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Brepocitinib shows promise for psoriatic arthritis patients
The investigational drug brepocitinib showed superior symptom reduction in adults with moderate to severe active psoriatic arthritis (PsA), compared with placebo, by meeting primary and secondary endpoints of a phase 2b trial at 16 weeks, which persisted out to 1 year, according to data from 218 individuals.
Brepocitinib, a combination tyrosine kinase 2 and Janus kinase 1 inhibitor, is being studied for the treatment of several immunologic diseases including PsA, wrote Philip Mease, MD, of the Swedish Medical Center/Providence St. Joseph Health and the University of Washington, both in Seattle.
Previous studies in patients with PsA support the use of Janus kinase inhibitors and demonstrate the efficacy of tyrosine kinase 2 inhibitors, but more data are needed in patients with active PsA, the researchers noted.
In a study published in Arthritis & Rheumatology, the researchers randomized adults aged 18-75 years with moderate to severe PsA to once-daily oral doses of brepocitinib at 10 mg, 30 mg, or 60 mg, or a placebo for 16 weeks to assess safety, efficacy, and dose response. Placebo-treated patients were advanced to 30 mg or 60 mg of brepocitinib at week 16. Baseline demographics and disease characteristics were similar among the treatment groups. The mean Psoriatic Arthritis Disease Activity Score (PASDAS) and Disease Activity Index for PsA scores were 5.6 and 38.2, respectively, for the overall study population. Approximately two-thirds (64.7%) had a baseline Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score greater than 0 and 3% or more of their body surface area affected by psoriasis.
The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients achieving 20% improvement in American College of Rheumatology response criteria (ACR 20) at week 16. Secondary endpoints included rates of patients meeting ACR 50 and ACR 70 response criteria, the proportion of patients achieving 75% and 90% improvement in PASI scores (PASI 70 and 90), as well as the rates of patients meeting Minimal Disease Activity (MDA) criteria at 16 and 52 weeks.
At week 16, ACR 20 response rates were significantly higher in the brepocitinib 30-mg and 60-mg groups, compared with the placebo group (66.7% and 74.6%, respectively, vs. 43.3%), but not for those who received brepocitinib 10 mg (64.5%).
Response rates for ACR 50, ACR 70, PASI 75, PASI 90, and MDA were similarly higher in the 30-mg and 60-mg brepocitinib groups, compared with placebo, and these responses persisted at week 52. Notably, significant differences in PASI 75 and PASI 90 were observed in patients taking 30 mg and 60 mg brepocitinib, compared with placebo, as early as weeks 4 and 8, respectively, the researchers said.
In addition, disease activity based on PASDAS improved significantly more from baseline to week 16 in all brepocitinib groups, compared with placebo.
The overall safety data were consistent with previous brepocitinib studies, and most of the adverse events were mild or moderate, the researchers said. A total of 12 participants (5.5%) experienced a total of 15 serious adverse events, including 6 infections with brepocitinib 30 mg or 60 mg. No major adverse cardiovascular events or deaths occurred during the study period.
The findings were limited by several factors, including the use of clinics in a limited geographic area (11 countries in Europe), small sample size, and mainly White population, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the large placebo effect and relatively short placebo-controlled period.
The study was supported by Pfizer. Dr. Mease disclosed relationships with Pfizer and other companies including AbbVie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, Galapagos, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Inmagene, Janssen, Lilly, Novartis, Sun, and UCB. Many coauthors were employees of Pfizer, and others reported financial relationships with Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies.
The investigational drug brepocitinib showed superior symptom reduction in adults with moderate to severe active psoriatic arthritis (PsA), compared with placebo, by meeting primary and secondary endpoints of a phase 2b trial at 16 weeks, which persisted out to 1 year, according to data from 218 individuals.
Brepocitinib, a combination tyrosine kinase 2 and Janus kinase 1 inhibitor, is being studied for the treatment of several immunologic diseases including PsA, wrote Philip Mease, MD, of the Swedish Medical Center/Providence St. Joseph Health and the University of Washington, both in Seattle.
Previous studies in patients with PsA support the use of Janus kinase inhibitors and demonstrate the efficacy of tyrosine kinase 2 inhibitors, but more data are needed in patients with active PsA, the researchers noted.
In a study published in Arthritis & Rheumatology, the researchers randomized adults aged 18-75 years with moderate to severe PsA to once-daily oral doses of brepocitinib at 10 mg, 30 mg, or 60 mg, or a placebo for 16 weeks to assess safety, efficacy, and dose response. Placebo-treated patients were advanced to 30 mg or 60 mg of brepocitinib at week 16. Baseline demographics and disease characteristics were similar among the treatment groups. The mean Psoriatic Arthritis Disease Activity Score (PASDAS) and Disease Activity Index for PsA scores were 5.6 and 38.2, respectively, for the overall study population. Approximately two-thirds (64.7%) had a baseline Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score greater than 0 and 3% or more of their body surface area affected by psoriasis.
The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients achieving 20% improvement in American College of Rheumatology response criteria (ACR 20) at week 16. Secondary endpoints included rates of patients meeting ACR 50 and ACR 70 response criteria, the proportion of patients achieving 75% and 90% improvement in PASI scores (PASI 70 and 90), as well as the rates of patients meeting Minimal Disease Activity (MDA) criteria at 16 and 52 weeks.
At week 16, ACR 20 response rates were significantly higher in the brepocitinib 30-mg and 60-mg groups, compared with the placebo group (66.7% and 74.6%, respectively, vs. 43.3%), but not for those who received brepocitinib 10 mg (64.5%).
Response rates for ACR 50, ACR 70, PASI 75, PASI 90, and MDA were similarly higher in the 30-mg and 60-mg brepocitinib groups, compared with placebo, and these responses persisted at week 52. Notably, significant differences in PASI 75 and PASI 90 were observed in patients taking 30 mg and 60 mg brepocitinib, compared with placebo, as early as weeks 4 and 8, respectively, the researchers said.
In addition, disease activity based on PASDAS improved significantly more from baseline to week 16 in all brepocitinib groups, compared with placebo.
The overall safety data were consistent with previous brepocitinib studies, and most of the adverse events were mild or moderate, the researchers said. A total of 12 participants (5.5%) experienced a total of 15 serious adverse events, including 6 infections with brepocitinib 30 mg or 60 mg. No major adverse cardiovascular events or deaths occurred during the study period.
The findings were limited by several factors, including the use of clinics in a limited geographic area (11 countries in Europe), small sample size, and mainly White population, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the large placebo effect and relatively short placebo-controlled period.
The study was supported by Pfizer. Dr. Mease disclosed relationships with Pfizer and other companies including AbbVie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, Galapagos, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Inmagene, Janssen, Lilly, Novartis, Sun, and UCB. Many coauthors were employees of Pfizer, and others reported financial relationships with Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies.
The investigational drug brepocitinib showed superior symptom reduction in adults with moderate to severe active psoriatic arthritis (PsA), compared with placebo, by meeting primary and secondary endpoints of a phase 2b trial at 16 weeks, which persisted out to 1 year, according to data from 218 individuals.
Brepocitinib, a combination tyrosine kinase 2 and Janus kinase 1 inhibitor, is being studied for the treatment of several immunologic diseases including PsA, wrote Philip Mease, MD, of the Swedish Medical Center/Providence St. Joseph Health and the University of Washington, both in Seattle.
Previous studies in patients with PsA support the use of Janus kinase inhibitors and demonstrate the efficacy of tyrosine kinase 2 inhibitors, but more data are needed in patients with active PsA, the researchers noted.
In a study published in Arthritis & Rheumatology, the researchers randomized adults aged 18-75 years with moderate to severe PsA to once-daily oral doses of brepocitinib at 10 mg, 30 mg, or 60 mg, or a placebo for 16 weeks to assess safety, efficacy, and dose response. Placebo-treated patients were advanced to 30 mg or 60 mg of brepocitinib at week 16. Baseline demographics and disease characteristics were similar among the treatment groups. The mean Psoriatic Arthritis Disease Activity Score (PASDAS) and Disease Activity Index for PsA scores were 5.6 and 38.2, respectively, for the overall study population. Approximately two-thirds (64.7%) had a baseline Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score greater than 0 and 3% or more of their body surface area affected by psoriasis.
The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients achieving 20% improvement in American College of Rheumatology response criteria (ACR 20) at week 16. Secondary endpoints included rates of patients meeting ACR 50 and ACR 70 response criteria, the proportion of patients achieving 75% and 90% improvement in PASI scores (PASI 70 and 90), as well as the rates of patients meeting Minimal Disease Activity (MDA) criteria at 16 and 52 weeks.
At week 16, ACR 20 response rates were significantly higher in the brepocitinib 30-mg and 60-mg groups, compared with the placebo group (66.7% and 74.6%, respectively, vs. 43.3%), but not for those who received brepocitinib 10 mg (64.5%).
Response rates for ACR 50, ACR 70, PASI 75, PASI 90, and MDA were similarly higher in the 30-mg and 60-mg brepocitinib groups, compared with placebo, and these responses persisted at week 52. Notably, significant differences in PASI 75 and PASI 90 were observed in patients taking 30 mg and 60 mg brepocitinib, compared with placebo, as early as weeks 4 and 8, respectively, the researchers said.
In addition, disease activity based on PASDAS improved significantly more from baseline to week 16 in all brepocitinib groups, compared with placebo.
The overall safety data were consistent with previous brepocitinib studies, and most of the adverse events were mild or moderate, the researchers said. A total of 12 participants (5.5%) experienced a total of 15 serious adverse events, including 6 infections with brepocitinib 30 mg or 60 mg. No major adverse cardiovascular events or deaths occurred during the study period.
The findings were limited by several factors, including the use of clinics in a limited geographic area (11 countries in Europe), small sample size, and mainly White population, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the large placebo effect and relatively short placebo-controlled period.
The study was supported by Pfizer. Dr. Mease disclosed relationships with Pfizer and other companies including AbbVie, Amgen, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Boehringer Ingelheim, Galapagos, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Inmagene, Janssen, Lilly, Novartis, Sun, and UCB. Many coauthors were employees of Pfizer, and others reported financial relationships with Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies.
FROM ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY
Analysis: 40% of information about cirrhosis on TikTok is incorrect
CHICAGO –
TikTok’s short video format is increasingly becoming a major source for news and information, especially for adolescents and young adults. In 2022 the technology news website The Verge reported that about 10% of all U.S. adults regularly get news from TikTok, including an estimated 26% of adults under 30.
“Our study highlights the alarming prevalence of misinformation related to liver disease and cirrhosis on the TikTok platform. This misinformation can potentially lead to harm and poor health outcomes for individuals seeking accurate information about their conditions,” wrote the study authors in their abstract.
The study, which was led by Macklin Loveland, MD, an internal medicine resident at the University of Arizona, Tucson, found that, among 2,223 TikTok posts related to liver disease or cirrhosis as of November 2022, 60.3% were found to have accurate medical information, but the remaining 39.7% contained misinformation.
Some of the misinformation offered highly dubious and potentially dangerous advice, such as “Reishi mushrooms can reverse liver damage,” when in fact there is evidence to suggest that reishi mushrooms, especially in powder form, may be toxic to the liver and may even cause fatal fulminant hepatitis.
In an interview, Dr. Loveland said that much of the good information about liver disease on TikTok seems to come from patients with cirrhosis or other liver diseases who post videos chronicling their experiences, whereas bad information seems to come from people who are trying to pitch a product such as “natural” or “alternative” medicine.
“People who have real-life, firsthand experiences with cirrhosis have a really nice platform to talk about their disease process and share information with other people with similar disease processes, and the majority of them are accurate,” he said. “Where the inaccuracies come in are when people are trying to profit off a product or sell a dietary supplement, and then things go by the wayside.”
It’s important for TikTok users to understand the intentions of other users, he said, and expressed the hope that content mediators within TikTok would help to keep misinformation at bay.
Skyler B. Johnson, MD, assistant professor of radiation oncology at the University of Utah Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, has studied misinformation about cancer on social media, and as he and colleagues reported in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, of 200 articles on cancer posted on social media sites, 32.5% contained misinformation and 30.5% contained harmful information.
In an interview, Dr. Johnson, who was not involved in the study by Dr. Loveland and colleagues, offered advice for colleagues about countering misinformation.
“What we’re trying to do, as part of our research group, is encourage physicians to take an active role in addressing misinformation with their patients and also in their social networking interactions,” he said. “When I see a new patient with a new diagnosis of cancer, I warn them that they’re going to encounter things online that may or may not be true.”
He noted that, often when physicians instruct patients not to go online to research their disease, the first thing the vast majority of patients do after leaving the office is to jump online.
Instead, Dr. Johnson recommended inoculating patients against misinformation – not to discourage them from going online, but to inform them about the myriad good and bad information sources, and steer them toward trustworthy sites such as government agencies (the National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, etc), academic medical center sites, or select nonprofit organizations, foundations, and medical associations.
“But at the end of the day, even those you have to be somewhat vigilant about, because there are some unscrupulous providers who exploit even those sites,” he added.
Study details
Dr. Loveland and colleagues used the TikTok search engine to look for posts containing the terms “cirrhosis” and “liver disease,” and watched all such videos that turned up in the search from beginning to end. They classified each post as either educational in intent or whether it depicted a firsthand experience with liver disease.
They determined whether each post was accurate or erroneous according to guidelines from the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease, American College of Gastroenterology, and American Gastroenterological Association. They also recorded the number of likes, comments, and the number of times that each video was shared.
Accurate posts were viewed and liked significantly more often than inaccurate ones, and accurate posts had significantly more comments that faulty posts.
However, both accurate and inaccurate posts were shared a similar number of times, suggesting that bad-quality information can metastasize just as easily as good information can be disseminated.
Dr. Loveland and colleagues echoed the recommendations of Dr. Johnson, stating that “health care provides should be aware of the potential for misinformation on social media and should strive to provide their patients with accurate and evidence-based information to inform their health care decisions.”
The study was internally funded. Dr. Loveland and Dr. Johnson reported having no conflicts of interest to disclose.
DDW is sponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the AGA, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
CHICAGO –
TikTok’s short video format is increasingly becoming a major source for news and information, especially for adolescents and young adults. In 2022 the technology news website The Verge reported that about 10% of all U.S. adults regularly get news from TikTok, including an estimated 26% of adults under 30.
“Our study highlights the alarming prevalence of misinformation related to liver disease and cirrhosis on the TikTok platform. This misinformation can potentially lead to harm and poor health outcomes for individuals seeking accurate information about their conditions,” wrote the study authors in their abstract.
The study, which was led by Macklin Loveland, MD, an internal medicine resident at the University of Arizona, Tucson, found that, among 2,223 TikTok posts related to liver disease or cirrhosis as of November 2022, 60.3% were found to have accurate medical information, but the remaining 39.7% contained misinformation.
Some of the misinformation offered highly dubious and potentially dangerous advice, such as “Reishi mushrooms can reverse liver damage,” when in fact there is evidence to suggest that reishi mushrooms, especially in powder form, may be toxic to the liver and may even cause fatal fulminant hepatitis.
In an interview, Dr. Loveland said that much of the good information about liver disease on TikTok seems to come from patients with cirrhosis or other liver diseases who post videos chronicling their experiences, whereas bad information seems to come from people who are trying to pitch a product such as “natural” or “alternative” medicine.
“People who have real-life, firsthand experiences with cirrhosis have a really nice platform to talk about their disease process and share information with other people with similar disease processes, and the majority of them are accurate,” he said. “Where the inaccuracies come in are when people are trying to profit off a product or sell a dietary supplement, and then things go by the wayside.”
It’s important for TikTok users to understand the intentions of other users, he said, and expressed the hope that content mediators within TikTok would help to keep misinformation at bay.
Skyler B. Johnson, MD, assistant professor of radiation oncology at the University of Utah Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, has studied misinformation about cancer on social media, and as he and colleagues reported in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, of 200 articles on cancer posted on social media sites, 32.5% contained misinformation and 30.5% contained harmful information.
In an interview, Dr. Johnson, who was not involved in the study by Dr. Loveland and colleagues, offered advice for colleagues about countering misinformation.
“What we’re trying to do, as part of our research group, is encourage physicians to take an active role in addressing misinformation with their patients and also in their social networking interactions,” he said. “When I see a new patient with a new diagnosis of cancer, I warn them that they’re going to encounter things online that may or may not be true.”
He noted that, often when physicians instruct patients not to go online to research their disease, the first thing the vast majority of patients do after leaving the office is to jump online.
Instead, Dr. Johnson recommended inoculating patients against misinformation – not to discourage them from going online, but to inform them about the myriad good and bad information sources, and steer them toward trustworthy sites such as government agencies (the National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, etc), academic medical center sites, or select nonprofit organizations, foundations, and medical associations.
“But at the end of the day, even those you have to be somewhat vigilant about, because there are some unscrupulous providers who exploit even those sites,” he added.
Study details
Dr. Loveland and colleagues used the TikTok search engine to look for posts containing the terms “cirrhosis” and “liver disease,” and watched all such videos that turned up in the search from beginning to end. They classified each post as either educational in intent or whether it depicted a firsthand experience with liver disease.
They determined whether each post was accurate or erroneous according to guidelines from the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease, American College of Gastroenterology, and American Gastroenterological Association. They also recorded the number of likes, comments, and the number of times that each video was shared.
Accurate posts were viewed and liked significantly more often than inaccurate ones, and accurate posts had significantly more comments that faulty posts.
However, both accurate and inaccurate posts were shared a similar number of times, suggesting that bad-quality information can metastasize just as easily as good information can be disseminated.
Dr. Loveland and colleagues echoed the recommendations of Dr. Johnson, stating that “health care provides should be aware of the potential for misinformation on social media and should strive to provide their patients with accurate and evidence-based information to inform their health care decisions.”
The study was internally funded. Dr. Loveland and Dr. Johnson reported having no conflicts of interest to disclose.
DDW is sponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the AGA, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
CHICAGO –
TikTok’s short video format is increasingly becoming a major source for news and information, especially for adolescents and young adults. In 2022 the technology news website The Verge reported that about 10% of all U.S. adults regularly get news from TikTok, including an estimated 26% of adults under 30.
“Our study highlights the alarming prevalence of misinformation related to liver disease and cirrhosis on the TikTok platform. This misinformation can potentially lead to harm and poor health outcomes for individuals seeking accurate information about their conditions,” wrote the study authors in their abstract.
The study, which was led by Macklin Loveland, MD, an internal medicine resident at the University of Arizona, Tucson, found that, among 2,223 TikTok posts related to liver disease or cirrhosis as of November 2022, 60.3% were found to have accurate medical information, but the remaining 39.7% contained misinformation.
Some of the misinformation offered highly dubious and potentially dangerous advice, such as “Reishi mushrooms can reverse liver damage,” when in fact there is evidence to suggest that reishi mushrooms, especially in powder form, may be toxic to the liver and may even cause fatal fulminant hepatitis.
In an interview, Dr. Loveland said that much of the good information about liver disease on TikTok seems to come from patients with cirrhosis or other liver diseases who post videos chronicling their experiences, whereas bad information seems to come from people who are trying to pitch a product such as “natural” or “alternative” medicine.
“People who have real-life, firsthand experiences with cirrhosis have a really nice platform to talk about their disease process and share information with other people with similar disease processes, and the majority of them are accurate,” he said. “Where the inaccuracies come in are when people are trying to profit off a product or sell a dietary supplement, and then things go by the wayside.”
It’s important for TikTok users to understand the intentions of other users, he said, and expressed the hope that content mediators within TikTok would help to keep misinformation at bay.
Skyler B. Johnson, MD, assistant professor of radiation oncology at the University of Utah Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, has studied misinformation about cancer on social media, and as he and colleagues reported in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, of 200 articles on cancer posted on social media sites, 32.5% contained misinformation and 30.5% contained harmful information.
In an interview, Dr. Johnson, who was not involved in the study by Dr. Loveland and colleagues, offered advice for colleagues about countering misinformation.
“What we’re trying to do, as part of our research group, is encourage physicians to take an active role in addressing misinformation with their patients and also in their social networking interactions,” he said. “When I see a new patient with a new diagnosis of cancer, I warn them that they’re going to encounter things online that may or may not be true.”
He noted that, often when physicians instruct patients not to go online to research their disease, the first thing the vast majority of patients do after leaving the office is to jump online.
Instead, Dr. Johnson recommended inoculating patients against misinformation – not to discourage them from going online, but to inform them about the myriad good and bad information sources, and steer them toward trustworthy sites such as government agencies (the National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, etc), academic medical center sites, or select nonprofit organizations, foundations, and medical associations.
“But at the end of the day, even those you have to be somewhat vigilant about, because there are some unscrupulous providers who exploit even those sites,” he added.
Study details
Dr. Loveland and colleagues used the TikTok search engine to look for posts containing the terms “cirrhosis” and “liver disease,” and watched all such videos that turned up in the search from beginning to end. They classified each post as either educational in intent or whether it depicted a firsthand experience with liver disease.
They determined whether each post was accurate or erroneous according to guidelines from the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease, American College of Gastroenterology, and American Gastroenterological Association. They also recorded the number of likes, comments, and the number of times that each video was shared.
Accurate posts were viewed and liked significantly more often than inaccurate ones, and accurate posts had significantly more comments that faulty posts.
However, both accurate and inaccurate posts were shared a similar number of times, suggesting that bad-quality information can metastasize just as easily as good information can be disseminated.
Dr. Loveland and colleagues echoed the recommendations of Dr. Johnson, stating that “health care provides should be aware of the potential for misinformation on social media and should strive to provide their patients with accurate and evidence-based information to inform their health care decisions.”
The study was internally funded. Dr. Loveland and Dr. Johnson reported having no conflicts of interest to disclose.
DDW is sponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the AGA, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
AT DDW 2023
Misdiagnosis, mismatch still common in pancreatic cystic neoplasms
CHICAGO – , data from a retrospective study show.
An analysis of all pancreatic resections performed for presumed PCN at the Verona Pancreas Institute, Italy, from 2011 through 2020 showed a high degree of discrepancy between the preoperative clinical diagnosis and the final postoperative pathology, with some lesions being misdiagnosed in nearly two-thirds of cases, reported Anna Burelli, MD, of the department of general and pancreatic surgery at the University of Verona.
“Diagnostic errors are still common for resected PCNs. Morphological and clinical information alone still poorly frame actual targets for surgery, and hopefully the development of new reliable biomarkers will represent the next evolution in pancreatic cystic neoplasm management,” she said in an oral abstract session at the annual Digestive Disease Week® (DDW).
Diagnostic errors are significant issues in care of patients with PCN, because clinicians must balance the need for prompt, definitive treatment when necessary with the need for avoiding the significant morbidity of pancreatic resection for patients with lesions that turn out to be nonmalignant.
The investigators define “misdiagnosis” as a discrepancy between the preoperative clinical diagnosis and the postoperative pathology, and “mismatch” as a discrepancy between the preoperative suspicion of malignant or benign disease and the final pathology.
Checkered history
In previous cases series from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston (2010) and the Verona Pancreas Institute (2012) – both experienced, high-volume centers – PCN misdiagnosis rates were 30% and 21%, respectively, and results from the current study show that things haven’t changed much since then, Dr. Burelli said.
PCNs are divided into neoplastic and nonneoplastic categories, with mucin-producing subtypes considered to be precancerous lesions that require accurate diagnosis and close monitoring.
Examples of neoplastic PCNs are intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) of the main pancreatic duct or side branch and mucinous cystadenomas. In contrast, serous cystadenomas, considered nonneoplastic, are mostly benign lesions discovered incidentally during abdominal imaging for another indication. It is very difficult, however, to distinguish between the two PCN subtypes clinically.
For example, Dr. Burelli showed images from a patient who received a preoperative diagnosis of mixed IPMN that was in fact found to be chronic pancreatitis on postoperative pathology.
Dr. Burelli noted that AGA and joint European guidelines for management of PCNs have been updated over the past decade, with the latest AGA iteration in 2015.
A 2017 study evaluating the 2015 AGA guidelines for management of asymptomatic PCNs found that following the guidelines in a large multicenter cohort “would have resulted in 60 % fewer patients being referred for surgical resection, and accurately recommended surveillance in 95% of patients with asymptomatic PCNs.”
Misdiagnosis and mismatch common
In the current study, Dr. Burelli and colleagues reviewed all pancreatic resections performed for PCNs at their center from 2011 through 2020.
Of 601 patients included in the retrospective study, 301 underwent endoscopic ultrasound (EUS).
The investigators identified misdiagnosis in 19% of cases and mismatch in 34%, and there was no significant improvement in diagnostic accuracy among the 50% of patients who underwent EUS.
The most frequently misdiagnosed lesions were cystic neuroendocrine tumors, in 61% of cases. The least misdiagnosed lesions were pseudopapillary tumors, in 6% of cases.
Many of the diagnostic errors were clinically important. For example, seven cases presumed to be serous cystic neoplasms (an almost always benign lesion) were found on final pathology to have a different, malignant histology.
Mismatch examples included 50 IPMNs with high-risk stigmata that were presumed to be malignant before surgery but were nonmalignant on final pathology, and 38 IPMNs without high-risk stigmata which were thought on clinical examination to be benign but turned out to be malignant on final pathology.
“Our results are in line with the current literature,” Dr. Burelli said, citing a recent meta-analysis showing that among 3,292 patients who underwent resection for mucinous cystic neoplasms (MCNs), the pooled rate of malignancy was 16.1%, yet the 2012 International Association of Pancreatology guidelines recommend surgery for all fit patients with MCNs, and joint European evidence-based guidelines from 2018 recommend surgery for MCNs 40 mm or larger, those with mural nodules, and for patients who are symptomatic.
The 16.1% pooled malignancy rate suggests “that there is space for surveillance in most cases of MCNs,” she said.
In addition, morphologic and clinical evaluation for IPMN with high-risk stigmata have been shown to have low specificity and low sensitivity, “so should guideline recommendations be revised?” Dr. Burelli said.
She pointed to a recent multi-institutional study in Gastroenterology showing that real-time next-generation sequencing of pancreatic cyst fluid “is sensitive and specific for various pancreatic cyst types and advanced neoplasia arising from mucinous cysts, but also reveals the diversity of genomic alterations seen in pancreatic cysts and their clinical significance.”
“This is not the future; this is the present,” she concluded.
Invited discussant R. Matthew Walsh, MD, a surgeon specializing in pancreatic and cancer surgery at the Cleveland Clinic, complimented the contributions of her group.
“The patient that you showed with chronic pancreatitis could have very well benefited from the operation regardless of the diagnosis if they were symptomatic,” he said, addressing Dr. Burelli. “So what is the group that is the regrettable surgical patients, and where are you aiming your studies? Is it really the 24% with high-risk features in IPMN that have low-grade dysplasia, or is it the 58% who we’re not sure why they were operated on because they didn’t have high-grade features who had low-grade dysplasia?”
She replied that “the goal here is to avoid surgery for benign entities, and we know that the only true benign entities are serous cystic neoplasms, and all the others have a malignant potential, but we think at Verona Pancreas Institute there is no reason to operate on low-grade dysplasia free patients. This is what we really would like to avoid.”
Dr. Walsh also asked, given their finding that EUS did not appear to offer a benefit to patients or change decision making, which patients should still get EUS.
“I think that only patients in which the diagnosis is uncertain or in which there are some worrisome features or high-risk stigmata should undergo EUS before surgery, and also to continue follow-up,” Dr. Burelli said. “I don’t think that the conclusion is that EUS is not useful, but it’s not useful in all.”
For example, large, microcystic lesions can be readily identified radiographically, but other, more complex cases may still require EUS to help nail down or refine a diagnosis, she said.
The study was internally funded. Dr. Burelli and Dr. Walsh reported having no conflicts of interest.
DDW is sponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
CHICAGO – , data from a retrospective study show.
An analysis of all pancreatic resections performed for presumed PCN at the Verona Pancreas Institute, Italy, from 2011 through 2020 showed a high degree of discrepancy between the preoperative clinical diagnosis and the final postoperative pathology, with some lesions being misdiagnosed in nearly two-thirds of cases, reported Anna Burelli, MD, of the department of general and pancreatic surgery at the University of Verona.
“Diagnostic errors are still common for resected PCNs. Morphological and clinical information alone still poorly frame actual targets for surgery, and hopefully the development of new reliable biomarkers will represent the next evolution in pancreatic cystic neoplasm management,” she said in an oral abstract session at the annual Digestive Disease Week® (DDW).
Diagnostic errors are significant issues in care of patients with PCN, because clinicians must balance the need for prompt, definitive treatment when necessary with the need for avoiding the significant morbidity of pancreatic resection for patients with lesions that turn out to be nonmalignant.
The investigators define “misdiagnosis” as a discrepancy between the preoperative clinical diagnosis and the postoperative pathology, and “mismatch” as a discrepancy between the preoperative suspicion of malignant or benign disease and the final pathology.
Checkered history
In previous cases series from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston (2010) and the Verona Pancreas Institute (2012) – both experienced, high-volume centers – PCN misdiagnosis rates were 30% and 21%, respectively, and results from the current study show that things haven’t changed much since then, Dr. Burelli said.
PCNs are divided into neoplastic and nonneoplastic categories, with mucin-producing subtypes considered to be precancerous lesions that require accurate diagnosis and close monitoring.
Examples of neoplastic PCNs are intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) of the main pancreatic duct or side branch and mucinous cystadenomas. In contrast, serous cystadenomas, considered nonneoplastic, are mostly benign lesions discovered incidentally during abdominal imaging for another indication. It is very difficult, however, to distinguish between the two PCN subtypes clinically.
For example, Dr. Burelli showed images from a patient who received a preoperative diagnosis of mixed IPMN that was in fact found to be chronic pancreatitis on postoperative pathology.
Dr. Burelli noted that AGA and joint European guidelines for management of PCNs have been updated over the past decade, with the latest AGA iteration in 2015.
A 2017 study evaluating the 2015 AGA guidelines for management of asymptomatic PCNs found that following the guidelines in a large multicenter cohort “would have resulted in 60 % fewer patients being referred for surgical resection, and accurately recommended surveillance in 95% of patients with asymptomatic PCNs.”
Misdiagnosis and mismatch common
In the current study, Dr. Burelli and colleagues reviewed all pancreatic resections performed for PCNs at their center from 2011 through 2020.
Of 601 patients included in the retrospective study, 301 underwent endoscopic ultrasound (EUS).
The investigators identified misdiagnosis in 19% of cases and mismatch in 34%, and there was no significant improvement in diagnostic accuracy among the 50% of patients who underwent EUS.
The most frequently misdiagnosed lesions were cystic neuroendocrine tumors, in 61% of cases. The least misdiagnosed lesions were pseudopapillary tumors, in 6% of cases.
Many of the diagnostic errors were clinically important. For example, seven cases presumed to be serous cystic neoplasms (an almost always benign lesion) were found on final pathology to have a different, malignant histology.
Mismatch examples included 50 IPMNs with high-risk stigmata that were presumed to be malignant before surgery but were nonmalignant on final pathology, and 38 IPMNs without high-risk stigmata which were thought on clinical examination to be benign but turned out to be malignant on final pathology.
“Our results are in line with the current literature,” Dr. Burelli said, citing a recent meta-analysis showing that among 3,292 patients who underwent resection for mucinous cystic neoplasms (MCNs), the pooled rate of malignancy was 16.1%, yet the 2012 International Association of Pancreatology guidelines recommend surgery for all fit patients with MCNs, and joint European evidence-based guidelines from 2018 recommend surgery for MCNs 40 mm or larger, those with mural nodules, and for patients who are symptomatic.
The 16.1% pooled malignancy rate suggests “that there is space for surveillance in most cases of MCNs,” she said.
In addition, morphologic and clinical evaluation for IPMN with high-risk stigmata have been shown to have low specificity and low sensitivity, “so should guideline recommendations be revised?” Dr. Burelli said.
She pointed to a recent multi-institutional study in Gastroenterology showing that real-time next-generation sequencing of pancreatic cyst fluid “is sensitive and specific for various pancreatic cyst types and advanced neoplasia arising from mucinous cysts, but also reveals the diversity of genomic alterations seen in pancreatic cysts and their clinical significance.”
“This is not the future; this is the present,” she concluded.
Invited discussant R. Matthew Walsh, MD, a surgeon specializing in pancreatic and cancer surgery at the Cleveland Clinic, complimented the contributions of her group.
“The patient that you showed with chronic pancreatitis could have very well benefited from the operation regardless of the diagnosis if they were symptomatic,” he said, addressing Dr. Burelli. “So what is the group that is the regrettable surgical patients, and where are you aiming your studies? Is it really the 24% with high-risk features in IPMN that have low-grade dysplasia, or is it the 58% who we’re not sure why they were operated on because they didn’t have high-grade features who had low-grade dysplasia?”
She replied that “the goal here is to avoid surgery for benign entities, and we know that the only true benign entities are serous cystic neoplasms, and all the others have a malignant potential, but we think at Verona Pancreas Institute there is no reason to operate on low-grade dysplasia free patients. This is what we really would like to avoid.”
Dr. Walsh also asked, given their finding that EUS did not appear to offer a benefit to patients or change decision making, which patients should still get EUS.
“I think that only patients in which the diagnosis is uncertain or in which there are some worrisome features or high-risk stigmata should undergo EUS before surgery, and also to continue follow-up,” Dr. Burelli said. “I don’t think that the conclusion is that EUS is not useful, but it’s not useful in all.”
For example, large, microcystic lesions can be readily identified radiographically, but other, more complex cases may still require EUS to help nail down or refine a diagnosis, she said.
The study was internally funded. Dr. Burelli and Dr. Walsh reported having no conflicts of interest.
DDW is sponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
CHICAGO – , data from a retrospective study show.
An analysis of all pancreatic resections performed for presumed PCN at the Verona Pancreas Institute, Italy, from 2011 through 2020 showed a high degree of discrepancy between the preoperative clinical diagnosis and the final postoperative pathology, with some lesions being misdiagnosed in nearly two-thirds of cases, reported Anna Burelli, MD, of the department of general and pancreatic surgery at the University of Verona.
“Diagnostic errors are still common for resected PCNs. Morphological and clinical information alone still poorly frame actual targets for surgery, and hopefully the development of new reliable biomarkers will represent the next evolution in pancreatic cystic neoplasm management,” she said in an oral abstract session at the annual Digestive Disease Week® (DDW).
Diagnostic errors are significant issues in care of patients with PCN, because clinicians must balance the need for prompt, definitive treatment when necessary with the need for avoiding the significant morbidity of pancreatic resection for patients with lesions that turn out to be nonmalignant.
The investigators define “misdiagnosis” as a discrepancy between the preoperative clinical diagnosis and the postoperative pathology, and “mismatch” as a discrepancy between the preoperative suspicion of malignant or benign disease and the final pathology.
Checkered history
In previous cases series from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston (2010) and the Verona Pancreas Institute (2012) – both experienced, high-volume centers – PCN misdiagnosis rates were 30% and 21%, respectively, and results from the current study show that things haven’t changed much since then, Dr. Burelli said.
PCNs are divided into neoplastic and nonneoplastic categories, with mucin-producing subtypes considered to be precancerous lesions that require accurate diagnosis and close monitoring.
Examples of neoplastic PCNs are intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) of the main pancreatic duct or side branch and mucinous cystadenomas. In contrast, serous cystadenomas, considered nonneoplastic, are mostly benign lesions discovered incidentally during abdominal imaging for another indication. It is very difficult, however, to distinguish between the two PCN subtypes clinically.
For example, Dr. Burelli showed images from a patient who received a preoperative diagnosis of mixed IPMN that was in fact found to be chronic pancreatitis on postoperative pathology.
Dr. Burelli noted that AGA and joint European guidelines for management of PCNs have been updated over the past decade, with the latest AGA iteration in 2015.
A 2017 study evaluating the 2015 AGA guidelines for management of asymptomatic PCNs found that following the guidelines in a large multicenter cohort “would have resulted in 60 % fewer patients being referred for surgical resection, and accurately recommended surveillance in 95% of patients with asymptomatic PCNs.”
Misdiagnosis and mismatch common
In the current study, Dr. Burelli and colleagues reviewed all pancreatic resections performed for PCNs at their center from 2011 through 2020.
Of 601 patients included in the retrospective study, 301 underwent endoscopic ultrasound (EUS).
The investigators identified misdiagnosis in 19% of cases and mismatch in 34%, and there was no significant improvement in diagnostic accuracy among the 50% of patients who underwent EUS.
The most frequently misdiagnosed lesions were cystic neuroendocrine tumors, in 61% of cases. The least misdiagnosed lesions were pseudopapillary tumors, in 6% of cases.
Many of the diagnostic errors were clinically important. For example, seven cases presumed to be serous cystic neoplasms (an almost always benign lesion) were found on final pathology to have a different, malignant histology.
Mismatch examples included 50 IPMNs with high-risk stigmata that were presumed to be malignant before surgery but were nonmalignant on final pathology, and 38 IPMNs without high-risk stigmata which were thought on clinical examination to be benign but turned out to be malignant on final pathology.
“Our results are in line with the current literature,” Dr. Burelli said, citing a recent meta-analysis showing that among 3,292 patients who underwent resection for mucinous cystic neoplasms (MCNs), the pooled rate of malignancy was 16.1%, yet the 2012 International Association of Pancreatology guidelines recommend surgery for all fit patients with MCNs, and joint European evidence-based guidelines from 2018 recommend surgery for MCNs 40 mm or larger, those with mural nodules, and for patients who are symptomatic.
The 16.1% pooled malignancy rate suggests “that there is space for surveillance in most cases of MCNs,” she said.
In addition, morphologic and clinical evaluation for IPMN with high-risk stigmata have been shown to have low specificity and low sensitivity, “so should guideline recommendations be revised?” Dr. Burelli said.
She pointed to a recent multi-institutional study in Gastroenterology showing that real-time next-generation sequencing of pancreatic cyst fluid “is sensitive and specific for various pancreatic cyst types and advanced neoplasia arising from mucinous cysts, but also reveals the diversity of genomic alterations seen in pancreatic cysts and their clinical significance.”
“This is not the future; this is the present,” she concluded.
Invited discussant R. Matthew Walsh, MD, a surgeon specializing in pancreatic and cancer surgery at the Cleveland Clinic, complimented the contributions of her group.
“The patient that you showed with chronic pancreatitis could have very well benefited from the operation regardless of the diagnosis if they were symptomatic,” he said, addressing Dr. Burelli. “So what is the group that is the regrettable surgical patients, and where are you aiming your studies? Is it really the 24% with high-risk features in IPMN that have low-grade dysplasia, or is it the 58% who we’re not sure why they were operated on because they didn’t have high-grade features who had low-grade dysplasia?”
She replied that “the goal here is to avoid surgery for benign entities, and we know that the only true benign entities are serous cystic neoplasms, and all the others have a malignant potential, but we think at Verona Pancreas Institute there is no reason to operate on low-grade dysplasia free patients. This is what we really would like to avoid.”
Dr. Walsh also asked, given their finding that EUS did not appear to offer a benefit to patients or change decision making, which patients should still get EUS.
“I think that only patients in which the diagnosis is uncertain or in which there are some worrisome features or high-risk stigmata should undergo EUS before surgery, and also to continue follow-up,” Dr. Burelli said. “I don’t think that the conclusion is that EUS is not useful, but it’s not useful in all.”
For example, large, microcystic lesions can be readily identified radiographically, but other, more complex cases may still require EUS to help nail down or refine a diagnosis, she said.
The study was internally funded. Dr. Burelli and Dr. Walsh reported having no conflicts of interest.
DDW is sponsored by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
AT DDW 2023
Emotional eating isn’t all emotional
“Food gives me ‘hugs,’ ” Ms. S* said as her eyes lit up. Finally, after weeks of working together, she could articulate her complex relationship with food. She had been struggling to explain why she continued to eat when she was full or consumed foods she knew wouldn’t help her health.
Like millions of people struggling with their weight or the disease of obesity, Ms. S had tried multiple diets and programs but continued to return to unhelpful eating patterns. Ms. S was an emotional eater, and the pandemic only worsened her emotional eating. As a single professional forced to work from home during the pandemic, she became lonely. She went from working in a busy downtown office, training for half-marathons, and teaching live workout sessions to being alone daily. Her only “real” human interaction was when she ordered daily delivery meals of her favorite comfort foods. As a person with type 2 diabetes, she knew that her delivery habit was wrecking her health, but willpower wasn’t enough to make her stop.
Her psychologist referred her to our virtual integrative obesity practice to help her lose weight and find long-term solutions. Ms. S admitted that she knew what she was doing as an emotional eater. But like many emotional eaters, she didn’t know why or how to switch from emotional eating to eating based on her biological hunger signals. As a trained obesity expert and recovering emotional eater of 8 years, personally and professionally I can appreciate the challenges of emotional eating and how it can sabotage even the best weight loss plan. In this article, I will share facts and feelings that drive emotional eating. I aim to empower clinicians seeking to help patients with emotional eating.
Fact: Emotional eating isn’t all emotional
It’s important not to dismiss emotional eating as all emotion driven. Recall that hunger is hormonally regulated. There are two main hunger pathways: the homeostatic pathway and the hedonic pathway. The homeostatic pathway is our biological hunger pathway and is driven by the need for energy in calories. Conversely, hedonic eating is pleasure-driven and uses emotional stimuli to “bypass” the physical hunger/satisfaction signals.
Emotional eating falls under the hedonic pathway. As clinicians, the first step in helping a patient struggling with emotional eating is empathetically listening, then assessing for any physiologic causes.
Several factors can disrupt physiologic appetite regulation, such as sleep disturbances; high stress levels; and many medical conditions, including but not limited to obesity, diabetes, and polycystic ovarian syndrome. Such factors as insulin resistance and inflammation are a common link in these conditions. Both contribute to the pathophysiology of the changes in appetite and can influence other hormones that lead to reduced satisfaction after eating. Furthermore, mental health conditions may disrupt levels of neurotransmitters such as serotonin and dopamine, which can also cause appetite changes.
These settings of physiologically disrupted appetite can trigger hedonic eating. But the relationship is complex. For example, one way to research hedonic eating is by using the Power of Food Scale. Functional MRI studies show that people with higher Power of Food Scale readings have more brain activity in the visual cortex when they see highly palatable foods. While more studies are needed to better understand the clinical implications of this finding, it’s yet another indicator that “emotional” eating isn’t all emotional. It’s also physiologic.
Feelings: Patterns, personality, places, psychological factors
Physiology only explains part of emotional eating. Like Ms. S, emotional eaters have strong emotional connections to food and behavior patterns. Often, physiologic cues have been coupled with psychological habits.
For example, menses is a common physiologic trigger for stress-eating for many of my patients. Studies have shown that in addition to iron levels changing during menses, calcium, magnesium, and phosphorous levels also change. Emotionally, the discomfort of “that time of the month” can lead to solace in comfort foods such as chocolate in different forms. But this isn’t surprising, as cacao and its derivative, chocolate, are rich in iron and other minerals. The chocolate is actually addressing a physical and emotional need. It can be helpful to point out this association to your patients. Suggest choosing a lower-sugar form of chocolate, such as dark chocolate, or even trying cacao nibs, while addressing any emotions.
But physiologic conditions and patterns aren’t the only emotional eating triggers. Places and psychological conditions can also trigger emotional eating.
Places and people
Celebrations, vacations, proximity to certain restaurants, exposure to food marketing, and major life shifts can lead to increased hedonic eating. Helping patients recognize this connection opens the door to advance preparation for these situations.
Psychological conditions can be connected to emotional eating. It’s important to screen for mental health conditions and past traumas. For example, emotional eating could be a symptom of binge eating disorder, major depression, or generalized anxiety disorder. Childhood trauma is associated with disordered eating. The adverse childhood events quiz can be used clinically.
Emotional eating can lead to feelings of guilt, shame, and negative self-talk. It’s helpful to offer patients reassurance and encourage self-compassion. After all, it’s natural to eat. The goal isn’t to stop eating but to eat on the basis of physiologic needs.
Putting it together: Addressing the facts and feelings of emotional eating
1. Treat biological causes that impact physiologic hunger and trigger emotional eating.
2. Triggers: Address patterns, places/people, psychological events.
3. Transition to non-food rewards; the key to emotional eating is eating. While healthier substitutes can be a short-term solution for improving eating behaviors, ultimately, helping patients find non-food ways to address emotions is invaluable.
4. Stress management: Offer your patients ways to decrease stress levels through mindfulness and other techniques.
5. Professional support: Creating a multidisciplinary team is helpful, given the complexity of emotional eating. In addition to the primary care physician/clinician, other team members may include:
- Psychologist
- Psychiatrist
- coach and/or certified wellness coaches
- Obesity specialist
Back to Ms. S
Ms. S is doing well. We started her on a GLP-1 agonist to address her underlying insulin resistance. Together we’ve found creative ways to satisfy her loneliness, such as volunteering and teaching virtual workout classes. Her emotional eating has decreased by over 60%, and we continue to discover new strategies to address her emotional eating triggers.
Conclusion
Despite being common, the impact of emotional eating is often minimized. With no DSM-5 criteria or ICD-11 code, it’s easy to dismiss emotional eating clinically. However, emotional eating is common and associated with weight gain.
In light of the obesity epidemic, this significance can’t be overlooked. Thankfully we have groundbreaking medications to address the homeostatic hunger pathway and physiologic drivers of emotional eating, but they’re not a substitute for addressing the psychosocial components of emotional eating.
As clinicians, we can have a meaningful impact on our patients’ lives beyond writing a prescription.
*Name/initial changed for privacy.
Sylvia Gonsahn-Bollie, MD, DipABOM, is an integrative obesity specialist focused on individualized solutions for emotional and biological overeating.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
“Food gives me ‘hugs,’ ” Ms. S* said as her eyes lit up. Finally, after weeks of working together, she could articulate her complex relationship with food. She had been struggling to explain why she continued to eat when she was full or consumed foods she knew wouldn’t help her health.
Like millions of people struggling with their weight or the disease of obesity, Ms. S had tried multiple diets and programs but continued to return to unhelpful eating patterns. Ms. S was an emotional eater, and the pandemic only worsened her emotional eating. As a single professional forced to work from home during the pandemic, she became lonely. She went from working in a busy downtown office, training for half-marathons, and teaching live workout sessions to being alone daily. Her only “real” human interaction was when she ordered daily delivery meals of her favorite comfort foods. As a person with type 2 diabetes, she knew that her delivery habit was wrecking her health, but willpower wasn’t enough to make her stop.
Her psychologist referred her to our virtual integrative obesity practice to help her lose weight and find long-term solutions. Ms. S admitted that she knew what she was doing as an emotional eater. But like many emotional eaters, she didn’t know why or how to switch from emotional eating to eating based on her biological hunger signals. As a trained obesity expert and recovering emotional eater of 8 years, personally and professionally I can appreciate the challenges of emotional eating and how it can sabotage even the best weight loss plan. In this article, I will share facts and feelings that drive emotional eating. I aim to empower clinicians seeking to help patients with emotional eating.
Fact: Emotional eating isn’t all emotional
It’s important not to dismiss emotional eating as all emotion driven. Recall that hunger is hormonally regulated. There are two main hunger pathways: the homeostatic pathway and the hedonic pathway. The homeostatic pathway is our biological hunger pathway and is driven by the need for energy in calories. Conversely, hedonic eating is pleasure-driven and uses emotional stimuli to “bypass” the physical hunger/satisfaction signals.
Emotional eating falls under the hedonic pathway. As clinicians, the first step in helping a patient struggling with emotional eating is empathetically listening, then assessing for any physiologic causes.
Several factors can disrupt physiologic appetite regulation, such as sleep disturbances; high stress levels; and many medical conditions, including but not limited to obesity, diabetes, and polycystic ovarian syndrome. Such factors as insulin resistance and inflammation are a common link in these conditions. Both contribute to the pathophysiology of the changes in appetite and can influence other hormones that lead to reduced satisfaction after eating. Furthermore, mental health conditions may disrupt levels of neurotransmitters such as serotonin and dopamine, which can also cause appetite changes.
These settings of physiologically disrupted appetite can trigger hedonic eating. But the relationship is complex. For example, one way to research hedonic eating is by using the Power of Food Scale. Functional MRI studies show that people with higher Power of Food Scale readings have more brain activity in the visual cortex when they see highly palatable foods. While more studies are needed to better understand the clinical implications of this finding, it’s yet another indicator that “emotional” eating isn’t all emotional. It’s also physiologic.
Feelings: Patterns, personality, places, psychological factors
Physiology only explains part of emotional eating. Like Ms. S, emotional eaters have strong emotional connections to food and behavior patterns. Often, physiologic cues have been coupled with psychological habits.
For example, menses is a common physiologic trigger for stress-eating for many of my patients. Studies have shown that in addition to iron levels changing during menses, calcium, magnesium, and phosphorous levels also change. Emotionally, the discomfort of “that time of the month” can lead to solace in comfort foods such as chocolate in different forms. But this isn’t surprising, as cacao and its derivative, chocolate, are rich in iron and other minerals. The chocolate is actually addressing a physical and emotional need. It can be helpful to point out this association to your patients. Suggest choosing a lower-sugar form of chocolate, such as dark chocolate, or even trying cacao nibs, while addressing any emotions.
But physiologic conditions and patterns aren’t the only emotional eating triggers. Places and psychological conditions can also trigger emotional eating.
Places and people
Celebrations, vacations, proximity to certain restaurants, exposure to food marketing, and major life shifts can lead to increased hedonic eating. Helping patients recognize this connection opens the door to advance preparation for these situations.
Psychological conditions can be connected to emotional eating. It’s important to screen for mental health conditions and past traumas. For example, emotional eating could be a symptom of binge eating disorder, major depression, or generalized anxiety disorder. Childhood trauma is associated with disordered eating. The adverse childhood events quiz can be used clinically.
Emotional eating can lead to feelings of guilt, shame, and negative self-talk. It’s helpful to offer patients reassurance and encourage self-compassion. After all, it’s natural to eat. The goal isn’t to stop eating but to eat on the basis of physiologic needs.
Putting it together: Addressing the facts and feelings of emotional eating
1. Treat biological causes that impact physiologic hunger and trigger emotional eating.
2. Triggers: Address patterns, places/people, psychological events.
3. Transition to non-food rewards; the key to emotional eating is eating. While healthier substitutes can be a short-term solution for improving eating behaviors, ultimately, helping patients find non-food ways to address emotions is invaluable.
4. Stress management: Offer your patients ways to decrease stress levels through mindfulness and other techniques.
5. Professional support: Creating a multidisciplinary team is helpful, given the complexity of emotional eating. In addition to the primary care physician/clinician, other team members may include:
- Psychologist
- Psychiatrist
- coach and/or certified wellness coaches
- Obesity specialist
Back to Ms. S
Ms. S is doing well. We started her on a GLP-1 agonist to address her underlying insulin resistance. Together we’ve found creative ways to satisfy her loneliness, such as volunteering and teaching virtual workout classes. Her emotional eating has decreased by over 60%, and we continue to discover new strategies to address her emotional eating triggers.
Conclusion
Despite being common, the impact of emotional eating is often minimized. With no DSM-5 criteria or ICD-11 code, it’s easy to dismiss emotional eating clinically. However, emotional eating is common and associated with weight gain.
In light of the obesity epidemic, this significance can’t be overlooked. Thankfully we have groundbreaking medications to address the homeostatic hunger pathway and physiologic drivers of emotional eating, but they’re not a substitute for addressing the psychosocial components of emotional eating.
As clinicians, we can have a meaningful impact on our patients’ lives beyond writing a prescription.
*Name/initial changed for privacy.
Sylvia Gonsahn-Bollie, MD, DipABOM, is an integrative obesity specialist focused on individualized solutions for emotional and biological overeating.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
“Food gives me ‘hugs,’ ” Ms. S* said as her eyes lit up. Finally, after weeks of working together, she could articulate her complex relationship with food. She had been struggling to explain why she continued to eat when she was full or consumed foods she knew wouldn’t help her health.
Like millions of people struggling with their weight or the disease of obesity, Ms. S had tried multiple diets and programs but continued to return to unhelpful eating patterns. Ms. S was an emotional eater, and the pandemic only worsened her emotional eating. As a single professional forced to work from home during the pandemic, she became lonely. She went from working in a busy downtown office, training for half-marathons, and teaching live workout sessions to being alone daily. Her only “real” human interaction was when she ordered daily delivery meals of her favorite comfort foods. As a person with type 2 diabetes, she knew that her delivery habit was wrecking her health, but willpower wasn’t enough to make her stop.
Her psychologist referred her to our virtual integrative obesity practice to help her lose weight and find long-term solutions. Ms. S admitted that she knew what she was doing as an emotional eater. But like many emotional eaters, she didn’t know why or how to switch from emotional eating to eating based on her biological hunger signals. As a trained obesity expert and recovering emotional eater of 8 years, personally and professionally I can appreciate the challenges of emotional eating and how it can sabotage even the best weight loss plan. In this article, I will share facts and feelings that drive emotional eating. I aim to empower clinicians seeking to help patients with emotional eating.
Fact: Emotional eating isn’t all emotional
It’s important not to dismiss emotional eating as all emotion driven. Recall that hunger is hormonally regulated. There are two main hunger pathways: the homeostatic pathway and the hedonic pathway. The homeostatic pathway is our biological hunger pathway and is driven by the need for energy in calories. Conversely, hedonic eating is pleasure-driven and uses emotional stimuli to “bypass” the physical hunger/satisfaction signals.
Emotional eating falls under the hedonic pathway. As clinicians, the first step in helping a patient struggling with emotional eating is empathetically listening, then assessing for any physiologic causes.
Several factors can disrupt physiologic appetite regulation, such as sleep disturbances; high stress levels; and many medical conditions, including but not limited to obesity, diabetes, and polycystic ovarian syndrome. Such factors as insulin resistance and inflammation are a common link in these conditions. Both contribute to the pathophysiology of the changes in appetite and can influence other hormones that lead to reduced satisfaction after eating. Furthermore, mental health conditions may disrupt levels of neurotransmitters such as serotonin and dopamine, which can also cause appetite changes.
These settings of physiologically disrupted appetite can trigger hedonic eating. But the relationship is complex. For example, one way to research hedonic eating is by using the Power of Food Scale. Functional MRI studies show that people with higher Power of Food Scale readings have more brain activity in the visual cortex when they see highly palatable foods. While more studies are needed to better understand the clinical implications of this finding, it’s yet another indicator that “emotional” eating isn’t all emotional. It’s also physiologic.
Feelings: Patterns, personality, places, psychological factors
Physiology only explains part of emotional eating. Like Ms. S, emotional eaters have strong emotional connections to food and behavior patterns. Often, physiologic cues have been coupled with psychological habits.
For example, menses is a common physiologic trigger for stress-eating for many of my patients. Studies have shown that in addition to iron levels changing during menses, calcium, magnesium, and phosphorous levels also change. Emotionally, the discomfort of “that time of the month” can lead to solace in comfort foods such as chocolate in different forms. But this isn’t surprising, as cacao and its derivative, chocolate, are rich in iron and other minerals. The chocolate is actually addressing a physical and emotional need. It can be helpful to point out this association to your patients. Suggest choosing a lower-sugar form of chocolate, such as dark chocolate, or even trying cacao nibs, while addressing any emotions.
But physiologic conditions and patterns aren’t the only emotional eating triggers. Places and psychological conditions can also trigger emotional eating.
Places and people
Celebrations, vacations, proximity to certain restaurants, exposure to food marketing, and major life shifts can lead to increased hedonic eating. Helping patients recognize this connection opens the door to advance preparation for these situations.
Psychological conditions can be connected to emotional eating. It’s important to screen for mental health conditions and past traumas. For example, emotional eating could be a symptom of binge eating disorder, major depression, or generalized anxiety disorder. Childhood trauma is associated with disordered eating. The adverse childhood events quiz can be used clinically.
Emotional eating can lead to feelings of guilt, shame, and negative self-talk. It’s helpful to offer patients reassurance and encourage self-compassion. After all, it’s natural to eat. The goal isn’t to stop eating but to eat on the basis of physiologic needs.
Putting it together: Addressing the facts and feelings of emotional eating
1. Treat biological causes that impact physiologic hunger and trigger emotional eating.
2. Triggers: Address patterns, places/people, psychological events.
3. Transition to non-food rewards; the key to emotional eating is eating. While healthier substitutes can be a short-term solution for improving eating behaviors, ultimately, helping patients find non-food ways to address emotions is invaluable.
4. Stress management: Offer your patients ways to decrease stress levels through mindfulness and other techniques.
5. Professional support: Creating a multidisciplinary team is helpful, given the complexity of emotional eating. In addition to the primary care physician/clinician, other team members may include:
- Psychologist
- Psychiatrist
- coach and/or certified wellness coaches
- Obesity specialist
Back to Ms. S
Ms. S is doing well. We started her on a GLP-1 agonist to address her underlying insulin resistance. Together we’ve found creative ways to satisfy her loneliness, such as volunteering and teaching virtual workout classes. Her emotional eating has decreased by over 60%, and we continue to discover new strategies to address her emotional eating triggers.
Conclusion
Despite being common, the impact of emotional eating is often minimized. With no DSM-5 criteria or ICD-11 code, it’s easy to dismiss emotional eating clinically. However, emotional eating is common and associated with weight gain.
In light of the obesity epidemic, this significance can’t be overlooked. Thankfully we have groundbreaking medications to address the homeostatic hunger pathway and physiologic drivers of emotional eating, but they’re not a substitute for addressing the psychosocial components of emotional eating.
As clinicians, we can have a meaningful impact on our patients’ lives beyond writing a prescription.
*Name/initial changed for privacy.
Sylvia Gonsahn-Bollie, MD, DipABOM, is an integrative obesity specialist focused on individualized solutions for emotional and biological overeating.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Meat heavy diets may lead to ulcerative colitis flares
CHICAGO –
The data, which was presented on May 7 in Chicago at the annual Digestive Disease Week® meeting, is based on an analysis of data from the PREdiCCt study (Prognostic Effect of Environmental Factors in Crohn’s and Colitis) in which diets of patients with IBD were tracked over 2-3 months with 2-year follow-ups. While the study itself includes nearly 3,000 patients from the United Kingdom who are in clinical remission, this analysis included 497 patients with Crohn’s disease and 520 with ulcerative colitis.
The highest level of patient-reported meat consumption was associated with doubled risk for hard flares – defined as an increase in symptoms plus elevation in c-reactive protein (CRP) and fecal calprotection (FCAL) plus a change in IBD therapy – in patients with ulcerative colitis, said study author Charlie W Lees, PhD, FRCP(Ed), Western General Hospital and University of Edinburgh.
Investigators also evaluated the occurrence of soft flares, which was defined as a negative response to the question, “Do you think your disease has been well controlled in the past month or since you last logged on to the portal?”
After a median follow-up of 1,481.5 days, hard flares occurred at a rate of 5.6% per year, but it did not differ by IBD subtype. However, soft flares accumulated rapidly. Hard flares with baseline FCAL levels in the 50-250 mcg/g range, as well as FCAL levels above 250 mcg, were associated with flares.
The mean baseline total protein intake was 91.9 g per day of which 35.8 g came from animal sources. The hazard ratio for the highest vs. lowest quartile of meat intake in the ulcerative colitis group was 2.08. They found no associations between hard flares with intake of total dietary fiber, N-6 polyunsaturated acids, or ultraprocessed foods, which Dr. Lees found surprising.
“Perhaps most intriguingly, when we look at ultraprocessed food intake, no difference in Crohn’s disease, and no difference in ulcerative colitis,” Dr. Lees said.
The finding is in contradiction to a study reported at the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress this year that found additives in ultraprocessed foods appear to have deleterious effects on intestinal microbiota, while others may exert their influence through mechanisms, such as endoplasmic stress.
However, the new data are consistent with a previously reported association between meat consumption and ulcerative colitis development, and suggests that reducing meat consumption could help to reduce the risk of flare in patients with ulcerative colitis.
PREdiCCt is designed to examine dietary, environmental, genetic, and microbiotic factors that are associated with disease flares in patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Investigators are evaluating potential contributions to disease flares from total animal protein intake, dietary fiber, N-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids, dietary emulsifiers, and ultraprocessed foods, and total bacterial gene count in stool samples. They aim to examine data from 2,500 microbiome samples currently being sequenced at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in Hinxton, England, to determine whether the association between meat and ulcerative colitis flares could be related, as they hypothesize, to diet-induced alterations in the gut microbiome.
The research is preliminary with many unanswered questions, said Russell D. Cohen, MD, director of the inflammatory bowel disease center at the University of Chicago.
“I think he still has to evaluate a lot of the data that he has already collected because, are you talking about meat? Are you talking about poultry? Are you talking about fish? It is interesting, but it still needs to be evaluated further before we make any conclusive decisions,” he said. Dr. Cohen was not involved in the research.
He said the presumed effect of meat consumption on disease exacerbation appeared to take years, “which is a little surprising. If you really thought that IBD was due to something in diet, you would see the response right away, so it doesn’t follow timewise. Why does it takes 5 years? It should be within 5 weeks or 5 days.”
Dr. Lees disclosed relationships with Abbvie, Takeda, Pfizer, Galapagos, and BDD Pharma, among others.
DDW is sponsored by the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
CHICAGO –
The data, which was presented on May 7 in Chicago at the annual Digestive Disease Week® meeting, is based on an analysis of data from the PREdiCCt study (Prognostic Effect of Environmental Factors in Crohn’s and Colitis) in which diets of patients with IBD were tracked over 2-3 months with 2-year follow-ups. While the study itself includes nearly 3,000 patients from the United Kingdom who are in clinical remission, this analysis included 497 patients with Crohn’s disease and 520 with ulcerative colitis.
The highest level of patient-reported meat consumption was associated with doubled risk for hard flares – defined as an increase in symptoms plus elevation in c-reactive protein (CRP) and fecal calprotection (FCAL) plus a change in IBD therapy – in patients with ulcerative colitis, said study author Charlie W Lees, PhD, FRCP(Ed), Western General Hospital and University of Edinburgh.
Investigators also evaluated the occurrence of soft flares, which was defined as a negative response to the question, “Do you think your disease has been well controlled in the past month or since you last logged on to the portal?”
After a median follow-up of 1,481.5 days, hard flares occurred at a rate of 5.6% per year, but it did not differ by IBD subtype. However, soft flares accumulated rapidly. Hard flares with baseline FCAL levels in the 50-250 mcg/g range, as well as FCAL levels above 250 mcg, were associated with flares.
The mean baseline total protein intake was 91.9 g per day of which 35.8 g came from animal sources. The hazard ratio for the highest vs. lowest quartile of meat intake in the ulcerative colitis group was 2.08. They found no associations between hard flares with intake of total dietary fiber, N-6 polyunsaturated acids, or ultraprocessed foods, which Dr. Lees found surprising.
“Perhaps most intriguingly, when we look at ultraprocessed food intake, no difference in Crohn’s disease, and no difference in ulcerative colitis,” Dr. Lees said.
The finding is in contradiction to a study reported at the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress this year that found additives in ultraprocessed foods appear to have deleterious effects on intestinal microbiota, while others may exert their influence through mechanisms, such as endoplasmic stress.
However, the new data are consistent with a previously reported association between meat consumption and ulcerative colitis development, and suggests that reducing meat consumption could help to reduce the risk of flare in patients with ulcerative colitis.
PREdiCCt is designed to examine dietary, environmental, genetic, and microbiotic factors that are associated with disease flares in patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Investigators are evaluating potential contributions to disease flares from total animal protein intake, dietary fiber, N-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids, dietary emulsifiers, and ultraprocessed foods, and total bacterial gene count in stool samples. They aim to examine data from 2,500 microbiome samples currently being sequenced at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in Hinxton, England, to determine whether the association between meat and ulcerative colitis flares could be related, as they hypothesize, to diet-induced alterations in the gut microbiome.
The research is preliminary with many unanswered questions, said Russell D. Cohen, MD, director of the inflammatory bowel disease center at the University of Chicago.
“I think he still has to evaluate a lot of the data that he has already collected because, are you talking about meat? Are you talking about poultry? Are you talking about fish? It is interesting, but it still needs to be evaluated further before we make any conclusive decisions,” he said. Dr. Cohen was not involved in the research.
He said the presumed effect of meat consumption on disease exacerbation appeared to take years, “which is a little surprising. If you really thought that IBD was due to something in diet, you would see the response right away, so it doesn’t follow timewise. Why does it takes 5 years? It should be within 5 weeks or 5 days.”
Dr. Lees disclosed relationships with Abbvie, Takeda, Pfizer, Galapagos, and BDD Pharma, among others.
DDW is sponsored by the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
CHICAGO –
The data, which was presented on May 7 in Chicago at the annual Digestive Disease Week® meeting, is based on an analysis of data from the PREdiCCt study (Prognostic Effect of Environmental Factors in Crohn’s and Colitis) in which diets of patients with IBD were tracked over 2-3 months with 2-year follow-ups. While the study itself includes nearly 3,000 patients from the United Kingdom who are in clinical remission, this analysis included 497 patients with Crohn’s disease and 520 with ulcerative colitis.
The highest level of patient-reported meat consumption was associated with doubled risk for hard flares – defined as an increase in symptoms plus elevation in c-reactive protein (CRP) and fecal calprotection (FCAL) plus a change in IBD therapy – in patients with ulcerative colitis, said study author Charlie W Lees, PhD, FRCP(Ed), Western General Hospital and University of Edinburgh.
Investigators also evaluated the occurrence of soft flares, which was defined as a negative response to the question, “Do you think your disease has been well controlled in the past month or since you last logged on to the portal?”
After a median follow-up of 1,481.5 days, hard flares occurred at a rate of 5.6% per year, but it did not differ by IBD subtype. However, soft flares accumulated rapidly. Hard flares with baseline FCAL levels in the 50-250 mcg/g range, as well as FCAL levels above 250 mcg, were associated with flares.
The mean baseline total protein intake was 91.9 g per day of which 35.8 g came from animal sources. The hazard ratio for the highest vs. lowest quartile of meat intake in the ulcerative colitis group was 2.08. They found no associations between hard flares with intake of total dietary fiber, N-6 polyunsaturated acids, or ultraprocessed foods, which Dr. Lees found surprising.
“Perhaps most intriguingly, when we look at ultraprocessed food intake, no difference in Crohn’s disease, and no difference in ulcerative colitis,” Dr. Lees said.
The finding is in contradiction to a study reported at the Crohn’s & Colitis Congress this year that found additives in ultraprocessed foods appear to have deleterious effects on intestinal microbiota, while others may exert their influence through mechanisms, such as endoplasmic stress.
However, the new data are consistent with a previously reported association between meat consumption and ulcerative colitis development, and suggests that reducing meat consumption could help to reduce the risk of flare in patients with ulcerative colitis.
PREdiCCt is designed to examine dietary, environmental, genetic, and microbiotic factors that are associated with disease flares in patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Investigators are evaluating potential contributions to disease flares from total animal protein intake, dietary fiber, N-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids, dietary emulsifiers, and ultraprocessed foods, and total bacterial gene count in stool samples. They aim to examine data from 2,500 microbiome samples currently being sequenced at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in Hinxton, England, to determine whether the association between meat and ulcerative colitis flares could be related, as they hypothesize, to diet-induced alterations in the gut microbiome.
The research is preliminary with many unanswered questions, said Russell D. Cohen, MD, director of the inflammatory bowel disease center at the University of Chicago.
“I think he still has to evaluate a lot of the data that he has already collected because, are you talking about meat? Are you talking about poultry? Are you talking about fish? It is interesting, but it still needs to be evaluated further before we make any conclusive decisions,” he said. Dr. Cohen was not involved in the research.
He said the presumed effect of meat consumption on disease exacerbation appeared to take years, “which is a little surprising. If you really thought that IBD was due to something in diet, you would see the response right away, so it doesn’t follow timewise. Why does it takes 5 years? It should be within 5 weeks or 5 days.”
Dr. Lees disclosed relationships with Abbvie, Takeda, Pfizer, Galapagos, and BDD Pharma, among others.
DDW is sponsored by the American Gastroenterological Association, the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.
AT DDW 2023
FDA OKs spinal cord stimulation devices for chronic back pain
The Food and Drug Administration has expanded the indication for Abbott Laboratories’ spinal cord stimulation (SCS) devices to include treatment of chronic back pain in patients who have not had, or are not eligible for, back surgery, the company has announced.
The new indication spans all of Abbott’s SCS devices in the United States, which include the recharge-free Proclaim SCS family and the rechargeable Eterna SCS platform.
The devices feature the company’s proprietary, low-energy BurstDR stimulation waveform, a form of stimulation therapy that uses bursts of mild electrical energy without causing an abnormal tingling sensation to help disrupt pain signals before they can reach the brain, the company explained.
The expanded indication was supported by results from the DISTINCT study, which enrolled 270 adults suffering from severe, disabling chronic back pain for an average of more than 12 years and who were not eligible for surgery.
The study showed that significantly more patients who were treated with SCS achieved significant improvements in back pain, function, quality of life, and psychological status than peers treated with conservative medical management.
“To date, we have struggled with how to treat people who weren’t considered a good surgical candidate because we didn’t have clear, data-driven treatment options for non-surgical back pain,” Timothy Deer, MD, president and CEO of the Spine and Nerve Centers of the Virginias in Charleston, W.Va., said in a news release.
“This new indication for Abbott’s SCS devices, together with BurstDR stimulation, allows physicians the ability to identify and treat a new group of people, providing them with relief from chronic back pain,” Dr. Deer said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has expanded the indication for Abbott Laboratories’ spinal cord stimulation (SCS) devices to include treatment of chronic back pain in patients who have not had, or are not eligible for, back surgery, the company has announced.
The new indication spans all of Abbott’s SCS devices in the United States, which include the recharge-free Proclaim SCS family and the rechargeable Eterna SCS platform.
The devices feature the company’s proprietary, low-energy BurstDR stimulation waveform, a form of stimulation therapy that uses bursts of mild electrical energy without causing an abnormal tingling sensation to help disrupt pain signals before they can reach the brain, the company explained.
The expanded indication was supported by results from the DISTINCT study, which enrolled 270 adults suffering from severe, disabling chronic back pain for an average of more than 12 years and who were not eligible for surgery.
The study showed that significantly more patients who were treated with SCS achieved significant improvements in back pain, function, quality of life, and psychological status than peers treated with conservative medical management.
“To date, we have struggled with how to treat people who weren’t considered a good surgical candidate because we didn’t have clear, data-driven treatment options for non-surgical back pain,” Timothy Deer, MD, president and CEO of the Spine and Nerve Centers of the Virginias in Charleston, W.Va., said in a news release.
“This new indication for Abbott’s SCS devices, together with BurstDR stimulation, allows physicians the ability to identify and treat a new group of people, providing them with relief from chronic back pain,” Dr. Deer said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Food and Drug Administration has expanded the indication for Abbott Laboratories’ spinal cord stimulation (SCS) devices to include treatment of chronic back pain in patients who have not had, or are not eligible for, back surgery, the company has announced.
The new indication spans all of Abbott’s SCS devices in the United States, which include the recharge-free Proclaim SCS family and the rechargeable Eterna SCS platform.
The devices feature the company’s proprietary, low-energy BurstDR stimulation waveform, a form of stimulation therapy that uses bursts of mild electrical energy without causing an abnormal tingling sensation to help disrupt pain signals before they can reach the brain, the company explained.
The expanded indication was supported by results from the DISTINCT study, which enrolled 270 adults suffering from severe, disabling chronic back pain for an average of more than 12 years and who were not eligible for surgery.
The study showed that significantly more patients who were treated with SCS achieved significant improvements in back pain, function, quality of life, and psychological status than peers treated with conservative medical management.
“To date, we have struggled with how to treat people who weren’t considered a good surgical candidate because we didn’t have clear, data-driven treatment options for non-surgical back pain,” Timothy Deer, MD, president and CEO of the Spine and Nerve Centers of the Virginias in Charleston, W.Va., said in a news release.
“This new indication for Abbott’s SCS devices, together with BurstDR stimulation, allows physicians the ability to identify and treat a new group of people, providing them with relief from chronic back pain,” Dr. Deer said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TransCon PTH nears U.S. approval for hypoparathyroidism?
SEATTLE –
Findings from 110-week phase 2 data for the once-daily investigational parathyroid hormone (PTH) replacement drug were recently presented at the annual scientific & clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology.
Overall, the drug was associated with independence from conventional calcium and active vitamin D therapy in most patients at 110 weeks, with no discontinuations due to adverse effects.
“Patients with hypoparathyroidism have low serum calcium levels and struggle with quality of life and biochemical abnormalities. The data from the TransCon PTH studies seem to show that a lot of these abnormalities can be reversed,” presenter Mishaela R. Rubin, MD, said in an interview.
Other PTH replacement therapies such as Nupara (now discontinued) and teriparatide (off-label) have been used in some patients with hypoparathyroidism.
However, “[TransCon PTH] is delivered in such a way as to have a prolonged half-life, so that’s kind of a special benefit that it has,” added Dr. Rubin of the division of endocrinology and metabolic bone disease, department of medicine, Columbia University, New York.
Asked to comment, session moderator Thanh Hoang, DO, of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Silver Spring, Md., said: “I think it’s a very promising medication because right now we don’t have a lot of options ... I think it would help a lot of patients.”
Approval denied, company addressing concerns
On May 1, the Food and Drug Administration issued a complete response letter, signaling denial of approval for the TransCon PTH, citing concerns related to manufacturing control of the product’s drug/device combination product, but not about the product’s safety and efficacy, according to an Ascendis statement.
The company is now working with the FDA to address these issues and is awaiting a European Union decision later this year.
The FDA did not request that the company conduct further clinical trials of TransCon PTH, which now include published 26-week phase 2 and phase 3 data along with the current longer-term phase 2 data presented at AACE.
“The company has said that they’re hopeful the issues will be addressable and that the FDA did not have any concerns about safety,” Dr. Rubin said in an interview.
Calcium normalized, bone turnover improved
Dr. Rubin presented long-term efficacy and safety data from the Phase 2 PaTH Forward trial, which involved 57 of the initial 59 participants who completed week 110 of an open-label extension of the trial.
During the first 4 weeks, patients had been randomized to TransCon PTH at fixed doses of 15 µg/day, 18 µg/day, 21 µg/day, or placebo. After week 4, all patients switched to TransCon PTH titrated to doses of 6-60 µg/day along with conventional therapy, with the goal of maintaining normocalcemia.
Participants were a mean age of 50 years, 81% were women, and 92% were White. Causes of hypoparathyroidism were neck surgery in 80%, autoimmune disease in 2%, and idiopathic disease in 19%. Disease duration was 12 years (range 1-39), and all were taking conventional therapy including calcium and active vitamin D (calcitriol or alfacaldiol).
At 110 weeks, all 57 patients were able to stop taking active vitamin D, and 53 of the 57 (93%) patients achieved independence from conventional therapy, defined as taking 0 µg/day of active vitamin D and no more than 600 mg/day of calcium (the dietary supplement dose). A total of 44 (77%) patients were not taking any calcium or active vitamin D.
“This really establishes the durability up to 2 years of keeping people off conventional therapy,” Dr. Rubin said during her presentation.
There was an initial uptick to 9.4 mg/dL in mean serum calcium, as some participants were still taking active vitamin D, but that dropped to 8.9 mg/dL by week 26. Mean 24-hour urine calcium dropped from 428 mg/day at baseline to 173 mg/day by week 26. Both serum calcium and urine calcium remained in the normal range through week 110 in all patients, at 8.6 mg/dL and 167 mg/day, respectively.
“This is a really important outcome because we know that high urine calcium in these patients sets them at risk for going on to develop nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and ultimately, chronic kidney disease,” Dr. Rubin said.
Serum levels of two bone formation markers peaked at 12 weeks after initiation of TransCon PTH. Both trended downward thereafter through week 110 to levels approximating those of age- and sex-matched controls.
“Both markers started off low, consistent with hypoparathyroidism, but with initiation of TransCon PTH we see a robust increase in bone turnover markers, almost as if the bone is ‘waking up,’ if you will. And this is consistent with calcium being mobilized from the skeleton and going into the circulation,” Dr. Rubin explained.
Bone mineral density assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry normalized, primarily in the first 26 weeks. For lumbar spine L1-L4, mean Z-scores dropped from 1.6 to 1.0 at 26 weeks and down to 0.7 by week 100. For total hip, those values were 1.0, 0.6, and 0.4, respectively. The values approached age- and sex-matched norms, Dr. Rubin noted, to “perhaps where their skeleton would be if they hadn’t had hypoparathyroidism.”
Overall 56 of the 57 (94.9%) patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events, of which 25 (42.4%) were treatment related and none were deemed serious. There were no treatment-emergent adverse events related to hypercalcemia or hypocalcemia leading to health care visits or hospitalization, none leading to discontinuation of study drug, and none to death.
“So overall, a reassuring safety profile,” Dr. Rubin said. “We look forward to presenting the next 2 years’ worth of data to the end of the open-label extension study.”
Dr. Rubin is a paid researcher for Ascendis, which funded the study. Dr. Hoang has reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
SEATTLE –
Findings from 110-week phase 2 data for the once-daily investigational parathyroid hormone (PTH) replacement drug were recently presented at the annual scientific & clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology.
Overall, the drug was associated with independence from conventional calcium and active vitamin D therapy in most patients at 110 weeks, with no discontinuations due to adverse effects.
“Patients with hypoparathyroidism have low serum calcium levels and struggle with quality of life and biochemical abnormalities. The data from the TransCon PTH studies seem to show that a lot of these abnormalities can be reversed,” presenter Mishaela R. Rubin, MD, said in an interview.
Other PTH replacement therapies such as Nupara (now discontinued) and teriparatide (off-label) have been used in some patients with hypoparathyroidism.
However, “[TransCon PTH] is delivered in such a way as to have a prolonged half-life, so that’s kind of a special benefit that it has,” added Dr. Rubin of the division of endocrinology and metabolic bone disease, department of medicine, Columbia University, New York.
Asked to comment, session moderator Thanh Hoang, DO, of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Silver Spring, Md., said: “I think it’s a very promising medication because right now we don’t have a lot of options ... I think it would help a lot of patients.”
Approval denied, company addressing concerns
On May 1, the Food and Drug Administration issued a complete response letter, signaling denial of approval for the TransCon PTH, citing concerns related to manufacturing control of the product’s drug/device combination product, but not about the product’s safety and efficacy, according to an Ascendis statement.
The company is now working with the FDA to address these issues and is awaiting a European Union decision later this year.
The FDA did not request that the company conduct further clinical trials of TransCon PTH, which now include published 26-week phase 2 and phase 3 data along with the current longer-term phase 2 data presented at AACE.
“The company has said that they’re hopeful the issues will be addressable and that the FDA did not have any concerns about safety,” Dr. Rubin said in an interview.
Calcium normalized, bone turnover improved
Dr. Rubin presented long-term efficacy and safety data from the Phase 2 PaTH Forward trial, which involved 57 of the initial 59 participants who completed week 110 of an open-label extension of the trial.
During the first 4 weeks, patients had been randomized to TransCon PTH at fixed doses of 15 µg/day, 18 µg/day, 21 µg/day, or placebo. After week 4, all patients switched to TransCon PTH titrated to doses of 6-60 µg/day along with conventional therapy, with the goal of maintaining normocalcemia.
Participants were a mean age of 50 years, 81% were women, and 92% were White. Causes of hypoparathyroidism were neck surgery in 80%, autoimmune disease in 2%, and idiopathic disease in 19%. Disease duration was 12 years (range 1-39), and all were taking conventional therapy including calcium and active vitamin D (calcitriol or alfacaldiol).
At 110 weeks, all 57 patients were able to stop taking active vitamin D, and 53 of the 57 (93%) patients achieved independence from conventional therapy, defined as taking 0 µg/day of active vitamin D and no more than 600 mg/day of calcium (the dietary supplement dose). A total of 44 (77%) patients were not taking any calcium or active vitamin D.
“This really establishes the durability up to 2 years of keeping people off conventional therapy,” Dr. Rubin said during her presentation.
There was an initial uptick to 9.4 mg/dL in mean serum calcium, as some participants were still taking active vitamin D, but that dropped to 8.9 mg/dL by week 26. Mean 24-hour urine calcium dropped from 428 mg/day at baseline to 173 mg/day by week 26. Both serum calcium and urine calcium remained in the normal range through week 110 in all patients, at 8.6 mg/dL and 167 mg/day, respectively.
“This is a really important outcome because we know that high urine calcium in these patients sets them at risk for going on to develop nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and ultimately, chronic kidney disease,” Dr. Rubin said.
Serum levels of two bone formation markers peaked at 12 weeks after initiation of TransCon PTH. Both trended downward thereafter through week 110 to levels approximating those of age- and sex-matched controls.
“Both markers started off low, consistent with hypoparathyroidism, but with initiation of TransCon PTH we see a robust increase in bone turnover markers, almost as if the bone is ‘waking up,’ if you will. And this is consistent with calcium being mobilized from the skeleton and going into the circulation,” Dr. Rubin explained.
Bone mineral density assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry normalized, primarily in the first 26 weeks. For lumbar spine L1-L4, mean Z-scores dropped from 1.6 to 1.0 at 26 weeks and down to 0.7 by week 100. For total hip, those values were 1.0, 0.6, and 0.4, respectively. The values approached age- and sex-matched norms, Dr. Rubin noted, to “perhaps where their skeleton would be if they hadn’t had hypoparathyroidism.”
Overall 56 of the 57 (94.9%) patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events, of which 25 (42.4%) were treatment related and none were deemed serious. There were no treatment-emergent adverse events related to hypercalcemia or hypocalcemia leading to health care visits or hospitalization, none leading to discontinuation of study drug, and none to death.
“So overall, a reassuring safety profile,” Dr. Rubin said. “We look forward to presenting the next 2 years’ worth of data to the end of the open-label extension study.”
Dr. Rubin is a paid researcher for Ascendis, which funded the study. Dr. Hoang has reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
SEATTLE –
Findings from 110-week phase 2 data for the once-daily investigational parathyroid hormone (PTH) replacement drug were recently presented at the annual scientific & clinical congress of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology.
Overall, the drug was associated with independence from conventional calcium and active vitamin D therapy in most patients at 110 weeks, with no discontinuations due to adverse effects.
“Patients with hypoparathyroidism have low serum calcium levels and struggle with quality of life and biochemical abnormalities. The data from the TransCon PTH studies seem to show that a lot of these abnormalities can be reversed,” presenter Mishaela R. Rubin, MD, said in an interview.
Other PTH replacement therapies such as Nupara (now discontinued) and teriparatide (off-label) have been used in some patients with hypoparathyroidism.
However, “[TransCon PTH] is delivered in such a way as to have a prolonged half-life, so that’s kind of a special benefit that it has,” added Dr. Rubin of the division of endocrinology and metabolic bone disease, department of medicine, Columbia University, New York.
Asked to comment, session moderator Thanh Hoang, DO, of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Silver Spring, Md., said: “I think it’s a very promising medication because right now we don’t have a lot of options ... I think it would help a lot of patients.”
Approval denied, company addressing concerns
On May 1, the Food and Drug Administration issued a complete response letter, signaling denial of approval for the TransCon PTH, citing concerns related to manufacturing control of the product’s drug/device combination product, but not about the product’s safety and efficacy, according to an Ascendis statement.
The company is now working with the FDA to address these issues and is awaiting a European Union decision later this year.
The FDA did not request that the company conduct further clinical trials of TransCon PTH, which now include published 26-week phase 2 and phase 3 data along with the current longer-term phase 2 data presented at AACE.
“The company has said that they’re hopeful the issues will be addressable and that the FDA did not have any concerns about safety,” Dr. Rubin said in an interview.
Calcium normalized, bone turnover improved
Dr. Rubin presented long-term efficacy and safety data from the Phase 2 PaTH Forward trial, which involved 57 of the initial 59 participants who completed week 110 of an open-label extension of the trial.
During the first 4 weeks, patients had been randomized to TransCon PTH at fixed doses of 15 µg/day, 18 µg/day, 21 µg/day, or placebo. After week 4, all patients switched to TransCon PTH titrated to doses of 6-60 µg/day along with conventional therapy, with the goal of maintaining normocalcemia.
Participants were a mean age of 50 years, 81% were women, and 92% were White. Causes of hypoparathyroidism were neck surgery in 80%, autoimmune disease in 2%, and idiopathic disease in 19%. Disease duration was 12 years (range 1-39), and all were taking conventional therapy including calcium and active vitamin D (calcitriol or alfacaldiol).
At 110 weeks, all 57 patients were able to stop taking active vitamin D, and 53 of the 57 (93%) patients achieved independence from conventional therapy, defined as taking 0 µg/day of active vitamin D and no more than 600 mg/day of calcium (the dietary supplement dose). A total of 44 (77%) patients were not taking any calcium or active vitamin D.
“This really establishes the durability up to 2 years of keeping people off conventional therapy,” Dr. Rubin said during her presentation.
There was an initial uptick to 9.4 mg/dL in mean serum calcium, as some participants were still taking active vitamin D, but that dropped to 8.9 mg/dL by week 26. Mean 24-hour urine calcium dropped from 428 mg/day at baseline to 173 mg/day by week 26. Both serum calcium and urine calcium remained in the normal range through week 110 in all patients, at 8.6 mg/dL and 167 mg/day, respectively.
“This is a really important outcome because we know that high urine calcium in these patients sets them at risk for going on to develop nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and ultimately, chronic kidney disease,” Dr. Rubin said.
Serum levels of two bone formation markers peaked at 12 weeks after initiation of TransCon PTH. Both trended downward thereafter through week 110 to levels approximating those of age- and sex-matched controls.
“Both markers started off low, consistent with hypoparathyroidism, but with initiation of TransCon PTH we see a robust increase in bone turnover markers, almost as if the bone is ‘waking up,’ if you will. And this is consistent with calcium being mobilized from the skeleton and going into the circulation,” Dr. Rubin explained.
Bone mineral density assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry normalized, primarily in the first 26 weeks. For lumbar spine L1-L4, mean Z-scores dropped from 1.6 to 1.0 at 26 weeks and down to 0.7 by week 100. For total hip, those values were 1.0, 0.6, and 0.4, respectively. The values approached age- and sex-matched norms, Dr. Rubin noted, to “perhaps where their skeleton would be if they hadn’t had hypoparathyroidism.”
Overall 56 of the 57 (94.9%) patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events, of which 25 (42.4%) were treatment related and none were deemed serious. There were no treatment-emergent adverse events related to hypercalcemia or hypocalcemia leading to health care visits or hospitalization, none leading to discontinuation of study drug, and none to death.
“So overall, a reassuring safety profile,” Dr. Rubin said. “We look forward to presenting the next 2 years’ worth of data to the end of the open-label extension study.”
Dr. Rubin is a paid researcher for Ascendis, which funded the study. Dr. Hoang has reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
AT AACE 2023
Redo-TAVR in U.S. database yields good news: Outcomes rival first intervention
Data support redo if needed.
Even after 3 years of follow-up, redo transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) performs about as well as the first procedure, whether compared for hard endpoints, such as death and stroke, or for softer endpoints, such as function and quality of life, new registry data suggest.
The results were presented at the annual meeting of the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions.
Data for this analysis were drawn from 348,338 TAVR procedures with the Edwards balloon-expandable valves in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons/American College of Cardiology Transcatheter Valve Replacement Registry.
Of these, 1,216 were redo procedures. In 475 of the cases, the redo was performed in a patient whose first procedure was with an Edwards device. In the remaining 741 cases, the Edwards device replaced a different prosthetic heart valve. The median time to the redo from the first procedure was 26 months.
For the analysis, the redo-TAVRs were compared with native TAVR patients through 1:1 propensity matching employing 35 covariates, such as age, body mass index (BMI), baseline comorbidities, prior cardiovascular procedures, valve size, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons risk score.
Low death and stroke rates following TAVR redos
The rates of all-cause death or stroke within hospital (4.7% vs. 3.9%; P = .32) and at 30 days (6.1% vs. 5.9%; P = .77) were numerically but not statistically higher in the redo group.
At 1 year, the rates of death (17.3% vs. 17.7%; P = .961) and stroke (3.3% vs. 3.5%; P = .982) were numerically but not significantly lower among those who underwent a redo procedure.
The secondary endpoints told the same story. The one exception was the higher aortic valve reintervention rate (0.61% vs. 0.09%; P = .03) at 30 days in the redo group. This did reach statistical significance, but Dr. Makkar pointed out rates were very low regardless. The rates climbed in both groups by 1 year (1.09% vs. 0.21%; P = .01).
No other secondary endpoints differed significantly at 30 days or at 1 year. Even though some were numerically higher after redo at 1 year, such as major vascular complications (1.25 vs. 1.60; P = .51), others were lower, such as new-start dialysis (1.62 vs. 0.98; P = .26). All-cause readmission rates at 1 year were nearly identical (32.56% vs. 32.23%; P = .82).
Consistent with the comparable outcomes on the hard endpoints, major and similar improvements were seen in both the redo and the propensity-matched native TAVR patients on the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire Overall Summary. The slight advantage for the redo group was not significant at 30 days, but the degree of improvement was greater after the redo than after native TAVR at 1 year (15% vs. 10%; P = .03).
“You bring good news,” said Alain G. Cribier, MD, director of cardiology, Charles Nicolle Hospital, University of Rouen, France. Widely regarded as the father of TAVR for his first-in-human series in 2002, Dr. Cribier said that there are several reassuring take-home messages from this study.
“First, these data tell us that the redo rate is extremely low,” he said, noting that the registry data suggests a risk well below 1%. “Second, we are seeing from this data that there are no more complications [than TAVR in a native valve] if you need to do this.”
Redo patients are generally sicker
The propensity matching was designed to eliminate baseline differences for the outcome comparisons, but Dr. Makkar did point out that redo-TAVR patients were sicker than the native TAVR patients. For example, when compared prior to propensity matching, the STS score was higher (8.3 vs. 5.2; P < .01), more patients had atrial fibrillation (47.9% vs. 36.2%; P < .01), and more patients had a prior stroke (15.0% vs. 10.7%; P < .01).
The registry only has follow-up out to 1 year, but participating patients were matched to a claims database to capture outcomes out to 3 years. Mortality rates at long-term follow-up were not significantly different for redo vs. native TAVR (42.2% vs. 40.3% respectively; P = .98); for the entire dataset or when compared in subgroups defined by Edwards valve redo of an Edwards valve (P = .909) or an Edwards valve redo of a non-Edwards device (P = .871).
Whether an early redo, defined as 12 months after the index TAVR procedure, or a late redo, the rate of mortality ranged from approximately 16% to 18% with no significant difference between redo and native TAVR.
A moderator for the late-breaking trials session where these data were presented, Darren Mylotte, MD, a consultant in cardiology for the Galway University Hospitals, Ireland, challenged Dr. Makkar about the potential for selection bias. He said redo patients might be the ones that interventionalists feel confident about helping, making this comparison unrepresentative.
“I think that the selection bias is likely to cut both ways,” Dr. Makkar replied. For many patients with a failed TAVR, he explained that clinicians might think, “There is nothing to be done for this patient except to try a redo.”
Dr. Makkar reports financial relationships with Abbott, Cordis, Edwards Lifesciences, and Medtronic. Dr. Cribier reports a financial relationship with Edwards Lifesciences. Dr. Mylotte reports no potential conflicts of interest.
Data support redo if needed.
Data support redo if needed.
Even after 3 years of follow-up, redo transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) performs about as well as the first procedure, whether compared for hard endpoints, such as death and stroke, or for softer endpoints, such as function and quality of life, new registry data suggest.
The results were presented at the annual meeting of the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions.
Data for this analysis were drawn from 348,338 TAVR procedures with the Edwards balloon-expandable valves in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons/American College of Cardiology Transcatheter Valve Replacement Registry.
Of these, 1,216 were redo procedures. In 475 of the cases, the redo was performed in a patient whose first procedure was with an Edwards device. In the remaining 741 cases, the Edwards device replaced a different prosthetic heart valve. The median time to the redo from the first procedure was 26 months.
For the analysis, the redo-TAVRs were compared with native TAVR patients through 1:1 propensity matching employing 35 covariates, such as age, body mass index (BMI), baseline comorbidities, prior cardiovascular procedures, valve size, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons risk score.
Low death and stroke rates following TAVR redos
The rates of all-cause death or stroke within hospital (4.7% vs. 3.9%; P = .32) and at 30 days (6.1% vs. 5.9%; P = .77) were numerically but not statistically higher in the redo group.
At 1 year, the rates of death (17.3% vs. 17.7%; P = .961) and stroke (3.3% vs. 3.5%; P = .982) were numerically but not significantly lower among those who underwent a redo procedure.
The secondary endpoints told the same story. The one exception was the higher aortic valve reintervention rate (0.61% vs. 0.09%; P = .03) at 30 days in the redo group. This did reach statistical significance, but Dr. Makkar pointed out rates were very low regardless. The rates climbed in both groups by 1 year (1.09% vs. 0.21%; P = .01).
No other secondary endpoints differed significantly at 30 days or at 1 year. Even though some were numerically higher after redo at 1 year, such as major vascular complications (1.25 vs. 1.60; P = .51), others were lower, such as new-start dialysis (1.62 vs. 0.98; P = .26). All-cause readmission rates at 1 year were nearly identical (32.56% vs. 32.23%; P = .82).
Consistent with the comparable outcomes on the hard endpoints, major and similar improvements were seen in both the redo and the propensity-matched native TAVR patients on the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire Overall Summary. The slight advantage for the redo group was not significant at 30 days, but the degree of improvement was greater after the redo than after native TAVR at 1 year (15% vs. 10%; P = .03).
“You bring good news,” said Alain G. Cribier, MD, director of cardiology, Charles Nicolle Hospital, University of Rouen, France. Widely regarded as the father of TAVR for his first-in-human series in 2002, Dr. Cribier said that there are several reassuring take-home messages from this study.
“First, these data tell us that the redo rate is extremely low,” he said, noting that the registry data suggests a risk well below 1%. “Second, we are seeing from this data that there are no more complications [than TAVR in a native valve] if you need to do this.”
Redo patients are generally sicker
The propensity matching was designed to eliminate baseline differences for the outcome comparisons, but Dr. Makkar did point out that redo-TAVR patients were sicker than the native TAVR patients. For example, when compared prior to propensity matching, the STS score was higher (8.3 vs. 5.2; P < .01), more patients had atrial fibrillation (47.9% vs. 36.2%; P < .01), and more patients had a prior stroke (15.0% vs. 10.7%; P < .01).
The registry only has follow-up out to 1 year, but participating patients were matched to a claims database to capture outcomes out to 3 years. Mortality rates at long-term follow-up were not significantly different for redo vs. native TAVR (42.2% vs. 40.3% respectively; P = .98); for the entire dataset or when compared in subgroups defined by Edwards valve redo of an Edwards valve (P = .909) or an Edwards valve redo of a non-Edwards device (P = .871).
Whether an early redo, defined as 12 months after the index TAVR procedure, or a late redo, the rate of mortality ranged from approximately 16% to 18% with no significant difference between redo and native TAVR.
A moderator for the late-breaking trials session where these data were presented, Darren Mylotte, MD, a consultant in cardiology for the Galway University Hospitals, Ireland, challenged Dr. Makkar about the potential for selection bias. He said redo patients might be the ones that interventionalists feel confident about helping, making this comparison unrepresentative.
“I think that the selection bias is likely to cut both ways,” Dr. Makkar replied. For many patients with a failed TAVR, he explained that clinicians might think, “There is nothing to be done for this patient except to try a redo.”
Dr. Makkar reports financial relationships with Abbott, Cordis, Edwards Lifesciences, and Medtronic. Dr. Cribier reports a financial relationship with Edwards Lifesciences. Dr. Mylotte reports no potential conflicts of interest.
Even after 3 years of follow-up, redo transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) performs about as well as the first procedure, whether compared for hard endpoints, such as death and stroke, or for softer endpoints, such as function and quality of life, new registry data suggest.
The results were presented at the annual meeting of the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions.
Data for this analysis were drawn from 348,338 TAVR procedures with the Edwards balloon-expandable valves in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons/American College of Cardiology Transcatheter Valve Replacement Registry.
Of these, 1,216 were redo procedures. In 475 of the cases, the redo was performed in a patient whose first procedure was with an Edwards device. In the remaining 741 cases, the Edwards device replaced a different prosthetic heart valve. The median time to the redo from the first procedure was 26 months.
For the analysis, the redo-TAVRs were compared with native TAVR patients through 1:1 propensity matching employing 35 covariates, such as age, body mass index (BMI), baseline comorbidities, prior cardiovascular procedures, valve size, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons risk score.
Low death and stroke rates following TAVR redos
The rates of all-cause death or stroke within hospital (4.7% vs. 3.9%; P = .32) and at 30 days (6.1% vs. 5.9%; P = .77) were numerically but not statistically higher in the redo group.
At 1 year, the rates of death (17.3% vs. 17.7%; P = .961) and stroke (3.3% vs. 3.5%; P = .982) were numerically but not significantly lower among those who underwent a redo procedure.
The secondary endpoints told the same story. The one exception was the higher aortic valve reintervention rate (0.61% vs. 0.09%; P = .03) at 30 days in the redo group. This did reach statistical significance, but Dr. Makkar pointed out rates were very low regardless. The rates climbed in both groups by 1 year (1.09% vs. 0.21%; P = .01).
No other secondary endpoints differed significantly at 30 days or at 1 year. Even though some were numerically higher after redo at 1 year, such as major vascular complications (1.25 vs. 1.60; P = .51), others were lower, such as new-start dialysis (1.62 vs. 0.98; P = .26). All-cause readmission rates at 1 year were nearly identical (32.56% vs. 32.23%; P = .82).
Consistent with the comparable outcomes on the hard endpoints, major and similar improvements were seen in both the redo and the propensity-matched native TAVR patients on the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire Overall Summary. The slight advantage for the redo group was not significant at 30 days, but the degree of improvement was greater after the redo than after native TAVR at 1 year (15% vs. 10%; P = .03).
“You bring good news,” said Alain G. Cribier, MD, director of cardiology, Charles Nicolle Hospital, University of Rouen, France. Widely regarded as the father of TAVR for his first-in-human series in 2002, Dr. Cribier said that there are several reassuring take-home messages from this study.
“First, these data tell us that the redo rate is extremely low,” he said, noting that the registry data suggests a risk well below 1%. “Second, we are seeing from this data that there are no more complications [than TAVR in a native valve] if you need to do this.”
Redo patients are generally sicker
The propensity matching was designed to eliminate baseline differences for the outcome comparisons, but Dr. Makkar did point out that redo-TAVR patients were sicker than the native TAVR patients. For example, when compared prior to propensity matching, the STS score was higher (8.3 vs. 5.2; P < .01), more patients had atrial fibrillation (47.9% vs. 36.2%; P < .01), and more patients had a prior stroke (15.0% vs. 10.7%; P < .01).
The registry only has follow-up out to 1 year, but participating patients were matched to a claims database to capture outcomes out to 3 years. Mortality rates at long-term follow-up were not significantly different for redo vs. native TAVR (42.2% vs. 40.3% respectively; P = .98); for the entire dataset or when compared in subgroups defined by Edwards valve redo of an Edwards valve (P = .909) or an Edwards valve redo of a non-Edwards device (P = .871).
Whether an early redo, defined as 12 months after the index TAVR procedure, or a late redo, the rate of mortality ranged from approximately 16% to 18% with no significant difference between redo and native TAVR.
A moderator for the late-breaking trials session where these data were presented, Darren Mylotte, MD, a consultant in cardiology for the Galway University Hospitals, Ireland, challenged Dr. Makkar about the potential for selection bias. He said redo patients might be the ones that interventionalists feel confident about helping, making this comparison unrepresentative.
“I think that the selection bias is likely to cut both ways,” Dr. Makkar replied. For many patients with a failed TAVR, he explained that clinicians might think, “There is nothing to be done for this patient except to try a redo.”
Dr. Makkar reports financial relationships with Abbott, Cordis, Edwards Lifesciences, and Medtronic. Dr. Cribier reports a financial relationship with Edwards Lifesciences. Dr. Mylotte reports no potential conflicts of interest.
FROM EUROPCR 2023
Docs fervently hope federal ban on noncompete clauses goes through
The Federal Trade Commission’s proposed regulation that would ban noncompete agreements across the country seems like potential good news for doctors. Of course, many hospitals and employers are against it. As a result, the FTC’s sweeping proposal has tongues wagging on both sides of the issue.
Many physicians are thrilled that they may soon have more control over their career and not be stuck in jobs where they feel frustrated, underpaid, or blocked in their progress.
As of 2018, as many as 45% of primary care physicians had inked such agreements with their employers.
Typically, the agreements prevent physicians from practicing medicine with a new employer for a defined period within a specific geographic area. No matter how attractive an alternate offer of employment might be, doctors are bound by the agreements to say no if the offer exists in that defined area and time period.
The period for public comment on the proposed regulation ended on April 19, and there is currently no set date for a decision.
In a Medscape poll of 558 physicians, more than 9 out of 10 respondents said that they were either currently bound by a noncompete clause or that they had been bound by one in the past that had forced them to temporarily stop working, commute long distances, move to a different area, or switch fields.
The new proposal would make it illegal for an employer, such as a hospital or large group, to enter a noncompete with a worker; maintain a noncompete with a worker; or represent to a worker, under certain circumstances, that the worker is subject to a noncompete.
It also would not only ban future noncompete agreements but also retroactively invalidate existing ones. The FTC reasons that noncompete clauses could potentially increase worker earnings as well as lower health care costs by billions of dollars. If the ruling were to move forward, it would represent part of President Biden’s “worker-forward” priorities, focusing on how competition can be a good thing for employees. The President billed the FTC’s announcement as a “huge win for workers.”
In its statements on the proposed ban, the FTC claimed that it could lower consumer prices across the board by as much as $150 billion per year and return nearly $300 million to workers each year.
However, even if passed, the draft rule would keep in place nonsolicitation rules that many health care organizations have put into place. That means that, if a physician leaves an employer, he or she cannot reach out to former patients and colleagues to bring them along or invite them to switch to him or her in the new job.
Within that clause, however, the FTC has specified that if such nonsolicitation agreement has the “equivalent effect” of a noncompete, the agency would deem it such. That means, even if that rule stays, it could be contested and may be interpreted as violating the noncompete law. So there’s value in reading all the fine print should the ban move forward.
Could the ban bring potential downsides?
Most physicians view the potential to break free of a noncompete agreement as a victory. Peter Glennon, an employment litigation attorney with The Glennon Law Firm in Rochester, N.Y., says not so fast. “If you ask anyone if they’d prefer a noncompete agreement, of course they’re going to say no,” he said in an interview. “It sounds like a restriction, one that can hold you back.”
Mr. Glennon believes that there are actually upsides to physician noncompetes. For instance, many noncompetes come with sign-on bonuses that could potentially disappear without the agreements. There’s also the fact that when some physicians sign a noncompete agreement, they then receive pro bono training and continuing education along with marketing and promotion of their skills. Without signing a noncompete, employers may be less incentivized to provide all those benefits to their physician employers.
Those benefits – and the noncompetes – also vary by specialty, Mr. Glennon said. “In 2021, Washington, DC, banned noncompetes for doctors making less than $250,000. So, most generalists there can walk across the street and get a new job. For specialists like cardiologists or neurosurgeons, however, advanced training and marketing benefits matter, so many of them don’t want to lose noncompetes.”
Still, most physicians hope that the FTC’s ban takes hold. Manan Shah, MD, founder, and chief medical officer at Wyndly, an allergy relief startup practice, is one of them.
“Initially, it might disincentivize hospital systems from helping new physicians build up their name and practice because they might be concerned about a physician leaving and starting anew,” he said. “But in the long term, hospitals require physicians to bring their patients to them for care, so the best hospitals will always compete for the best physicians and support them as they build up their practice.”
Dr. Shah views noncompetes as overly prohibitive to physicians. “Right now, if a physician starts a job at a large hospital system and realizes they want to switch jobs, the noncompete distances are so wide they often have to move cities to continue practicing,” he said. “Picking up and starting over in a new city isn’t an option for everyone and can be especially difficult for someone with a family.”
Where Mr. Glennon argued that a physician leaving a team-based practice might harm patients, Shah takes a different perspective. “Imagine you have a doctor whom you trust and have been working with,” he said. “If something changes at their hospital and they decide to move, you literally have to find a new doctor instead of just being able to see them at another location down the street.”
Another potential burden of the noncompete agreements is that they could possibly squelch doctor’s desires to hang up their own shingle. According to Dr. Shah, the agreements make it so that if a physician wants to work independently, it’s nearly impossible to fly solo. “This is frustrating because independent practices have been shown to be more cost effective and allow patients to build better relationships with their doctors,” he claimed.
A 2016 study from Annals of Family Medicine supports that claim, at least for small general practices. Another study appearing in JAMA concurred. It does point out, however, that the cost equation is nuanced and that benefits of larger systems include more resilience to economic downturns and can provide more specialized care.
Will nonprofit hospitals be subject to this noncompete ban?
Further complicating the noncompete ban issue is how it might impact nonprofit institutions versus their for-profit peers. Most hospitals structured as nonprofits would be exempt from the rule because the FTC Act provides that it can enforce against “persons, partnerships, or corporations,” which are further defined as entities “organized to carry on business for their own profit or that of their members.”
The fallout from this, said Dr. Shah, is that it “would disproportionately affect health care providers, since many hospital systems are nonprofits. This is disconcerting because we know that many nonprofit systems make large profits anyway and can offer executive teams’ lucrative packages, while the nurses, assistants, and physicians providing the care are generally not well compensated.”
So far, about nine states plus Washington, D.C., have already put noncompete bans in place, and they may serve as a harbinger of things to come should the federal ban go into effect. Each varies in its specifics. Some, like Indiana, outright ban them, whereas others limit them based on variables like income and industry. “We’re seeing these states responding to local market conditions,” said Darryl Drevna, senior director of regulatory affairs at the American Medical Group Association. “Health care is a hyperlocal market. Depending on the situation, the bans adapt and respond specific to those states.”
Should the federal ban take hold, however, it will supersede whatever rules the individual states have in place.
Some opponents of the federal ban proposal question its authority to begin with, however, Mr. Glennon included. “Many people believe the FTC is overstepping,” he said. “Some people believe that Section 5 of the FTC Act does not give it the authority to police labor markets.”
Mr. Drevna noted that the FTC has taken an aggressive stance, one that will ultimately wind up in the courts. “How it works out is anyone’s guess,” he said. “Ideally, the FTC will consider the comments and concerns of groups like AMGA and realize that states are best suited to regulate in this area.”
In general, the ban’s supporters are employees/physicians; those who oppose it are their employers. Joining the AMGA in speaking out against the noncompete ban is the American Hospital Association, whereas the American College of Emergency Physicians has come out largely in support of the ban.
Still, doctors like Dr. Shah remain hopeful. “I am optimistic that perhaps my colleagues will not continue to be stuck in overrestrictive noncompetes, but I am also realistic,” he said. “Hospital systems are already coming out strongly against this and they have deep pockets, so I won’t be surprised if it does not come to pass.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Federal Trade Commission’s proposed regulation that would ban noncompete agreements across the country seems like potential good news for doctors. Of course, many hospitals and employers are against it. As a result, the FTC’s sweeping proposal has tongues wagging on both sides of the issue.
Many physicians are thrilled that they may soon have more control over their career and not be stuck in jobs where they feel frustrated, underpaid, or blocked in their progress.
As of 2018, as many as 45% of primary care physicians had inked such agreements with their employers.
Typically, the agreements prevent physicians from practicing medicine with a new employer for a defined period within a specific geographic area. No matter how attractive an alternate offer of employment might be, doctors are bound by the agreements to say no if the offer exists in that defined area and time period.
The period for public comment on the proposed regulation ended on April 19, and there is currently no set date for a decision.
In a Medscape poll of 558 physicians, more than 9 out of 10 respondents said that they were either currently bound by a noncompete clause or that they had been bound by one in the past that had forced them to temporarily stop working, commute long distances, move to a different area, or switch fields.
The new proposal would make it illegal for an employer, such as a hospital or large group, to enter a noncompete with a worker; maintain a noncompete with a worker; or represent to a worker, under certain circumstances, that the worker is subject to a noncompete.
It also would not only ban future noncompete agreements but also retroactively invalidate existing ones. The FTC reasons that noncompete clauses could potentially increase worker earnings as well as lower health care costs by billions of dollars. If the ruling were to move forward, it would represent part of President Biden’s “worker-forward” priorities, focusing on how competition can be a good thing for employees. The President billed the FTC’s announcement as a “huge win for workers.”
In its statements on the proposed ban, the FTC claimed that it could lower consumer prices across the board by as much as $150 billion per year and return nearly $300 million to workers each year.
However, even if passed, the draft rule would keep in place nonsolicitation rules that many health care organizations have put into place. That means that, if a physician leaves an employer, he or she cannot reach out to former patients and colleagues to bring them along or invite them to switch to him or her in the new job.
Within that clause, however, the FTC has specified that if such nonsolicitation agreement has the “equivalent effect” of a noncompete, the agency would deem it such. That means, even if that rule stays, it could be contested and may be interpreted as violating the noncompete law. So there’s value in reading all the fine print should the ban move forward.
Could the ban bring potential downsides?
Most physicians view the potential to break free of a noncompete agreement as a victory. Peter Glennon, an employment litigation attorney with The Glennon Law Firm in Rochester, N.Y., says not so fast. “If you ask anyone if they’d prefer a noncompete agreement, of course they’re going to say no,” he said in an interview. “It sounds like a restriction, one that can hold you back.”
Mr. Glennon believes that there are actually upsides to physician noncompetes. For instance, many noncompetes come with sign-on bonuses that could potentially disappear without the agreements. There’s also the fact that when some physicians sign a noncompete agreement, they then receive pro bono training and continuing education along with marketing and promotion of their skills. Without signing a noncompete, employers may be less incentivized to provide all those benefits to their physician employers.
Those benefits – and the noncompetes – also vary by specialty, Mr. Glennon said. “In 2021, Washington, DC, banned noncompetes for doctors making less than $250,000. So, most generalists there can walk across the street and get a new job. For specialists like cardiologists or neurosurgeons, however, advanced training and marketing benefits matter, so many of them don’t want to lose noncompetes.”
Still, most physicians hope that the FTC’s ban takes hold. Manan Shah, MD, founder, and chief medical officer at Wyndly, an allergy relief startup practice, is one of them.
“Initially, it might disincentivize hospital systems from helping new physicians build up their name and practice because they might be concerned about a physician leaving and starting anew,” he said. “But in the long term, hospitals require physicians to bring their patients to them for care, so the best hospitals will always compete for the best physicians and support them as they build up their practice.”
Dr. Shah views noncompetes as overly prohibitive to physicians. “Right now, if a physician starts a job at a large hospital system and realizes they want to switch jobs, the noncompete distances are so wide they often have to move cities to continue practicing,” he said. “Picking up and starting over in a new city isn’t an option for everyone and can be especially difficult for someone with a family.”
Where Mr. Glennon argued that a physician leaving a team-based practice might harm patients, Shah takes a different perspective. “Imagine you have a doctor whom you trust and have been working with,” he said. “If something changes at their hospital and they decide to move, you literally have to find a new doctor instead of just being able to see them at another location down the street.”
Another potential burden of the noncompete agreements is that they could possibly squelch doctor’s desires to hang up their own shingle. According to Dr. Shah, the agreements make it so that if a physician wants to work independently, it’s nearly impossible to fly solo. “This is frustrating because independent practices have been shown to be more cost effective and allow patients to build better relationships with their doctors,” he claimed.
A 2016 study from Annals of Family Medicine supports that claim, at least for small general practices. Another study appearing in JAMA concurred. It does point out, however, that the cost equation is nuanced and that benefits of larger systems include more resilience to economic downturns and can provide more specialized care.
Will nonprofit hospitals be subject to this noncompete ban?
Further complicating the noncompete ban issue is how it might impact nonprofit institutions versus their for-profit peers. Most hospitals structured as nonprofits would be exempt from the rule because the FTC Act provides that it can enforce against “persons, partnerships, or corporations,” which are further defined as entities “organized to carry on business for their own profit or that of their members.”
The fallout from this, said Dr. Shah, is that it “would disproportionately affect health care providers, since many hospital systems are nonprofits. This is disconcerting because we know that many nonprofit systems make large profits anyway and can offer executive teams’ lucrative packages, while the nurses, assistants, and physicians providing the care are generally not well compensated.”
So far, about nine states plus Washington, D.C., have already put noncompete bans in place, and they may serve as a harbinger of things to come should the federal ban go into effect. Each varies in its specifics. Some, like Indiana, outright ban them, whereas others limit them based on variables like income and industry. “We’re seeing these states responding to local market conditions,” said Darryl Drevna, senior director of regulatory affairs at the American Medical Group Association. “Health care is a hyperlocal market. Depending on the situation, the bans adapt and respond specific to those states.”
Should the federal ban take hold, however, it will supersede whatever rules the individual states have in place.
Some opponents of the federal ban proposal question its authority to begin with, however, Mr. Glennon included. “Many people believe the FTC is overstepping,” he said. “Some people believe that Section 5 of the FTC Act does not give it the authority to police labor markets.”
Mr. Drevna noted that the FTC has taken an aggressive stance, one that will ultimately wind up in the courts. “How it works out is anyone’s guess,” he said. “Ideally, the FTC will consider the comments and concerns of groups like AMGA and realize that states are best suited to regulate in this area.”
In general, the ban’s supporters are employees/physicians; those who oppose it are their employers. Joining the AMGA in speaking out against the noncompete ban is the American Hospital Association, whereas the American College of Emergency Physicians has come out largely in support of the ban.
Still, doctors like Dr. Shah remain hopeful. “I am optimistic that perhaps my colleagues will not continue to be stuck in overrestrictive noncompetes, but I am also realistic,” he said. “Hospital systems are already coming out strongly against this and they have deep pockets, so I won’t be surprised if it does not come to pass.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The Federal Trade Commission’s proposed regulation that would ban noncompete agreements across the country seems like potential good news for doctors. Of course, many hospitals and employers are against it. As a result, the FTC’s sweeping proposal has tongues wagging on both sides of the issue.
Many physicians are thrilled that they may soon have more control over their career and not be stuck in jobs where they feel frustrated, underpaid, or blocked in their progress.
As of 2018, as many as 45% of primary care physicians had inked such agreements with their employers.
Typically, the agreements prevent physicians from practicing medicine with a new employer for a defined period within a specific geographic area. No matter how attractive an alternate offer of employment might be, doctors are bound by the agreements to say no if the offer exists in that defined area and time period.
The period for public comment on the proposed regulation ended on April 19, and there is currently no set date for a decision.
In a Medscape poll of 558 physicians, more than 9 out of 10 respondents said that they were either currently bound by a noncompete clause or that they had been bound by one in the past that had forced them to temporarily stop working, commute long distances, move to a different area, or switch fields.
The new proposal would make it illegal for an employer, such as a hospital or large group, to enter a noncompete with a worker; maintain a noncompete with a worker; or represent to a worker, under certain circumstances, that the worker is subject to a noncompete.
It also would not only ban future noncompete agreements but also retroactively invalidate existing ones. The FTC reasons that noncompete clauses could potentially increase worker earnings as well as lower health care costs by billions of dollars. If the ruling were to move forward, it would represent part of President Biden’s “worker-forward” priorities, focusing on how competition can be a good thing for employees. The President billed the FTC’s announcement as a “huge win for workers.”
In its statements on the proposed ban, the FTC claimed that it could lower consumer prices across the board by as much as $150 billion per year and return nearly $300 million to workers each year.
However, even if passed, the draft rule would keep in place nonsolicitation rules that many health care organizations have put into place. That means that, if a physician leaves an employer, he or she cannot reach out to former patients and colleagues to bring them along or invite them to switch to him or her in the new job.
Within that clause, however, the FTC has specified that if such nonsolicitation agreement has the “equivalent effect” of a noncompete, the agency would deem it such. That means, even if that rule stays, it could be contested and may be interpreted as violating the noncompete law. So there’s value in reading all the fine print should the ban move forward.
Could the ban bring potential downsides?
Most physicians view the potential to break free of a noncompete agreement as a victory. Peter Glennon, an employment litigation attorney with The Glennon Law Firm in Rochester, N.Y., says not so fast. “If you ask anyone if they’d prefer a noncompete agreement, of course they’re going to say no,” he said in an interview. “It sounds like a restriction, one that can hold you back.”
Mr. Glennon believes that there are actually upsides to physician noncompetes. For instance, many noncompetes come with sign-on bonuses that could potentially disappear without the agreements. There’s also the fact that when some physicians sign a noncompete agreement, they then receive pro bono training and continuing education along with marketing and promotion of their skills. Without signing a noncompete, employers may be less incentivized to provide all those benefits to their physician employers.
Those benefits – and the noncompetes – also vary by specialty, Mr. Glennon said. “In 2021, Washington, DC, banned noncompetes for doctors making less than $250,000. So, most generalists there can walk across the street and get a new job. For specialists like cardiologists or neurosurgeons, however, advanced training and marketing benefits matter, so many of them don’t want to lose noncompetes.”
Still, most physicians hope that the FTC’s ban takes hold. Manan Shah, MD, founder, and chief medical officer at Wyndly, an allergy relief startup practice, is one of them.
“Initially, it might disincentivize hospital systems from helping new physicians build up their name and practice because they might be concerned about a physician leaving and starting anew,” he said. “But in the long term, hospitals require physicians to bring their patients to them for care, so the best hospitals will always compete for the best physicians and support them as they build up their practice.”
Dr. Shah views noncompetes as overly prohibitive to physicians. “Right now, if a physician starts a job at a large hospital system and realizes they want to switch jobs, the noncompete distances are so wide they often have to move cities to continue practicing,” he said. “Picking up and starting over in a new city isn’t an option for everyone and can be especially difficult for someone with a family.”
Where Mr. Glennon argued that a physician leaving a team-based practice might harm patients, Shah takes a different perspective. “Imagine you have a doctor whom you trust and have been working with,” he said. “If something changes at their hospital and they decide to move, you literally have to find a new doctor instead of just being able to see them at another location down the street.”
Another potential burden of the noncompete agreements is that they could possibly squelch doctor’s desires to hang up their own shingle. According to Dr. Shah, the agreements make it so that if a physician wants to work independently, it’s nearly impossible to fly solo. “This is frustrating because independent practices have been shown to be more cost effective and allow patients to build better relationships with their doctors,” he claimed.
A 2016 study from Annals of Family Medicine supports that claim, at least for small general practices. Another study appearing in JAMA concurred. It does point out, however, that the cost equation is nuanced and that benefits of larger systems include more resilience to economic downturns and can provide more specialized care.
Will nonprofit hospitals be subject to this noncompete ban?
Further complicating the noncompete ban issue is how it might impact nonprofit institutions versus their for-profit peers. Most hospitals structured as nonprofits would be exempt from the rule because the FTC Act provides that it can enforce against “persons, partnerships, or corporations,” which are further defined as entities “organized to carry on business for their own profit or that of their members.”
The fallout from this, said Dr. Shah, is that it “would disproportionately affect health care providers, since many hospital systems are nonprofits. This is disconcerting because we know that many nonprofit systems make large profits anyway and can offer executive teams’ lucrative packages, while the nurses, assistants, and physicians providing the care are generally not well compensated.”
So far, about nine states plus Washington, D.C., have already put noncompete bans in place, and they may serve as a harbinger of things to come should the federal ban go into effect. Each varies in its specifics. Some, like Indiana, outright ban them, whereas others limit them based on variables like income and industry. “We’re seeing these states responding to local market conditions,” said Darryl Drevna, senior director of regulatory affairs at the American Medical Group Association. “Health care is a hyperlocal market. Depending on the situation, the bans adapt and respond specific to those states.”
Should the federal ban take hold, however, it will supersede whatever rules the individual states have in place.
Some opponents of the federal ban proposal question its authority to begin with, however, Mr. Glennon included. “Many people believe the FTC is overstepping,” he said. “Some people believe that Section 5 of the FTC Act does not give it the authority to police labor markets.”
Mr. Drevna noted that the FTC has taken an aggressive stance, one that will ultimately wind up in the courts. “How it works out is anyone’s guess,” he said. “Ideally, the FTC will consider the comments and concerns of groups like AMGA and realize that states are best suited to regulate in this area.”
In general, the ban’s supporters are employees/physicians; those who oppose it are their employers. Joining the AMGA in speaking out against the noncompete ban is the American Hospital Association, whereas the American College of Emergency Physicians has come out largely in support of the ban.
Still, doctors like Dr. Shah remain hopeful. “I am optimistic that perhaps my colleagues will not continue to be stuck in overrestrictive noncompetes, but I am also realistic,” he said. “Hospital systems are already coming out strongly against this and they have deep pockets, so I won’t be surprised if it does not come to pass.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Immunotherapy plus chemo improves quality of life in NSCLC
In the trial, patients who received the PD-1 inhibitor plus platinum-doublet chemotherapy in the first-line setting reported significant improvements in pain symptoms and delay in time to deterioration, as well as improvements in disease-related symptoms, such as dyspnea, constipation, nausea, and vomiting.
Overall, “the findings support the concept that the superior efficacy and favorable safety profile of cemiplimab plus chemotherapy translate to better patient-reported outcomes compared with chemotherapy alone in patients with advanced non–small cell lung cancer, “ corresponding author Tamta Makharadze, MD, of LTD High Technology Hospital Med Center in Batumi, Georgia, said in a press release.
The delays reported in time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration “are particularly pertinent, given the anticipated continued improvements in cancer survivorship among patients with advanced NSCLC,” the authors explained.
The research was published online May 8 in Cancer.
Quality of life is especially important for patients with advanced NSCLC, for whom the benefits of improved survival must be weighed against the potential drawbacks of treatment toxicities, which can severely impact quality of life, the authors noted.
In the initial multinational phase 3 EMPOWER-Lung 3 trial, Dr. Makharadze and colleagues randomly assigned 466 patients with stage IIIB, IIIC, or stage IV NSCLC to receive either 350 mg of cemiplimab (Libtayo, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals) every 3 weeks along with investigator’s choice of platinum‐doublet chemotherapy or placebo plus chemotherapy. Investigator’s choice of chemotherapy was either paclitaxel plus carboplatin or cisplatin, pemetrexed plus carboplatin, or cisplatin.
The researchers found that the addition of cemiplimab to chemotherapy was associated with a significant, almost 9-month improvement in overall survival. While the trial also highlighted significant improvements in quality of life, functioning, and most symptoms with cemiplimab in comparison with placebo, the current study provides more details on these patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes.
In the latest analysis, Dr. Makharadze and colleagues evaluated data on the 312 patients in the cemiplimab arm and the 154 in the placebo arm. The median age of the patients was 63 years, and most (83.9%) were men.
Patients in the cemiplimab arm reported significant improvements in pain symptoms from baseline, as measured with the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life–Core 30 (QLQ‐C30) score (–4.98; P = .004).
Patients who were treated with cemiplimab also reported a significant delay in time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration (hazard ratio [HR], 0.39; P < .0001).
Significant delays in the time to deterioration in other functioning and symptom scales favored the cemiplimab group, including dyspnea (HR, 0.54), nausea/vomiting (HR, 0.39), and constipation (HR, 0.48).
The cemiplimab group also reported significantly delayed time to deterioration in physical (HR, 0.62) and emotional functioning (HR, 0.52) compared with the placebo arm as well as significant overall improvements from baseline in global health status/quality of life scores.
No significant improvements in patient-reported outcomes favoring the placebo group were observed on any quality-of-life metric evaluated using the symptom scales.
As for study limitations, the authors said that although about 86% of patients in both arms completed at least one question at baseline and post baseline, “the results may have overrepresented the patients who did well in both treatment arms because patients who progressed no longer completed the questionnaires.”
Nevertheless, the results “show that the favorable efficacy achieved with cemiplimab plus chemotherapy over placebo plus chemotherapy is accompanied by significant overall improvement in pain and significant delay in [time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration] in multiple patient‐reported cancer‐related and lung cancer–specific functions and symptoms,” the authors concluded.
The study was sponsored by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
In the trial, patients who received the PD-1 inhibitor plus platinum-doublet chemotherapy in the first-line setting reported significant improvements in pain symptoms and delay in time to deterioration, as well as improvements in disease-related symptoms, such as dyspnea, constipation, nausea, and vomiting.
Overall, “the findings support the concept that the superior efficacy and favorable safety profile of cemiplimab plus chemotherapy translate to better patient-reported outcomes compared with chemotherapy alone in patients with advanced non–small cell lung cancer, “ corresponding author Tamta Makharadze, MD, of LTD High Technology Hospital Med Center in Batumi, Georgia, said in a press release.
The delays reported in time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration “are particularly pertinent, given the anticipated continued improvements in cancer survivorship among patients with advanced NSCLC,” the authors explained.
The research was published online May 8 in Cancer.
Quality of life is especially important for patients with advanced NSCLC, for whom the benefits of improved survival must be weighed against the potential drawbacks of treatment toxicities, which can severely impact quality of life, the authors noted.
In the initial multinational phase 3 EMPOWER-Lung 3 trial, Dr. Makharadze and colleagues randomly assigned 466 patients with stage IIIB, IIIC, or stage IV NSCLC to receive either 350 mg of cemiplimab (Libtayo, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals) every 3 weeks along with investigator’s choice of platinum‐doublet chemotherapy or placebo plus chemotherapy. Investigator’s choice of chemotherapy was either paclitaxel plus carboplatin or cisplatin, pemetrexed plus carboplatin, or cisplatin.
The researchers found that the addition of cemiplimab to chemotherapy was associated with a significant, almost 9-month improvement in overall survival. While the trial also highlighted significant improvements in quality of life, functioning, and most symptoms with cemiplimab in comparison with placebo, the current study provides more details on these patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes.
In the latest analysis, Dr. Makharadze and colleagues evaluated data on the 312 patients in the cemiplimab arm and the 154 in the placebo arm. The median age of the patients was 63 years, and most (83.9%) were men.
Patients in the cemiplimab arm reported significant improvements in pain symptoms from baseline, as measured with the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life–Core 30 (QLQ‐C30) score (–4.98; P = .004).
Patients who were treated with cemiplimab also reported a significant delay in time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration (hazard ratio [HR], 0.39; P < .0001).
Significant delays in the time to deterioration in other functioning and symptom scales favored the cemiplimab group, including dyspnea (HR, 0.54), nausea/vomiting (HR, 0.39), and constipation (HR, 0.48).
The cemiplimab group also reported significantly delayed time to deterioration in physical (HR, 0.62) and emotional functioning (HR, 0.52) compared with the placebo arm as well as significant overall improvements from baseline in global health status/quality of life scores.
No significant improvements in patient-reported outcomes favoring the placebo group were observed on any quality-of-life metric evaluated using the symptom scales.
As for study limitations, the authors said that although about 86% of patients in both arms completed at least one question at baseline and post baseline, “the results may have overrepresented the patients who did well in both treatment arms because patients who progressed no longer completed the questionnaires.”
Nevertheless, the results “show that the favorable efficacy achieved with cemiplimab plus chemotherapy over placebo plus chemotherapy is accompanied by significant overall improvement in pain and significant delay in [time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration] in multiple patient‐reported cancer‐related and lung cancer–specific functions and symptoms,” the authors concluded.
The study was sponsored by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
In the trial, patients who received the PD-1 inhibitor plus platinum-doublet chemotherapy in the first-line setting reported significant improvements in pain symptoms and delay in time to deterioration, as well as improvements in disease-related symptoms, such as dyspnea, constipation, nausea, and vomiting.
Overall, “the findings support the concept that the superior efficacy and favorable safety profile of cemiplimab plus chemotherapy translate to better patient-reported outcomes compared with chemotherapy alone in patients with advanced non–small cell lung cancer, “ corresponding author Tamta Makharadze, MD, of LTD High Technology Hospital Med Center in Batumi, Georgia, said in a press release.
The delays reported in time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration “are particularly pertinent, given the anticipated continued improvements in cancer survivorship among patients with advanced NSCLC,” the authors explained.
The research was published online May 8 in Cancer.
Quality of life is especially important for patients with advanced NSCLC, for whom the benefits of improved survival must be weighed against the potential drawbacks of treatment toxicities, which can severely impact quality of life, the authors noted.
In the initial multinational phase 3 EMPOWER-Lung 3 trial, Dr. Makharadze and colleagues randomly assigned 466 patients with stage IIIB, IIIC, or stage IV NSCLC to receive either 350 mg of cemiplimab (Libtayo, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals) every 3 weeks along with investigator’s choice of platinum‐doublet chemotherapy or placebo plus chemotherapy. Investigator’s choice of chemotherapy was either paclitaxel plus carboplatin or cisplatin, pemetrexed plus carboplatin, or cisplatin.
The researchers found that the addition of cemiplimab to chemotherapy was associated with a significant, almost 9-month improvement in overall survival. While the trial also highlighted significant improvements in quality of life, functioning, and most symptoms with cemiplimab in comparison with placebo, the current study provides more details on these patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes.
In the latest analysis, Dr. Makharadze and colleagues evaluated data on the 312 patients in the cemiplimab arm and the 154 in the placebo arm. The median age of the patients was 63 years, and most (83.9%) were men.
Patients in the cemiplimab arm reported significant improvements in pain symptoms from baseline, as measured with the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life–Core 30 (QLQ‐C30) score (–4.98; P = .004).
Patients who were treated with cemiplimab also reported a significant delay in time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration (hazard ratio [HR], 0.39; P < .0001).
Significant delays in the time to deterioration in other functioning and symptom scales favored the cemiplimab group, including dyspnea (HR, 0.54), nausea/vomiting (HR, 0.39), and constipation (HR, 0.48).
The cemiplimab group also reported significantly delayed time to deterioration in physical (HR, 0.62) and emotional functioning (HR, 0.52) compared with the placebo arm as well as significant overall improvements from baseline in global health status/quality of life scores.
No significant improvements in patient-reported outcomes favoring the placebo group were observed on any quality-of-life metric evaluated using the symptom scales.
As for study limitations, the authors said that although about 86% of patients in both arms completed at least one question at baseline and post baseline, “the results may have overrepresented the patients who did well in both treatment arms because patients who progressed no longer completed the questionnaires.”
Nevertheless, the results “show that the favorable efficacy achieved with cemiplimab plus chemotherapy over placebo plus chemotherapy is accompanied by significant overall improvement in pain and significant delay in [time to definitive clinically meaningful deterioration] in multiple patient‐reported cancer‐related and lung cancer–specific functions and symptoms,” the authors concluded.
The study was sponsored by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM CANCER