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Underdiagnosed: Iron deficiency anemia during pregnancy
Jerome J. Federspiel, MD, often cares for patients who are about to deliver a baby but who have untreated iron deficiency anemia (IDA). Often, these patients require a blood transfusion after giving birth.
“I am sad to hear commonly from patients we treat that they have had iron-deficient anemia symptoms for many years. Correcting these conditions makes birth safer and, oftentimes, makes people feel much better – sometimes better than they have in years,” Dr. Federspiel, maternal-fetal medicine physician and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology and population health sciences at Duke University, Durham, N.C., said.
Even patients he is able to diagnose earlier “will have difficulties catching up during pregnancy.”
The condition is the most common type of anemia among people who are pregnant. IDA increases a patient’s risk of delivering preterm and developing postpartum depression and puts their infants at a risk for perinatal mortality. Without proper treatment of IDA throughout pregnancy, the condition can also lead to low birth weights in infants or failing to meet weight goals later on.
But of all women with a new diagnosis of IDA from 2021 to 2022, 10% were pregnant, according to an analysis by Komodo Health, a health care analytics company.
While estimates of the prevalence of IDA vary, research from 2021 found 6.5% of nearly 1,500 patients who were pregnant during the first trimester had the condition, a figure the researchers said might underrepresent the problem.
“In severe cases [fetal outcomes can include] abnormal fetal oxygenation, nonreassuring fetal heart rate patterns, reduced amniotic fluid volume, fetal cerebral vasodilation, and fetal death,” Alianne S. Tilley, NP, family nurse practitioner at Women’s Care of Lake Cumberland, Somerset, Ky., said.
Research has shown that adequate levels of iron are an integral component in the development of the fetal brain. Some studies have reported that IDA during pregnancy increases an infant’s risk for poor neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Lack of screening protocol
Discrepancies in guidance for testing patients who are pregnant for IDA may add to late diagnosis and low treatment, according to Katelin Zahn, MD, assistant professor of general obstetrics, gynecology, and midwifery at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
“There’s no consistency, which leads to a lot of variation in individual practice, which creates variation in outcomes, too,” Dr. Zahn said. “You can only do so much as one independent physician, and you need to be able to create change in a system that functions and provides standard of care even when you aren’t there.”
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends screening all patients who are pregnant with a complete blood count in the first trimester and again between 24 and 27 weeks of gestation.
Patients who meet criteria for IDA based on hematocrit levels less than 33% in the first and third trimesters, and less than 32% in the second trimester, should be evaluated to determine the cause. Those with IDA should be treated with supplemental iron, in addition to prenatal vitamins, ACOG says.
But the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force in 2015 found insufficient evidence to recommend for or against screening patients without symptoms or signs of the condition. The organization is in the process of updating the recommendation.
Prevention as best practice
The most effective way to address IDA in patients who are pregnant is prevention, according to Dr. Federspiel.
“Having a systematic approach to screening and treatment is really important, and this starts before pregnancy,” Dr. Federspiel said. “On average, a typical pregnancy requires an additional 1 g of iron.”
Dr. Federspiel recommends clinicians discuss the causes and the effects of IDA with patients who are planning to or could become pregnant. Clinicians might recommend iron- and folate-rich foods and vitamins B12 and C and ask patients if they face any barriers to access.
“Prenatal vitamins with iron are the gold standard in preventing IDA in the pregnant population,” Ms. Tilley said. “Education on the significant risk factors associated with IDA in early pregnancy is key.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Jerome J. Federspiel, MD, often cares for patients who are about to deliver a baby but who have untreated iron deficiency anemia (IDA). Often, these patients require a blood transfusion after giving birth.
“I am sad to hear commonly from patients we treat that they have had iron-deficient anemia symptoms for many years. Correcting these conditions makes birth safer and, oftentimes, makes people feel much better – sometimes better than they have in years,” Dr. Federspiel, maternal-fetal medicine physician and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology and population health sciences at Duke University, Durham, N.C., said.
Even patients he is able to diagnose earlier “will have difficulties catching up during pregnancy.”
The condition is the most common type of anemia among people who are pregnant. IDA increases a patient’s risk of delivering preterm and developing postpartum depression and puts their infants at a risk for perinatal mortality. Without proper treatment of IDA throughout pregnancy, the condition can also lead to low birth weights in infants or failing to meet weight goals later on.
But of all women with a new diagnosis of IDA from 2021 to 2022, 10% were pregnant, according to an analysis by Komodo Health, a health care analytics company.
While estimates of the prevalence of IDA vary, research from 2021 found 6.5% of nearly 1,500 patients who were pregnant during the first trimester had the condition, a figure the researchers said might underrepresent the problem.
“In severe cases [fetal outcomes can include] abnormal fetal oxygenation, nonreassuring fetal heart rate patterns, reduced amniotic fluid volume, fetal cerebral vasodilation, and fetal death,” Alianne S. Tilley, NP, family nurse practitioner at Women’s Care of Lake Cumberland, Somerset, Ky., said.
Research has shown that adequate levels of iron are an integral component in the development of the fetal brain. Some studies have reported that IDA during pregnancy increases an infant’s risk for poor neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Lack of screening protocol
Discrepancies in guidance for testing patients who are pregnant for IDA may add to late diagnosis and low treatment, according to Katelin Zahn, MD, assistant professor of general obstetrics, gynecology, and midwifery at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
“There’s no consistency, which leads to a lot of variation in individual practice, which creates variation in outcomes, too,” Dr. Zahn said. “You can only do so much as one independent physician, and you need to be able to create change in a system that functions and provides standard of care even when you aren’t there.”
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends screening all patients who are pregnant with a complete blood count in the first trimester and again between 24 and 27 weeks of gestation.
Patients who meet criteria for IDA based on hematocrit levels less than 33% in the first and third trimesters, and less than 32% in the second trimester, should be evaluated to determine the cause. Those with IDA should be treated with supplemental iron, in addition to prenatal vitamins, ACOG says.
But the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force in 2015 found insufficient evidence to recommend for or against screening patients without symptoms or signs of the condition. The organization is in the process of updating the recommendation.
Prevention as best practice
The most effective way to address IDA in patients who are pregnant is prevention, according to Dr. Federspiel.
“Having a systematic approach to screening and treatment is really important, and this starts before pregnancy,” Dr. Federspiel said. “On average, a typical pregnancy requires an additional 1 g of iron.”
Dr. Federspiel recommends clinicians discuss the causes and the effects of IDA with patients who are planning to or could become pregnant. Clinicians might recommend iron- and folate-rich foods and vitamins B12 and C and ask patients if they face any barriers to access.
“Prenatal vitamins with iron are the gold standard in preventing IDA in the pregnant population,” Ms. Tilley said. “Education on the significant risk factors associated with IDA in early pregnancy is key.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Jerome J. Federspiel, MD, often cares for patients who are about to deliver a baby but who have untreated iron deficiency anemia (IDA). Often, these patients require a blood transfusion after giving birth.
“I am sad to hear commonly from patients we treat that they have had iron-deficient anemia symptoms for many years. Correcting these conditions makes birth safer and, oftentimes, makes people feel much better – sometimes better than they have in years,” Dr. Federspiel, maternal-fetal medicine physician and assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology and population health sciences at Duke University, Durham, N.C., said.
Even patients he is able to diagnose earlier “will have difficulties catching up during pregnancy.”
The condition is the most common type of anemia among people who are pregnant. IDA increases a patient’s risk of delivering preterm and developing postpartum depression and puts their infants at a risk for perinatal mortality. Without proper treatment of IDA throughout pregnancy, the condition can also lead to low birth weights in infants or failing to meet weight goals later on.
But of all women with a new diagnosis of IDA from 2021 to 2022, 10% were pregnant, according to an analysis by Komodo Health, a health care analytics company.
While estimates of the prevalence of IDA vary, research from 2021 found 6.5% of nearly 1,500 patients who were pregnant during the first trimester had the condition, a figure the researchers said might underrepresent the problem.
“In severe cases [fetal outcomes can include] abnormal fetal oxygenation, nonreassuring fetal heart rate patterns, reduced amniotic fluid volume, fetal cerebral vasodilation, and fetal death,” Alianne S. Tilley, NP, family nurse practitioner at Women’s Care of Lake Cumberland, Somerset, Ky., said.
Research has shown that adequate levels of iron are an integral component in the development of the fetal brain. Some studies have reported that IDA during pregnancy increases an infant’s risk for poor neurodevelopmental outcomes.
Lack of screening protocol
Discrepancies in guidance for testing patients who are pregnant for IDA may add to late diagnosis and low treatment, according to Katelin Zahn, MD, assistant professor of general obstetrics, gynecology, and midwifery at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
“There’s no consistency, which leads to a lot of variation in individual practice, which creates variation in outcomes, too,” Dr. Zahn said. “You can only do so much as one independent physician, and you need to be able to create change in a system that functions and provides standard of care even when you aren’t there.”
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends screening all patients who are pregnant with a complete blood count in the first trimester and again between 24 and 27 weeks of gestation.
Patients who meet criteria for IDA based on hematocrit levels less than 33% in the first and third trimesters, and less than 32% in the second trimester, should be evaluated to determine the cause. Those with IDA should be treated with supplemental iron, in addition to prenatal vitamins, ACOG says.
But the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force in 2015 found insufficient evidence to recommend for or against screening patients without symptoms or signs of the condition. The organization is in the process of updating the recommendation.
Prevention as best practice
The most effective way to address IDA in patients who are pregnant is prevention, according to Dr. Federspiel.
“Having a systematic approach to screening and treatment is really important, and this starts before pregnancy,” Dr. Federspiel said. “On average, a typical pregnancy requires an additional 1 g of iron.”
Dr. Federspiel recommends clinicians discuss the causes and the effects of IDA with patients who are planning to or could become pregnant. Clinicians might recommend iron- and folate-rich foods and vitamins B12 and C and ask patients if they face any barriers to access.
“Prenatal vitamins with iron are the gold standard in preventing IDA in the pregnant population,” Ms. Tilley said. “Education on the significant risk factors associated with IDA in early pregnancy is key.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Avoid anti-HER2 cancer therapies during pregnancy
TOPLINE:
, according to a recent analysis.
METHODOLOGY:
- Current guidelines do not recommend treating pregnant women with trastuzumab, given documented safety concerns. Other anti-HER2 agents are also discouraged in this setting because of a lack of safety data. However, when considering the efficacy of these drugs in HER2-positive breast cancer, having a better understanding of the potential toxicities in pregnant patients is important.
- In the current case-control analysis, the team explored the risk for adverse effects among pregnant women exposed to anti-HER2 agents vs other anticancer drugs.
- The researchers leveraged the World Health Organization’s pharmacovigilance database, VigiBase, to identify reports with at least one pregnancy-related complication and one suspected anticancer drug.
- The researchers classified exposure to the drugs as occurring before pregnancy, during pregnancy, or via breast milk, semen, or skin. The team then examined 30 maternal and fetal or neonatal adverse outcomes and grouped them into seven categories: abortions, stillbirths, congenital malformations, pregnancy complications, preterm birth, neonatal complications, and delivery complications.
- The most used anti-HER2 agent was trastuzumab (n = 302), followed by pertuzumab (n = 55), trastuzumab-emtansine (n = 20), and lapatinib (n = 18).
TAKEAWAY:
- Among 3,558 reports included in the analysis, 328 patients were exposed to anti-HER2 drugs compared with 3,230 patients who received other anticancer agents.
- Pregnancy, fetal, or newborn adverse outcomes were reported in 61.3% of women treated with anti-HER2 agents and 56.3% of those receiving other anticancer drugs.
- The five most frequently reported complications in the anti-HER2 group were oligohydramnios (23.8%), preterm birth (17.4%), intrauterine growth restriction (9.8%), neonatal respiratory disorder (7.3%), and spontaneous abortion (7.3%).
- Adverse outcomes overreported in women who received anti-HER2 agents included oligohydramnios (reporting odds ratio [ROR], 17.68), congenital tract disorders (ROR, 9.98), and neonatal kidney failure (ROR, 9.15). Cardiovascular malformations were also overreported among women receiving trastuzumab-emtansine (ROR, 4.46), as were intrauterine growth restrictions for those treated with lapatinib (ROR, 7.68).
IN PRACTICE:
Exposure to anti-HER2 agents was associated with “severe specific adverse pregnancy and fetal or newborn outcomes compared with exposure to other anticancer treatments,” with a “strong, highly significant overreporting of congenital respiratory tract disorders and neonatal kidney failure,” which can lead to oligohydramnios, the authors wrote. The authors also noted that when delaying anti-HER2 therapy is not possible, it’s imperative to monitor patients closely for oligohydramnios.
SOURCE:
The study, led by Paul Gougis, MD, Institut Curie Centre de Recherche, Paris, , was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
Potential inconsistencies in the collection of pharmacovigilance data could limit the generalizability of the results in the general population. The group of women exposed to other anticancer therapies may also constitute a different patient population from that given anti-HER2 therapies.
DISCLOSURES:
Coauthor Jean-Philippe Spano, MD, PhD, declared relationships Gilead, AstraZeneca, Lilly, Pfizer, Novartis, Daiichi Sankyo, and GSK.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
, according to a recent analysis.
METHODOLOGY:
- Current guidelines do not recommend treating pregnant women with trastuzumab, given documented safety concerns. Other anti-HER2 agents are also discouraged in this setting because of a lack of safety data. However, when considering the efficacy of these drugs in HER2-positive breast cancer, having a better understanding of the potential toxicities in pregnant patients is important.
- In the current case-control analysis, the team explored the risk for adverse effects among pregnant women exposed to anti-HER2 agents vs other anticancer drugs.
- The researchers leveraged the World Health Organization’s pharmacovigilance database, VigiBase, to identify reports with at least one pregnancy-related complication and one suspected anticancer drug.
- The researchers classified exposure to the drugs as occurring before pregnancy, during pregnancy, or via breast milk, semen, or skin. The team then examined 30 maternal and fetal or neonatal adverse outcomes and grouped them into seven categories: abortions, stillbirths, congenital malformations, pregnancy complications, preterm birth, neonatal complications, and delivery complications.
- The most used anti-HER2 agent was trastuzumab (n = 302), followed by pertuzumab (n = 55), trastuzumab-emtansine (n = 20), and lapatinib (n = 18).
TAKEAWAY:
- Among 3,558 reports included in the analysis, 328 patients were exposed to anti-HER2 drugs compared with 3,230 patients who received other anticancer agents.
- Pregnancy, fetal, or newborn adverse outcomes were reported in 61.3% of women treated with anti-HER2 agents and 56.3% of those receiving other anticancer drugs.
- The five most frequently reported complications in the anti-HER2 group were oligohydramnios (23.8%), preterm birth (17.4%), intrauterine growth restriction (9.8%), neonatal respiratory disorder (7.3%), and spontaneous abortion (7.3%).
- Adverse outcomes overreported in women who received anti-HER2 agents included oligohydramnios (reporting odds ratio [ROR], 17.68), congenital tract disorders (ROR, 9.98), and neonatal kidney failure (ROR, 9.15). Cardiovascular malformations were also overreported among women receiving trastuzumab-emtansine (ROR, 4.46), as were intrauterine growth restrictions for those treated with lapatinib (ROR, 7.68).
IN PRACTICE:
Exposure to anti-HER2 agents was associated with “severe specific adverse pregnancy and fetal or newborn outcomes compared with exposure to other anticancer treatments,” with a “strong, highly significant overreporting of congenital respiratory tract disorders and neonatal kidney failure,” which can lead to oligohydramnios, the authors wrote. The authors also noted that when delaying anti-HER2 therapy is not possible, it’s imperative to monitor patients closely for oligohydramnios.
SOURCE:
The study, led by Paul Gougis, MD, Institut Curie Centre de Recherche, Paris, , was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
Potential inconsistencies in the collection of pharmacovigilance data could limit the generalizability of the results in the general population. The group of women exposed to other anticancer therapies may also constitute a different patient population from that given anti-HER2 therapies.
DISCLOSURES:
Coauthor Jean-Philippe Spano, MD, PhD, declared relationships Gilead, AstraZeneca, Lilly, Pfizer, Novartis, Daiichi Sankyo, and GSK.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
, according to a recent analysis.
METHODOLOGY:
- Current guidelines do not recommend treating pregnant women with trastuzumab, given documented safety concerns. Other anti-HER2 agents are also discouraged in this setting because of a lack of safety data. However, when considering the efficacy of these drugs in HER2-positive breast cancer, having a better understanding of the potential toxicities in pregnant patients is important.
- In the current case-control analysis, the team explored the risk for adverse effects among pregnant women exposed to anti-HER2 agents vs other anticancer drugs.
- The researchers leveraged the World Health Organization’s pharmacovigilance database, VigiBase, to identify reports with at least one pregnancy-related complication and one suspected anticancer drug.
- The researchers classified exposure to the drugs as occurring before pregnancy, during pregnancy, or via breast milk, semen, or skin. The team then examined 30 maternal and fetal or neonatal adverse outcomes and grouped them into seven categories: abortions, stillbirths, congenital malformations, pregnancy complications, preterm birth, neonatal complications, and delivery complications.
- The most used anti-HER2 agent was trastuzumab (n = 302), followed by pertuzumab (n = 55), trastuzumab-emtansine (n = 20), and lapatinib (n = 18).
TAKEAWAY:
- Among 3,558 reports included in the analysis, 328 patients were exposed to anti-HER2 drugs compared with 3,230 patients who received other anticancer agents.
- Pregnancy, fetal, or newborn adverse outcomes were reported in 61.3% of women treated with anti-HER2 agents and 56.3% of those receiving other anticancer drugs.
- The five most frequently reported complications in the anti-HER2 group were oligohydramnios (23.8%), preterm birth (17.4%), intrauterine growth restriction (9.8%), neonatal respiratory disorder (7.3%), and spontaneous abortion (7.3%).
- Adverse outcomes overreported in women who received anti-HER2 agents included oligohydramnios (reporting odds ratio [ROR], 17.68), congenital tract disorders (ROR, 9.98), and neonatal kidney failure (ROR, 9.15). Cardiovascular malformations were also overreported among women receiving trastuzumab-emtansine (ROR, 4.46), as were intrauterine growth restrictions for those treated with lapatinib (ROR, 7.68).
IN PRACTICE:
Exposure to anti-HER2 agents was associated with “severe specific adverse pregnancy and fetal or newborn outcomes compared with exposure to other anticancer treatments,” with a “strong, highly significant overreporting of congenital respiratory tract disorders and neonatal kidney failure,” which can lead to oligohydramnios, the authors wrote. The authors also noted that when delaying anti-HER2 therapy is not possible, it’s imperative to monitor patients closely for oligohydramnios.
SOURCE:
The study, led by Paul Gougis, MD, Institut Curie Centre de Recherche, Paris, , was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
Potential inconsistencies in the collection of pharmacovigilance data could limit the generalizability of the results in the general population. The group of women exposed to other anticancer therapies may also constitute a different patient population from that given anti-HER2 therapies.
DISCLOSURES:
Coauthor Jean-Philippe Spano, MD, PhD, declared relationships Gilead, AstraZeneca, Lilly, Pfizer, Novartis, Daiichi Sankyo, and GSK.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Psychosocial environmental factors may drive persistent childhood asthma
TOPLINE:
Children with asthma exposed to worsening psychosocial environmental factors during childhood were more likely to have more severe asthma symptoms than those without such exposures.
METHODOLOGY:
- The researchers reviewed data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, a nationally representative cohort that also collects data on the health, psychosocial, and environmental status of parents, and used three multivariate models to assess the impact of psychosocial environmental factors on asthma symptoms at ages 1 year, 4-5 years, and 14-15 years.
- The study population included 3,917 children aged 0-15 years who were sorted into three asthma symptom trajectory groups (low/no asthma, transient high asthma, and persistent high asthma); asthma symptoms were defined as a history of chest wheezing lasting at least a week within the past 12 months.
- The researchers identified several psychosocial environmental factors as exposure variables on the basis of literature reviews; these factors were maternal depression, parents’ financial hardship, parental availability, and parental stressful life events.
TAKEAWAY:
- The mean scores of psychosocial factors for the overall study population remained stable over time, but groups of children exposed to bad trajectories of psychosocial factors were significantly more likely to have transient high and persistent high asthma symptoms.
- In the first year of life, only parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with the persistent high asthma symptom trajectory group in an adjusted analysis.
- At age 4-5 years, maternal depression, low parental availability, and parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with persistent high asthma; parents’ financial hardship was significantly associated with transient high asthma symptoms.
- At age 14-15 years, children exposed to “moderate and increasing” maternal depression, “moderate and declining” parents’ financial hardship, and “moderate and increasing” parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with persistent high asthma versus no or low asthma, with relative risk ratios of 1.55, 1.40, and 1.77, respectively.
IN PRACTICE:
The study findings highlight the need for policy makers to take action to improve asthma control in children by reducing exposure to harmful psychosocial environmental factors, the researchers concluded.
SOURCE:
The lead author of the study was K.M. Shahunja, MBBS, PhD candidate at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. The study was published online in Pediatric Pulmonology.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is the first known to examine asthma symptom trajectories at different developmental stages, but participant attrition and missing values were limiting factors, as was the inability to account for all potential psychosocial environmental factors that might influence asthma symptoms in childhood.
DISCLOSURES:
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Children with asthma exposed to worsening psychosocial environmental factors during childhood were more likely to have more severe asthma symptoms than those without such exposures.
METHODOLOGY:
- The researchers reviewed data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, a nationally representative cohort that also collects data on the health, psychosocial, and environmental status of parents, and used three multivariate models to assess the impact of psychosocial environmental factors on asthma symptoms at ages 1 year, 4-5 years, and 14-15 years.
- The study population included 3,917 children aged 0-15 years who were sorted into three asthma symptom trajectory groups (low/no asthma, transient high asthma, and persistent high asthma); asthma symptoms were defined as a history of chest wheezing lasting at least a week within the past 12 months.
- The researchers identified several psychosocial environmental factors as exposure variables on the basis of literature reviews; these factors were maternal depression, parents’ financial hardship, parental availability, and parental stressful life events.
TAKEAWAY:
- The mean scores of psychosocial factors for the overall study population remained stable over time, but groups of children exposed to bad trajectories of psychosocial factors were significantly more likely to have transient high and persistent high asthma symptoms.
- In the first year of life, only parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with the persistent high asthma symptom trajectory group in an adjusted analysis.
- At age 4-5 years, maternal depression, low parental availability, and parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with persistent high asthma; parents’ financial hardship was significantly associated with transient high asthma symptoms.
- At age 14-15 years, children exposed to “moderate and increasing” maternal depression, “moderate and declining” parents’ financial hardship, and “moderate and increasing” parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with persistent high asthma versus no or low asthma, with relative risk ratios of 1.55, 1.40, and 1.77, respectively.
IN PRACTICE:
The study findings highlight the need for policy makers to take action to improve asthma control in children by reducing exposure to harmful psychosocial environmental factors, the researchers concluded.
SOURCE:
The lead author of the study was K.M. Shahunja, MBBS, PhD candidate at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. The study was published online in Pediatric Pulmonology.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is the first known to examine asthma symptom trajectories at different developmental stages, but participant attrition and missing values were limiting factors, as was the inability to account for all potential psychosocial environmental factors that might influence asthma symptoms in childhood.
DISCLOSURES:
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Children with asthma exposed to worsening psychosocial environmental factors during childhood were more likely to have more severe asthma symptoms than those without such exposures.
METHODOLOGY:
- The researchers reviewed data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, a nationally representative cohort that also collects data on the health, psychosocial, and environmental status of parents, and used three multivariate models to assess the impact of psychosocial environmental factors on asthma symptoms at ages 1 year, 4-5 years, and 14-15 years.
- The study population included 3,917 children aged 0-15 years who were sorted into three asthma symptom trajectory groups (low/no asthma, transient high asthma, and persistent high asthma); asthma symptoms were defined as a history of chest wheezing lasting at least a week within the past 12 months.
- The researchers identified several psychosocial environmental factors as exposure variables on the basis of literature reviews; these factors were maternal depression, parents’ financial hardship, parental availability, and parental stressful life events.
TAKEAWAY:
- The mean scores of psychosocial factors for the overall study population remained stable over time, but groups of children exposed to bad trajectories of psychosocial factors were significantly more likely to have transient high and persistent high asthma symptoms.
- In the first year of life, only parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with the persistent high asthma symptom trajectory group in an adjusted analysis.
- At age 4-5 years, maternal depression, low parental availability, and parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with persistent high asthma; parents’ financial hardship was significantly associated with transient high asthma symptoms.
- At age 14-15 years, children exposed to “moderate and increasing” maternal depression, “moderate and declining” parents’ financial hardship, and “moderate and increasing” parents’ stressful life events were significantly associated with persistent high asthma versus no or low asthma, with relative risk ratios of 1.55, 1.40, and 1.77, respectively.
IN PRACTICE:
The study findings highlight the need for policy makers to take action to improve asthma control in children by reducing exposure to harmful psychosocial environmental factors, the researchers concluded.
SOURCE:
The lead author of the study was K.M. Shahunja, MBBS, PhD candidate at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. The study was published online in Pediatric Pulmonology.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is the first known to examine asthma symptom trajectories at different developmental stages, but participant attrition and missing values were limiting factors, as was the inability to account for all potential psychosocial environmental factors that might influence asthma symptoms in childhood.
DISCLOSURES:
The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Food insecurity a dementia risk factor?
TOPLINE:
Food insecurity among older adults is associated with increased dementia risk, poorer memory function, and faster memory decline, new research indicates.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers analyzed data on 7,012 adults (mean age, 67 years; 59% women) from the U.S. Health and Retirement Study.
- Food security status was assessed in 2013 using a validated survey, with cognitive outcomes evaluated between 2014 and 2018.
- Analyses were adjusted for demographics, socioeconomics, and health factors.
TAKEAWAY:
- About 18% of adults were food insecure, with 10% reporting low food security and 8% very low food security. About 11% of those aged 65+ in 2013 were food insecure.
- The odds of dementia were 38% higher (odds ratio, 1.38; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.15-1.67) in adults with low food security and 37% higher (OR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.11-1.59) in those with very low food security, compared with food-secure adults.
- Translated to years of excess cognitive aging, food insecurity was associated with increased dementia risk equivalent to roughly 1.3 excess years of aging.
- Low and very low food security were also associated with lower memory levels and faster age-related memory decline.
IN PRACTICE:
“Our study contributes to a limited literature by capitalizing on a large and diverse sample, validated exposure and outcome measures, and longitudinal data to robustly evaluate these associations, providing evidence in support of the connection between food insecurity in older adulthood and subsequent brain health,” the authors wrote. “Our findings highlight the need to improve food security in older adults and that doing so may protect individuals from cognitive decline and dementia.”
SOURCE:
The study, with first author Haobing Qian, PhD, with the University of California, San Francisco, was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
Residual confounding cannot be ruled out. Food insecurity was not assessed prior to 2013. The researchers lacked information on clinical dementia diagnoses.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Food insecurity among older adults is associated with increased dementia risk, poorer memory function, and faster memory decline, new research indicates.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers analyzed data on 7,012 adults (mean age, 67 years; 59% women) from the U.S. Health and Retirement Study.
- Food security status was assessed in 2013 using a validated survey, with cognitive outcomes evaluated between 2014 and 2018.
- Analyses were adjusted for demographics, socioeconomics, and health factors.
TAKEAWAY:
- About 18% of adults were food insecure, with 10% reporting low food security and 8% very low food security. About 11% of those aged 65+ in 2013 were food insecure.
- The odds of dementia were 38% higher (odds ratio, 1.38; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.15-1.67) in adults with low food security and 37% higher (OR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.11-1.59) in those with very low food security, compared with food-secure adults.
- Translated to years of excess cognitive aging, food insecurity was associated with increased dementia risk equivalent to roughly 1.3 excess years of aging.
- Low and very low food security were also associated with lower memory levels and faster age-related memory decline.
IN PRACTICE:
“Our study contributes to a limited literature by capitalizing on a large and diverse sample, validated exposure and outcome measures, and longitudinal data to robustly evaluate these associations, providing evidence in support of the connection between food insecurity in older adulthood and subsequent brain health,” the authors wrote. “Our findings highlight the need to improve food security in older adults and that doing so may protect individuals from cognitive decline and dementia.”
SOURCE:
The study, with first author Haobing Qian, PhD, with the University of California, San Francisco, was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
Residual confounding cannot be ruled out. Food insecurity was not assessed prior to 2013. The researchers lacked information on clinical dementia diagnoses.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Food insecurity among older adults is associated with increased dementia risk, poorer memory function, and faster memory decline, new research indicates.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers analyzed data on 7,012 adults (mean age, 67 years; 59% women) from the U.S. Health and Retirement Study.
- Food security status was assessed in 2013 using a validated survey, with cognitive outcomes evaluated between 2014 and 2018.
- Analyses were adjusted for demographics, socioeconomics, and health factors.
TAKEAWAY:
- About 18% of adults were food insecure, with 10% reporting low food security and 8% very low food security. About 11% of those aged 65+ in 2013 were food insecure.
- The odds of dementia were 38% higher (odds ratio, 1.38; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.15-1.67) in adults with low food security and 37% higher (OR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.11-1.59) in those with very low food security, compared with food-secure adults.
- Translated to years of excess cognitive aging, food insecurity was associated with increased dementia risk equivalent to roughly 1.3 excess years of aging.
- Low and very low food security were also associated with lower memory levels and faster age-related memory decline.
IN PRACTICE:
“Our study contributes to a limited literature by capitalizing on a large and diverse sample, validated exposure and outcome measures, and longitudinal data to robustly evaluate these associations, providing evidence in support of the connection between food insecurity in older adulthood and subsequent brain health,” the authors wrote. “Our findings highlight the need to improve food security in older adults and that doing so may protect individuals from cognitive decline and dementia.”
SOURCE:
The study, with first author Haobing Qian, PhD, with the University of California, San Francisco, was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
Residual confounding cannot be ruled out. Food insecurity was not assessed prior to 2013. The researchers lacked information on clinical dementia diagnoses.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pregnant women with eosinophilic esophagitis show no ill effects from inhaled steroids
, according to new research presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
“Currently, there are no specific recommendations about the safe use of steroids in pregnant women with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), Julton Tomanguillo Chumbe, MD, said in an interview. “Our recommendations about the use of steroids among this population are based on the safety data extrapolated mainly from pregnant women with asthma.”
In the study, Dr. Chumbe, an internal medicine resident at Charleston Area Medical Center, West Virginia University, Charleston, and colleagues identified pregnant patients aged 18 years and older with a diagnosis of EoE between January 2011 and December 2022 through the TriNetx Global Collaborative Network, which includes 101 health care organizations in 14 countries. The study population consisted of 1,263 individuals.
The researchers used propensity score matching (PSM) to compare the rates of spontaneous abortion, placenta previa, preeclampsia, premature delivery, HELLP syndrome, eclampsia, hyperemesis gravidarum, and major congenital abnormalities between women with EoE who did and did not use steroids during pregnancy. The PSM cohorts included 268 women in each group.
Overall, pregnant women who used steroids were not significantly more likely than were those who did not use steroids to experience spontaneous abortion (3.73% vs. 4.85%, P = .52). Rates of placenta previa, preeclampsia, premature delivery, HELLP syndrome, and hyperemesis gravidarum were equal between the groups (3.73% vs. 3.73%, P = 1.00 for all). No cases of eclampsia occurred in the steroid group, compared with a 3.73% rate in women who did not use steroids.
Incidence of major congenital abnormalities including but not limited to malformations of the eye, ear, face, neck, skull and face bones, and of the circulatory, respiratory, and digestive systems, were similar between the steroid and no steroid groups (7.09% vs. 8.20%, P = .62)
Dr. Chumbe said he was not surprised by the findings, given the robust data about the safe use of steroids in pregnant women with asthma, in terms of pregnancy outcomes and fetal outcomes.
“The findings of this study provide reassurance that the use of steroids in pregnant patients with eosinophilic esophagitis is not significantly associated with an increased risk of worse maternal or fetal outcomes,” he said. “During pregnancy, some patients may discontinue treatment due to safety concerns. However, this study suggests that this may not be necessary.” Consequently, patients can maintain EoE management while reducing the risk of complications.
Looking ahead, “it will be important to have some data about the safe use of dupilumab during pregnancy in patients with eosinophilic esophagitis,” he said.
Pregnant patients can maintain EoE management
“This study is able to address an important concern that many patients have regarding the safety of steroid therapy for EoE, particularly during pregnancy,” said Anita Afzali, MD, MPH, AGAF, a gastroenterologist specializing in inflammatory bowel disease and executive vice chair of internal medicine at the University of Cincinnati. “As EoE impacts over 40% of women, most who are in childbearing age, it is important to review the safety of treatment and management of EoE so a mother does not have to choose between EoE management and pregnancy.”
The results from this study were certainly reassuring, though not surprising, Dr. Afzali said. “Previously, the safety profile of steroids during pregnancy was mostly extrapolated from asthma, and other diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease. The results from this study confirm that there are no significant associations with adverse maternal or birth outcomes among women with EoE treated with steroids during pregnancy,” she said.
The study has some limitations, including the retrospective design and potential for selection bias, Dr. Afzali noted. “Further research is needed for the evaluation of newer therapies in the pipeline for treatment of EoE and its safety profile with pregnancy,” she said.
However, “sharing this information in clinical practice “will allow our patients to feel comfortable with continuation of appropriate steroid therapy for treatment and management of their EoE, without having to choose between family planning or pregnancy and EoE care management,” Dr. Afzali said.
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Chumbe an Dr. Afzali indicated having no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
, according to new research presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
“Currently, there are no specific recommendations about the safe use of steroids in pregnant women with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), Julton Tomanguillo Chumbe, MD, said in an interview. “Our recommendations about the use of steroids among this population are based on the safety data extrapolated mainly from pregnant women with asthma.”
In the study, Dr. Chumbe, an internal medicine resident at Charleston Area Medical Center, West Virginia University, Charleston, and colleagues identified pregnant patients aged 18 years and older with a diagnosis of EoE between January 2011 and December 2022 through the TriNetx Global Collaborative Network, which includes 101 health care organizations in 14 countries. The study population consisted of 1,263 individuals.
The researchers used propensity score matching (PSM) to compare the rates of spontaneous abortion, placenta previa, preeclampsia, premature delivery, HELLP syndrome, eclampsia, hyperemesis gravidarum, and major congenital abnormalities between women with EoE who did and did not use steroids during pregnancy. The PSM cohorts included 268 women in each group.
Overall, pregnant women who used steroids were not significantly more likely than were those who did not use steroids to experience spontaneous abortion (3.73% vs. 4.85%, P = .52). Rates of placenta previa, preeclampsia, premature delivery, HELLP syndrome, and hyperemesis gravidarum were equal between the groups (3.73% vs. 3.73%, P = 1.00 for all). No cases of eclampsia occurred in the steroid group, compared with a 3.73% rate in women who did not use steroids.
Incidence of major congenital abnormalities including but not limited to malformations of the eye, ear, face, neck, skull and face bones, and of the circulatory, respiratory, and digestive systems, were similar between the steroid and no steroid groups (7.09% vs. 8.20%, P = .62)
Dr. Chumbe said he was not surprised by the findings, given the robust data about the safe use of steroids in pregnant women with asthma, in terms of pregnancy outcomes and fetal outcomes.
“The findings of this study provide reassurance that the use of steroids in pregnant patients with eosinophilic esophagitis is not significantly associated with an increased risk of worse maternal or fetal outcomes,” he said. “During pregnancy, some patients may discontinue treatment due to safety concerns. However, this study suggests that this may not be necessary.” Consequently, patients can maintain EoE management while reducing the risk of complications.
Looking ahead, “it will be important to have some data about the safe use of dupilumab during pregnancy in patients with eosinophilic esophagitis,” he said.
Pregnant patients can maintain EoE management
“This study is able to address an important concern that many patients have regarding the safety of steroid therapy for EoE, particularly during pregnancy,” said Anita Afzali, MD, MPH, AGAF, a gastroenterologist specializing in inflammatory bowel disease and executive vice chair of internal medicine at the University of Cincinnati. “As EoE impacts over 40% of women, most who are in childbearing age, it is important to review the safety of treatment and management of EoE so a mother does not have to choose between EoE management and pregnancy.”
The results from this study were certainly reassuring, though not surprising, Dr. Afzali said. “Previously, the safety profile of steroids during pregnancy was mostly extrapolated from asthma, and other diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease. The results from this study confirm that there are no significant associations with adverse maternal or birth outcomes among women with EoE treated with steroids during pregnancy,” she said.
The study has some limitations, including the retrospective design and potential for selection bias, Dr. Afzali noted. “Further research is needed for the evaluation of newer therapies in the pipeline for treatment of EoE and its safety profile with pregnancy,” she said.
However, “sharing this information in clinical practice “will allow our patients to feel comfortable with continuation of appropriate steroid therapy for treatment and management of their EoE, without having to choose between family planning or pregnancy and EoE care management,” Dr. Afzali said.
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Chumbe an Dr. Afzali indicated having no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
, according to new research presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
“Currently, there are no specific recommendations about the safe use of steroids in pregnant women with eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), Julton Tomanguillo Chumbe, MD, said in an interview. “Our recommendations about the use of steroids among this population are based on the safety data extrapolated mainly from pregnant women with asthma.”
In the study, Dr. Chumbe, an internal medicine resident at Charleston Area Medical Center, West Virginia University, Charleston, and colleagues identified pregnant patients aged 18 years and older with a diagnosis of EoE between January 2011 and December 2022 through the TriNetx Global Collaborative Network, which includes 101 health care organizations in 14 countries. The study population consisted of 1,263 individuals.
The researchers used propensity score matching (PSM) to compare the rates of spontaneous abortion, placenta previa, preeclampsia, premature delivery, HELLP syndrome, eclampsia, hyperemesis gravidarum, and major congenital abnormalities between women with EoE who did and did not use steroids during pregnancy. The PSM cohorts included 268 women in each group.
Overall, pregnant women who used steroids were not significantly more likely than were those who did not use steroids to experience spontaneous abortion (3.73% vs. 4.85%, P = .52). Rates of placenta previa, preeclampsia, premature delivery, HELLP syndrome, and hyperemesis gravidarum were equal between the groups (3.73% vs. 3.73%, P = 1.00 for all). No cases of eclampsia occurred in the steroid group, compared with a 3.73% rate in women who did not use steroids.
Incidence of major congenital abnormalities including but not limited to malformations of the eye, ear, face, neck, skull and face bones, and of the circulatory, respiratory, and digestive systems, were similar between the steroid and no steroid groups (7.09% vs. 8.20%, P = .62)
Dr. Chumbe said he was not surprised by the findings, given the robust data about the safe use of steroids in pregnant women with asthma, in terms of pregnancy outcomes and fetal outcomes.
“The findings of this study provide reassurance that the use of steroids in pregnant patients with eosinophilic esophagitis is not significantly associated with an increased risk of worse maternal or fetal outcomes,” he said. “During pregnancy, some patients may discontinue treatment due to safety concerns. However, this study suggests that this may not be necessary.” Consequently, patients can maintain EoE management while reducing the risk of complications.
Looking ahead, “it will be important to have some data about the safe use of dupilumab during pregnancy in patients with eosinophilic esophagitis,” he said.
Pregnant patients can maintain EoE management
“This study is able to address an important concern that many patients have regarding the safety of steroid therapy for EoE, particularly during pregnancy,” said Anita Afzali, MD, MPH, AGAF, a gastroenterologist specializing in inflammatory bowel disease and executive vice chair of internal medicine at the University of Cincinnati. “As EoE impacts over 40% of women, most who are in childbearing age, it is important to review the safety of treatment and management of EoE so a mother does not have to choose between EoE management and pregnancy.”
The results from this study were certainly reassuring, though not surprising, Dr. Afzali said. “Previously, the safety profile of steroids during pregnancy was mostly extrapolated from asthma, and other diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease. The results from this study confirm that there are no significant associations with adverse maternal or birth outcomes among women with EoE treated with steroids during pregnancy,” she said.
The study has some limitations, including the retrospective design and potential for selection bias, Dr. Afzali noted. “Further research is needed for the evaluation of newer therapies in the pipeline for treatment of EoE and its safety profile with pregnancy,” she said.
However, “sharing this information in clinical practice “will allow our patients to feel comfortable with continuation of appropriate steroid therapy for treatment and management of their EoE, without having to choose between family planning or pregnancy and EoE care management,” Dr. Afzali said.
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Chumbe an Dr. Afzali indicated having no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM ACG 2023
MRIs, MRI-guided biopsies detect prostate cancer affordably
TOPLINE:
published online in JAMA Network Open.
METHODOLOGY:
- Investigators ran a simulation of a hypothetical group of 65-year-old men who were at risk for the cancer, as indicated by their prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels.
- The costs and benefits of periodic ultrasound biopsies were modeled in comparison with those of an annual MRI plus MRI-guided biopsies using epidemiologic and clinical data.
- The investigators compared the cost-effectiveness of each biopsy approach over a decade, as measured by the cost of procedures divided by the projected gain in life-years.
- Cost-effectiveness was defined as less than $100,000 for each life-year gain using an MRI in comparison with ultrasound.
- They stratified the cost-effectiveness of the MRI approach by severity of PSA level: less than 2.5 ng/mL, 2.5-4.0 ng/mL, 4.1-10.0 ng/mL, and greater than 10.0 ng/mL.
TAKEAWAY:
- For three of the four PSA levels (2.5-4.0 ng/mL, 4.1-10.0 ng/mL, and greater than 10.0 ng/mL) the combination of MRI plus MRI-guided biopsy was cost effective.
- The MRI-based approach cost $6,000 more than ultrasound for each life-year gained at the highest PSA level of greater than 10.0 ng/mL, which was significantly below the $100,000 threshold.
- At the lowest PSA level of less than 2.5 ng/mL, the difference between MRI and ultrasound was $187,000, which was above the threshold.
IN PRACTICE:
The researchers wrote that there is “a growing consensus that the use of MRI and potential MRI-guided biopsy is cost effective.”
SOURCE:
Ali Jalali, PhD, a health economist at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, is the senior author of the study. Simulation data come from the National Vital Statistics Report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Medicare fee schedule.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is a hypothetical simulation of what could happen under different conditions, not an analysis of data developed over time in clinical practice. It also assumes that PSA levels remain constant over time.
DISCLOSURES:
One author receives grants from Siemens Healthineers for MRI technology development, and another author consults for Promaxo, which develops MRI tools.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
published online in JAMA Network Open.
METHODOLOGY:
- Investigators ran a simulation of a hypothetical group of 65-year-old men who were at risk for the cancer, as indicated by their prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels.
- The costs and benefits of periodic ultrasound biopsies were modeled in comparison with those of an annual MRI plus MRI-guided biopsies using epidemiologic and clinical data.
- The investigators compared the cost-effectiveness of each biopsy approach over a decade, as measured by the cost of procedures divided by the projected gain in life-years.
- Cost-effectiveness was defined as less than $100,000 for each life-year gain using an MRI in comparison with ultrasound.
- They stratified the cost-effectiveness of the MRI approach by severity of PSA level: less than 2.5 ng/mL, 2.5-4.0 ng/mL, 4.1-10.0 ng/mL, and greater than 10.0 ng/mL.
TAKEAWAY:
- For three of the four PSA levels (2.5-4.0 ng/mL, 4.1-10.0 ng/mL, and greater than 10.0 ng/mL) the combination of MRI plus MRI-guided biopsy was cost effective.
- The MRI-based approach cost $6,000 more than ultrasound for each life-year gained at the highest PSA level of greater than 10.0 ng/mL, which was significantly below the $100,000 threshold.
- At the lowest PSA level of less than 2.5 ng/mL, the difference between MRI and ultrasound was $187,000, which was above the threshold.
IN PRACTICE:
The researchers wrote that there is “a growing consensus that the use of MRI and potential MRI-guided biopsy is cost effective.”
SOURCE:
Ali Jalali, PhD, a health economist at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, is the senior author of the study. Simulation data come from the National Vital Statistics Report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Medicare fee schedule.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is a hypothetical simulation of what could happen under different conditions, not an analysis of data developed over time in clinical practice. It also assumes that PSA levels remain constant over time.
DISCLOSURES:
One author receives grants from Siemens Healthineers for MRI technology development, and another author consults for Promaxo, which develops MRI tools.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
published online in JAMA Network Open.
METHODOLOGY:
- Investigators ran a simulation of a hypothetical group of 65-year-old men who were at risk for the cancer, as indicated by their prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels.
- The costs and benefits of periodic ultrasound biopsies were modeled in comparison with those of an annual MRI plus MRI-guided biopsies using epidemiologic and clinical data.
- The investigators compared the cost-effectiveness of each biopsy approach over a decade, as measured by the cost of procedures divided by the projected gain in life-years.
- Cost-effectiveness was defined as less than $100,000 for each life-year gain using an MRI in comparison with ultrasound.
- They stratified the cost-effectiveness of the MRI approach by severity of PSA level: less than 2.5 ng/mL, 2.5-4.0 ng/mL, 4.1-10.0 ng/mL, and greater than 10.0 ng/mL.
TAKEAWAY:
- For three of the four PSA levels (2.5-4.0 ng/mL, 4.1-10.0 ng/mL, and greater than 10.0 ng/mL) the combination of MRI plus MRI-guided biopsy was cost effective.
- The MRI-based approach cost $6,000 more than ultrasound for each life-year gained at the highest PSA level of greater than 10.0 ng/mL, which was significantly below the $100,000 threshold.
- At the lowest PSA level of less than 2.5 ng/mL, the difference between MRI and ultrasound was $187,000, which was above the threshold.
IN PRACTICE:
The researchers wrote that there is “a growing consensus that the use of MRI and potential MRI-guided biopsy is cost effective.”
SOURCE:
Ali Jalali, PhD, a health economist at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, is the senior author of the study. Simulation data come from the National Vital Statistics Report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Medicare fee schedule.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is a hypothetical simulation of what could happen under different conditions, not an analysis of data developed over time in clinical practice. It also assumes that PSA levels remain constant over time.
DISCLOSURES:
One author receives grants from Siemens Healthineers for MRI technology development, and another author consults for Promaxo, which develops MRI tools.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Rx for resilience: Five prescriptions for physician burnout
Physician burnout persists even as the height of the COVID-19 crisis fades farther into the rear-view mirror. The causes for the sadness, stress, and frustration among doctors vary, but the effects are universal and often debilitating: exhaustion, emotional detachment, lethargy, feeling useless, and lacking purpose.
When surveyed, physicians pointed to many systemic solutions for burnout in Medscape’s Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2023, such as a need for greater compensation, more manageable workloads and schedules, and more support staff. But for many doctors, these fixes may be years if not decades away. Equally important are strategies for relieving burnout symptoms now, especially as we head into a busy holiday season.
Because not every stress-relief practice works for everyone, it’s crucial to try various methods until you find something that makes a difference for you, said Christine Gibson, MD, a family physician and trauma therapist in Calgary, Alta., and author of The Modern Trauma Toolkit.
“Every person should have a toolkit of the things that bring them out of the psychological and physical distress that dysregulates their nervous system,” said Dr. Gibson.
Once you learn the personal ways to alleviate your specific brand of burnout, you can start working on systemic changes that might help the culture of medicine overall.
Symptoms speak louder than words
It seems obvious, but if you aren’t aware that what you’re feeling is burnout, you probably aren’t going to find effective steps to relieve it. Jessi Gold, MD, assistant professor and director of wellness, engagement, and outreach in the department of psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, is a psychiatrist who treats health care professionals, including frontline workers during the height of the pandemic. But even as a burnout expert, she admits that she misses the signs in herself.
“I was fighting constant fatigue, falling asleep the minute I got home from work every day, but I thought a B12 shot would solve all my problems. I didn’t realize I was having symptoms of burnout until my own therapist told me,” said Dr. Gold. “As doctors, we spend so much time focusing on other people that we don’t necessarily notice very much in ourselves – usually once it starts to impact our job.”
Practices like meditation and mindfulness can help you delve into your feelings and emotions and notice how you’re doing. But you may also need to ask spouses, partners, and friends and family – or better yet, a mental health professional – if they notice that you seem burnt out.
Practice ‘in the moment’ relief
Sometimes, walking away at the moment of stress helps like when stepping away from a heated argument. “Step out of a frustrating staff meeting to go to the bathroom and splash your face,” said Eran Magan, PhD, a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and founder and CEO of the suicide prevention system EarlyAlert.me. “Tell a patient you need to check something in the next room, so you have time to take a breath.”
Dr. Magan recommended finding techniques that help lower acute stress while it’s actually happening. First, find a way to escape or excuse yourself from the event, and when possible, stop situations that are actively upsetting or triggering in their tracks.
Next, recharge by doing something that helps you feel better, like looking at a cute video of your child or grandchild or closing your eyes and taking a deep breath. You can also try to “catch” good feelings from someone else, said Dr. Magan. Ask someone about a trip, vacation, holiday, or pleasant event. “Ask a colleague about something that makes [them] happy,” he said. “Happiness can be infectious too.”
Burnout is also in the body
“Body psychotherapy” or somatic therapy is a treatment that focuses on how emotions appear within your body. Dr. Gibson said it’s a valuable tool for addressing trauma and a mainstay in many a medical career; it’s useful to help physicians learn to “befriend” their nervous system.
Somatic therapy exercises involve things like body scanning, scanning for physical sensations; conscious breathing, connecting to each inhale and exhale; grounding your weight by releasing tension through your feet, doing a total body stretch; or releasing shoulder and neck tension by consciously relaxing each of these muscle groups.
“We spend our whole day in sympathetic tone; our amygdala’s are firing, telling us that we’re in danger,” said Dr. Gibson. “We actually have to practice getting into and spending time in our parasympathetic nervous system to restore the balance in our autonomic nervous system.”
Somatic therapy includes a wide array of exercises that help reconnect you to your body through calming or activation. The movements release tension, ground you, and restore balance.
Bite-sized tools for well-being
Because of the prevalence of physician burnout, there’s been a groundswell of researchers and organizations who have turned their focus toward improving the well-being in the health care workforce.
One such effort comes from the Duke Center for the Advancement of Well-being Science, which “camouflages” well-being tools as continuing education credits to make them accessible for busy, stressed, and overworked physicians.
“They’re called bite-sized tools for well-being, and they have actual evidence behind them,” said Dr. Gold. For example, she said, one tools is a text program called Three Good Things that encourages physicians to send a text listing three positive things that happened during the day. The exercise lasts 15 days, and texters have access to others’ answers as well. After 3 months, participants’ baseline depression, gratitude, and life satisfaction had all “significantly improved.”
“It feels almost ridiculous that that could work, but it does,” said Dr. Gold. “I’ve had patients push back and say: ‘Well, isn’t that toxic positivity?’ But really what it is is dialectics. It’s not saying there’s only positive; it’s just making you realize there is more than just the negative.”
These and other short interventions focus on concepts such as joy, humor, awe, engagement, and self-kindness to build resilience and help physicians recover from burnout symptoms.
Cognitive restructuring could work
Cognitive restructuring is a therapeutic process of learning new ways of interpreting and responding to people and situations. It helps you change the “filter” through which you interact with your environment. Dr. Gibson said it’s a tool to use with care after other modes of therapy that help you understand your patterns and how they developed because of how you view and understand the world.
“The message of [cognitive-behavioral therapy] or cognitive restructuring is there’s something wrong with the way you’re thinking, and we need to change it or fix it, but in a traumatic system [like health care], you’re thinking has been an adaptive process related to the harm in the environment you’re in,” said Dr. Gibson.
“So, if you [jump straight to cognitive restructuring before other types of therapy], then we just gaslight ourselves into believing that there’s something wrong with us, that we haven’t adapted sufficiently to an environment that’s actually harmful.”
Strive for a few systemic changes
Systemic changes can be small ones within your own sphere. For example, Dr. Magan said, work toward making little tweaks to the flow of your day that will increase calm and reduce frustration.
“Make a ‘bug list,’ little, regular demands that drain your energy, and discuss them with your colleagues and supervisors to see if they can be improved,” he said. Examples include everyday frustrations like having unsolicited visitors popping into your office, scheduling complex patients too late in the day, or having a computer freeze whenever you access patient charts.
Though not always financially feasible, affecting real change and finding relief from all these insidious bugs can improve your mental health and burnout symptoms.
“Physicians tend to work extremely hard in order to keep holding together a system that is often not inherently sustainable, like the fascia of a body under tremendous strain,” said Dr. Magan. “Sometimes the brave thing to do is to refuse to continue being the lynchpin and let things break, so the system will have to start improving itself, rather than demanding more and more of the people in it.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Physician burnout persists even as the height of the COVID-19 crisis fades farther into the rear-view mirror. The causes for the sadness, stress, and frustration among doctors vary, but the effects are universal and often debilitating: exhaustion, emotional detachment, lethargy, feeling useless, and lacking purpose.
When surveyed, physicians pointed to many systemic solutions for burnout in Medscape’s Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2023, such as a need for greater compensation, more manageable workloads and schedules, and more support staff. But for many doctors, these fixes may be years if not decades away. Equally important are strategies for relieving burnout symptoms now, especially as we head into a busy holiday season.
Because not every stress-relief practice works for everyone, it’s crucial to try various methods until you find something that makes a difference for you, said Christine Gibson, MD, a family physician and trauma therapist in Calgary, Alta., and author of The Modern Trauma Toolkit.
“Every person should have a toolkit of the things that bring them out of the psychological and physical distress that dysregulates their nervous system,” said Dr. Gibson.
Once you learn the personal ways to alleviate your specific brand of burnout, you can start working on systemic changes that might help the culture of medicine overall.
Symptoms speak louder than words
It seems obvious, but if you aren’t aware that what you’re feeling is burnout, you probably aren’t going to find effective steps to relieve it. Jessi Gold, MD, assistant professor and director of wellness, engagement, and outreach in the department of psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, is a psychiatrist who treats health care professionals, including frontline workers during the height of the pandemic. But even as a burnout expert, she admits that she misses the signs in herself.
“I was fighting constant fatigue, falling asleep the minute I got home from work every day, but I thought a B12 shot would solve all my problems. I didn’t realize I was having symptoms of burnout until my own therapist told me,” said Dr. Gold. “As doctors, we spend so much time focusing on other people that we don’t necessarily notice very much in ourselves – usually once it starts to impact our job.”
Practices like meditation and mindfulness can help you delve into your feelings and emotions and notice how you’re doing. But you may also need to ask spouses, partners, and friends and family – or better yet, a mental health professional – if they notice that you seem burnt out.
Practice ‘in the moment’ relief
Sometimes, walking away at the moment of stress helps like when stepping away from a heated argument. “Step out of a frustrating staff meeting to go to the bathroom and splash your face,” said Eran Magan, PhD, a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and founder and CEO of the suicide prevention system EarlyAlert.me. “Tell a patient you need to check something in the next room, so you have time to take a breath.”
Dr. Magan recommended finding techniques that help lower acute stress while it’s actually happening. First, find a way to escape or excuse yourself from the event, and when possible, stop situations that are actively upsetting or triggering in their tracks.
Next, recharge by doing something that helps you feel better, like looking at a cute video of your child or grandchild or closing your eyes and taking a deep breath. You can also try to “catch” good feelings from someone else, said Dr. Magan. Ask someone about a trip, vacation, holiday, or pleasant event. “Ask a colleague about something that makes [them] happy,” he said. “Happiness can be infectious too.”
Burnout is also in the body
“Body psychotherapy” or somatic therapy is a treatment that focuses on how emotions appear within your body. Dr. Gibson said it’s a valuable tool for addressing trauma and a mainstay in many a medical career; it’s useful to help physicians learn to “befriend” their nervous system.
Somatic therapy exercises involve things like body scanning, scanning for physical sensations; conscious breathing, connecting to each inhale and exhale; grounding your weight by releasing tension through your feet, doing a total body stretch; or releasing shoulder and neck tension by consciously relaxing each of these muscle groups.
“We spend our whole day in sympathetic tone; our amygdala’s are firing, telling us that we’re in danger,” said Dr. Gibson. “We actually have to practice getting into and spending time in our parasympathetic nervous system to restore the balance in our autonomic nervous system.”
Somatic therapy includes a wide array of exercises that help reconnect you to your body through calming or activation. The movements release tension, ground you, and restore balance.
Bite-sized tools for well-being
Because of the prevalence of physician burnout, there’s been a groundswell of researchers and organizations who have turned their focus toward improving the well-being in the health care workforce.
One such effort comes from the Duke Center for the Advancement of Well-being Science, which “camouflages” well-being tools as continuing education credits to make them accessible for busy, stressed, and overworked physicians.
“They’re called bite-sized tools for well-being, and they have actual evidence behind them,” said Dr. Gold. For example, she said, one tools is a text program called Three Good Things that encourages physicians to send a text listing three positive things that happened during the day. The exercise lasts 15 days, and texters have access to others’ answers as well. After 3 months, participants’ baseline depression, gratitude, and life satisfaction had all “significantly improved.”
“It feels almost ridiculous that that could work, but it does,” said Dr. Gold. “I’ve had patients push back and say: ‘Well, isn’t that toxic positivity?’ But really what it is is dialectics. It’s not saying there’s only positive; it’s just making you realize there is more than just the negative.”
These and other short interventions focus on concepts such as joy, humor, awe, engagement, and self-kindness to build resilience and help physicians recover from burnout symptoms.
Cognitive restructuring could work
Cognitive restructuring is a therapeutic process of learning new ways of interpreting and responding to people and situations. It helps you change the “filter” through which you interact with your environment. Dr. Gibson said it’s a tool to use with care after other modes of therapy that help you understand your patterns and how they developed because of how you view and understand the world.
“The message of [cognitive-behavioral therapy] or cognitive restructuring is there’s something wrong with the way you’re thinking, and we need to change it or fix it, but in a traumatic system [like health care], you’re thinking has been an adaptive process related to the harm in the environment you’re in,” said Dr. Gibson.
“So, if you [jump straight to cognitive restructuring before other types of therapy], then we just gaslight ourselves into believing that there’s something wrong with us, that we haven’t adapted sufficiently to an environment that’s actually harmful.”
Strive for a few systemic changes
Systemic changes can be small ones within your own sphere. For example, Dr. Magan said, work toward making little tweaks to the flow of your day that will increase calm and reduce frustration.
“Make a ‘bug list,’ little, regular demands that drain your energy, and discuss them with your colleagues and supervisors to see if they can be improved,” he said. Examples include everyday frustrations like having unsolicited visitors popping into your office, scheduling complex patients too late in the day, or having a computer freeze whenever you access patient charts.
Though not always financially feasible, affecting real change and finding relief from all these insidious bugs can improve your mental health and burnout symptoms.
“Physicians tend to work extremely hard in order to keep holding together a system that is often not inherently sustainable, like the fascia of a body under tremendous strain,” said Dr. Magan. “Sometimes the brave thing to do is to refuse to continue being the lynchpin and let things break, so the system will have to start improving itself, rather than demanding more and more of the people in it.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Physician burnout persists even as the height of the COVID-19 crisis fades farther into the rear-view mirror. The causes for the sadness, stress, and frustration among doctors vary, but the effects are universal and often debilitating: exhaustion, emotional detachment, lethargy, feeling useless, and lacking purpose.
When surveyed, physicians pointed to many systemic solutions for burnout in Medscape’s Physician Burnout & Depression Report 2023, such as a need for greater compensation, more manageable workloads and schedules, and more support staff. But for many doctors, these fixes may be years if not decades away. Equally important are strategies for relieving burnout symptoms now, especially as we head into a busy holiday season.
Because not every stress-relief practice works for everyone, it’s crucial to try various methods until you find something that makes a difference for you, said Christine Gibson, MD, a family physician and trauma therapist in Calgary, Alta., and author of The Modern Trauma Toolkit.
“Every person should have a toolkit of the things that bring them out of the psychological and physical distress that dysregulates their nervous system,” said Dr. Gibson.
Once you learn the personal ways to alleviate your specific brand of burnout, you can start working on systemic changes that might help the culture of medicine overall.
Symptoms speak louder than words
It seems obvious, but if you aren’t aware that what you’re feeling is burnout, you probably aren’t going to find effective steps to relieve it. Jessi Gold, MD, assistant professor and director of wellness, engagement, and outreach in the department of psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, is a psychiatrist who treats health care professionals, including frontline workers during the height of the pandemic. But even as a burnout expert, she admits that she misses the signs in herself.
“I was fighting constant fatigue, falling asleep the minute I got home from work every day, but I thought a B12 shot would solve all my problems. I didn’t realize I was having symptoms of burnout until my own therapist told me,” said Dr. Gold. “As doctors, we spend so much time focusing on other people that we don’t necessarily notice very much in ourselves – usually once it starts to impact our job.”
Practices like meditation and mindfulness can help you delve into your feelings and emotions and notice how you’re doing. But you may also need to ask spouses, partners, and friends and family – or better yet, a mental health professional – if they notice that you seem burnt out.
Practice ‘in the moment’ relief
Sometimes, walking away at the moment of stress helps like when stepping away from a heated argument. “Step out of a frustrating staff meeting to go to the bathroom and splash your face,” said Eran Magan, PhD, a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and founder and CEO of the suicide prevention system EarlyAlert.me. “Tell a patient you need to check something in the next room, so you have time to take a breath.”
Dr. Magan recommended finding techniques that help lower acute stress while it’s actually happening. First, find a way to escape or excuse yourself from the event, and when possible, stop situations that are actively upsetting or triggering in their tracks.
Next, recharge by doing something that helps you feel better, like looking at a cute video of your child or grandchild or closing your eyes and taking a deep breath. You can also try to “catch” good feelings from someone else, said Dr. Magan. Ask someone about a trip, vacation, holiday, or pleasant event. “Ask a colleague about something that makes [them] happy,” he said. “Happiness can be infectious too.”
Burnout is also in the body
“Body psychotherapy” or somatic therapy is a treatment that focuses on how emotions appear within your body. Dr. Gibson said it’s a valuable tool for addressing trauma and a mainstay in many a medical career; it’s useful to help physicians learn to “befriend” their nervous system.
Somatic therapy exercises involve things like body scanning, scanning for physical sensations; conscious breathing, connecting to each inhale and exhale; grounding your weight by releasing tension through your feet, doing a total body stretch; or releasing shoulder and neck tension by consciously relaxing each of these muscle groups.
“We spend our whole day in sympathetic tone; our amygdala’s are firing, telling us that we’re in danger,” said Dr. Gibson. “We actually have to practice getting into and spending time in our parasympathetic nervous system to restore the balance in our autonomic nervous system.”
Somatic therapy includes a wide array of exercises that help reconnect you to your body through calming or activation. The movements release tension, ground you, and restore balance.
Bite-sized tools for well-being
Because of the prevalence of physician burnout, there’s been a groundswell of researchers and organizations who have turned their focus toward improving the well-being in the health care workforce.
One such effort comes from the Duke Center for the Advancement of Well-being Science, which “camouflages” well-being tools as continuing education credits to make them accessible for busy, stressed, and overworked physicians.
“They’re called bite-sized tools for well-being, and they have actual evidence behind them,” said Dr. Gold. For example, she said, one tools is a text program called Three Good Things that encourages physicians to send a text listing three positive things that happened during the day. The exercise lasts 15 days, and texters have access to others’ answers as well. After 3 months, participants’ baseline depression, gratitude, and life satisfaction had all “significantly improved.”
“It feels almost ridiculous that that could work, but it does,” said Dr. Gold. “I’ve had patients push back and say: ‘Well, isn’t that toxic positivity?’ But really what it is is dialectics. It’s not saying there’s only positive; it’s just making you realize there is more than just the negative.”
These and other short interventions focus on concepts such as joy, humor, awe, engagement, and self-kindness to build resilience and help physicians recover from burnout symptoms.
Cognitive restructuring could work
Cognitive restructuring is a therapeutic process of learning new ways of interpreting and responding to people and situations. It helps you change the “filter” through which you interact with your environment. Dr. Gibson said it’s a tool to use with care after other modes of therapy that help you understand your patterns and how they developed because of how you view and understand the world.
“The message of [cognitive-behavioral therapy] or cognitive restructuring is there’s something wrong with the way you’re thinking, and we need to change it or fix it, but in a traumatic system [like health care], you’re thinking has been an adaptive process related to the harm in the environment you’re in,” said Dr. Gibson.
“So, if you [jump straight to cognitive restructuring before other types of therapy], then we just gaslight ourselves into believing that there’s something wrong with us, that we haven’t adapted sufficiently to an environment that’s actually harmful.”
Strive for a few systemic changes
Systemic changes can be small ones within your own sphere. For example, Dr. Magan said, work toward making little tweaks to the flow of your day that will increase calm and reduce frustration.
“Make a ‘bug list,’ little, regular demands that drain your energy, and discuss them with your colleagues and supervisors to see if they can be improved,” he said. Examples include everyday frustrations like having unsolicited visitors popping into your office, scheduling complex patients too late in the day, or having a computer freeze whenever you access patient charts.
Though not always financially feasible, affecting real change and finding relief from all these insidious bugs can improve your mental health and burnout symptoms.
“Physicians tend to work extremely hard in order to keep holding together a system that is often not inherently sustainable, like the fascia of a body under tremendous strain,” said Dr. Magan. “Sometimes the brave thing to do is to refuse to continue being the lynchpin and let things break, so the system will have to start improving itself, rather than demanding more and more of the people in it.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Isotretinoin users do not have higher suicide risk: meta-analysis
.
Instead, those who are treated with the drug for severe acne may have a lower risk of suicide attempts 2-4 years after treatment, wrote the authors, led by Nicole Kye Wen Tan, MBBS, of Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine at the National University of Singapore. The results were published online in JAMA Dermatology.
The analysis showed that the 1-year absolute risk from between two and eight studies of suicide attempts, suicidal ideation, completed suicides, and self-harm were each less than 0.5%. For comparison, the absolute risk of depression was 3.83% (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.45-5.93; I2 [measuring heterogeneity] = 77%) in 11 studies.
Less likely to attempt suicide
Isotretinoin users were less likely than were nonusers to attempt suicide at 2 years (relative risk [RR], 0.92; 95% CI, 0.84-1.00; I2 = 0%); 3 years (RR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.77-0.95; I2 = 0%); and 4 years (RR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.72-1.00; I2 = 23%) following treatment.
Additionally, isotretinoin was not linked with the risk of “all psychiatric disorders” (RR, 1.08; 95% CI, 0.99-1.19; I2 = 0%).
Among the study limitations, the authors noted that because of the widespread claims that isotretinoin can affect mental health, it is plausible that patients at high risk of psychiatric illness were less likely to be treated with isotretinoin in the first place, which could have resulted in underestimating psychiatric risks in the observational studies.
“Two things can be true”
John S. Barbieri, MD, MBA, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and director of the Advanced Acne Therapeutics Clinic at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, who was not involved with this research, said the study helps confirm what he and many others have long thought.
The results of the meta-analysis show that “two things can be true, which often gets lost with isotretinoin,” he said. At a population level, isotretinoin improves mental health but on the individual level, it may cause rare side effects that harm mental health, he added.
In making decisions on the use of isotretinoin, he continued, “we should feel reassured that the likely outcome is improved mental health compared to other alternatives that we have, but at the same time we should be vigilant about monitoring a patient’s mental health while they are being treated with isotretinoin.”
He said that this topic draws extreme views on social media, with people who want the drug off the market and those who discount concerns altogether.
“I think the real answer is a little more in the middle,” he said. “We still have to be thoughtful when we use it.”
Because outcomes such as suicide in patients on isotretinoin are not common, Dr. Barbieri said, smaller studies individually have lacked precision on effect. The size of this meta-analysis helps add confidence in the results, he said.
In addition, this study can help clinicians point to numbers when they talk with their patients about benefits and risks, he said.
What a meta-analysis might miss
In an accompanying editorial, Parker Magin, PhD, of the School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia, and Shaun Prentice, PhD, of the School of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Adelaide, South Australia, wrote that though the work by Tan et al. is “broadly reassuring,” they have concerns about the patients a meta-analysis might miss.
They wrote that other studies have shown evidence both of biological plausibility that isotretinoin may be linked with psychiatric effects and that it may cause these side effects. “One could conclude that it is plausible that isotretinoin has markedly adverse, idiosyncratic psychiatric effects in a small minority of individual patients,” they wrote. “It is also plausible that these presumably rare occurrences are not detectable in studies where the majority of patients experience no adverse psychiatric outcomes or even positive outcomes.”
Far from the “final word”
Dr. Magin and Dr. Prentice pointed out that while the study adds to the literature on his topic, the relationship between acne, psychiatric conditions, and isotretinoin is complex and thus these findings “are far from the final word.”
Randomized, controlled trials have limited use in this area and observational studies are always susceptible to bias, they noted. “Clinicians, though, can take some degree of further reassurance from this extension of the literature around the psychiatric sequelae of isotretinoin,” they wrote.
Senior author Hazel Oon, MD, of the National Skin Centre, Singapore, disclosed ties with AbbVie, Amgen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Novartis, and Pfizer. No other author disclosures were reported. Dr. Barbieri is an associate editor at JAMA Dermatology and is cochair of the American Academy of Dermatology Acne Guidelines Work Group.
.
Instead, those who are treated with the drug for severe acne may have a lower risk of suicide attempts 2-4 years after treatment, wrote the authors, led by Nicole Kye Wen Tan, MBBS, of Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine at the National University of Singapore. The results were published online in JAMA Dermatology.
The analysis showed that the 1-year absolute risk from between two and eight studies of suicide attempts, suicidal ideation, completed suicides, and self-harm were each less than 0.5%. For comparison, the absolute risk of depression was 3.83% (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.45-5.93; I2 [measuring heterogeneity] = 77%) in 11 studies.
Less likely to attempt suicide
Isotretinoin users were less likely than were nonusers to attempt suicide at 2 years (relative risk [RR], 0.92; 95% CI, 0.84-1.00; I2 = 0%); 3 years (RR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.77-0.95; I2 = 0%); and 4 years (RR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.72-1.00; I2 = 23%) following treatment.
Additionally, isotretinoin was not linked with the risk of “all psychiatric disorders” (RR, 1.08; 95% CI, 0.99-1.19; I2 = 0%).
Among the study limitations, the authors noted that because of the widespread claims that isotretinoin can affect mental health, it is plausible that patients at high risk of psychiatric illness were less likely to be treated with isotretinoin in the first place, which could have resulted in underestimating psychiatric risks in the observational studies.
“Two things can be true”
John S. Barbieri, MD, MBA, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and director of the Advanced Acne Therapeutics Clinic at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, who was not involved with this research, said the study helps confirm what he and many others have long thought.
The results of the meta-analysis show that “two things can be true, which often gets lost with isotretinoin,” he said. At a population level, isotretinoin improves mental health but on the individual level, it may cause rare side effects that harm mental health, he added.
In making decisions on the use of isotretinoin, he continued, “we should feel reassured that the likely outcome is improved mental health compared to other alternatives that we have, but at the same time we should be vigilant about monitoring a patient’s mental health while they are being treated with isotretinoin.”
He said that this topic draws extreme views on social media, with people who want the drug off the market and those who discount concerns altogether.
“I think the real answer is a little more in the middle,” he said. “We still have to be thoughtful when we use it.”
Because outcomes such as suicide in patients on isotretinoin are not common, Dr. Barbieri said, smaller studies individually have lacked precision on effect. The size of this meta-analysis helps add confidence in the results, he said.
In addition, this study can help clinicians point to numbers when they talk with their patients about benefits and risks, he said.
What a meta-analysis might miss
In an accompanying editorial, Parker Magin, PhD, of the School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia, and Shaun Prentice, PhD, of the School of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Adelaide, South Australia, wrote that though the work by Tan et al. is “broadly reassuring,” they have concerns about the patients a meta-analysis might miss.
They wrote that other studies have shown evidence both of biological plausibility that isotretinoin may be linked with psychiatric effects and that it may cause these side effects. “One could conclude that it is plausible that isotretinoin has markedly adverse, idiosyncratic psychiatric effects in a small minority of individual patients,” they wrote. “It is also plausible that these presumably rare occurrences are not detectable in studies where the majority of patients experience no adverse psychiatric outcomes or even positive outcomes.”
Far from the “final word”
Dr. Magin and Dr. Prentice pointed out that while the study adds to the literature on his topic, the relationship between acne, psychiatric conditions, and isotretinoin is complex and thus these findings “are far from the final word.”
Randomized, controlled trials have limited use in this area and observational studies are always susceptible to bias, they noted. “Clinicians, though, can take some degree of further reassurance from this extension of the literature around the psychiatric sequelae of isotretinoin,” they wrote.
Senior author Hazel Oon, MD, of the National Skin Centre, Singapore, disclosed ties with AbbVie, Amgen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Novartis, and Pfizer. No other author disclosures were reported. Dr. Barbieri is an associate editor at JAMA Dermatology and is cochair of the American Academy of Dermatology Acne Guidelines Work Group.
.
Instead, those who are treated with the drug for severe acne may have a lower risk of suicide attempts 2-4 years after treatment, wrote the authors, led by Nicole Kye Wen Tan, MBBS, of Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine at the National University of Singapore. The results were published online in JAMA Dermatology.
The analysis showed that the 1-year absolute risk from between two and eight studies of suicide attempts, suicidal ideation, completed suicides, and self-harm were each less than 0.5%. For comparison, the absolute risk of depression was 3.83% (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.45-5.93; I2 [measuring heterogeneity] = 77%) in 11 studies.
Less likely to attempt suicide
Isotretinoin users were less likely than were nonusers to attempt suicide at 2 years (relative risk [RR], 0.92; 95% CI, 0.84-1.00; I2 = 0%); 3 years (RR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.77-0.95; I2 = 0%); and 4 years (RR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.72-1.00; I2 = 23%) following treatment.
Additionally, isotretinoin was not linked with the risk of “all psychiatric disorders” (RR, 1.08; 95% CI, 0.99-1.19; I2 = 0%).
Among the study limitations, the authors noted that because of the widespread claims that isotretinoin can affect mental health, it is plausible that patients at high risk of psychiatric illness were less likely to be treated with isotretinoin in the first place, which could have resulted in underestimating psychiatric risks in the observational studies.
“Two things can be true”
John S. Barbieri, MD, MBA, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and director of the Advanced Acne Therapeutics Clinic at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, who was not involved with this research, said the study helps confirm what he and many others have long thought.
The results of the meta-analysis show that “two things can be true, which often gets lost with isotretinoin,” he said. At a population level, isotretinoin improves mental health but on the individual level, it may cause rare side effects that harm mental health, he added.
In making decisions on the use of isotretinoin, he continued, “we should feel reassured that the likely outcome is improved mental health compared to other alternatives that we have, but at the same time we should be vigilant about monitoring a patient’s mental health while they are being treated with isotretinoin.”
He said that this topic draws extreme views on social media, with people who want the drug off the market and those who discount concerns altogether.
“I think the real answer is a little more in the middle,” he said. “We still have to be thoughtful when we use it.”
Because outcomes such as suicide in patients on isotretinoin are not common, Dr. Barbieri said, smaller studies individually have lacked precision on effect. The size of this meta-analysis helps add confidence in the results, he said.
In addition, this study can help clinicians point to numbers when they talk with their patients about benefits and risks, he said.
What a meta-analysis might miss
In an accompanying editorial, Parker Magin, PhD, of the School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia, and Shaun Prentice, PhD, of the School of Psychology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Adelaide, South Australia, wrote that though the work by Tan et al. is “broadly reassuring,” they have concerns about the patients a meta-analysis might miss.
They wrote that other studies have shown evidence both of biological plausibility that isotretinoin may be linked with psychiatric effects and that it may cause these side effects. “One could conclude that it is plausible that isotretinoin has markedly adverse, idiosyncratic psychiatric effects in a small minority of individual patients,” they wrote. “It is also plausible that these presumably rare occurrences are not detectable in studies where the majority of patients experience no adverse psychiatric outcomes or even positive outcomes.”
Far from the “final word”
Dr. Magin and Dr. Prentice pointed out that while the study adds to the literature on his topic, the relationship between acne, psychiatric conditions, and isotretinoin is complex and thus these findings “are far from the final word.”
Randomized, controlled trials have limited use in this area and observational studies are always susceptible to bias, they noted. “Clinicians, though, can take some degree of further reassurance from this extension of the literature around the psychiatric sequelae of isotretinoin,” they wrote.
Senior author Hazel Oon, MD, of the National Skin Centre, Singapore, disclosed ties with AbbVie, Amgen, Boehringer Ingelheim, Eli Lilly, Galderma, Janssen, LEO Pharma, Novartis, and Pfizer. No other author disclosures were reported. Dr. Barbieri is an associate editor at JAMA Dermatology and is cochair of the American Academy of Dermatology Acne Guidelines Work Group.
FROM JAMA DERMATOLOGY
Exercise improves physical and cognitive health in Down syndrome
In the first study of its kind, U.K. and French researchers reported that exercise positively affected physical and cognitive health in persons with Down syndrome. “The findings are significant and offer a crucial challenge to the [Down syndrome] and wider societies,” wrote a team led by Dan Gordon, PhD, associate professor of cardiorespiratory exercise physiology at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, England. “Impact of Prescribed Exercise on the Physical and Cognitive Health of Adults with Down Syndrome: The MinDSets Study” was published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
“Through the simple application of walking, a form of exercise which requires little to no equipment or expense, there were significant increases in cognitive and executive function, reflecting improved capabilities in key attributes of information processing, vigilance, and selective attention,” the researchers wrote.
“Increased cognitive function will help foster increased societal integration and quality of life, which, given that this is the first generation of those with [Down syndrome] to outlive their parents and caregivers, is of importance,” they wrote.
For example, those in an exercise-only intervention arm had an 11.4% improvement on the distance covered in the Six-Minute Walk Test, going from a mean of 498.8 meters before intervention to 522.1 meters afterward. Those in a group that combined group exercise with cognitive training increased the distance walked by 9.9%, or 49.2 meters. Groups that got cognitive training only or no intervention showed no significant changes.
In measures of cognitive function, the exercise group showed a 38% increase in selective attention, with the cognitive and combined groups showing changes for the same measure of 16.5% and 55.3%, respectively. The changes for concentration in the exercise-alone group was 31.5%, while those receiving cognitive training alone or combined exercise plus cognitive training showed improvements in concentration of 21% and 15%, respectively.
Asked why a combination intervention was not superior to exercise alone, Dr. Gordon said in an interview, “Something we’re looking at in the data but can’t fully confirm is that the combined group started to become fatigued due to the double dose of the intervention, and this prevented them in the final tests from doing quite so well as the exercise-alone group. Irrespective of the magnitude of change, any cognitive adaptation observed will be beneficial to this population.”
The evidence for the benefits of exercise on both physical and cognitive health in a non–Down syndrome population are well established, he said, but there were few data on its effect on the Down syndrome population.
One small study showed physical and neurocognitive benefits with resistance training.
“The evidence from previous studies showed increased levels of inactivity and sitting time in Down syndrome individuals compared with non–[Down syndrome] controls, so we hypothesized that exercise, albeit small amounts, would increase their physical fitness,” Dr. Gordon said.
His team also hypothesized that walking would stimulate cognitive development since it requires heightened cognitive engagement compared with inactivity. “What surprised us was the degree of improvement,” Dr. Gordon said.
The process of walking requires the brain to interpret information on a real-time basis from both internal and external cues, he continued. “For most of us this process requires low-level cognitive engagement. However, in the [Down syndrome] population, where motor control is impaired and accompanied by poor muscle tone, walking imposes a heightened cognitive load.” It requires them to concentrate on the action, be aware of their surroundings, and make the right decisions, all of which stimulate areas of the brain that control these functions.
Study details
Eighty-three adult participants were available for final analysis – 67 from North America, 8 from Europe, 5 from Africa, 2 from Asia, and 1 from Australia. The mean age of participants was 27.1 years, 40 were female, and all had caregiver support during the study.
Those unable to visualize information on computer and mobile/tablet screens or to listen to instructions/auditory cues were excluded. All were provided with instructions and a mobile monitoring tool set to record steps completed, distances covered, speeds, and heart rate.
Each was assigned to one of four groups. Exercise intervention-only consisted of 8 weeks of cardiorespiratory exercise defined as either walking or jogging three times a week for 30 minutes. Cognitive training included eight levels (about 20 minutes) of cognitive and executive function exercises six times per week. The combined group completed both the cardiorespiratory and cognitive interventions, while the fourth group acted as controls with no intervention.
According to the authors, the study offers a real-life scenario that can be readily adopted within the Down syndrome community.
This study was commissioned by the Canadian Down Syndrome Society. The authors had no conflicts of interest to declare.
In the first study of its kind, U.K. and French researchers reported that exercise positively affected physical and cognitive health in persons with Down syndrome. “The findings are significant and offer a crucial challenge to the [Down syndrome] and wider societies,” wrote a team led by Dan Gordon, PhD, associate professor of cardiorespiratory exercise physiology at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, England. “Impact of Prescribed Exercise on the Physical and Cognitive Health of Adults with Down Syndrome: The MinDSets Study” was published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
“Through the simple application of walking, a form of exercise which requires little to no equipment or expense, there were significant increases in cognitive and executive function, reflecting improved capabilities in key attributes of information processing, vigilance, and selective attention,” the researchers wrote.
“Increased cognitive function will help foster increased societal integration and quality of life, which, given that this is the first generation of those with [Down syndrome] to outlive their parents and caregivers, is of importance,” they wrote.
For example, those in an exercise-only intervention arm had an 11.4% improvement on the distance covered in the Six-Minute Walk Test, going from a mean of 498.8 meters before intervention to 522.1 meters afterward. Those in a group that combined group exercise with cognitive training increased the distance walked by 9.9%, or 49.2 meters. Groups that got cognitive training only or no intervention showed no significant changes.
In measures of cognitive function, the exercise group showed a 38% increase in selective attention, with the cognitive and combined groups showing changes for the same measure of 16.5% and 55.3%, respectively. The changes for concentration in the exercise-alone group was 31.5%, while those receiving cognitive training alone or combined exercise plus cognitive training showed improvements in concentration of 21% and 15%, respectively.
Asked why a combination intervention was not superior to exercise alone, Dr. Gordon said in an interview, “Something we’re looking at in the data but can’t fully confirm is that the combined group started to become fatigued due to the double dose of the intervention, and this prevented them in the final tests from doing quite so well as the exercise-alone group. Irrespective of the magnitude of change, any cognitive adaptation observed will be beneficial to this population.”
The evidence for the benefits of exercise on both physical and cognitive health in a non–Down syndrome population are well established, he said, but there were few data on its effect on the Down syndrome population.
One small study showed physical and neurocognitive benefits with resistance training.
“The evidence from previous studies showed increased levels of inactivity and sitting time in Down syndrome individuals compared with non–[Down syndrome] controls, so we hypothesized that exercise, albeit small amounts, would increase their physical fitness,” Dr. Gordon said.
His team also hypothesized that walking would stimulate cognitive development since it requires heightened cognitive engagement compared with inactivity. “What surprised us was the degree of improvement,” Dr. Gordon said.
The process of walking requires the brain to interpret information on a real-time basis from both internal and external cues, he continued. “For most of us this process requires low-level cognitive engagement. However, in the [Down syndrome] population, where motor control is impaired and accompanied by poor muscle tone, walking imposes a heightened cognitive load.” It requires them to concentrate on the action, be aware of their surroundings, and make the right decisions, all of which stimulate areas of the brain that control these functions.
Study details
Eighty-three adult participants were available for final analysis – 67 from North America, 8 from Europe, 5 from Africa, 2 from Asia, and 1 from Australia. The mean age of participants was 27.1 years, 40 were female, and all had caregiver support during the study.
Those unable to visualize information on computer and mobile/tablet screens or to listen to instructions/auditory cues were excluded. All were provided with instructions and a mobile monitoring tool set to record steps completed, distances covered, speeds, and heart rate.
Each was assigned to one of four groups. Exercise intervention-only consisted of 8 weeks of cardiorespiratory exercise defined as either walking or jogging three times a week for 30 minutes. Cognitive training included eight levels (about 20 minutes) of cognitive and executive function exercises six times per week. The combined group completed both the cardiorespiratory and cognitive interventions, while the fourth group acted as controls with no intervention.
According to the authors, the study offers a real-life scenario that can be readily adopted within the Down syndrome community.
This study was commissioned by the Canadian Down Syndrome Society. The authors had no conflicts of interest to declare.
In the first study of its kind, U.K. and French researchers reported that exercise positively affected physical and cognitive health in persons with Down syndrome. “The findings are significant and offer a crucial challenge to the [Down syndrome] and wider societies,” wrote a team led by Dan Gordon, PhD, associate professor of cardiorespiratory exercise physiology at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, England. “Impact of Prescribed Exercise on the Physical and Cognitive Health of Adults with Down Syndrome: The MinDSets Study” was published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.
“Through the simple application of walking, a form of exercise which requires little to no equipment or expense, there were significant increases in cognitive and executive function, reflecting improved capabilities in key attributes of information processing, vigilance, and selective attention,” the researchers wrote.
“Increased cognitive function will help foster increased societal integration and quality of life, which, given that this is the first generation of those with [Down syndrome] to outlive their parents and caregivers, is of importance,” they wrote.
For example, those in an exercise-only intervention arm had an 11.4% improvement on the distance covered in the Six-Minute Walk Test, going from a mean of 498.8 meters before intervention to 522.1 meters afterward. Those in a group that combined group exercise with cognitive training increased the distance walked by 9.9%, or 49.2 meters. Groups that got cognitive training only or no intervention showed no significant changes.
In measures of cognitive function, the exercise group showed a 38% increase in selective attention, with the cognitive and combined groups showing changes for the same measure of 16.5% and 55.3%, respectively. The changes for concentration in the exercise-alone group was 31.5%, while those receiving cognitive training alone or combined exercise plus cognitive training showed improvements in concentration of 21% and 15%, respectively.
Asked why a combination intervention was not superior to exercise alone, Dr. Gordon said in an interview, “Something we’re looking at in the data but can’t fully confirm is that the combined group started to become fatigued due to the double dose of the intervention, and this prevented them in the final tests from doing quite so well as the exercise-alone group. Irrespective of the magnitude of change, any cognitive adaptation observed will be beneficial to this population.”
The evidence for the benefits of exercise on both physical and cognitive health in a non–Down syndrome population are well established, he said, but there were few data on its effect on the Down syndrome population.
One small study showed physical and neurocognitive benefits with resistance training.
“The evidence from previous studies showed increased levels of inactivity and sitting time in Down syndrome individuals compared with non–[Down syndrome] controls, so we hypothesized that exercise, albeit small amounts, would increase their physical fitness,” Dr. Gordon said.
His team also hypothesized that walking would stimulate cognitive development since it requires heightened cognitive engagement compared with inactivity. “What surprised us was the degree of improvement,” Dr. Gordon said.
The process of walking requires the brain to interpret information on a real-time basis from both internal and external cues, he continued. “For most of us this process requires low-level cognitive engagement. However, in the [Down syndrome] population, where motor control is impaired and accompanied by poor muscle tone, walking imposes a heightened cognitive load.” It requires them to concentrate on the action, be aware of their surroundings, and make the right decisions, all of which stimulate areas of the brain that control these functions.
Study details
Eighty-three adult participants were available for final analysis – 67 from North America, 8 from Europe, 5 from Africa, 2 from Asia, and 1 from Australia. The mean age of participants was 27.1 years, 40 were female, and all had caregiver support during the study.
Those unable to visualize information on computer and mobile/tablet screens or to listen to instructions/auditory cues were excluded. All were provided with instructions and a mobile monitoring tool set to record steps completed, distances covered, speeds, and heart rate.
Each was assigned to one of four groups. Exercise intervention-only consisted of 8 weeks of cardiorespiratory exercise defined as either walking or jogging three times a week for 30 minutes. Cognitive training included eight levels (about 20 minutes) of cognitive and executive function exercises six times per week. The combined group completed both the cardiorespiratory and cognitive interventions, while the fourth group acted as controls with no intervention.
According to the authors, the study offers a real-life scenario that can be readily adopted within the Down syndrome community.
This study was commissioned by the Canadian Down Syndrome Society. The authors had no conflicts of interest to declare.
FROM INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Prognostic tool identifies alcohol relapse risk after liver transplant
, based on data from 140 individuals.
Alcohol relapse after liver transplant ranges from 4% to as high as 95% among patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALD) and better tools are needed to identify those at increased risk, Jiten P. Kothadia, MD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, said in a presentation given in October at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
Dr. Kothadia and colleagues evaluated the effectiveness of the Social Determinant Acuity Tool (S-DAT), which stratified patients in terms of successful post-liver transplant outcomes from excellent (S-DAT scores 0-6) to poor candidates (scores 35-40). The S-DAT categories included cognitive function, mental health, social support, coping skills, financial status, compliance, alcohol abuse, substance abuse, reliability, legal issues, understanding the transplant process, and desire for transplant.
The study population included 140 adults with alcoholic liver disease who underwent a liver transplant between January 2016 and November 2021 at a single center. Before surgery, all patients underwent a thorough psychosocial evaluation using the S-DAT. The mean age of the participants was 53.4 years, 107 were male, and 67.9% had abstained from alcohol for more than 6 months prior to transplant.
The primary outcome of post-liver transplant alcohol relapse was defined as any alcohol use regardless of the amount or frequency, based on patient interviews or blood or urine tests.
Overall, the rate of relapse was 23.6%; and the rate within a year was 18.6%. In a multivariate analysis, S-DAT score was a significant predictor of relapse (odds ratio [OR] 1.65, P = .000). Other independent predictors of relapse were post-LT alcohol treatment (OR 7.11, P = .02), smoking history (OR 0.15, P = .03), and marital status (OR 60.28, P = .000). The area under the receiver operative curves (AUROC) for the S-DAT score to predict alcohol relapse within 1 year after LT was 0.77.
The sensitivity of the S-DAT for predicting relapse risk was 96.2%, and specificity was 40.4%; positive and negative predictive values were 26.9% and 97.9%, respectively.
The high sensitivity and negative predictive values of the S-DAT make it a useful screening tool for identifying patients at low risk of alcohol relapse after a liver transplant, Dr. Kothadia said in an interview. “Our score will guide risk-based interventions post-LT to reduce post-LT relapse and improve long-term outcomes.”
The findings included only data from a single center, which may limit generalizability, Dr. Kothadia said. The tool is not yet clinically available, he noted.
“We would like to perform external validation of our S-DAT score as it stresses the importance of these psychosocial variables,” and to confirm the findings in larger, multicenter, prospective clinical trials, he said.
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Kothadia indicated no relevant financial relationships.
, based on data from 140 individuals.
Alcohol relapse after liver transplant ranges from 4% to as high as 95% among patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALD) and better tools are needed to identify those at increased risk, Jiten P. Kothadia, MD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, said in a presentation given in October at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
Dr. Kothadia and colleagues evaluated the effectiveness of the Social Determinant Acuity Tool (S-DAT), which stratified patients in terms of successful post-liver transplant outcomes from excellent (S-DAT scores 0-6) to poor candidates (scores 35-40). The S-DAT categories included cognitive function, mental health, social support, coping skills, financial status, compliance, alcohol abuse, substance abuse, reliability, legal issues, understanding the transplant process, and desire for transplant.
The study population included 140 adults with alcoholic liver disease who underwent a liver transplant between January 2016 and November 2021 at a single center. Before surgery, all patients underwent a thorough psychosocial evaluation using the S-DAT. The mean age of the participants was 53.4 years, 107 were male, and 67.9% had abstained from alcohol for more than 6 months prior to transplant.
The primary outcome of post-liver transplant alcohol relapse was defined as any alcohol use regardless of the amount or frequency, based on patient interviews or blood or urine tests.
Overall, the rate of relapse was 23.6%; and the rate within a year was 18.6%. In a multivariate analysis, S-DAT score was a significant predictor of relapse (odds ratio [OR] 1.65, P = .000). Other independent predictors of relapse were post-LT alcohol treatment (OR 7.11, P = .02), smoking history (OR 0.15, P = .03), and marital status (OR 60.28, P = .000). The area under the receiver operative curves (AUROC) for the S-DAT score to predict alcohol relapse within 1 year after LT was 0.77.
The sensitivity of the S-DAT for predicting relapse risk was 96.2%, and specificity was 40.4%; positive and negative predictive values were 26.9% and 97.9%, respectively.
The high sensitivity and negative predictive values of the S-DAT make it a useful screening tool for identifying patients at low risk of alcohol relapse after a liver transplant, Dr. Kothadia said in an interview. “Our score will guide risk-based interventions post-LT to reduce post-LT relapse and improve long-term outcomes.”
The findings included only data from a single center, which may limit generalizability, Dr. Kothadia said. The tool is not yet clinically available, he noted.
“We would like to perform external validation of our S-DAT score as it stresses the importance of these psychosocial variables,” and to confirm the findings in larger, multicenter, prospective clinical trials, he said.
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Kothadia indicated no relevant financial relationships.
, based on data from 140 individuals.
Alcohol relapse after liver transplant ranges from 4% to as high as 95% among patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALD) and better tools are needed to identify those at increased risk, Jiten P. Kothadia, MD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, said in a presentation given in October at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology.
Dr. Kothadia and colleagues evaluated the effectiveness of the Social Determinant Acuity Tool (S-DAT), which stratified patients in terms of successful post-liver transplant outcomes from excellent (S-DAT scores 0-6) to poor candidates (scores 35-40). The S-DAT categories included cognitive function, mental health, social support, coping skills, financial status, compliance, alcohol abuse, substance abuse, reliability, legal issues, understanding the transplant process, and desire for transplant.
The study population included 140 adults with alcoholic liver disease who underwent a liver transplant between January 2016 and November 2021 at a single center. Before surgery, all patients underwent a thorough psychosocial evaluation using the S-DAT. The mean age of the participants was 53.4 years, 107 were male, and 67.9% had abstained from alcohol for more than 6 months prior to transplant.
The primary outcome of post-liver transplant alcohol relapse was defined as any alcohol use regardless of the amount or frequency, based on patient interviews or blood or urine tests.
Overall, the rate of relapse was 23.6%; and the rate within a year was 18.6%. In a multivariate analysis, S-DAT score was a significant predictor of relapse (odds ratio [OR] 1.65, P = .000). Other independent predictors of relapse were post-LT alcohol treatment (OR 7.11, P = .02), smoking history (OR 0.15, P = .03), and marital status (OR 60.28, P = .000). The area under the receiver operative curves (AUROC) for the S-DAT score to predict alcohol relapse within 1 year after LT was 0.77.
The sensitivity of the S-DAT for predicting relapse risk was 96.2%, and specificity was 40.4%; positive and negative predictive values were 26.9% and 97.9%, respectively.
The high sensitivity and negative predictive values of the S-DAT make it a useful screening tool for identifying patients at low risk of alcohol relapse after a liver transplant, Dr. Kothadia said in an interview. “Our score will guide risk-based interventions post-LT to reduce post-LT relapse and improve long-term outcomes.”
The findings included only data from a single center, which may limit generalizability, Dr. Kothadia said. The tool is not yet clinically available, he noted.
“We would like to perform external validation of our S-DAT score as it stresses the importance of these psychosocial variables,” and to confirm the findings in larger, multicenter, prospective clinical trials, he said.
The study received no outside funding. Dr. Kothadia indicated no relevant financial relationships.
FROM ACG 2023