MicroRNA Could Be a Biomarker of MS

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Study results could provide an objective measure to complement clinical observations in the diagnosis of MS.

SAN DIEGO—Absence of miR-219, a microRNA (miRNA), in CSF could be a biomarker of multiple sclerosis (MS), according to data presented at the ACTRIMS 2018 Forum. If confirmed, the results could provide an objective measure to improve the diagnosis of MS.

When demyelination occurs in healthy individuals, remyelination follows. In the latter process, oligodendrocyte precursor cells repopulate the demyelinated area and create new myelin. Although large numbers of these cells surround new MS lesions, the precursor cells may fail to differentiate into mature oligodendrocytes, and thus fail to remyelinate the lesions. Data suggest that miR-219 is necessary for oligodendrocyte precursor cell differentiation in mice and rats.

Brigit A. de Jong, MD, PhD, a neurologist at Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen, the Netherlands, and colleagues found decreased miR-219 expression in the tissue of patients with MS, compared with healthy controls. To investigate whether CSF levels of miR-219 could be a biomarker of MS, the investigators performed quantitative polymerase chain reaction on samples taken from patients with MS and controls.

An Analysis of Three Cohorts

Dr. de Jong and colleagues analyzed three independent cohorts in their study. Cohort 1 included 24 participants, Cohort 2 included 115 participants, and Cohort 3 included 112 participants. Study participants included healthy controls and patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), relapsing-remitting MS, secondary progressive MS, primary progressive MS, inflammatory neurologic disease, noninflammatory neurologic disease, Alzheimer’s disease, or idiopathic intracranial hypertension. In all, 148 of the participants (59%) were women.

The absence of miR-219 in CSF was consistently associated with MS. In Cohort 1, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of progressive MS was 20.8, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable. In Cohort 2, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of MS or CIS was 2.6, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable. The odds ratio for a diagnosis of progressive MS was 3.6, compared with other neurologic disorders, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable in this cohort. In Cohort 3, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of MS was 39.7, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable.

Advantages of miRNAs

Detecting miRNAs in CSF is difficult because of the low levels at which they are present, said the authors. Nevertheless, miRNAs could be advantageous biomarkers because they are highly stable in body fluids, and the corresponding detection assays can be developed and multiplexed easily. Assessing the performance of miR-219 as a biomarker in situations in which MS cannot be differentiated from MS mimics will require future research, they concluded.

—Erik Greb

Suggested Reading

Agah E, Zardoui A, Saghazadeh A, et al. Osteopontin (OPN) as a CSF and blood biomarker for multiple sclerosis: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS One. 2018 Jan 18;13(1):e0190252.

Bruinsma IB, van Dijk M, Bridel C, et al. Regulator of oligodendrocyte maturation, miR-219, a potential biomarker for MS. J Neuroinflammation. 2017;14(1):235.

Puz P, Steposz A, Lasek-Bal A, et al. Diagnostic methods used in searching for markers of atrophy in patients with multiple sclerosis. Neurol Res. 2018;40(2):110-116.

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Study results could provide an objective measure to complement clinical observations in the diagnosis of MS.
Study results could provide an objective measure to complement clinical observations in the diagnosis of MS.

SAN DIEGO—Absence of miR-219, a microRNA (miRNA), in CSF could be a biomarker of multiple sclerosis (MS), according to data presented at the ACTRIMS 2018 Forum. If confirmed, the results could provide an objective measure to improve the diagnosis of MS.

When demyelination occurs in healthy individuals, remyelination follows. In the latter process, oligodendrocyte precursor cells repopulate the demyelinated area and create new myelin. Although large numbers of these cells surround new MS lesions, the precursor cells may fail to differentiate into mature oligodendrocytes, and thus fail to remyelinate the lesions. Data suggest that miR-219 is necessary for oligodendrocyte precursor cell differentiation in mice and rats.

Brigit A. de Jong, MD, PhD, a neurologist at Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen, the Netherlands, and colleagues found decreased miR-219 expression in the tissue of patients with MS, compared with healthy controls. To investigate whether CSF levels of miR-219 could be a biomarker of MS, the investigators performed quantitative polymerase chain reaction on samples taken from patients with MS and controls.

An Analysis of Three Cohorts

Dr. de Jong and colleagues analyzed three independent cohorts in their study. Cohort 1 included 24 participants, Cohort 2 included 115 participants, and Cohort 3 included 112 participants. Study participants included healthy controls and patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), relapsing-remitting MS, secondary progressive MS, primary progressive MS, inflammatory neurologic disease, noninflammatory neurologic disease, Alzheimer’s disease, or idiopathic intracranial hypertension. In all, 148 of the participants (59%) were women.

The absence of miR-219 in CSF was consistently associated with MS. In Cohort 1, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of progressive MS was 20.8, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable. In Cohort 2, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of MS or CIS was 2.6, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable. The odds ratio for a diagnosis of progressive MS was 3.6, compared with other neurologic disorders, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable in this cohort. In Cohort 3, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of MS was 39.7, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable.

Advantages of miRNAs

Detecting miRNAs in CSF is difficult because of the low levels at which they are present, said the authors. Nevertheless, miRNAs could be advantageous biomarkers because they are highly stable in body fluids, and the corresponding detection assays can be developed and multiplexed easily. Assessing the performance of miR-219 as a biomarker in situations in which MS cannot be differentiated from MS mimics will require future research, they concluded.

—Erik Greb

Suggested Reading

Agah E, Zardoui A, Saghazadeh A, et al. Osteopontin (OPN) as a CSF and blood biomarker for multiple sclerosis: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS One. 2018 Jan 18;13(1):e0190252.

Bruinsma IB, van Dijk M, Bridel C, et al. Regulator of oligodendrocyte maturation, miR-219, a potential biomarker for MS. J Neuroinflammation. 2017;14(1):235.

Puz P, Steposz A, Lasek-Bal A, et al. Diagnostic methods used in searching for markers of atrophy in patients with multiple sclerosis. Neurol Res. 2018;40(2):110-116.

SAN DIEGO—Absence of miR-219, a microRNA (miRNA), in CSF could be a biomarker of multiple sclerosis (MS), according to data presented at the ACTRIMS 2018 Forum. If confirmed, the results could provide an objective measure to improve the diagnosis of MS.

When demyelination occurs in healthy individuals, remyelination follows. In the latter process, oligodendrocyte precursor cells repopulate the demyelinated area and create new myelin. Although large numbers of these cells surround new MS lesions, the precursor cells may fail to differentiate into mature oligodendrocytes, and thus fail to remyelinate the lesions. Data suggest that miR-219 is necessary for oligodendrocyte precursor cell differentiation in mice and rats.

Brigit A. de Jong, MD, PhD, a neurologist at Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen, the Netherlands, and colleagues found decreased miR-219 expression in the tissue of patients with MS, compared with healthy controls. To investigate whether CSF levels of miR-219 could be a biomarker of MS, the investigators performed quantitative polymerase chain reaction on samples taken from patients with MS and controls.

An Analysis of Three Cohorts

Dr. de Jong and colleagues analyzed three independent cohorts in their study. Cohort 1 included 24 participants, Cohort 2 included 115 participants, and Cohort 3 included 112 participants. Study participants included healthy controls and patients with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), relapsing-remitting MS, secondary progressive MS, primary progressive MS, inflammatory neurologic disease, noninflammatory neurologic disease, Alzheimer’s disease, or idiopathic intracranial hypertension. In all, 148 of the participants (59%) were women.

The absence of miR-219 in CSF was consistently associated with MS. In Cohort 1, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of progressive MS was 20.8, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable. In Cohort 2, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of MS or CIS was 2.6, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable. The odds ratio for a diagnosis of progressive MS was 3.6, compared with other neurologic disorders, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable in this cohort. In Cohort 3, the odds ratio for a diagnosis of MS was 39.7, compared with controls, if CSF miR-219 was undetectable.

Advantages of miRNAs

Detecting miRNAs in CSF is difficult because of the low levels at which they are present, said the authors. Nevertheless, miRNAs could be advantageous biomarkers because they are highly stable in body fluids, and the corresponding detection assays can be developed and multiplexed easily. Assessing the performance of miR-219 as a biomarker in situations in which MS cannot be differentiated from MS mimics will require future research, they concluded.

—Erik Greb

Suggested Reading

Agah E, Zardoui A, Saghazadeh A, et al. Osteopontin (OPN) as a CSF and blood biomarker for multiple sclerosis: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS One. 2018 Jan 18;13(1):e0190252.

Bruinsma IB, van Dijk M, Bridel C, et al. Regulator of oligodendrocyte maturation, miR-219, a potential biomarker for MS. J Neuroinflammation. 2017;14(1):235.

Puz P, Steposz A, Lasek-Bal A, et al. Diagnostic methods used in searching for markers of atrophy in patients with multiple sclerosis. Neurol Res. 2018;40(2):110-116.

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Few acutely ill hospitalized patients receive VTE prophylaxis

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– Among patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses, the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) remained elevated 30-40 days after discharge, results from a large analysis of national data showed.

Moreover, only 7% of at-risk patients received VTE prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient setting.

Dr. Alpesh Amin

“The results of this real-world study imply that there is a significantly unmet medical need for effective VTE prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient continuum of care among patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses,” researchers led by Alpesh Amin, MD, wrote in a poster presented at the biennial summit of the Thrombosis & Hemostasis Societies of North America.

According to Dr. Amin, who chairs the department of medicine at the University of California, Irvine, hospitalized patients with acute medical illnesses face an increased risk for VTE during hospital discharge, mainly within 40 days following hospital admission. However, the treatment patterns of VTE prophylaxis in this patient population have not been well studied in the “real-world” setting. In an effort to improve this area of clinical practice, the researchers used the Marketscan database between Jan. 1, 2012, and June 30, 2015, to identify acutely ill hospitalized patients, such as those with heart failure, respiratory diseases, ischemic stroke, cancer, infectious diseases, and rheumatic diseases. The key outcomes of interest were the proportion of patients receiving inpatient and outpatient VTE prophylaxis and the proportion of patients with VTE events during and after the index hospitalization. They used Kaplan-Meier analysis to examine the risk for VTE events after the index inpatient admission.

The mean age of the 17,895 patients was 58 years, 55% were female, and most (77%) were from the Southern area of the United States. Their mean Charlson Comborbidity Index score prior to hospitalization was 2.2. Nearly all hospitals (87%) were urban based, nonteaching (95%), and large, with 68% having at least 300 beds. Nearly three-quarters of patients (72%) were hospitalized for infectious and respiratory diseases, and the mean length of stay was 5 days.

Dr. Amin and his associates found that 59% of hospitalized patients did not receive any VTE prophylaxis, while only 7% received prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient continuum of care. At the same time, cumulative VTE rates within 40 days of index admission were highest among patients hospitalized for infectious diseases and cancer (3.4% each), followed by those with heart failure (3.1%), respiratory diseases (2%), ischemic stroke (1.5%), and rheumatic diseases (1.3%). The cumulative VTE event rate for the overall study population within 40 days from index hospitalization was nearly 3%, with 60% of VTE events having occurred within 40 days.
 

The study was funded by Portola Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Amin reported having no financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Amin A et al. THSNA 2018, Poster 51.

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– Among patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses, the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) remained elevated 30-40 days after discharge, results from a large analysis of national data showed.

Moreover, only 7% of at-risk patients received VTE prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient setting.

Dr. Alpesh Amin

“The results of this real-world study imply that there is a significantly unmet medical need for effective VTE prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient continuum of care among patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses,” researchers led by Alpesh Amin, MD, wrote in a poster presented at the biennial summit of the Thrombosis & Hemostasis Societies of North America.

According to Dr. Amin, who chairs the department of medicine at the University of California, Irvine, hospitalized patients with acute medical illnesses face an increased risk for VTE during hospital discharge, mainly within 40 days following hospital admission. However, the treatment patterns of VTE prophylaxis in this patient population have not been well studied in the “real-world” setting. In an effort to improve this area of clinical practice, the researchers used the Marketscan database between Jan. 1, 2012, and June 30, 2015, to identify acutely ill hospitalized patients, such as those with heart failure, respiratory diseases, ischemic stroke, cancer, infectious diseases, and rheumatic diseases. The key outcomes of interest were the proportion of patients receiving inpatient and outpatient VTE prophylaxis and the proportion of patients with VTE events during and after the index hospitalization. They used Kaplan-Meier analysis to examine the risk for VTE events after the index inpatient admission.

The mean age of the 17,895 patients was 58 years, 55% were female, and most (77%) were from the Southern area of the United States. Their mean Charlson Comborbidity Index score prior to hospitalization was 2.2. Nearly all hospitals (87%) were urban based, nonteaching (95%), and large, with 68% having at least 300 beds. Nearly three-quarters of patients (72%) were hospitalized for infectious and respiratory diseases, and the mean length of stay was 5 days.

Dr. Amin and his associates found that 59% of hospitalized patients did not receive any VTE prophylaxis, while only 7% received prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient continuum of care. At the same time, cumulative VTE rates within 40 days of index admission were highest among patients hospitalized for infectious diseases and cancer (3.4% each), followed by those with heart failure (3.1%), respiratory diseases (2%), ischemic stroke (1.5%), and rheumatic diseases (1.3%). The cumulative VTE event rate for the overall study population within 40 days from index hospitalization was nearly 3%, with 60% of VTE events having occurred within 40 days.
 

The study was funded by Portola Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Amin reported having no financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Amin A et al. THSNA 2018, Poster 51.

 

– Among patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses, the risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) remained elevated 30-40 days after discharge, results from a large analysis of national data showed.

Moreover, only 7% of at-risk patients received VTE prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient setting.

Dr. Alpesh Amin

“The results of this real-world study imply that there is a significantly unmet medical need for effective VTE prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient continuum of care among patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses,” researchers led by Alpesh Amin, MD, wrote in a poster presented at the biennial summit of the Thrombosis & Hemostasis Societies of North America.

According to Dr. Amin, who chairs the department of medicine at the University of California, Irvine, hospitalized patients with acute medical illnesses face an increased risk for VTE during hospital discharge, mainly within 40 days following hospital admission. However, the treatment patterns of VTE prophylaxis in this patient population have not been well studied in the “real-world” setting. In an effort to improve this area of clinical practice, the researchers used the Marketscan database between Jan. 1, 2012, and June 30, 2015, to identify acutely ill hospitalized patients, such as those with heart failure, respiratory diseases, ischemic stroke, cancer, infectious diseases, and rheumatic diseases. The key outcomes of interest were the proportion of patients receiving inpatient and outpatient VTE prophylaxis and the proportion of patients with VTE events during and after the index hospitalization. They used Kaplan-Meier analysis to examine the risk for VTE events after the index inpatient admission.

The mean age of the 17,895 patients was 58 years, 55% were female, and most (77%) were from the Southern area of the United States. Their mean Charlson Comborbidity Index score prior to hospitalization was 2.2. Nearly all hospitals (87%) were urban based, nonteaching (95%), and large, with 68% having at least 300 beds. Nearly three-quarters of patients (72%) were hospitalized for infectious and respiratory diseases, and the mean length of stay was 5 days.

Dr. Amin and his associates found that 59% of hospitalized patients did not receive any VTE prophylaxis, while only 7% received prophylaxis in both the inpatient and outpatient continuum of care. At the same time, cumulative VTE rates within 40 days of index admission were highest among patients hospitalized for infectious diseases and cancer (3.4% each), followed by those with heart failure (3.1%), respiratory diseases (2%), ischemic stroke (1.5%), and rheumatic diseases (1.3%). The cumulative VTE event rate for the overall study population within 40 days from index hospitalization was nearly 3%, with 60% of VTE events having occurred within 40 days.
 

The study was funded by Portola Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Amin reported having no financial disclosures.

SOURCE: Amin A et al. THSNA 2018, Poster 51.

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REPORTING FROM THSNA 2018

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Key clinical point: There is a significant unmet medical need for VTE prophylaxis in the continuum of care of patients hospitalized for acute medical illnesses.

Major finding: Of the overall study population, only 7% received both inpatient and outpatient VTE prophylaxis.

Study details: An analysis of national data from 17,895 acutely ill hospitalized patients.

Disclosures: The study was funded by Portola Pharmaceuticals. The presenter reported having no financial conflicts.

Source: Amin A et al. THSNA 2018, Poster 51.

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Interventionalists eager for better bioresorbable stents

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Tue, 12/04/2018 - 11:40

 

– The published results with bioresorbable stents have been disappointing, but most interventionalists think such devices have the potential to prevail over drug-eluting stents by addressing unmet needs, judging from a debate on this topic that took place at CRT 2018 sponsored by the Cardiovascular Research Institute at Washington Hospital Center..

“There is a clinical need for bioresorbable stents [BRS] unless drug-eluting stents [DES] are perfect, and I think we agree that they are not perfect,” argued Gregg Stone, MD, director of cardiovascular research and education at Columbia University Medical Center, New York.

Ted Bosworth/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Gregg Stone
As the proponent of a debate premise that “there is an unmet need for BRS technology in the era of improved DES technology,” Dr. Stone focused on the persistent late target-lesion failure (TLF) rate with DES. He previewed data he and his coauthors are now preparing for publication that found that the risk of TLF is about 2% per year for every year of follow-up, extending out to 20 years.

“It does not matter what device you evaluate,” Dr. Stone said. Whether caused by late polymer sensitivity reactions, late strut fractures, or neoatherosclerosis formation, failure can occur suddenly after a decade or more in DES that were performing well up until that point, according to data cited by Dr. Stone. This is one of the key risks that BRS technology was designed to address.



“We now know that the bioresorbable scaffold is replaced by normal tissue at 3 years,” Dr. Stone said. He reported that he is encouraged by the absence of any scaffold thrombosis after 3 years in a recent series of 501 patients with a BRS that have been followed at least 4 years. “This is the first time that we have seen that,” he asserted, adding, “The concept is there.”

His debate opponent, Stephan Windecker, MD, director of invasive cardiology at the Swiss Cardiovascular Center in Bern, cited numerous studies to conclude that “there is clear inferiority” of BRS relative to DES for most important clinical outcomes, including TLF. Although he acknowledged late TLF does occur with DES devices, he contended that new design changes are at least as likely to mitigate risk in DES as improvements in BRS.

Ted Bosworth/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Stephan Windecker
“One of the shortcomings [of DES devices] has been scaffold thrombosis, but this may be related to strut thickness,” Dr. Windecker said. “As we move from early devices to new-generation DES [with thinner struts], there is evidence this risk is diminishing.” So far, there is no published evidence to support the premise that BRS will provide better long-term outcomes than DES, according to Dr. Windecker, who said that the higher rates of early TLF relative to DES devices is a hurdle for BRS devices even if risk of late TLF proves to be lower.

 

 


However, Dr. Stone suggested that reductions in strut thickness might be the answer for reduced TLF for both BRS and DES devices. If so, there are several reasons to believe that this would ultimately favor BRS as the dominant technology.

“We did not get there with the 150-mcm strut thickness scaffold, but now we have struts as thin as 80 mcm. I’m pretty confident that with smaller struts we will see great results,” countered Dr. Stone.

Returning to the theme that BRS devices address an unmet need, Dr. Stone contended that BRS is the preferred strategy if advances render BRS and drug-eluting stents equally safe and effective. Not least of the reasons is patient preference. “It is an undeniable fact that based on cultural, religious, or personal beliefs, many patients prefer not to live their lives with a permanently implanted device,” he said.

The audience agreed. Asked for a show of hands regarding whether bioresorbable stents technology has the potential to address an unmet need, the majority vote was overwhelmingly in favor of Dr. Stone’s position. Based on a visual vote count that seemed to clearly affirm that BRS addresses and unmet need, Dr. Stone contended that a statistical analysis would have had a P value “with about eight zeros after the decimal point.”

Dr. Stone reports a financial relationship with Reva Medical. Dr. Windecker reports financial relationships with Abbott, Boston Scientific, Biotronik, Edwards Lifesciences, Medtronic, and St. Jude.

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– The published results with bioresorbable stents have been disappointing, but most interventionalists think such devices have the potential to prevail over drug-eluting stents by addressing unmet needs, judging from a debate on this topic that took place at CRT 2018 sponsored by the Cardiovascular Research Institute at Washington Hospital Center..

“There is a clinical need for bioresorbable stents [BRS] unless drug-eluting stents [DES] are perfect, and I think we agree that they are not perfect,” argued Gregg Stone, MD, director of cardiovascular research and education at Columbia University Medical Center, New York.

Ted Bosworth/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Gregg Stone
As the proponent of a debate premise that “there is an unmet need for BRS technology in the era of improved DES technology,” Dr. Stone focused on the persistent late target-lesion failure (TLF) rate with DES. He previewed data he and his coauthors are now preparing for publication that found that the risk of TLF is about 2% per year for every year of follow-up, extending out to 20 years.

“It does not matter what device you evaluate,” Dr. Stone said. Whether caused by late polymer sensitivity reactions, late strut fractures, or neoatherosclerosis formation, failure can occur suddenly after a decade or more in DES that were performing well up until that point, according to data cited by Dr. Stone. This is one of the key risks that BRS technology was designed to address.



“We now know that the bioresorbable scaffold is replaced by normal tissue at 3 years,” Dr. Stone said. He reported that he is encouraged by the absence of any scaffold thrombosis after 3 years in a recent series of 501 patients with a BRS that have been followed at least 4 years. “This is the first time that we have seen that,” he asserted, adding, “The concept is there.”

His debate opponent, Stephan Windecker, MD, director of invasive cardiology at the Swiss Cardiovascular Center in Bern, cited numerous studies to conclude that “there is clear inferiority” of BRS relative to DES for most important clinical outcomes, including TLF. Although he acknowledged late TLF does occur with DES devices, he contended that new design changes are at least as likely to mitigate risk in DES as improvements in BRS.

Ted Bosworth/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Stephan Windecker
“One of the shortcomings [of DES devices] has been scaffold thrombosis, but this may be related to strut thickness,” Dr. Windecker said. “As we move from early devices to new-generation DES [with thinner struts], there is evidence this risk is diminishing.” So far, there is no published evidence to support the premise that BRS will provide better long-term outcomes than DES, according to Dr. Windecker, who said that the higher rates of early TLF relative to DES devices is a hurdle for BRS devices even if risk of late TLF proves to be lower.

 

 


However, Dr. Stone suggested that reductions in strut thickness might be the answer for reduced TLF for both BRS and DES devices. If so, there are several reasons to believe that this would ultimately favor BRS as the dominant technology.

“We did not get there with the 150-mcm strut thickness scaffold, but now we have struts as thin as 80 mcm. I’m pretty confident that with smaller struts we will see great results,” countered Dr. Stone.

Returning to the theme that BRS devices address an unmet need, Dr. Stone contended that BRS is the preferred strategy if advances render BRS and drug-eluting stents equally safe and effective. Not least of the reasons is patient preference. “It is an undeniable fact that based on cultural, religious, or personal beliefs, many patients prefer not to live their lives with a permanently implanted device,” he said.

The audience agreed. Asked for a show of hands regarding whether bioresorbable stents technology has the potential to address an unmet need, the majority vote was overwhelmingly in favor of Dr. Stone’s position. Based on a visual vote count that seemed to clearly affirm that BRS addresses and unmet need, Dr. Stone contended that a statistical analysis would have had a P value “with about eight zeros after the decimal point.”

Dr. Stone reports a financial relationship with Reva Medical. Dr. Windecker reports financial relationships with Abbott, Boston Scientific, Biotronik, Edwards Lifesciences, Medtronic, and St. Jude.

 

– The published results with bioresorbable stents have been disappointing, but most interventionalists think such devices have the potential to prevail over drug-eluting stents by addressing unmet needs, judging from a debate on this topic that took place at CRT 2018 sponsored by the Cardiovascular Research Institute at Washington Hospital Center..

“There is a clinical need for bioresorbable stents [BRS] unless drug-eluting stents [DES] are perfect, and I think we agree that they are not perfect,” argued Gregg Stone, MD, director of cardiovascular research and education at Columbia University Medical Center, New York.

Ted Bosworth/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Gregg Stone
As the proponent of a debate premise that “there is an unmet need for BRS technology in the era of improved DES technology,” Dr. Stone focused on the persistent late target-lesion failure (TLF) rate with DES. He previewed data he and his coauthors are now preparing for publication that found that the risk of TLF is about 2% per year for every year of follow-up, extending out to 20 years.

“It does not matter what device you evaluate,” Dr. Stone said. Whether caused by late polymer sensitivity reactions, late strut fractures, or neoatherosclerosis formation, failure can occur suddenly after a decade or more in DES that were performing well up until that point, according to data cited by Dr. Stone. This is one of the key risks that BRS technology was designed to address.



“We now know that the bioresorbable scaffold is replaced by normal tissue at 3 years,” Dr. Stone said. He reported that he is encouraged by the absence of any scaffold thrombosis after 3 years in a recent series of 501 patients with a BRS that have been followed at least 4 years. “This is the first time that we have seen that,” he asserted, adding, “The concept is there.”

His debate opponent, Stephan Windecker, MD, director of invasive cardiology at the Swiss Cardiovascular Center in Bern, cited numerous studies to conclude that “there is clear inferiority” of BRS relative to DES for most important clinical outcomes, including TLF. Although he acknowledged late TLF does occur with DES devices, he contended that new design changes are at least as likely to mitigate risk in DES as improvements in BRS.

Ted Bosworth/Frontline Medical News
Dr. Stephan Windecker
“One of the shortcomings [of DES devices] has been scaffold thrombosis, but this may be related to strut thickness,” Dr. Windecker said. “As we move from early devices to new-generation DES [with thinner struts], there is evidence this risk is diminishing.” So far, there is no published evidence to support the premise that BRS will provide better long-term outcomes than DES, according to Dr. Windecker, who said that the higher rates of early TLF relative to DES devices is a hurdle for BRS devices even if risk of late TLF proves to be lower.

 

 


However, Dr. Stone suggested that reductions in strut thickness might be the answer for reduced TLF for both BRS and DES devices. If so, there are several reasons to believe that this would ultimately favor BRS as the dominant technology.

“We did not get there with the 150-mcm strut thickness scaffold, but now we have struts as thin as 80 mcm. I’m pretty confident that with smaller struts we will see great results,” countered Dr. Stone.

Returning to the theme that BRS devices address an unmet need, Dr. Stone contended that BRS is the preferred strategy if advances render BRS and drug-eluting stents equally safe and effective. Not least of the reasons is patient preference. “It is an undeniable fact that based on cultural, religious, or personal beliefs, many patients prefer not to live their lives with a permanently implanted device,” he said.

The audience agreed. Asked for a show of hands regarding whether bioresorbable stents technology has the potential to address an unmet need, the majority vote was overwhelmingly in favor of Dr. Stone’s position. Based on a visual vote count that seemed to clearly affirm that BRS addresses and unmet need, Dr. Stone contended that a statistical analysis would have had a P value “with about eight zeros after the decimal point.”

Dr. Stone reports a financial relationship with Reva Medical. Dr. Windecker reports financial relationships with Abbott, Boston Scientific, Biotronik, Edwards Lifesciences, Medtronic, and St. Jude.

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Most PsA patients discontinue initial biologic within 12 months

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Most adult patients with psoriatic arthritis who newly initiate biologic therapy with a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor or anti–interleukin-12/23 inhibitor discontinued the treatment before a year is up, according to a recent analysis of a U.S. claims database.

Over a 12-month follow-up period, 27% of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) patients discontinued the index biologic, 23% switched to a different biologic, and 6% discontinued the index biologic but later restarted it, according to the results, which were published in the Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy.

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Dr. Jessica A. Walsh
Treatment persistence is important to achieve optimal outcomes in PsA patients on biologic therapy, first author Jessica A. Walsh, MD, of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and her coauthors wrote in the report.

“In this population of patients with PsA, additional options for concomitant therapies or alternatives to TNF inhibitors and anti–IL-12/23 inhibitors may be important,” the authors wrote.

The retrospective, observational study included administrative claims data from the Optum research database representing 1,235 adults with PsA who newly initiated a biologic therapy between Jan. 1, 2013, and Jan. 31, 2015. The patients (53% female; mean age, 50.3 years) had received biologic therapies approved for treatment of PsA at the time. These patients had commercial health coverage or Medicare Advantage, and nearly half were from the South. About half (48%) received etanercept, 24% received adalimumab, 10% received infliximab, and the rest received golimumab, ustekinumab, or certolizumab pegol.

The mean duration of persistence with a newly initiated biologic was just 246 days, the investigators reported. Infliximab had the highest 12-month persistence in this study, investigators said, with a mean of 293 days, while certolizumab pegol had the shortest, at a mean of 207 days.

Among patients who stayed on the index biologic for at least 90 days, nearly half started an adjunctive treatment, which was usually corticosteroids (22%), opioids (17%), or an NSAID (13%), Dr. Walsh and her coauthors said.

 

 


Dose escalation of the index biologic occurred in 9.6% of patients over the 12-month follow-up, they added.

“High rates of discontinuation and switching of biologic therapies, along with high rates of dose escalation, suggest a high frequency of suboptimal biologic experience in patients with PsA,” they wrote. Although the study did not address why patients discontinued or switched, previous studies suggest adverse effects and lack of efficacy are the most commonly reported reasons.

“Insufficient control of symptoms may lead patients to discontinue biologic therapy, which can contribute to disease progression,” the authors said in their conclusion.

Novartis sponsored the study. Some study authors reported disclosures related to Novartis, including consultancy and employment, and to Optum, which was commissioned to conduct the study.

SOURCE: Walsh JA et al. J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2018 Mar 20. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2018.17388.

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Most adult patients with psoriatic arthritis who newly initiate biologic therapy with a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor or anti–interleukin-12/23 inhibitor discontinued the treatment before a year is up, according to a recent analysis of a U.S. claims database.

Over a 12-month follow-up period, 27% of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) patients discontinued the index biologic, 23% switched to a different biologic, and 6% discontinued the index biologic but later restarted it, according to the results, which were published in the Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy.

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontine Medical News
Dr. Jessica A. Walsh
Treatment persistence is important to achieve optimal outcomes in PsA patients on biologic therapy, first author Jessica A. Walsh, MD, of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and her coauthors wrote in the report.

“In this population of patients with PsA, additional options for concomitant therapies or alternatives to TNF inhibitors and anti–IL-12/23 inhibitors may be important,” the authors wrote.

The retrospective, observational study included administrative claims data from the Optum research database representing 1,235 adults with PsA who newly initiated a biologic therapy between Jan. 1, 2013, and Jan. 31, 2015. The patients (53% female; mean age, 50.3 years) had received biologic therapies approved for treatment of PsA at the time. These patients had commercial health coverage or Medicare Advantage, and nearly half were from the South. About half (48%) received etanercept, 24% received adalimumab, 10% received infliximab, and the rest received golimumab, ustekinumab, or certolizumab pegol.

The mean duration of persistence with a newly initiated biologic was just 246 days, the investigators reported. Infliximab had the highest 12-month persistence in this study, investigators said, with a mean of 293 days, while certolizumab pegol had the shortest, at a mean of 207 days.

Among patients who stayed on the index biologic for at least 90 days, nearly half started an adjunctive treatment, which was usually corticosteroids (22%), opioids (17%), or an NSAID (13%), Dr. Walsh and her coauthors said.

 

 


Dose escalation of the index biologic occurred in 9.6% of patients over the 12-month follow-up, they added.

“High rates of discontinuation and switching of biologic therapies, along with high rates of dose escalation, suggest a high frequency of suboptimal biologic experience in patients with PsA,” they wrote. Although the study did not address why patients discontinued or switched, previous studies suggest adverse effects and lack of efficacy are the most commonly reported reasons.

“Insufficient control of symptoms may lead patients to discontinue biologic therapy, which can contribute to disease progression,” the authors said in their conclusion.

Novartis sponsored the study. Some study authors reported disclosures related to Novartis, including consultancy and employment, and to Optum, which was commissioned to conduct the study.

SOURCE: Walsh JA et al. J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2018 Mar 20. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2018.17388.

 

Most adult patients with psoriatic arthritis who newly initiate biologic therapy with a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitor or anti–interleukin-12/23 inhibitor discontinued the treatment before a year is up, according to a recent analysis of a U.S. claims database.

Over a 12-month follow-up period, 27% of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) patients discontinued the index biologic, 23% switched to a different biologic, and 6% discontinued the index biologic but later restarted it, according to the results, which were published in the Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy.

Mitchel L. Zoler/Frontine Medical News
Dr. Jessica A. Walsh
Treatment persistence is important to achieve optimal outcomes in PsA patients on biologic therapy, first author Jessica A. Walsh, MD, of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and her coauthors wrote in the report.

“In this population of patients with PsA, additional options for concomitant therapies or alternatives to TNF inhibitors and anti–IL-12/23 inhibitors may be important,” the authors wrote.

The retrospective, observational study included administrative claims data from the Optum research database representing 1,235 adults with PsA who newly initiated a biologic therapy between Jan. 1, 2013, and Jan. 31, 2015. The patients (53% female; mean age, 50.3 years) had received biologic therapies approved for treatment of PsA at the time. These patients had commercial health coverage or Medicare Advantage, and nearly half were from the South. About half (48%) received etanercept, 24% received adalimumab, 10% received infliximab, and the rest received golimumab, ustekinumab, or certolizumab pegol.

The mean duration of persistence with a newly initiated biologic was just 246 days, the investigators reported. Infliximab had the highest 12-month persistence in this study, investigators said, with a mean of 293 days, while certolizumab pegol had the shortest, at a mean of 207 days.

Among patients who stayed on the index biologic for at least 90 days, nearly half started an adjunctive treatment, which was usually corticosteroids (22%), opioids (17%), or an NSAID (13%), Dr. Walsh and her coauthors said.

 

 


Dose escalation of the index biologic occurred in 9.6% of patients over the 12-month follow-up, they added.

“High rates of discontinuation and switching of biologic therapies, along with high rates of dose escalation, suggest a high frequency of suboptimal biologic experience in patients with PsA,” they wrote. Although the study did not address why patients discontinued or switched, previous studies suggest adverse effects and lack of efficacy are the most commonly reported reasons.

“Insufficient control of symptoms may lead patients to discontinue biologic therapy, which can contribute to disease progression,” the authors said in their conclusion.

Novartis sponsored the study. Some study authors reported disclosures related to Novartis, including consultancy and employment, and to Optum, which was commissioned to conduct the study.

SOURCE: Walsh JA et al. J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2018 Mar 20. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2018.17388.

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Key clinical point: While treatment persistence is important to achieve optimal outcomes, most adult patients with psoriatic arthritis who newly initiated a biologic therapy discontinued the treatment before 12 months.

Major finding: Over a 12-month follow-up period, 27% of patients discontinued the index biologic, 23% switched to a different biologic, and 6% discontinued the index biologic but later restarted it.

Study details: A retrospective, observational study of U.S. administrative claims data representing 1,235 adults with PsA who newly initiated a biologic therapy between Jan. 1, 2013, and Jan. 31, 2015.

Disclosures: Novartis sponsored the study. Some study authors reported disclosures related to Novartis, including consultancy and employment, and to Optum, which was commissioned to conduct the study.

Source: Walsh JA et al. J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2018 Mar 20. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2018.17388.

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Patients who hide. Patients who seek.

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Thu, 03/28/2019 - 14:39

 

Some people are more likely to seek medical care, and some people are less likely, but which type is more common? The results of a survey of over 14,000 Medicare beneficiaries suggest that the avoid-care type may be a bit more prevalent.

In the survey, 40% of respondents said that they were more likely to keep it to themselves when they got sick, but 36% visit a physician as soon as they feel bad. Almost 29% reported that they avoid going to a physician, but 25% worry about their own health more than others, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reported based on the results of the 2015 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey.

The last two questions on propensity to seek care put the avoid-care type in the minority, albeit a somewhat disturbing one: 11% of Medicare patients responding to a survey said that they had a problem and did not seek a physician and 7% had a prescription they did not fill, the CMS noted.

Race and ethnicity made a big difference for some questions: 59% of Hispanics said that they visit a doctor as soon as they feel bad, compared with 44% of non-Hispanic blacks and 31% of non-Hispanic whites. That same order was seen for “worry about your health more than others” – 54% Hispanic, 38% black, and 19% white – and for “avoid going to the doctor” – 44% Hispanic, 34% black, and 26% white, the CMS reported.

The three groups, which were the only race/ethnicities included in the report, were all around 40% for “when sick, keep it to yourself,” while two of the three were the same for “had a problem and did not seek a doctor” (blacks and Hispanics at 14% and whites at 10%) and for “ever had a prescription you did not fill” (whites and Hispanics at 7% and blacks at 10%), the report said.

The estimates on propensity to seek care did not include Medicare recipients who lived part or all of the year in a long-term care facility, which was about 4% of the Medicare population in 2015. The survey included a total of 14,068 respondents.

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Some people are more likely to seek medical care, and some people are less likely, but which type is more common? The results of a survey of over 14,000 Medicare beneficiaries suggest that the avoid-care type may be a bit more prevalent.

In the survey, 40% of respondents said that they were more likely to keep it to themselves when they got sick, but 36% visit a physician as soon as they feel bad. Almost 29% reported that they avoid going to a physician, but 25% worry about their own health more than others, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reported based on the results of the 2015 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey.

The last two questions on propensity to seek care put the avoid-care type in the minority, albeit a somewhat disturbing one: 11% of Medicare patients responding to a survey said that they had a problem and did not seek a physician and 7% had a prescription they did not fill, the CMS noted.

Race and ethnicity made a big difference for some questions: 59% of Hispanics said that they visit a doctor as soon as they feel bad, compared with 44% of non-Hispanic blacks and 31% of non-Hispanic whites. That same order was seen for “worry about your health more than others” – 54% Hispanic, 38% black, and 19% white – and for “avoid going to the doctor” – 44% Hispanic, 34% black, and 26% white, the CMS reported.

The three groups, which were the only race/ethnicities included in the report, were all around 40% for “when sick, keep it to yourself,” while two of the three were the same for “had a problem and did not seek a doctor” (blacks and Hispanics at 14% and whites at 10%) and for “ever had a prescription you did not fill” (whites and Hispanics at 7% and blacks at 10%), the report said.

The estimates on propensity to seek care did not include Medicare recipients who lived part or all of the year in a long-term care facility, which was about 4% of the Medicare population in 2015. The survey included a total of 14,068 respondents.

 

Some people are more likely to seek medical care, and some people are less likely, but which type is more common? The results of a survey of over 14,000 Medicare beneficiaries suggest that the avoid-care type may be a bit more prevalent.

In the survey, 40% of respondents said that they were more likely to keep it to themselves when they got sick, but 36% visit a physician as soon as they feel bad. Almost 29% reported that they avoid going to a physician, but 25% worry about their own health more than others, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reported based on the results of the 2015 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey.

The last two questions on propensity to seek care put the avoid-care type in the minority, albeit a somewhat disturbing one: 11% of Medicare patients responding to a survey said that they had a problem and did not seek a physician and 7% had a prescription they did not fill, the CMS noted.

Race and ethnicity made a big difference for some questions: 59% of Hispanics said that they visit a doctor as soon as they feel bad, compared with 44% of non-Hispanic blacks and 31% of non-Hispanic whites. That same order was seen for “worry about your health more than others” – 54% Hispanic, 38% black, and 19% white – and for “avoid going to the doctor” – 44% Hispanic, 34% black, and 26% white, the CMS reported.

The three groups, which were the only race/ethnicities included in the report, were all around 40% for “when sick, keep it to yourself,” while two of the three were the same for “had a problem and did not seek a doctor” (blacks and Hispanics at 14% and whites at 10%) and for “ever had a prescription you did not fill” (whites and Hispanics at 7% and blacks at 10%), the report said.

The estimates on propensity to seek care did not include Medicare recipients who lived part or all of the year in a long-term care facility, which was about 4% of the Medicare population in 2015. The survey included a total of 14,068 respondents.

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Certolizumab pegol: Has serious infection risk been overstated?

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Sat, 12/08/2018 - 14:54

 

Contrary to prior reports, certolizumab pegol may not be associated with an increased risk of serious infections versus other biologics used in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, according to results of a recent U.K. registry study.

Certolizumab pegol (Cimzia) actually had a lower risk of serious infections, compared with etanercept in the primary analysis, according to a report on the study recently published in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

In sensitivity analyses, though, the result in favor of certolizumab pegol was no longer significant, according to lead author Andrew I. Rutherford, MBBS, of King’s College London, and his coauthors.

“From these results, it would be wrong to conclude that certolizumab pegol has a lower rate of [serious infection] than other biologics,” Dr. Rutherford and his colleagues said in their report. “However, the risk does not appear to be significantly higher as has previously been suggested.”

The prospective, observational cohort study, based on data from the British Society for Rheumatology Biologics Register for Rheumatoid Arthritis (BSRBR-RA), represented 19,282 patients with 46,771 years of follow-up, according to the authors.

For the entire cohort, the incidence of serious infections was 5.51 cases per 100 patient-years (95% confidence interval, 5.29-5.71), and the 30-day mortality after serious infection was 10.4% (95% CI, 9.2%-11.6%), the report said. Compared with etanercept, the risk of serious infections was lower for certolizumab pegol (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.58-0.97). Etanercept was used as the reference arm for comparison since it was the most widely prescribed drug in the registry.

That finding is in “direct contradiction” to a 2011 Cochrane review finding that certolizumab pegol was associated with an infection rate three to four times higher than other anti–tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) drugs (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011;2:Cd008794), the authors noted.

 

 


“It would seem unusual for drugs acting on the same pathway with similar efficacy to have such drastically different infection risks,” Dr. Rutherford and his coauthors observed in their report.

However, investigators noticed that in the certolizumab pegol cohort, a large number of patients had not previously been on a biologic. When those biologic-naive patients were excluded from analysis, there was no longer a difference in infection rate favoring certolizumab pegol. “This suggests that unmeasured confounders may be responsible for the difference that was observed in the primary analysis,” the investigators said in their discussion of the results.

The Cochrane review showing an increased risk of serious infections with certolizumab pegol was a large network meta-analysis, which they said relies on indirect comparisons between drugs and could be prone to error if there are differences in study design.

“In contrast, national registers use the same methodology for detecting and reporting of adverse events for each drug,” they added.

Dr. Rutherford reported no disclosures. Study coauthors reported disclosures related to Pfizer, AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, UCB, and Celgene. The British Society for Rheumatology, which commissioned the study, receives income from AbbVie, Celltrion, Hospira, Pfizer, UCB, and Roche related to a different contract.

SOURCE: Rutherford AI et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2018 Mar 28. doi: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212825.

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Contrary to prior reports, certolizumab pegol may not be associated with an increased risk of serious infections versus other biologics used in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, according to results of a recent U.K. registry study.

Certolizumab pegol (Cimzia) actually had a lower risk of serious infections, compared with etanercept in the primary analysis, according to a report on the study recently published in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

In sensitivity analyses, though, the result in favor of certolizumab pegol was no longer significant, according to lead author Andrew I. Rutherford, MBBS, of King’s College London, and his coauthors.

“From these results, it would be wrong to conclude that certolizumab pegol has a lower rate of [serious infection] than other biologics,” Dr. Rutherford and his colleagues said in their report. “However, the risk does not appear to be significantly higher as has previously been suggested.”

The prospective, observational cohort study, based on data from the British Society for Rheumatology Biologics Register for Rheumatoid Arthritis (BSRBR-RA), represented 19,282 patients with 46,771 years of follow-up, according to the authors.

For the entire cohort, the incidence of serious infections was 5.51 cases per 100 patient-years (95% confidence interval, 5.29-5.71), and the 30-day mortality after serious infection was 10.4% (95% CI, 9.2%-11.6%), the report said. Compared with etanercept, the risk of serious infections was lower for certolizumab pegol (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.58-0.97). Etanercept was used as the reference arm for comparison since it was the most widely prescribed drug in the registry.

That finding is in “direct contradiction” to a 2011 Cochrane review finding that certolizumab pegol was associated with an infection rate three to four times higher than other anti–tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) drugs (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011;2:Cd008794), the authors noted.

 

 


“It would seem unusual for drugs acting on the same pathway with similar efficacy to have such drastically different infection risks,” Dr. Rutherford and his coauthors observed in their report.

However, investigators noticed that in the certolizumab pegol cohort, a large number of patients had not previously been on a biologic. When those biologic-naive patients were excluded from analysis, there was no longer a difference in infection rate favoring certolizumab pegol. “This suggests that unmeasured confounders may be responsible for the difference that was observed in the primary analysis,” the investigators said in their discussion of the results.

The Cochrane review showing an increased risk of serious infections with certolizumab pegol was a large network meta-analysis, which they said relies on indirect comparisons between drugs and could be prone to error if there are differences in study design.

“In contrast, national registers use the same methodology for detecting and reporting of adverse events for each drug,” they added.

Dr. Rutherford reported no disclosures. Study coauthors reported disclosures related to Pfizer, AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, UCB, and Celgene. The British Society for Rheumatology, which commissioned the study, receives income from AbbVie, Celltrion, Hospira, Pfizer, UCB, and Roche related to a different contract.

SOURCE: Rutherford AI et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2018 Mar 28. doi: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212825.

 

Contrary to prior reports, certolizumab pegol may not be associated with an increased risk of serious infections versus other biologics used in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, according to results of a recent U.K. registry study.

Certolizumab pegol (Cimzia) actually had a lower risk of serious infections, compared with etanercept in the primary analysis, according to a report on the study recently published in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

In sensitivity analyses, though, the result in favor of certolizumab pegol was no longer significant, according to lead author Andrew I. Rutherford, MBBS, of King’s College London, and his coauthors.

“From these results, it would be wrong to conclude that certolizumab pegol has a lower rate of [serious infection] than other biologics,” Dr. Rutherford and his colleagues said in their report. “However, the risk does not appear to be significantly higher as has previously been suggested.”

The prospective, observational cohort study, based on data from the British Society for Rheumatology Biologics Register for Rheumatoid Arthritis (BSRBR-RA), represented 19,282 patients with 46,771 years of follow-up, according to the authors.

For the entire cohort, the incidence of serious infections was 5.51 cases per 100 patient-years (95% confidence interval, 5.29-5.71), and the 30-day mortality after serious infection was 10.4% (95% CI, 9.2%-11.6%), the report said. Compared with etanercept, the risk of serious infections was lower for certolizumab pegol (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.58-0.97). Etanercept was used as the reference arm for comparison since it was the most widely prescribed drug in the registry.

That finding is in “direct contradiction” to a 2011 Cochrane review finding that certolizumab pegol was associated with an infection rate three to four times higher than other anti–tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) drugs (Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011;2:Cd008794), the authors noted.

 

 


“It would seem unusual for drugs acting on the same pathway with similar efficacy to have such drastically different infection risks,” Dr. Rutherford and his coauthors observed in their report.

However, investigators noticed that in the certolizumab pegol cohort, a large number of patients had not previously been on a biologic. When those biologic-naive patients were excluded from analysis, there was no longer a difference in infection rate favoring certolizumab pegol. “This suggests that unmeasured confounders may be responsible for the difference that was observed in the primary analysis,” the investigators said in their discussion of the results.

The Cochrane review showing an increased risk of serious infections with certolizumab pegol was a large network meta-analysis, which they said relies on indirect comparisons between drugs and could be prone to error if there are differences in study design.

“In contrast, national registers use the same methodology for detecting and reporting of adverse events for each drug,” they added.

Dr. Rutherford reported no disclosures. Study coauthors reported disclosures related to Pfizer, AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, UCB, and Celgene. The British Society for Rheumatology, which commissioned the study, receives income from AbbVie, Celltrion, Hospira, Pfizer, UCB, and Roche related to a different contract.

SOURCE: Rutherford AI et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2018 Mar 28. doi: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212825.

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Key clinical point: The rate of serious infections with certolizumab pegol may not be significantly higher than other biologics for RA, as previously suggested.

Major finding: Certolizumab pegol had a lower risk of serious infections compared to etanercept (HR, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.58-0.97), though in sensitivity analyses, the difference was no longer significant.

Study details: A prospective observational cohort study of data from the British Society for Rheumatology Biologics Register for Rheumatoid Arthritis (BSRBR-RA) representing 19,282 patients with 46,771 years of follow-up.

Disclosures: Study authors reported disclosures related to Pfizer, AbbVie, Bristol-Myers Squibb, UCB, and Celgene. The British Society for Rheumatology, which commissioned the study, receives income from AbbVie, Celltrion, Hospira, Pfizer, UCB, and Roche related to a different contract.

Source: Rutherford AI et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2018 Mar 28. doi: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212825.

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Wound protectors lower risk of surgical site infections

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Wed, 01/02/2019 - 10:07

 

Wound protection devices could significantly decrease the risk of surgical site infections after lower gastrointestinal surgery, particularly dual-ring devices, new research suggests.

A meta-analysis of 12 randomized, controlled trials with 3,029 participants found that the use of wound protectors during surgery was associated with 34% lower odds of surgical site infection (95% confidence interval, 0.45–0.90; P less than .01).


The study, published in the March edition of Surgical Endoscopy, also showed that dual-ring wound protectors were associated with a highly significant 69% reduction in the odds of surgical site infections (95% CI, 0.18-0.52; P less than .0001), while the benefits of single-ring wound protectors did not reach statistical significance (OR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.67–1.04; P = .11).

Wound protectors – also known as wound guards or wound retractors – are intended to prevent the edges of a surgical wound from coming into contact with the contaminated surgical field.

The single-ring model consists of a plastic ring that sits within the wound and a protective drape that extends out from it. In the dual-ring model, one ring sits inside the wound and the other outside the wound, with the two rings joined by the protective plastic.

Of the 12 studies included in the meta-analysis, 5 involved colorectal surgery only, 5 included both colorectal and other gastrointestinal surgery, and 2 studies focused on appendectomies. All but one study involved open surgery.

“Our study is more specific in the interventions included in that we included lower gastrointestinal surgery only, which is a population that would likely benefit the most from the intervention due to the high incidence of SSIs in bowel surgery, compared to other abdominal surgeries,” wrote Lisa Zhang, MD, a general surgery resident at the department of surgery at Kingston (Ont.) General Hospital and her coauthors.

 

 


There was no difference in the effect of wound protectors based on the target organ for surgery, even with a high number of patients in one of the appendectomy trials, which the authors were concerned may have skewed the results.

Overall, the authors rated the evidence to be of moderate quality, but several studies had a high risk of bias.

The authors said that one barrier to routine use of these devices was cost. However, given that surgical site infections are estimated to cost around $3.5 billion to $10 billion annually in health care expenditures, they argued that “the use of dual-ring wound edge protectors should be considered in open lower gastrointestinal surgery, including open appendectomies.”

No funding sources or conflicts of interest were declared.
 

SOURCE: Zhang L et al. Surg Endosc. 2018;32:1111–22.

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Wound protection devices could significantly decrease the risk of surgical site infections after lower gastrointestinal surgery, particularly dual-ring devices, new research suggests.

A meta-analysis of 12 randomized, controlled trials with 3,029 participants found that the use of wound protectors during surgery was associated with 34% lower odds of surgical site infection (95% confidence interval, 0.45–0.90; P less than .01).


The study, published in the March edition of Surgical Endoscopy, also showed that dual-ring wound protectors were associated with a highly significant 69% reduction in the odds of surgical site infections (95% CI, 0.18-0.52; P less than .0001), while the benefits of single-ring wound protectors did not reach statistical significance (OR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.67–1.04; P = .11).

Wound protectors – also known as wound guards or wound retractors – are intended to prevent the edges of a surgical wound from coming into contact with the contaminated surgical field.

The single-ring model consists of a plastic ring that sits within the wound and a protective drape that extends out from it. In the dual-ring model, one ring sits inside the wound and the other outside the wound, with the two rings joined by the protective plastic.

Of the 12 studies included in the meta-analysis, 5 involved colorectal surgery only, 5 included both colorectal and other gastrointestinal surgery, and 2 studies focused on appendectomies. All but one study involved open surgery.

“Our study is more specific in the interventions included in that we included lower gastrointestinal surgery only, which is a population that would likely benefit the most from the intervention due to the high incidence of SSIs in bowel surgery, compared to other abdominal surgeries,” wrote Lisa Zhang, MD, a general surgery resident at the department of surgery at Kingston (Ont.) General Hospital and her coauthors.

 

 


There was no difference in the effect of wound protectors based on the target organ for surgery, even with a high number of patients in one of the appendectomy trials, which the authors were concerned may have skewed the results.

Overall, the authors rated the evidence to be of moderate quality, but several studies had a high risk of bias.

The authors said that one barrier to routine use of these devices was cost. However, given that surgical site infections are estimated to cost around $3.5 billion to $10 billion annually in health care expenditures, they argued that “the use of dual-ring wound edge protectors should be considered in open lower gastrointestinal surgery, including open appendectomies.”

No funding sources or conflicts of interest were declared.
 

SOURCE: Zhang L et al. Surg Endosc. 2018;32:1111–22.

 

Wound protection devices could significantly decrease the risk of surgical site infections after lower gastrointestinal surgery, particularly dual-ring devices, new research suggests.

A meta-analysis of 12 randomized, controlled trials with 3,029 participants found that the use of wound protectors during surgery was associated with 34% lower odds of surgical site infection (95% confidence interval, 0.45–0.90; P less than .01).


The study, published in the March edition of Surgical Endoscopy, also showed that dual-ring wound protectors were associated with a highly significant 69% reduction in the odds of surgical site infections (95% CI, 0.18-0.52; P less than .0001), while the benefits of single-ring wound protectors did not reach statistical significance (OR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.67–1.04; P = .11).

Wound protectors – also known as wound guards or wound retractors – are intended to prevent the edges of a surgical wound from coming into contact with the contaminated surgical field.

The single-ring model consists of a plastic ring that sits within the wound and a protective drape that extends out from it. In the dual-ring model, one ring sits inside the wound and the other outside the wound, with the two rings joined by the protective plastic.

Of the 12 studies included in the meta-analysis, 5 involved colorectal surgery only, 5 included both colorectal and other gastrointestinal surgery, and 2 studies focused on appendectomies. All but one study involved open surgery.

“Our study is more specific in the interventions included in that we included lower gastrointestinal surgery only, which is a population that would likely benefit the most from the intervention due to the high incidence of SSIs in bowel surgery, compared to other abdominal surgeries,” wrote Lisa Zhang, MD, a general surgery resident at the department of surgery at Kingston (Ont.) General Hospital and her coauthors.

 

 


There was no difference in the effect of wound protectors based on the target organ for surgery, even with a high number of patients in one of the appendectomy trials, which the authors were concerned may have skewed the results.

Overall, the authors rated the evidence to be of moderate quality, but several studies had a high risk of bias.

The authors said that one barrier to routine use of these devices was cost. However, given that surgical site infections are estimated to cost around $3.5 billion to $10 billion annually in health care expenditures, they argued that “the use of dual-ring wound edge protectors should be considered in open lower gastrointestinal surgery, including open appendectomies.”

No funding sources or conflicts of interest were declared.
 

SOURCE: Zhang L et al. Surg Endosc. 2018;32:1111–22.

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Key clinical point: Dual-ring wound protectors significantly decrease the risk of gastrointestinal surgical site infections.

Major finding: Dual-ring wound protectors were associated with a 69% reduction in the odds of surgical site infections.

Study details: A meta-analysis of 12 randomized, controlled trials.

Disclosures: No funding source or conflicts of interest were declared.

Source: Zhang L et al. Surg Endosc. 2018;32:1111–22.
 

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Clean-Surfaced Nanocrystalline Gold May Promote Remyelination

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SAN DIEGO—A novel therapy designed to promote the maturation and activation of myelin-producing oligodendrocytes is moving to phase II clinical trials based on evidence of safety and efficacy in animal models and humans. The therapy, a suspension of clean-surfaced gold nanocrystals, may remyelinate multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions, according to research presented at the ACTRIMS 2018 Forum.

This agent, known as CNM-Au8, has been associated with improved behavioral function in animal models of MS, according to Michael Hotchkin, Head of Strategic Oper­ations at Clene Nanomedicine in Salt Lake City. Clene Nanomedicine is developing CNM-Au8. Although the mechanism of action is “multifactorial,” the benefit has been linked to bioenergetic support for the differentiation and maturation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells, said Mr. Hotchkin.

In one behavioral study of fine motor kinetics in an experimental model of MS, mice treated with CNM-Au8 “were effectively indistinguishable” from animals with no demyelination, he said.

Treatment Improved Two Models of Demyelination

Following in vitro studies that suggested that CNM-Au8 can promote the differentiation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells into mature myelin-producing oligodendrocytes, a series of studies was conducted in lysolecithin and cuprizone animal models of MS demyelination.

The studies using the lysolecithin model included vehicle controls and compared CNM-Au8’s effect on remyelinated axons after inducing spinal demyelination with lysolecithin. In the cuprizone studies, the treatments were delivered before injury to test prophylactic efficacy and after injury to test treatment efficacy. Markers of remyelination, such as oligodendrocyte maturation, myelin basic protein expression, and axonal staining, were evaluated by immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopy in animals sacrificed at various times after injury.

CNM-Au8 produced “striking visible evidence of progressive increase in myelin,” according to Mr. Hotchkin. The treatment was associated with reductions in myelin sheath degeneration and demyelinated areas, relative to vehicle. In one analysis of the lysolecithin model, CNM-Au8 was associated with a 43% increase in myelinated axon count. Moreover, an increase in mature oligodendrocytes localized at the site of focal demyelination injury in the CNM-Au8-treated animals was consistent with stimulation of oligodendrocyte maturation, according to Mr. Hotchkin.

In both models, investigators found evidence of increased oligodendrocyte maturation and remyelination when CNM-Au8 was administered after injury, as well as when it was administered before injury. The results suggest that CNM-Au8 has important activity in the remyelination of demyelinated axons.

Researchers also conducted behavioral studies in the cuprizone model of MS. They tracked the animals’ movement with lasers and used computer software to analyze the movement. These studies included relevant controls and compared animals with no demyelination, vehicle-treated animals dosed with cuprizone, and CNM-Au8-treated animals similarly dosed with cuprizone, to determine whether delayed treatment following initial damage from the toxin would result in functional recovery in the animals.

The investigators observed protective effects of CNM-Au8 when the drug was administered in this treatment paradigm. Improvements in several behavioral end points when the drug was administered after the demyelinating insult “demonstrated that CNM-Au8 restored behavioral function following demyelination,” said Mr. Hotchkin.

Furthermore, in a behavioral study of fine motor kinetics, function improved by 78% at week 6, compared with week 3 (ie, immediately following the start of treatment) in the group treated with CMN-Au8 that was receiving cuprizone. The animals treated with vehicle and cuprizone had a 39% functional improvement at week 6, compared with week 3. Notably, there was not a statistically significant difference in function at week 6 between CNM-Au8-treated animals and the normal healthy control animals without demyelination, indicating that the functional recovery made the former and latter animals indistinguishable.

Therapy Promotes Bioenergetics Catalysis

CNM-Au8 may generate remyelination by more than one mechanism, said Mr. Hotchkin, and evidence indicates that the drug promotes bioenergetic catalysis that is important to the maturation of oligodendrocyte precursors. Published literature suggests an association between altered oligodendrocyte energy utilization and remyelination failure in the human brain. Other evidence suggests that CNM-Au8 may trigger oligodendrocytes’ remyelinating activity by improving energy sources such as adenosine triphosphate, lactate, and oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), said Mr. Hotchkin. For example, CNM-Au8 increased NAD+ levels in mouse hippocampal cultures by about 40%, relative to vehicle.

In response to questions about the catalytic mechanism, Mr. Hotchkin responded, “You can fill a car’s tank with gas, but if the electrical system is fouled, the car goes nowhere. CNM-Au8 is the catalytic engine driving bioenergetic improvements in the oligodendrocytes driving them to remyelinate.” Data suggest that CNM-Au8 may have applications in other neurodegenerative diseases, based on the bioenergetic failure hypothesis of neurodegeneration and aging, said Mr. Hotchkin.

Oligodendrocyte precursor cells are known to be present in the human brain in and around MS lesions even years after an MS attack. Thus, the animal studies may be relevant to clinical MS. As an oral agent, CNM-Au8 has the potential to be a major clinical advance if human trials show activity comparable to that in animal studies, said Mr. Hotchkin.

Initial phase I human clinical work and extensive animal toxicology has supported the safety of this agent. Trials in patients with MS that examine clinical end points are planned. “A phase II study in chronic optic neuropathy in relapsing-remitting MS patients will commence in 2018,” Glen Frick, MD, PhD, Chief Medical Officer of Clene Nanomedicine, told Neurology Reviews.

 

 

—Ted Bosworth

Suggested Reading

Rone MB, Cui QL, Fang J, et al. Oligodendrogliopathy in multiple sclerosis: low glycolytic metabolic rate promotes oligodendrocyte survival. J Neurosci. 2016;36(17):4698-4707.

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SAN DIEGO—A novel therapy designed to promote the maturation and activation of myelin-producing oligodendrocytes is moving to phase II clinical trials based on evidence of safety and efficacy in animal models and humans. The therapy, a suspension of clean-surfaced gold nanocrystals, may remyelinate multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions, according to research presented at the ACTRIMS 2018 Forum.

This agent, known as CNM-Au8, has been associated with improved behavioral function in animal models of MS, according to Michael Hotchkin, Head of Strategic Oper­ations at Clene Nanomedicine in Salt Lake City. Clene Nanomedicine is developing CNM-Au8. Although the mechanism of action is “multifactorial,” the benefit has been linked to bioenergetic support for the differentiation and maturation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells, said Mr. Hotchkin.

In one behavioral study of fine motor kinetics in an experimental model of MS, mice treated with CNM-Au8 “were effectively indistinguishable” from animals with no demyelination, he said.

Treatment Improved Two Models of Demyelination

Following in vitro studies that suggested that CNM-Au8 can promote the differentiation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells into mature myelin-producing oligodendrocytes, a series of studies was conducted in lysolecithin and cuprizone animal models of MS demyelination.

The studies using the lysolecithin model included vehicle controls and compared CNM-Au8’s effect on remyelinated axons after inducing spinal demyelination with lysolecithin. In the cuprizone studies, the treatments were delivered before injury to test prophylactic efficacy and after injury to test treatment efficacy. Markers of remyelination, such as oligodendrocyte maturation, myelin basic protein expression, and axonal staining, were evaluated by immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopy in animals sacrificed at various times after injury.

CNM-Au8 produced “striking visible evidence of progressive increase in myelin,” according to Mr. Hotchkin. The treatment was associated with reductions in myelin sheath degeneration and demyelinated areas, relative to vehicle. In one analysis of the lysolecithin model, CNM-Au8 was associated with a 43% increase in myelinated axon count. Moreover, an increase in mature oligodendrocytes localized at the site of focal demyelination injury in the CNM-Au8-treated animals was consistent with stimulation of oligodendrocyte maturation, according to Mr. Hotchkin.

In both models, investigators found evidence of increased oligodendrocyte maturation and remyelination when CNM-Au8 was administered after injury, as well as when it was administered before injury. The results suggest that CNM-Au8 has important activity in the remyelination of demyelinated axons.

Researchers also conducted behavioral studies in the cuprizone model of MS. They tracked the animals’ movement with lasers and used computer software to analyze the movement. These studies included relevant controls and compared animals with no demyelination, vehicle-treated animals dosed with cuprizone, and CNM-Au8-treated animals similarly dosed with cuprizone, to determine whether delayed treatment following initial damage from the toxin would result in functional recovery in the animals.

The investigators observed protective effects of CNM-Au8 when the drug was administered in this treatment paradigm. Improvements in several behavioral end points when the drug was administered after the demyelinating insult “demonstrated that CNM-Au8 restored behavioral function following demyelination,” said Mr. Hotchkin.

Furthermore, in a behavioral study of fine motor kinetics, function improved by 78% at week 6, compared with week 3 (ie, immediately following the start of treatment) in the group treated with CMN-Au8 that was receiving cuprizone. The animals treated with vehicle and cuprizone had a 39% functional improvement at week 6, compared with week 3. Notably, there was not a statistically significant difference in function at week 6 between CNM-Au8-treated animals and the normal healthy control animals without demyelination, indicating that the functional recovery made the former and latter animals indistinguishable.

Therapy Promotes Bioenergetics Catalysis

CNM-Au8 may generate remyelination by more than one mechanism, said Mr. Hotchkin, and evidence indicates that the drug promotes bioenergetic catalysis that is important to the maturation of oligodendrocyte precursors. Published literature suggests an association between altered oligodendrocyte energy utilization and remyelination failure in the human brain. Other evidence suggests that CNM-Au8 may trigger oligodendrocytes’ remyelinating activity by improving energy sources such as adenosine triphosphate, lactate, and oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), said Mr. Hotchkin. For example, CNM-Au8 increased NAD+ levels in mouse hippocampal cultures by about 40%, relative to vehicle.

In response to questions about the catalytic mechanism, Mr. Hotchkin responded, “You can fill a car’s tank with gas, but if the electrical system is fouled, the car goes nowhere. CNM-Au8 is the catalytic engine driving bioenergetic improvements in the oligodendrocytes driving them to remyelinate.” Data suggest that CNM-Au8 may have applications in other neurodegenerative diseases, based on the bioenergetic failure hypothesis of neurodegeneration and aging, said Mr. Hotchkin.

Oligodendrocyte precursor cells are known to be present in the human brain in and around MS lesions even years after an MS attack. Thus, the animal studies may be relevant to clinical MS. As an oral agent, CNM-Au8 has the potential to be a major clinical advance if human trials show activity comparable to that in animal studies, said Mr. Hotchkin.

Initial phase I human clinical work and extensive animal toxicology has supported the safety of this agent. Trials in patients with MS that examine clinical end points are planned. “A phase II study in chronic optic neuropathy in relapsing-remitting MS patients will commence in 2018,” Glen Frick, MD, PhD, Chief Medical Officer of Clene Nanomedicine, told Neurology Reviews.

 

 

—Ted Bosworth

Suggested Reading

Rone MB, Cui QL, Fang J, et al. Oligodendrogliopathy in multiple sclerosis: low glycolytic metabolic rate promotes oligodendrocyte survival. J Neurosci. 2016;36(17):4698-4707.

SAN DIEGO—A novel therapy designed to promote the maturation and activation of myelin-producing oligodendrocytes is moving to phase II clinical trials based on evidence of safety and efficacy in animal models and humans. The therapy, a suspension of clean-surfaced gold nanocrystals, may remyelinate multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions, according to research presented at the ACTRIMS 2018 Forum.

This agent, known as CNM-Au8, has been associated with improved behavioral function in animal models of MS, according to Michael Hotchkin, Head of Strategic Oper­ations at Clene Nanomedicine in Salt Lake City. Clene Nanomedicine is developing CNM-Au8. Although the mechanism of action is “multifactorial,” the benefit has been linked to bioenergetic support for the differentiation and maturation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells, said Mr. Hotchkin.

In one behavioral study of fine motor kinetics in an experimental model of MS, mice treated with CNM-Au8 “were effectively indistinguishable” from animals with no demyelination, he said.

Treatment Improved Two Models of Demyelination

Following in vitro studies that suggested that CNM-Au8 can promote the differentiation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells into mature myelin-producing oligodendrocytes, a series of studies was conducted in lysolecithin and cuprizone animal models of MS demyelination.

The studies using the lysolecithin model included vehicle controls and compared CNM-Au8’s effect on remyelinated axons after inducing spinal demyelination with lysolecithin. In the cuprizone studies, the treatments were delivered before injury to test prophylactic efficacy and after injury to test treatment efficacy. Markers of remyelination, such as oligodendrocyte maturation, myelin basic protein expression, and axonal staining, were evaluated by immunohistochemistry and transmission electron microscopy in animals sacrificed at various times after injury.

CNM-Au8 produced “striking visible evidence of progressive increase in myelin,” according to Mr. Hotchkin. The treatment was associated with reductions in myelin sheath degeneration and demyelinated areas, relative to vehicle. In one analysis of the lysolecithin model, CNM-Au8 was associated with a 43% increase in myelinated axon count. Moreover, an increase in mature oligodendrocytes localized at the site of focal demyelination injury in the CNM-Au8-treated animals was consistent with stimulation of oligodendrocyte maturation, according to Mr. Hotchkin.

In both models, investigators found evidence of increased oligodendrocyte maturation and remyelination when CNM-Au8 was administered after injury, as well as when it was administered before injury. The results suggest that CNM-Au8 has important activity in the remyelination of demyelinated axons.

Researchers also conducted behavioral studies in the cuprizone model of MS. They tracked the animals’ movement with lasers and used computer software to analyze the movement. These studies included relevant controls and compared animals with no demyelination, vehicle-treated animals dosed with cuprizone, and CNM-Au8-treated animals similarly dosed with cuprizone, to determine whether delayed treatment following initial damage from the toxin would result in functional recovery in the animals.

The investigators observed protective effects of CNM-Au8 when the drug was administered in this treatment paradigm. Improvements in several behavioral end points when the drug was administered after the demyelinating insult “demonstrated that CNM-Au8 restored behavioral function following demyelination,” said Mr. Hotchkin.

Furthermore, in a behavioral study of fine motor kinetics, function improved by 78% at week 6, compared with week 3 (ie, immediately following the start of treatment) in the group treated with CMN-Au8 that was receiving cuprizone. The animals treated with vehicle and cuprizone had a 39% functional improvement at week 6, compared with week 3. Notably, there was not a statistically significant difference in function at week 6 between CNM-Au8-treated animals and the normal healthy control animals without demyelination, indicating that the functional recovery made the former and latter animals indistinguishable.

Therapy Promotes Bioenergetics Catalysis

CNM-Au8 may generate remyelination by more than one mechanism, said Mr. Hotchkin, and evidence indicates that the drug promotes bioenergetic catalysis that is important to the maturation of oligodendrocyte precursors. Published literature suggests an association between altered oligodendrocyte energy utilization and remyelination failure in the human brain. Other evidence suggests that CNM-Au8 may trigger oligodendrocytes’ remyelinating activity by improving energy sources such as adenosine triphosphate, lactate, and oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+), said Mr. Hotchkin. For example, CNM-Au8 increased NAD+ levels in mouse hippocampal cultures by about 40%, relative to vehicle.

In response to questions about the catalytic mechanism, Mr. Hotchkin responded, “You can fill a car’s tank with gas, but if the electrical system is fouled, the car goes nowhere. CNM-Au8 is the catalytic engine driving bioenergetic improvements in the oligodendrocytes driving them to remyelinate.” Data suggest that CNM-Au8 may have applications in other neurodegenerative diseases, based on the bioenergetic failure hypothesis of neurodegeneration and aging, said Mr. Hotchkin.

Oligodendrocyte precursor cells are known to be present in the human brain in and around MS lesions even years after an MS attack. Thus, the animal studies may be relevant to clinical MS. As an oral agent, CNM-Au8 has the potential to be a major clinical advance if human trials show activity comparable to that in animal studies, said Mr. Hotchkin.

Initial phase I human clinical work and extensive animal toxicology has supported the safety of this agent. Trials in patients with MS that examine clinical end points are planned. “A phase II study in chronic optic neuropathy in relapsing-remitting MS patients will commence in 2018,” Glen Frick, MD, PhD, Chief Medical Officer of Clene Nanomedicine, told Neurology Reviews.

 

 

—Ted Bosworth

Suggested Reading

Rone MB, Cui QL, Fang J, et al. Oligodendrogliopathy in multiple sclerosis: low glycolytic metabolic rate promotes oligodendrocyte survival. J Neurosci. 2016;36(17):4698-4707.

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PPIs, H2RAs in infants raise later allergy risk

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Children prescribed histamine2-receptor antagonists (H2RAs), proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), or antibiotics during the first 6 months of life may be at greater risk of developing allergic disease, research suggests.

A retrospective cohort study looked at the incidence of subsequent allergic disease in 792,130 children, 7.6% of whom were prescribed an H2RA, 1.7% were prescribed a PPI, and 16.6% were prescribed an antibiotic during the first 6 months of life.

Children who were prescribed a H2RA or a PPI had a greater than twofold higher incidence of food allergy (adjusted hazard ratios 2.18 and 2.59, respectively), reported Edward Mitre, MD, of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md., and his coauthors, reported in the April 2 online edition of JAMA Pediatrics.

In particular, the use of acid-suppressing medications was associated with a 2.4-fold increase in the risk of being diagnosed with cow’s milk allergy, while the risk of egg allergy was 74% higher in children prescribed an H2RA and 35% higher in children prescribed a PPI. In children prescribed an H2RA, the risk of peanut allergy was 21% higher, and in children prescribed a PPI, it was 27% higher.

There also was a dose-dependent interaction between the duration of medication and risk of food allergy. Children who were prescribed more than 60 days of PPIs had a 52% higher risk than did those who were prescribed 1-60 days, and a similar but slightly lower increased risk was seen in those prescribed more than 60 days of H2RAs (hazard ratio, 1.32).

Acid-suppressing medication use also was associated with an increased risk of nonfood allergies, in particular medication allergy (adjusted HR, 1.70 for H2RAs and 1.84 for PPIs), allergic rhinitis (aHR, 1.50 for H2RAs and 1.44 for PPIs), anaphylaxis (aHR, 1.51 for H2RAs and 1.45 for PPIs).

Infants prescribed acid-suppressing medication also showed higher rates of asthma, allergic conjunctivitis, and urticaria during childhood.

 

 


The use of antibiotics in the first 6 months of life was associated with a 14% higher incidence of food allergy but with a 24% higher risk of cow’s milk allergy and egg allergy. Children prescribed antibiotics also had a twofold greater risk of asthma, a 51% higher risk of anaphylaxis, 42% higher risk of allergic conjunctivitis, and a 34% higher risk of medication allergy.

“This study adds to the mounting evidence that agents that disrupt the normal intestinal microbiome during infancy may increase the development of allergic disease,” said Dr. Mitre and his coauthors. “Thus, this study provides further impetus that antibiotics and acid-suppressive medications should be used during infancy only in situations of clear clinical benefit.”

No funding source or conflicts of interest were declared.

SOURCE: Mitre E et al. JAMA Pediatrics. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.0315.

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Children prescribed histamine2-receptor antagonists (H2RAs), proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), or antibiotics during the first 6 months of life may be at greater risk of developing allergic disease, research suggests.

A retrospective cohort study looked at the incidence of subsequent allergic disease in 792,130 children, 7.6% of whom were prescribed an H2RA, 1.7% were prescribed a PPI, and 16.6% were prescribed an antibiotic during the first 6 months of life.

Children who were prescribed a H2RA or a PPI had a greater than twofold higher incidence of food allergy (adjusted hazard ratios 2.18 and 2.59, respectively), reported Edward Mitre, MD, of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md., and his coauthors, reported in the April 2 online edition of JAMA Pediatrics.

In particular, the use of acid-suppressing medications was associated with a 2.4-fold increase in the risk of being diagnosed with cow’s milk allergy, while the risk of egg allergy was 74% higher in children prescribed an H2RA and 35% higher in children prescribed a PPI. In children prescribed an H2RA, the risk of peanut allergy was 21% higher, and in children prescribed a PPI, it was 27% higher.

There also was a dose-dependent interaction between the duration of medication and risk of food allergy. Children who were prescribed more than 60 days of PPIs had a 52% higher risk than did those who were prescribed 1-60 days, and a similar but slightly lower increased risk was seen in those prescribed more than 60 days of H2RAs (hazard ratio, 1.32).

Acid-suppressing medication use also was associated with an increased risk of nonfood allergies, in particular medication allergy (adjusted HR, 1.70 for H2RAs and 1.84 for PPIs), allergic rhinitis (aHR, 1.50 for H2RAs and 1.44 for PPIs), anaphylaxis (aHR, 1.51 for H2RAs and 1.45 for PPIs).

Infants prescribed acid-suppressing medication also showed higher rates of asthma, allergic conjunctivitis, and urticaria during childhood.

 

 


The use of antibiotics in the first 6 months of life was associated with a 14% higher incidence of food allergy but with a 24% higher risk of cow’s milk allergy and egg allergy. Children prescribed antibiotics also had a twofold greater risk of asthma, a 51% higher risk of anaphylaxis, 42% higher risk of allergic conjunctivitis, and a 34% higher risk of medication allergy.

“This study adds to the mounting evidence that agents that disrupt the normal intestinal microbiome during infancy may increase the development of allergic disease,” said Dr. Mitre and his coauthors. “Thus, this study provides further impetus that antibiotics and acid-suppressive medications should be used during infancy only in situations of clear clinical benefit.”

No funding source or conflicts of interest were declared.

SOURCE: Mitre E et al. JAMA Pediatrics. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.0315.

 

Children prescribed histamine2-receptor antagonists (H2RAs), proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), or antibiotics during the first 6 months of life may be at greater risk of developing allergic disease, research suggests.

A retrospective cohort study looked at the incidence of subsequent allergic disease in 792,130 children, 7.6% of whom were prescribed an H2RA, 1.7% were prescribed a PPI, and 16.6% were prescribed an antibiotic during the first 6 months of life.

Children who were prescribed a H2RA or a PPI had a greater than twofold higher incidence of food allergy (adjusted hazard ratios 2.18 and 2.59, respectively), reported Edward Mitre, MD, of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Md., and his coauthors, reported in the April 2 online edition of JAMA Pediatrics.

In particular, the use of acid-suppressing medications was associated with a 2.4-fold increase in the risk of being diagnosed with cow’s milk allergy, while the risk of egg allergy was 74% higher in children prescribed an H2RA and 35% higher in children prescribed a PPI. In children prescribed an H2RA, the risk of peanut allergy was 21% higher, and in children prescribed a PPI, it was 27% higher.

There also was a dose-dependent interaction between the duration of medication and risk of food allergy. Children who were prescribed more than 60 days of PPIs had a 52% higher risk than did those who were prescribed 1-60 days, and a similar but slightly lower increased risk was seen in those prescribed more than 60 days of H2RAs (hazard ratio, 1.32).

Acid-suppressing medication use also was associated with an increased risk of nonfood allergies, in particular medication allergy (adjusted HR, 1.70 for H2RAs and 1.84 for PPIs), allergic rhinitis (aHR, 1.50 for H2RAs and 1.44 for PPIs), anaphylaxis (aHR, 1.51 for H2RAs and 1.45 for PPIs).

Infants prescribed acid-suppressing medication also showed higher rates of asthma, allergic conjunctivitis, and urticaria during childhood.

 

 


The use of antibiotics in the first 6 months of life was associated with a 14% higher incidence of food allergy but with a 24% higher risk of cow’s milk allergy and egg allergy. Children prescribed antibiotics also had a twofold greater risk of asthma, a 51% higher risk of anaphylaxis, 42% higher risk of allergic conjunctivitis, and a 34% higher risk of medication allergy.

“This study adds to the mounting evidence that agents that disrupt the normal intestinal microbiome during infancy may increase the development of allergic disease,” said Dr. Mitre and his coauthors. “Thus, this study provides further impetus that antibiotics and acid-suppressive medications should be used during infancy only in situations of clear clinical benefit.”

No funding source or conflicts of interest were declared.

SOURCE: Mitre E et al. JAMA Pediatrics. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.0315.

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Key clinical point: Acid-suppressing medications before 6 months of age may increase the risk of food allergies.

Major finding: Children prescribed acid-suppressing medications before 6 months had a greater than twofold higher incidence of food allergy.

Study details: A retrospective cohort study in 792,130 children between Oct. 1, 2001, and Sept. 30, 2013.

Disclosures: No funding source or conflicts of interest were declared.

Source: Mitre E et al. JAMA Pediatrics. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.0315.

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Neurology faculty gender gap confirmed, but explanations remain scant

Women on traditional career path need support
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Despite a wide gap between male and female neurologists, both in terms of academic faculty rank and number of publications, there may be some good news for women in this medical field.

A recent study of the 1,712 academic neurologists across 29 top-ranked neurology programs revealed that 1,184 (69%) were men and 528 (31%) were women, and men outnumbered women in all academic faculty ranks with a gap that increased as the rank advanced. For example, at the rank of instructor/lecturer, the male-to-female ratio was 59% to 41%. The gap only widens from there: assistant professor (57% male), associate professor (70%), and professor (86%).

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The disparity “is to be expected because individuals with more senior academic rank are more likely to have graduated when the ratio of male to female medical students was higher,” Mollie McDermott, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and her colleagues wrote in a study published April 2 in JAMA Neurology. “However, even after controlling for years since medical school graduation, fewer women than men have achieved the rank of full professor.”

Additionally, unadjusted analyses showed that men had significantly more publications listed in PubMed than women at the positions of assistant professor, associate professor, and full professor.

The investigators compiled their list of programs and faculty members by combining the top 20 programs listed on either the 2016 or 2017 Doximity Residency Navigator tool with the top 20 programs listed in the U.S. News and World Report ranking of Best Graduate Schools and a search of the programs’ departmental websites between December 1, 2015, and April 30, 2016.

The study was not able to account for many potential explanations for the gender gap, suggesting that the findings may not necessarily be indicative of bad news.

The results “can be viewed as either disappointing or encouraging, depending on whether they reflect persistent barriers to women trying to achieve similar goals as men, or whether they reflect a system that supports women with different goals altogether,” Dr. McDermott and her colleagues wrote.

 

 


For example, the authors note that there are a variety of explanations for the gender gap in both rank and publication, including asymmetric home or childcare responsibilities, cultural stereotypes, professional isolation, and different career motivations, though the study was not able to account for those variables.

“Compared with men, women may be more likely to be recruited for employment positions that emphasize teaching and mentoring rather than research, or women may be more inclined to choose such positions,” the authors noted, adding that academic institutions are moving beyond traditional measures of academic productivity (publication rate, publication impact, and grant support) to recognize other factors, such as the quality and quantity of teaching, the development of educational resources, and administrative effectiveness.

If the numbers reflect persistent barriers to women, “it will be important to develop programs to heighten awareness of diversity in academic neurology,” the authors stated. On the flip side, if the numbers reflect a system that is supporting different goals, “academic neurology departments should be encouraged to foster a variety of career paths and expectations for all faculty.”

The authors reported no conflicts of interest. The study was funded by the Jerry Isler Neuromuscular Fund.

SOURCE: McDermott M et al. JAMA Neurol. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.0275.

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While there may be positive ways to interpret the data, challenges remain for women who want to pursue a career path that features more traditional ways of being recognized. These include ensuring that career paths that require protected time for research and depend on publication and grant support are carefully monitored; and determining that barriers do not hinder women from advancing.

Training programs also must be revisited to ensure that parity across the wider spectrum of careers in neurology is maintained and opportunities continue to exist for both men and women as the specialty continues to grow.

Frances Jensen, MD , is with the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Her remarks are derived from an editorial accompanying the report by Dr. McDermott and colleagues (JAMA Neurol. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.0300). She reported no disclosures.

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While there may be positive ways to interpret the data, challenges remain for women who want to pursue a career path that features more traditional ways of being recognized. These include ensuring that career paths that require protected time for research and depend on publication and grant support are carefully monitored; and determining that barriers do not hinder women from advancing.

Training programs also must be revisited to ensure that parity across the wider spectrum of careers in neurology is maintained and opportunities continue to exist for both men and women as the specialty continues to grow.

Frances Jensen, MD , is with the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Her remarks are derived from an editorial accompanying the report by Dr. McDermott and colleagues (JAMA Neurol. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.0300). She reported no disclosures.

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While there may be positive ways to interpret the data, challenges remain for women who want to pursue a career path that features more traditional ways of being recognized. These include ensuring that career paths that require protected time for research and depend on publication and grant support are carefully monitored; and determining that barriers do not hinder women from advancing.

Training programs also must be revisited to ensure that parity across the wider spectrum of careers in neurology is maintained and opportunities continue to exist for both men and women as the specialty continues to grow.

Frances Jensen, MD , is with the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Her remarks are derived from an editorial accompanying the report by Dr. McDermott and colleagues (JAMA Neurol. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.0300). She reported no disclosures.

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Women on traditional career path need support
Women on traditional career path need support

 

Despite a wide gap between male and female neurologists, both in terms of academic faculty rank and number of publications, there may be some good news for women in this medical field.

A recent study of the 1,712 academic neurologists across 29 top-ranked neurology programs revealed that 1,184 (69%) were men and 528 (31%) were women, and men outnumbered women in all academic faculty ranks with a gap that increased as the rank advanced. For example, at the rank of instructor/lecturer, the male-to-female ratio was 59% to 41%. The gap only widens from there: assistant professor (57% male), associate professor (70%), and professor (86%).

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The disparity “is to be expected because individuals with more senior academic rank are more likely to have graduated when the ratio of male to female medical students was higher,” Mollie McDermott, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and her colleagues wrote in a study published April 2 in JAMA Neurology. “However, even after controlling for years since medical school graduation, fewer women than men have achieved the rank of full professor.”

Additionally, unadjusted analyses showed that men had significantly more publications listed in PubMed than women at the positions of assistant professor, associate professor, and full professor.

The investigators compiled their list of programs and faculty members by combining the top 20 programs listed on either the 2016 or 2017 Doximity Residency Navigator tool with the top 20 programs listed in the U.S. News and World Report ranking of Best Graduate Schools and a search of the programs’ departmental websites between December 1, 2015, and April 30, 2016.

The study was not able to account for many potential explanations for the gender gap, suggesting that the findings may not necessarily be indicative of bad news.

The results “can be viewed as either disappointing or encouraging, depending on whether they reflect persistent barriers to women trying to achieve similar goals as men, or whether they reflect a system that supports women with different goals altogether,” Dr. McDermott and her colleagues wrote.

 

 


For example, the authors note that there are a variety of explanations for the gender gap in both rank and publication, including asymmetric home or childcare responsibilities, cultural stereotypes, professional isolation, and different career motivations, though the study was not able to account for those variables.

“Compared with men, women may be more likely to be recruited for employment positions that emphasize teaching and mentoring rather than research, or women may be more inclined to choose such positions,” the authors noted, adding that academic institutions are moving beyond traditional measures of academic productivity (publication rate, publication impact, and grant support) to recognize other factors, such as the quality and quantity of teaching, the development of educational resources, and administrative effectiveness.

If the numbers reflect persistent barriers to women, “it will be important to develop programs to heighten awareness of diversity in academic neurology,” the authors stated. On the flip side, if the numbers reflect a system that is supporting different goals, “academic neurology departments should be encouraged to foster a variety of career paths and expectations for all faculty.”

The authors reported no conflicts of interest. The study was funded by the Jerry Isler Neuromuscular Fund.

SOURCE: McDermott M et al. JAMA Neurol. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.0275.

 

Despite a wide gap between male and female neurologists, both in terms of academic faculty rank and number of publications, there may be some good news for women in this medical field.

A recent study of the 1,712 academic neurologists across 29 top-ranked neurology programs revealed that 1,184 (69%) were men and 528 (31%) were women, and men outnumbered women in all academic faculty ranks with a gap that increased as the rank advanced. For example, at the rank of instructor/lecturer, the male-to-female ratio was 59% to 41%. The gap only widens from there: assistant professor (57% male), associate professor (70%), and professor (86%).

Thinkstock photo
The disparity “is to be expected because individuals with more senior academic rank are more likely to have graduated when the ratio of male to female medical students was higher,” Mollie McDermott, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and her colleagues wrote in a study published April 2 in JAMA Neurology. “However, even after controlling for years since medical school graduation, fewer women than men have achieved the rank of full professor.”

Additionally, unadjusted analyses showed that men had significantly more publications listed in PubMed than women at the positions of assistant professor, associate professor, and full professor.

The investigators compiled their list of programs and faculty members by combining the top 20 programs listed on either the 2016 or 2017 Doximity Residency Navigator tool with the top 20 programs listed in the U.S. News and World Report ranking of Best Graduate Schools and a search of the programs’ departmental websites between December 1, 2015, and April 30, 2016.

The study was not able to account for many potential explanations for the gender gap, suggesting that the findings may not necessarily be indicative of bad news.

The results “can be viewed as either disappointing or encouraging, depending on whether they reflect persistent barriers to women trying to achieve similar goals as men, or whether they reflect a system that supports women with different goals altogether,” Dr. McDermott and her colleagues wrote.

 

 


For example, the authors note that there are a variety of explanations for the gender gap in both rank and publication, including asymmetric home or childcare responsibilities, cultural stereotypes, professional isolation, and different career motivations, though the study was not able to account for those variables.

“Compared with men, women may be more likely to be recruited for employment positions that emphasize teaching and mentoring rather than research, or women may be more inclined to choose such positions,” the authors noted, adding that academic institutions are moving beyond traditional measures of academic productivity (publication rate, publication impact, and grant support) to recognize other factors, such as the quality and quantity of teaching, the development of educational resources, and administrative effectiveness.

If the numbers reflect persistent barriers to women, “it will be important to develop programs to heighten awareness of diversity in academic neurology,” the authors stated. On the flip side, if the numbers reflect a system that is supporting different goals, “academic neurology departments should be encouraged to foster a variety of career paths and expectations for all faculty.”

The authors reported no conflicts of interest. The study was funded by the Jerry Isler Neuromuscular Fund.

SOURCE: McDermott M et al. JAMA Neurol. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.0275.

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Major finding: Male-to-female ratio widens as rank advances, from 59% male at instructor/lecturer to 86% male at full professor.

Study details: An examination of 1,712 academic neurologists across 29 top-ranked academic institutions.

Disclosures: The study authors reported no conflicts of interest. The study was funded by the Jerry Isler Neuromuscular Fund.

Source: McDermott M et al. JAMA Neurol. 2018 Apr 2. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.0275.

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