorders, specifically, and these results were largely validated in the UK Biobank,” the authors reported. 

In trajectory analyses, compared with controls, individuals with psychiatric disorders had higher leukocyte and haptoglobin levels and lower IgG up to three decades before being diagnosed. 

The MR analysis suggested a possible causal relationship between leukocytes and depression. 

The underlying mechanisms for the associations of serum leukocytes, haptoglobin, CRP, and IgG with psychiatry disorders remain unclear.

“Possible explanations mainly include blood-brain barrier disruption, microglia activation, neurotransmission impairment, and other interactions between inflammations and neuropathology,” the researchers wrote. 

A related paper published online on August 21 in JAMA Psychiatry looked at trajectories of inflammation in childhood and risk for mental and cardiometabolic disorders in adulthood. 

This longitudinal cohort study found that having persistently raised levels of inflammation as measured by CRP throughout childhood and adolescence, peaking at age 9 years, were associated with an increased risk of developing psychosis disorder, severe depression, and higher levels of insulin resistance.
 

Support for Precision Psychiatry

This study is “another strong indication that inflammation plays a role in depression,” Andrew H. Miller, MD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and director of the behavioral immunology program, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, who wasn’t involved in the study, told this news organization. 

“The work adds to the mounting data that there exists an inflammatory phenotype of depression that may uniquely respond to treatment and may have a unique trajectory,” Dr. Miller said. 

“Eventually the field will want to embrace this novel phenotype and better understand how to recognize it and treat it. This is our entrée into precision psychiatry where we identify the right treatment for the right patient at the right time based on an understanding of the underlying cause of their illness,” Dr. Miller added. 

Also weighing in, Alexander B. Niculescu III, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and medical neuroscience, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, cautioned that these biomarkers are “very nonspecific and are likely related to these subjects that go on to develop psychiatric disorders having more stressful, adverse life trajectories.”

“There are better, more specific blood biomarkers for psychiatric disorders already available,” Dr. Niculescu told this news organization.

His group recently reported that a panel of blood-based biomarkers can distinguish between depression and bipolar disorder, predict a person’s future risk for these disorders, and inform more tailored medication choices. 

Notably, they observed a strong circadian clock gene component to mood disorders, which helps explain why some patients’ conditions become worse with seasonal changes. It also explains the sleep alterations that occur among patients with mood disorders, they said.

This study had no commercial funding. Yu Zeng and Dr. Miller had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Niculescu is a cofounder of MindX Sciences and is listed as inventor on a patent application filed by Indiana University.
 

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

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New research provides more evidence that inflammation may contribute to the development of psychiatric disorders and suggests that measuring certain inflammatory biomarkers may aid in the early identification of individuals at high risk.

Using large-scale datasets, researchers found that elevated levels of certain inflammatory biomarkers, particularly leukocytes, haptoglobin, and C-reactive protein (CRP), and lower levels of anti-inflammatory immunoglobulin G (IgG) were associated with an increased risk for psychiatric disorders. 

Individuals with psychiatric disorders had persistently higher levels of leukocytes and haptoglobin, as well as persistently lower levels of IgG, than controls during the 30 years before diagnosis, which suggest “long-term processes and may aid in the identification of individuals at high risk,” the researchers wrote. 

In addition, a higher level of leukocytes was consistently associated with increased odds of depression across different methods of Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis, “indicating a possible causal relationship between leukocytes and depression,” they said. 

The study, with first author Yu Zeng, MSc, with the Mental Health Center and West China Biomedical Big Data Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China, was published online on August 21 in JAMA Psychiatry
 

Inflammatory Phenotype

Individuals with psychiatric disorders have been found to have elevated levels of inflammatory biomarkers, but prospective evidence is limited regarding the association between inflammatory biomarkers and subsequent psychiatric disorders risk. 

To investigate further, the researchers employed a “triangulation” approach consisting of an exploration dataset of 585,279 adults in the Swedish AMORIS cohort with no prior psychiatric diagnoses and a measurement of at least one inflammatory biomarker, a validation dataset of 485,620 UK Biobank participants, and genetic and MR analyses using genome-wide association study summary statistics.

In the AMORIS cohort, individuals with a higher than median level of leukocytes (hazard ratio [HR], 1.11), haptoglobin (HR, 1.13), or CRP (HR, 1.02) had an elevated risk for any psychiatric disorder. In contrast, there was an inverse association for IgG level (HR, 0.92). 

“The estimates were comparable for depression, anxiety, and stress-related disorders, specifically, and these results were largely validated in the UK Biobank,” the authors reported. 

In trajectory analyses, compared with controls, individuals with psychiatric disorders had higher leukocyte and haptoglobin levels and lower IgG up to three decades before being diagnosed. 

The MR analysis suggested a possible causal relationship between leukocytes and depression. 

The underlying mechanisms for the associations of serum leukocytes, haptoglobin, CRP, and IgG with psychiatry disorders remain unclear.

“Possible explanations mainly include blood-brain barrier disruption, microglia activation, neurotransmission impairment, and other interactions between inflammations and neuropathology,” the researchers wrote. 

A related paper published online on August 21 in JAMA Psychiatry looked at trajectories of inflammation in childhood and risk for mental and cardiometabolic disorders in adulthood. 

This longitudinal cohort study found that having persistently raised levels of inflammation as measured by CRP throughout childhood and adolescence, peaking at age 9 years, were associated with an increased risk of developing psychosis disorder, severe depression, and higher levels of insulin resistance.
 

Support for Precision Psychiatry

This study is “another strong indication that inflammation plays a role in depression,” Andrew H. Miller, MD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and director of the behavioral immunology program, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, who wasn’t involved in the study, told this news organization. 

“The work adds to the mounting data that there exists an inflammatory phenotype of depression that may uniquely respond to treatment and may have a unique trajectory,” Dr. Miller said. 

“Eventually the field will want to embrace this novel phenotype and better understand how to recognize it and treat it. This is our entrée into precision psychiatry where we identify the right treatment for the right patient at the right time based on an understanding of the underlying cause of their illness,” Dr. Miller added. 

Also weighing in, Alexander B. Niculescu III, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and medical neuroscience, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, cautioned that these biomarkers are “very nonspecific and are likely related to these subjects that go on to develop psychiatric disorders having more stressful, adverse life trajectories.”

“There are better, more specific blood biomarkers for psychiatric disorders already available,” Dr. Niculescu told this news organization.

His group recently reported that a panel of blood-based biomarkers can distinguish between depression and bipolar disorder, predict a person’s future risk for these disorders, and inform more tailored medication choices. 

Notably, they observed a strong circadian clock gene component to mood disorders, which helps explain why some patients’ conditions become worse with seasonal changes. It also explains the sleep alterations that occur among patients with mood disorders, they said.

This study had no commercial funding. Yu Zeng and Dr. Miller had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Niculescu is a cofounder of MindX Sciences and is listed as inventor on a patent application filed by Indiana University.
 

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

New research provides more evidence that inflammation may contribute to the development of psychiatric disorders and suggests that measuring certain inflammatory biomarkers may aid in the early identification of individuals at high risk.

Using large-scale datasets, researchers found that elevated levels of certain inflammatory biomarkers, particularly leukocytes, haptoglobin, and C-reactive protein (CRP), and lower levels of anti-inflammatory immunoglobulin G (IgG) were associated with an increased risk for psychiatric disorders. 

Individuals with psychiatric disorders had persistently higher levels of leukocytes and haptoglobin, as well as persistently lower levels of IgG, than controls during the 30 years before diagnosis, which suggest “long-term processes and may aid in the identification of individuals at high risk,” the researchers wrote. 

In addition, a higher level of leukocytes was consistently associated with increased odds of depression across different methods of Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis, “indicating a possible causal relationship between leukocytes and depression,” they said. 

The study, with first author Yu Zeng, MSc, with the Mental Health Center and West China Biomedical Big Data Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China, was published online on August 21 in JAMA Psychiatry
 

Inflammatory Phenotype

Individuals with psychiatric disorders have been found to have elevated levels of inflammatory biomarkers, but prospective evidence is limited regarding the association between inflammatory biomarkers and subsequent psychiatric disorders risk. 

To investigate further, the researchers employed a “triangulation” approach consisting of an exploration dataset of 585,279 adults in the Swedish AMORIS cohort with no prior psychiatric diagnoses and a measurement of at least one inflammatory biomarker, a validation dataset of 485,620 UK Biobank participants, and genetic and MR analyses using genome-wide association study summary statistics.

In the AMORIS cohort, individuals with a higher than median level of leukocytes (hazard ratio [HR], 1.11), haptoglobin (HR, 1.13), or CRP (HR, 1.02) had an elevated risk for any psychiatric disorder. In contrast, there was an inverse association for IgG level (HR, 0.92). 

“The estimates were comparable for depression, anxiety, and stress-related disorders, specifically, and these results were largely validated in the UK Biobank,” the authors reported. 

In trajectory analyses, compared with controls, individuals with psychiatric disorders had higher leukocyte and haptoglobin levels and lower IgG up to three decades before being diagnosed. 

The MR analysis suggested a possible causal relationship between leukocytes and depression. 

The underlying mechanisms for the associations of serum leukocytes, haptoglobin, CRP, and IgG with psychiatry disorders remain unclear.

“Possible explanations mainly include blood-brain barrier disruption, microglia activation, neurotransmission impairment, and other interactions between inflammations and neuropathology,” the researchers wrote. 

A related paper published online on August 21 in JAMA Psychiatry looked at trajectories of inflammation in childhood and risk for mental and cardiometabolic disorders in adulthood. 

This longitudinal cohort study found that having persistently raised levels of inflammation as measured by CRP throughout childhood and adolescence, peaking at age 9 years, were associated with an increased risk of developing psychosis disorder, severe depression, and higher levels of insulin resistance.
 

Support for Precision Psychiatry

This study is “another strong indication that inflammation plays a role in depression,” Andrew H. Miller, MD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and director of the behavioral immunology program, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, who wasn’t involved in the study, told this news organization. 

“The work adds to the mounting data that there exists an inflammatory phenotype of depression that may uniquely respond to treatment and may have a unique trajectory,” Dr. Miller said. 

“Eventually the field will want to embrace this novel phenotype and better understand how to recognize it and treat it. This is our entrée into precision psychiatry where we identify the right treatment for the right patient at the right time based on an understanding of the underlying cause of their illness,” Dr. Miller added. 

Also weighing in, Alexander B. Niculescu III, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and medical neuroscience, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, cautioned that these biomarkers are “very nonspecific and are likely related to these subjects that go on to develop psychiatric disorders having more stressful, adverse life trajectories.”

“There are better, more specific blood biomarkers for psychiatric disorders already available,” Dr. Niculescu told this news organization.

His group recently reported that a panel of blood-based biomarkers can distinguish between depression and bipolar disorder, predict a person’s future risk for these disorders, and inform more tailored medication choices. 

Notably, they observed a strong circadian clock gene component to mood disorders, which helps explain why some patients’ conditions become worse with seasonal changes. It also explains the sleep alterations that occur among patients with mood disorders, they said.

This study had no commercial funding. Yu Zeng and Dr. Miller had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Niculescu is a cofounder of MindX Sciences and is listed as inventor on a patent application filed by Indiana University.
 

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

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The Next Frontier of Antibiotic Discovery: Inside Your Gut

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Tue, 08/27/2024 - 09:29

Scientists at Stanford University and the University of Pennsylvania have discovered a new antibiotic candidate in a surprising place: the human gut. 

In mice, the antibiotic — a peptide known as prevotellin-2 — showed antimicrobial potency on par with polymyxin B, an antibiotic medication used to treat multidrug-resistant infections. Meanwhile, the peptide mainly left commensal, or beneficial, bacteria alone. The study, published in Cell, also identified several other potent antibiotic peptides with the potential to combat antimicrobial-resistant infections.

The research is part of a larger quest to find new antibiotics that can fight drug-resistant infections, a critical public health threat with more than 2.8 million cases and 35,000 deaths annually in the United States. That quest is urgent, said study author César de la Fuente, PhD, professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. 

“The main pillars that have enabled us to almost double our lifespan in the last 100 years or so have been antibiotics, vaccines, and clean water,” said Dr. de la Fuente. “Imagine taking out one of those. I think it would be pretty dramatic.” (Dr. De la Fuente’s lab has become known for finding antibiotic candidates in unusual places, like ancient genetic information of Neanderthals and woolly mammoths.)  

The first widely used antibiotic, penicillin, was discovered in 1928, when a physician studying Staphylococcus bacteria returned to his lab after summer break to find mold growing in one of his petri dishes. But many other antibiotics — like streptomycin, tetracycline, and erythromycin — were discovered from soil bacteria, which produce variations of these substances to compete with other microorganisms. 

By looking in the gut microbiome, the researchers hoped to identify peptides that the trillions of microbes use against each other in the fight for limited resources — ideally, peptides that wouldn’t broadly kill off the entire microbiome. 
 

Kill the Bad, Spare the Good

Many traditional antibiotics are small molecules. This means they can wipe out the good bacteria in your body, and because each targets a specific bacterial function, bad bacteria can become resistant to them.

Peptide antibiotics, on the other hand, don’t diffuse into the whole body. If taken orally, they stay in the gut; if taken intravenously, they generally stay in the blood. And because of how they kill bacteria, targeting the membrane, they’re also less prone to bacterial resistance.

The microbiome is like a big reservoir of pathogens, said Ami Bhatt, MD, PhD, hematologist at Stanford University in California and one of the study’s authors. Because many antibiotics kill healthy gut bacteria, “what you have left over,” Dr. Bhatt said, “is this big open niche that gets filled up with multidrug-resistant organisms like E coli [Escherichia coli] or vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus.”

Dr. Bhatt has seen cancer patients undergo successful treatment only to die of a multidrug-resistant infection, because current antibiotics fail against those pathogens. “That’s like winning the battle to lose the war.”

By investigating the microbiome, “we wanted to see if we could identify antimicrobial peptides that might spare key members of our regular microbiome, so that we wouldn’t totally disrupt the microbiome the way we do when we use broad-spectrum, small molecule–based antibiotics,” Dr. Bhatt said.

The researchers used artificial intelligence to sift through 400,000 proteins to predict, based on known antibiotics, which peptide sequences might have antimicrobial properties. From the results, they chose 78 peptides to synthesize and test.

“The application of computational approaches combined with experimental validation is very powerful and exciting,” said Jennifer Geddes-McAlister, PhD, professor of cell biology at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, who was not involved in the study. “The study is robust in its approach to microbiome sampling.” 
 

 

 

The Long Journey from Lab to Clinic

More than half of the peptides the team tested effectively inhibited the growth of harmful bacteria, and prevotellin-2 (derived from the bacteria Prevotella copri)stood out as the most powerful.

“The study validates experimental data from the lab using animal models, which moves discoveries closer to the clinic,” said Dr. Geddes-McAlister. “Further testing with clinical trials is needed, but the potential for clinical application is promising.” 

Unfortunately, that’s not likely to happen anytime soon, said Dr. de la Fuente. “There is not enough economic incentive” for companies to develop new antibiotics. Ten years is his most hopeful guess for when we might see prevotellin-2, or a similar antibiotic, complete clinical trials.

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

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Scientists at Stanford University and the University of Pennsylvania have discovered a new antibiotic candidate in a surprising place: the human gut. 

In mice, the antibiotic — a peptide known as prevotellin-2 — showed antimicrobial potency on par with polymyxin B, an antibiotic medication used to treat multidrug-resistant infections. Meanwhile, the peptide mainly left commensal, or beneficial, bacteria alone. The study, published in Cell, also identified several other potent antibiotic peptides with the potential to combat antimicrobial-resistant infections.

The research is part of a larger quest to find new antibiotics that can fight drug-resistant infections, a critical public health threat with more than 2.8 million cases and 35,000 deaths annually in the United States. That quest is urgent, said study author César de la Fuente, PhD, professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. 

“The main pillars that have enabled us to almost double our lifespan in the last 100 years or so have been antibiotics, vaccines, and clean water,” said Dr. de la Fuente. “Imagine taking out one of those. I think it would be pretty dramatic.” (Dr. De la Fuente’s lab has become known for finding antibiotic candidates in unusual places, like ancient genetic information of Neanderthals and woolly mammoths.)  

The first widely used antibiotic, penicillin, was discovered in 1928, when a physician studying Staphylococcus bacteria returned to his lab after summer break to find mold growing in one of his petri dishes. But many other antibiotics — like streptomycin, tetracycline, and erythromycin — were discovered from soil bacteria, which produce variations of these substances to compete with other microorganisms. 

By looking in the gut microbiome, the researchers hoped to identify peptides that the trillions of microbes use against each other in the fight for limited resources — ideally, peptides that wouldn’t broadly kill off the entire microbiome. 
 

Kill the Bad, Spare the Good

Many traditional antibiotics are small molecules. This means they can wipe out the good bacteria in your body, and because each targets a specific bacterial function, bad bacteria can become resistant to them.

Peptide antibiotics, on the other hand, don’t diffuse into the whole body. If taken orally, they stay in the gut; if taken intravenously, they generally stay in the blood. And because of how they kill bacteria, targeting the membrane, they’re also less prone to bacterial resistance.

The microbiome is like a big reservoir of pathogens, said Ami Bhatt, MD, PhD, hematologist at Stanford University in California and one of the study’s authors. Because many antibiotics kill healthy gut bacteria, “what you have left over,” Dr. Bhatt said, “is this big open niche that gets filled up with multidrug-resistant organisms like E coli [Escherichia coli] or vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus.”

Dr. Bhatt has seen cancer patients undergo successful treatment only to die of a multidrug-resistant infection, because current antibiotics fail against those pathogens. “That’s like winning the battle to lose the war.”

By investigating the microbiome, “we wanted to see if we could identify antimicrobial peptides that might spare key members of our regular microbiome, so that we wouldn’t totally disrupt the microbiome the way we do when we use broad-spectrum, small molecule–based antibiotics,” Dr. Bhatt said.

The researchers used artificial intelligence to sift through 400,000 proteins to predict, based on known antibiotics, which peptide sequences might have antimicrobial properties. From the results, they chose 78 peptides to synthesize and test.

“The application of computational approaches combined with experimental validation is very powerful and exciting,” said Jennifer Geddes-McAlister, PhD, professor of cell biology at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, who was not involved in the study. “The study is robust in its approach to microbiome sampling.” 
 

 

 

The Long Journey from Lab to Clinic

More than half of the peptides the team tested effectively inhibited the growth of harmful bacteria, and prevotellin-2 (derived from the bacteria Prevotella copri)stood out as the most powerful.

“The study validates experimental data from the lab using animal models, which moves discoveries closer to the clinic,” said Dr. Geddes-McAlister. “Further testing with clinical trials is needed, but the potential for clinical application is promising.” 

Unfortunately, that’s not likely to happen anytime soon, said Dr. de la Fuente. “There is not enough economic incentive” for companies to develop new antibiotics. Ten years is his most hopeful guess for when we might see prevotellin-2, or a similar antibiotic, complete clinical trials.

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

Scientists at Stanford University and the University of Pennsylvania have discovered a new antibiotic candidate in a surprising place: the human gut. 

In mice, the antibiotic — a peptide known as prevotellin-2 — showed antimicrobial potency on par with polymyxin B, an antibiotic medication used to treat multidrug-resistant infections. Meanwhile, the peptide mainly left commensal, or beneficial, bacteria alone. The study, published in Cell, also identified several other potent antibiotic peptides with the potential to combat antimicrobial-resistant infections.

The research is part of a larger quest to find new antibiotics that can fight drug-resistant infections, a critical public health threat with more than 2.8 million cases and 35,000 deaths annually in the United States. That quest is urgent, said study author César de la Fuente, PhD, professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. 

“The main pillars that have enabled us to almost double our lifespan in the last 100 years or so have been antibiotics, vaccines, and clean water,” said Dr. de la Fuente. “Imagine taking out one of those. I think it would be pretty dramatic.” (Dr. De la Fuente’s lab has become known for finding antibiotic candidates in unusual places, like ancient genetic information of Neanderthals and woolly mammoths.)  

The first widely used antibiotic, penicillin, was discovered in 1928, when a physician studying Staphylococcus bacteria returned to his lab after summer break to find mold growing in one of his petri dishes. But many other antibiotics — like streptomycin, tetracycline, and erythromycin — were discovered from soil bacteria, which produce variations of these substances to compete with other microorganisms. 

By looking in the gut microbiome, the researchers hoped to identify peptides that the trillions of microbes use against each other in the fight for limited resources — ideally, peptides that wouldn’t broadly kill off the entire microbiome. 
 

Kill the Bad, Spare the Good

Many traditional antibiotics are small molecules. This means they can wipe out the good bacteria in your body, and because each targets a specific bacterial function, bad bacteria can become resistant to them.

Peptide antibiotics, on the other hand, don’t diffuse into the whole body. If taken orally, they stay in the gut; if taken intravenously, they generally stay in the blood. And because of how they kill bacteria, targeting the membrane, they’re also less prone to bacterial resistance.

The microbiome is like a big reservoir of pathogens, said Ami Bhatt, MD, PhD, hematologist at Stanford University in California and one of the study’s authors. Because many antibiotics kill healthy gut bacteria, “what you have left over,” Dr. Bhatt said, “is this big open niche that gets filled up with multidrug-resistant organisms like E coli [Escherichia coli] or vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus.”

Dr. Bhatt has seen cancer patients undergo successful treatment only to die of a multidrug-resistant infection, because current antibiotics fail against those pathogens. “That’s like winning the battle to lose the war.”

By investigating the microbiome, “we wanted to see if we could identify antimicrobial peptides that might spare key members of our regular microbiome, so that we wouldn’t totally disrupt the microbiome the way we do when we use broad-spectrum, small molecule–based antibiotics,” Dr. Bhatt said.

The researchers used artificial intelligence to sift through 400,000 proteins to predict, based on known antibiotics, which peptide sequences might have antimicrobial properties. From the results, they chose 78 peptides to synthesize and test.

“The application of computational approaches combined with experimental validation is very powerful and exciting,” said Jennifer Geddes-McAlister, PhD, professor of cell biology at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, who was not involved in the study. “The study is robust in its approach to microbiome sampling.” 
 

 

 

The Long Journey from Lab to Clinic

More than half of the peptides the team tested effectively inhibited the growth of harmful bacteria, and prevotellin-2 (derived from the bacteria Prevotella copri)stood out as the most powerful.

“The study validates experimental data from the lab using animal models, which moves discoveries closer to the clinic,” said Dr. Geddes-McAlister. “Further testing with clinical trials is needed, but the potential for clinical application is promising.” 

Unfortunately, that’s not likely to happen anytime soon, said Dr. de la Fuente. “There is not enough economic incentive” for companies to develop new antibiotics. Ten years is his most hopeful guess for when we might see prevotellin-2, or a similar antibiotic, complete clinical trials.

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

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The Most Misinterpreted Study in Medicine: Don’t be TRICCed

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Changed
Tue, 08/27/2024 - 09:31

Ah, blood. That sweet nectar of life that quiets angina, abolishes dyspnea, prevents orthostatic syncope, and quells sinus tachycardia. As a cardiologist, I am an unabashed hemophile. 

But we liberal transfusionists are challenged on every request for consideration of transfusion. Whereas the polite may resort to whispered skepticism, vehement critics respond with scorn as if we’d asked them to burn aromatic herbs or fetch a bucket of leeches. And to what do we owe this pathological angst? The broad and persistent misinterpretation of the pesky TRICC trial (N Engl J Med. 1999;340:409-417). You know; the one that should have been published with a boxed warning stating: “Misinterpretation of this trial could result in significant harm.” 
 

Point 1: Our Actively Bleeding Patient is Not a TRICC Patient. 

Published in 1999, the TRICC trial enrolled critical anemic patients older than 16 years who were stable after fluid resuscitation and were not actively bleeding. They had a hemoglobin level < 9 g/dL and were expected to stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) for more than 24 hours. They were randomly assigned to either a conservative trigger for transfusion of < 7 g/dL or a liberal threshold of < 10 g/dL. Mortality at 30 days was lower with the conservative approach — 18.7% vs 23.3% — but the difference was not statistically significant (P = .11). The findings were similar for the secondary endpoints of inpatient mortality (22.2% vs 28.1%; P = .05) and ICU mortality (13.9% vs 16.2%; P = .29). 

One must admit that these P values are not impressive, and the authors’ conclusion should have warranted caution: “A restrictive strategy ... is at least as effective as and possibly superior to a liberal transfusion strategy in critically ill patients, with the possible exception of patients with acute myocardial infarction and unstable angina.” 
 

Point 2: Our Critically Ill Cardiac Patient is Unlikely to be a “TRICC” Patient.

Another criticism of TRICC is that only 13% of those assessed and 26% of those eligible were enrolled, mostly owing to physician refusal. Only 26% of enrolled patients had cardiac disease. This makes the TRICC population highly selected and not representative of typical ICU patients. 

To prove my point that the edict against higher transfusion thresholds can be dangerous, I’ll describe my most recent interface with TRICC trial misinterpretation 
 

A Case in Point

The patient, Mrs. Kemp,* is 79 years old and has been on aspirin for years following coronary stent placement. One evening, she began spurting bright red blood from her rectum, interrupted only briefly by large clots the consistency of jellied cranberries. When she arrived at the hospital, she was hemodynamically stable, with a hemoglobin level of 10 g/dL, down from her usual 12 g/dL. That level bolstered the confidence of her provider, who insisted that she be managed conservatively. 

Mrs. Kemp was transferred to the ward, where she continued to bleed briskly. Over the next 2 hours, her hemoglobin level dropped to 9 g/dL, then 8 g/dL. Her daughter, a healthcare worker, requested a transfusion. The answer was, wait for it — the well-scripted, somewhat patronizing oft-quoted line, “The medical literature states that we need to wait for a hemoglobin level of 7 g/dL before we transfuse.” 

Later that evening, Mrs. Kemp’s systolic blood pressure dropped to the upper 80s, despite her usual hypertension. The provider was again comforted by the fact that she was not tachycardic (she had a pacemaker and was on bisoprolol). The next morning, Mrs. Kemp felt the need to defecate and was placed on the bedside commode and left to her privacy. Predictably, she became dizzy and experienced frank syncope. Thankfully, she avoided a hip fracture or worse. A stat hemoglobin returned at 6 g/dL. 

Her daughter said she literally heard the hallelujah chorus because her mother’s hemoglobin was finally below that much revered and often misleading threshold of 7 g/dL. Finally, there was an order for platelets and packed red cells. Five units later, Mr. Kemp achieved a hemoglobin of 8 g/dL and survived. Two more units and she was soaring at 9 g/dL! 
 

 

 

Lessons for Transfusion Conservatives

There are many lessons here. 

The TRICC study found that hemodynamically stable, asymptomatic patients who are not actively bleeding may well tolerate a hemoglobin level of 7 g/dL. But a patient with bright red blood actively pouring from an orifice and a rapidly declining hemoglobin level isn’t one of those people. Additionally, a patient who faints from hypovolemia is not one of those people. 

Patients with a history of bleeding presenting with new resting sinus tachycardia (in those who have chronotropic competence) should be presumed to be actively bleeding, and the findings of TRICC do not apply to them. Patients who have bled buckets on anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapies and have dropped their hemoglobin will probably continue to ooze and should be subject to a low threshold for transfusion. 

Additionally, anemic people who are hemodynamically stable but can’t walk without new significant shortness of air or new rest angina need blood, and sometimes at hemoglobin levels higher than generally accepted by conservative strategists. Finally, failing to treat or at least monitor patients who are spontaneously bleeding as aggressively as some trauma patients is a failure to provide proper medical care. 

The vast majority of my healthcare clinician colleagues are competent, compassionate individuals who can reasonably discuss the nuances of any medical scenario. One important distinction of a good medical team is the willingness to change course based on a change in patient status or the presentation of what may be new information for the provider. 

But those proud transfusion conservatives who will not budge until their threshold is met need to make certain their patient is truly subject to their supposed edicts. Our blood banks should not be more difficult to access than Fort Knox, and transfusion should be used appropriately and liberally in the hemodynamically unstable, the symptomatic, and active brisk bleeders. 

I beg staunch transfusion conservatives to consider how they might feel if someone stuck a magic spigot in their brachial artery and acutely drained their hemoglobin to that magic threshold of 7 g/dL. When syncope, shortness of air, fatigue, and angina find them, they may generate empathy for those who need transfusion. Might that do the TRICC? 

*Some details have been changed to conceal the identity of the patient, but the essence of the case has been preserved.

Dr. Walton-Shirley, a native Kentuckian who retired from full-time invasive cardiology and now does locums work in Montana, is a champion of physician rights and patient safety. She has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Ah, blood. That sweet nectar of life that quiets angina, abolishes dyspnea, prevents orthostatic syncope, and quells sinus tachycardia. As a cardiologist, I am an unabashed hemophile. 

But we liberal transfusionists are challenged on every request for consideration of transfusion. Whereas the polite may resort to whispered skepticism, vehement critics respond with scorn as if we’d asked them to burn aromatic herbs or fetch a bucket of leeches. And to what do we owe this pathological angst? The broad and persistent misinterpretation of the pesky TRICC trial (N Engl J Med. 1999;340:409-417). You know; the one that should have been published with a boxed warning stating: “Misinterpretation of this trial could result in significant harm.” 
 

Point 1: Our Actively Bleeding Patient is Not a TRICC Patient. 

Published in 1999, the TRICC trial enrolled critical anemic patients older than 16 years who were stable after fluid resuscitation and were not actively bleeding. They had a hemoglobin level < 9 g/dL and were expected to stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) for more than 24 hours. They were randomly assigned to either a conservative trigger for transfusion of < 7 g/dL or a liberal threshold of < 10 g/dL. Mortality at 30 days was lower with the conservative approach — 18.7% vs 23.3% — but the difference was not statistically significant (P = .11). The findings were similar for the secondary endpoints of inpatient mortality (22.2% vs 28.1%; P = .05) and ICU mortality (13.9% vs 16.2%; P = .29). 

One must admit that these P values are not impressive, and the authors’ conclusion should have warranted caution: “A restrictive strategy ... is at least as effective as and possibly superior to a liberal transfusion strategy in critically ill patients, with the possible exception of patients with acute myocardial infarction and unstable angina.” 
 

Point 2: Our Critically Ill Cardiac Patient is Unlikely to be a “TRICC” Patient.

Another criticism of TRICC is that only 13% of those assessed and 26% of those eligible were enrolled, mostly owing to physician refusal. Only 26% of enrolled patients had cardiac disease. This makes the TRICC population highly selected and not representative of typical ICU patients. 

To prove my point that the edict against higher transfusion thresholds can be dangerous, I’ll describe my most recent interface with TRICC trial misinterpretation 
 

A Case in Point

The patient, Mrs. Kemp,* is 79 years old and has been on aspirin for years following coronary stent placement. One evening, she began spurting bright red blood from her rectum, interrupted only briefly by large clots the consistency of jellied cranberries. When she arrived at the hospital, she was hemodynamically stable, with a hemoglobin level of 10 g/dL, down from her usual 12 g/dL. That level bolstered the confidence of her provider, who insisted that she be managed conservatively. 

Mrs. Kemp was transferred to the ward, where she continued to bleed briskly. Over the next 2 hours, her hemoglobin level dropped to 9 g/dL, then 8 g/dL. Her daughter, a healthcare worker, requested a transfusion. The answer was, wait for it — the well-scripted, somewhat patronizing oft-quoted line, “The medical literature states that we need to wait for a hemoglobin level of 7 g/dL before we transfuse.” 

Later that evening, Mrs. Kemp’s systolic blood pressure dropped to the upper 80s, despite her usual hypertension. The provider was again comforted by the fact that she was not tachycardic (she had a pacemaker and was on bisoprolol). The next morning, Mrs. Kemp felt the need to defecate and was placed on the bedside commode and left to her privacy. Predictably, she became dizzy and experienced frank syncope. Thankfully, she avoided a hip fracture or worse. A stat hemoglobin returned at 6 g/dL. 

Her daughter said she literally heard the hallelujah chorus because her mother’s hemoglobin was finally below that much revered and often misleading threshold of 7 g/dL. Finally, there was an order for platelets and packed red cells. Five units later, Mr. Kemp achieved a hemoglobin of 8 g/dL and survived. Two more units and she was soaring at 9 g/dL! 
 

 

 

Lessons for Transfusion Conservatives

There are many lessons here. 

The TRICC study found that hemodynamically stable, asymptomatic patients who are not actively bleeding may well tolerate a hemoglobin level of 7 g/dL. But a patient with bright red blood actively pouring from an orifice and a rapidly declining hemoglobin level isn’t one of those people. Additionally, a patient who faints from hypovolemia is not one of those people. 

Patients with a history of bleeding presenting with new resting sinus tachycardia (in those who have chronotropic competence) should be presumed to be actively bleeding, and the findings of TRICC do not apply to them. Patients who have bled buckets on anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapies and have dropped their hemoglobin will probably continue to ooze and should be subject to a low threshold for transfusion. 

Additionally, anemic people who are hemodynamically stable but can’t walk without new significant shortness of air or new rest angina need blood, and sometimes at hemoglobin levels higher than generally accepted by conservative strategists. Finally, failing to treat or at least monitor patients who are spontaneously bleeding as aggressively as some trauma patients is a failure to provide proper medical care. 

The vast majority of my healthcare clinician colleagues are competent, compassionate individuals who can reasonably discuss the nuances of any medical scenario. One important distinction of a good medical team is the willingness to change course based on a change in patient status or the presentation of what may be new information for the provider. 

But those proud transfusion conservatives who will not budge until their threshold is met need to make certain their patient is truly subject to their supposed edicts. Our blood banks should not be more difficult to access than Fort Knox, and transfusion should be used appropriately and liberally in the hemodynamically unstable, the symptomatic, and active brisk bleeders. 

I beg staunch transfusion conservatives to consider how they might feel if someone stuck a magic spigot in their brachial artery and acutely drained their hemoglobin to that magic threshold of 7 g/dL. When syncope, shortness of air, fatigue, and angina find them, they may generate empathy for those who need transfusion. Might that do the TRICC? 

*Some details have been changed to conceal the identity of the patient, but the essence of the case has been preserved.

Dr. Walton-Shirley, a native Kentuckian who retired from full-time invasive cardiology and now does locums work in Montana, is a champion of physician rights and patient safety. She has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Ah, blood. That sweet nectar of life that quiets angina, abolishes dyspnea, prevents orthostatic syncope, and quells sinus tachycardia. As a cardiologist, I am an unabashed hemophile. 

But we liberal transfusionists are challenged on every request for consideration of transfusion. Whereas the polite may resort to whispered skepticism, vehement critics respond with scorn as if we’d asked them to burn aromatic herbs or fetch a bucket of leeches. And to what do we owe this pathological angst? The broad and persistent misinterpretation of the pesky TRICC trial (N Engl J Med. 1999;340:409-417). You know; the one that should have been published with a boxed warning stating: “Misinterpretation of this trial could result in significant harm.” 
 

Point 1: Our Actively Bleeding Patient is Not a TRICC Patient. 

Published in 1999, the TRICC trial enrolled critical anemic patients older than 16 years who were stable after fluid resuscitation and were not actively bleeding. They had a hemoglobin level < 9 g/dL and were expected to stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) for more than 24 hours. They were randomly assigned to either a conservative trigger for transfusion of < 7 g/dL or a liberal threshold of < 10 g/dL. Mortality at 30 days was lower with the conservative approach — 18.7% vs 23.3% — but the difference was not statistically significant (P = .11). The findings were similar for the secondary endpoints of inpatient mortality (22.2% vs 28.1%; P = .05) and ICU mortality (13.9% vs 16.2%; P = .29). 

One must admit that these P values are not impressive, and the authors’ conclusion should have warranted caution: “A restrictive strategy ... is at least as effective as and possibly superior to a liberal transfusion strategy in critically ill patients, with the possible exception of patients with acute myocardial infarction and unstable angina.” 
 

Point 2: Our Critically Ill Cardiac Patient is Unlikely to be a “TRICC” Patient.

Another criticism of TRICC is that only 13% of those assessed and 26% of those eligible were enrolled, mostly owing to physician refusal. Only 26% of enrolled patients had cardiac disease. This makes the TRICC population highly selected and not representative of typical ICU patients. 

To prove my point that the edict against higher transfusion thresholds can be dangerous, I’ll describe my most recent interface with TRICC trial misinterpretation 
 

A Case in Point

The patient, Mrs. Kemp,* is 79 years old and has been on aspirin for years following coronary stent placement. One evening, she began spurting bright red blood from her rectum, interrupted only briefly by large clots the consistency of jellied cranberries. When she arrived at the hospital, she was hemodynamically stable, with a hemoglobin level of 10 g/dL, down from her usual 12 g/dL. That level bolstered the confidence of her provider, who insisted that she be managed conservatively. 

Mrs. Kemp was transferred to the ward, where she continued to bleed briskly. Over the next 2 hours, her hemoglobin level dropped to 9 g/dL, then 8 g/dL. Her daughter, a healthcare worker, requested a transfusion. The answer was, wait for it — the well-scripted, somewhat patronizing oft-quoted line, “The medical literature states that we need to wait for a hemoglobin level of 7 g/dL before we transfuse.” 

Later that evening, Mrs. Kemp’s systolic blood pressure dropped to the upper 80s, despite her usual hypertension. The provider was again comforted by the fact that she was not tachycardic (she had a pacemaker and was on bisoprolol). The next morning, Mrs. Kemp felt the need to defecate and was placed on the bedside commode and left to her privacy. Predictably, she became dizzy and experienced frank syncope. Thankfully, she avoided a hip fracture or worse. A stat hemoglobin returned at 6 g/dL. 

Her daughter said she literally heard the hallelujah chorus because her mother’s hemoglobin was finally below that much revered and often misleading threshold of 7 g/dL. Finally, there was an order for platelets and packed red cells. Five units later, Mr. Kemp achieved a hemoglobin of 8 g/dL and survived. Two more units and she was soaring at 9 g/dL! 
 

 

 

Lessons for Transfusion Conservatives

There are many lessons here. 

The TRICC study found that hemodynamically stable, asymptomatic patients who are not actively bleeding may well tolerate a hemoglobin level of 7 g/dL. But a patient with bright red blood actively pouring from an orifice and a rapidly declining hemoglobin level isn’t one of those people. Additionally, a patient who faints from hypovolemia is not one of those people. 

Patients with a history of bleeding presenting with new resting sinus tachycardia (in those who have chronotropic competence) should be presumed to be actively bleeding, and the findings of TRICC do not apply to them. Patients who have bled buckets on anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapies and have dropped their hemoglobin will probably continue to ooze and should be subject to a low threshold for transfusion. 

Additionally, anemic people who are hemodynamically stable but can’t walk without new significant shortness of air or new rest angina need blood, and sometimes at hemoglobin levels higher than generally accepted by conservative strategists. Finally, failing to treat or at least monitor patients who are spontaneously bleeding as aggressively as some trauma patients is a failure to provide proper medical care. 

The vast majority of my healthcare clinician colleagues are competent, compassionate individuals who can reasonably discuss the nuances of any medical scenario. One important distinction of a good medical team is the willingness to change course based on a change in patient status or the presentation of what may be new information for the provider. 

But those proud transfusion conservatives who will not budge until their threshold is met need to make certain their patient is truly subject to their supposed edicts. Our blood banks should not be more difficult to access than Fort Knox, and transfusion should be used appropriately and liberally in the hemodynamically unstable, the symptomatic, and active brisk bleeders. 

I beg staunch transfusion conservatives to consider how they might feel if someone stuck a magic spigot in their brachial artery and acutely drained their hemoglobin to that magic threshold of 7 g/dL. When syncope, shortness of air, fatigue, and angina find them, they may generate empathy for those who need transfusion. Might that do the TRICC? 

*Some details have been changed to conceal the identity of the patient, but the essence of the case has been preserved.

Dr. Walton-Shirley, a native Kentuckian who retired from full-time invasive cardiology and now does locums work in Montana, is a champion of physician rights and patient safety. She has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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PrEP Prescription Pickups Vary With Prescriber Specialty

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Changed
Thu, 08/22/2024 - 08:59

Preexposure prophylaxis prescription reversals and abandonments were lower for patients seen by primary care clinicians than by other non–infectious disease clinicians, based on data from approximately 37,000 individuals.

Although preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has been associated with a reduced risk of HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) infection when used as prescribed, the association between PrEP prescription pickup and specialty of the prescribing clinician has not been examined, wrote Lorraine T. Dean, ScD, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues.

“HIV PrEP is highly effective at preventing new HIV cases, and while use is on the rise, is still used much less than it should be by people who are at risk of HIV,” Dr. Dean said in an interview. “This study is helpful in pinpointing who is at risk for not picking up PrEP and in helping us think through how to reach them so that they can be better positioned to get PrEP,” she said.

In a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, the researchers reviewed data for PrEP care. The study population included 37,003 patients aged 18 years and older who received new insurer-approved PrEP prescriptions between 2015 and 2019. Most of the patients (77%) ranged in age from 25 to 64 years; 88% were male.

Pharmacy claims data were matched with clinician data from the US National Plan and Provider Enumeration System.

Clinicians were divided into three groups: primary care providers (PCPs), infectious disease specialists (IDs), and other specialists (defined as any clinician prescribing PrEP but not classified as a PCP or an ID specialist). The main binary outcomes were prescription reversal (defined as when a patient failed to retrieve a prescription) and abandonment (defined as when a patient neglected to pick up a prescription for 1 year).

Overall, of 24,604 patients 67% received prescriptions from PCPs, 3,571 (10%) received prescriptions from ID specialists, and 8828 (24%) received prescriptions from other specialty clinicians.

The prevalence of reversals for patients seen by PCPs, ID specialists, and other specialty clinicians was 18%, 18%, and 25%, respectively. The prevalence of abandonments by clinician group was 12%, 12%, and 20%, respectively.

In a regression analysis, patients prescribed PrEP by ID specialists had 10% lower odds of reversals and 12% lower odds of abandonments compared to those seen by PCPs (odds ratio 0.90 and 0.88, respectively). However, patients seen by other clinicians (not primary care or ID) were 33% and 54% more likely to have reversals and abandonments, respectively, compared with those seen by PCPs.

Many patients at risk for HIV first see a PCP and then are referred to a specialist, such as an ID physician, Dr. Dean said. “The patients who take the time to then follow up with a specialist may be most motivated and able to follow through with the specialist’s request, in this case, accessing their PrEP prescription,” she said. In the current study, the researchers were most surprised by how many other specialty providers are involved in PrEP care, which is very positive given the effectiveness of the medication, she noted.

“Our results suggest that a wide range of prescribers, regardless of specialty, should be equipped to prescribe PrEP as well as offer PrEP counseling,” Dr. Dean said. A key takeaway for clinicians is that PrEP should have no cost for the majority of patients in the United States, she emphasized. The absence of cost expands the population who should be interested and able to access PrEP, she said. Therefore, providers should be prepared to recommend PrEP to eligible patients, and seek training or continuing medical education for themselves so they feel equipped to prescribe and counsel patients on PrEP, she said.

“One limitation of this work is that, while it can point to what is happening, it cannot tell us why the reversals are happening; what is the reason patients prescribed by certain providers are more or less likely to get their PrEP,” Dr. Dean explained. “We have tried to do interviews with patients to understand why this might be happening, but it’s hard to find people who aren’t showing up to do something, compared to finding people who are showing up to do something,” she said. Alternatively, researchers could interview providers to understand their perspective on why differences in prescription pickups occur across specialties, she said.

Looking ahead, “a national PrEP program that includes elements of required clinician training could be beneficial, and research on how a national PrEP program could be implemented and impact HIV rates would be helpful in considering this strategy of prevention,” said Dr. Dean. 
 

 

 

Support All Prescribers to Increase PrEP Adherence

Differences in uptake of PrEP prescriptions may be explained by the different populations seen by various specialties, Meredith Green, MD, of Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, and Lona Mody, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, wrote in an accompanying editorial. However, the key question is how to support all prescribers and promote initiation and adherence to PrEP, they said.

Considerations include whether people at risk for HIV prefer to discuss PrEP with a clinician they already know, vs. a new specialist, but many PCPs are not familiar with the latest PrEP guidelines, they said.

“Interventions that support PrEP provision by PCPs, especially since they prescribed the largest proportion of PrEP prescriptions, can accelerate the uptake of PrEP,” the editorialists wrote.

“Supporting a diverse clinician workforce reflective of communities most impacted by HIV will remain critical, as will acknowledging and addressing HIV stigma,” they said. Educational interventions, including online programs and specialist access for complex cases, would help as well, they said. The approval of additional PrEP agents since the current study was conducted make it even more important to support PrEP prescribers and promote treatment adherence for those at risk for HIV, Dr. Green and Dr. Mody emphasized.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Dean had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Green disclosed grants from Gilead and royalties from Wolters Kluwer unrelated to the current study; she also disclosed serving on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Health Resources and Services Administration advisory committee on HIV, viral hepatitis, and sexually transmitted infection prevention and treatment. Dr. Mody disclosed grants from the US National Institute on Aging, Veterans Affairs, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, NanoVibronix, and UpToDate unrelated to the current study.

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Preexposure prophylaxis prescription reversals and abandonments were lower for patients seen by primary care clinicians than by other non–infectious disease clinicians, based on data from approximately 37,000 individuals.

Although preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has been associated with a reduced risk of HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) infection when used as prescribed, the association between PrEP prescription pickup and specialty of the prescribing clinician has not been examined, wrote Lorraine T. Dean, ScD, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues.

“HIV PrEP is highly effective at preventing new HIV cases, and while use is on the rise, is still used much less than it should be by people who are at risk of HIV,” Dr. Dean said in an interview. “This study is helpful in pinpointing who is at risk for not picking up PrEP and in helping us think through how to reach them so that they can be better positioned to get PrEP,” she said.

In a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, the researchers reviewed data for PrEP care. The study population included 37,003 patients aged 18 years and older who received new insurer-approved PrEP prescriptions between 2015 and 2019. Most of the patients (77%) ranged in age from 25 to 64 years; 88% were male.

Pharmacy claims data were matched with clinician data from the US National Plan and Provider Enumeration System.

Clinicians were divided into three groups: primary care providers (PCPs), infectious disease specialists (IDs), and other specialists (defined as any clinician prescribing PrEP but not classified as a PCP or an ID specialist). The main binary outcomes were prescription reversal (defined as when a patient failed to retrieve a prescription) and abandonment (defined as when a patient neglected to pick up a prescription for 1 year).

Overall, of 24,604 patients 67% received prescriptions from PCPs, 3,571 (10%) received prescriptions from ID specialists, and 8828 (24%) received prescriptions from other specialty clinicians.

The prevalence of reversals for patients seen by PCPs, ID specialists, and other specialty clinicians was 18%, 18%, and 25%, respectively. The prevalence of abandonments by clinician group was 12%, 12%, and 20%, respectively.

In a regression analysis, patients prescribed PrEP by ID specialists had 10% lower odds of reversals and 12% lower odds of abandonments compared to those seen by PCPs (odds ratio 0.90 and 0.88, respectively). However, patients seen by other clinicians (not primary care or ID) were 33% and 54% more likely to have reversals and abandonments, respectively, compared with those seen by PCPs.

Many patients at risk for HIV first see a PCP and then are referred to a specialist, such as an ID physician, Dr. Dean said. “The patients who take the time to then follow up with a specialist may be most motivated and able to follow through with the specialist’s request, in this case, accessing their PrEP prescription,” she said. In the current study, the researchers were most surprised by how many other specialty providers are involved in PrEP care, which is very positive given the effectiveness of the medication, she noted.

“Our results suggest that a wide range of prescribers, regardless of specialty, should be equipped to prescribe PrEP as well as offer PrEP counseling,” Dr. Dean said. A key takeaway for clinicians is that PrEP should have no cost for the majority of patients in the United States, she emphasized. The absence of cost expands the population who should be interested and able to access PrEP, she said. Therefore, providers should be prepared to recommend PrEP to eligible patients, and seek training or continuing medical education for themselves so they feel equipped to prescribe and counsel patients on PrEP, she said.

“One limitation of this work is that, while it can point to what is happening, it cannot tell us why the reversals are happening; what is the reason patients prescribed by certain providers are more or less likely to get their PrEP,” Dr. Dean explained. “We have tried to do interviews with patients to understand why this might be happening, but it’s hard to find people who aren’t showing up to do something, compared to finding people who are showing up to do something,” she said. Alternatively, researchers could interview providers to understand their perspective on why differences in prescription pickups occur across specialties, she said.

Looking ahead, “a national PrEP program that includes elements of required clinician training could be beneficial, and research on how a national PrEP program could be implemented and impact HIV rates would be helpful in considering this strategy of prevention,” said Dr. Dean. 
 

 

 

Support All Prescribers to Increase PrEP Adherence

Differences in uptake of PrEP prescriptions may be explained by the different populations seen by various specialties, Meredith Green, MD, of Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, and Lona Mody, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, wrote in an accompanying editorial. However, the key question is how to support all prescribers and promote initiation and adherence to PrEP, they said.

Considerations include whether people at risk for HIV prefer to discuss PrEP with a clinician they already know, vs. a new specialist, but many PCPs are not familiar with the latest PrEP guidelines, they said.

“Interventions that support PrEP provision by PCPs, especially since they prescribed the largest proportion of PrEP prescriptions, can accelerate the uptake of PrEP,” the editorialists wrote.

“Supporting a diverse clinician workforce reflective of communities most impacted by HIV will remain critical, as will acknowledging and addressing HIV stigma,” they said. Educational interventions, including online programs and specialist access for complex cases, would help as well, they said. The approval of additional PrEP agents since the current study was conducted make it even more important to support PrEP prescribers and promote treatment adherence for those at risk for HIV, Dr. Green and Dr. Mody emphasized.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Dean had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Green disclosed grants from Gilead and royalties from Wolters Kluwer unrelated to the current study; she also disclosed serving on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Health Resources and Services Administration advisory committee on HIV, viral hepatitis, and sexually transmitted infection prevention and treatment. Dr. Mody disclosed grants from the US National Institute on Aging, Veterans Affairs, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, NanoVibronix, and UpToDate unrelated to the current study.

Preexposure prophylaxis prescription reversals and abandonments were lower for patients seen by primary care clinicians than by other non–infectious disease clinicians, based on data from approximately 37,000 individuals.

Although preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has been associated with a reduced risk of HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) infection when used as prescribed, the association between PrEP prescription pickup and specialty of the prescribing clinician has not been examined, wrote Lorraine T. Dean, ScD, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues.

“HIV PrEP is highly effective at preventing new HIV cases, and while use is on the rise, is still used much less than it should be by people who are at risk of HIV,” Dr. Dean said in an interview. “This study is helpful in pinpointing who is at risk for not picking up PrEP and in helping us think through how to reach them so that they can be better positioned to get PrEP,” she said.

In a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, the researchers reviewed data for PrEP care. The study population included 37,003 patients aged 18 years and older who received new insurer-approved PrEP prescriptions between 2015 and 2019. Most of the patients (77%) ranged in age from 25 to 64 years; 88% were male.

Pharmacy claims data were matched with clinician data from the US National Plan and Provider Enumeration System.

Clinicians were divided into three groups: primary care providers (PCPs), infectious disease specialists (IDs), and other specialists (defined as any clinician prescribing PrEP but not classified as a PCP or an ID specialist). The main binary outcomes were prescription reversal (defined as when a patient failed to retrieve a prescription) and abandonment (defined as when a patient neglected to pick up a prescription for 1 year).

Overall, of 24,604 patients 67% received prescriptions from PCPs, 3,571 (10%) received prescriptions from ID specialists, and 8828 (24%) received prescriptions from other specialty clinicians.

The prevalence of reversals for patients seen by PCPs, ID specialists, and other specialty clinicians was 18%, 18%, and 25%, respectively. The prevalence of abandonments by clinician group was 12%, 12%, and 20%, respectively.

In a regression analysis, patients prescribed PrEP by ID specialists had 10% lower odds of reversals and 12% lower odds of abandonments compared to those seen by PCPs (odds ratio 0.90 and 0.88, respectively). However, patients seen by other clinicians (not primary care or ID) were 33% and 54% more likely to have reversals and abandonments, respectively, compared with those seen by PCPs.

Many patients at risk for HIV first see a PCP and then are referred to a specialist, such as an ID physician, Dr. Dean said. “The patients who take the time to then follow up with a specialist may be most motivated and able to follow through with the specialist’s request, in this case, accessing their PrEP prescription,” she said. In the current study, the researchers were most surprised by how many other specialty providers are involved in PrEP care, which is very positive given the effectiveness of the medication, she noted.

“Our results suggest that a wide range of prescribers, regardless of specialty, should be equipped to prescribe PrEP as well as offer PrEP counseling,” Dr. Dean said. A key takeaway for clinicians is that PrEP should have no cost for the majority of patients in the United States, she emphasized. The absence of cost expands the population who should be interested and able to access PrEP, she said. Therefore, providers should be prepared to recommend PrEP to eligible patients, and seek training or continuing medical education for themselves so they feel equipped to prescribe and counsel patients on PrEP, she said.

“One limitation of this work is that, while it can point to what is happening, it cannot tell us why the reversals are happening; what is the reason patients prescribed by certain providers are more or less likely to get their PrEP,” Dr. Dean explained. “We have tried to do interviews with patients to understand why this might be happening, but it’s hard to find people who aren’t showing up to do something, compared to finding people who are showing up to do something,” she said. Alternatively, researchers could interview providers to understand their perspective on why differences in prescription pickups occur across specialties, she said.

Looking ahead, “a national PrEP program that includes elements of required clinician training could be beneficial, and research on how a national PrEP program could be implemented and impact HIV rates would be helpful in considering this strategy of prevention,” said Dr. Dean. 
 

 

 

Support All Prescribers to Increase PrEP Adherence

Differences in uptake of PrEP prescriptions may be explained by the different populations seen by various specialties, Meredith Green, MD, of Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, and Lona Mody, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, wrote in an accompanying editorial. However, the key question is how to support all prescribers and promote initiation and adherence to PrEP, they said.

Considerations include whether people at risk for HIV prefer to discuss PrEP with a clinician they already know, vs. a new specialist, but many PCPs are not familiar with the latest PrEP guidelines, they said.

“Interventions that support PrEP provision by PCPs, especially since they prescribed the largest proportion of PrEP prescriptions, can accelerate the uptake of PrEP,” the editorialists wrote.

“Supporting a diverse clinician workforce reflective of communities most impacted by HIV will remain critical, as will acknowledging and addressing HIV stigma,” they said. Educational interventions, including online programs and specialist access for complex cases, would help as well, they said. The approval of additional PrEP agents since the current study was conducted make it even more important to support PrEP prescribers and promote treatment adherence for those at risk for HIV, Dr. Green and Dr. Mody emphasized.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Dean had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Green disclosed grants from Gilead and royalties from Wolters Kluwer unrelated to the current study; she also disclosed serving on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Health Resources and Services Administration advisory committee on HIV, viral hepatitis, and sexually transmitted infection prevention and treatment. Dr. Mody disclosed grants from the US National Institute on Aging, Veterans Affairs, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, NanoVibronix, and UpToDate unrelated to the current study.

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Which Medications Can Cause Edema?

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Edema in the feet and legs is a common complaint in our practices. It can cause pain, weakness, heaviness, discomfort, limited movement, and a negative body image. Medications can contribute to edema, either alone or in combination with other health issues.

Edema is also associated with advanced age, female sex, obesity, diabetes, hypertension, pain, lack of physical activity, and mobility limitations. These factors often necessitate medication prescriptions, which can aggravate the problem. Therefore, it is important to know how to treat or prevent medication-induced edema.

There are four main causes of edema, and all can facilitate medication-induced edema.

  • Increased capillary pressure. Conditions such as heart failure, renal dysfunction, venous insufficiency, deep vein thrombosis, and cirrhosis can increase capillary pressure, leading to edema.
  • Decreased oncotic pressure. Hypoalbuminemia, a primary cause of reduced colloid oncotic pressure, can result from nephrotic syndrome, diabetic nephropathy, lupus nephropathy, amyloidosis, nephropathies, cirrhosis, chronic liver disease, and malabsorption or malnutrition.
  • Increased capillary permeability. Vascular injury, often associated with diabetes, can increase capillary permeability and contribute to edema.
  • Impaired lymphatic drainage. Lymphatic obstruction is common in patients with lymphedema, tumors, inflammation, fibrosis, certain infections, surgery, and congenital anomalies. Conditions such as thyroid disorders can also cause an increase in interstitial albumin and other proteins without a corresponding increase in lymphatic flow, leading to lymphedema.

Medications That Can Cause Edema

  • Calcium channel blockers (CCBs). Drugs such as nifedipine and amlodipine can increase hydrostatic pressure by causing selective vasodilation of precapillary vessels, leading to increased intracapillary pressures. Newer lipophilic CCBs (eg, levamlodipine) exhibit lower rates of edema. Reducing the dose is often effective. Diuretics are not very effective for vasodilation-induced edema. Combining CCBs with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), which induce postcapillary dilation and normalize intracapillary pressure, may reduce fluid leakage into the interstitial space. This combination may be more beneficial than high-dose CCB monotherapy.
  • Thiazolidinedione (eg, pioglitazone). These increase vascular permeability and hydrostatic pressure. They work by stimulating the peroxisome proliferator–activated gamma receptor, increasing vascular endothelial permeability, vascular endothelial growth factor secretion, and renal retention of sodium and fluids. Because of other adverse effects, their use is now limited.
  • Agents for neuropathic pain (gabapentin and pregabalin). These drugs can induce selective vasodilation of arterioles through a mechanism similar to that of CCBs, causing increased intracapillary pressures. Edema usually begins within the first month of treatment or dose increase and often regresses after dose reduction or drug discontinuation.
  • Antiparkinsonian dopamine agonists. These increase hydrostatic pressure by reducing sympathetic tone and dilating arterioles through alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activity.
  • New antipsychotics. Drugs like clozapine, iloperidone, lurasidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone can increase hydrostatic pressure through antagonistic effects on alpha-1 adrenergic receptors, causing vasodilation.
  • Nitrates. These drugs increase hydrostatic pressure by causing preferential venous dilation, leading to increased venous pooling.
  • Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). These drugs can increase hydrostatic pressure by inhibiting vasodilation of afferent renal arterioles, decreasing the glomerular filtration rate, and stimulating the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, which leads to sodium and water retention. These adverse effects warrant cautious use of these agents.
  • ACE inhibitors. Drugs such as enalapril and ramipril can increase vascular permeability. They reduce the metabolism and accumulation of bradykinin, which increases vascular permeability and fluid leakage. These effects are rare and are usually related to allergic responses.
  • Insulin. Insulin decreases capillary oncotic pressure and increases vascular permeability. Rapid correction of hyperglycemia can cause a loss of oncotic pressure, while chronic hyperglycemia can damage vascular membranes, increasing permeability. These effects are generally benign and can be managed with careful dose titration, sodium restriction, or diuretics.
  • Steroids. Steroids with mineralocorticoid activity can increase renal sodium and water retention, leading to increased blood volume. Fludrocortisone has the highest mineralocorticoid activity, while dexamethasone and methylprednisolone have negligible activity.
 

 

Implications

Understanding how these medications cause edema is important for effective management. For example, in the case of those causing edema due to reduced oncotic pressure, like insulin, slow dose titrations can help adapt to osmolarity changes. For drugs causing edema due to increased hydrostatic pressure, diuretics are more effective in acute management.

The key takeaways from this review are:

  • Awareness of drug-induced edema. Many drugs besides CCBs can cause edema.
  • Combination therapy. Combining ACE inhibitors or ARBs with CCBs can prevent or reduce CCB-induced edema.
  • Edema management strategies. Strategies to manage or prevent edema should include dose reductions or replacement of the problematic medication, especially in severe or refractory cases.

Dr. Wajngarten, professor of cardiology, University of São Paulo, Brazil, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Edema in the feet and legs is a common complaint in our practices. It can cause pain, weakness, heaviness, discomfort, limited movement, and a negative body image. Medications can contribute to edema, either alone or in combination with other health issues.

Edema is also associated with advanced age, female sex, obesity, diabetes, hypertension, pain, lack of physical activity, and mobility limitations. These factors often necessitate medication prescriptions, which can aggravate the problem. Therefore, it is important to know how to treat or prevent medication-induced edema.

There are four main causes of edema, and all can facilitate medication-induced edema.

  • Increased capillary pressure. Conditions such as heart failure, renal dysfunction, venous insufficiency, deep vein thrombosis, and cirrhosis can increase capillary pressure, leading to edema.
  • Decreased oncotic pressure. Hypoalbuminemia, a primary cause of reduced colloid oncotic pressure, can result from nephrotic syndrome, diabetic nephropathy, lupus nephropathy, amyloidosis, nephropathies, cirrhosis, chronic liver disease, and malabsorption or malnutrition.
  • Increased capillary permeability. Vascular injury, often associated with diabetes, can increase capillary permeability and contribute to edema.
  • Impaired lymphatic drainage. Lymphatic obstruction is common in patients with lymphedema, tumors, inflammation, fibrosis, certain infections, surgery, and congenital anomalies. Conditions such as thyroid disorders can also cause an increase in interstitial albumin and other proteins without a corresponding increase in lymphatic flow, leading to lymphedema.

Medications That Can Cause Edema

  • Calcium channel blockers (CCBs). Drugs such as nifedipine and amlodipine can increase hydrostatic pressure by causing selective vasodilation of precapillary vessels, leading to increased intracapillary pressures. Newer lipophilic CCBs (eg, levamlodipine) exhibit lower rates of edema. Reducing the dose is often effective. Diuretics are not very effective for vasodilation-induced edema. Combining CCBs with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), which induce postcapillary dilation and normalize intracapillary pressure, may reduce fluid leakage into the interstitial space. This combination may be more beneficial than high-dose CCB monotherapy.
  • Thiazolidinedione (eg, pioglitazone). These increase vascular permeability and hydrostatic pressure. They work by stimulating the peroxisome proliferator–activated gamma receptor, increasing vascular endothelial permeability, vascular endothelial growth factor secretion, and renal retention of sodium and fluids. Because of other adverse effects, their use is now limited.
  • Agents for neuropathic pain (gabapentin and pregabalin). These drugs can induce selective vasodilation of arterioles through a mechanism similar to that of CCBs, causing increased intracapillary pressures. Edema usually begins within the first month of treatment or dose increase and often regresses after dose reduction or drug discontinuation.
  • Antiparkinsonian dopamine agonists. These increase hydrostatic pressure by reducing sympathetic tone and dilating arterioles through alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activity.
  • New antipsychotics. Drugs like clozapine, iloperidone, lurasidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone can increase hydrostatic pressure through antagonistic effects on alpha-1 adrenergic receptors, causing vasodilation.
  • Nitrates. These drugs increase hydrostatic pressure by causing preferential venous dilation, leading to increased venous pooling.
  • Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). These drugs can increase hydrostatic pressure by inhibiting vasodilation of afferent renal arterioles, decreasing the glomerular filtration rate, and stimulating the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, which leads to sodium and water retention. These adverse effects warrant cautious use of these agents.
  • ACE inhibitors. Drugs such as enalapril and ramipril can increase vascular permeability. They reduce the metabolism and accumulation of bradykinin, which increases vascular permeability and fluid leakage. These effects are rare and are usually related to allergic responses.
  • Insulin. Insulin decreases capillary oncotic pressure and increases vascular permeability. Rapid correction of hyperglycemia can cause a loss of oncotic pressure, while chronic hyperglycemia can damage vascular membranes, increasing permeability. These effects are generally benign and can be managed with careful dose titration, sodium restriction, or diuretics.
  • Steroids. Steroids with mineralocorticoid activity can increase renal sodium and water retention, leading to increased blood volume. Fludrocortisone has the highest mineralocorticoid activity, while dexamethasone and methylprednisolone have negligible activity.
 

 

Implications

Understanding how these medications cause edema is important for effective management. For example, in the case of those causing edema due to reduced oncotic pressure, like insulin, slow dose titrations can help adapt to osmolarity changes. For drugs causing edema due to increased hydrostatic pressure, diuretics are more effective in acute management.

The key takeaways from this review are:

  • Awareness of drug-induced edema. Many drugs besides CCBs can cause edema.
  • Combination therapy. Combining ACE inhibitors or ARBs with CCBs can prevent or reduce CCB-induced edema.
  • Edema management strategies. Strategies to manage or prevent edema should include dose reductions or replacement of the problematic medication, especially in severe or refractory cases.

Dr. Wajngarten, professor of cardiology, University of São Paulo, Brazil, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Edema in the feet and legs is a common complaint in our practices. It can cause pain, weakness, heaviness, discomfort, limited movement, and a negative body image. Medications can contribute to edema, either alone or in combination with other health issues.

Edema is also associated with advanced age, female sex, obesity, diabetes, hypertension, pain, lack of physical activity, and mobility limitations. These factors often necessitate medication prescriptions, which can aggravate the problem. Therefore, it is important to know how to treat or prevent medication-induced edema.

There are four main causes of edema, and all can facilitate medication-induced edema.

  • Increased capillary pressure. Conditions such as heart failure, renal dysfunction, venous insufficiency, deep vein thrombosis, and cirrhosis can increase capillary pressure, leading to edema.
  • Decreased oncotic pressure. Hypoalbuminemia, a primary cause of reduced colloid oncotic pressure, can result from nephrotic syndrome, diabetic nephropathy, lupus nephropathy, amyloidosis, nephropathies, cirrhosis, chronic liver disease, and malabsorption or malnutrition.
  • Increased capillary permeability. Vascular injury, often associated with diabetes, can increase capillary permeability and contribute to edema.
  • Impaired lymphatic drainage. Lymphatic obstruction is common in patients with lymphedema, tumors, inflammation, fibrosis, certain infections, surgery, and congenital anomalies. Conditions such as thyroid disorders can also cause an increase in interstitial albumin and other proteins without a corresponding increase in lymphatic flow, leading to lymphedema.

Medications That Can Cause Edema

  • Calcium channel blockers (CCBs). Drugs such as nifedipine and amlodipine can increase hydrostatic pressure by causing selective vasodilation of precapillary vessels, leading to increased intracapillary pressures. Newer lipophilic CCBs (eg, levamlodipine) exhibit lower rates of edema. Reducing the dose is often effective. Diuretics are not very effective for vasodilation-induced edema. Combining CCBs with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), which induce postcapillary dilation and normalize intracapillary pressure, may reduce fluid leakage into the interstitial space. This combination may be more beneficial than high-dose CCB monotherapy.
  • Thiazolidinedione (eg, pioglitazone). These increase vascular permeability and hydrostatic pressure. They work by stimulating the peroxisome proliferator–activated gamma receptor, increasing vascular endothelial permeability, vascular endothelial growth factor secretion, and renal retention of sodium and fluids. Because of other adverse effects, their use is now limited.
  • Agents for neuropathic pain (gabapentin and pregabalin). These drugs can induce selective vasodilation of arterioles through a mechanism similar to that of CCBs, causing increased intracapillary pressures. Edema usually begins within the first month of treatment or dose increase and often regresses after dose reduction or drug discontinuation.
  • Antiparkinsonian dopamine agonists. These increase hydrostatic pressure by reducing sympathetic tone and dilating arterioles through alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activity.
  • New antipsychotics. Drugs like clozapine, iloperidone, lurasidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone can increase hydrostatic pressure through antagonistic effects on alpha-1 adrenergic receptors, causing vasodilation.
  • Nitrates. These drugs increase hydrostatic pressure by causing preferential venous dilation, leading to increased venous pooling.
  • Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). These drugs can increase hydrostatic pressure by inhibiting vasodilation of afferent renal arterioles, decreasing the glomerular filtration rate, and stimulating the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, which leads to sodium and water retention. These adverse effects warrant cautious use of these agents.
  • ACE inhibitors. Drugs such as enalapril and ramipril can increase vascular permeability. They reduce the metabolism and accumulation of bradykinin, which increases vascular permeability and fluid leakage. These effects are rare and are usually related to allergic responses.
  • Insulin. Insulin decreases capillary oncotic pressure and increases vascular permeability. Rapid correction of hyperglycemia can cause a loss of oncotic pressure, while chronic hyperglycemia can damage vascular membranes, increasing permeability. These effects are generally benign and can be managed with careful dose titration, sodium restriction, or diuretics.
  • Steroids. Steroids with mineralocorticoid activity can increase renal sodium and water retention, leading to increased blood volume. Fludrocortisone has the highest mineralocorticoid activity, while dexamethasone and methylprednisolone have negligible activity.
 

 

Implications

Understanding how these medications cause edema is important for effective management. For example, in the case of those causing edema due to reduced oncotic pressure, like insulin, slow dose titrations can help adapt to osmolarity changes. For drugs causing edema due to increased hydrostatic pressure, diuretics are more effective in acute management.

The key takeaways from this review are:

  • Awareness of drug-induced edema. Many drugs besides CCBs can cause edema.
  • Combination therapy. Combining ACE inhibitors or ARBs with CCBs can prevent or reduce CCB-induced edema.
  • Edema management strategies. Strategies to manage or prevent edema should include dose reductions or replacement of the problematic medication, especially in severe or refractory cases.

Dr. Wajngarten, professor of cardiology, University of São Paulo, Brazil, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Recurrent Pancreatitis Triples Risk for Chronic Disease

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TOPLINE:

The overall progression to chronic pancreatitis among adults was three times higher following recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis than occurring after just the first acute pancreatitis episode.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The progression of acute pancreatitis is time-dependent, with the recurrence and progression rates to recurrent acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis varying based on the follow-up duration and may be affected by the cause and severity of the first acute episode.
  • To better understand the progression of acute pancreatitis to recurrent acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis, researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 119 studies, all of which were used for qualitative and quantitative synthesis and 29 of which also were used for calculating incidence rates.
  • The primary outcomes were the incidence rates of recurrent acute and chronic pancreatitis following the initial episode of acute pancreatitis and the incidence rate of chronic pancreatitis after recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis.
  • The secondary outcomes were the cumulative incidences and proportions of recurrent acute and chronic pancreatitis following the initial acute pancreatitis episode and the proportion of chronic pancreatitis occurring after recurrent acute pancreatitis episodes.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The incidence rate of recurrent acute pancreatitis after the first acute episode was 5.26 per 100 person-years in adults and 4.64 per 100 person-years in children, a difference that did not reach statistical significance.
  • The progression rate to chronic pancreatitis in adults was threefold higher after recurrent acute pancreatitis episodes than after the first acute pancreatitis episode (4.31 vs 1.38 per 100 person-years).
  • Hypertriglyceridemia-induced acute pancreatitis had the highest recurrence rates, followed by alcohol-induced, idiopathic, and biliary pancreatitis.
  • The overall progression rate into chronic pancreatitis was 8% after the first acute pancreatitis episode and 24% after recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis. Progression to chronic pancreatitis among adults was highest among those with alcohol-induced disease, followed by idiopathic and biliary pancreatitis.
  • A moderately severe first episode of acute pancreatitis was associated with the highest recurrence rate, followed by mild and severe first episodes.

IN PRACTICE:

The authors emphasized the need to develop new interventions to address the factors associated with acute pancreatitis and its progression and to better utilize existing approaches, such as brief and repeated psychological interventions and alcohol and smoking cessation programs. Deeper investigation into the underlying causes of the disease’s etiology is warranted to reduce recurrence and progression rates, they noted.

SOURCE:

The study, led by Endre-Botond Gagyi, MD, of the Center for Translational Medicine, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary, was published online in Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology.

LIMITATIONS:

Most of the studies included in the analysis were retrospective, and there was high heterogeneity between them. The researchers could only analyze the presence of recurrent acute pancreatitis but could not explore the number of episodes or their impact on progression due to the lack of reported data.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund. The authors declared no conflict of interest.

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

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TOPLINE:

The overall progression to chronic pancreatitis among adults was three times higher following recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis than occurring after just the first acute pancreatitis episode.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The progression of acute pancreatitis is time-dependent, with the recurrence and progression rates to recurrent acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis varying based on the follow-up duration and may be affected by the cause and severity of the first acute episode.
  • To better understand the progression of acute pancreatitis to recurrent acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis, researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 119 studies, all of which were used for qualitative and quantitative synthesis and 29 of which also were used for calculating incidence rates.
  • The primary outcomes were the incidence rates of recurrent acute and chronic pancreatitis following the initial episode of acute pancreatitis and the incidence rate of chronic pancreatitis after recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis.
  • The secondary outcomes were the cumulative incidences and proportions of recurrent acute and chronic pancreatitis following the initial acute pancreatitis episode and the proportion of chronic pancreatitis occurring after recurrent acute pancreatitis episodes.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The incidence rate of recurrent acute pancreatitis after the first acute episode was 5.26 per 100 person-years in adults and 4.64 per 100 person-years in children, a difference that did not reach statistical significance.
  • The progression rate to chronic pancreatitis in adults was threefold higher after recurrent acute pancreatitis episodes than after the first acute pancreatitis episode (4.31 vs 1.38 per 100 person-years).
  • Hypertriglyceridemia-induced acute pancreatitis had the highest recurrence rates, followed by alcohol-induced, idiopathic, and biliary pancreatitis.
  • The overall progression rate into chronic pancreatitis was 8% after the first acute pancreatitis episode and 24% after recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis. Progression to chronic pancreatitis among adults was highest among those with alcohol-induced disease, followed by idiopathic and biliary pancreatitis.
  • A moderately severe first episode of acute pancreatitis was associated with the highest recurrence rate, followed by mild and severe first episodes.

IN PRACTICE:

The authors emphasized the need to develop new interventions to address the factors associated with acute pancreatitis and its progression and to better utilize existing approaches, such as brief and repeated psychological interventions and alcohol and smoking cessation programs. Deeper investigation into the underlying causes of the disease’s etiology is warranted to reduce recurrence and progression rates, they noted.

SOURCE:

The study, led by Endre-Botond Gagyi, MD, of the Center for Translational Medicine, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary, was published online in Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology.

LIMITATIONS:

Most of the studies included in the analysis were retrospective, and there was high heterogeneity between them. The researchers could only analyze the presence of recurrent acute pancreatitis but could not explore the number of episodes or their impact on progression due to the lack of reported data.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund. The authors declared no conflict of interest.

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

 

TOPLINE:

The overall progression to chronic pancreatitis among adults was three times higher following recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis than occurring after just the first acute pancreatitis episode.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The progression of acute pancreatitis is time-dependent, with the recurrence and progression rates to recurrent acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis varying based on the follow-up duration and may be affected by the cause and severity of the first acute episode.
  • To better understand the progression of acute pancreatitis to recurrent acute pancreatitis and chronic pancreatitis, researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 119 studies, all of which were used for qualitative and quantitative synthesis and 29 of which also were used for calculating incidence rates.
  • The primary outcomes were the incidence rates of recurrent acute and chronic pancreatitis following the initial episode of acute pancreatitis and the incidence rate of chronic pancreatitis after recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis.
  • The secondary outcomes were the cumulative incidences and proportions of recurrent acute and chronic pancreatitis following the initial acute pancreatitis episode and the proportion of chronic pancreatitis occurring after recurrent acute pancreatitis episodes.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The incidence rate of recurrent acute pancreatitis after the first acute episode was 5.26 per 100 person-years in adults and 4.64 per 100 person-years in children, a difference that did not reach statistical significance.
  • The progression rate to chronic pancreatitis in adults was threefold higher after recurrent acute pancreatitis episodes than after the first acute pancreatitis episode (4.31 vs 1.38 per 100 person-years).
  • Hypertriglyceridemia-induced acute pancreatitis had the highest recurrence rates, followed by alcohol-induced, idiopathic, and biliary pancreatitis.
  • The overall progression rate into chronic pancreatitis was 8% after the first acute pancreatitis episode and 24% after recurrent episodes of acute pancreatitis. Progression to chronic pancreatitis among adults was highest among those with alcohol-induced disease, followed by idiopathic and biliary pancreatitis.
  • A moderately severe first episode of acute pancreatitis was associated with the highest recurrence rate, followed by mild and severe first episodes.

IN PRACTICE:

The authors emphasized the need to develop new interventions to address the factors associated with acute pancreatitis and its progression and to better utilize existing approaches, such as brief and repeated psychological interventions and alcohol and smoking cessation programs. Deeper investigation into the underlying causes of the disease’s etiology is warranted to reduce recurrence and progression rates, they noted.

SOURCE:

The study, led by Endre-Botond Gagyi, MD, of the Center for Translational Medicine, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary, was published online in Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology.

LIMITATIONS:

Most of the studies included in the analysis were retrospective, and there was high heterogeneity between them. The researchers could only analyze the presence of recurrent acute pancreatitis but could not explore the number of episodes or their impact on progression due to the lack of reported data.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology from the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund. The authors declared no conflict of interest.

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

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