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Many children with COVID-19 present without classic symptoms
Most children who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 had no respiratory illness, according to data from a retrospective study of 22 patients at a single center.
To date, children account for less than 5% of COVID-19 cases in the United States, but details of the clinical presentations in children are limited, wrote Rabia Agha, MD, and colleagues of Maimonides Children’s Hospital, Brooklyn, N.Y.
In a study published in Hospital Pediatrics, the researchers reviewed data from 22 children aged 0-18 years who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and were admitted to a single hospital over a 4-week period from March 18, 2020, to April 15, 2020.
Of four patients requiring mechanical ventilation, two had underlying pulmonary disease. The other two patients who required intubation were one with cerebral palsy and status epilepticus and one who presented in a state of cardiac arrest.
The study population ranged from 11 days to 18 years of age, but 45% were infants younger than 1 year. None of the children had a travel history that might increase their risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection; 27% had confirmed exposure to the virus.
Most of the children (82%) were hospitalized within 3 days of the onset of symptoms, and no deaths occurred during the study period. The most common symptom was fever without a source in five (23%) otherwise healthy infants aged 11-35 days. All five of these children underwent a sepsis evaluation, received empiric antibiotics, and were discharged home with negative bacterial cultures within 48-72 hours. Another 10 children had fever in combination with other symptoms.
Other presenting symptoms were respiratory (9), fatigue (6), seizures (2), and headache (1).
Most children with respiratory illness were treated with supportive therapy and antibiotics, but three of those on mechanical ventilation also were treated with remdesivir; all three were ultimately extubated.
Neurological abnormalities occurred in two patients: an 11-year-old otherwise healthy boy who presented with fever, headache, confusion, and seizure but ultimately improved without short-term sequelae; and a 12-year-old girl with cerebral palsy who developed new onset seizures and required mechanical ventilation, but ultimately improved to baseline.
Positive PCR results were identified in seven patients (32%) during the second half of the study period who were initially hospitalized for non-COVID related symptoms; four with bacterial infections, two with illnesses of unknown etiology, and one with cardiac arrest. Another two children were completely asymptomatic at the time of admission but then tested positive by PCR; one child had been admitted for routine chemotherapy and the other for social reasons, Dr. Agha and associates said.
The study findings contrast with early data from China in which respiratory illness of varying severity was the major presentation in children with COVID-19, but support a more recent meta-analysis of 551 cases, the researchers noted. The findings also highlight the value of universal testing for children.
“Our initial testing strategy was according to the federal and local guidelines that recommended PCR testing for the symptoms of fever, cough and shortness of breath, or travel to certain countries or close contact with a confirmed case,” Dr. Agha and colleagues said.
“With the implementation of our universal screening strategy of all admitted pediatric patients, we identified 9 (41%) patients with COVID-19 that would have been missed, as they did not meet the then-recommended criteria for testing,” they wrote.
The results suggest the need for broader guidelines to test pediatric patients because children presenting with other illnesses may be positive for SARS-CoV-2 as well, the researchers said.
“Testing of all hospitalized patients will not only identify cases early in the course of their admission process, but will also help prevent inadvertent exposure of other patients and health care workers, assist in cohorting infected patients, and aid in conservation of personal protective equipment,” Dr. Agha and associates concluded.
The current study is important as clinicians continue to learn about how infection with SARS-CoV-2 presents in different populations, Diana Lee, MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, said in an interview.
“Understanding how it can present in the pediatric population is important in identifying children who may have the infection and developing strategies for testing,” she said.
“I was not surprised by the finding that most children did not present with the classic symptoms of COVID-19 in adults based on other published studies and my personal clinical experience taking care of hospitalized children in New York City,” said Dr. Lee. “Studies from the U.S. and other countries have reported that fewer children experience fever, cough, and shortness of breath [compared with] adults, and that most children have a milder clinical course, though there is a small percentage of children who can have severe or critical illness,” she said.
“A multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children associated with COVID-19 has also emerged and appears to be a postinfectious process with a presentation that often differs from classic COVID-19 infection in adults,” she added.
The take-home message for clinicians is the reminder that SARS-CoV-2 infection often presents differently in children than in adults, said Dr. Lee.
“Children who present to the hospital with non-classic COVID-19 symptoms or with other diagnoses may be positive for SARS-CoV-2 on testing. Broadly testing hospitalized children for SARS-CoV-2 and instituting appropriate isolation precautions may help to protect other individuals from being exposed to the virus,” she said.
“Further research is needed to understand which individuals are contagious and how to accurately distinguish those who are infectious versus those who are not,” said Dr. Lee. “There have been individuals who persistently test positive for SARS-CoV-2 RNA (the genetic material of the virus), but were not found to have virus in their bodies that can replicate and thereby infect others,” she emphasized. “Further study is needed regarding the likelihood of household exposures in children with SARS-CoV-2 infection given that this study was done early in the epidemic in New York City when testing and contact tracing was less established,” she said.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Lee had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Agha R et al. Hosp Pediatr. 2020 July. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2020-000257.
Most children who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 had no respiratory illness, according to data from a retrospective study of 22 patients at a single center.
To date, children account for less than 5% of COVID-19 cases in the United States, but details of the clinical presentations in children are limited, wrote Rabia Agha, MD, and colleagues of Maimonides Children’s Hospital, Brooklyn, N.Y.
In a study published in Hospital Pediatrics, the researchers reviewed data from 22 children aged 0-18 years who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and were admitted to a single hospital over a 4-week period from March 18, 2020, to April 15, 2020.
Of four patients requiring mechanical ventilation, two had underlying pulmonary disease. The other two patients who required intubation were one with cerebral palsy and status epilepticus and one who presented in a state of cardiac arrest.
The study population ranged from 11 days to 18 years of age, but 45% were infants younger than 1 year. None of the children had a travel history that might increase their risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection; 27% had confirmed exposure to the virus.
Most of the children (82%) were hospitalized within 3 days of the onset of symptoms, and no deaths occurred during the study period. The most common symptom was fever without a source in five (23%) otherwise healthy infants aged 11-35 days. All five of these children underwent a sepsis evaluation, received empiric antibiotics, and were discharged home with negative bacterial cultures within 48-72 hours. Another 10 children had fever in combination with other symptoms.
Other presenting symptoms were respiratory (9), fatigue (6), seizures (2), and headache (1).
Most children with respiratory illness were treated with supportive therapy and antibiotics, but three of those on mechanical ventilation also were treated with remdesivir; all three were ultimately extubated.
Neurological abnormalities occurred in two patients: an 11-year-old otherwise healthy boy who presented with fever, headache, confusion, and seizure but ultimately improved without short-term sequelae; and a 12-year-old girl with cerebral palsy who developed new onset seizures and required mechanical ventilation, but ultimately improved to baseline.
Positive PCR results were identified in seven patients (32%) during the second half of the study period who were initially hospitalized for non-COVID related symptoms; four with bacterial infections, two with illnesses of unknown etiology, and one with cardiac arrest. Another two children were completely asymptomatic at the time of admission but then tested positive by PCR; one child had been admitted for routine chemotherapy and the other for social reasons, Dr. Agha and associates said.
The study findings contrast with early data from China in which respiratory illness of varying severity was the major presentation in children with COVID-19, but support a more recent meta-analysis of 551 cases, the researchers noted. The findings also highlight the value of universal testing for children.
“Our initial testing strategy was according to the federal and local guidelines that recommended PCR testing for the symptoms of fever, cough and shortness of breath, or travel to certain countries or close contact with a confirmed case,” Dr. Agha and colleagues said.
“With the implementation of our universal screening strategy of all admitted pediatric patients, we identified 9 (41%) patients with COVID-19 that would have been missed, as they did not meet the then-recommended criteria for testing,” they wrote.
The results suggest the need for broader guidelines to test pediatric patients because children presenting with other illnesses may be positive for SARS-CoV-2 as well, the researchers said.
“Testing of all hospitalized patients will not only identify cases early in the course of their admission process, but will also help prevent inadvertent exposure of other patients and health care workers, assist in cohorting infected patients, and aid in conservation of personal protective equipment,” Dr. Agha and associates concluded.
The current study is important as clinicians continue to learn about how infection with SARS-CoV-2 presents in different populations, Diana Lee, MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, said in an interview.
“Understanding how it can present in the pediatric population is important in identifying children who may have the infection and developing strategies for testing,” she said.
“I was not surprised by the finding that most children did not present with the classic symptoms of COVID-19 in adults based on other published studies and my personal clinical experience taking care of hospitalized children in New York City,” said Dr. Lee. “Studies from the U.S. and other countries have reported that fewer children experience fever, cough, and shortness of breath [compared with] adults, and that most children have a milder clinical course, though there is a small percentage of children who can have severe or critical illness,” she said.
“A multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children associated with COVID-19 has also emerged and appears to be a postinfectious process with a presentation that often differs from classic COVID-19 infection in adults,” she added.
The take-home message for clinicians is the reminder that SARS-CoV-2 infection often presents differently in children than in adults, said Dr. Lee.
“Children who present to the hospital with non-classic COVID-19 symptoms or with other diagnoses may be positive for SARS-CoV-2 on testing. Broadly testing hospitalized children for SARS-CoV-2 and instituting appropriate isolation precautions may help to protect other individuals from being exposed to the virus,” she said.
“Further research is needed to understand which individuals are contagious and how to accurately distinguish those who are infectious versus those who are not,” said Dr. Lee. “There have been individuals who persistently test positive for SARS-CoV-2 RNA (the genetic material of the virus), but were not found to have virus in their bodies that can replicate and thereby infect others,” she emphasized. “Further study is needed regarding the likelihood of household exposures in children with SARS-CoV-2 infection given that this study was done early in the epidemic in New York City when testing and contact tracing was less established,” she said.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Lee had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Agha R et al. Hosp Pediatr. 2020 July. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2020-000257.
Most children who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 had no respiratory illness, according to data from a retrospective study of 22 patients at a single center.
To date, children account for less than 5% of COVID-19 cases in the United States, but details of the clinical presentations in children are limited, wrote Rabia Agha, MD, and colleagues of Maimonides Children’s Hospital, Brooklyn, N.Y.
In a study published in Hospital Pediatrics, the researchers reviewed data from 22 children aged 0-18 years who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and were admitted to a single hospital over a 4-week period from March 18, 2020, to April 15, 2020.
Of four patients requiring mechanical ventilation, two had underlying pulmonary disease. The other two patients who required intubation were one with cerebral palsy and status epilepticus and one who presented in a state of cardiac arrest.
The study population ranged from 11 days to 18 years of age, but 45% were infants younger than 1 year. None of the children had a travel history that might increase their risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection; 27% had confirmed exposure to the virus.
Most of the children (82%) were hospitalized within 3 days of the onset of symptoms, and no deaths occurred during the study period. The most common symptom was fever without a source in five (23%) otherwise healthy infants aged 11-35 days. All five of these children underwent a sepsis evaluation, received empiric antibiotics, and were discharged home with negative bacterial cultures within 48-72 hours. Another 10 children had fever in combination with other symptoms.
Other presenting symptoms were respiratory (9), fatigue (6), seizures (2), and headache (1).
Most children with respiratory illness were treated with supportive therapy and antibiotics, but three of those on mechanical ventilation also were treated with remdesivir; all three were ultimately extubated.
Neurological abnormalities occurred in two patients: an 11-year-old otherwise healthy boy who presented with fever, headache, confusion, and seizure but ultimately improved without short-term sequelae; and a 12-year-old girl with cerebral palsy who developed new onset seizures and required mechanical ventilation, but ultimately improved to baseline.
Positive PCR results were identified in seven patients (32%) during the second half of the study period who were initially hospitalized for non-COVID related symptoms; four with bacterial infections, two with illnesses of unknown etiology, and one with cardiac arrest. Another two children were completely asymptomatic at the time of admission but then tested positive by PCR; one child had been admitted for routine chemotherapy and the other for social reasons, Dr. Agha and associates said.
The study findings contrast with early data from China in which respiratory illness of varying severity was the major presentation in children with COVID-19, but support a more recent meta-analysis of 551 cases, the researchers noted. The findings also highlight the value of universal testing for children.
“Our initial testing strategy was according to the federal and local guidelines that recommended PCR testing for the symptoms of fever, cough and shortness of breath, or travel to certain countries or close contact with a confirmed case,” Dr. Agha and colleagues said.
“With the implementation of our universal screening strategy of all admitted pediatric patients, we identified 9 (41%) patients with COVID-19 that would have been missed, as they did not meet the then-recommended criteria for testing,” they wrote.
The results suggest the need for broader guidelines to test pediatric patients because children presenting with other illnesses may be positive for SARS-CoV-2 as well, the researchers said.
“Testing of all hospitalized patients will not only identify cases early in the course of their admission process, but will also help prevent inadvertent exposure of other patients and health care workers, assist in cohorting infected patients, and aid in conservation of personal protective equipment,” Dr. Agha and associates concluded.
The current study is important as clinicians continue to learn about how infection with SARS-CoV-2 presents in different populations, Diana Lee, MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, said in an interview.
“Understanding how it can present in the pediatric population is important in identifying children who may have the infection and developing strategies for testing,” she said.
“I was not surprised by the finding that most children did not present with the classic symptoms of COVID-19 in adults based on other published studies and my personal clinical experience taking care of hospitalized children in New York City,” said Dr. Lee. “Studies from the U.S. and other countries have reported that fewer children experience fever, cough, and shortness of breath [compared with] adults, and that most children have a milder clinical course, though there is a small percentage of children who can have severe or critical illness,” she said.
“A multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children associated with COVID-19 has also emerged and appears to be a postinfectious process with a presentation that often differs from classic COVID-19 infection in adults,” she added.
The take-home message for clinicians is the reminder that SARS-CoV-2 infection often presents differently in children than in adults, said Dr. Lee.
“Children who present to the hospital with non-classic COVID-19 symptoms or with other diagnoses may be positive for SARS-CoV-2 on testing. Broadly testing hospitalized children for SARS-CoV-2 and instituting appropriate isolation precautions may help to protect other individuals from being exposed to the virus,” she said.
“Further research is needed to understand which individuals are contagious and how to accurately distinguish those who are infectious versus those who are not,” said Dr. Lee. “There have been individuals who persistently test positive for SARS-CoV-2 RNA (the genetic material of the virus), but were not found to have virus in their bodies that can replicate and thereby infect others,” she emphasized. “Further study is needed regarding the likelihood of household exposures in children with SARS-CoV-2 infection given that this study was done early in the epidemic in New York City when testing and contact tracing was less established,” she said.
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Lee had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Agha R et al. Hosp Pediatr. 2020 July. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2020-000257.
FROM HOSPITAL PEDIATRICS
Diabetic amputations soared amid Italian pandemic lockdown
Amid a mandatory national lockdown, the rates of amputations skyrocketed at a hospital far from the hardest-hit region as many patients developed gangrene.
The findings offer critical lessons for the United States, said wound care specialist William H. Tettelbach, MD, of Western Peaks Specialty Hospital near Salt Lake City. “It’s become more obvious that outpatient wound care is a critical care need for the community because of the risk of ignoring these chronic wounds and letting them remain open. We cannot let these services be closed down like some were when the pandemic started.”
The study, led by Paola Caruso, MD, of the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli in Naples, appeared in Diabetes Care.
The researchers launched the study to understand how patients with diabetes and DFU fared during the height of the pandemic in Italy, where tens of thousands of people died, mainly in the northern region of the country. They focused on patients in the southern region who were admitted to the division of endocrinology and metabolic diseases at the Teaching Hospital at the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli.
The study compared 25 patients who were admitted from March 9 to May 18, 2020, with 38 patients who were admitted from a longer period between January and May 2019. The demographics of the groups are similar, with average ages in the early 60s and more men than women (21:4, respectively, in 2020 and 23:15, respectively, in 2019.)
The results reveal high numbers of emergent and serious cases in 2020. Compared with 2019, fewer were outpatients (16% vs. 45%, P = .028) and more were emergency patients (76% vs. 26%, P < .001).
Clinically, gangrene was much more common in the 2020 group, compared with the 2019 group (64% vs. 29%, P = .009), as was amputation (60% vs. 18%, P = .001).
The researchers determined that amputation was more than three times more likely in the 2020 versus the 2019 group (relative risk, 3.26; 95% confidence interval, 1.55-6.84) even though the 2019 period was longer. After adjustment for gender, the heightened risk in 2020 was 2.50 (95% CI, 1.18-5.29).
There was no statistically significant increase in the risk of revascularization.
“The COVID-19 lockdown may have had a detrimental impact on amputation risk because of the sudden interruption of DFU care and lower-limb preservation pathways, resulting in delayed diagnosis and treatment,” the researchers wrote. “DFU is often characterized by progressive clinical course, which can rapidly lead patients to critical worsening of their ulcers.”
They added that “the higher risk of amputation observed during COVID-19 lockdown confirms the need for proper and timely management of DFU patients to prevent dramatic outcomes responsible for a reduction of quality of life and increased morbidity and mortality.”
The study authors didn’t discuss why more patients seemed to have stayed home and not gotten proper care. It’s not clear if they were scared to get treatment or couldn’t obtain it because of the national shutdown.
Both have been factors affecting diabetic foot care in the United States during the pandemic, said Dr. Tettelbach. He called the study “timely and pertinent,” and said it highlights how wound care is “a critical need” that must remain available even when other medical services such as elective surgeries are shut down.
Infection-control protocols such as allowing patients to wait for appointments in their cars instead of waiting rooms will alleviate the fears of certain patients about seeking in-person care during the pandemic, he said. But some patients will be afraid to come in no matter what, he said, and home health may be the best solution for their care.
Several of the study authors reported various disclosures. Dr. Tettelbach reported no relevant disclosures.
SOURCE: Caruso P et al. Diabetes Care. 2020 Jul 23. doi:10.2337/dc20-1347.
Amid a mandatory national lockdown, the rates of amputations skyrocketed at a hospital far from the hardest-hit region as many patients developed gangrene.
The findings offer critical lessons for the United States, said wound care specialist William H. Tettelbach, MD, of Western Peaks Specialty Hospital near Salt Lake City. “It’s become more obvious that outpatient wound care is a critical care need for the community because of the risk of ignoring these chronic wounds and letting them remain open. We cannot let these services be closed down like some were when the pandemic started.”
The study, led by Paola Caruso, MD, of the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli in Naples, appeared in Diabetes Care.
The researchers launched the study to understand how patients with diabetes and DFU fared during the height of the pandemic in Italy, where tens of thousands of people died, mainly in the northern region of the country. They focused on patients in the southern region who were admitted to the division of endocrinology and metabolic diseases at the Teaching Hospital at the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli.
The study compared 25 patients who were admitted from March 9 to May 18, 2020, with 38 patients who were admitted from a longer period between January and May 2019. The demographics of the groups are similar, with average ages in the early 60s and more men than women (21:4, respectively, in 2020 and 23:15, respectively, in 2019.)
The results reveal high numbers of emergent and serious cases in 2020. Compared with 2019, fewer were outpatients (16% vs. 45%, P = .028) and more were emergency patients (76% vs. 26%, P < .001).
Clinically, gangrene was much more common in the 2020 group, compared with the 2019 group (64% vs. 29%, P = .009), as was amputation (60% vs. 18%, P = .001).
The researchers determined that amputation was more than three times more likely in the 2020 versus the 2019 group (relative risk, 3.26; 95% confidence interval, 1.55-6.84) even though the 2019 period was longer. After adjustment for gender, the heightened risk in 2020 was 2.50 (95% CI, 1.18-5.29).
There was no statistically significant increase in the risk of revascularization.
“The COVID-19 lockdown may have had a detrimental impact on amputation risk because of the sudden interruption of DFU care and lower-limb preservation pathways, resulting in delayed diagnosis and treatment,” the researchers wrote. “DFU is often characterized by progressive clinical course, which can rapidly lead patients to critical worsening of their ulcers.”
They added that “the higher risk of amputation observed during COVID-19 lockdown confirms the need for proper and timely management of DFU patients to prevent dramatic outcomes responsible for a reduction of quality of life and increased morbidity and mortality.”
The study authors didn’t discuss why more patients seemed to have stayed home and not gotten proper care. It’s not clear if they were scared to get treatment or couldn’t obtain it because of the national shutdown.
Both have been factors affecting diabetic foot care in the United States during the pandemic, said Dr. Tettelbach. He called the study “timely and pertinent,” and said it highlights how wound care is “a critical need” that must remain available even when other medical services such as elective surgeries are shut down.
Infection-control protocols such as allowing patients to wait for appointments in their cars instead of waiting rooms will alleviate the fears of certain patients about seeking in-person care during the pandemic, he said. But some patients will be afraid to come in no matter what, he said, and home health may be the best solution for their care.
Several of the study authors reported various disclosures. Dr. Tettelbach reported no relevant disclosures.
SOURCE: Caruso P et al. Diabetes Care. 2020 Jul 23. doi:10.2337/dc20-1347.
Amid a mandatory national lockdown, the rates of amputations skyrocketed at a hospital far from the hardest-hit region as many patients developed gangrene.
The findings offer critical lessons for the United States, said wound care specialist William H. Tettelbach, MD, of Western Peaks Specialty Hospital near Salt Lake City. “It’s become more obvious that outpatient wound care is a critical care need for the community because of the risk of ignoring these chronic wounds and letting them remain open. We cannot let these services be closed down like some were when the pandemic started.”
The study, led by Paola Caruso, MD, of the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli in Naples, appeared in Diabetes Care.
The researchers launched the study to understand how patients with diabetes and DFU fared during the height of the pandemic in Italy, where tens of thousands of people died, mainly in the northern region of the country. They focused on patients in the southern region who were admitted to the division of endocrinology and metabolic diseases at the Teaching Hospital at the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli.
The study compared 25 patients who were admitted from March 9 to May 18, 2020, with 38 patients who were admitted from a longer period between January and May 2019. The demographics of the groups are similar, with average ages in the early 60s and more men than women (21:4, respectively, in 2020 and 23:15, respectively, in 2019.)
The results reveal high numbers of emergent and serious cases in 2020. Compared with 2019, fewer were outpatients (16% vs. 45%, P = .028) and more were emergency patients (76% vs. 26%, P < .001).
Clinically, gangrene was much more common in the 2020 group, compared with the 2019 group (64% vs. 29%, P = .009), as was amputation (60% vs. 18%, P = .001).
The researchers determined that amputation was more than three times more likely in the 2020 versus the 2019 group (relative risk, 3.26; 95% confidence interval, 1.55-6.84) even though the 2019 period was longer. After adjustment for gender, the heightened risk in 2020 was 2.50 (95% CI, 1.18-5.29).
There was no statistically significant increase in the risk of revascularization.
“The COVID-19 lockdown may have had a detrimental impact on amputation risk because of the sudden interruption of DFU care and lower-limb preservation pathways, resulting in delayed diagnosis and treatment,” the researchers wrote. “DFU is often characterized by progressive clinical course, which can rapidly lead patients to critical worsening of their ulcers.”
They added that “the higher risk of amputation observed during COVID-19 lockdown confirms the need for proper and timely management of DFU patients to prevent dramatic outcomes responsible for a reduction of quality of life and increased morbidity and mortality.”
The study authors didn’t discuss why more patients seemed to have stayed home and not gotten proper care. It’s not clear if they were scared to get treatment or couldn’t obtain it because of the national shutdown.
Both have been factors affecting diabetic foot care in the United States during the pandemic, said Dr. Tettelbach. He called the study “timely and pertinent,” and said it highlights how wound care is “a critical need” that must remain available even when other medical services such as elective surgeries are shut down.
Infection-control protocols such as allowing patients to wait for appointments in their cars instead of waiting rooms will alleviate the fears of certain patients about seeking in-person care during the pandemic, he said. But some patients will be afraid to come in no matter what, he said, and home health may be the best solution for their care.
Several of the study authors reported various disclosures. Dr. Tettelbach reported no relevant disclosures.
SOURCE: Caruso P et al. Diabetes Care. 2020 Jul 23. doi:10.2337/dc20-1347.
FROM DIABETES CARE
Restrictive IV fluid strategy comparable to usual care for severe sepsis, septic shock
Background: Since the advent of early goal-directed therapy (EGDT), studies have challenged the notion that high-volume IV fluid resuscitation improves clinical outcomes in sepsis and septic shock. The optimal IV fluid resuscitation strategy for severe sepsis and septic shock remains unclear.
Study design: Prospective randomized controlled trial.
Setting: Two critical care units in one academic system.
Synopsis: The Restrictive IV Fluid Trial in Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock (RIFTS) randomized 109 participants ages 54-82 years to a restrictive (less than 60 mL/kg) or to usual care (no prespecified limit) IV fluid resuscitation strategy for the first 72 hours of ICU admission. The primary outcome of 30-day mortality was similar between groups (odds ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 0.41-2.53).
Limitations to RIFTS include its small sample size, single-system design, and inadequate power to detect noninferiority or superiority. While larger, multicenter trials are required for further investigation, hospitalists should note a trend toward conservative IV fluid administration in severe sepsis and septic shock.
Bottom line: Restrictive IV fluid resuscitation for severe sepsis and septic shock may result in mortality rates similar to those of usual care, but larger, multicenter studies are needed to confirm noninferiority.
Citation: Corl KA et al. The restrictive IV fluid trial in severe sepsis and septic shock (RIFTS): A randomized pilot study. Crit Care Med. 2019;47(7):951-9.
Dr. McIntyre is a hospitalist at Ochsner Health System, New Orleans.
Background: Since the advent of early goal-directed therapy (EGDT), studies have challenged the notion that high-volume IV fluid resuscitation improves clinical outcomes in sepsis and septic shock. The optimal IV fluid resuscitation strategy for severe sepsis and septic shock remains unclear.
Study design: Prospective randomized controlled trial.
Setting: Two critical care units in one academic system.
Synopsis: The Restrictive IV Fluid Trial in Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock (RIFTS) randomized 109 participants ages 54-82 years to a restrictive (less than 60 mL/kg) or to usual care (no prespecified limit) IV fluid resuscitation strategy for the first 72 hours of ICU admission. The primary outcome of 30-day mortality was similar between groups (odds ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 0.41-2.53).
Limitations to RIFTS include its small sample size, single-system design, and inadequate power to detect noninferiority or superiority. While larger, multicenter trials are required for further investigation, hospitalists should note a trend toward conservative IV fluid administration in severe sepsis and septic shock.
Bottom line: Restrictive IV fluid resuscitation for severe sepsis and septic shock may result in mortality rates similar to those of usual care, but larger, multicenter studies are needed to confirm noninferiority.
Citation: Corl KA et al. The restrictive IV fluid trial in severe sepsis and septic shock (RIFTS): A randomized pilot study. Crit Care Med. 2019;47(7):951-9.
Dr. McIntyre is a hospitalist at Ochsner Health System, New Orleans.
Background: Since the advent of early goal-directed therapy (EGDT), studies have challenged the notion that high-volume IV fluid resuscitation improves clinical outcomes in sepsis and septic shock. The optimal IV fluid resuscitation strategy for severe sepsis and septic shock remains unclear.
Study design: Prospective randomized controlled trial.
Setting: Two critical care units in one academic system.
Synopsis: The Restrictive IV Fluid Trial in Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock (RIFTS) randomized 109 participants ages 54-82 years to a restrictive (less than 60 mL/kg) or to usual care (no prespecified limit) IV fluid resuscitation strategy for the first 72 hours of ICU admission. The primary outcome of 30-day mortality was similar between groups (odds ratio, 1.02; 95% confidence interval, 0.41-2.53).
Limitations to RIFTS include its small sample size, single-system design, and inadequate power to detect noninferiority or superiority. While larger, multicenter trials are required for further investigation, hospitalists should note a trend toward conservative IV fluid administration in severe sepsis and septic shock.
Bottom line: Restrictive IV fluid resuscitation for severe sepsis and septic shock may result in mortality rates similar to those of usual care, but larger, multicenter studies are needed to confirm noninferiority.
Citation: Corl KA et al. The restrictive IV fluid trial in severe sepsis and septic shock (RIFTS): A randomized pilot study. Crit Care Med. 2019;47(7):951-9.
Dr. McIntyre is a hospitalist at Ochsner Health System, New Orleans.
Twelve risk factors linked to 40% of world’s dementia cases
according to an update of the Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care.
The original report, published in 2017, identified nine modifiable risk factors that were estimated to be responsible for one-third of dementia cases. The commission has now added three new modifiable risk factors to the list.
“We reconvened the 2017 Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care to identify the evidence for advances likely to have the greatest impact since our 2017 paper,” the authors wrote.
The 2020 report was presented at the virtual annual meeting of the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC) 2020 and also was published online July 30 in the Lancet.
Alcohol, TBI, air pollution
The three new risk factors that have been added in the latest update are excessive alcohol intake, traumatic brain injury (TBI), and air pollution. The original nine risk factors were not completing secondary education; hypertension; obesity; hearing loss; smoking; depression; physical inactivity; social isolation; and diabetes. Together, these 12 risk factors are estimated to account for 40% of the world’s dementia cases.
“We knew in 2017 when we published our first report with the nine risk factors that they would only be part of the story and that several other factors would likely be involved,” said lead author Gill Livingston, MD, professor, University College London (England). “We now have more published data giving enough evidence” to justify adding the three new factors to the list, she said.
The report includes the following nine recommendations for policymakers and individuals to prevent risk for dementia in the general population:
- Aim to maintain systolic blood pressure of 130 mm Hg or less in midlife from around age 40 years.
- Encourage use of hearing aids for hearing loss, and reduce hearing loss by protecting ears from high noise levels.
- Reduce exposure to air pollution and second-hand tobacco smoke.
- Prevent , particularly by targeting high-risk occupations and transport.
- Prevent alcohol misuse and limit drinking to less than 21 units per week.
- Stop smoking and support individuals to stop smoking, which the authors stress is beneficial at any age.
- Provide all children with primary and secondary education.
- Lead an active life into midlife and possibly later life.
- Reduce obesity and diabetes.
The report also summarizes the evidence supporting the three new risk factors for dementia.
TBI is usually caused by car, motorcycle, and bicycle injuries; military exposures; boxing, horse riding, and other recreational sports; firearms; and falls. The report notes that a single severe TBI is associated in humans and in mouse models with widespread hyperphosphorylated tau pathology. It also cites several nationwide studies that show that TBI is linked with a significantly increased risk for long-term dementia.
“We are not advising against partaking in sports, as playing sports is healthy. But we are urging people to take precautions to protect themselves properly,” Dr. Livingston said.
For excessive alcohol consumption, the report states that an “increasing body of evidence is emerging on alcohol’s complex relationship with cognition and dementia outcomes from a variety of sources including detailed cohorts and large-scale record-based studies.” One French study, which included more than 31 million individuals admitted to the hospital, showed that alcohol use disorders were associated with a threefold increased dementia risk. However, other studies have suggested that moderate drinking may be protective.
“We are not saying it is bad to drink, but we are saying it is bad to drink more than 21 units a week,” Dr. Livingston noted.
On air pollution, the report notes that in animal studies, airborne particulate pollutants have been found to accelerate neurodegenerative processes. Also, high nitrogen dioxide concentrations, fine ambient particulate matter from traffic exhaust, and residential wood burning have been shown in past research to be associated with increased dementia incidence.
“While we need international policy on reducing air pollution, individuals can take some action to reduce their risk,” Dr. Livingston said. For example, she suggested avoiding walking right next to busy roads and instead walking “a few streets back if possible.”
Hearing loss
The researchers assessed how much each risk factor contributes to dementia, expressed as the population-attributable fraction (PAF). Hearing loss had the greatest effect, accounting for an estimated 8.2% of dementia cases. This was followed by lower education levels in young people (7.1%) and smoking (5.2%).
Dr. Livingston noted that the evidence that hearing loss is one of the most important risk factors for dementia is very strong. New studies show that correcting hearing loss with hearing aids negates any increased risk.
Hearing loss “has both a high relative risk for dementia and is a common problem, so it contributes a significant amount to dementia cases. This is really something that we can reduce relatively easily by encouraging use of hearing aids. They need to be made more accessible, more comfortable, and more acceptable,” she said.
“This could make a huge difference in reducing dementia cases in the future,” Dr. Livingston added.
Other risk factors for which the evidence base has strengthened since the 2017 report include systolic blood pressure, social interaction, and early-life education.
Dr. Livingston noted that the SPRINT MIND trial showed that aiming for a target systolic blood pressure of 120 mm Hg reduced risk for future mild cognitive impairment. “Before, we thought under 140 was the target, but now are recommending under 130 to reduce risks of dementia,” she said.
Evidence on social interaction “has been very consistent, and we now have more certainty on this. It is now well established that increased social interaction in midlife reduces dementia in late life,” said Dr. Livingston.
On the benefits of education in the young, she noted that it has been known for some time that education for individuals younger than 11 years is important in reducing later-life dementia. However, it is now thought that education to the age of 20 also makes a difference.
“While keeping the brain active in later years has some positive effects, increasing brain activity in young people seems to be more important. This is probably because of the better plasticity of the brain in the young,” she said.
Sleep and diet
Two risk factors that have not made it onto the list are diet and sleep. “While there has also been a lot more data published on nutrition and sleep with regard to dementia in the last few years, we didn’t think the evidence stacked up enough to include these on the list of modifiable risk factors,” Dr. Livingston said.
The report cites studies that suggest that both more sleep and less sleep are associated with increased risk for dementia, which the authors thought did not make “biological sense.” In addition, other underlying factors involved in sleep, such as depression, apathy, and different sleep patterns, may be symptoms of early dementia.
More data have been published on diet and dementia, “but there isn’t any individual vitamin deficit that is associated with the condition. The evidence is quite clear on that,” Dr. Livingston said. “Global diets, such as the Mediterranean or Nordic diets, can probably make a difference, but there doesn’t seem to be any one particular element that is needed,” she noted.
“We just recommend to eat a healthy diet and stay a healthy weight. Diet is very connected to economic circumstances and so very difficult to separate out as a risk factor. We do think it is linked, but we are not convinced enough to put it in the model,” she added.
Among other key information that has become available since 2017, Dr. Livingston highlighted new data showing that dementia is more common in less privileged populations, including Black and minority ethnic groups and low- and middle-income countries.
Although dementia was traditionally considered a disease of high-income countries, that has now been shown not to be the case. “People in low- and middle-income countries are now living longer and so are developing dementia more, and they have higher rates of many of the risk factors, including smoking and low education levels. There is a huge potential for prevention in these countries,” said Dr. Livingston.
She also highlighted new evidence showing that patients with dementia do not do well when admitted to the hospital. “So we need to do more to keep them well at home,” she said.
COVID-19 advice
The report also has a section on COVID-19. It points out that patients with dementia are particularly vulnerable to the disease because of their age, multimorbidities, and difficulties in maintaining physical distancing. Death certificates from the United Kingdom indicate that dementia and Alzheimer’s disease were the most common underlying conditions (present in 25.6% of all deaths involving COVID-19).
The situation is particularly concerning in care homes. In one U.S. study, nursing home residents living with dementia made up 52% of COVID-19 cases, yet they accounted for 72% of all deaths (increased risk, 1.7), the commission reported.
The authors recommended rigorous public health measures, such as protective equipment and hygiene, not moving staff or residents between care homes, and not admitting new residents when their COVID-19 status is unknown. The report also recommends regular testing of staff in care homes and the provision of oxygen therapy at the home to avoid hospital admission.
It is also important to reduce isolation by providing the necessary equipment to relatives and offering them brief training on how to protect themselves and others from COVID-19 so that they can visit their relatives with dementia in nursing homes safely when it is allowed.
“Most comprehensive overview to date”
Alzheimer’s Research UK welcomed the new report. “This is the most comprehensive overview into dementia risk to date, building on previous work by this commission and moving our understanding forward,” Rosa Sancho, PhD, head of research at the charity, said.
“This report underlines the importance of acting at a personal and policy level to reduce dementia risk. With Alzheimer’s Research UK’s Dementia Attitudes Monitor showing just a third of people think it’s possible to reduce their risk of developing dementia, there’s clearly much to do here to increase people’s awareness of the steps they can take,” Dr. Sancho said.
She added that, although there is “no surefire way of preventing dementia,” the best way to keep a brain healthy as it ages is for an individual to stay physically and mentally active, eat a healthy balanced diet, not smoke, drink only within the recommended limits, and keep weight, cholesterol level, and blood pressure in check. “With no treatments yet able to slow or stop the onset of dementia, taking action to reduce these risks is an important part of our strategy for tackling the condition,” Dr. Sancho said.
The Lancet Commission is partnered by University College London, the Alzheimer’s Society UK, the Economic and Social Research Council, and Alzheimer’s Research UK, which funded fares, accommodation, and food for the commission meeting but had no role in the writing of the manuscript or the decision to submit it for publication.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
according to an update of the Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care.
The original report, published in 2017, identified nine modifiable risk factors that were estimated to be responsible for one-third of dementia cases. The commission has now added three new modifiable risk factors to the list.
“We reconvened the 2017 Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care to identify the evidence for advances likely to have the greatest impact since our 2017 paper,” the authors wrote.
The 2020 report was presented at the virtual annual meeting of the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC) 2020 and also was published online July 30 in the Lancet.
Alcohol, TBI, air pollution
The three new risk factors that have been added in the latest update are excessive alcohol intake, traumatic brain injury (TBI), and air pollution. The original nine risk factors were not completing secondary education; hypertension; obesity; hearing loss; smoking; depression; physical inactivity; social isolation; and diabetes. Together, these 12 risk factors are estimated to account for 40% of the world’s dementia cases.
“We knew in 2017 when we published our first report with the nine risk factors that they would only be part of the story and that several other factors would likely be involved,” said lead author Gill Livingston, MD, professor, University College London (England). “We now have more published data giving enough evidence” to justify adding the three new factors to the list, she said.
The report includes the following nine recommendations for policymakers and individuals to prevent risk for dementia in the general population:
- Aim to maintain systolic blood pressure of 130 mm Hg or less in midlife from around age 40 years.
- Encourage use of hearing aids for hearing loss, and reduce hearing loss by protecting ears from high noise levels.
- Reduce exposure to air pollution and second-hand tobacco smoke.
- Prevent , particularly by targeting high-risk occupations and transport.
- Prevent alcohol misuse and limit drinking to less than 21 units per week.
- Stop smoking and support individuals to stop smoking, which the authors stress is beneficial at any age.
- Provide all children with primary and secondary education.
- Lead an active life into midlife and possibly later life.
- Reduce obesity and diabetes.
The report also summarizes the evidence supporting the three new risk factors for dementia.
TBI is usually caused by car, motorcycle, and bicycle injuries; military exposures; boxing, horse riding, and other recreational sports; firearms; and falls. The report notes that a single severe TBI is associated in humans and in mouse models with widespread hyperphosphorylated tau pathology. It also cites several nationwide studies that show that TBI is linked with a significantly increased risk for long-term dementia.
“We are not advising against partaking in sports, as playing sports is healthy. But we are urging people to take precautions to protect themselves properly,” Dr. Livingston said.
For excessive alcohol consumption, the report states that an “increasing body of evidence is emerging on alcohol’s complex relationship with cognition and dementia outcomes from a variety of sources including detailed cohorts and large-scale record-based studies.” One French study, which included more than 31 million individuals admitted to the hospital, showed that alcohol use disorders were associated with a threefold increased dementia risk. However, other studies have suggested that moderate drinking may be protective.
“We are not saying it is bad to drink, but we are saying it is bad to drink more than 21 units a week,” Dr. Livingston noted.
On air pollution, the report notes that in animal studies, airborne particulate pollutants have been found to accelerate neurodegenerative processes. Also, high nitrogen dioxide concentrations, fine ambient particulate matter from traffic exhaust, and residential wood burning have been shown in past research to be associated with increased dementia incidence.
“While we need international policy on reducing air pollution, individuals can take some action to reduce their risk,” Dr. Livingston said. For example, she suggested avoiding walking right next to busy roads and instead walking “a few streets back if possible.”
Hearing loss
The researchers assessed how much each risk factor contributes to dementia, expressed as the population-attributable fraction (PAF). Hearing loss had the greatest effect, accounting for an estimated 8.2% of dementia cases. This was followed by lower education levels in young people (7.1%) and smoking (5.2%).
Dr. Livingston noted that the evidence that hearing loss is one of the most important risk factors for dementia is very strong. New studies show that correcting hearing loss with hearing aids negates any increased risk.
Hearing loss “has both a high relative risk for dementia and is a common problem, so it contributes a significant amount to dementia cases. This is really something that we can reduce relatively easily by encouraging use of hearing aids. They need to be made more accessible, more comfortable, and more acceptable,” she said.
“This could make a huge difference in reducing dementia cases in the future,” Dr. Livingston added.
Other risk factors for which the evidence base has strengthened since the 2017 report include systolic blood pressure, social interaction, and early-life education.
Dr. Livingston noted that the SPRINT MIND trial showed that aiming for a target systolic blood pressure of 120 mm Hg reduced risk for future mild cognitive impairment. “Before, we thought under 140 was the target, but now are recommending under 130 to reduce risks of dementia,” she said.
Evidence on social interaction “has been very consistent, and we now have more certainty on this. It is now well established that increased social interaction in midlife reduces dementia in late life,” said Dr. Livingston.
On the benefits of education in the young, she noted that it has been known for some time that education for individuals younger than 11 years is important in reducing later-life dementia. However, it is now thought that education to the age of 20 also makes a difference.
“While keeping the brain active in later years has some positive effects, increasing brain activity in young people seems to be more important. This is probably because of the better plasticity of the brain in the young,” she said.
Sleep and diet
Two risk factors that have not made it onto the list are diet and sleep. “While there has also been a lot more data published on nutrition and sleep with regard to dementia in the last few years, we didn’t think the evidence stacked up enough to include these on the list of modifiable risk factors,” Dr. Livingston said.
The report cites studies that suggest that both more sleep and less sleep are associated with increased risk for dementia, which the authors thought did not make “biological sense.” In addition, other underlying factors involved in sleep, such as depression, apathy, and different sleep patterns, may be symptoms of early dementia.
More data have been published on diet and dementia, “but there isn’t any individual vitamin deficit that is associated with the condition. The evidence is quite clear on that,” Dr. Livingston said. “Global diets, such as the Mediterranean or Nordic diets, can probably make a difference, but there doesn’t seem to be any one particular element that is needed,” she noted.
“We just recommend to eat a healthy diet and stay a healthy weight. Diet is very connected to economic circumstances and so very difficult to separate out as a risk factor. We do think it is linked, but we are not convinced enough to put it in the model,” she added.
Among other key information that has become available since 2017, Dr. Livingston highlighted new data showing that dementia is more common in less privileged populations, including Black and minority ethnic groups and low- and middle-income countries.
Although dementia was traditionally considered a disease of high-income countries, that has now been shown not to be the case. “People in low- and middle-income countries are now living longer and so are developing dementia more, and they have higher rates of many of the risk factors, including smoking and low education levels. There is a huge potential for prevention in these countries,” said Dr. Livingston.
She also highlighted new evidence showing that patients with dementia do not do well when admitted to the hospital. “So we need to do more to keep them well at home,” she said.
COVID-19 advice
The report also has a section on COVID-19. It points out that patients with dementia are particularly vulnerable to the disease because of their age, multimorbidities, and difficulties in maintaining physical distancing. Death certificates from the United Kingdom indicate that dementia and Alzheimer’s disease were the most common underlying conditions (present in 25.6% of all deaths involving COVID-19).
The situation is particularly concerning in care homes. In one U.S. study, nursing home residents living with dementia made up 52% of COVID-19 cases, yet they accounted for 72% of all deaths (increased risk, 1.7), the commission reported.
The authors recommended rigorous public health measures, such as protective equipment and hygiene, not moving staff or residents between care homes, and not admitting new residents when their COVID-19 status is unknown. The report also recommends regular testing of staff in care homes and the provision of oxygen therapy at the home to avoid hospital admission.
It is also important to reduce isolation by providing the necessary equipment to relatives and offering them brief training on how to protect themselves and others from COVID-19 so that they can visit their relatives with dementia in nursing homes safely when it is allowed.
“Most comprehensive overview to date”
Alzheimer’s Research UK welcomed the new report. “This is the most comprehensive overview into dementia risk to date, building on previous work by this commission and moving our understanding forward,” Rosa Sancho, PhD, head of research at the charity, said.
“This report underlines the importance of acting at a personal and policy level to reduce dementia risk. With Alzheimer’s Research UK’s Dementia Attitudes Monitor showing just a third of people think it’s possible to reduce their risk of developing dementia, there’s clearly much to do here to increase people’s awareness of the steps they can take,” Dr. Sancho said.
She added that, although there is “no surefire way of preventing dementia,” the best way to keep a brain healthy as it ages is for an individual to stay physically and mentally active, eat a healthy balanced diet, not smoke, drink only within the recommended limits, and keep weight, cholesterol level, and blood pressure in check. “With no treatments yet able to slow or stop the onset of dementia, taking action to reduce these risks is an important part of our strategy for tackling the condition,” Dr. Sancho said.
The Lancet Commission is partnered by University College London, the Alzheimer’s Society UK, the Economic and Social Research Council, and Alzheimer’s Research UK, which funded fares, accommodation, and food for the commission meeting but had no role in the writing of the manuscript or the decision to submit it for publication.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
according to an update of the Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care.
The original report, published in 2017, identified nine modifiable risk factors that were estimated to be responsible for one-third of dementia cases. The commission has now added three new modifiable risk factors to the list.
“We reconvened the 2017 Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care to identify the evidence for advances likely to have the greatest impact since our 2017 paper,” the authors wrote.
The 2020 report was presented at the virtual annual meeting of the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC) 2020 and also was published online July 30 in the Lancet.
Alcohol, TBI, air pollution
The three new risk factors that have been added in the latest update are excessive alcohol intake, traumatic brain injury (TBI), and air pollution. The original nine risk factors were not completing secondary education; hypertension; obesity; hearing loss; smoking; depression; physical inactivity; social isolation; and diabetes. Together, these 12 risk factors are estimated to account for 40% of the world’s dementia cases.
“We knew in 2017 when we published our first report with the nine risk factors that they would only be part of the story and that several other factors would likely be involved,” said lead author Gill Livingston, MD, professor, University College London (England). “We now have more published data giving enough evidence” to justify adding the three new factors to the list, she said.
The report includes the following nine recommendations for policymakers and individuals to prevent risk for dementia in the general population:
- Aim to maintain systolic blood pressure of 130 mm Hg or less in midlife from around age 40 years.
- Encourage use of hearing aids for hearing loss, and reduce hearing loss by protecting ears from high noise levels.
- Reduce exposure to air pollution and second-hand tobacco smoke.
- Prevent , particularly by targeting high-risk occupations and transport.
- Prevent alcohol misuse and limit drinking to less than 21 units per week.
- Stop smoking and support individuals to stop smoking, which the authors stress is beneficial at any age.
- Provide all children with primary and secondary education.
- Lead an active life into midlife and possibly later life.
- Reduce obesity and diabetes.
The report also summarizes the evidence supporting the three new risk factors for dementia.
TBI is usually caused by car, motorcycle, and bicycle injuries; military exposures; boxing, horse riding, and other recreational sports; firearms; and falls. The report notes that a single severe TBI is associated in humans and in mouse models with widespread hyperphosphorylated tau pathology. It also cites several nationwide studies that show that TBI is linked with a significantly increased risk for long-term dementia.
“We are not advising against partaking in sports, as playing sports is healthy. But we are urging people to take precautions to protect themselves properly,” Dr. Livingston said.
For excessive alcohol consumption, the report states that an “increasing body of evidence is emerging on alcohol’s complex relationship with cognition and dementia outcomes from a variety of sources including detailed cohorts and large-scale record-based studies.” One French study, which included more than 31 million individuals admitted to the hospital, showed that alcohol use disorders were associated with a threefold increased dementia risk. However, other studies have suggested that moderate drinking may be protective.
“We are not saying it is bad to drink, but we are saying it is bad to drink more than 21 units a week,” Dr. Livingston noted.
On air pollution, the report notes that in animal studies, airborne particulate pollutants have been found to accelerate neurodegenerative processes. Also, high nitrogen dioxide concentrations, fine ambient particulate matter from traffic exhaust, and residential wood burning have been shown in past research to be associated with increased dementia incidence.
“While we need international policy on reducing air pollution, individuals can take some action to reduce their risk,” Dr. Livingston said. For example, she suggested avoiding walking right next to busy roads and instead walking “a few streets back if possible.”
Hearing loss
The researchers assessed how much each risk factor contributes to dementia, expressed as the population-attributable fraction (PAF). Hearing loss had the greatest effect, accounting for an estimated 8.2% of dementia cases. This was followed by lower education levels in young people (7.1%) and smoking (5.2%).
Dr. Livingston noted that the evidence that hearing loss is one of the most important risk factors for dementia is very strong. New studies show that correcting hearing loss with hearing aids negates any increased risk.
Hearing loss “has both a high relative risk for dementia and is a common problem, so it contributes a significant amount to dementia cases. This is really something that we can reduce relatively easily by encouraging use of hearing aids. They need to be made more accessible, more comfortable, and more acceptable,” she said.
“This could make a huge difference in reducing dementia cases in the future,” Dr. Livingston added.
Other risk factors for which the evidence base has strengthened since the 2017 report include systolic blood pressure, social interaction, and early-life education.
Dr. Livingston noted that the SPRINT MIND trial showed that aiming for a target systolic blood pressure of 120 mm Hg reduced risk for future mild cognitive impairment. “Before, we thought under 140 was the target, but now are recommending under 130 to reduce risks of dementia,” she said.
Evidence on social interaction “has been very consistent, and we now have more certainty on this. It is now well established that increased social interaction in midlife reduces dementia in late life,” said Dr. Livingston.
On the benefits of education in the young, she noted that it has been known for some time that education for individuals younger than 11 years is important in reducing later-life dementia. However, it is now thought that education to the age of 20 also makes a difference.
“While keeping the brain active in later years has some positive effects, increasing brain activity in young people seems to be more important. This is probably because of the better plasticity of the brain in the young,” she said.
Sleep and diet
Two risk factors that have not made it onto the list are diet and sleep. “While there has also been a lot more data published on nutrition and sleep with regard to dementia in the last few years, we didn’t think the evidence stacked up enough to include these on the list of modifiable risk factors,” Dr. Livingston said.
The report cites studies that suggest that both more sleep and less sleep are associated with increased risk for dementia, which the authors thought did not make “biological sense.” In addition, other underlying factors involved in sleep, such as depression, apathy, and different sleep patterns, may be symptoms of early dementia.
More data have been published on diet and dementia, “but there isn’t any individual vitamin deficit that is associated with the condition. The evidence is quite clear on that,” Dr. Livingston said. “Global diets, such as the Mediterranean or Nordic diets, can probably make a difference, but there doesn’t seem to be any one particular element that is needed,” she noted.
“We just recommend to eat a healthy diet and stay a healthy weight. Diet is very connected to economic circumstances and so very difficult to separate out as a risk factor. We do think it is linked, but we are not convinced enough to put it in the model,” she added.
Among other key information that has become available since 2017, Dr. Livingston highlighted new data showing that dementia is more common in less privileged populations, including Black and minority ethnic groups and low- and middle-income countries.
Although dementia was traditionally considered a disease of high-income countries, that has now been shown not to be the case. “People in low- and middle-income countries are now living longer and so are developing dementia more, and they have higher rates of many of the risk factors, including smoking and low education levels. There is a huge potential for prevention in these countries,” said Dr. Livingston.
She also highlighted new evidence showing that patients with dementia do not do well when admitted to the hospital. “So we need to do more to keep them well at home,” she said.
COVID-19 advice
The report also has a section on COVID-19. It points out that patients with dementia are particularly vulnerable to the disease because of their age, multimorbidities, and difficulties in maintaining physical distancing. Death certificates from the United Kingdom indicate that dementia and Alzheimer’s disease were the most common underlying conditions (present in 25.6% of all deaths involving COVID-19).
The situation is particularly concerning in care homes. In one U.S. study, nursing home residents living with dementia made up 52% of COVID-19 cases, yet they accounted for 72% of all deaths (increased risk, 1.7), the commission reported.
The authors recommended rigorous public health measures, such as protective equipment and hygiene, not moving staff or residents between care homes, and not admitting new residents when their COVID-19 status is unknown. The report also recommends regular testing of staff in care homes and the provision of oxygen therapy at the home to avoid hospital admission.
It is also important to reduce isolation by providing the necessary equipment to relatives and offering them brief training on how to protect themselves and others from COVID-19 so that they can visit their relatives with dementia in nursing homes safely when it is allowed.
“Most comprehensive overview to date”
Alzheimer’s Research UK welcomed the new report. “This is the most comprehensive overview into dementia risk to date, building on previous work by this commission and moving our understanding forward,” Rosa Sancho, PhD, head of research at the charity, said.
“This report underlines the importance of acting at a personal and policy level to reduce dementia risk. With Alzheimer’s Research UK’s Dementia Attitudes Monitor showing just a third of people think it’s possible to reduce their risk of developing dementia, there’s clearly much to do here to increase people’s awareness of the steps they can take,” Dr. Sancho said.
She added that, although there is “no surefire way of preventing dementia,” the best way to keep a brain healthy as it ages is for an individual to stay physically and mentally active, eat a healthy balanced diet, not smoke, drink only within the recommended limits, and keep weight, cholesterol level, and blood pressure in check. “With no treatments yet able to slow or stop the onset of dementia, taking action to reduce these risks is an important part of our strategy for tackling the condition,” Dr. Sancho said.
The Lancet Commission is partnered by University College London, the Alzheimer’s Society UK, the Economic and Social Research Council, and Alzheimer’s Research UK, which funded fares, accommodation, and food for the commission meeting but had no role in the writing of the manuscript or the decision to submit it for publication.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
From AAIC 2020
Don’t discount discharge planning during pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to disrupt all aspects of hospital care, and has altered nearly all fundamental practices, including discharge protocols. A session presented at the Society of Hospitalist Medicine’s 2020 Virtual Annual Conference will focus on discharge issues in the COVID-19 era.
“Discharge planning is an integral part of a hospitalist’s clinical care. On a daily basis, we think carefully about how to help our patients safely transition back into life outside of the hospital,” said Maralyssa Bann, MD, of the University of Washington, Seattle, a copresenter at the session.
“Patients need up-to-date information about how to keep themselves and those around them safe,” she said. “They need resources and supports to help them recover from illness.”
These supports include access to appropriate follow-up with primary care doctors or other specialists and being discharged to the right location, such as home or a skilled nursing facility, Dr. Bann noted.
In response to COVID-19, “within an exceptionally short time frame, hospitals have had to rapidly adapt their discharge planning protocols and have had to continue to adapt as new information comes out,” Dr. Bann said.
“In many ways, the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of discharge planning for patient care and has added a new element of public health in that we have to take all possible precautions to ensure that patients are not spreading the virus after they leave the hospital,” said Ryan Greysen, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and Dr. Bann’s copresenter.
Many elements go into creating a good discharge plan, but there are often many unknowns, Dr. Greysen said. “I think there is an opportunity to improve the process by improving follow-up as well.”
“For example, one program at our hospital focused on vulnerable older adults includes an in-home visit by a visiting nurse on the day of discharge to verify the patient has everything they need when they arrive home,” However, now with more telemedicine and social distancing, there should be creative approaches to tying up loose ends and monitoring for things that can go wrong in order to give additional guidance, he said.
“In a previous study of 12 U.S. academic medical centers, my colleagues and I interviewed over 1,000 patients who were discharged and then readmitted to ask them what they thought went wrong,” said Dr. Greysen. “Overwhelmingly, patients indicated that they understood their discharge instructions and the plan of care at the time they left the hospital, but then when there were breakdowns or unanticipated challenges in the plan, they were uncertain what to do.”
In the HM20 Virtual session, Dr. Greysen and Dr. Bann will present additional data from the same network that Dr. Greysen used in his study, the Hospital Medicine Reengineering Network or HOMERuN, but expanded to include 22 sites.
The specific areas will include clinical and nonclinical criteria for patients to be discharged home, how criteria differed for discharge destinations other than home, discharge logistics, discharge instructions for patients and caregivers, and postdischarge follow-up.
“Developing a discharge protocol during a pandemic is a major challenge. There are new barriers and challenges to finding the right discharge location, as information about illness course and outcome is incomplete or evolving,” Dr. Bann said. “The safety of patients and their loved ones, health care workers and staff, as well as the public at large is always top of mind. Decisions have to be made in a timely way and communicated clearly. This is a huge task in addition to all of the other competing work in the midst of a pandemic, which is why learning from each other and collectively creating our shared best practices is tremendously helpful. If I can take example approaches from other hospitals and update them for use at my site, this saves a lot of time and effort.”
“There is great urgency to understand when it is safe to discharge these patients from the hospital,” Dr. Greysen said. “Many COVID patients can have worsening of their symptoms after a period of initial improvement so sending them home too soon is a major concern. On the other hand, we can’t keep COVID patients in the hospital until they have fully recovered; we would increase their risk of iatrogenic events and we could risk using up capacity of the health care system to care for other patients, both COVID and non-COVID.”
Unfortunately, no evidence base yet exists to guide the creation of discharge guidelines for COVID patients, said Dr. Greysen. “Therefore, we conducted a survey of HOMERuN sites to synthesize practices across sites and provide some guidance for hospitals based on themes or concordance between these sites.
“One area of clear concordance among sites in our study was around the use of [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines to address patient isolation procedures as well as strategies to mitigate transmission, such as providing patients with protective gear like masks or requiring the driver who picks up the patient wear a mask for transportation,” Dr. Greysen said. “We also found that many sites used certain clinical criteria – for example, temperature, oxygen saturation or supplementation, and improvement of presenting symptoms – but there was wide variation in the details for these criteria.”
In addition, “some sites required that a patient be afebrile for a certain period of time before discharge whereas others only required that patients be afebrile at the time of discharge. There was also relatively strong consensus around assessing the level of social support and ability to perform activities of daily living prior to discharge,” since social support and ability to function are often interrelated and can be difficult to assess without visiting the home, he said.
“Further development the evidence around which discharge criteria are associated with adverse outcomes such as readmission or death is urgently needed. At this moment, we really don’t know which clinical criteria such as oxygen supplementation or nonclinical criteria are associated with better outcomes in COVID patients,” Dr. Greysen said, but he and his team plan to study this using EMR data in HOMERuN.
Dr. Bann said that clinical criteria for discharge will likely provoke lively discussions during the interactive part of the virtual session. “Also, I have heard a lot of discussion and interest in learning about how different sites are handling postdischarge monitoring and follow-up, such as how we ensure that patients are recovering well after discharge, and whether there are new or different needs for this patient population,” she added.
“Attendees should come away from this session with an understanding of how hospitals across the country have augmented their discharge planning responses during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Dr. Bann said. “This session is all about learning from each other and creating shared best practices,” she said.
“I hope that those who attend our session are able to see some areas of consensus in our study that could be applied to their discharge criteria,” Dr. Greysen added.
Dr. Bann and Dr. Greysen had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
Discharge Planning for COVID-19: Collected Practices from Across the U.S.
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to disrupt all aspects of hospital care, and has altered nearly all fundamental practices, including discharge protocols. A session presented at the Society of Hospitalist Medicine’s 2020 Virtual Annual Conference will focus on discharge issues in the COVID-19 era.
“Discharge planning is an integral part of a hospitalist’s clinical care. On a daily basis, we think carefully about how to help our patients safely transition back into life outside of the hospital,” said Maralyssa Bann, MD, of the University of Washington, Seattle, a copresenter at the session.
“Patients need up-to-date information about how to keep themselves and those around them safe,” she said. “They need resources and supports to help them recover from illness.”
These supports include access to appropriate follow-up with primary care doctors or other specialists and being discharged to the right location, such as home or a skilled nursing facility, Dr. Bann noted.
In response to COVID-19, “within an exceptionally short time frame, hospitals have had to rapidly adapt their discharge planning protocols and have had to continue to adapt as new information comes out,” Dr. Bann said.
“In many ways, the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of discharge planning for patient care and has added a new element of public health in that we have to take all possible precautions to ensure that patients are not spreading the virus after they leave the hospital,” said Ryan Greysen, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and Dr. Bann’s copresenter.
Many elements go into creating a good discharge plan, but there are often many unknowns, Dr. Greysen said. “I think there is an opportunity to improve the process by improving follow-up as well.”
“For example, one program at our hospital focused on vulnerable older adults includes an in-home visit by a visiting nurse on the day of discharge to verify the patient has everything they need when they arrive home,” However, now with more telemedicine and social distancing, there should be creative approaches to tying up loose ends and monitoring for things that can go wrong in order to give additional guidance, he said.
“In a previous study of 12 U.S. academic medical centers, my colleagues and I interviewed over 1,000 patients who were discharged and then readmitted to ask them what they thought went wrong,” said Dr. Greysen. “Overwhelmingly, patients indicated that they understood their discharge instructions and the plan of care at the time they left the hospital, but then when there were breakdowns or unanticipated challenges in the plan, they were uncertain what to do.”
In the HM20 Virtual session, Dr. Greysen and Dr. Bann will present additional data from the same network that Dr. Greysen used in his study, the Hospital Medicine Reengineering Network or HOMERuN, but expanded to include 22 sites.
The specific areas will include clinical and nonclinical criteria for patients to be discharged home, how criteria differed for discharge destinations other than home, discharge logistics, discharge instructions for patients and caregivers, and postdischarge follow-up.
“Developing a discharge protocol during a pandemic is a major challenge. There are new barriers and challenges to finding the right discharge location, as information about illness course and outcome is incomplete or evolving,” Dr. Bann said. “The safety of patients and their loved ones, health care workers and staff, as well as the public at large is always top of mind. Decisions have to be made in a timely way and communicated clearly. This is a huge task in addition to all of the other competing work in the midst of a pandemic, which is why learning from each other and collectively creating our shared best practices is tremendously helpful. If I can take example approaches from other hospitals and update them for use at my site, this saves a lot of time and effort.”
“There is great urgency to understand when it is safe to discharge these patients from the hospital,” Dr. Greysen said. “Many COVID patients can have worsening of their symptoms after a period of initial improvement so sending them home too soon is a major concern. On the other hand, we can’t keep COVID patients in the hospital until they have fully recovered; we would increase their risk of iatrogenic events and we could risk using up capacity of the health care system to care for other patients, both COVID and non-COVID.”
Unfortunately, no evidence base yet exists to guide the creation of discharge guidelines for COVID patients, said Dr. Greysen. “Therefore, we conducted a survey of HOMERuN sites to synthesize practices across sites and provide some guidance for hospitals based on themes or concordance between these sites.
“One area of clear concordance among sites in our study was around the use of [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines to address patient isolation procedures as well as strategies to mitigate transmission, such as providing patients with protective gear like masks or requiring the driver who picks up the patient wear a mask for transportation,” Dr. Greysen said. “We also found that many sites used certain clinical criteria – for example, temperature, oxygen saturation or supplementation, and improvement of presenting symptoms – but there was wide variation in the details for these criteria.”
In addition, “some sites required that a patient be afebrile for a certain period of time before discharge whereas others only required that patients be afebrile at the time of discharge. There was also relatively strong consensus around assessing the level of social support and ability to perform activities of daily living prior to discharge,” since social support and ability to function are often interrelated and can be difficult to assess without visiting the home, he said.
“Further development the evidence around which discharge criteria are associated with adverse outcomes such as readmission or death is urgently needed. At this moment, we really don’t know which clinical criteria such as oxygen supplementation or nonclinical criteria are associated with better outcomes in COVID patients,” Dr. Greysen said, but he and his team plan to study this using EMR data in HOMERuN.
Dr. Bann said that clinical criteria for discharge will likely provoke lively discussions during the interactive part of the virtual session. “Also, I have heard a lot of discussion and interest in learning about how different sites are handling postdischarge monitoring and follow-up, such as how we ensure that patients are recovering well after discharge, and whether there are new or different needs for this patient population,” she added.
“Attendees should come away from this session with an understanding of how hospitals across the country have augmented their discharge planning responses during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Dr. Bann said. “This session is all about learning from each other and creating shared best practices,” she said.
“I hope that those who attend our session are able to see some areas of consensus in our study that could be applied to their discharge criteria,” Dr. Greysen added.
Dr. Bann and Dr. Greysen had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
Discharge Planning for COVID-19: Collected Practices from Across the U.S.
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to disrupt all aspects of hospital care, and has altered nearly all fundamental practices, including discharge protocols. A session presented at the Society of Hospitalist Medicine’s 2020 Virtual Annual Conference will focus on discharge issues in the COVID-19 era.
“Discharge planning is an integral part of a hospitalist’s clinical care. On a daily basis, we think carefully about how to help our patients safely transition back into life outside of the hospital,” said Maralyssa Bann, MD, of the University of Washington, Seattle, a copresenter at the session.
“Patients need up-to-date information about how to keep themselves and those around them safe,” she said. “They need resources and supports to help them recover from illness.”
These supports include access to appropriate follow-up with primary care doctors or other specialists and being discharged to the right location, such as home or a skilled nursing facility, Dr. Bann noted.
In response to COVID-19, “within an exceptionally short time frame, hospitals have had to rapidly adapt their discharge planning protocols and have had to continue to adapt as new information comes out,” Dr. Bann said.
“In many ways, the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of discharge planning for patient care and has added a new element of public health in that we have to take all possible precautions to ensure that patients are not spreading the virus after they leave the hospital,” said Ryan Greysen, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and Dr. Bann’s copresenter.
Many elements go into creating a good discharge plan, but there are often many unknowns, Dr. Greysen said. “I think there is an opportunity to improve the process by improving follow-up as well.”
“For example, one program at our hospital focused on vulnerable older adults includes an in-home visit by a visiting nurse on the day of discharge to verify the patient has everything they need when they arrive home,” However, now with more telemedicine and social distancing, there should be creative approaches to tying up loose ends and monitoring for things that can go wrong in order to give additional guidance, he said.
“In a previous study of 12 U.S. academic medical centers, my colleagues and I interviewed over 1,000 patients who were discharged and then readmitted to ask them what they thought went wrong,” said Dr. Greysen. “Overwhelmingly, patients indicated that they understood their discharge instructions and the plan of care at the time they left the hospital, but then when there were breakdowns or unanticipated challenges in the plan, they were uncertain what to do.”
In the HM20 Virtual session, Dr. Greysen and Dr. Bann will present additional data from the same network that Dr. Greysen used in his study, the Hospital Medicine Reengineering Network or HOMERuN, but expanded to include 22 sites.
The specific areas will include clinical and nonclinical criteria for patients to be discharged home, how criteria differed for discharge destinations other than home, discharge logistics, discharge instructions for patients and caregivers, and postdischarge follow-up.
“Developing a discharge protocol during a pandemic is a major challenge. There are new barriers and challenges to finding the right discharge location, as information about illness course and outcome is incomplete or evolving,” Dr. Bann said. “The safety of patients and their loved ones, health care workers and staff, as well as the public at large is always top of mind. Decisions have to be made in a timely way and communicated clearly. This is a huge task in addition to all of the other competing work in the midst of a pandemic, which is why learning from each other and collectively creating our shared best practices is tremendously helpful. If I can take example approaches from other hospitals and update them for use at my site, this saves a lot of time and effort.”
“There is great urgency to understand when it is safe to discharge these patients from the hospital,” Dr. Greysen said. “Many COVID patients can have worsening of their symptoms after a period of initial improvement so sending them home too soon is a major concern. On the other hand, we can’t keep COVID patients in the hospital until they have fully recovered; we would increase their risk of iatrogenic events and we could risk using up capacity of the health care system to care for other patients, both COVID and non-COVID.”
Unfortunately, no evidence base yet exists to guide the creation of discharge guidelines for COVID patients, said Dr. Greysen. “Therefore, we conducted a survey of HOMERuN sites to synthesize practices across sites and provide some guidance for hospitals based on themes or concordance between these sites.
“One area of clear concordance among sites in our study was around the use of [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines to address patient isolation procedures as well as strategies to mitigate transmission, such as providing patients with protective gear like masks or requiring the driver who picks up the patient wear a mask for transportation,” Dr. Greysen said. “We also found that many sites used certain clinical criteria – for example, temperature, oxygen saturation or supplementation, and improvement of presenting symptoms – but there was wide variation in the details for these criteria.”
In addition, “some sites required that a patient be afebrile for a certain period of time before discharge whereas others only required that patients be afebrile at the time of discharge. There was also relatively strong consensus around assessing the level of social support and ability to perform activities of daily living prior to discharge,” since social support and ability to function are often interrelated and can be difficult to assess without visiting the home, he said.
“Further development the evidence around which discharge criteria are associated with adverse outcomes such as readmission or death is urgently needed. At this moment, we really don’t know which clinical criteria such as oxygen supplementation or nonclinical criteria are associated with better outcomes in COVID patients,” Dr. Greysen said, but he and his team plan to study this using EMR data in HOMERuN.
Dr. Bann said that clinical criteria for discharge will likely provoke lively discussions during the interactive part of the virtual session. “Also, I have heard a lot of discussion and interest in learning about how different sites are handling postdischarge monitoring and follow-up, such as how we ensure that patients are recovering well after discharge, and whether there are new or different needs for this patient population,” she added.
“Attendees should come away from this session with an understanding of how hospitals across the country have augmented their discharge planning responses during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Dr. Bann said. “This session is all about learning from each other and creating shared best practices,” she said.
“I hope that those who attend our session are able to see some areas of consensus in our study that could be applied to their discharge criteria,” Dr. Greysen added.
Dr. Bann and Dr. Greysen had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
Discharge Planning for COVID-19: Collected Practices from Across the U.S.
Telemedicine meets menopause in customized patient care service
Women facing issues related to perimenopause and menopause can consult their primary care physicians or ob.gyns. through telemedicine visits, but
The Cusp doesn’t claim to replace routine gynecologic care. Rather, it focuses on perimenopause and menopause symptoms specifically, and states that its physicians, some of whom are certified by the North American Menopause Society, provide expertise in menopause beyond what patients might receive as part of a typical ob.gyn. visit.
The Cusp is a for-profit organization, a group of physicians, nurse practitioners, and technologists who focus on integrated care for women in perimenopause and beyond. The aim is to leverage technology as a way to connect women to the care platform to book physician and nurse practitioner visits virtually and to have all of the information about their care centralized in one place.
According to the website, most patients who sign up for a care plan check in with their providers at least once a month to monitor their symptoms and tweak treatment strategies. Patients who sign up are prompted to download an app, which then becomes the main tool for scheduling future visits, tracking symptoms, and communicating with providers.
The Cusp launched in early 2019, before the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the pandemic has accelerated the acceptance across medical specialties, suggesting that telemedicine is here to stay, according to Mindy Goldman, MD, professor of gynecology and gynecologic surgery at the University of California, San Francisco, and director of the Gynecology Center for Cancer Survivors and At-Risk Women at UCSF, who also serves as a medical adviser to the Cusp.
Partnering with technology companies allows opportunities to provide care in areas where there are gaps, such as menopause management, she said. Many clinicians in primary care and ob.gyn. care don’t have the time or training to discuss menopause management in depth with patients, and patient interviews conducted by the Cusp before launching the site showed that this was an area of need.
“One thing that is really unique about the Cusp is that we brought together experts to provide care in both in an evidence-based and holistic fashion,” Dr. Goldman emphasized.
The Cusp’s medical team includes physician and nurse practitioner menopause experts with backgrounds including not only ob.gyn. but also psychiatry, integrative medicine, and naturopathic medicine, with plans to add endocrinology and dermatology as well. This holistic approach allows the Cusp to tailor care based on what each woman is looking for, with evidence-based expertise to support treatment decisions, said Dr. Goldman, whose advisory role includes helping to develop patient treatment protocols and services.
If a woman wants to begin treating symptoms with a naturopathic approach, the team will provide protocols that take current guidelines into account. Regular visits, approximately once a month or as needed, allow for collaboration with the Cusp’s specialists to provide consistent care that is very comprehensive, she said.
One of the benefits of the Cusp is the opportunity for “frequent touchpoints” in which providers reach out to patients via text, email, or video. Although a traditional medical visit may include some initial discussion of menopause and treatment plans, the Cusp offers “a more seamless way to address needs on an ongoing basis,” to provide more complete patient care, Dr. Goldman said.
“We are constantly asking women what they are looking for in menopause care,” and a recurring question was about hormone testing, she said. Nontraditional practitioners may offer hormone testing as a way of individualizing care that also involves compounded formulations, and other treatments that are not standard of care. “In all of our protocols we follow what is recommended by standard organizations such as ACOG [American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists] and NAMS.”
The Cusp’s newest service is an at-home hormone test currently for women in New York and California, but the company plans to expand this service. The hormone test, while not essential, is another tool to guide menopause management, and having a sense of when menopause will occur “gives us a chance to talk to people about behavioral changes and time to personalize a treatment protocol,” Dr. Goldman said.
The test is based in part on the anti-Müllerian hormone, which recent studies have shown is useful in predicting time to menopause. This, in combination with other hormone tests and other clinical information, will allow the Cusp’s menopause specialists to help women in perimenopause gain perspective on their symptoms and design a treatment plan that can evolve as their needs change, she explained.
“The more information you know about when menopause is going to be happening, you can tailor your treatment plan,” Dr. Goldman said. For example, a woman who may be 2 years away from menopause might consider a naturopathic approach at first, and switch to a different therapy as menopause occurs. “We know that the risks of cardiovascular disease and bone loss increase after menopause, and knowing the time to menopause gives us more guidance when educating patients about healthy lifestyle habits such as exercise and dietary changes that can help reduce these risks.”
The Cusp allows patients to use money in flexible spending accounts or health savings accounts to pay for the program. If doctors require lab tests or other procedures, these are covered through the patients’ regular health insurance as they would be if requested by a primary care physician or other health care professional.
Lubna Pal, MBBS, director of the menopause program at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., commented that part of the value in a telehealth site such as the Cusp is to serve as “a resource for reproductively aging women to understand what is happening to them.”
Any way to improve education on the topic of menopause is empowering to women, said Dr. Pal, professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences at Yale. “This is an opportunity for patients to have access to a directed evaluation” of menopause-related symptoms. Then, when women visit their regular health care provider in person, they are well-equipped with knowledge to ask more informed questions and discuss a wide range of treatment options.
Dr. Pal noted that the hormone test is less valuable than the interaction between physicians and patients, whether online or in person.
“Menopause is a Monday morning quarterback diagnosis,” she said, emphasizing that, not only is a year without menses part of the diagnosis of menopause, many women in perimenopause can have wide fluctuations in hormone levels, so a test is more of a snapshot than a diagnostic tool, and that the results might cause unnecessary angst and concerns for patients.
However, part of the value of a telehealth site that focuses on menopause is that it gives women a place to learn more about their biology and to clarify their questions about symptoms and become aware of a range of treatment options. Telehealth consultations also can help women recognize how other factors such as lifestyle modifications can play a role in menopause symptoms, and how modifying these factors may provide some relief, she said.
Dr. Pal said she would be cautious about the idea of prescribing without seeing the patient in person, but noted that telehealth sites such as the Cusp can be a win-win to enhance women’s health when used in combination with regular in-person visits to an ob.gyn. The added value in patients’ being able to discuss their concerns and to learn more about their symptoms means that they will be better informed to develop a menopause management strategy in partnership with their providers, said Dr. Pal, who is not associated with the Cusp.
Dr. Goldman disclosed receiving compensation from the Cusp for her advisory work. She also holds stock options in the company. Dr. Pal, who is a member of the Ob.Gyn. News editorial advisory board, had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Women facing issues related to perimenopause and menopause can consult their primary care physicians or ob.gyns. through telemedicine visits, but
The Cusp doesn’t claim to replace routine gynecologic care. Rather, it focuses on perimenopause and menopause symptoms specifically, and states that its physicians, some of whom are certified by the North American Menopause Society, provide expertise in menopause beyond what patients might receive as part of a typical ob.gyn. visit.
The Cusp is a for-profit organization, a group of physicians, nurse practitioners, and technologists who focus on integrated care for women in perimenopause and beyond. The aim is to leverage technology as a way to connect women to the care platform to book physician and nurse practitioner visits virtually and to have all of the information about their care centralized in one place.
According to the website, most patients who sign up for a care plan check in with their providers at least once a month to monitor their symptoms and tweak treatment strategies. Patients who sign up are prompted to download an app, which then becomes the main tool for scheduling future visits, tracking symptoms, and communicating with providers.
The Cusp launched in early 2019, before the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the pandemic has accelerated the acceptance across medical specialties, suggesting that telemedicine is here to stay, according to Mindy Goldman, MD, professor of gynecology and gynecologic surgery at the University of California, San Francisco, and director of the Gynecology Center for Cancer Survivors and At-Risk Women at UCSF, who also serves as a medical adviser to the Cusp.
Partnering with technology companies allows opportunities to provide care in areas where there are gaps, such as menopause management, she said. Many clinicians in primary care and ob.gyn. care don’t have the time or training to discuss menopause management in depth with patients, and patient interviews conducted by the Cusp before launching the site showed that this was an area of need.
“One thing that is really unique about the Cusp is that we brought together experts to provide care in both in an evidence-based and holistic fashion,” Dr. Goldman emphasized.
The Cusp’s medical team includes physician and nurse practitioner menopause experts with backgrounds including not only ob.gyn. but also psychiatry, integrative medicine, and naturopathic medicine, with plans to add endocrinology and dermatology as well. This holistic approach allows the Cusp to tailor care based on what each woman is looking for, with evidence-based expertise to support treatment decisions, said Dr. Goldman, whose advisory role includes helping to develop patient treatment protocols and services.
If a woman wants to begin treating symptoms with a naturopathic approach, the team will provide protocols that take current guidelines into account. Regular visits, approximately once a month or as needed, allow for collaboration with the Cusp’s specialists to provide consistent care that is very comprehensive, she said.
One of the benefits of the Cusp is the opportunity for “frequent touchpoints” in which providers reach out to patients via text, email, or video. Although a traditional medical visit may include some initial discussion of menopause and treatment plans, the Cusp offers “a more seamless way to address needs on an ongoing basis,” to provide more complete patient care, Dr. Goldman said.
“We are constantly asking women what they are looking for in menopause care,” and a recurring question was about hormone testing, she said. Nontraditional practitioners may offer hormone testing as a way of individualizing care that also involves compounded formulations, and other treatments that are not standard of care. “In all of our protocols we follow what is recommended by standard organizations such as ACOG [American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists] and NAMS.”
The Cusp’s newest service is an at-home hormone test currently for women in New York and California, but the company plans to expand this service. The hormone test, while not essential, is another tool to guide menopause management, and having a sense of when menopause will occur “gives us a chance to talk to people about behavioral changes and time to personalize a treatment protocol,” Dr. Goldman said.
The test is based in part on the anti-Müllerian hormone, which recent studies have shown is useful in predicting time to menopause. This, in combination with other hormone tests and other clinical information, will allow the Cusp’s menopause specialists to help women in perimenopause gain perspective on their symptoms and design a treatment plan that can evolve as their needs change, she explained.
“The more information you know about when menopause is going to be happening, you can tailor your treatment plan,” Dr. Goldman said. For example, a woman who may be 2 years away from menopause might consider a naturopathic approach at first, and switch to a different therapy as menopause occurs. “We know that the risks of cardiovascular disease and bone loss increase after menopause, and knowing the time to menopause gives us more guidance when educating patients about healthy lifestyle habits such as exercise and dietary changes that can help reduce these risks.”
The Cusp allows patients to use money in flexible spending accounts or health savings accounts to pay for the program. If doctors require lab tests or other procedures, these are covered through the patients’ regular health insurance as they would be if requested by a primary care physician or other health care professional.
Lubna Pal, MBBS, director of the menopause program at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., commented that part of the value in a telehealth site such as the Cusp is to serve as “a resource for reproductively aging women to understand what is happening to them.”
Any way to improve education on the topic of menopause is empowering to women, said Dr. Pal, professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences at Yale. “This is an opportunity for patients to have access to a directed evaluation” of menopause-related symptoms. Then, when women visit their regular health care provider in person, they are well-equipped with knowledge to ask more informed questions and discuss a wide range of treatment options.
Dr. Pal noted that the hormone test is less valuable than the interaction between physicians and patients, whether online or in person.
“Menopause is a Monday morning quarterback diagnosis,” she said, emphasizing that, not only is a year without menses part of the diagnosis of menopause, many women in perimenopause can have wide fluctuations in hormone levels, so a test is more of a snapshot than a diagnostic tool, and that the results might cause unnecessary angst and concerns for patients.
However, part of the value of a telehealth site that focuses on menopause is that it gives women a place to learn more about their biology and to clarify their questions about symptoms and become aware of a range of treatment options. Telehealth consultations also can help women recognize how other factors such as lifestyle modifications can play a role in menopause symptoms, and how modifying these factors may provide some relief, she said.
Dr. Pal said she would be cautious about the idea of prescribing without seeing the patient in person, but noted that telehealth sites such as the Cusp can be a win-win to enhance women’s health when used in combination with regular in-person visits to an ob.gyn. The added value in patients’ being able to discuss their concerns and to learn more about their symptoms means that they will be better informed to develop a menopause management strategy in partnership with their providers, said Dr. Pal, who is not associated with the Cusp.
Dr. Goldman disclosed receiving compensation from the Cusp for her advisory work. She also holds stock options in the company. Dr. Pal, who is a member of the Ob.Gyn. News editorial advisory board, had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Women facing issues related to perimenopause and menopause can consult their primary care physicians or ob.gyns. through telemedicine visits, but
The Cusp doesn’t claim to replace routine gynecologic care. Rather, it focuses on perimenopause and menopause symptoms specifically, and states that its physicians, some of whom are certified by the North American Menopause Society, provide expertise in menopause beyond what patients might receive as part of a typical ob.gyn. visit.
The Cusp is a for-profit organization, a group of physicians, nurse practitioners, and technologists who focus on integrated care for women in perimenopause and beyond. The aim is to leverage technology as a way to connect women to the care platform to book physician and nurse practitioner visits virtually and to have all of the information about their care centralized in one place.
According to the website, most patients who sign up for a care plan check in with their providers at least once a month to monitor their symptoms and tweak treatment strategies. Patients who sign up are prompted to download an app, which then becomes the main tool for scheduling future visits, tracking symptoms, and communicating with providers.
The Cusp launched in early 2019, before the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the pandemic has accelerated the acceptance across medical specialties, suggesting that telemedicine is here to stay, according to Mindy Goldman, MD, professor of gynecology and gynecologic surgery at the University of California, San Francisco, and director of the Gynecology Center for Cancer Survivors and At-Risk Women at UCSF, who also serves as a medical adviser to the Cusp.
Partnering with technology companies allows opportunities to provide care in areas where there are gaps, such as menopause management, she said. Many clinicians in primary care and ob.gyn. care don’t have the time or training to discuss menopause management in depth with patients, and patient interviews conducted by the Cusp before launching the site showed that this was an area of need.
“One thing that is really unique about the Cusp is that we brought together experts to provide care in both in an evidence-based and holistic fashion,” Dr. Goldman emphasized.
The Cusp’s medical team includes physician and nurse practitioner menopause experts with backgrounds including not only ob.gyn. but also psychiatry, integrative medicine, and naturopathic medicine, with plans to add endocrinology and dermatology as well. This holistic approach allows the Cusp to tailor care based on what each woman is looking for, with evidence-based expertise to support treatment decisions, said Dr. Goldman, whose advisory role includes helping to develop patient treatment protocols and services.
If a woman wants to begin treating symptoms with a naturopathic approach, the team will provide protocols that take current guidelines into account. Regular visits, approximately once a month or as needed, allow for collaboration with the Cusp’s specialists to provide consistent care that is very comprehensive, she said.
One of the benefits of the Cusp is the opportunity for “frequent touchpoints” in which providers reach out to patients via text, email, or video. Although a traditional medical visit may include some initial discussion of menopause and treatment plans, the Cusp offers “a more seamless way to address needs on an ongoing basis,” to provide more complete patient care, Dr. Goldman said.
“We are constantly asking women what they are looking for in menopause care,” and a recurring question was about hormone testing, she said. Nontraditional practitioners may offer hormone testing as a way of individualizing care that also involves compounded formulations, and other treatments that are not standard of care. “In all of our protocols we follow what is recommended by standard organizations such as ACOG [American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists] and NAMS.”
The Cusp’s newest service is an at-home hormone test currently for women in New York and California, but the company plans to expand this service. The hormone test, while not essential, is another tool to guide menopause management, and having a sense of when menopause will occur “gives us a chance to talk to people about behavioral changes and time to personalize a treatment protocol,” Dr. Goldman said.
The test is based in part on the anti-Müllerian hormone, which recent studies have shown is useful in predicting time to menopause. This, in combination with other hormone tests and other clinical information, will allow the Cusp’s menopause specialists to help women in perimenopause gain perspective on their symptoms and design a treatment plan that can evolve as their needs change, she explained.
“The more information you know about when menopause is going to be happening, you can tailor your treatment plan,” Dr. Goldman said. For example, a woman who may be 2 years away from menopause might consider a naturopathic approach at first, and switch to a different therapy as menopause occurs. “We know that the risks of cardiovascular disease and bone loss increase after menopause, and knowing the time to menopause gives us more guidance when educating patients about healthy lifestyle habits such as exercise and dietary changes that can help reduce these risks.”
The Cusp allows patients to use money in flexible spending accounts or health savings accounts to pay for the program. If doctors require lab tests or other procedures, these are covered through the patients’ regular health insurance as they would be if requested by a primary care physician or other health care professional.
Lubna Pal, MBBS, director of the menopause program at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., commented that part of the value in a telehealth site such as the Cusp is to serve as “a resource for reproductively aging women to understand what is happening to them.”
Any way to improve education on the topic of menopause is empowering to women, said Dr. Pal, professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences at Yale. “This is an opportunity for patients to have access to a directed evaluation” of menopause-related symptoms. Then, when women visit their regular health care provider in person, they are well-equipped with knowledge to ask more informed questions and discuss a wide range of treatment options.
Dr. Pal noted that the hormone test is less valuable than the interaction between physicians and patients, whether online or in person.
“Menopause is a Monday morning quarterback diagnosis,” she said, emphasizing that, not only is a year without menses part of the diagnosis of menopause, many women in perimenopause can have wide fluctuations in hormone levels, so a test is more of a snapshot than a diagnostic tool, and that the results might cause unnecessary angst and concerns for patients.
However, part of the value of a telehealth site that focuses on menopause is that it gives women a place to learn more about their biology and to clarify their questions about symptoms and become aware of a range of treatment options. Telehealth consultations also can help women recognize how other factors such as lifestyle modifications can play a role in menopause symptoms, and how modifying these factors may provide some relief, she said.
Dr. Pal said she would be cautious about the idea of prescribing without seeing the patient in person, but noted that telehealth sites such as the Cusp can be a win-win to enhance women’s health when used in combination with regular in-person visits to an ob.gyn. The added value in patients’ being able to discuss their concerns and to learn more about their symptoms means that they will be better informed to develop a menopause management strategy in partnership with their providers, said Dr. Pal, who is not associated with the Cusp.
Dr. Goldman disclosed receiving compensation from the Cusp for her advisory work. She also holds stock options in the company. Dr. Pal, who is a member of the Ob.Gyn. News editorial advisory board, had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Diagnostic testing for COVID-19: A quick summary for PCPs
Information about COVID has evolved so quickly that it can be difficult for clinicians to feel confident that they are staying current. These summaries include links to our reference article on diagnosis of COVID-19, which is constantly updated to make sure you have the latest information.
Diagnostic testing for COVID-19 is critical. No one disputes that. But what is in dispute is whom to test, when to test, how to test, what to do while waiting for results, and how accurate those results are when you finally get them.
Here are the answers to those questions, based on the current information.
Whom to test. This is the (relatively) easy part. The ideal answer is that everyone should be tested. The Infectious Diseases Society of America issued tier-based recommendations way back in March, and they still apply. First priority continues to be patients who are ill, healthcare workers, and those with known exposure. But to truly figure out the amount of community spread in a given area, we need to test people who do not have a clear indication for testing. That is particularly true as more people return to work and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued guidelines for workplaces to establish testing programs. Universal testing is recommended for some high-risk settings, such as nursing homes.
One key change: CDC no longer recommends testing to determine whether someone with a known infection is still infectious.
When to test. People with any symptoms suggestive of COVID should be tested, ideally as soon as feasible. But given the ongoing shortages of tests, that may not be possible, particularly for those requiring only symptomatic care. Rather, these patients should be treated as probable cases, with appropriate instructions regarding quarantine. Testing of those with known exposures ideally should be done about 5 days after exposure.
How to test. Only viral nucleic acid or antigen tests should be used to diagnose acute illness. CDC does not currently recommend using serologic assays, now broadly available, for diagnosis of acute infection, though they obviously play an important role in understanding the transmission dynamic of the virus in the general population.
Testing strategies vary from state to state and even within communities in a single state. It is recommended that clinicians check with their own local or state health department for specifics on tests available, indications for testing, and processing details. While often forgotten, it is worth emphasizing that no diagnostic tests have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Rather, they are available under emergency use authorization (EUA), meaning that they have not been fully vetted by the FDA.
In late July, the FDA expanded authorization for real-time reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) molecular assays, utilizing nasal or nasopharyngeal swabs, to permit testing of all persons, regardless of exposure history or symptoms. The FDA maintains a list of all approved diagnostic tests and corresponding labs. Patients will have to get what is available via their health department or insurance plan.
Two point-of-care antigen tests using nasopharyngeal or nasal samples have been issued an EUA. These tests can be used only in settings with a valid CLIA certificate.
Several commercial laboratories have received approval to process diagnostic tests using patients’ self-collected saliva rather than swabs. One lab has now received authorization for in-home testing without any input from a clinician. These testing options can be a boon for patients who have symptoms or exposure and for whatever reason are unable to get to a diagnostic site. These samples are collected at home and mailed to a lab. Note that these tests are not yet widely available.
Waiting for results. If waiting for results meant a day or even a couple of days, the answer to this one would be easier. But if the wait extends to 1 and even sometimes 2 weeks, then the test is not able to meaningfully guide clinical decisions. The latest guidance from the CDC is that individuals with symptoms suggestive of COVID who do not require hospitalization should remain at home in self-quarantine for at least 10 days from symptom onset. Asymptomatic individuals with a known exposure to someone else with COVID, or participation in a high-risk event like an indoor gathering involving more than 10 persons, should self-quarantine either until they receive a negative test result or 14 days after the exposure.
Accuracy of results. A positive rRT-PCR antigen test is highly accurate, indicating presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA. There appears to be no significant cross-reactivity with other respiratory viruses or even other coronaviruses. A small study conducted in Korea suggests that patients with persistent positive tests who are beyond 10 days from the initial positive test and are now symptom free are no longer infectious.
For patients with a high suspicion of COVID-19, a negative test should not rule out the infection. The number of false-negative results is not well known, though the resultant risk is “substantial.” A number of factors affect the likelihood of a false-negative test, including when the sample was collected relative to the timing of illness and the type of specimen collected; for example, nasopharyngeal swabs are more likely to be accurate vs nasal or throat specimens. Repeat or serial testing increases the sensitivity but may not always be available. Although rRT-PCR is the current criterion standard, more inclusive consensus-based criteria are likely to emerge because of the concern about these false-negative results.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Information about COVID has evolved so quickly that it can be difficult for clinicians to feel confident that they are staying current. These summaries include links to our reference article on diagnosis of COVID-19, which is constantly updated to make sure you have the latest information.
Diagnostic testing for COVID-19 is critical. No one disputes that. But what is in dispute is whom to test, when to test, how to test, what to do while waiting for results, and how accurate those results are when you finally get them.
Here are the answers to those questions, based on the current information.
Whom to test. This is the (relatively) easy part. The ideal answer is that everyone should be tested. The Infectious Diseases Society of America issued tier-based recommendations way back in March, and they still apply. First priority continues to be patients who are ill, healthcare workers, and those with known exposure. But to truly figure out the amount of community spread in a given area, we need to test people who do not have a clear indication for testing. That is particularly true as more people return to work and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued guidelines for workplaces to establish testing programs. Universal testing is recommended for some high-risk settings, such as nursing homes.
One key change: CDC no longer recommends testing to determine whether someone with a known infection is still infectious.
When to test. People with any symptoms suggestive of COVID should be tested, ideally as soon as feasible. But given the ongoing shortages of tests, that may not be possible, particularly for those requiring only symptomatic care. Rather, these patients should be treated as probable cases, with appropriate instructions regarding quarantine. Testing of those with known exposures ideally should be done about 5 days after exposure.
How to test. Only viral nucleic acid or antigen tests should be used to diagnose acute illness. CDC does not currently recommend using serologic assays, now broadly available, for diagnosis of acute infection, though they obviously play an important role in understanding the transmission dynamic of the virus in the general population.
Testing strategies vary from state to state and even within communities in a single state. It is recommended that clinicians check with their own local or state health department for specifics on tests available, indications for testing, and processing details. While often forgotten, it is worth emphasizing that no diagnostic tests have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Rather, they are available under emergency use authorization (EUA), meaning that they have not been fully vetted by the FDA.
In late July, the FDA expanded authorization for real-time reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) molecular assays, utilizing nasal or nasopharyngeal swabs, to permit testing of all persons, regardless of exposure history or symptoms. The FDA maintains a list of all approved diagnostic tests and corresponding labs. Patients will have to get what is available via their health department or insurance plan.
Two point-of-care antigen tests using nasopharyngeal or nasal samples have been issued an EUA. These tests can be used only in settings with a valid CLIA certificate.
Several commercial laboratories have received approval to process diagnostic tests using patients’ self-collected saliva rather than swabs. One lab has now received authorization for in-home testing without any input from a clinician. These testing options can be a boon for patients who have symptoms or exposure and for whatever reason are unable to get to a diagnostic site. These samples are collected at home and mailed to a lab. Note that these tests are not yet widely available.
Waiting for results. If waiting for results meant a day or even a couple of days, the answer to this one would be easier. But if the wait extends to 1 and even sometimes 2 weeks, then the test is not able to meaningfully guide clinical decisions. The latest guidance from the CDC is that individuals with symptoms suggestive of COVID who do not require hospitalization should remain at home in self-quarantine for at least 10 days from symptom onset. Asymptomatic individuals with a known exposure to someone else with COVID, or participation in a high-risk event like an indoor gathering involving more than 10 persons, should self-quarantine either until they receive a negative test result or 14 days after the exposure.
Accuracy of results. A positive rRT-PCR antigen test is highly accurate, indicating presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA. There appears to be no significant cross-reactivity with other respiratory viruses or even other coronaviruses. A small study conducted in Korea suggests that patients with persistent positive tests who are beyond 10 days from the initial positive test and are now symptom free are no longer infectious.
For patients with a high suspicion of COVID-19, a negative test should not rule out the infection. The number of false-negative results is not well known, though the resultant risk is “substantial.” A number of factors affect the likelihood of a false-negative test, including when the sample was collected relative to the timing of illness and the type of specimen collected; for example, nasopharyngeal swabs are more likely to be accurate vs nasal or throat specimens. Repeat or serial testing increases the sensitivity but may not always be available. Although rRT-PCR is the current criterion standard, more inclusive consensus-based criteria are likely to emerge because of the concern about these false-negative results.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Information about COVID has evolved so quickly that it can be difficult for clinicians to feel confident that they are staying current. These summaries include links to our reference article on diagnosis of COVID-19, which is constantly updated to make sure you have the latest information.
Diagnostic testing for COVID-19 is critical. No one disputes that. But what is in dispute is whom to test, when to test, how to test, what to do while waiting for results, and how accurate those results are when you finally get them.
Here are the answers to those questions, based on the current information.
Whom to test. This is the (relatively) easy part. The ideal answer is that everyone should be tested. The Infectious Diseases Society of America issued tier-based recommendations way back in March, and they still apply. First priority continues to be patients who are ill, healthcare workers, and those with known exposure. But to truly figure out the amount of community spread in a given area, we need to test people who do not have a clear indication for testing. That is particularly true as more people return to work and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued guidelines for workplaces to establish testing programs. Universal testing is recommended for some high-risk settings, such as nursing homes.
One key change: CDC no longer recommends testing to determine whether someone with a known infection is still infectious.
When to test. People with any symptoms suggestive of COVID should be tested, ideally as soon as feasible. But given the ongoing shortages of tests, that may not be possible, particularly for those requiring only symptomatic care. Rather, these patients should be treated as probable cases, with appropriate instructions regarding quarantine. Testing of those with known exposures ideally should be done about 5 days after exposure.
How to test. Only viral nucleic acid or antigen tests should be used to diagnose acute illness. CDC does not currently recommend using serologic assays, now broadly available, for diagnosis of acute infection, though they obviously play an important role in understanding the transmission dynamic of the virus in the general population.
Testing strategies vary from state to state and even within communities in a single state. It is recommended that clinicians check with their own local or state health department for specifics on tests available, indications for testing, and processing details. While often forgotten, it is worth emphasizing that no diagnostic tests have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Rather, they are available under emergency use authorization (EUA), meaning that they have not been fully vetted by the FDA.
In late July, the FDA expanded authorization for real-time reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) molecular assays, utilizing nasal or nasopharyngeal swabs, to permit testing of all persons, regardless of exposure history or symptoms. The FDA maintains a list of all approved diagnostic tests and corresponding labs. Patients will have to get what is available via their health department or insurance plan.
Two point-of-care antigen tests using nasopharyngeal or nasal samples have been issued an EUA. These tests can be used only in settings with a valid CLIA certificate.
Several commercial laboratories have received approval to process diagnostic tests using patients’ self-collected saliva rather than swabs. One lab has now received authorization for in-home testing without any input from a clinician. These testing options can be a boon for patients who have symptoms or exposure and for whatever reason are unable to get to a diagnostic site. These samples are collected at home and mailed to a lab. Note that these tests are not yet widely available.
Waiting for results. If waiting for results meant a day or even a couple of days, the answer to this one would be easier. But if the wait extends to 1 and even sometimes 2 weeks, then the test is not able to meaningfully guide clinical decisions. The latest guidance from the CDC is that individuals with symptoms suggestive of COVID who do not require hospitalization should remain at home in self-quarantine for at least 10 days from symptom onset. Asymptomatic individuals with a known exposure to someone else with COVID, or participation in a high-risk event like an indoor gathering involving more than 10 persons, should self-quarantine either until they receive a negative test result or 14 days after the exposure.
Accuracy of results. A positive rRT-PCR antigen test is highly accurate, indicating presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA. There appears to be no significant cross-reactivity with other respiratory viruses or even other coronaviruses. A small study conducted in Korea suggests that patients with persistent positive tests who are beyond 10 days from the initial positive test and are now symptom free are no longer infectious.
For patients with a high suspicion of COVID-19, a negative test should not rule out the infection. The number of false-negative results is not well known, though the resultant risk is “substantial.” A number of factors affect the likelihood of a false-negative test, including when the sample was collected relative to the timing of illness and the type of specimen collected; for example, nasopharyngeal swabs are more likely to be accurate vs nasal or throat specimens. Repeat or serial testing increases the sensitivity but may not always be available. Although rRT-PCR is the current criterion standard, more inclusive consensus-based criteria are likely to emerge because of the concern about these false-negative results.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
System provides ‘faster, less invasive’ method for breast cancer detection
A system designed for resource-limited settings provides rapid cancer profiling and requires “scant” cellular specimens, according to researchers.
The automated image cytometry system is called CytoPAN. In preclinical experiments, CytoPAN provided accurate cancer detection in 1 hour using as few as 50 cells.
In a prospective study of 68 breast cancer patients, CytoPAN detected cancer with 100% accuracy. The receptor subtyping accuracy was 96% for HER2 and 93% for estrogen and progesterone receptors.
Jouha Min, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and colleagues reported these findings in Science Translational Medicine.
The authors explained that the CytoPAN system is designed to address one of the biggest cancer challenges in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where more than two-thirds of cancer deaths occur: providing rapid, affordable diagnostics that enable patients to obtain locally available treatments.
Unfortunately, because of bottlenecks in specimen acquisition, complex handling logistics, a lack of pathologists, and limited laboratory infrastructure, diagnosis in many LMICs frequently takes months. Cancers typically are not diagnosed until advanced symptoms such as palpable mass lesions, weight loss, and malaise have become manifest.
Lesion assessment guides management
For women with suspicion of breast cancer, the authors noted, preoperative assessment of focal lesions for receptor status, presence of invasion, histologic type, and tumor grade are crucial for planning therapeutic management. For physicians to provide, for example, tamoxifen, which is commonly available at low cost in LMICs, they must know a patients’ hormone receptor status.
While core and open surgical biopsies yield abundant tissue for embedding, sectioning, and staining for subsequent histopathological analysis, they entail lengthy work flow and call for expensive instrumentation and a trained workforce, the authors noted.
Fine needle aspirations (FNAs) can be performed by nonphysicians after minimal training with very low complication rates. The much smaller–gauge needles (20-25 gauge) used in FNAs are generally well tolerated, the authors added.
This is why CytoPAN was designed for use with specimens obtained via FNA of palpable mass lesions.
Self-contained design
The CytoPAN system was engineered as a self-contained, integrated cytometry platform enabling same-day diagnosis and treatment of breast lesions.
The system was designed to comply with the World Health Organization’s “ASSURED” criteria (affordable, sensitive, specific, user friendly, rapid and robust, equipment free, and deliverable to end users), and to be potentially operable by nonphysicians after brief training.
CytoPAN operators collect cells through minimally invasive FNAs and use lyophilized immunostaining kits with relevant antibodies (not requiring refrigeration). Operators perform imaging using the CytoPAN device, which is then subjected to an automated analysis algorithm with results displayed on a user interface.
CytoPAN classifies detected malignant cells according to four subtypes reflecting estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and HER2 status – luminal HER2-negative, luminal HER2-positive, HER2-positive, and triple-negative breast cancer. This is intended to facilitate informed treatment choices (e.g., a selective ER modulator, antiestrogen or aromatase inhibitor for ER/PR-positive patients; an anti-HER2 agent for HER2-positive patients).
The final diagnostic report from a given patient sample includes cancer cell population and molecular subtype distribution. The entire diagnostic procedure takes less than an hour. A repeat biopsy, should the sample be nondiagnostic, can be taken within an hour.
Murine, then human testing
A test of CytoPAN on FNA samples from mouse xenografts representing the spectrum of human breast cancer subtypes showed correct and reproducible molecular subtyping that matched well with flow cytometry reports derived from the same tumors.
To determine the clinical utility of CytoPAN, investigators enrolled 68 treatment-naive breast cancer patients who were referred for primary surgery at the Kyungpook National University Chilgok Hospital in Daegu, South Korea. FNA samples were obtained after visualization of breast masses by ultrasound or CT.
Surgical specimens and/or core biopsies were processed by routine pathology for “gold-standard” comparison. FNA samples had sufficient numbers of cells in 63 (93%) patients, with a mean number of cells among them of 1,308 (range, 93-11,985).
CytoPAN analysis correctly identified malignant breast cancer in 55 patients and benign lesions in 5 patients. Three cases were inconclusive because of low numbers of Quad-positive cells for further analysis. The authors pointed out that roughly 20% of biopsy samples in developed countries are deemed “nondiagnostic” because of insufficient cellular contents.
The authors’ summary underscored CytoPAN’s affordable system using cellular rather than tissue specimens, actionable results in an hour, lack of moving parts, multiplexed analysis, and user-friendly interface.
Cancer detection accuracy was 100% (no false negatives or false positives), and receptor subtyping accuracy was 97% for HER2 and 93% for ER/PR.
“Based on these results, we envision prospective clinical trials in remote, decentralized locations,” the authors wrote. The system is being tested further in Botswana.
“I find the data in this paper compelling – particularly for those patients presenting with a palpable mass on clinical exam. ... Certainly in resource-limited settings, this would have significant appeal,” William J. Gradishar, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview.
Dr. Gradishar explained that, while palpable masses that lead to a diagnosis of noninvasive disease alone are uncommon in the United States because of routine screening mammography, they may still be an issue in other parts of the world.
The authors received funding from the National Institutes of Health, the MGH Scholar Fund, and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Some authors disclosed relationships with Akili, Accure Health, ModeRNA, Tarveda, Lumicell, and Noul. Dr. Gradishar reported having no disclosures.
SOURCE: Min J et al. Sci Transl Med. 2020 Aug 5. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz9746.
A system designed for resource-limited settings provides rapid cancer profiling and requires “scant” cellular specimens, according to researchers.
The automated image cytometry system is called CytoPAN. In preclinical experiments, CytoPAN provided accurate cancer detection in 1 hour using as few as 50 cells.
In a prospective study of 68 breast cancer patients, CytoPAN detected cancer with 100% accuracy. The receptor subtyping accuracy was 96% for HER2 and 93% for estrogen and progesterone receptors.
Jouha Min, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and colleagues reported these findings in Science Translational Medicine.
The authors explained that the CytoPAN system is designed to address one of the biggest cancer challenges in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where more than two-thirds of cancer deaths occur: providing rapid, affordable diagnostics that enable patients to obtain locally available treatments.
Unfortunately, because of bottlenecks in specimen acquisition, complex handling logistics, a lack of pathologists, and limited laboratory infrastructure, diagnosis in many LMICs frequently takes months. Cancers typically are not diagnosed until advanced symptoms such as palpable mass lesions, weight loss, and malaise have become manifest.
Lesion assessment guides management
For women with suspicion of breast cancer, the authors noted, preoperative assessment of focal lesions for receptor status, presence of invasion, histologic type, and tumor grade are crucial for planning therapeutic management. For physicians to provide, for example, tamoxifen, which is commonly available at low cost in LMICs, they must know a patients’ hormone receptor status.
While core and open surgical biopsies yield abundant tissue for embedding, sectioning, and staining for subsequent histopathological analysis, they entail lengthy work flow and call for expensive instrumentation and a trained workforce, the authors noted.
Fine needle aspirations (FNAs) can be performed by nonphysicians after minimal training with very low complication rates. The much smaller–gauge needles (20-25 gauge) used in FNAs are generally well tolerated, the authors added.
This is why CytoPAN was designed for use with specimens obtained via FNA of palpable mass lesions.
Self-contained design
The CytoPAN system was engineered as a self-contained, integrated cytometry platform enabling same-day diagnosis and treatment of breast lesions.
The system was designed to comply with the World Health Organization’s “ASSURED” criteria (affordable, sensitive, specific, user friendly, rapid and robust, equipment free, and deliverable to end users), and to be potentially operable by nonphysicians after brief training.
CytoPAN operators collect cells through minimally invasive FNAs and use lyophilized immunostaining kits with relevant antibodies (not requiring refrigeration). Operators perform imaging using the CytoPAN device, which is then subjected to an automated analysis algorithm with results displayed on a user interface.
CytoPAN classifies detected malignant cells according to four subtypes reflecting estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and HER2 status – luminal HER2-negative, luminal HER2-positive, HER2-positive, and triple-negative breast cancer. This is intended to facilitate informed treatment choices (e.g., a selective ER modulator, antiestrogen or aromatase inhibitor for ER/PR-positive patients; an anti-HER2 agent for HER2-positive patients).
The final diagnostic report from a given patient sample includes cancer cell population and molecular subtype distribution. The entire diagnostic procedure takes less than an hour. A repeat biopsy, should the sample be nondiagnostic, can be taken within an hour.
Murine, then human testing
A test of CytoPAN on FNA samples from mouse xenografts representing the spectrum of human breast cancer subtypes showed correct and reproducible molecular subtyping that matched well with flow cytometry reports derived from the same tumors.
To determine the clinical utility of CytoPAN, investigators enrolled 68 treatment-naive breast cancer patients who were referred for primary surgery at the Kyungpook National University Chilgok Hospital in Daegu, South Korea. FNA samples were obtained after visualization of breast masses by ultrasound or CT.
Surgical specimens and/or core biopsies were processed by routine pathology for “gold-standard” comparison. FNA samples had sufficient numbers of cells in 63 (93%) patients, with a mean number of cells among them of 1,308 (range, 93-11,985).
CytoPAN analysis correctly identified malignant breast cancer in 55 patients and benign lesions in 5 patients. Three cases were inconclusive because of low numbers of Quad-positive cells for further analysis. The authors pointed out that roughly 20% of biopsy samples in developed countries are deemed “nondiagnostic” because of insufficient cellular contents.
The authors’ summary underscored CytoPAN’s affordable system using cellular rather than tissue specimens, actionable results in an hour, lack of moving parts, multiplexed analysis, and user-friendly interface.
Cancer detection accuracy was 100% (no false negatives or false positives), and receptor subtyping accuracy was 97% for HER2 and 93% for ER/PR.
“Based on these results, we envision prospective clinical trials in remote, decentralized locations,” the authors wrote. The system is being tested further in Botswana.
“I find the data in this paper compelling – particularly for those patients presenting with a palpable mass on clinical exam. ... Certainly in resource-limited settings, this would have significant appeal,” William J. Gradishar, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview.
Dr. Gradishar explained that, while palpable masses that lead to a diagnosis of noninvasive disease alone are uncommon in the United States because of routine screening mammography, they may still be an issue in other parts of the world.
The authors received funding from the National Institutes of Health, the MGH Scholar Fund, and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Some authors disclosed relationships with Akili, Accure Health, ModeRNA, Tarveda, Lumicell, and Noul. Dr. Gradishar reported having no disclosures.
SOURCE: Min J et al. Sci Transl Med. 2020 Aug 5. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz9746.
A system designed for resource-limited settings provides rapid cancer profiling and requires “scant” cellular specimens, according to researchers.
The automated image cytometry system is called CytoPAN. In preclinical experiments, CytoPAN provided accurate cancer detection in 1 hour using as few as 50 cells.
In a prospective study of 68 breast cancer patients, CytoPAN detected cancer with 100% accuracy. The receptor subtyping accuracy was 96% for HER2 and 93% for estrogen and progesterone receptors.
Jouha Min, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and colleagues reported these findings in Science Translational Medicine.
The authors explained that the CytoPAN system is designed to address one of the biggest cancer challenges in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where more than two-thirds of cancer deaths occur: providing rapid, affordable diagnostics that enable patients to obtain locally available treatments.
Unfortunately, because of bottlenecks in specimen acquisition, complex handling logistics, a lack of pathologists, and limited laboratory infrastructure, diagnosis in many LMICs frequently takes months. Cancers typically are not diagnosed until advanced symptoms such as palpable mass lesions, weight loss, and malaise have become manifest.
Lesion assessment guides management
For women with suspicion of breast cancer, the authors noted, preoperative assessment of focal lesions for receptor status, presence of invasion, histologic type, and tumor grade are crucial for planning therapeutic management. For physicians to provide, for example, tamoxifen, which is commonly available at low cost in LMICs, they must know a patients’ hormone receptor status.
While core and open surgical biopsies yield abundant tissue for embedding, sectioning, and staining for subsequent histopathological analysis, they entail lengthy work flow and call for expensive instrumentation and a trained workforce, the authors noted.
Fine needle aspirations (FNAs) can be performed by nonphysicians after minimal training with very low complication rates. The much smaller–gauge needles (20-25 gauge) used in FNAs are generally well tolerated, the authors added.
This is why CytoPAN was designed for use with specimens obtained via FNA of palpable mass lesions.
Self-contained design
The CytoPAN system was engineered as a self-contained, integrated cytometry platform enabling same-day diagnosis and treatment of breast lesions.
The system was designed to comply with the World Health Organization’s “ASSURED” criteria (affordable, sensitive, specific, user friendly, rapid and robust, equipment free, and deliverable to end users), and to be potentially operable by nonphysicians after brief training.
CytoPAN operators collect cells through minimally invasive FNAs and use lyophilized immunostaining kits with relevant antibodies (not requiring refrigeration). Operators perform imaging using the CytoPAN device, which is then subjected to an automated analysis algorithm with results displayed on a user interface.
CytoPAN classifies detected malignant cells according to four subtypes reflecting estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), and HER2 status – luminal HER2-negative, luminal HER2-positive, HER2-positive, and triple-negative breast cancer. This is intended to facilitate informed treatment choices (e.g., a selective ER modulator, antiestrogen or aromatase inhibitor for ER/PR-positive patients; an anti-HER2 agent for HER2-positive patients).
The final diagnostic report from a given patient sample includes cancer cell population and molecular subtype distribution. The entire diagnostic procedure takes less than an hour. A repeat biopsy, should the sample be nondiagnostic, can be taken within an hour.
Murine, then human testing
A test of CytoPAN on FNA samples from mouse xenografts representing the spectrum of human breast cancer subtypes showed correct and reproducible molecular subtyping that matched well with flow cytometry reports derived from the same tumors.
To determine the clinical utility of CytoPAN, investigators enrolled 68 treatment-naive breast cancer patients who were referred for primary surgery at the Kyungpook National University Chilgok Hospital in Daegu, South Korea. FNA samples were obtained after visualization of breast masses by ultrasound or CT.
Surgical specimens and/or core biopsies were processed by routine pathology for “gold-standard” comparison. FNA samples had sufficient numbers of cells in 63 (93%) patients, with a mean number of cells among them of 1,308 (range, 93-11,985).
CytoPAN analysis correctly identified malignant breast cancer in 55 patients and benign lesions in 5 patients. Three cases were inconclusive because of low numbers of Quad-positive cells for further analysis. The authors pointed out that roughly 20% of biopsy samples in developed countries are deemed “nondiagnostic” because of insufficient cellular contents.
The authors’ summary underscored CytoPAN’s affordable system using cellular rather than tissue specimens, actionable results in an hour, lack of moving parts, multiplexed analysis, and user-friendly interface.
Cancer detection accuracy was 100% (no false negatives or false positives), and receptor subtyping accuracy was 97% for HER2 and 93% for ER/PR.
“Based on these results, we envision prospective clinical trials in remote, decentralized locations,” the authors wrote. The system is being tested further in Botswana.
“I find the data in this paper compelling – particularly for those patients presenting with a palpable mass on clinical exam. ... Certainly in resource-limited settings, this would have significant appeal,” William J. Gradishar, MD, of Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview.
Dr. Gradishar explained that, while palpable masses that lead to a diagnosis of noninvasive disease alone are uncommon in the United States because of routine screening mammography, they may still be an issue in other parts of the world.
The authors received funding from the National Institutes of Health, the MGH Scholar Fund, and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Some authors disclosed relationships with Akili, Accure Health, ModeRNA, Tarveda, Lumicell, and Noul. Dr. Gradishar reported having no disclosures.
SOURCE: Min J et al. Sci Transl Med. 2020 Aug 5. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz9746.
FROM SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Immigrant hospitalist dilemma takes stage at HM20 Virtual
Manpreet Malik, MD, a hospitalist at Emory University, takes care of patients with COVID-19 at Grady Memorial Hospital in downtown Atlanta. Born in India but living in the United States for more than 10 years, he is awaiting permanent resident status. At the current pace of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, that may be decades away.
Dr. Malik lives and works in the United States on an H-1B visa, which is based on employment in a specialty occupation. Although he has a job that he loves, his immigrant status, social life, and geographic location in the United States is, technically, entirely dependent on doing that job.
“For single-income families with doctors on visas, the pandemic brings anxiety and uncertainty about legal status in the U.S. in case the breadwinner gets sick, disabled or unemployed,” he said.
In a presentation to be given at the HM20 Virtual, hosted by the Society of Hospital Medicine, Dr. Malik will offer perspective on the current challenges facing immigrant hospitalists and health care workers, especially in a U.S. health care system stretched thin and one in which many health professionals born outside the United States are working on the front lines. These challenges should be motivation to make legislative changes to give these health care workers more stability, flexibility, and peace of mind, he said.
The talk – to be given along with HM20 course director Benji Mathews, MD, SFHM, and called “The Immigrant Hospitalist: Navigating the Uncertain Terrain During COVID-19” – will describe a long-standing issue and outline a path forward, the two physicians said.
“The objective of this talk is to really highlight the contributions of these physicians and health care workers and also to provide a call for action for our hospitalist colleagues. This talk paints a picture of what my family and thousands of the other immigrant health care worker families are going through,” Dr. Malik said.
Dr. Mathews said that many physicians do not have benefits they can fall back on should they fall ill. And without the jobs their visas are based on, they could face deportation.
“That’s extreme – but the pathway towards that is very much there,” said Dr. Mathews, who was born in the Middle East and immigrated to the United States, received a green card, and later his citizenship. He now advocates for immigrant health and immigrant health care workers.
Dr. Malik and Dr. Mathews recently published a perspective piece in the Journal of Hospital Medicine. In it, they pointed out that 16.4% of health care workers are immigrants, and 29% of physicians are immigrants. Among practicing hospitalists, 32% are international medical graduates. They called for reform to visa regulations to allow physicians who are immigrants to travel to areas where they are most needed during the pandemic, for extensions of visa deadlines, and exemption from future immigration bans or limitations. These measures would only bolster the health care workforce that is under such strain during the pandemic, they write. (J Hosp Med. 2020 Aug;15[8]:505-506)
Dr. Malik said that, even while under added personal strain caused by the uncertainty of the past several months, he has never questioned his decision to be a physician in the United States.
“Now, more than ever, there is a sense of purpose and a passion to make a difference for our patients,” he said.
“I think most of us get into medicine and become hospitalists because we want to care for people, because we want to serve, because we want to be able to take care of sick, hospitalized patients, and that can be anywhere in the world, whether you’re in India serving a population that you grew up with or whether you’re in the U.S. serving the population that are your neighbors, your friends, your community, or people that are vulnerable. You’re serving humanity, and that is the ultimate goal.”
SHM advocacy on immigration issues
SHM has been advocating for more equitable skilled-immigration system, recognizing that from visa-backlogs to per-country caps, unfair visa restrictions have limited the United States’ ability to adequately expand its health care workforce.
The Society has consistently advocated on Capitol Hill for visa and skilled-immigration reform and has championed several significant immigration bills, including the following:
The Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act
- This legislation will eliminate per-country caps on green cards and convert the system into a “first-come, first-serve” system. This will help ensure certain nationalize are not disproportionally impacted by excessive green card backlogs.
- This legislation has passed the House of Representatives. Send a message to your Senator asking them to cosponsor this legislation.
The Conrad State 30 Physician Reauthorization Act
- This legislation will renew the Conrad State 30 program, which allows physicians on a J-1 visa to remain in the United States if they work in an underserved region for a minimum of three years. This legislation also included additional employment protection claims.
The Healthcare Workforce Resilience Act
- This legislation will recapture 40,000 unused immigrant visas for foreign doctors (15,000) and nurses (25,000), as well as provide visas for their spouse and children.
- This legislation will only be in effect for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
To join SHM in supporting our immigrant clinicians, you can send a message to your representatives in support of these bills by visiting hospitalmedicine.org/takeaction.
Manpreet Malik, MD, a hospitalist at Emory University, takes care of patients with COVID-19 at Grady Memorial Hospital in downtown Atlanta. Born in India but living in the United States for more than 10 years, he is awaiting permanent resident status. At the current pace of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, that may be decades away.
Dr. Malik lives and works in the United States on an H-1B visa, which is based on employment in a specialty occupation. Although he has a job that he loves, his immigrant status, social life, and geographic location in the United States is, technically, entirely dependent on doing that job.
“For single-income families with doctors on visas, the pandemic brings anxiety and uncertainty about legal status in the U.S. in case the breadwinner gets sick, disabled or unemployed,” he said.
In a presentation to be given at the HM20 Virtual, hosted by the Society of Hospital Medicine, Dr. Malik will offer perspective on the current challenges facing immigrant hospitalists and health care workers, especially in a U.S. health care system stretched thin and one in which many health professionals born outside the United States are working on the front lines. These challenges should be motivation to make legislative changes to give these health care workers more stability, flexibility, and peace of mind, he said.
The talk – to be given along with HM20 course director Benji Mathews, MD, SFHM, and called “The Immigrant Hospitalist: Navigating the Uncertain Terrain During COVID-19” – will describe a long-standing issue and outline a path forward, the two physicians said.
“The objective of this talk is to really highlight the contributions of these physicians and health care workers and also to provide a call for action for our hospitalist colleagues. This talk paints a picture of what my family and thousands of the other immigrant health care worker families are going through,” Dr. Malik said.
Dr. Mathews said that many physicians do not have benefits they can fall back on should they fall ill. And without the jobs their visas are based on, they could face deportation.
“That’s extreme – but the pathway towards that is very much there,” said Dr. Mathews, who was born in the Middle East and immigrated to the United States, received a green card, and later his citizenship. He now advocates for immigrant health and immigrant health care workers.
Dr. Malik and Dr. Mathews recently published a perspective piece in the Journal of Hospital Medicine. In it, they pointed out that 16.4% of health care workers are immigrants, and 29% of physicians are immigrants. Among practicing hospitalists, 32% are international medical graduates. They called for reform to visa regulations to allow physicians who are immigrants to travel to areas where they are most needed during the pandemic, for extensions of visa deadlines, and exemption from future immigration bans or limitations. These measures would only bolster the health care workforce that is under such strain during the pandemic, they write. (J Hosp Med. 2020 Aug;15[8]:505-506)
Dr. Malik said that, even while under added personal strain caused by the uncertainty of the past several months, he has never questioned his decision to be a physician in the United States.
“Now, more than ever, there is a sense of purpose and a passion to make a difference for our patients,” he said.
“I think most of us get into medicine and become hospitalists because we want to care for people, because we want to serve, because we want to be able to take care of sick, hospitalized patients, and that can be anywhere in the world, whether you’re in India serving a population that you grew up with or whether you’re in the U.S. serving the population that are your neighbors, your friends, your community, or people that are vulnerable. You’re serving humanity, and that is the ultimate goal.”
SHM advocacy on immigration issues
SHM has been advocating for more equitable skilled-immigration system, recognizing that from visa-backlogs to per-country caps, unfair visa restrictions have limited the United States’ ability to adequately expand its health care workforce.
The Society has consistently advocated on Capitol Hill for visa and skilled-immigration reform and has championed several significant immigration bills, including the following:
The Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act
- This legislation will eliminate per-country caps on green cards and convert the system into a “first-come, first-serve” system. This will help ensure certain nationalize are not disproportionally impacted by excessive green card backlogs.
- This legislation has passed the House of Representatives. Send a message to your Senator asking them to cosponsor this legislation.
The Conrad State 30 Physician Reauthorization Act
- This legislation will renew the Conrad State 30 program, which allows physicians on a J-1 visa to remain in the United States if they work in an underserved region for a minimum of three years. This legislation also included additional employment protection claims.
The Healthcare Workforce Resilience Act
- This legislation will recapture 40,000 unused immigrant visas for foreign doctors (15,000) and nurses (25,000), as well as provide visas for their spouse and children.
- This legislation will only be in effect for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
To join SHM in supporting our immigrant clinicians, you can send a message to your representatives in support of these bills by visiting hospitalmedicine.org/takeaction.
Manpreet Malik, MD, a hospitalist at Emory University, takes care of patients with COVID-19 at Grady Memorial Hospital in downtown Atlanta. Born in India but living in the United States for more than 10 years, he is awaiting permanent resident status. At the current pace of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, that may be decades away.
Dr. Malik lives and works in the United States on an H-1B visa, which is based on employment in a specialty occupation. Although he has a job that he loves, his immigrant status, social life, and geographic location in the United States is, technically, entirely dependent on doing that job.
“For single-income families with doctors on visas, the pandemic brings anxiety and uncertainty about legal status in the U.S. in case the breadwinner gets sick, disabled or unemployed,” he said.
In a presentation to be given at the HM20 Virtual, hosted by the Society of Hospital Medicine, Dr. Malik will offer perspective on the current challenges facing immigrant hospitalists and health care workers, especially in a U.S. health care system stretched thin and one in which many health professionals born outside the United States are working on the front lines. These challenges should be motivation to make legislative changes to give these health care workers more stability, flexibility, and peace of mind, he said.
The talk – to be given along with HM20 course director Benji Mathews, MD, SFHM, and called “The Immigrant Hospitalist: Navigating the Uncertain Terrain During COVID-19” – will describe a long-standing issue and outline a path forward, the two physicians said.
“The objective of this talk is to really highlight the contributions of these physicians and health care workers and also to provide a call for action for our hospitalist colleagues. This talk paints a picture of what my family and thousands of the other immigrant health care worker families are going through,” Dr. Malik said.
Dr. Mathews said that many physicians do not have benefits they can fall back on should they fall ill. And without the jobs their visas are based on, they could face deportation.
“That’s extreme – but the pathway towards that is very much there,” said Dr. Mathews, who was born in the Middle East and immigrated to the United States, received a green card, and later his citizenship. He now advocates for immigrant health and immigrant health care workers.
Dr. Malik and Dr. Mathews recently published a perspective piece in the Journal of Hospital Medicine. In it, they pointed out that 16.4% of health care workers are immigrants, and 29% of physicians are immigrants. Among practicing hospitalists, 32% are international medical graduates. They called for reform to visa regulations to allow physicians who are immigrants to travel to areas where they are most needed during the pandemic, for extensions of visa deadlines, and exemption from future immigration bans or limitations. These measures would only bolster the health care workforce that is under such strain during the pandemic, they write. (J Hosp Med. 2020 Aug;15[8]:505-506)
Dr. Malik said that, even while under added personal strain caused by the uncertainty of the past several months, he has never questioned his decision to be a physician in the United States.
“Now, more than ever, there is a sense of purpose and a passion to make a difference for our patients,” he said.
“I think most of us get into medicine and become hospitalists because we want to care for people, because we want to serve, because we want to be able to take care of sick, hospitalized patients, and that can be anywhere in the world, whether you’re in India serving a population that you grew up with or whether you’re in the U.S. serving the population that are your neighbors, your friends, your community, or people that are vulnerable. You’re serving humanity, and that is the ultimate goal.”
SHM advocacy on immigration issues
SHM has been advocating for more equitable skilled-immigration system, recognizing that from visa-backlogs to per-country caps, unfair visa restrictions have limited the United States’ ability to adequately expand its health care workforce.
The Society has consistently advocated on Capitol Hill for visa and skilled-immigration reform and has championed several significant immigration bills, including the following:
The Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act
- This legislation will eliminate per-country caps on green cards and convert the system into a “first-come, first-serve” system. This will help ensure certain nationalize are not disproportionally impacted by excessive green card backlogs.
- This legislation has passed the House of Representatives. Send a message to your Senator asking them to cosponsor this legislation.
The Conrad State 30 Physician Reauthorization Act
- This legislation will renew the Conrad State 30 program, which allows physicians on a J-1 visa to remain in the United States if they work in an underserved region for a minimum of three years. This legislation also included additional employment protection claims.
The Healthcare Workforce Resilience Act
- This legislation will recapture 40,000 unused immigrant visas for foreign doctors (15,000) and nurses (25,000), as well as provide visas for their spouse and children.
- This legislation will only be in effect for the duration of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
To join SHM in supporting our immigrant clinicians, you can send a message to your representatives in support of these bills by visiting hospitalmedicine.org/takeaction.
HM20 Virtual: Experts to discuss structural racism in hospital medicine
Nathan Chomilo, MD, the Medicaid medical director for the state of Minnesota and assistant adjunct professor of pediatrics at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, was prepared to deliver a talk on structural racism in the U.S. health care system at Hospital Medicine 2020 meeting (HM20) in April 2020. But that changed in the COVID-19 era.
When the pandemic hit, the problems Dr. Chomilo was going to point out began to play out dramatically around the country: Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people – many of them under-insured; in high-exposure, frontline jobs; and already burdened with health comorbidities – are at a higher risk of contracting COVID-19 and dying from it.
He will now be giving his talk at HM20 Virtual in a session called “Structural Racism and Bias in Hospital Medicine During Two Pandemics,” with the powerful narrative of COVID-19 to get his message to sink in:
“It’s something that’s been going on since the start of our country,” said Dr. Chomilo, who is also a founding member of Minnesota Doctors for Health Equity. Physicians, he said, participated in upholding the institution of slavery by trying to describe the physical discrepancies between White people and non-White people.
Now, the way health care is provided in the United States fundamentally favors Whites over Black, Indigenous, and Latinx patients.
“We have a health care system here in the United States that is based on employer-sponsored insurance,” he said. “And who has had access to those jobs over the course of our country’s history has been mostly White people.” That impacts who is more at risk of contracting the virus, who is able to shelter in place, and who has the financial reserves to withstand furloughs and unemployment.
In a recent blog post in Health Affairs, Dr. Chomilo and his coauthors discussed articles from the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association that try to offer an ethical framework for allocating scarce medical resources – such as intensive-care beds and ventilators – during the pandemic.
“Unfortunately, neither article acknowledged the structural racial inequities that inherently bias its proposals, nor did either piece adequately acknowledge how its care rationing plan might worsen already racially disparate health outcomes,” Dr. Chomilo and his coauthors wrote. For instance, the life expectancy of a White female in the United States is 81 years, compared with 72 years for Black males, and any allocation plan that prioritizes preserving years of life would automatically be tilted against black patients.
In his talk, Dr. Chomilo will also discuss how physicians can make a difference by looking at their own perceptions and habits and then start helping others and the systems in which they work.
“The first thing is, we have to look at ourselves,” he said.
In the same session, Benji Mathews, MD, SFHM – chief of hospital medicine at Regions Hospital in St. Paul, Minn., which is part of HealthPartners; associate professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; and the Annual Conference’s course director – said he will be discussing the way social inequities are “patterned by place” and how resources for staying healthy vary neighborhood to neighborhood. He will point to dense housing and multigenerational households as a chief driver of COVID-19 infection risk. People of color are often “first fired, last hired, and in the front lines of fire,” he said, and they are experiencing a more severe impact from the pandemic.
And he will get deeper into the other disparities that track along racial lines, such as insurance disparities. For instance, the percentage of African Americans on Medicaid is three times as high as the percentage of White, non-Hispanic patients, he said.
Dr. Mathews will also discuss race’s role in the biases that everyone has and how health care professionals might, with deliberate reflection, be able to reshape or mitigate their own biases and deliver care more equitably.
“The associations we have, and our biases, are not necessarily declared beliefs or even reflect our stances that we explicitly endorse – sometimes it comes through in our default stance, and generally favor our in-group,” he said. “These implicit biases are malleable, so that allows us some hope. There are some ways they can be unlearned or progressively acted upon with some coaching – some active, intentional development.”
Structural Racism and Bias in Hospital Medicine During Two Pandemics
Nathan Chomilo, MD, the Medicaid medical director for the state of Minnesota and assistant adjunct professor of pediatrics at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, was prepared to deliver a talk on structural racism in the U.S. health care system at Hospital Medicine 2020 meeting (HM20) in April 2020. But that changed in the COVID-19 era.
When the pandemic hit, the problems Dr. Chomilo was going to point out began to play out dramatically around the country: Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people – many of them under-insured; in high-exposure, frontline jobs; and already burdened with health comorbidities – are at a higher risk of contracting COVID-19 and dying from it.
He will now be giving his talk at HM20 Virtual in a session called “Structural Racism and Bias in Hospital Medicine During Two Pandemics,” with the powerful narrative of COVID-19 to get his message to sink in:
“It’s something that’s been going on since the start of our country,” said Dr. Chomilo, who is also a founding member of Minnesota Doctors for Health Equity. Physicians, he said, participated in upholding the institution of slavery by trying to describe the physical discrepancies between White people and non-White people.
Now, the way health care is provided in the United States fundamentally favors Whites over Black, Indigenous, and Latinx patients.
“We have a health care system here in the United States that is based on employer-sponsored insurance,” he said. “And who has had access to those jobs over the course of our country’s history has been mostly White people.” That impacts who is more at risk of contracting the virus, who is able to shelter in place, and who has the financial reserves to withstand furloughs and unemployment.
In a recent blog post in Health Affairs, Dr. Chomilo and his coauthors discussed articles from the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association that try to offer an ethical framework for allocating scarce medical resources – such as intensive-care beds and ventilators – during the pandemic.
“Unfortunately, neither article acknowledged the structural racial inequities that inherently bias its proposals, nor did either piece adequately acknowledge how its care rationing plan might worsen already racially disparate health outcomes,” Dr. Chomilo and his coauthors wrote. For instance, the life expectancy of a White female in the United States is 81 years, compared with 72 years for Black males, and any allocation plan that prioritizes preserving years of life would automatically be tilted against black patients.
In his talk, Dr. Chomilo will also discuss how physicians can make a difference by looking at their own perceptions and habits and then start helping others and the systems in which they work.
“The first thing is, we have to look at ourselves,” he said.
In the same session, Benji Mathews, MD, SFHM – chief of hospital medicine at Regions Hospital in St. Paul, Minn., which is part of HealthPartners; associate professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; and the Annual Conference’s course director – said he will be discussing the way social inequities are “patterned by place” and how resources for staying healthy vary neighborhood to neighborhood. He will point to dense housing and multigenerational households as a chief driver of COVID-19 infection risk. People of color are often “first fired, last hired, and in the front lines of fire,” he said, and they are experiencing a more severe impact from the pandemic.
And he will get deeper into the other disparities that track along racial lines, such as insurance disparities. For instance, the percentage of African Americans on Medicaid is three times as high as the percentage of White, non-Hispanic patients, he said.
Dr. Mathews will also discuss race’s role in the biases that everyone has and how health care professionals might, with deliberate reflection, be able to reshape or mitigate their own biases and deliver care more equitably.
“The associations we have, and our biases, are not necessarily declared beliefs or even reflect our stances that we explicitly endorse – sometimes it comes through in our default stance, and generally favor our in-group,” he said. “These implicit biases are malleable, so that allows us some hope. There are some ways they can be unlearned or progressively acted upon with some coaching – some active, intentional development.”
Structural Racism and Bias in Hospital Medicine During Two Pandemics
Nathan Chomilo, MD, the Medicaid medical director for the state of Minnesota and assistant adjunct professor of pediatrics at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, was prepared to deliver a talk on structural racism in the U.S. health care system at Hospital Medicine 2020 meeting (HM20) in April 2020. But that changed in the COVID-19 era.
When the pandemic hit, the problems Dr. Chomilo was going to point out began to play out dramatically around the country: Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people – many of them under-insured; in high-exposure, frontline jobs; and already burdened with health comorbidities – are at a higher risk of contracting COVID-19 and dying from it.
He will now be giving his talk at HM20 Virtual in a session called “Structural Racism and Bias in Hospital Medicine During Two Pandemics,” with the powerful narrative of COVID-19 to get his message to sink in:
“It’s something that’s been going on since the start of our country,” said Dr. Chomilo, who is also a founding member of Minnesota Doctors for Health Equity. Physicians, he said, participated in upholding the institution of slavery by trying to describe the physical discrepancies between White people and non-White people.
Now, the way health care is provided in the United States fundamentally favors Whites over Black, Indigenous, and Latinx patients.
“We have a health care system here in the United States that is based on employer-sponsored insurance,” he said. “And who has had access to those jobs over the course of our country’s history has been mostly White people.” That impacts who is more at risk of contracting the virus, who is able to shelter in place, and who has the financial reserves to withstand furloughs and unemployment.
In a recent blog post in Health Affairs, Dr. Chomilo and his coauthors discussed articles from the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association that try to offer an ethical framework for allocating scarce medical resources – such as intensive-care beds and ventilators – during the pandemic.
“Unfortunately, neither article acknowledged the structural racial inequities that inherently bias its proposals, nor did either piece adequately acknowledge how its care rationing plan might worsen already racially disparate health outcomes,” Dr. Chomilo and his coauthors wrote. For instance, the life expectancy of a White female in the United States is 81 years, compared with 72 years for Black males, and any allocation plan that prioritizes preserving years of life would automatically be tilted against black patients.
In his talk, Dr. Chomilo will also discuss how physicians can make a difference by looking at their own perceptions and habits and then start helping others and the systems in which they work.
“The first thing is, we have to look at ourselves,” he said.
In the same session, Benji Mathews, MD, SFHM – chief of hospital medicine at Regions Hospital in St. Paul, Minn., which is part of HealthPartners; associate professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; and the Annual Conference’s course director – said he will be discussing the way social inequities are “patterned by place” and how resources for staying healthy vary neighborhood to neighborhood. He will point to dense housing and multigenerational households as a chief driver of COVID-19 infection risk. People of color are often “first fired, last hired, and in the front lines of fire,” he said, and they are experiencing a more severe impact from the pandemic.
And he will get deeper into the other disparities that track along racial lines, such as insurance disparities. For instance, the percentage of African Americans on Medicaid is three times as high as the percentage of White, non-Hispanic patients, he said.
Dr. Mathews will also discuss race’s role in the biases that everyone has and how health care professionals might, with deliberate reflection, be able to reshape or mitigate their own biases and deliver care more equitably.
“The associations we have, and our biases, are not necessarily declared beliefs or even reflect our stances that we explicitly endorse – sometimes it comes through in our default stance, and generally favor our in-group,” he said. “These implicit biases are malleable, so that allows us some hope. There are some ways they can be unlearned or progressively acted upon with some coaching – some active, intentional development.”
Structural Racism and Bias in Hospital Medicine During Two Pandemics