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The leading independent newspaper covering dermatology news and commentary.
Patient Navigators for Serious Illnesses Can Now Bill Under New Medicare Codes
In a move that acknowledges the gauntlet the US health system poses for people facing serious and fatal illnesses, Medicare will pay for a new class of workers to help patients manage treatments for conditions like cancer and heart failure.
The 2024 Medicare physician fee schedule includes new billing codes, including G0023, to pay for 60 minutes a month of care coordination by certified or trained auxiliary personnel working under the direction of a clinician.
A diagnosis of cancer or another serious illness takes a toll beyond the physical effects of the disease. Patients often scramble to make adjustments in family and work schedules to manage treatment, said Samyukta Mullangi, MD, MBA, medical director of oncology at Thyme Care, a Nashville, Tennessee–based firm that provides navigation and coordination services to oncology practices and insurers.
“It just really does create a bit of a pressure cooker for patients,” Dr. Mullangi told this news organization.
Medicare has for many years paid for medical professionals to help patients cope with the complexities of disease, such as chronic care management (CCM) provided by physicians, nurses, and physician assistants.
The new principal illness navigation (PIN) payments are intended to pay for work that to date typically has been done by people without medical degrees, including those involved in peer support networks and community health programs. The US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services(CMS) expects these navigators will undergo training and work under the supervision of clinicians.
The new navigators may coordinate care transitions between medical settings, follow up with patients after emergency department (ED) visits, or communicate with skilled nursing facilities regarding the psychosocial needs and functional deficits of a patient, among other functions.
CMS expects the new navigators may:
- Conduct assessments to understand a patient’s life story, strengths, needs, goals, preferences, and desired outcomes, including understanding cultural and linguistic factors.
- Provide support to accomplish the clinician’s treatment plan.
- Coordinate the receipt of needed services from healthcare facilities, home- and community-based service providers, and caregivers.
Peers as Navigators
The new navigators can be former patients who have undergone similar treatments for serious diseases, CMS said. This approach sets the new program apart from other care management services Medicare already covers, program officials wrote in the 2024 physician fee schedule.
“For some conditions, patients are best able to engage with the healthcare system and access care if they have assistance from a single, dedicated individual who has ‘lived experience,’ ” according to the rule.
The agency has taken a broad initial approach in defining what kinds of illnesses a patient may have to qualify for services. Patients must have a serious condition that is expected to last at least 3 months, such as cancer, heart failure, or substance use disorder.
But those without a definitive diagnosis may also qualify to receive navigator services.
In the rule, CMS cited a case in which a CT scan identified a suspicious mass in a patient’s colon. A clinician might decide this person would benefit from navigation services due to the potential risks for an undiagnosed illness.
“Regardless of the definitive diagnosis of the mass, presence of a colonic mass for that patient may be a serious high-risk condition that could, for example, cause obstruction and lead the patient to present to the emergency department, as well as be potentially indicative of an underlying life-threatening illness such as colon cancer,” CMS wrote in the rule.
Navigators often start their work when cancer patients are screened and guide them through initial diagnosis, potential surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy, said Sharon Gentry, MSN, RN, a former nurse navigator who is now the editor in chief of the Journal of the Academy of Oncology Nurse & Patient Navigators.
The navigators are meant to be a trusted and continual presence for patients, who otherwise might be left to start anew in finding help at each phase of care.
The navigators “see the whole picture. They see the whole journey the patient takes, from pre-diagnosis all the way through diagnosis care out through survival,” Ms. Gentry said.
Gaining a special Medicare payment for these kinds of services will elevate this work, she said.
Many newer drugs can target specific mechanisms and proteins of cancer. Often, oncology treatment involves testing to find out if mutations are allowing the cancer cells to evade a patient’s immune system.
Checking these biomarkers takes time, however. Patients sometimes become frustrated because they are anxious to begin treatment. Patients may receive inaccurate information from friends or family who went through treatment previously. Navigators can provide knowledge on the current state of care for a patient’s disease, helping them better manage anxieties.
“You have to explain to them that things have changed since the guy you drink coffee with was diagnosed with cancer, and there may be a drug that could target that,” Ms. Gentry said.
Potential Challenges
Initial uptake of the new PIN codes may be slow going, however, as clinicians and health systems may already use well-established codes. These include CCM and principal care management services, which may pay higher rates, Mullangi said.
“There might be sensitivity around not wanting to cannibalize existing programs with a new program,” Dr. Mullangi said.
In addition, many patients will have a copay for the services of principal illness navigators, Dr. Mullangi said.
While many patients have additional insurance that would cover the service, not all do. People with traditional Medicare coverage can sometimes pay 20% of the cost of some medical services.
“I think that may give patients pause, particularly if they’re already feeling the financial burden of a cancer treatment journey,” Dr. Mullangi said.
Pay rates for PIN services involve calculations of regional price differences, which are posted publicly by CMS, and potential added fees for services provided by hospital-affiliated organizations.
Consider payments for code G0023, covering 60 minutes of principal navigation services provided in a single month.
A set reimbursement for patients cared for in independent medical practices exists, with variation for local costs. Medicare’s non-facility price for G0023 would be $102.41 in some parts of Silicon Valley in California, including San Jose. In Arkansas, where costs are lower, reimbursement would be $73.14 for this same service.
Patients who get services covered by code G0023 in independent medical practices would have monthly copays of about $15-$20, depending on where they live.
The tab for patients tends to be higher for these same services if delivered through a medical practice owned by a hospital, as this would trigger the addition of facility fees to the payments made to cover the services. Facility fees are difficult for the public to ascertain before getting a treatment or service.
Dr. Mullangi and Ms. Gentry reported no relevant financial disclosures outside of their employers.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In a move that acknowledges the gauntlet the US health system poses for people facing serious and fatal illnesses, Medicare will pay for a new class of workers to help patients manage treatments for conditions like cancer and heart failure.
The 2024 Medicare physician fee schedule includes new billing codes, including G0023, to pay for 60 minutes a month of care coordination by certified or trained auxiliary personnel working under the direction of a clinician.
A diagnosis of cancer or another serious illness takes a toll beyond the physical effects of the disease. Patients often scramble to make adjustments in family and work schedules to manage treatment, said Samyukta Mullangi, MD, MBA, medical director of oncology at Thyme Care, a Nashville, Tennessee–based firm that provides navigation and coordination services to oncology practices and insurers.
“It just really does create a bit of a pressure cooker for patients,” Dr. Mullangi told this news organization.
Medicare has for many years paid for medical professionals to help patients cope with the complexities of disease, such as chronic care management (CCM) provided by physicians, nurses, and physician assistants.
The new principal illness navigation (PIN) payments are intended to pay for work that to date typically has been done by people without medical degrees, including those involved in peer support networks and community health programs. The US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services(CMS) expects these navigators will undergo training and work under the supervision of clinicians.
The new navigators may coordinate care transitions between medical settings, follow up with patients after emergency department (ED) visits, or communicate with skilled nursing facilities regarding the psychosocial needs and functional deficits of a patient, among other functions.
CMS expects the new navigators may:
- Conduct assessments to understand a patient’s life story, strengths, needs, goals, preferences, and desired outcomes, including understanding cultural and linguistic factors.
- Provide support to accomplish the clinician’s treatment plan.
- Coordinate the receipt of needed services from healthcare facilities, home- and community-based service providers, and caregivers.
Peers as Navigators
The new navigators can be former patients who have undergone similar treatments for serious diseases, CMS said. This approach sets the new program apart from other care management services Medicare already covers, program officials wrote in the 2024 physician fee schedule.
“For some conditions, patients are best able to engage with the healthcare system and access care if they have assistance from a single, dedicated individual who has ‘lived experience,’ ” according to the rule.
The agency has taken a broad initial approach in defining what kinds of illnesses a patient may have to qualify for services. Patients must have a serious condition that is expected to last at least 3 months, such as cancer, heart failure, or substance use disorder.
But those without a definitive diagnosis may also qualify to receive navigator services.
In the rule, CMS cited a case in which a CT scan identified a suspicious mass in a patient’s colon. A clinician might decide this person would benefit from navigation services due to the potential risks for an undiagnosed illness.
“Regardless of the definitive diagnosis of the mass, presence of a colonic mass for that patient may be a serious high-risk condition that could, for example, cause obstruction and lead the patient to present to the emergency department, as well as be potentially indicative of an underlying life-threatening illness such as colon cancer,” CMS wrote in the rule.
Navigators often start their work when cancer patients are screened and guide them through initial diagnosis, potential surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy, said Sharon Gentry, MSN, RN, a former nurse navigator who is now the editor in chief of the Journal of the Academy of Oncology Nurse & Patient Navigators.
The navigators are meant to be a trusted and continual presence for patients, who otherwise might be left to start anew in finding help at each phase of care.
The navigators “see the whole picture. They see the whole journey the patient takes, from pre-diagnosis all the way through diagnosis care out through survival,” Ms. Gentry said.
Gaining a special Medicare payment for these kinds of services will elevate this work, she said.
Many newer drugs can target specific mechanisms and proteins of cancer. Often, oncology treatment involves testing to find out if mutations are allowing the cancer cells to evade a patient’s immune system.
Checking these biomarkers takes time, however. Patients sometimes become frustrated because they are anxious to begin treatment. Patients may receive inaccurate information from friends or family who went through treatment previously. Navigators can provide knowledge on the current state of care for a patient’s disease, helping them better manage anxieties.
“You have to explain to them that things have changed since the guy you drink coffee with was diagnosed with cancer, and there may be a drug that could target that,” Ms. Gentry said.
Potential Challenges
Initial uptake of the new PIN codes may be slow going, however, as clinicians and health systems may already use well-established codes. These include CCM and principal care management services, which may pay higher rates, Mullangi said.
“There might be sensitivity around not wanting to cannibalize existing programs with a new program,” Dr. Mullangi said.
In addition, many patients will have a copay for the services of principal illness navigators, Dr. Mullangi said.
While many patients have additional insurance that would cover the service, not all do. People with traditional Medicare coverage can sometimes pay 20% of the cost of some medical services.
“I think that may give patients pause, particularly if they’re already feeling the financial burden of a cancer treatment journey,” Dr. Mullangi said.
Pay rates for PIN services involve calculations of regional price differences, which are posted publicly by CMS, and potential added fees for services provided by hospital-affiliated organizations.
Consider payments for code G0023, covering 60 minutes of principal navigation services provided in a single month.
A set reimbursement for patients cared for in independent medical practices exists, with variation for local costs. Medicare’s non-facility price for G0023 would be $102.41 in some parts of Silicon Valley in California, including San Jose. In Arkansas, where costs are lower, reimbursement would be $73.14 for this same service.
Patients who get services covered by code G0023 in independent medical practices would have monthly copays of about $15-$20, depending on where they live.
The tab for patients tends to be higher for these same services if delivered through a medical practice owned by a hospital, as this would trigger the addition of facility fees to the payments made to cover the services. Facility fees are difficult for the public to ascertain before getting a treatment or service.
Dr. Mullangi and Ms. Gentry reported no relevant financial disclosures outside of their employers.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In a move that acknowledges the gauntlet the US health system poses for people facing serious and fatal illnesses, Medicare will pay for a new class of workers to help patients manage treatments for conditions like cancer and heart failure.
The 2024 Medicare physician fee schedule includes new billing codes, including G0023, to pay for 60 minutes a month of care coordination by certified or trained auxiliary personnel working under the direction of a clinician.
A diagnosis of cancer or another serious illness takes a toll beyond the physical effects of the disease. Patients often scramble to make adjustments in family and work schedules to manage treatment, said Samyukta Mullangi, MD, MBA, medical director of oncology at Thyme Care, a Nashville, Tennessee–based firm that provides navigation and coordination services to oncology practices and insurers.
“It just really does create a bit of a pressure cooker for patients,” Dr. Mullangi told this news organization.
Medicare has for many years paid for medical professionals to help patients cope with the complexities of disease, such as chronic care management (CCM) provided by physicians, nurses, and physician assistants.
The new principal illness navigation (PIN) payments are intended to pay for work that to date typically has been done by people without medical degrees, including those involved in peer support networks and community health programs. The US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services(CMS) expects these navigators will undergo training and work under the supervision of clinicians.
The new navigators may coordinate care transitions between medical settings, follow up with patients after emergency department (ED) visits, or communicate with skilled nursing facilities regarding the psychosocial needs and functional deficits of a patient, among other functions.
CMS expects the new navigators may:
- Conduct assessments to understand a patient’s life story, strengths, needs, goals, preferences, and desired outcomes, including understanding cultural and linguistic factors.
- Provide support to accomplish the clinician’s treatment plan.
- Coordinate the receipt of needed services from healthcare facilities, home- and community-based service providers, and caregivers.
Peers as Navigators
The new navigators can be former patients who have undergone similar treatments for serious diseases, CMS said. This approach sets the new program apart from other care management services Medicare already covers, program officials wrote in the 2024 physician fee schedule.
“For some conditions, patients are best able to engage with the healthcare system and access care if they have assistance from a single, dedicated individual who has ‘lived experience,’ ” according to the rule.
The agency has taken a broad initial approach in defining what kinds of illnesses a patient may have to qualify for services. Patients must have a serious condition that is expected to last at least 3 months, such as cancer, heart failure, or substance use disorder.
But those without a definitive diagnosis may also qualify to receive navigator services.
In the rule, CMS cited a case in which a CT scan identified a suspicious mass in a patient’s colon. A clinician might decide this person would benefit from navigation services due to the potential risks for an undiagnosed illness.
“Regardless of the definitive diagnosis of the mass, presence of a colonic mass for that patient may be a serious high-risk condition that could, for example, cause obstruction and lead the patient to present to the emergency department, as well as be potentially indicative of an underlying life-threatening illness such as colon cancer,” CMS wrote in the rule.
Navigators often start their work when cancer patients are screened and guide them through initial diagnosis, potential surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy, said Sharon Gentry, MSN, RN, a former nurse navigator who is now the editor in chief of the Journal of the Academy of Oncology Nurse & Patient Navigators.
The navigators are meant to be a trusted and continual presence for patients, who otherwise might be left to start anew in finding help at each phase of care.
The navigators “see the whole picture. They see the whole journey the patient takes, from pre-diagnosis all the way through diagnosis care out through survival,” Ms. Gentry said.
Gaining a special Medicare payment for these kinds of services will elevate this work, she said.
Many newer drugs can target specific mechanisms and proteins of cancer. Often, oncology treatment involves testing to find out if mutations are allowing the cancer cells to evade a patient’s immune system.
Checking these biomarkers takes time, however. Patients sometimes become frustrated because they are anxious to begin treatment. Patients may receive inaccurate information from friends or family who went through treatment previously. Navigators can provide knowledge on the current state of care for a patient’s disease, helping them better manage anxieties.
“You have to explain to them that things have changed since the guy you drink coffee with was diagnosed with cancer, and there may be a drug that could target that,” Ms. Gentry said.
Potential Challenges
Initial uptake of the new PIN codes may be slow going, however, as clinicians and health systems may already use well-established codes. These include CCM and principal care management services, which may pay higher rates, Mullangi said.
“There might be sensitivity around not wanting to cannibalize existing programs with a new program,” Dr. Mullangi said.
In addition, many patients will have a copay for the services of principal illness navigators, Dr. Mullangi said.
While many patients have additional insurance that would cover the service, not all do. People with traditional Medicare coverage can sometimes pay 20% of the cost of some medical services.
“I think that may give patients pause, particularly if they’re already feeling the financial burden of a cancer treatment journey,” Dr. Mullangi said.
Pay rates for PIN services involve calculations of regional price differences, which are posted publicly by CMS, and potential added fees for services provided by hospital-affiliated organizations.
Consider payments for code G0023, covering 60 minutes of principal navigation services provided in a single month.
A set reimbursement for patients cared for in independent medical practices exists, with variation for local costs. Medicare’s non-facility price for G0023 would be $102.41 in some parts of Silicon Valley in California, including San Jose. In Arkansas, where costs are lower, reimbursement would be $73.14 for this same service.
Patients who get services covered by code G0023 in independent medical practices would have monthly copays of about $15-$20, depending on where they live.
The tab for patients tends to be higher for these same services if delivered through a medical practice owned by a hospital, as this would trigger the addition of facility fees to the payments made to cover the services. Facility fees are difficult for the public to ascertain before getting a treatment or service.
Dr. Mullangi and Ms. Gentry reported no relevant financial disclosures outside of their employers.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
How to explain physician compounding to legislators
In Ohio, new limits on drug compounding in physicians’ offices went into effect in April and have become a real hindrance to care for dermatology patients. The State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy has defined compounding as combining two or more prescription drugs and has required that physicians who perform this “compounding” must obtain a “Terminal Distributor of Dangerous Drugs” license. Ohio is the “test state,” and these rules, unless vigorously opposed, will be coming to your state.
[polldaddy:9779752]
The rules state that “compounded” drugs used within 6 hours of preparation must be prepared in a designated clean medication area with proper hand hygiene and the use of powder-free gloves. “Compounded” drugs that are used more than 6 hours after preparation, require a designated clean room with access limited to authorized personnel, environmental control devices such as a laminar flow hood, and additional equipment and training of personnel to maintain an aseptic environment. A separate license is required for each office location.
The state pharmacy boards are eager to restrict physicians – as well as dentists and veterinarians – and to collect annual licensing fees. Additionally, according to an article from the Ohio State Medical Association, noncompliant physicians can be fined by the pharmacy board.
We are talking big money, power, and dreams of clinical relevancy (and billable activities) here.
What can dermatologists do to prevent this regulatory overreach? I encourage you to plan a visit to your state representative, where you can demonstrate how these restrictions affect you and your patients – an exercise that should be both fun and compelling. All you need to illustrate your case is a simple kit that includes a syringe (but no needles in the statehouse!), a bottle of lidocaine with epinephrine, a bottle of 8.4% bicarbonate, alcohol pads, and gloves.
First, explain to your audience that there is a skin cancer epidemic with more than 5.4 million new cases a year and that, over the past 20 years, the incidence of skin cancer has doubled and is projected to double again over the next 20 years. Further, explain that dermatologists treat more than 70% of these cases in the office setting, under local anesthesia, at a huge cost savings to the public and government (it costs an average of 12 times as much to remove these cancers in the outpatient department at the hospital). Remember, states foot most of the bill for Medicaid and Medicare gap indigent coverage.
Take the bottle of lidocaine with epinephrine and open the syringe pack (Staffers love this demonstration; everyone is fascinated with shots.). Put on your gloves, wipe the top of the lidocaine bottle with an alcohol swab, and explain that this medicine is the anesthetic preferred for skin cancer surgery. Explain how it not only numbs the skin, but also causes vasoconstriction, so that the cancer can be easily and safely removed in the office.
Then explain that, in order for the epinephrine to be stable, the solution has to be very acidic (a pH of 4.2, in fact). Explain that this makes it burn like hell unless you add 0.1 cc per cc of 8.4% bicarbonate, in which case the perceived pain on a 10-point scale will drop from 8 to 2. Then pick up the bottle of bicarbonate and explain that you will no longer be able to mix these two components anymore without a “Terminal Distributor of Dangerous Drugs” license because your state pharmacy board considers this compounding. Your representative is likely to give you looks of astonishment, disbelief, and then a dawning realization of the absurdity of the situation.
Follow-up questions may include “Why can’t you buy buffered lidocaine with epinephrine from the compounding pharmacy?” Easy answer: because each patient needs an individual prescription, and you may not know in advance which patient will need it, and how much the patient will need, and it becomes unstable once it has been buffered. It also will cost the patient $45 per 5-cc syringe, and it will be degraded by the time the patient returns from the compounding pharmacy. Explain further that it costs you only 84 cents to make a 5-cc syringe of buffered lidocaine; that some patients may need as many as 10 syringes; and that these costs are all included in the surgery (free!) if the physician draws it up in the office.
A simple summary is – less pain, less cost – and no history of infections or complications.
It is an eye-opener when you demonstrate how ridiculous the compounding rules being imposed are for physicians and patients. I’ve used this demonstration at the state and federal legislative level, and more recently, at the Food and Drug Administration.
If you get the chance, when a state legislator is in your office, become an advocate for your patients and fellow physicians. Make sure physician offices are excluded from these definitions of compounding.
This column was updated June 22, 2017.
Dr. Coldiron is in private practice but maintains a clinical assistant professorship at the University of Cincinnati. He cares for patients, teaches medical students and residents, and has several active clinical research projects. Dr. Coldiron is the author of more than 80 scientific letters, papers, and several book chapters, and he speaks frequently on a variety of topics. He is a past president of the American Academy of Dermatology. Write to him at dermnews@frontlinemedcom.com.
In Ohio, new limits on drug compounding in physicians’ offices went into effect in April and have become a real hindrance to care for dermatology patients. The State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy has defined compounding as combining two or more prescription drugs and has required that physicians who perform this “compounding” must obtain a “Terminal Distributor of Dangerous Drugs” license. Ohio is the “test state,” and these rules, unless vigorously opposed, will be coming to your state.
[polldaddy:9779752]
The rules state that “compounded” drugs used within 6 hours of preparation must be prepared in a designated clean medication area with proper hand hygiene and the use of powder-free gloves. “Compounded” drugs that are used more than 6 hours after preparation, require a designated clean room with access limited to authorized personnel, environmental control devices such as a laminar flow hood, and additional equipment and training of personnel to maintain an aseptic environment. A separate license is required for each office location.
The state pharmacy boards are eager to restrict physicians – as well as dentists and veterinarians – and to collect annual licensing fees. Additionally, according to an article from the Ohio State Medical Association, noncompliant physicians can be fined by the pharmacy board.
We are talking big money, power, and dreams of clinical relevancy (and billable activities) here.
What can dermatologists do to prevent this regulatory overreach? I encourage you to plan a visit to your state representative, where you can demonstrate how these restrictions affect you and your patients – an exercise that should be both fun and compelling. All you need to illustrate your case is a simple kit that includes a syringe (but no needles in the statehouse!), a bottle of lidocaine with epinephrine, a bottle of 8.4% bicarbonate, alcohol pads, and gloves.
First, explain to your audience that there is a skin cancer epidemic with more than 5.4 million new cases a year and that, over the past 20 years, the incidence of skin cancer has doubled and is projected to double again over the next 20 years. Further, explain that dermatologists treat more than 70% of these cases in the office setting, under local anesthesia, at a huge cost savings to the public and government (it costs an average of 12 times as much to remove these cancers in the outpatient department at the hospital). Remember, states foot most of the bill for Medicaid and Medicare gap indigent coverage.
Take the bottle of lidocaine with epinephrine and open the syringe pack (Staffers love this demonstration; everyone is fascinated with shots.). Put on your gloves, wipe the top of the lidocaine bottle with an alcohol swab, and explain that this medicine is the anesthetic preferred for skin cancer surgery. Explain how it not only numbs the skin, but also causes vasoconstriction, so that the cancer can be easily and safely removed in the office.
Then explain that, in order for the epinephrine to be stable, the solution has to be very acidic (a pH of 4.2, in fact). Explain that this makes it burn like hell unless you add 0.1 cc per cc of 8.4% bicarbonate, in which case the perceived pain on a 10-point scale will drop from 8 to 2. Then pick up the bottle of bicarbonate and explain that you will no longer be able to mix these two components anymore without a “Terminal Distributor of Dangerous Drugs” license because your state pharmacy board considers this compounding. Your representative is likely to give you looks of astonishment, disbelief, and then a dawning realization of the absurdity of the situation.
Follow-up questions may include “Why can’t you buy buffered lidocaine with epinephrine from the compounding pharmacy?” Easy answer: because each patient needs an individual prescription, and you may not know in advance which patient will need it, and how much the patient will need, and it becomes unstable once it has been buffered. It also will cost the patient $45 per 5-cc syringe, and it will be degraded by the time the patient returns from the compounding pharmacy. Explain further that it costs you only 84 cents to make a 5-cc syringe of buffered lidocaine; that some patients may need as many as 10 syringes; and that these costs are all included in the surgery (free!) if the physician draws it up in the office.
A simple summary is – less pain, less cost – and no history of infections or complications.
It is an eye-opener when you demonstrate how ridiculous the compounding rules being imposed are for physicians and patients. I’ve used this demonstration at the state and federal legislative level, and more recently, at the Food and Drug Administration.
If you get the chance, when a state legislator is in your office, become an advocate for your patients and fellow physicians. Make sure physician offices are excluded from these definitions of compounding.
This column was updated June 22, 2017.
Dr. Coldiron is in private practice but maintains a clinical assistant professorship at the University of Cincinnati. He cares for patients, teaches medical students and residents, and has several active clinical research projects. Dr. Coldiron is the author of more than 80 scientific letters, papers, and several book chapters, and he speaks frequently on a variety of topics. He is a past president of the American Academy of Dermatology. Write to him at dermnews@frontlinemedcom.com.
In Ohio, new limits on drug compounding in physicians’ offices went into effect in April and have become a real hindrance to care for dermatology patients. The State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy has defined compounding as combining two or more prescription drugs and has required that physicians who perform this “compounding” must obtain a “Terminal Distributor of Dangerous Drugs” license. Ohio is the “test state,” and these rules, unless vigorously opposed, will be coming to your state.
[polldaddy:9779752]
The rules state that “compounded” drugs used within 6 hours of preparation must be prepared in a designated clean medication area with proper hand hygiene and the use of powder-free gloves. “Compounded” drugs that are used more than 6 hours after preparation, require a designated clean room with access limited to authorized personnel, environmental control devices such as a laminar flow hood, and additional equipment and training of personnel to maintain an aseptic environment. A separate license is required for each office location.
The state pharmacy boards are eager to restrict physicians – as well as dentists and veterinarians – and to collect annual licensing fees. Additionally, according to an article from the Ohio State Medical Association, noncompliant physicians can be fined by the pharmacy board.
We are talking big money, power, and dreams of clinical relevancy (and billable activities) here.
What can dermatologists do to prevent this regulatory overreach? I encourage you to plan a visit to your state representative, where you can demonstrate how these restrictions affect you and your patients – an exercise that should be both fun and compelling. All you need to illustrate your case is a simple kit that includes a syringe (but no needles in the statehouse!), a bottle of lidocaine with epinephrine, a bottle of 8.4% bicarbonate, alcohol pads, and gloves.
First, explain to your audience that there is a skin cancer epidemic with more than 5.4 million new cases a year and that, over the past 20 years, the incidence of skin cancer has doubled and is projected to double again over the next 20 years. Further, explain that dermatologists treat more than 70% of these cases in the office setting, under local anesthesia, at a huge cost savings to the public and government (it costs an average of 12 times as much to remove these cancers in the outpatient department at the hospital). Remember, states foot most of the bill for Medicaid and Medicare gap indigent coverage.
Take the bottle of lidocaine with epinephrine and open the syringe pack (Staffers love this demonstration; everyone is fascinated with shots.). Put on your gloves, wipe the top of the lidocaine bottle with an alcohol swab, and explain that this medicine is the anesthetic preferred for skin cancer surgery. Explain how it not only numbs the skin, but also causes vasoconstriction, so that the cancer can be easily and safely removed in the office.
Then explain that, in order for the epinephrine to be stable, the solution has to be very acidic (a pH of 4.2, in fact). Explain that this makes it burn like hell unless you add 0.1 cc per cc of 8.4% bicarbonate, in which case the perceived pain on a 10-point scale will drop from 8 to 2. Then pick up the bottle of bicarbonate and explain that you will no longer be able to mix these two components anymore without a “Terminal Distributor of Dangerous Drugs” license because your state pharmacy board considers this compounding. Your representative is likely to give you looks of astonishment, disbelief, and then a dawning realization of the absurdity of the situation.
Follow-up questions may include “Why can’t you buy buffered lidocaine with epinephrine from the compounding pharmacy?” Easy answer: because each patient needs an individual prescription, and you may not know in advance which patient will need it, and how much the patient will need, and it becomes unstable once it has been buffered. It also will cost the patient $45 per 5-cc syringe, and it will be degraded by the time the patient returns from the compounding pharmacy. Explain further that it costs you only 84 cents to make a 5-cc syringe of buffered lidocaine; that some patients may need as many as 10 syringes; and that these costs are all included in the surgery (free!) if the physician draws it up in the office.
A simple summary is – less pain, less cost – and no history of infections or complications.
It is an eye-opener when you demonstrate how ridiculous the compounding rules being imposed are for physicians and patients. I’ve used this demonstration at the state and federal legislative level, and more recently, at the Food and Drug Administration.
If you get the chance, when a state legislator is in your office, become an advocate for your patients and fellow physicians. Make sure physician offices are excluded from these definitions of compounding.
This column was updated June 22, 2017.
Dr. Coldiron is in private practice but maintains a clinical assistant professorship at the University of Cincinnati. He cares for patients, teaches medical students and residents, and has several active clinical research projects. Dr. Coldiron is the author of more than 80 scientific letters, papers, and several book chapters, and he speaks frequently on a variety of topics. He is a past president of the American Academy of Dermatology. Write to him at dermnews@frontlinemedcom.com.
Best Practices: Protecting Dry Vulnerable Skin with CeraVe® Healing Ointment
A supplement to Dermatology News. This advertising supplement is sponsored by Valeant Pharmaceuticals.
Topics
- Reinforcing the Skin Barrier
- NEA Seal of Acceptance
- A Preventative Approach to Dry, Cracked Skin
- CeraVe Ointment in the Clinical Setting
Faculty/Faculty Disclosure
Sheila Fallon Friedlander, MD
Professor of Clinical Dermatology & Pediatrics
Director, Pediatric Dermatology Fellowship Training Program
University of California at San Diego School of Medicine
Rady Children’s Hospital,
San Diego, California
Dr. Friedlander was compensated for her participation in the development of this article.
CeraVe is a registered trademark of Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. or its affiliates.
A supplement to Dermatology News. This advertising supplement is sponsored by Valeant Pharmaceuticals.
Topics
- Reinforcing the Skin Barrier
- NEA Seal of Acceptance
- A Preventative Approach to Dry, Cracked Skin
- CeraVe Ointment in the Clinical Setting
Faculty/Faculty Disclosure
Sheila Fallon Friedlander, MD
Professor of Clinical Dermatology & Pediatrics
Director, Pediatric Dermatology Fellowship Training Program
University of California at San Diego School of Medicine
Rady Children’s Hospital,
San Diego, California
Dr. Friedlander was compensated for her participation in the development of this article.
CeraVe is a registered trademark of Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. or its affiliates.
A supplement to Dermatology News. This advertising supplement is sponsored by Valeant Pharmaceuticals.
Topics
- Reinforcing the Skin Barrier
- NEA Seal of Acceptance
- A Preventative Approach to Dry, Cracked Skin
- CeraVe Ointment in the Clinical Setting
Faculty/Faculty Disclosure
Sheila Fallon Friedlander, MD
Professor of Clinical Dermatology & Pediatrics
Director, Pediatric Dermatology Fellowship Training Program
University of California at San Diego School of Medicine
Rady Children’s Hospital,
San Diego, California
Dr. Friedlander was compensated for her participation in the development of this article.
CeraVe is a registered trademark of Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Inc. or its affiliates.
Trump Nominations for US Health Agencies Spark Controversy, Criticism, Praise
President-elect Donald Trump’s vision for the nation’s top health agencies is coming into focus with three nominations announced Nov. 22 that drew both criticism and praise:
- Surgeon and health researcher Martin A. Makary, MD, MPH, to lead the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
- Former Republican congressman and physician David J. Weldon, MD, for director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
- Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat, MD, for surgeon general.
Earlier in November, Trump nominated vaccine skeptic and former presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Here’s what to know about the latest nominees, who, like Kennedy, must be confirmed by the US Senate.
Martin A. Makary
Currently a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and chief of islet transplant surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Makary co-invented in 2006 a surgery checklist that became a widely-used patient safety tool.
As a US FDA commissioner, Makary would preside over a $6.5 billion agency with more than 18,000 employees. The agency, part of HHS, oversees human and animal drugs and vaccines, medical devices, food, tobacco and other products. Some of Makary’s views align closely with those of HHS nominee Kennedy.
Makary is also chief medical officer of telehealth platform Sesame.
Makary was primarily known as a health researcher and author of books about price transparency and the cost of health care until the COVID-19 pandemic, when he became an outspoken critic of the federal response, lambasting restrictions and mandates advocated by the CDC and other public health officials.
In 2023, Makary told the House Select Subcommittee on the COVID Pandemic that federal officials had ignored what he called “natural immunity.” Studies have shown that natural immunity is “at least as effective as vaccinated immunity, and probably better,” testified Makary.
Makary called for an overhaul of the US FDA in a 2021 Fox News opinion, saying that its culture was “defined by counterproductive rigidity and a refusal to adapt.”
Blind Spots, his most recent book, takes on what he calls “medical dogma” and challenges conventional views on subjects ranging from the microbiome to marijuana to cancer prevention, hormone replacement therapy, antibiotics and peanut allergies.
In an interview he posted to X, Makary blames inappropriate use of antibiotics for a variety of childhood illnesses. He cites increases in obesity, learning disabilities, attention deficit disorder, asthma, celiac disease, ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease as all potentially causally related to antibiotics given in childhood.
Makary is an advisor to two conservative think tanks, the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity, and to Paragon Health Institute, begun in 2021 by two former top officials in the previous Trump administration.
Makary would “cut the bureaucratic red tape at the agency to make sure Americans get the medical cures and treatments they deserve,” Trump said on his social media platform, Truth Social, and in a press release.
While Los Angeles Times owner and physician-entrepreneur Patrick Soon-Shiong, MBBCh, MSc, praised the nomination of Makary (and the two other nominees) as “inspired,” other physicians criticized Makary for his anti-COVID mandate views and “fear-mongering” over COVID vaccine side effects.
Janette Nesheiwat
As surgeon general, Nesheiwat would serve as the top “health communicator in chief” and oversee the 6000 member US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps.
She is a frequent medical contributor to Fox News and serves as a medical director for a group of urgent care clinics in New York. She received her medical degree from the American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine and completed a family medicine residency at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. She is board-certified in family medicine.
Nesheiwat sells vitamin supplements on her website and in December will publish a book on “miracles in medicine” and her Christian faith.
Trump said in a statement that Nesheiwat “is a fierce advocate and strong communicator for preventive medicine and public health. She is committed to ensuring that Americans have access to affordable, quality healthcare, and believes in empowering individuals to take charge of their health to live longer, healthier lives.”
While Nesheiwat was critical of COVID mandates, she voiced more support for COVID vaccines and mask-wearing during the pandemic than her fellow nominees, leading some Trump supporters to criticize her nomination.
“A good appointment, happy about this: I got to know @DoctorJanette during the pandemic, exchanging information. She is very smart, thoughtful, interested in learning, and a compassionate doctor, and…a truly nice person,” noted vaccine researcher Peter Hotez, MD, PhD, said on X.
David J. Weldon
If confirmed, former congressman Weldon would oversee the sprawling CDC, an agency with a roughly $17 billion budget, 15,000 employees or contractors, and numerous centers covering everything from health statistics to vaccines to epidemiology.
After earning his medical degree from the University at Buffalo School of Medicine, Weldon served in the US Army and US Army reserve. The Republican later served for 14 years in Congress representing Florida’s 15th district, which covers the Tampa region.
He now practices as an internist in Brevard County, Florida.
In Congress, Weldon raised concerns about the safety of some vaccines and promoted the false narrative that a former vaccine ingredient, thimerosal, caused autism, the Washington Post reported. Thimerosal has not been used in child vaccines for more than two decades. He also introduced a bill to move vaccine safety oversight from the CDC to an independent agency within HHS.
Trump said in a statement that Weldon “will proudly restore the CDC to its true purpose, and will work to end the Chronic Disease Epidemic.”
But some physicians criticized Weldon for what they called his anti-vaccine views.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
President-elect Donald Trump’s vision for the nation’s top health agencies is coming into focus with three nominations announced Nov. 22 that drew both criticism and praise:
- Surgeon and health researcher Martin A. Makary, MD, MPH, to lead the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
- Former Republican congressman and physician David J. Weldon, MD, for director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
- Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat, MD, for surgeon general.
Earlier in November, Trump nominated vaccine skeptic and former presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Here’s what to know about the latest nominees, who, like Kennedy, must be confirmed by the US Senate.
Martin A. Makary
Currently a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and chief of islet transplant surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Makary co-invented in 2006 a surgery checklist that became a widely-used patient safety tool.
As a US FDA commissioner, Makary would preside over a $6.5 billion agency with more than 18,000 employees. The agency, part of HHS, oversees human and animal drugs and vaccines, medical devices, food, tobacco and other products. Some of Makary’s views align closely with those of HHS nominee Kennedy.
Makary is also chief medical officer of telehealth platform Sesame.
Makary was primarily known as a health researcher and author of books about price transparency and the cost of health care until the COVID-19 pandemic, when he became an outspoken critic of the federal response, lambasting restrictions and mandates advocated by the CDC and other public health officials.
In 2023, Makary told the House Select Subcommittee on the COVID Pandemic that federal officials had ignored what he called “natural immunity.” Studies have shown that natural immunity is “at least as effective as vaccinated immunity, and probably better,” testified Makary.
Makary called for an overhaul of the US FDA in a 2021 Fox News opinion, saying that its culture was “defined by counterproductive rigidity and a refusal to adapt.”
Blind Spots, his most recent book, takes on what he calls “medical dogma” and challenges conventional views on subjects ranging from the microbiome to marijuana to cancer prevention, hormone replacement therapy, antibiotics and peanut allergies.
In an interview he posted to X, Makary blames inappropriate use of antibiotics for a variety of childhood illnesses. He cites increases in obesity, learning disabilities, attention deficit disorder, asthma, celiac disease, ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease as all potentially causally related to antibiotics given in childhood.
Makary is an advisor to two conservative think tanks, the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity, and to Paragon Health Institute, begun in 2021 by two former top officials in the previous Trump administration.
Makary would “cut the bureaucratic red tape at the agency to make sure Americans get the medical cures and treatments they deserve,” Trump said on his social media platform, Truth Social, and in a press release.
While Los Angeles Times owner and physician-entrepreneur Patrick Soon-Shiong, MBBCh, MSc, praised the nomination of Makary (and the two other nominees) as “inspired,” other physicians criticized Makary for his anti-COVID mandate views and “fear-mongering” over COVID vaccine side effects.
Janette Nesheiwat
As surgeon general, Nesheiwat would serve as the top “health communicator in chief” and oversee the 6000 member US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps.
She is a frequent medical contributor to Fox News and serves as a medical director for a group of urgent care clinics in New York. She received her medical degree from the American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine and completed a family medicine residency at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. She is board-certified in family medicine.
Nesheiwat sells vitamin supplements on her website and in December will publish a book on “miracles in medicine” and her Christian faith.
Trump said in a statement that Nesheiwat “is a fierce advocate and strong communicator for preventive medicine and public health. She is committed to ensuring that Americans have access to affordable, quality healthcare, and believes in empowering individuals to take charge of their health to live longer, healthier lives.”
While Nesheiwat was critical of COVID mandates, she voiced more support for COVID vaccines and mask-wearing during the pandemic than her fellow nominees, leading some Trump supporters to criticize her nomination.
“A good appointment, happy about this: I got to know @DoctorJanette during the pandemic, exchanging information. She is very smart, thoughtful, interested in learning, and a compassionate doctor, and…a truly nice person,” noted vaccine researcher Peter Hotez, MD, PhD, said on X.
David J. Weldon
If confirmed, former congressman Weldon would oversee the sprawling CDC, an agency with a roughly $17 billion budget, 15,000 employees or contractors, and numerous centers covering everything from health statistics to vaccines to epidemiology.
After earning his medical degree from the University at Buffalo School of Medicine, Weldon served in the US Army and US Army reserve. The Republican later served for 14 years in Congress representing Florida’s 15th district, which covers the Tampa region.
He now practices as an internist in Brevard County, Florida.
In Congress, Weldon raised concerns about the safety of some vaccines and promoted the false narrative that a former vaccine ingredient, thimerosal, caused autism, the Washington Post reported. Thimerosal has not been used in child vaccines for more than two decades. He also introduced a bill to move vaccine safety oversight from the CDC to an independent agency within HHS.
Trump said in a statement that Weldon “will proudly restore the CDC to its true purpose, and will work to end the Chronic Disease Epidemic.”
But some physicians criticized Weldon for what they called his anti-vaccine views.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
President-elect Donald Trump’s vision for the nation’s top health agencies is coming into focus with three nominations announced Nov. 22 that drew both criticism and praise:
- Surgeon and health researcher Martin A. Makary, MD, MPH, to lead the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
- Former Republican congressman and physician David J. Weldon, MD, for director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
- Fox News contributor Janette Nesheiwat, MD, for surgeon general.
Earlier in November, Trump nominated vaccine skeptic and former presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Here’s what to know about the latest nominees, who, like Kennedy, must be confirmed by the US Senate.
Martin A. Makary
Currently a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and chief of islet transplant surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Makary co-invented in 2006 a surgery checklist that became a widely-used patient safety tool.
As a US FDA commissioner, Makary would preside over a $6.5 billion agency with more than 18,000 employees. The agency, part of HHS, oversees human and animal drugs and vaccines, medical devices, food, tobacco and other products. Some of Makary’s views align closely with those of HHS nominee Kennedy.
Makary is also chief medical officer of telehealth platform Sesame.
Makary was primarily known as a health researcher and author of books about price transparency and the cost of health care until the COVID-19 pandemic, when he became an outspoken critic of the federal response, lambasting restrictions and mandates advocated by the CDC and other public health officials.
In 2023, Makary told the House Select Subcommittee on the COVID Pandemic that federal officials had ignored what he called “natural immunity.” Studies have shown that natural immunity is “at least as effective as vaccinated immunity, and probably better,” testified Makary.
Makary called for an overhaul of the US FDA in a 2021 Fox News opinion, saying that its culture was “defined by counterproductive rigidity and a refusal to adapt.”
Blind Spots, his most recent book, takes on what he calls “medical dogma” and challenges conventional views on subjects ranging from the microbiome to marijuana to cancer prevention, hormone replacement therapy, antibiotics and peanut allergies.
In an interview he posted to X, Makary blames inappropriate use of antibiotics for a variety of childhood illnesses. He cites increases in obesity, learning disabilities, attention deficit disorder, asthma, celiac disease, ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease as all potentially causally related to antibiotics given in childhood.
Makary is an advisor to two conservative think tanks, the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity, and to Paragon Health Institute, begun in 2021 by two former top officials in the previous Trump administration.
Makary would “cut the bureaucratic red tape at the agency to make sure Americans get the medical cures and treatments they deserve,” Trump said on his social media platform, Truth Social, and in a press release.
While Los Angeles Times owner and physician-entrepreneur Patrick Soon-Shiong, MBBCh, MSc, praised the nomination of Makary (and the two other nominees) as “inspired,” other physicians criticized Makary for his anti-COVID mandate views and “fear-mongering” over COVID vaccine side effects.
Janette Nesheiwat
As surgeon general, Nesheiwat would serve as the top “health communicator in chief” and oversee the 6000 member US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps.
She is a frequent medical contributor to Fox News and serves as a medical director for a group of urgent care clinics in New York. She received her medical degree from the American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine and completed a family medicine residency at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. She is board-certified in family medicine.
Nesheiwat sells vitamin supplements on her website and in December will publish a book on “miracles in medicine” and her Christian faith.
Trump said in a statement that Nesheiwat “is a fierce advocate and strong communicator for preventive medicine and public health. She is committed to ensuring that Americans have access to affordable, quality healthcare, and believes in empowering individuals to take charge of their health to live longer, healthier lives.”
While Nesheiwat was critical of COVID mandates, she voiced more support for COVID vaccines and mask-wearing during the pandemic than her fellow nominees, leading some Trump supporters to criticize her nomination.
“A good appointment, happy about this: I got to know @DoctorJanette during the pandemic, exchanging information. She is very smart, thoughtful, interested in learning, and a compassionate doctor, and…a truly nice person,” noted vaccine researcher Peter Hotez, MD, PhD, said on X.
David J. Weldon
If confirmed, former congressman Weldon would oversee the sprawling CDC, an agency with a roughly $17 billion budget, 15,000 employees or contractors, and numerous centers covering everything from health statistics to vaccines to epidemiology.
After earning his medical degree from the University at Buffalo School of Medicine, Weldon served in the US Army and US Army reserve. The Republican later served for 14 years in Congress representing Florida’s 15th district, which covers the Tampa region.
He now practices as an internist in Brevard County, Florida.
In Congress, Weldon raised concerns about the safety of some vaccines and promoted the false narrative that a former vaccine ingredient, thimerosal, caused autism, the Washington Post reported. Thimerosal has not been used in child vaccines for more than two decades. He also introduced a bill to move vaccine safety oversight from the CDC to an independent agency within HHS.
Trump said in a statement that Weldon “will proudly restore the CDC to its true purpose, and will work to end the Chronic Disease Epidemic.”
But some physicians criticized Weldon for what they called his anti-vaccine views.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Low-Dose Oral Minoxidil: Expert Consensus Provide Guidance for Treating Hair Loss
. With large randomized, controlled trials lacking, the guidelines authors and other dermatologists said the paper provides practical pointers that should increase clinicians’ confidence in prescribing LDOM for hair loss.
Comfort and Confidence
Benjamin N. Ungar, MD, director of the Alopecia Center of Excellence at Mount Sinai Icahn School of Medicine, New York City, said he hopes that the guidelines will “make dermatologists in practice more comfortable with the use of low-dose oral minoxidil to treat different kinds of hair loss, and therefore, more patients will benefit.” He was not an author of the paper, which was published online in JAMA Dermatology on November 20, but was asked to comment.
Members of the multidisciplinary Low-Dose Oral Minoxidil Initiation steering committee recruited dermatologists with hair loss expertise from 12 countries. Using a modified four-round Delphi process that required at least 70% agreement, the group of 43 dermatologists crafted 76 consensus statements. “Notably,” said Co-senior author Jennifer Fu, MD, director of the Hair Disorders Clinic at the University of California, San Francisco, “27 items achieved at least 90% consensus after the first two rounds, indicating broad agreement in expert practice.”
Indications for LDOM
At least 90% of experts concurred regarding the appropriateness of LDOM use for androgenetic alopecia (AGA) and age-related thinning and in cases where topical minoxidil proves ineffective or problematic. Additional situations in which LDOM might provide direct benefit involve follicular miniaturization, such as alopecia areata, or hair cycle disruption, such as chemotherapy. The authors also recommended considering LDOM over topical minoxidil when the latter is more expensive and when patients desire enhanced hypertrichosis.
Contraindications and Precautions
Before prescribing LDOM, the authors wrote, clinicians may consult with primary care or cardiology when contraindications (cardiovascular issues, pregnancy/nursing, and potential drug interactions) or precautions (history of tachycardia or arrhythmia, hypotension, or impaired kidney function) exist. Patients with precautions may require blood pressure monitoring, as well as monitoring for adverse effects of treatment. The panel also suggested the latter for all patients at the time of LDOM initiation and dose escalation. The authors advised against routine baseline laboratory and EKG testing in cases without relevant precautions.
Dosing Considerations
Along with systemic adverse event risk and baseline hair loss severity, key dosing considerations include patient age, sex, and whether patients desire hypertrichosis. Consensus on daily doses for adolescent females and males begins at 0.625 mg and 1.25 mg, respectively, and ranges up to 2.5 mg for adolescent females vs 5 mg for adult females and adolescent and adult males.
Presently, said Ungar, many dermatologists — including some who prescribe LDOM — remain uncomfortable even with very low doses, perhaps because of an invalid perception of cardiovascular safety issues including potential hypotension and pericardial effusions. However, recently published data include a review published November 7 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, which showed no significant effect of LDOM on blood pressure. And in a September Journal of Drugs in Dermatology article the authors found no impact on pericardial effusions in a 100-patient cohort.
Some dermatologists worry about the impact hypertrichosis may have on patients, Ungar added. Although incidence estimates range from 15% to 30%, he said, more than half of his patients experience hypertrichosis. “However, most continue treatment because the beneficial effects outweigh the effect of hypertrichosis.”
Practical Roadmap
Adam Friedman, MD, who was not involved with the publication, applauds its inclusion of pragmatic clinical guidance, which he said consensus papers often lack. “This paper sets a great roadmap for working low-dose oral minoxidil into your clinical practice, Friedman, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, DC, said in an interview.
Rather than limiting LDOM use to AGA, he said, the paper is most helpful in showing the spectrum of disease states for which the expert panel prescribes LDOM. “We use it as adjunctive therapy for many other things, both scarring and nonscarring hair loss,” he added.
In appropriate clinical contexts, the authors wrote, clinicians may consider combining LDOM with spironolactone or beta-blockers. Friedman said that in his hands, combining LDOM with a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor (5ARI) is “absolutely outstanding.” Minoxidil increases blood flow to the scalp, he explained, while 5ARIs prevent production of dihydrotestosterone, which miniaturizes hair.
Fu said, “We hope these consensus outcomes will be helpful to dermatology colleagues as they consider using LDOM to treat hair loss in their adult and adolescent patient populations. We anticipate that these guidelines will be updated as additional evidence-based data emerges and are encouraged that we are already seeing new publications on this topic.”
Important areas for future research, she noted, include pediatric use of LDOM, the comparative efficacy of topical vs oral minoxidil, the safety of oral minoxidil for patients with a history of allergic contact dermatitis to topical minoxidil, and the use of other off-label forms of minoxidil, such as compounded oral minoxidil and sublingual minoxidil.
The study was funded by the University of California, San Francisco, Department of Dermatology Medical Student Summer Research Fellowship Program. Fu reported personal fees from Pfizer, Eli Lilly and Company, and Sun Pharma outside of the study. The full list of author disclosures can be found in the paper. Ungar and Friedman reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
. With large randomized, controlled trials lacking, the guidelines authors and other dermatologists said the paper provides practical pointers that should increase clinicians’ confidence in prescribing LDOM for hair loss.
Comfort and Confidence
Benjamin N. Ungar, MD, director of the Alopecia Center of Excellence at Mount Sinai Icahn School of Medicine, New York City, said he hopes that the guidelines will “make dermatologists in practice more comfortable with the use of low-dose oral minoxidil to treat different kinds of hair loss, and therefore, more patients will benefit.” He was not an author of the paper, which was published online in JAMA Dermatology on November 20, but was asked to comment.
Members of the multidisciplinary Low-Dose Oral Minoxidil Initiation steering committee recruited dermatologists with hair loss expertise from 12 countries. Using a modified four-round Delphi process that required at least 70% agreement, the group of 43 dermatologists crafted 76 consensus statements. “Notably,” said Co-senior author Jennifer Fu, MD, director of the Hair Disorders Clinic at the University of California, San Francisco, “27 items achieved at least 90% consensus after the first two rounds, indicating broad agreement in expert practice.”
Indications for LDOM
At least 90% of experts concurred regarding the appropriateness of LDOM use for androgenetic alopecia (AGA) and age-related thinning and in cases where topical minoxidil proves ineffective or problematic. Additional situations in which LDOM might provide direct benefit involve follicular miniaturization, such as alopecia areata, or hair cycle disruption, such as chemotherapy. The authors also recommended considering LDOM over topical minoxidil when the latter is more expensive and when patients desire enhanced hypertrichosis.
Contraindications and Precautions
Before prescribing LDOM, the authors wrote, clinicians may consult with primary care or cardiology when contraindications (cardiovascular issues, pregnancy/nursing, and potential drug interactions) or precautions (history of tachycardia or arrhythmia, hypotension, or impaired kidney function) exist. Patients with precautions may require blood pressure monitoring, as well as monitoring for adverse effects of treatment. The panel also suggested the latter for all patients at the time of LDOM initiation and dose escalation. The authors advised against routine baseline laboratory and EKG testing in cases without relevant precautions.
Dosing Considerations
Along with systemic adverse event risk and baseline hair loss severity, key dosing considerations include patient age, sex, and whether patients desire hypertrichosis. Consensus on daily doses for adolescent females and males begins at 0.625 mg and 1.25 mg, respectively, and ranges up to 2.5 mg for adolescent females vs 5 mg for adult females and adolescent and adult males.
Presently, said Ungar, many dermatologists — including some who prescribe LDOM — remain uncomfortable even with very low doses, perhaps because of an invalid perception of cardiovascular safety issues including potential hypotension and pericardial effusions. However, recently published data include a review published November 7 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, which showed no significant effect of LDOM on blood pressure. And in a September Journal of Drugs in Dermatology article the authors found no impact on pericardial effusions in a 100-patient cohort.
Some dermatologists worry about the impact hypertrichosis may have on patients, Ungar added. Although incidence estimates range from 15% to 30%, he said, more than half of his patients experience hypertrichosis. “However, most continue treatment because the beneficial effects outweigh the effect of hypertrichosis.”
Practical Roadmap
Adam Friedman, MD, who was not involved with the publication, applauds its inclusion of pragmatic clinical guidance, which he said consensus papers often lack. “This paper sets a great roadmap for working low-dose oral minoxidil into your clinical practice, Friedman, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, DC, said in an interview.
Rather than limiting LDOM use to AGA, he said, the paper is most helpful in showing the spectrum of disease states for which the expert panel prescribes LDOM. “We use it as adjunctive therapy for many other things, both scarring and nonscarring hair loss,” he added.
In appropriate clinical contexts, the authors wrote, clinicians may consider combining LDOM with spironolactone or beta-blockers. Friedman said that in his hands, combining LDOM with a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor (5ARI) is “absolutely outstanding.” Minoxidil increases blood flow to the scalp, he explained, while 5ARIs prevent production of dihydrotestosterone, which miniaturizes hair.
Fu said, “We hope these consensus outcomes will be helpful to dermatology colleagues as they consider using LDOM to treat hair loss in their adult and adolescent patient populations. We anticipate that these guidelines will be updated as additional evidence-based data emerges and are encouraged that we are already seeing new publications on this topic.”
Important areas for future research, she noted, include pediatric use of LDOM, the comparative efficacy of topical vs oral minoxidil, the safety of oral minoxidil for patients with a history of allergic contact dermatitis to topical minoxidil, and the use of other off-label forms of minoxidil, such as compounded oral minoxidil and sublingual minoxidil.
The study was funded by the University of California, San Francisco, Department of Dermatology Medical Student Summer Research Fellowship Program. Fu reported personal fees from Pfizer, Eli Lilly and Company, and Sun Pharma outside of the study. The full list of author disclosures can be found in the paper. Ungar and Friedman reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
. With large randomized, controlled trials lacking, the guidelines authors and other dermatologists said the paper provides practical pointers that should increase clinicians’ confidence in prescribing LDOM for hair loss.
Comfort and Confidence
Benjamin N. Ungar, MD, director of the Alopecia Center of Excellence at Mount Sinai Icahn School of Medicine, New York City, said he hopes that the guidelines will “make dermatologists in practice more comfortable with the use of low-dose oral minoxidil to treat different kinds of hair loss, and therefore, more patients will benefit.” He was not an author of the paper, which was published online in JAMA Dermatology on November 20, but was asked to comment.
Members of the multidisciplinary Low-Dose Oral Minoxidil Initiation steering committee recruited dermatologists with hair loss expertise from 12 countries. Using a modified four-round Delphi process that required at least 70% agreement, the group of 43 dermatologists crafted 76 consensus statements. “Notably,” said Co-senior author Jennifer Fu, MD, director of the Hair Disorders Clinic at the University of California, San Francisco, “27 items achieved at least 90% consensus after the first two rounds, indicating broad agreement in expert practice.”
Indications for LDOM
At least 90% of experts concurred regarding the appropriateness of LDOM use for androgenetic alopecia (AGA) and age-related thinning and in cases where topical minoxidil proves ineffective or problematic. Additional situations in which LDOM might provide direct benefit involve follicular miniaturization, such as alopecia areata, or hair cycle disruption, such as chemotherapy. The authors also recommended considering LDOM over topical minoxidil when the latter is more expensive and when patients desire enhanced hypertrichosis.
Contraindications and Precautions
Before prescribing LDOM, the authors wrote, clinicians may consult with primary care or cardiology when contraindications (cardiovascular issues, pregnancy/nursing, and potential drug interactions) or precautions (history of tachycardia or arrhythmia, hypotension, or impaired kidney function) exist. Patients with precautions may require blood pressure monitoring, as well as monitoring for adverse effects of treatment. The panel also suggested the latter for all patients at the time of LDOM initiation and dose escalation. The authors advised against routine baseline laboratory and EKG testing in cases without relevant precautions.
Dosing Considerations
Along with systemic adverse event risk and baseline hair loss severity, key dosing considerations include patient age, sex, and whether patients desire hypertrichosis. Consensus on daily doses for adolescent females and males begins at 0.625 mg and 1.25 mg, respectively, and ranges up to 2.5 mg for adolescent females vs 5 mg for adult females and adolescent and adult males.
Presently, said Ungar, many dermatologists — including some who prescribe LDOM — remain uncomfortable even with very low doses, perhaps because of an invalid perception of cardiovascular safety issues including potential hypotension and pericardial effusions. However, recently published data include a review published November 7 in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, which showed no significant effect of LDOM on blood pressure. And in a September Journal of Drugs in Dermatology article the authors found no impact on pericardial effusions in a 100-patient cohort.
Some dermatologists worry about the impact hypertrichosis may have on patients, Ungar added. Although incidence estimates range from 15% to 30%, he said, more than half of his patients experience hypertrichosis. “However, most continue treatment because the beneficial effects outweigh the effect of hypertrichosis.”
Practical Roadmap
Adam Friedman, MD, who was not involved with the publication, applauds its inclusion of pragmatic clinical guidance, which he said consensus papers often lack. “This paper sets a great roadmap for working low-dose oral minoxidil into your clinical practice, Friedman, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, DC, said in an interview.
Rather than limiting LDOM use to AGA, he said, the paper is most helpful in showing the spectrum of disease states for which the expert panel prescribes LDOM. “We use it as adjunctive therapy for many other things, both scarring and nonscarring hair loss,” he added.
In appropriate clinical contexts, the authors wrote, clinicians may consider combining LDOM with spironolactone or beta-blockers. Friedman said that in his hands, combining LDOM with a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor (5ARI) is “absolutely outstanding.” Minoxidil increases blood flow to the scalp, he explained, while 5ARIs prevent production of dihydrotestosterone, which miniaturizes hair.
Fu said, “We hope these consensus outcomes will be helpful to dermatology colleagues as they consider using LDOM to treat hair loss in their adult and adolescent patient populations. We anticipate that these guidelines will be updated as additional evidence-based data emerges and are encouraged that we are already seeing new publications on this topic.”
Important areas for future research, she noted, include pediatric use of LDOM, the comparative efficacy of topical vs oral minoxidil, the safety of oral minoxidil for patients with a history of allergic contact dermatitis to topical minoxidil, and the use of other off-label forms of minoxidil, such as compounded oral minoxidil and sublingual minoxidil.
The study was funded by the University of California, San Francisco, Department of Dermatology Medical Student Summer Research Fellowship Program. Fu reported personal fees from Pfizer, Eli Lilly and Company, and Sun Pharma outside of the study. The full list of author disclosures can be found in the paper. Ungar and Friedman reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Phase 3 Lupus Trial Shows Promising Results for Dapirolizumab Pegol
WASHINGTON — The investigational anti-CD40 ligand agent dapirolizumab pegol (DZP) outperformed placebo in improving disease activity and reducing high-dose corticosteroid use in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in the phase 3 PHOENYCS GO trial.
“We really think that dapirolizumab pegol may represent a novel treatment for lupus, particularly given its broad immune modulatory effects,” said Megan Clowse, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Rheumatology and Immunology at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina. She presented the study in a late-breaking poster session at the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 2024 Annual Meeting.
There is a “huge unmet need” for drugs for lupus, Clowse told this news organization. Patients with SLE continue to have high disease burden, including ongoing symptoms often driven by inflammation. Corticosteroids are often the best medications to control disease activity, she said, but they can result in long-term toxicity.
What Makes DZP Unique?
Through CD40 ligand signaling, DZP has been shown to reduce B- and T-cell activation and to downregulate interferon pathways. Previous antibodies targeting the CD40 ligand have been associated with an increased risk for thromboembolic events. However, DZP lacks the Fc portion of the antibody, which can bind to platelets and cause clotting. Data from phase 1, 2, and 3 trials thus far do not show an elevated risk for these events, Clowse explained. In fact, safety signals were strong enough that patients with antiphospholipid antibodies — a key driver for blood clots in patients with SLE — were included in the trial.
In PHOENYCS GO, investigators enrolled 321 patients with moderate to severe SLE with persistently active or frequently flaring/relapsing-remitting disease activity despite stable standard of care (SOC) medications such as antimalarials, corticosteroids, and immunosuppressants.
Patients were randomized 2:1 to receive intravenous DZP (24 mg/kg) plus SOC or intravenous placebo plus SOC every 4 weeks, with patients and investigators blinded to treatment assignments.
Patients taking a corticosteroid dose > 7.5 mg/day began a mandatory steroid taper by week 8 of the trial, with the goal of reducing that to < 7.5 mg/day. The tapering regimen was at the discretion of providers and was adapted to each patient’s individual disease activity.
The primary endpoint was British Isles Lupus Assessment Group–based Composite Lupus Assessment (BICLA) response at week 48.
Patients in the DZP and placebo groups were on average 43.5 and 41.5 years old, respectively. More than 90% of patients were women, all on concomitant SLE medications. About half of the participants took a daily corticosteroid dose > 7.5 mg.
At 48 weeks, half of the DZP group (49.5%) achieved BICLA response compared with 34.6% in the placebo group (P = .0110). A higher proportion of patients taking DZP achieved SLE Responder Index-4 response than those taking placebo (60.1% vs 41.1%, respectively; P = .0014), and the rate of severe British Isles Lupus Assessment Group flares in the DZP group was half that of the placebo group (11.6% vs 23.4%; P = .0257). In the subgroup of patients who underwent corticosteroid tapering, 72.4% receiving DZP and 52.9% taking placebo reduced their dose to < 7.5 mg/day by 48 weeks (P = .0404).
DZP was generally well tolerated. Over 48 weeks, 82.6% of the DZP group and 75% of the placebo group reported treatment-emergent adverse events, but serious occurrences were more common in the placebo group (14.8%) than in the DZP group (9.9%). Herpes viral infections were higher in the placebo group, although there were three ophthalmic herpes cases in the DZP group. There was one case of acute myocardial infarction and one death linked to gangrene-related sepsis in patients receiving DZP.
A ‘Mild to Moderate’ Response
Although these are definitely positive results, they show a “mild to moderate response” to DZP, commented Gregory Gardner, MD, an emeritus professor in the Division of Rheumatology at the University of Washington, Seattle, and chair of the American College of Rheumatology’s annual meeting planning committee. He moderated the session where the research was presented. Although DZP showed efficacy among some patients, he noted, “there were still 51% patients that it didn’t work for.”
The drug uses an alternative pathway to current lupus drugs, Gardner added, and more research is needed to understand how best to use this medication in practice.
Clowse noted that DZP could be particularly beneficial for patients with SLE who want to get pregnant. Many drugs used to treat the disease are teratogenic; however, “because of the lack of Fc portion on this drug, it very likely does not cross the placenta in any kind of significant amount,” she said. Although there are not yet any reproductive safety data on DZP, she added, “that is a great potential niche.”
Biogen and UCB, which are jointly developing DZP, aim to start a second phase 3 trial of DZP in patients with SLE, called PHOENYCS FLY, in 2024.
The trial was sponsored by UCB. Clowse is a consultant and has received grant/research support from GSK and UCB. Gardner had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
WASHINGTON — The investigational anti-CD40 ligand agent dapirolizumab pegol (DZP) outperformed placebo in improving disease activity and reducing high-dose corticosteroid use in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in the phase 3 PHOENYCS GO trial.
“We really think that dapirolizumab pegol may represent a novel treatment for lupus, particularly given its broad immune modulatory effects,” said Megan Clowse, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Rheumatology and Immunology at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina. She presented the study in a late-breaking poster session at the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 2024 Annual Meeting.
There is a “huge unmet need” for drugs for lupus, Clowse told this news organization. Patients with SLE continue to have high disease burden, including ongoing symptoms often driven by inflammation. Corticosteroids are often the best medications to control disease activity, she said, but they can result in long-term toxicity.
What Makes DZP Unique?
Through CD40 ligand signaling, DZP has been shown to reduce B- and T-cell activation and to downregulate interferon pathways. Previous antibodies targeting the CD40 ligand have been associated with an increased risk for thromboembolic events. However, DZP lacks the Fc portion of the antibody, which can bind to platelets and cause clotting. Data from phase 1, 2, and 3 trials thus far do not show an elevated risk for these events, Clowse explained. In fact, safety signals were strong enough that patients with antiphospholipid antibodies — a key driver for blood clots in patients with SLE — were included in the trial.
In PHOENYCS GO, investigators enrolled 321 patients with moderate to severe SLE with persistently active or frequently flaring/relapsing-remitting disease activity despite stable standard of care (SOC) medications such as antimalarials, corticosteroids, and immunosuppressants.
Patients were randomized 2:1 to receive intravenous DZP (24 mg/kg) plus SOC or intravenous placebo plus SOC every 4 weeks, with patients and investigators blinded to treatment assignments.
Patients taking a corticosteroid dose > 7.5 mg/day began a mandatory steroid taper by week 8 of the trial, with the goal of reducing that to < 7.5 mg/day. The tapering regimen was at the discretion of providers and was adapted to each patient’s individual disease activity.
The primary endpoint was British Isles Lupus Assessment Group–based Composite Lupus Assessment (BICLA) response at week 48.
Patients in the DZP and placebo groups were on average 43.5 and 41.5 years old, respectively. More than 90% of patients were women, all on concomitant SLE medications. About half of the participants took a daily corticosteroid dose > 7.5 mg.
At 48 weeks, half of the DZP group (49.5%) achieved BICLA response compared with 34.6% in the placebo group (P = .0110). A higher proportion of patients taking DZP achieved SLE Responder Index-4 response than those taking placebo (60.1% vs 41.1%, respectively; P = .0014), and the rate of severe British Isles Lupus Assessment Group flares in the DZP group was half that of the placebo group (11.6% vs 23.4%; P = .0257). In the subgroup of patients who underwent corticosteroid tapering, 72.4% receiving DZP and 52.9% taking placebo reduced their dose to < 7.5 mg/day by 48 weeks (P = .0404).
DZP was generally well tolerated. Over 48 weeks, 82.6% of the DZP group and 75% of the placebo group reported treatment-emergent adverse events, but serious occurrences were more common in the placebo group (14.8%) than in the DZP group (9.9%). Herpes viral infections were higher in the placebo group, although there were three ophthalmic herpes cases in the DZP group. There was one case of acute myocardial infarction and one death linked to gangrene-related sepsis in patients receiving DZP.
A ‘Mild to Moderate’ Response
Although these are definitely positive results, they show a “mild to moderate response” to DZP, commented Gregory Gardner, MD, an emeritus professor in the Division of Rheumatology at the University of Washington, Seattle, and chair of the American College of Rheumatology’s annual meeting planning committee. He moderated the session where the research was presented. Although DZP showed efficacy among some patients, he noted, “there were still 51% patients that it didn’t work for.”
The drug uses an alternative pathway to current lupus drugs, Gardner added, and more research is needed to understand how best to use this medication in practice.
Clowse noted that DZP could be particularly beneficial for patients with SLE who want to get pregnant. Many drugs used to treat the disease are teratogenic; however, “because of the lack of Fc portion on this drug, it very likely does not cross the placenta in any kind of significant amount,” she said. Although there are not yet any reproductive safety data on DZP, she added, “that is a great potential niche.”
Biogen and UCB, which are jointly developing DZP, aim to start a second phase 3 trial of DZP in patients with SLE, called PHOENYCS FLY, in 2024.
The trial was sponsored by UCB. Clowse is a consultant and has received grant/research support from GSK and UCB. Gardner had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
WASHINGTON — The investigational anti-CD40 ligand agent dapirolizumab pegol (DZP) outperformed placebo in improving disease activity and reducing high-dose corticosteroid use in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in the phase 3 PHOENYCS GO trial.
“We really think that dapirolizumab pegol may represent a novel treatment for lupus, particularly given its broad immune modulatory effects,” said Megan Clowse, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Rheumatology and Immunology at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina. She presented the study in a late-breaking poster session at the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) 2024 Annual Meeting.
There is a “huge unmet need” for drugs for lupus, Clowse told this news organization. Patients with SLE continue to have high disease burden, including ongoing symptoms often driven by inflammation. Corticosteroids are often the best medications to control disease activity, she said, but they can result in long-term toxicity.
What Makes DZP Unique?
Through CD40 ligand signaling, DZP has been shown to reduce B- and T-cell activation and to downregulate interferon pathways. Previous antibodies targeting the CD40 ligand have been associated with an increased risk for thromboembolic events. However, DZP lacks the Fc portion of the antibody, which can bind to platelets and cause clotting. Data from phase 1, 2, and 3 trials thus far do not show an elevated risk for these events, Clowse explained. In fact, safety signals were strong enough that patients with antiphospholipid antibodies — a key driver for blood clots in patients with SLE — were included in the trial.
In PHOENYCS GO, investigators enrolled 321 patients with moderate to severe SLE with persistently active or frequently flaring/relapsing-remitting disease activity despite stable standard of care (SOC) medications such as antimalarials, corticosteroids, and immunosuppressants.
Patients were randomized 2:1 to receive intravenous DZP (24 mg/kg) plus SOC or intravenous placebo plus SOC every 4 weeks, with patients and investigators blinded to treatment assignments.
Patients taking a corticosteroid dose > 7.5 mg/day began a mandatory steroid taper by week 8 of the trial, with the goal of reducing that to < 7.5 mg/day. The tapering regimen was at the discretion of providers and was adapted to each patient’s individual disease activity.
The primary endpoint was British Isles Lupus Assessment Group–based Composite Lupus Assessment (BICLA) response at week 48.
Patients in the DZP and placebo groups were on average 43.5 and 41.5 years old, respectively. More than 90% of patients were women, all on concomitant SLE medications. About half of the participants took a daily corticosteroid dose > 7.5 mg.
At 48 weeks, half of the DZP group (49.5%) achieved BICLA response compared with 34.6% in the placebo group (P = .0110). A higher proportion of patients taking DZP achieved SLE Responder Index-4 response than those taking placebo (60.1% vs 41.1%, respectively; P = .0014), and the rate of severe British Isles Lupus Assessment Group flares in the DZP group was half that of the placebo group (11.6% vs 23.4%; P = .0257). In the subgroup of patients who underwent corticosteroid tapering, 72.4% receiving DZP and 52.9% taking placebo reduced their dose to < 7.5 mg/day by 48 weeks (P = .0404).
DZP was generally well tolerated. Over 48 weeks, 82.6% of the DZP group and 75% of the placebo group reported treatment-emergent adverse events, but serious occurrences were more common in the placebo group (14.8%) than in the DZP group (9.9%). Herpes viral infections were higher in the placebo group, although there were three ophthalmic herpes cases in the DZP group. There was one case of acute myocardial infarction and one death linked to gangrene-related sepsis in patients receiving DZP.
A ‘Mild to Moderate’ Response
Although these are definitely positive results, they show a “mild to moderate response” to DZP, commented Gregory Gardner, MD, an emeritus professor in the Division of Rheumatology at the University of Washington, Seattle, and chair of the American College of Rheumatology’s annual meeting planning committee. He moderated the session where the research was presented. Although DZP showed efficacy among some patients, he noted, “there were still 51% patients that it didn’t work for.”
The drug uses an alternative pathway to current lupus drugs, Gardner added, and more research is needed to understand how best to use this medication in practice.
Clowse noted that DZP could be particularly beneficial for patients with SLE who want to get pregnant. Many drugs used to treat the disease are teratogenic; however, “because of the lack of Fc portion on this drug, it very likely does not cross the placenta in any kind of significant amount,” she said. Although there are not yet any reproductive safety data on DZP, she added, “that is a great potential niche.”
Biogen and UCB, which are jointly developing DZP, aim to start a second phase 3 trial of DZP in patients with SLE, called PHOENYCS FLY, in 2024.
The trial was sponsored by UCB. Clowse is a consultant and has received grant/research support from GSK and UCB. Gardner had no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ACR 2024
A 58-year-old White male presented with lesions on his index and middle finger for 3 months
Syphilis
Two biopsies by punch technique were performed; one for pathology and one for tissue culture (fungal and atypical mycobacteria). Tissue cultures showed no growth at 4 and 6 weeks, respectively. The lesions were swabbed for bacterial and viral cultures. Bacterial culture was positive for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and group C Streptococcus. Viral culture for herpes simplex virus (HSV) and varicella zoster virus (VZV) was negative. Histopathology confirmed the diagnosis of syphilis. Immunoperoxidase stain was positive for Treponema pallidum, and negative for HSV-1, HSV-2, and VZV. Special stains for PAS, GMS, Fite, and AFB were negative for organisms.
Syphilis, also known as Lues disease, is a contagious, sexually acquired disease caused by the spirochete T pallidum. The skin and mucous membranes are primarily infected. There are primary, secondary, and tertiary stages. In the primary or initial stage of syphilis, a chancre appears, usually 3-4 weeks after infection. The chancre is a painless papule or erosion that progresses to a firm ulceration. Lymphadenopathy may be present. Less often, multiple chancres may be present. Primary chancre on the finger has been reported in the literature, although it is far less common to have extragenital primary syphilis. The incidence ranges from 2% to 10%. Other extragenital areas that can be affected include lips, intraoral lesions, and the anus. Atypical chancres can be formed when other microbial agents are also present. Generally, an untreated chancre will heal spontaneously within a few months.
The patient referred to the department of health for treatment with penicillin G and further workup of sexually transmitted diseases. He was also seen by infectious disease for treatment of the superimposed bacterial infections and treated with an antibiotic regimen.
The case and photo were submitted by Dr. Bilu Martin.
Dr Bilu Martin is a board-certified dermatologist in private practice at Premier Dermatology, MD, in Aventura, Florida. More diagnostic cases are available at mdedge.com/dermatology. To submit a case for possible publication, send an email to dermnews@mdedge.com.
References
Ramoni S et al. Sex Transm Dis. 2010 Jul;37(7):468. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0b013e3181e2cfac.
Starzycki Z. Br J Vener Dis. 1983 Jun;59(3):169-71. doi: 10.1136/sti.59.3.169.
Syphilis
Two biopsies by punch technique were performed; one for pathology and one for tissue culture (fungal and atypical mycobacteria). Tissue cultures showed no growth at 4 and 6 weeks, respectively. The lesions were swabbed for bacterial and viral cultures. Bacterial culture was positive for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and group C Streptococcus. Viral culture for herpes simplex virus (HSV) and varicella zoster virus (VZV) was negative. Histopathology confirmed the diagnosis of syphilis. Immunoperoxidase stain was positive for Treponema pallidum, and negative for HSV-1, HSV-2, and VZV. Special stains for PAS, GMS, Fite, and AFB were negative for organisms.
Syphilis, also known as Lues disease, is a contagious, sexually acquired disease caused by the spirochete T pallidum. The skin and mucous membranes are primarily infected. There are primary, secondary, and tertiary stages. In the primary or initial stage of syphilis, a chancre appears, usually 3-4 weeks after infection. The chancre is a painless papule or erosion that progresses to a firm ulceration. Lymphadenopathy may be present. Less often, multiple chancres may be present. Primary chancre on the finger has been reported in the literature, although it is far less common to have extragenital primary syphilis. The incidence ranges from 2% to 10%. Other extragenital areas that can be affected include lips, intraoral lesions, and the anus. Atypical chancres can be formed when other microbial agents are also present. Generally, an untreated chancre will heal spontaneously within a few months.
The patient referred to the department of health for treatment with penicillin G and further workup of sexually transmitted diseases. He was also seen by infectious disease for treatment of the superimposed bacterial infections and treated with an antibiotic regimen.
The case and photo were submitted by Dr. Bilu Martin.
Dr Bilu Martin is a board-certified dermatologist in private practice at Premier Dermatology, MD, in Aventura, Florida. More diagnostic cases are available at mdedge.com/dermatology. To submit a case for possible publication, send an email to dermnews@mdedge.com.
References
Ramoni S et al. Sex Transm Dis. 2010 Jul;37(7):468. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0b013e3181e2cfac.
Starzycki Z. Br J Vener Dis. 1983 Jun;59(3):169-71. doi: 10.1136/sti.59.3.169.
Syphilis
Two biopsies by punch technique were performed; one for pathology and one for tissue culture (fungal and atypical mycobacteria). Tissue cultures showed no growth at 4 and 6 weeks, respectively. The lesions were swabbed for bacterial and viral cultures. Bacterial culture was positive for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and group C Streptococcus. Viral culture for herpes simplex virus (HSV) and varicella zoster virus (VZV) was negative. Histopathology confirmed the diagnosis of syphilis. Immunoperoxidase stain was positive for Treponema pallidum, and negative for HSV-1, HSV-2, and VZV. Special stains for PAS, GMS, Fite, and AFB were negative for organisms.
Syphilis, also known as Lues disease, is a contagious, sexually acquired disease caused by the spirochete T pallidum. The skin and mucous membranes are primarily infected. There are primary, secondary, and tertiary stages. In the primary or initial stage of syphilis, a chancre appears, usually 3-4 weeks after infection. The chancre is a painless papule or erosion that progresses to a firm ulceration. Lymphadenopathy may be present. Less often, multiple chancres may be present. Primary chancre on the finger has been reported in the literature, although it is far less common to have extragenital primary syphilis. The incidence ranges from 2% to 10%. Other extragenital areas that can be affected include lips, intraoral lesions, and the anus. Atypical chancres can be formed when other microbial agents are also present. Generally, an untreated chancre will heal spontaneously within a few months.
The patient referred to the department of health for treatment with penicillin G and further workup of sexually transmitted diseases. He was also seen by infectious disease for treatment of the superimposed bacterial infections and treated with an antibiotic regimen.
The case and photo were submitted by Dr. Bilu Martin.
Dr Bilu Martin is a board-certified dermatologist in private practice at Premier Dermatology, MD, in Aventura, Florida. More diagnostic cases are available at mdedge.com/dermatology. To submit a case for possible publication, send an email to dermnews@mdedge.com.
References
Ramoni S et al. Sex Transm Dis. 2010 Jul;37(7):468. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0b013e3181e2cfac.
Starzycki Z. Br J Vener Dis. 1983 Jun;59(3):169-71. doi: 10.1136/sti.59.3.169.
A 58-year-old White male with no significant past medical history presented with lesions on his right index and middle fingers, which had been present for 3 months. The lesions were painless. The patient has a history of hand dermatitis. Upon questioning, the patient said he had not fished or cleaned fish tanks. He did garden occasionally (no roses). He has been using Neosporin on the lesions. He denied any fever or systemic symptoms and had no lymphadenopathy.
What's your diagnosis?
Managing Rosacea: Tips for Reducing Facial Erythema, Flushing
LAS VEGAS —
These agents “work fast” and “improve redness quickly,” Harper, a dermatologist who practices in Birmingham, Alabama, said at the Society of Dermatology Physician Associates (SDPA) 22nd Annual Fall Dermatology Conference. In addition, “you’re going to know within 30 minutes or an hour whether it’s going to work or not.”
Brimonidine 0.33% gel, an alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonist, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2014 for persistent facial erythema of rosacea. It does not treat telangiectasia and is not approved for flushing (transient erythema). Patients are advised to apply the gel daily in the morning. In phase 3 pivotal trials of patients with moderate to severe erythema of rosacea, which excluded individuals with more than two papules, a composite (investigator- and patient-reported) 2-grade improvement was seen as early as 30 minutes after application on day 1, and erythema was reduced for 9-12 hours.
Oxymetazoline 1% cream, an alpha-1a adrenergic receptor agonist, was approved by the FDA in 2017 for persistent facial erythema of rosacea. It neither treats telangiectasia nor is approved for flushing. Phase 3 trials of patients with moderate to severe persistent erythema of rosacea excluded individuals with more than three inflammatory papules or pustules. A composite (investigator- and subject-reported) 2-grade improvement was seen as early as 1 hour after application on day 1, and erythema was reduced for 9-12 hours.
Receptor Selectivity Differences
According to Harper, there are more reports of worsening erythema with brimonidine 0.33% gel than with oxymetazoline 1% cream, perhaps because of the different receptor selectivity between the two products. She explained that alpha-1 receptors are located only postsynaptically in vascular smooth muscle, while alpha-2 receptors are located presynaptically, which can inhibit norepinephrine and lead to vasodilation. Alpha-2 receptors are also located postsynaptically in vascular smooth muscle and in the endothelial wall, which can mediate nitric oxide release and cause vasodilation.
No head-to-head studies exist that compare brimonidine 0.33% gel with oxymetazoline 1% cream. But in a 52-week study of oxymetazoline 1% cream for persistent facial erythema associated with rosacea published in 2018, at week 52, 36.7% and 43.4% of patients achieved a 2-grade or greater composite improvement from baseline in both Clinician Erythema Assessment and Subject Self-Assessment 3 and 6 hours after a dose, respectively. Also, fewer than 1% of patients experienced a rebound effect following treatment cessation.
“What we learned from this study is that maybe patients do better if they use oxymetazoline 1% cream consistently,” Harper said. “Does that mean that everybody I give this to uses it daily? Probably not, but I think we can change the vascular tone by using it consistently every day.”
Oral Beta-Blockers Another Option
Alpha agonists can also help quell flushing associated with rosacea, Harper continued, but oral beta-blockers may be the better choice. In a 2020 review that drew from nine studies, researchers evaluated the use of carvedilol, propranolol, nadolol, and beta-blockers in general for rosacea-associated facial erythema and flushing. Articles studying carvedilol and propranolol showed a large reduction of erythema and flushing during treatment with a rapid onset of symptom control, while bradycardia and hypotension were the most commonly reported adverse events. “All of these agents are studied in rosacea, but none of them are FDA approved for rosacea,” Harper noted.
In a separate study, five patients with rosacea who had either severe frequent flushing episodes or persistent erythema and burning sensations were treated with carvedilol, a nonselective beta-blocker. Prior treatments included cetirizine and doxycycline, or isotretinoin combined with topical application of metronidazole gel or ivermectin without sufficient improvement in erythema. Carvedilol was added to the above treatments and titrated up to 12.5 mg twice a day and continued for at least 6 months.
The Clinician Erythema Assessment 5-point scale before therapy was 3.4 and dropped to 0.4 during therapy, while the patient self-assessment before therapy was 3.8 and dropped to 0.8 during therapy.
Another study evaluated the use of propranolol and/or doxycycline in 78 patients with rosacea. The propranolol and combination treatment groups showed more rapid improvement at weeks 4 and 8, but there was no statistically significant difference between them by week 12. Rosacea clinical scores also decreased in all groups, but there were no significant differences between them. Reduction of Assessment of Rosacea Clinical Score was 51%, 52.2%, and 57.3% in the propranolol, doxycycline, and combination groups, respectively.
Harper disclosed ties with Almirall, Cutera, Galderma, Journey, Ortho Dermatologics, and Sun Pharmaceutical Industries.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
LAS VEGAS —
These agents “work fast” and “improve redness quickly,” Harper, a dermatologist who practices in Birmingham, Alabama, said at the Society of Dermatology Physician Associates (SDPA) 22nd Annual Fall Dermatology Conference. In addition, “you’re going to know within 30 minutes or an hour whether it’s going to work or not.”
Brimonidine 0.33% gel, an alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonist, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2014 for persistent facial erythema of rosacea. It does not treat telangiectasia and is not approved for flushing (transient erythema). Patients are advised to apply the gel daily in the morning. In phase 3 pivotal trials of patients with moderate to severe erythema of rosacea, which excluded individuals with more than two papules, a composite (investigator- and patient-reported) 2-grade improvement was seen as early as 30 minutes after application on day 1, and erythema was reduced for 9-12 hours.
Oxymetazoline 1% cream, an alpha-1a adrenergic receptor agonist, was approved by the FDA in 2017 for persistent facial erythema of rosacea. It neither treats telangiectasia nor is approved for flushing. Phase 3 trials of patients with moderate to severe persistent erythema of rosacea excluded individuals with more than three inflammatory papules or pustules. A composite (investigator- and subject-reported) 2-grade improvement was seen as early as 1 hour after application on day 1, and erythema was reduced for 9-12 hours.
Receptor Selectivity Differences
According to Harper, there are more reports of worsening erythema with brimonidine 0.33% gel than with oxymetazoline 1% cream, perhaps because of the different receptor selectivity between the two products. She explained that alpha-1 receptors are located only postsynaptically in vascular smooth muscle, while alpha-2 receptors are located presynaptically, which can inhibit norepinephrine and lead to vasodilation. Alpha-2 receptors are also located postsynaptically in vascular smooth muscle and in the endothelial wall, which can mediate nitric oxide release and cause vasodilation.
No head-to-head studies exist that compare brimonidine 0.33% gel with oxymetazoline 1% cream. But in a 52-week study of oxymetazoline 1% cream for persistent facial erythema associated with rosacea published in 2018, at week 52, 36.7% and 43.4% of patients achieved a 2-grade or greater composite improvement from baseline in both Clinician Erythema Assessment and Subject Self-Assessment 3 and 6 hours after a dose, respectively. Also, fewer than 1% of patients experienced a rebound effect following treatment cessation.
“What we learned from this study is that maybe patients do better if they use oxymetazoline 1% cream consistently,” Harper said. “Does that mean that everybody I give this to uses it daily? Probably not, but I think we can change the vascular tone by using it consistently every day.”
Oral Beta-Blockers Another Option
Alpha agonists can also help quell flushing associated with rosacea, Harper continued, but oral beta-blockers may be the better choice. In a 2020 review that drew from nine studies, researchers evaluated the use of carvedilol, propranolol, nadolol, and beta-blockers in general for rosacea-associated facial erythema and flushing. Articles studying carvedilol and propranolol showed a large reduction of erythema and flushing during treatment with a rapid onset of symptom control, while bradycardia and hypotension were the most commonly reported adverse events. “All of these agents are studied in rosacea, but none of them are FDA approved for rosacea,” Harper noted.
In a separate study, five patients with rosacea who had either severe frequent flushing episodes or persistent erythema and burning sensations were treated with carvedilol, a nonselective beta-blocker. Prior treatments included cetirizine and doxycycline, or isotretinoin combined with topical application of metronidazole gel or ivermectin without sufficient improvement in erythema. Carvedilol was added to the above treatments and titrated up to 12.5 mg twice a day and continued for at least 6 months.
The Clinician Erythema Assessment 5-point scale before therapy was 3.4 and dropped to 0.4 during therapy, while the patient self-assessment before therapy was 3.8 and dropped to 0.8 during therapy.
Another study evaluated the use of propranolol and/or doxycycline in 78 patients with rosacea. The propranolol and combination treatment groups showed more rapid improvement at weeks 4 and 8, but there was no statistically significant difference between them by week 12. Rosacea clinical scores also decreased in all groups, but there were no significant differences between them. Reduction of Assessment of Rosacea Clinical Score was 51%, 52.2%, and 57.3% in the propranolol, doxycycline, and combination groups, respectively.
Harper disclosed ties with Almirall, Cutera, Galderma, Journey, Ortho Dermatologics, and Sun Pharmaceutical Industries.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
LAS VEGAS —
These agents “work fast” and “improve redness quickly,” Harper, a dermatologist who practices in Birmingham, Alabama, said at the Society of Dermatology Physician Associates (SDPA) 22nd Annual Fall Dermatology Conference. In addition, “you’re going to know within 30 minutes or an hour whether it’s going to work or not.”
Brimonidine 0.33% gel, an alpha-2 adrenergic receptor agonist, was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2014 for persistent facial erythema of rosacea. It does not treat telangiectasia and is not approved for flushing (transient erythema). Patients are advised to apply the gel daily in the morning. In phase 3 pivotal trials of patients with moderate to severe erythema of rosacea, which excluded individuals with more than two papules, a composite (investigator- and patient-reported) 2-grade improvement was seen as early as 30 minutes after application on day 1, and erythema was reduced for 9-12 hours.
Oxymetazoline 1% cream, an alpha-1a adrenergic receptor agonist, was approved by the FDA in 2017 for persistent facial erythema of rosacea. It neither treats telangiectasia nor is approved for flushing. Phase 3 trials of patients with moderate to severe persistent erythema of rosacea excluded individuals with more than three inflammatory papules or pustules. A composite (investigator- and subject-reported) 2-grade improvement was seen as early as 1 hour after application on day 1, and erythema was reduced for 9-12 hours.
Receptor Selectivity Differences
According to Harper, there are more reports of worsening erythema with brimonidine 0.33% gel than with oxymetazoline 1% cream, perhaps because of the different receptor selectivity between the two products. She explained that alpha-1 receptors are located only postsynaptically in vascular smooth muscle, while alpha-2 receptors are located presynaptically, which can inhibit norepinephrine and lead to vasodilation. Alpha-2 receptors are also located postsynaptically in vascular smooth muscle and in the endothelial wall, which can mediate nitric oxide release and cause vasodilation.
No head-to-head studies exist that compare brimonidine 0.33% gel with oxymetazoline 1% cream. But in a 52-week study of oxymetazoline 1% cream for persistent facial erythema associated with rosacea published in 2018, at week 52, 36.7% and 43.4% of patients achieved a 2-grade or greater composite improvement from baseline in both Clinician Erythema Assessment and Subject Self-Assessment 3 and 6 hours after a dose, respectively. Also, fewer than 1% of patients experienced a rebound effect following treatment cessation.
“What we learned from this study is that maybe patients do better if they use oxymetazoline 1% cream consistently,” Harper said. “Does that mean that everybody I give this to uses it daily? Probably not, but I think we can change the vascular tone by using it consistently every day.”
Oral Beta-Blockers Another Option
Alpha agonists can also help quell flushing associated with rosacea, Harper continued, but oral beta-blockers may be the better choice. In a 2020 review that drew from nine studies, researchers evaluated the use of carvedilol, propranolol, nadolol, and beta-blockers in general for rosacea-associated facial erythema and flushing. Articles studying carvedilol and propranolol showed a large reduction of erythema and flushing during treatment with a rapid onset of symptom control, while bradycardia and hypotension were the most commonly reported adverse events. “All of these agents are studied in rosacea, but none of them are FDA approved for rosacea,” Harper noted.
In a separate study, five patients with rosacea who had either severe frequent flushing episodes or persistent erythema and burning sensations were treated with carvedilol, a nonselective beta-blocker. Prior treatments included cetirizine and doxycycline, or isotretinoin combined with topical application of metronidazole gel or ivermectin without sufficient improvement in erythema. Carvedilol was added to the above treatments and titrated up to 12.5 mg twice a day and continued for at least 6 months.
The Clinician Erythema Assessment 5-point scale before therapy was 3.4 and dropped to 0.4 during therapy, while the patient self-assessment before therapy was 3.8 and dropped to 0.8 during therapy.
Another study evaluated the use of propranolol and/or doxycycline in 78 patients with rosacea. The propranolol and combination treatment groups showed more rapid improvement at weeks 4 and 8, but there was no statistically significant difference between them by week 12. Rosacea clinical scores also decreased in all groups, but there were no significant differences between them. Reduction of Assessment of Rosacea Clinical Score was 51%, 52.2%, and 57.3% in the propranolol, doxycycline, and combination groups, respectively.
Harper disclosed ties with Almirall, Cutera, Galderma, Journey, Ortho Dermatologics, and Sun Pharmaceutical Industries.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM SDPA 2024
Recognizing Burnout: Why Physicians Often Miss the Signs in Themselves
Summary and Key Highlights
Summary: This section explores why physicians often struggle to recognize burnout within themselves, partly due to stigma and a tendency to focus on productivity over well-being. Dr. Tyra Fainstad shares personal experiences of burnout symptoms, emphasizing the importance of awareness and self-reflection. Recognizing and addressing burnout early can help physicians find healthier coping strategies, avoid productivity traps, and seek support.
Key Takeaways:
- Many physicians struggle to identify burnout due to stigma and self-blame.
- Awareness of burnout symptoms is essential for early intervention and healthy coping.
- Seeking support can prevent burnout from worsening and improve quality of life.
Our Editors Also Recommend:
Medscape Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2024: ‘We Have Much Work to Do’
Medscape Hospitalist Burnout & Depression Report 2024: Seeking Progress, Balance
Medscape Physician Lifestyle & Happiness Report 2024: The Ongoing Struggle for Balance
A Transformative Rx for Burnout, Grief, and Illness: Dance
Next Medscape Masters Event:
Stay at the forefront of obesity care. Register for exclusive insights and the latest treatment innovations.
Lotte Dyrbye, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Co-inventor of the Well-being Index and its derivatives, which Mayo Clinic has licensed. Dyrbye receives royalties.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Summary and Key Highlights
Summary: This section explores why physicians often struggle to recognize burnout within themselves, partly due to stigma and a tendency to focus on productivity over well-being. Dr. Tyra Fainstad shares personal experiences of burnout symptoms, emphasizing the importance of awareness and self-reflection. Recognizing and addressing burnout early can help physicians find healthier coping strategies, avoid productivity traps, and seek support.
Key Takeaways:
- Many physicians struggle to identify burnout due to stigma and self-blame.
- Awareness of burnout symptoms is essential for early intervention and healthy coping.
- Seeking support can prevent burnout from worsening and improve quality of life.
Our Editors Also Recommend:
Medscape Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2024: ‘We Have Much Work to Do’
Medscape Hospitalist Burnout & Depression Report 2024: Seeking Progress, Balance
Medscape Physician Lifestyle & Happiness Report 2024: The Ongoing Struggle for Balance
A Transformative Rx for Burnout, Grief, and Illness: Dance
Next Medscape Masters Event:
Stay at the forefront of obesity care. Register for exclusive insights and the latest treatment innovations.
Lotte Dyrbye, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Co-inventor of the Well-being Index and its derivatives, which Mayo Clinic has licensed. Dyrbye receives royalties.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Summary and Key Highlights
Summary: This section explores why physicians often struggle to recognize burnout within themselves, partly due to stigma and a tendency to focus on productivity over well-being. Dr. Tyra Fainstad shares personal experiences of burnout symptoms, emphasizing the importance of awareness and self-reflection. Recognizing and addressing burnout early can help physicians find healthier coping strategies, avoid productivity traps, and seek support.
Key Takeaways:
- Many physicians struggle to identify burnout due to stigma and self-blame.
- Awareness of burnout symptoms is essential for early intervention and healthy coping.
- Seeking support can prevent burnout from worsening and improve quality of life.
Our Editors Also Recommend:
Medscape Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2024: ‘We Have Much Work to Do’
Medscape Hospitalist Burnout & Depression Report 2024: Seeking Progress, Balance
Medscape Physician Lifestyle & Happiness Report 2024: The Ongoing Struggle for Balance
A Transformative Rx for Burnout, Grief, and Illness: Dance
Next Medscape Masters Event:
Stay at the forefront of obesity care. Register for exclusive insights and the latest treatment innovations.
Lotte Dyrbye, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Co-inventor of the Well-being Index and its derivatives, which Mayo Clinic has licensed. Dyrbye receives royalties.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Breaking the Cycle: Why Self-Compassion Is Essential for Today’s Physicians
Summary and Key Highlights
Summary: Dr Tyra Fainstad explores the ingrained culture in medicine that encourages self-criticism, with many physicians feeling that they must be hard on themselves to succeed. Dr Fainstad challenges this belief, advocating for self-compassion as a healthier alternative. The evolving medical field now includes physicians who prioritize well-being without sacrificing quality of care, underscoring the importance of self-kindness for sustainable practice.
Key Takeaways:
- Many physicians believe that self-criticism is necessary for success, a mindset rooted in medical culture.
- Practicing self-compassion can improve long-term resilience and prevent burnout.
- The changing landscape of healthcare supports a more balanced approach to physician well-being.
Our Editors Also Recommend:
Medscape Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2024: ‘We Have Much Work to Do’
Medscape Hospitalist Burnout & Depression Report 2024: Seeking Progress, Balance
Medscape Physician Lifestyle & Happiness Report 2024: The Ongoing Struggle for Balance
A Transformative Rx for Burnout, Grief, and Illness: Dance
Next Medscape Masters Event:
Stay at the forefront of obesity care. Register for exclusive insights and the latest treatment innovations.
Lotte Dyrbye, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Co-inventor of the Well-being Index and its derivatives, which Mayo Clinic has licensed. Dyrbye receives royalties.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Summary and Key Highlights
Summary: Dr Tyra Fainstad explores the ingrained culture in medicine that encourages self-criticism, with many physicians feeling that they must be hard on themselves to succeed. Dr Fainstad challenges this belief, advocating for self-compassion as a healthier alternative. The evolving medical field now includes physicians who prioritize well-being without sacrificing quality of care, underscoring the importance of self-kindness for sustainable practice.
Key Takeaways:
- Many physicians believe that self-criticism is necessary for success, a mindset rooted in medical culture.
- Practicing self-compassion can improve long-term resilience and prevent burnout.
- The changing landscape of healthcare supports a more balanced approach to physician well-being.
Our Editors Also Recommend:
Medscape Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2024: ‘We Have Much Work to Do’
Medscape Hospitalist Burnout & Depression Report 2024: Seeking Progress, Balance
Medscape Physician Lifestyle & Happiness Report 2024: The Ongoing Struggle for Balance
A Transformative Rx for Burnout, Grief, and Illness: Dance
Next Medscape Masters Event:
Stay at the forefront of obesity care. Register for exclusive insights and the latest treatment innovations.
Lotte Dyrbye, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Co-inventor of the Well-being Index and its derivatives, which Mayo Clinic has licensed. Dyrbye receives royalties.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Summary and Key Highlights
Summary: Dr Tyra Fainstad explores the ingrained culture in medicine that encourages self-criticism, with many physicians feeling that they must be hard on themselves to succeed. Dr Fainstad challenges this belief, advocating for self-compassion as a healthier alternative. The evolving medical field now includes physicians who prioritize well-being without sacrificing quality of care, underscoring the importance of self-kindness for sustainable practice.
Key Takeaways:
- Many physicians believe that self-criticism is necessary for success, a mindset rooted in medical culture.
- Practicing self-compassion can improve long-term resilience and prevent burnout.
- The changing landscape of healthcare supports a more balanced approach to physician well-being.
Our Editors Also Recommend:
Medscape Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2024: ‘We Have Much Work to Do’
Medscape Hospitalist Burnout & Depression Report 2024: Seeking Progress, Balance
Medscape Physician Lifestyle & Happiness Report 2024: The Ongoing Struggle for Balance
A Transformative Rx for Burnout, Grief, and Illness: Dance
Next Medscape Masters Event:
Stay at the forefront of obesity care. Register for exclusive insights and the latest treatment innovations.
Lotte Dyrbye, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Co-inventor of the Well-being Index and its derivatives, which Mayo Clinic has licensed. Dyrbye receives royalties.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.