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Lawmakers Rush to Stave Off Doctor Pay Cuts as Medicare Finalizes 2025 Rates
Federal lawmakers are rushing to soften the blow of Medicare’s 2025 effective pay cut for doctors in 2025, introducing a bill that could limit the cut. But they have little time to act.
In 2025, the conversion factor used to calculate payment to doctors and hospitals caring for Medicare patients will drop to $32.35, a nearly 3% decrease from the current level.
Congress likely will act before the cuts take effect, said Rep. Larry Bucshon, MD (R-IN), who specialized in cardiothoracic surgery before joining Congress. Lawmakers in past years have typically tinkered with the Medicare physician fee schedule at the last minute, tucking in fixes to December legislative packages and spending bills.
“I’m pretty optimistic that a good portion of the fee cuts will be mitigated and they won’t go through,” Bucshon told this news organization in an interview.
Bruce A. Scott, MD, president of the American Medical Association (AMA) said in a statement that CMS’ release of the final fee schedule on November 1 should trigger serious work on a change to the 2025 Medicare physician fee schedule.
“The fee schedule rule released [on November 1] starts the clock — with January 1 looming,” Scott said. “A legislative remedy will require hard work and compromise. The 66 million patients who rely on Medicare are counting on that.”
Both Bucshon and Scott also joined many lawmakers and medical associations in calling on Congress for a larger overhaul of the Medicare physician fee schedule, well beyond whatever temporary adjustment may be made in the months ahead to avoid or soften the 2025 cuts.
The physician fee schedule sets formulas and rules regarding how the largest US buyer of health services pays the almost 1.3 million clinicians who bill Medicare. Of these, 51% are physicians. The physician fee schedule also covers payments for nurse practitioners, physician assistants, physical therapists, and other health professionals.
Last Major Overhaul Unpopular
There’s broad dissatisfaction with Congress’ last major overhaul of the Medicare physician fee schedule. The 2015 Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) aimed to shift clinicians toward programs tying pay increases to quality measures. But the implementation of that aim through the Merit-based Incentive Payment System is widely considered a disappointment.
MACRA was intended to end the need for annual “doc fixes,” as Congress’ last-minute Medicare adjustments are known. Seventeen such tweaks passed before MACRA took effect.
But MACRA did not include a broad-based inflation adjuster, and some clinicians’ incomes are lagging as inflation rates — and practice costs — have risen. Scott said the Medicare Economic Index, which is a measure used to gauge increases in practice costs for clinicians, is expected to rise by 3.5%.
“To put it bluntly, Medicare plans to pay us less while costs go up. You don’t have to be an economist to know that is an unsustainable trend, though one that has been going on for decades,” Scott said. “For physician practices operating on small margins already, this means it is harder to acquire new equipment, harder to retain staff, harder to take on new Medicare patients, and harder to keep the doors open, particularly in rural and underserved areas.”
In a statement, Jen Brull, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, noted that this likely will be the fifth year in a row that Congress will need to do a patch to prevent cuts in pay to clinicians.
Bucshon, who will retire from the House in January, said he expects Congress to pass legislation tying Medicare payment rates to inflation — eventually.
“People want to find a way to fix this problem, but also do it in a way that does not cut benefits to anyone, and that’s the key,” Bucshon said. “We’re going to have to find a way to make sure that providers are properly reimbursed.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Federal lawmakers are rushing to soften the blow of Medicare’s 2025 effective pay cut for doctors in 2025, introducing a bill that could limit the cut. But they have little time to act.
In 2025, the conversion factor used to calculate payment to doctors and hospitals caring for Medicare patients will drop to $32.35, a nearly 3% decrease from the current level.
Congress likely will act before the cuts take effect, said Rep. Larry Bucshon, MD (R-IN), who specialized in cardiothoracic surgery before joining Congress. Lawmakers in past years have typically tinkered with the Medicare physician fee schedule at the last minute, tucking in fixes to December legislative packages and spending bills.
“I’m pretty optimistic that a good portion of the fee cuts will be mitigated and they won’t go through,” Bucshon told this news organization in an interview.
Bruce A. Scott, MD, president of the American Medical Association (AMA) said in a statement that CMS’ release of the final fee schedule on November 1 should trigger serious work on a change to the 2025 Medicare physician fee schedule.
“The fee schedule rule released [on November 1] starts the clock — with January 1 looming,” Scott said. “A legislative remedy will require hard work and compromise. The 66 million patients who rely on Medicare are counting on that.”
Both Bucshon and Scott also joined many lawmakers and medical associations in calling on Congress for a larger overhaul of the Medicare physician fee schedule, well beyond whatever temporary adjustment may be made in the months ahead to avoid or soften the 2025 cuts.
The physician fee schedule sets formulas and rules regarding how the largest US buyer of health services pays the almost 1.3 million clinicians who bill Medicare. Of these, 51% are physicians. The physician fee schedule also covers payments for nurse practitioners, physician assistants, physical therapists, and other health professionals.
Last Major Overhaul Unpopular
There’s broad dissatisfaction with Congress’ last major overhaul of the Medicare physician fee schedule. The 2015 Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) aimed to shift clinicians toward programs tying pay increases to quality measures. But the implementation of that aim through the Merit-based Incentive Payment System is widely considered a disappointment.
MACRA was intended to end the need for annual “doc fixes,” as Congress’ last-minute Medicare adjustments are known. Seventeen such tweaks passed before MACRA took effect.
But MACRA did not include a broad-based inflation adjuster, and some clinicians’ incomes are lagging as inflation rates — and practice costs — have risen. Scott said the Medicare Economic Index, which is a measure used to gauge increases in practice costs for clinicians, is expected to rise by 3.5%.
“To put it bluntly, Medicare plans to pay us less while costs go up. You don’t have to be an economist to know that is an unsustainable trend, though one that has been going on for decades,” Scott said. “For physician practices operating on small margins already, this means it is harder to acquire new equipment, harder to retain staff, harder to take on new Medicare patients, and harder to keep the doors open, particularly in rural and underserved areas.”
In a statement, Jen Brull, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, noted that this likely will be the fifth year in a row that Congress will need to do a patch to prevent cuts in pay to clinicians.
Bucshon, who will retire from the House in January, said he expects Congress to pass legislation tying Medicare payment rates to inflation — eventually.
“People want to find a way to fix this problem, but also do it in a way that does not cut benefits to anyone, and that’s the key,” Bucshon said. “We’re going to have to find a way to make sure that providers are properly reimbursed.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Federal lawmakers are rushing to soften the blow of Medicare’s 2025 effective pay cut for doctors in 2025, introducing a bill that could limit the cut. But they have little time to act.
In 2025, the conversion factor used to calculate payment to doctors and hospitals caring for Medicare patients will drop to $32.35, a nearly 3% decrease from the current level.
Congress likely will act before the cuts take effect, said Rep. Larry Bucshon, MD (R-IN), who specialized in cardiothoracic surgery before joining Congress. Lawmakers in past years have typically tinkered with the Medicare physician fee schedule at the last minute, tucking in fixes to December legislative packages and spending bills.
“I’m pretty optimistic that a good portion of the fee cuts will be mitigated and they won’t go through,” Bucshon told this news organization in an interview.
Bruce A. Scott, MD, president of the American Medical Association (AMA) said in a statement that CMS’ release of the final fee schedule on November 1 should trigger serious work on a change to the 2025 Medicare physician fee schedule.
“The fee schedule rule released [on November 1] starts the clock — with January 1 looming,” Scott said. “A legislative remedy will require hard work and compromise. The 66 million patients who rely on Medicare are counting on that.”
Both Bucshon and Scott also joined many lawmakers and medical associations in calling on Congress for a larger overhaul of the Medicare physician fee schedule, well beyond whatever temporary adjustment may be made in the months ahead to avoid or soften the 2025 cuts.
The physician fee schedule sets formulas and rules regarding how the largest US buyer of health services pays the almost 1.3 million clinicians who bill Medicare. Of these, 51% are physicians. The physician fee schedule also covers payments for nurse practitioners, physician assistants, physical therapists, and other health professionals.
Last Major Overhaul Unpopular
There’s broad dissatisfaction with Congress’ last major overhaul of the Medicare physician fee schedule. The 2015 Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) aimed to shift clinicians toward programs tying pay increases to quality measures. But the implementation of that aim through the Merit-based Incentive Payment System is widely considered a disappointment.
MACRA was intended to end the need for annual “doc fixes,” as Congress’ last-minute Medicare adjustments are known. Seventeen such tweaks passed before MACRA took effect.
But MACRA did not include a broad-based inflation adjuster, and some clinicians’ incomes are lagging as inflation rates — and practice costs — have risen. Scott said the Medicare Economic Index, which is a measure used to gauge increases in practice costs for clinicians, is expected to rise by 3.5%.
“To put it bluntly, Medicare plans to pay us less while costs go up. You don’t have to be an economist to know that is an unsustainable trend, though one that has been going on for decades,” Scott said. “For physician practices operating on small margins already, this means it is harder to acquire new equipment, harder to retain staff, harder to take on new Medicare patients, and harder to keep the doors open, particularly in rural and underserved areas.”
In a statement, Jen Brull, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, noted that this likely will be the fifth year in a row that Congress will need to do a patch to prevent cuts in pay to clinicians.
Bucshon, who will retire from the House in January, said he expects Congress to pass legislation tying Medicare payment rates to inflation — eventually.
“People want to find a way to fix this problem, but also do it in a way that does not cut benefits to anyone, and that’s the key,” Bucshon said. “We’re going to have to find a way to make sure that providers are properly reimbursed.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Being a Weekend Warrior Linked to Lower Dementia Risk
TOPLINE:
, a new study shows. Investigators say the findings suggest even limited physical activity may offer protective cognitive benefits.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers analyzed the data of 10,033 participants in the Mexico City Prospective Study who were aged 35 years or older.
- Physical activity patterns were categorized into four groups: No exercise, weekend warriors (one or two sessions per week), regularly active (three or more sessions per week), and a combined group.
- Cognitive function was assessed using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE).
- The analysis adjusted for confounders such as age, sex, education, income, blood pressure, smoking status, body mass index, civil status, sleep duration, diet, and alcohol intake.
- The mean follow-up duration was 16 years.
TAKEAWAY:
- When mild dementia was defined as an MMSE score ≤ 22, dementia prevalence was 26% in those who did not exercise, 14% in weekend warriors, and 18.5% in the regularly active group.
- When mild dementia was defined as an MMSE score ≤ 23, dementia prevalence was 30% in those who did not exercise, 20% in weekend warriors, and 22% in the regularly active group.
- Compared with people who did not exercise and after adjusting for confounding factors, risk for mild dementia was 13%-25% lower in weekend warriors, 11%-12% lower in the regular activity group, and 12%-16% lower in the two groups combined.
- The findings were consistent in men and women.
IN PRACTICE:
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first prospective cohort study to show that the weekend warrior physical activity pattern and the regularly active physical activity pattern are associated with similar reductions in the risk of mild dementia. This study has important implications for policy and practice because the weekend warrior physical activity pattern may be a more convenient option for busy people around the world,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
The study was led by Gary O’Donovan, Faculty of Medicine, University of the Andes, Bogotá, Colombia. It was published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
LIMITATIONS:
The survey respondents may not have been truly representative of middle-aged adults. Further, there were no objective measures of physical activity. The observational nature of the study does not provide insights into causality.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was funded by the Mexican Health Ministry, the National Council of Science and Technology for Mexico, Wellcome, and the UK Medical Research Council. No conflicts of interest were disclosed.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
, a new study shows. Investigators say the findings suggest even limited physical activity may offer protective cognitive benefits.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers analyzed the data of 10,033 participants in the Mexico City Prospective Study who were aged 35 years or older.
- Physical activity patterns were categorized into four groups: No exercise, weekend warriors (one or two sessions per week), regularly active (three or more sessions per week), and a combined group.
- Cognitive function was assessed using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE).
- The analysis adjusted for confounders such as age, sex, education, income, blood pressure, smoking status, body mass index, civil status, sleep duration, diet, and alcohol intake.
- The mean follow-up duration was 16 years.
TAKEAWAY:
- When mild dementia was defined as an MMSE score ≤ 22, dementia prevalence was 26% in those who did not exercise, 14% in weekend warriors, and 18.5% in the regularly active group.
- When mild dementia was defined as an MMSE score ≤ 23, dementia prevalence was 30% in those who did not exercise, 20% in weekend warriors, and 22% in the regularly active group.
- Compared with people who did not exercise and after adjusting for confounding factors, risk for mild dementia was 13%-25% lower in weekend warriors, 11%-12% lower in the regular activity group, and 12%-16% lower in the two groups combined.
- The findings were consistent in men and women.
IN PRACTICE:
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first prospective cohort study to show that the weekend warrior physical activity pattern and the regularly active physical activity pattern are associated with similar reductions in the risk of mild dementia. This study has important implications for policy and practice because the weekend warrior physical activity pattern may be a more convenient option for busy people around the world,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
The study was led by Gary O’Donovan, Faculty of Medicine, University of the Andes, Bogotá, Colombia. It was published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
LIMITATIONS:
The survey respondents may not have been truly representative of middle-aged adults. Further, there were no objective measures of physical activity. The observational nature of the study does not provide insights into causality.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was funded by the Mexican Health Ministry, the National Council of Science and Technology for Mexico, Wellcome, and the UK Medical Research Council. No conflicts of interest were disclosed.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
, a new study shows. Investigators say the findings suggest even limited physical activity may offer protective cognitive benefits.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers analyzed the data of 10,033 participants in the Mexico City Prospective Study who were aged 35 years or older.
- Physical activity patterns were categorized into four groups: No exercise, weekend warriors (one or two sessions per week), regularly active (three or more sessions per week), and a combined group.
- Cognitive function was assessed using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE).
- The analysis adjusted for confounders such as age, sex, education, income, blood pressure, smoking status, body mass index, civil status, sleep duration, diet, and alcohol intake.
- The mean follow-up duration was 16 years.
TAKEAWAY:
- When mild dementia was defined as an MMSE score ≤ 22, dementia prevalence was 26% in those who did not exercise, 14% in weekend warriors, and 18.5% in the regularly active group.
- When mild dementia was defined as an MMSE score ≤ 23, dementia prevalence was 30% in those who did not exercise, 20% in weekend warriors, and 22% in the regularly active group.
- Compared with people who did not exercise and after adjusting for confounding factors, risk for mild dementia was 13%-25% lower in weekend warriors, 11%-12% lower in the regular activity group, and 12%-16% lower in the two groups combined.
- The findings were consistent in men and women.
IN PRACTICE:
“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first prospective cohort study to show that the weekend warrior physical activity pattern and the regularly active physical activity pattern are associated with similar reductions in the risk of mild dementia. This study has important implications for policy and practice because the weekend warrior physical activity pattern may be a more convenient option for busy people around the world,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
The study was led by Gary O’Donovan, Faculty of Medicine, University of the Andes, Bogotá, Colombia. It was published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
LIMITATIONS:
The survey respondents may not have been truly representative of middle-aged adults. Further, there were no objective measures of physical activity. The observational nature of the study does not provide insights into causality.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was funded by the Mexican Health Ministry, the National Council of Science and Technology for Mexico, Wellcome, and the UK Medical Research Council. No conflicts of interest were disclosed.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Novel Intervention Slows Cognitive Decline in At-Risk Adults
new research suggests.
The cognitive remediation intervention included a series of progressively difficult computer-based and facilitator-monitored mental exercises designed to sharpen cognitive function.
Researchers found that using cognitive remediation with tDCS slowed decline in executive function and verbal memory more than other cognitive functions. The effect was stronger among people with rMDD versus those with MCI and in those at low genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
“We have developed a novel intervention, combining two interventions that if used separately have a weak effect but together have substantial and clinically meaningful effect of slowing the progression of cognitive decline,” said study author Benoit H. Mulsant, MD, chair of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and senior scientist at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, also in Toronto.
The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry.
High-Risk Group
Research shows that older adults with MDD or MCI are at high risk for cognitive decline and dementia. Evidence also suggests that depression in early or mid-life significantly increases the risk for dementia in late life, even if the depression has been in remission for decades.
A potential mechanism underlying this increased risk for dementia could be impaired cortical plasticity, or the ability of the brain to compensate for damage.
The PACt-MD trial included 375 older adults with rMDD, MCI, or both (mean age, 72 years; 62% women) at five academic hospitals in Toronto.
Participants received either cognitive remediation plus tDCS or sham intervention 5 days per week for 8 weeks (acute phase), followed by 5-day “boosters” every 6 months.
tDCS was administered by trained personnel and involved active stimulation for 30 minutes at the beginning of each cognitive remediation group session. The intervention targets the prefrontal cortex, a critical region for cognitive compensation in normal cognitive aging.
The sham group received a weakened version of cognitive remediation, with exercises that did not get progressively more difficult. For the sham stimulation, the current flowed at full intensity for only 54 seconds before and after 30-second ramp-up and ramp-down phases, to create a blinding effect, the authors noted.
A geriatric psychiatrist followed all participants throughout the study, conducting assessments at baseline, month 2, and yearly for 3-7 years (mean follow-up, 48.3 months).
Participants’ depressive symptoms were evaluated at baseline and at all follow-ups and underwent neuropsychological testing to assess six cognitive domains: processing speed, working memory, executive functioning, verbal memory, visual memory, and language.
To get a norm for the cognitive tests, researchers recruited a comparator group of 75 subjects similar in age, gender, and years of education, with no neuropsychiatric disorder or cognitive impairment. They completed the same assessments but not the intervention.
Study participants and assessors were blinded to treatment assignment.
Slower Cognitive Decline
Participants in the intervention group had a significantly slower decline in cognitive function, compared with those in the sham group (adjusted z score difference [active – sham] at month 60, 0.21; P = .006). This is equivalent to slowing cognitive decline by about 4 years, researchers reported. The intervention also showed a positive effect on executive function and verbal memory.
“If I can push dementia from 85 to 89 years and you die at 86, in practice, I have prevented you from ever developing dementia,” Mulsant said.
The efficacy of cognitive remediation plus tDCS in rMDD could be tied to enhanced neuroplasticity, said Mulsant.
The treatment worked well in people with a history of depression, regardless of MCI status, but was not as effective for people with just MCI, researchers noted. The intervention also did not work as well among people at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
“We don’t believe we have discovered an intervention to prevent dementia in people who are at high risk for Alzheimer disease, but we have discovered an intervention that could prevent dementia in people who have an history of depression,” said Mulsant.
These results suggest the pathways to dementia among people with MCI and rMDD are different, he added.
Because previous research showed either treatment alone demonstrated little efficacy, researchers said the new results indicate that there may be a synergistic effect of combining the two.
The ideal amount of treatment and optimal age for initiation still need to be determined, said Mulsant. The study did not include a comparator group without rMDD or MCI, so the observed cognitive benefits might be specific to people with these high-risk conditions. Another study limitation is lack of diversity in terms of ethnicity, race, and education.
Promising, Important Findings
Commenting on the research, Badr Ratnakaran, MD, assistant professor and division director of geriatric psychiatry at Carilion Clinic–Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, said the results are promising and important because there are so few treatment options for the increasing number of older patients with depression and dementia.
The side-effect profile of the combined treatment is better than that of many pharmacologic treatments, Ratnakaran noted. As more research like this comes out, Ratnakaran predicts that cognitive remediation and tCDS will become more readily available.
“This is telling us that the field of psychiatry, and also dementia, is progressing beyond your usual pharmacotherapy treatments,” said Ratnakaran, who also is chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Council on Geriatric Psychiatry.
The study received support from the Canada Brain Research Fund of Brain Canada, Health Canada, the Chagnon Family, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Discovery Fund. Mulsant reported holding and receiving support from the Labatt Family Chair in Biology of Depression in Late-Life Adults at the University of Toronto; being a member of the Center for Addiction and Mental Health Board of Trustees; research support from Brain Canada, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Center for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and National Institutes of Health; and nonfinancial support from Capital Solution Design and HappyNeuron. Ratnakaran reported no relevant conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
new research suggests.
The cognitive remediation intervention included a series of progressively difficult computer-based and facilitator-monitored mental exercises designed to sharpen cognitive function.
Researchers found that using cognitive remediation with tDCS slowed decline in executive function and verbal memory more than other cognitive functions. The effect was stronger among people with rMDD versus those with MCI and in those at low genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
“We have developed a novel intervention, combining two interventions that if used separately have a weak effect but together have substantial and clinically meaningful effect of slowing the progression of cognitive decline,” said study author Benoit H. Mulsant, MD, chair of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and senior scientist at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, also in Toronto.
The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry.
High-Risk Group
Research shows that older adults with MDD or MCI are at high risk for cognitive decline and dementia. Evidence also suggests that depression in early or mid-life significantly increases the risk for dementia in late life, even if the depression has been in remission for decades.
A potential mechanism underlying this increased risk for dementia could be impaired cortical plasticity, or the ability of the brain to compensate for damage.
The PACt-MD trial included 375 older adults with rMDD, MCI, or both (mean age, 72 years; 62% women) at five academic hospitals in Toronto.
Participants received either cognitive remediation plus tDCS or sham intervention 5 days per week for 8 weeks (acute phase), followed by 5-day “boosters” every 6 months.
tDCS was administered by trained personnel and involved active stimulation for 30 minutes at the beginning of each cognitive remediation group session. The intervention targets the prefrontal cortex, a critical region for cognitive compensation in normal cognitive aging.
The sham group received a weakened version of cognitive remediation, with exercises that did not get progressively more difficult. For the sham stimulation, the current flowed at full intensity for only 54 seconds before and after 30-second ramp-up and ramp-down phases, to create a blinding effect, the authors noted.
A geriatric psychiatrist followed all participants throughout the study, conducting assessments at baseline, month 2, and yearly for 3-7 years (mean follow-up, 48.3 months).
Participants’ depressive symptoms were evaluated at baseline and at all follow-ups and underwent neuropsychological testing to assess six cognitive domains: processing speed, working memory, executive functioning, verbal memory, visual memory, and language.
To get a norm for the cognitive tests, researchers recruited a comparator group of 75 subjects similar in age, gender, and years of education, with no neuropsychiatric disorder or cognitive impairment. They completed the same assessments but not the intervention.
Study participants and assessors were blinded to treatment assignment.
Slower Cognitive Decline
Participants in the intervention group had a significantly slower decline in cognitive function, compared with those in the sham group (adjusted z score difference [active – sham] at month 60, 0.21; P = .006). This is equivalent to slowing cognitive decline by about 4 years, researchers reported. The intervention also showed a positive effect on executive function and verbal memory.
“If I can push dementia from 85 to 89 years and you die at 86, in practice, I have prevented you from ever developing dementia,” Mulsant said.
The efficacy of cognitive remediation plus tDCS in rMDD could be tied to enhanced neuroplasticity, said Mulsant.
The treatment worked well in people with a history of depression, regardless of MCI status, but was not as effective for people with just MCI, researchers noted. The intervention also did not work as well among people at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
“We don’t believe we have discovered an intervention to prevent dementia in people who are at high risk for Alzheimer disease, but we have discovered an intervention that could prevent dementia in people who have an history of depression,” said Mulsant.
These results suggest the pathways to dementia among people with MCI and rMDD are different, he added.
Because previous research showed either treatment alone demonstrated little efficacy, researchers said the new results indicate that there may be a synergistic effect of combining the two.
The ideal amount of treatment and optimal age for initiation still need to be determined, said Mulsant. The study did not include a comparator group without rMDD or MCI, so the observed cognitive benefits might be specific to people with these high-risk conditions. Another study limitation is lack of diversity in terms of ethnicity, race, and education.
Promising, Important Findings
Commenting on the research, Badr Ratnakaran, MD, assistant professor and division director of geriatric psychiatry at Carilion Clinic–Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, said the results are promising and important because there are so few treatment options for the increasing number of older patients with depression and dementia.
The side-effect profile of the combined treatment is better than that of many pharmacologic treatments, Ratnakaran noted. As more research like this comes out, Ratnakaran predicts that cognitive remediation and tCDS will become more readily available.
“This is telling us that the field of psychiatry, and also dementia, is progressing beyond your usual pharmacotherapy treatments,” said Ratnakaran, who also is chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Council on Geriatric Psychiatry.
The study received support from the Canada Brain Research Fund of Brain Canada, Health Canada, the Chagnon Family, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Discovery Fund. Mulsant reported holding and receiving support from the Labatt Family Chair in Biology of Depression in Late-Life Adults at the University of Toronto; being a member of the Center for Addiction and Mental Health Board of Trustees; research support from Brain Canada, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Center for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and National Institutes of Health; and nonfinancial support from Capital Solution Design and HappyNeuron. Ratnakaran reported no relevant conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
new research suggests.
The cognitive remediation intervention included a series of progressively difficult computer-based and facilitator-monitored mental exercises designed to sharpen cognitive function.
Researchers found that using cognitive remediation with tDCS slowed decline in executive function and verbal memory more than other cognitive functions. The effect was stronger among people with rMDD versus those with MCI and in those at low genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
“We have developed a novel intervention, combining two interventions that if used separately have a weak effect but together have substantial and clinically meaningful effect of slowing the progression of cognitive decline,” said study author Benoit H. Mulsant, MD, chair of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and senior scientist at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, also in Toronto.
The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry.
High-Risk Group
Research shows that older adults with MDD or MCI are at high risk for cognitive decline and dementia. Evidence also suggests that depression in early or mid-life significantly increases the risk for dementia in late life, even if the depression has been in remission for decades.
A potential mechanism underlying this increased risk for dementia could be impaired cortical plasticity, or the ability of the brain to compensate for damage.
The PACt-MD trial included 375 older adults with rMDD, MCI, or both (mean age, 72 years; 62% women) at five academic hospitals in Toronto.
Participants received either cognitive remediation plus tDCS or sham intervention 5 days per week for 8 weeks (acute phase), followed by 5-day “boosters” every 6 months.
tDCS was administered by trained personnel and involved active stimulation for 30 minutes at the beginning of each cognitive remediation group session. The intervention targets the prefrontal cortex, a critical region for cognitive compensation in normal cognitive aging.
The sham group received a weakened version of cognitive remediation, with exercises that did not get progressively more difficult. For the sham stimulation, the current flowed at full intensity for only 54 seconds before and after 30-second ramp-up and ramp-down phases, to create a blinding effect, the authors noted.
A geriatric psychiatrist followed all participants throughout the study, conducting assessments at baseline, month 2, and yearly for 3-7 years (mean follow-up, 48.3 months).
Participants’ depressive symptoms were evaluated at baseline and at all follow-ups and underwent neuropsychological testing to assess six cognitive domains: processing speed, working memory, executive functioning, verbal memory, visual memory, and language.
To get a norm for the cognitive tests, researchers recruited a comparator group of 75 subjects similar in age, gender, and years of education, with no neuropsychiatric disorder or cognitive impairment. They completed the same assessments but not the intervention.
Study participants and assessors were blinded to treatment assignment.
Slower Cognitive Decline
Participants in the intervention group had a significantly slower decline in cognitive function, compared with those in the sham group (adjusted z score difference [active – sham] at month 60, 0.21; P = .006). This is equivalent to slowing cognitive decline by about 4 years, researchers reported. The intervention also showed a positive effect on executive function and verbal memory.
“If I can push dementia from 85 to 89 years and you die at 86, in practice, I have prevented you from ever developing dementia,” Mulsant said.
The efficacy of cognitive remediation plus tDCS in rMDD could be tied to enhanced neuroplasticity, said Mulsant.
The treatment worked well in people with a history of depression, regardless of MCI status, but was not as effective for people with just MCI, researchers noted. The intervention also did not work as well among people at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
“We don’t believe we have discovered an intervention to prevent dementia in people who are at high risk for Alzheimer disease, but we have discovered an intervention that could prevent dementia in people who have an history of depression,” said Mulsant.
These results suggest the pathways to dementia among people with MCI and rMDD are different, he added.
Because previous research showed either treatment alone demonstrated little efficacy, researchers said the new results indicate that there may be a synergistic effect of combining the two.
The ideal amount of treatment and optimal age for initiation still need to be determined, said Mulsant. The study did not include a comparator group without rMDD or MCI, so the observed cognitive benefits might be specific to people with these high-risk conditions. Another study limitation is lack of diversity in terms of ethnicity, race, and education.
Promising, Important Findings
Commenting on the research, Badr Ratnakaran, MD, assistant professor and division director of geriatric psychiatry at Carilion Clinic–Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, said the results are promising and important because there are so few treatment options for the increasing number of older patients with depression and dementia.
The side-effect profile of the combined treatment is better than that of many pharmacologic treatments, Ratnakaran noted. As more research like this comes out, Ratnakaran predicts that cognitive remediation and tCDS will become more readily available.
“This is telling us that the field of psychiatry, and also dementia, is progressing beyond your usual pharmacotherapy treatments,” said Ratnakaran, who also is chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Council on Geriatric Psychiatry.
The study received support from the Canada Brain Research Fund of Brain Canada, Health Canada, the Chagnon Family, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Discovery Fund. Mulsant reported holding and receiving support from the Labatt Family Chair in Biology of Depression in Late-Life Adults at the University of Toronto; being a member of the Center for Addiction and Mental Health Board of Trustees; research support from Brain Canada, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Center for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and National Institutes of Health; and nonfinancial support from Capital Solution Design and HappyNeuron. Ratnakaran reported no relevant conflicts.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM JAMA PSYCHIATRY
A Finger-Prick Test for Alzheimer’s Disease?
In a pilot study, researchers found a good correlation of p-tau217 levels from blood obtained via standard venous sampling and from a single finger prick.
“We see the potential that capillary p-tau217 from dried blood spots could overcome the limitations of standard venous collection of being invasive, dependent on centrifuges and ultra-low temperature freezers, and also requiring less volume than standard plasma analysis,” said lead investigator Hanna Huber, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
The findings were presented at the 17th Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference.
Strong Link Between Venous and Capillary Samples
p-tau217 has emerged as the most effective blood test to identify Alzheimer’s disease. However, traditional venous blood sampling requires certain infrastructure and immediate processing. Increased and simplified access to this blood biomarker could be crucial for early diagnosis, proper patient management, and prompt initiation of disease-modifying treatments.
The DROP-AD project is investigating the diagnostic performance of finger-prick collection to accurately measure p-tau217. In the current study, the research team obtained paired venous blood and capillary blood samples from 206 adults (mean age, 71.8 years; 59% women), with or without cognitive impairment, from five European centers. A subset of participants provided a second finger-prick sample collected without any supervision.
The capillary blood samples were obtained via a single finger prick, and then single blood drops were applied to a dried plasma spot (DPS) card, which was then shipped to a lab (without temperature control or cooling) for p-tau217 measurement. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers were available for a subset of individuals.
Throughout the entire study population, there was a “very convincing correlation” between p-tau217 levels from capillary DPS and venous plasma, Huber told conference attendees.
Additionally, capillary DPS p-tau217 levels were able to discriminate amyloid-positive from amyloid-negative individuals, with levels of this biomarker increasing in a stepwise fashion, “from cognitively unimpaired individuals to individuals with mild cognitive impairment and, finally, to dementia patients,” Huber said.
Of note, capillary p-tau217 levels from DPS samples that were collected by research staff did not differ from unsupervised self-collected samples.
What about the stability of the samples? Capillary DPS p-tau-217 is “stable over 2 weeks at room temperature,” Huber said.
Ready for Prime Time?
Preliminary data from the DROP-AD project highlight the potential of using finger-prick blood collection to identify neurofilament light (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), two other Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers.
“We think that capillary p-tau217, but also other biomarkers, could be a widely accessible and cheap alternative for clinical practice and clinical trials in individuals with cognitive decline if the results are confirmed in longitudinal and home-sampling cohorts,” Huber concluded.
“Measuring biomarkers by a simple finger prick could facilitate regular and autonomous sampling at home, which would be particularly useful in remote and rural settings,” she noted.
The findings in this study confirm and extend earlier findings that the study team reported last year at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC).
“The data shared at CTAD 2024, along with the related material previously presented at AAIC 2023, reporting on a ‘finger prick’ blood test approach is interesting and emerging work but not yet ready for clinical use,” said Rebecca M. Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association vice president of scientific engagement.
“That said, the idea of a highly accessible and scalable tool that can aid in easier and more equitable diagnosis would be welcomed by researchers, clinicians, and individuals and families affected by Alzheimer’s disease and all other dementias,” Edelmayer said.
“This finger-prick blood testing technology for Alzheimer’s biomarkers still has to be validated more broadly, but it is very promising. Advancements in technology and practice demonstrate the simplicity, transportability, and diagnostic value of blood-based biomarkers for Alzheimer’s,” she added.
The Alzheimer’s Association is currently conducting a systematic review of the evidence and preparing clinical practice guidelines on blood-based biomarker tests for specialized healthcare settings, with publications, clinical resources, and tools anticipated in 2025, Edelmayer noted.
The study had no commercial funding. Huber and Edelmayer report no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
In a pilot study, researchers found a good correlation of p-tau217 levels from blood obtained via standard venous sampling and from a single finger prick.
“We see the potential that capillary p-tau217 from dried blood spots could overcome the limitations of standard venous collection of being invasive, dependent on centrifuges and ultra-low temperature freezers, and also requiring less volume than standard plasma analysis,” said lead investigator Hanna Huber, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
The findings were presented at the 17th Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference.
Strong Link Between Venous and Capillary Samples
p-tau217 has emerged as the most effective blood test to identify Alzheimer’s disease. However, traditional venous blood sampling requires certain infrastructure and immediate processing. Increased and simplified access to this blood biomarker could be crucial for early diagnosis, proper patient management, and prompt initiation of disease-modifying treatments.
The DROP-AD project is investigating the diagnostic performance of finger-prick collection to accurately measure p-tau217. In the current study, the research team obtained paired venous blood and capillary blood samples from 206 adults (mean age, 71.8 years; 59% women), with or without cognitive impairment, from five European centers. A subset of participants provided a second finger-prick sample collected without any supervision.
The capillary blood samples were obtained via a single finger prick, and then single blood drops were applied to a dried plasma spot (DPS) card, which was then shipped to a lab (without temperature control or cooling) for p-tau217 measurement. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers were available for a subset of individuals.
Throughout the entire study population, there was a “very convincing correlation” between p-tau217 levels from capillary DPS and venous plasma, Huber told conference attendees.
Additionally, capillary DPS p-tau217 levels were able to discriminate amyloid-positive from amyloid-negative individuals, with levels of this biomarker increasing in a stepwise fashion, “from cognitively unimpaired individuals to individuals with mild cognitive impairment and, finally, to dementia patients,” Huber said.
Of note, capillary p-tau217 levels from DPS samples that were collected by research staff did not differ from unsupervised self-collected samples.
What about the stability of the samples? Capillary DPS p-tau-217 is “stable over 2 weeks at room temperature,” Huber said.
Ready for Prime Time?
Preliminary data from the DROP-AD project highlight the potential of using finger-prick blood collection to identify neurofilament light (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), two other Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers.
“We think that capillary p-tau217, but also other biomarkers, could be a widely accessible and cheap alternative for clinical practice and clinical trials in individuals with cognitive decline if the results are confirmed in longitudinal and home-sampling cohorts,” Huber concluded.
“Measuring biomarkers by a simple finger prick could facilitate regular and autonomous sampling at home, which would be particularly useful in remote and rural settings,” she noted.
The findings in this study confirm and extend earlier findings that the study team reported last year at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC).
“The data shared at CTAD 2024, along with the related material previously presented at AAIC 2023, reporting on a ‘finger prick’ blood test approach is interesting and emerging work but not yet ready for clinical use,” said Rebecca M. Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association vice president of scientific engagement.
“That said, the idea of a highly accessible and scalable tool that can aid in easier and more equitable diagnosis would be welcomed by researchers, clinicians, and individuals and families affected by Alzheimer’s disease and all other dementias,” Edelmayer said.
“This finger-prick blood testing technology for Alzheimer’s biomarkers still has to be validated more broadly, but it is very promising. Advancements in technology and practice demonstrate the simplicity, transportability, and diagnostic value of blood-based biomarkers for Alzheimer’s,” she added.
The Alzheimer’s Association is currently conducting a systematic review of the evidence and preparing clinical practice guidelines on blood-based biomarker tests for specialized healthcare settings, with publications, clinical resources, and tools anticipated in 2025, Edelmayer noted.
The study had no commercial funding. Huber and Edelmayer report no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
In a pilot study, researchers found a good correlation of p-tau217 levels from blood obtained via standard venous sampling and from a single finger prick.
“We see the potential that capillary p-tau217 from dried blood spots could overcome the limitations of standard venous collection of being invasive, dependent on centrifuges and ultra-low temperature freezers, and also requiring less volume than standard plasma analysis,” said lead investigator Hanna Huber, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
The findings were presented at the 17th Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference.
Strong Link Between Venous and Capillary Samples
p-tau217 has emerged as the most effective blood test to identify Alzheimer’s disease. However, traditional venous blood sampling requires certain infrastructure and immediate processing. Increased and simplified access to this blood biomarker could be crucial for early diagnosis, proper patient management, and prompt initiation of disease-modifying treatments.
The DROP-AD project is investigating the diagnostic performance of finger-prick collection to accurately measure p-tau217. In the current study, the research team obtained paired venous blood and capillary blood samples from 206 adults (mean age, 71.8 years; 59% women), with or without cognitive impairment, from five European centers. A subset of participants provided a second finger-prick sample collected without any supervision.
The capillary blood samples were obtained via a single finger prick, and then single blood drops were applied to a dried plasma spot (DPS) card, which was then shipped to a lab (without temperature control or cooling) for p-tau217 measurement. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers were available for a subset of individuals.
Throughout the entire study population, there was a “very convincing correlation” between p-tau217 levels from capillary DPS and venous plasma, Huber told conference attendees.
Additionally, capillary DPS p-tau217 levels were able to discriminate amyloid-positive from amyloid-negative individuals, with levels of this biomarker increasing in a stepwise fashion, “from cognitively unimpaired individuals to individuals with mild cognitive impairment and, finally, to dementia patients,” Huber said.
Of note, capillary p-tau217 levels from DPS samples that were collected by research staff did not differ from unsupervised self-collected samples.
What about the stability of the samples? Capillary DPS p-tau-217 is “stable over 2 weeks at room temperature,” Huber said.
Ready for Prime Time?
Preliminary data from the DROP-AD project highlight the potential of using finger-prick blood collection to identify neurofilament light (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), two other Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers.
“We think that capillary p-tau217, but also other biomarkers, could be a widely accessible and cheap alternative for clinical practice and clinical trials in individuals with cognitive decline if the results are confirmed in longitudinal and home-sampling cohorts,” Huber concluded.
“Measuring biomarkers by a simple finger prick could facilitate regular and autonomous sampling at home, which would be particularly useful in remote and rural settings,” she noted.
The findings in this study confirm and extend earlier findings that the study team reported last year at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC).
“The data shared at CTAD 2024, along with the related material previously presented at AAIC 2023, reporting on a ‘finger prick’ blood test approach is interesting and emerging work but not yet ready for clinical use,” said Rebecca M. Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association vice president of scientific engagement.
“That said, the idea of a highly accessible and scalable tool that can aid in easier and more equitable diagnosis would be welcomed by researchers, clinicians, and individuals and families affected by Alzheimer’s disease and all other dementias,” Edelmayer said.
“This finger-prick blood testing technology for Alzheimer’s biomarkers still has to be validated more broadly, but it is very promising. Advancements in technology and practice demonstrate the simplicity, transportability, and diagnostic value of blood-based biomarkers for Alzheimer’s,” she added.
The Alzheimer’s Association is currently conducting a systematic review of the evidence and preparing clinical practice guidelines on blood-based biomarker tests for specialized healthcare settings, with publications, clinical resources, and tools anticipated in 2025, Edelmayer noted.
The study had no commercial funding. Huber and Edelmayer report no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM CTAD 2024
Minor Progress in Gender Pay Equity, But a Big Gap Persists
Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.
According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.
The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.
In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.
“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”
The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.
On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.
“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.
Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.
Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.
“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.
Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.
“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”
Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.
“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.”
Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.
According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.
The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.
In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.
“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”
The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.
On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.
“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.
Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.
Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.
“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.
Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.
“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”
Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.
“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.”
Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.
According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.
The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.
In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.
“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”
The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.
On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.
“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.
Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.
Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.
“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.
Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.
“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”
Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.
“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.”
Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Maternal BMI and Eating Disorders Tied to Mental Health in Kids
TOPLINE:
Children of mothers who had obesity or eating disorders before or during pregnancy may face higher risks for neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers conducted a population-based cohort study to investigate the association of maternal eating disorders and high prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) with psychiatric disorder and neurodevelopmental diagnoses in offspring.
- They used Finnish national registers to assess all live births from 2004 through 2014, with follow-up until 2021.
- Data of 392,098 mothers (mean age, 30.15 years) and 649,956 offspring (48.86% girls) were included.
- Maternal eating disorders and prepregnancy BMI were the main exposures, with 1.60% of mothers having a history of eating disorders; 5.89% were underweight and 53.13% had obesity.
- Diagnoses of children were identified and grouped by ICD-10 codes of mental, behavioral, and neurodevelopmental disorders, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and conduct disorders, among several others.
TAKEAWAY:
- From birth until 7-17 years of age, 16.43% of offspring were diagnosed with a neurodevelopmental or psychiatric disorder.
- Maternal eating disorders were associated with psychiatric disorders in the offspring, with the largest effect sizes observed for sleep disorders (hazard ratio [HR], 2.36) and social functioning and tic disorders (HR, 2.18; P < .001 for both).
- The offspring of mothers with severe prepregnancy obesity had a more than twofold increased risk for intellectual disabilities (HR, 2.04; 95% CI, 1.83-2.28); being underweight before pregnancy was also linked to many psychiatric disorders in offspring.
- The occurrence of adverse birth outcomes along with maternal eating disorders or high BMI further increased the risk for neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders in the offspring.
IN PRACTICE:
“The findings underline the risk of offspring mental illness associated with maternal eating disorders and prepregnancy BMI and suggest the need to consider these exposures clinically to help prevent offspring mental illness,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
This study was led by Ida A.K. Nilsson, PhD, of the Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, and was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
A limitation of the study was the relatively short follow-up time, which restricted the inclusion of late-onset psychiatric disorder diagnoses, such as schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Paternal data and genetic information, which may have influenced the interpretation of the data, were not available. Another potential bias was that mothers with eating disorders may have been more perceptive to their child’s eating behavior, leading to greater access to care and diagnosis for these children.
DISCLOSURES:
This work was supported by the Swedish Research Council, the regional agreement on medical training and clinical research between Region Stockholm and the Karolinska Institutet, the Swedish Brain Foundation, and other sources. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Children of mothers who had obesity or eating disorders before or during pregnancy may face higher risks for neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers conducted a population-based cohort study to investigate the association of maternal eating disorders and high prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) with psychiatric disorder and neurodevelopmental diagnoses in offspring.
- They used Finnish national registers to assess all live births from 2004 through 2014, with follow-up until 2021.
- Data of 392,098 mothers (mean age, 30.15 years) and 649,956 offspring (48.86% girls) were included.
- Maternal eating disorders and prepregnancy BMI were the main exposures, with 1.60% of mothers having a history of eating disorders; 5.89% were underweight and 53.13% had obesity.
- Diagnoses of children were identified and grouped by ICD-10 codes of mental, behavioral, and neurodevelopmental disorders, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and conduct disorders, among several others.
TAKEAWAY:
- From birth until 7-17 years of age, 16.43% of offspring were diagnosed with a neurodevelopmental or psychiatric disorder.
- Maternal eating disorders were associated with psychiatric disorders in the offspring, with the largest effect sizes observed for sleep disorders (hazard ratio [HR], 2.36) and social functioning and tic disorders (HR, 2.18; P < .001 for both).
- The offspring of mothers with severe prepregnancy obesity had a more than twofold increased risk for intellectual disabilities (HR, 2.04; 95% CI, 1.83-2.28); being underweight before pregnancy was also linked to many psychiatric disorders in offspring.
- The occurrence of adverse birth outcomes along with maternal eating disorders or high BMI further increased the risk for neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders in the offspring.
IN PRACTICE:
“The findings underline the risk of offspring mental illness associated with maternal eating disorders and prepregnancy BMI and suggest the need to consider these exposures clinically to help prevent offspring mental illness,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
This study was led by Ida A.K. Nilsson, PhD, of the Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, and was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
A limitation of the study was the relatively short follow-up time, which restricted the inclusion of late-onset psychiatric disorder diagnoses, such as schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Paternal data and genetic information, which may have influenced the interpretation of the data, were not available. Another potential bias was that mothers with eating disorders may have been more perceptive to their child’s eating behavior, leading to greater access to care and diagnosis for these children.
DISCLOSURES:
This work was supported by the Swedish Research Council, the regional agreement on medical training and clinical research between Region Stockholm and the Karolinska Institutet, the Swedish Brain Foundation, and other sources. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
Children of mothers who had obesity or eating disorders before or during pregnancy may face higher risks for neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders.
METHODOLOGY:
- Researchers conducted a population-based cohort study to investigate the association of maternal eating disorders and high prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) with psychiatric disorder and neurodevelopmental diagnoses in offspring.
- They used Finnish national registers to assess all live births from 2004 through 2014, with follow-up until 2021.
- Data of 392,098 mothers (mean age, 30.15 years) and 649,956 offspring (48.86% girls) were included.
- Maternal eating disorders and prepregnancy BMI were the main exposures, with 1.60% of mothers having a history of eating disorders; 5.89% were underweight and 53.13% had obesity.
- Diagnoses of children were identified and grouped by ICD-10 codes of mental, behavioral, and neurodevelopmental disorders, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, sleep disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and conduct disorders, among several others.
TAKEAWAY:
- From birth until 7-17 years of age, 16.43% of offspring were diagnosed with a neurodevelopmental or psychiatric disorder.
- Maternal eating disorders were associated with psychiatric disorders in the offspring, with the largest effect sizes observed for sleep disorders (hazard ratio [HR], 2.36) and social functioning and tic disorders (HR, 2.18; P < .001 for both).
- The offspring of mothers with severe prepregnancy obesity had a more than twofold increased risk for intellectual disabilities (HR, 2.04; 95% CI, 1.83-2.28); being underweight before pregnancy was also linked to many psychiatric disorders in offspring.
- The occurrence of adverse birth outcomes along with maternal eating disorders or high BMI further increased the risk for neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders in the offspring.
IN PRACTICE:
“The findings underline the risk of offspring mental illness associated with maternal eating disorders and prepregnancy BMI and suggest the need to consider these exposures clinically to help prevent offspring mental illness,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
This study was led by Ida A.K. Nilsson, PhD, of the Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, and was published online in JAMA Network Open.
LIMITATIONS:
A limitation of the study was the relatively short follow-up time, which restricted the inclusion of late-onset psychiatric disorder diagnoses, such as schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Paternal data and genetic information, which may have influenced the interpretation of the data, were not available. Another potential bias was that mothers with eating disorders may have been more perceptive to their child’s eating behavior, leading to greater access to care and diagnosis for these children.
DISCLOSURES:
This work was supported by the Swedish Research Council, the regional agreement on medical training and clinical research between Region Stockholm and the Karolinska Institutet, the Swedish Brain Foundation, and other sources. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.
This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Is This Methadone’s Moment?
Methadone has been shown to be highly effective for opioid use disorder. So why is it still so difficult to prescribe in the United States and is that about to change?
This paper included more than 30,000 patients with opioid use disorder and showed those on methadone were almost 60% significantly less likely to stop treatment at 24 months than their peers assigned to buprenorphine/naloxone (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.58), with no difference in mortality risk (aHR, 0.57).
“In Canada, unlike the US, methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone are both available in office-based settings. Methadone really outperforms buprenorphine/naloxone in being able to retain people in treatment, which is our main goal and comes with a host of benefits,” Bohdan Nosyk, PhD, with Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, who worked on the study, said in an interview.
In addition, a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of relevant research involving more than 1 million patients with opioid use disorder also showed better treatment retention with methadone than with buprenorphine.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, relaxed methadone regulations, that included take-home medications, did not lead to an increase in overdoses. Instead, these changes improved treatment retention and patient experiences, highlighting the potential benefits of further deregulation.
‘Atrocious’ Outdated Policies
However, despite methadone’s proven efficacy and safety for opioid use disorder, it remains vastly underutilized because of outdated US policies restricting its use to opioid treatment programs (OTPs).
“It’s absolutely atrocious that methadone policies have not kept up with the evidence. If you look at other countries that have expanded their access to methadone, their overdose rates have fallen dramatically,” said Leslie Suen, MD, with the University of California, San Francisco, and coauthor of a recent JAMA Viewpoint on this topic.
“Methadone is a very good medication that’s been shown over and over to be very effective and safe,” Alan Leshner, PhD, past director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in an interview.
“There is no reason why it couldn’t be administered through pharmacies or through physicians’ offices as long as it’s done in a controlled and careful way,” said Leshner.
Leshner chaired the committee that produced the 2019 report Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Save Lives.
“We learned during COVID that increasing the amount of take-home methadone and increasing access does not lead to an increase in deaths or an increase in overdose, so it’s hard to find a reason not to do it,” he said.
Change Finally on the Horizon?
Several recent and proposed policy changes could revolutionize methadone delivery in the United States.
In March 2022, in response to the pandemic, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allowed hospitals to dispense up to a 3-day supply of methadone (known as the 72-hour rule) to bridge care transitions without needing OTPs.
In April 2024, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and DEA codified many methadone and buprenorphine delivery flexibilities granted temporarily during the pandemic, including increased use of telehealth assessments and earlier access to take-home methadone doses.
Another contemporary policy change is expansion of the Americans with Disabilities Act mandating that patients taking medications for opioid use disorder, such as methadone, be able to continue treatment when transitioning to settings such as hospitals, jails, and skilled nursing facilities.
At the state level, California Governor Gavin Newsom recently signed a bill, effective immediately, that expands access to methadone treatment in his state.
On the horizon at the federal level is the Modernizing Opioid Treatment Access Act (MOTAA) — the bipartisan and bicameral bill introduced by Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), along with Rep. Donald Norcross (D-NJ) and Rep. Don Bacon, (R-NE) — that would allow methadone to be prescribed by addiction specialists and dispensed in community pharmacies.
An Ethical Imperative
“With only about 2000 OTP clinics clustered in urban areas, less than 25% of people who are diagnosed with opioid use disorder are actually able to access methadone,” Caty Simon, with the National Survivors Union, Greensboro, North Carolina, and coauthor of the JAMA Viewpoint, said in an interview.
While MOTAA represents a major step forward, limiting methadone prescribing to addiction specialists may not fully address the treatment gap, particularly in rural and underserved areas, Simon said.
To optimize methadone’s potential, she’d like to see further expansion of prescribing privileges to general healthcare providers.
“As someone with lived and living experience of opioid use and treatment, and somebody who works nationally and locally in organizations of people impacted by drug use, I know people in my area right now — marginalized people of color — who would have much better chances of survival if they were able to access methadone. If MOTAA passed tomorrow, we could save so many lives. There is an ethical imperative to pass it,” Simon said.
Leshner said he is “always very concerned about access, particularly for underserved populations, poor people, people living in rural areas. If you can access the medications you need, you’re in big trouble.”
Is this methadone’s moment? “I’m a little optimistic, but I haven’t seen the progress I would like to see,” Leshner said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Methadone has been shown to be highly effective for opioid use disorder. So why is it still so difficult to prescribe in the United States and is that about to change?
This paper included more than 30,000 patients with opioid use disorder and showed those on methadone were almost 60% significantly less likely to stop treatment at 24 months than their peers assigned to buprenorphine/naloxone (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.58), with no difference in mortality risk (aHR, 0.57).
“In Canada, unlike the US, methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone are both available in office-based settings. Methadone really outperforms buprenorphine/naloxone in being able to retain people in treatment, which is our main goal and comes with a host of benefits,” Bohdan Nosyk, PhD, with Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, who worked on the study, said in an interview.
In addition, a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of relevant research involving more than 1 million patients with opioid use disorder also showed better treatment retention with methadone than with buprenorphine.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, relaxed methadone regulations, that included take-home medications, did not lead to an increase in overdoses. Instead, these changes improved treatment retention and patient experiences, highlighting the potential benefits of further deregulation.
‘Atrocious’ Outdated Policies
However, despite methadone’s proven efficacy and safety for opioid use disorder, it remains vastly underutilized because of outdated US policies restricting its use to opioid treatment programs (OTPs).
“It’s absolutely atrocious that methadone policies have not kept up with the evidence. If you look at other countries that have expanded their access to methadone, their overdose rates have fallen dramatically,” said Leslie Suen, MD, with the University of California, San Francisco, and coauthor of a recent JAMA Viewpoint on this topic.
“Methadone is a very good medication that’s been shown over and over to be very effective and safe,” Alan Leshner, PhD, past director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in an interview.
“There is no reason why it couldn’t be administered through pharmacies or through physicians’ offices as long as it’s done in a controlled and careful way,” said Leshner.
Leshner chaired the committee that produced the 2019 report Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Save Lives.
“We learned during COVID that increasing the amount of take-home methadone and increasing access does not lead to an increase in deaths or an increase in overdose, so it’s hard to find a reason not to do it,” he said.
Change Finally on the Horizon?
Several recent and proposed policy changes could revolutionize methadone delivery in the United States.
In March 2022, in response to the pandemic, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allowed hospitals to dispense up to a 3-day supply of methadone (known as the 72-hour rule) to bridge care transitions without needing OTPs.
In April 2024, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and DEA codified many methadone and buprenorphine delivery flexibilities granted temporarily during the pandemic, including increased use of telehealth assessments and earlier access to take-home methadone doses.
Another contemporary policy change is expansion of the Americans with Disabilities Act mandating that patients taking medications for opioid use disorder, such as methadone, be able to continue treatment when transitioning to settings such as hospitals, jails, and skilled nursing facilities.
At the state level, California Governor Gavin Newsom recently signed a bill, effective immediately, that expands access to methadone treatment in his state.
On the horizon at the federal level is the Modernizing Opioid Treatment Access Act (MOTAA) — the bipartisan and bicameral bill introduced by Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), along with Rep. Donald Norcross (D-NJ) and Rep. Don Bacon, (R-NE) — that would allow methadone to be prescribed by addiction specialists and dispensed in community pharmacies.
An Ethical Imperative
“With only about 2000 OTP clinics clustered in urban areas, less than 25% of people who are diagnosed with opioid use disorder are actually able to access methadone,” Caty Simon, with the National Survivors Union, Greensboro, North Carolina, and coauthor of the JAMA Viewpoint, said in an interview.
While MOTAA represents a major step forward, limiting methadone prescribing to addiction specialists may not fully address the treatment gap, particularly in rural and underserved areas, Simon said.
To optimize methadone’s potential, she’d like to see further expansion of prescribing privileges to general healthcare providers.
“As someone with lived and living experience of opioid use and treatment, and somebody who works nationally and locally in organizations of people impacted by drug use, I know people in my area right now — marginalized people of color — who would have much better chances of survival if they were able to access methadone. If MOTAA passed tomorrow, we could save so many lives. There is an ethical imperative to pass it,” Simon said.
Leshner said he is “always very concerned about access, particularly for underserved populations, poor people, people living in rural areas. If you can access the medications you need, you’re in big trouble.”
Is this methadone’s moment? “I’m a little optimistic, but I haven’t seen the progress I would like to see,” Leshner said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Methadone has been shown to be highly effective for opioid use disorder. So why is it still so difficult to prescribe in the United States and is that about to change?
This paper included more than 30,000 patients with opioid use disorder and showed those on methadone were almost 60% significantly less likely to stop treatment at 24 months than their peers assigned to buprenorphine/naloxone (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.58), with no difference in mortality risk (aHR, 0.57).
“In Canada, unlike the US, methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone are both available in office-based settings. Methadone really outperforms buprenorphine/naloxone in being able to retain people in treatment, which is our main goal and comes with a host of benefits,” Bohdan Nosyk, PhD, with Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, who worked on the study, said in an interview.
In addition, a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of relevant research involving more than 1 million patients with opioid use disorder also showed better treatment retention with methadone than with buprenorphine.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, relaxed methadone regulations, that included take-home medications, did not lead to an increase in overdoses. Instead, these changes improved treatment retention and patient experiences, highlighting the potential benefits of further deregulation.
‘Atrocious’ Outdated Policies
However, despite methadone’s proven efficacy and safety for opioid use disorder, it remains vastly underutilized because of outdated US policies restricting its use to opioid treatment programs (OTPs).
“It’s absolutely atrocious that methadone policies have not kept up with the evidence. If you look at other countries that have expanded their access to methadone, their overdose rates have fallen dramatically,” said Leslie Suen, MD, with the University of California, San Francisco, and coauthor of a recent JAMA Viewpoint on this topic.
“Methadone is a very good medication that’s been shown over and over to be very effective and safe,” Alan Leshner, PhD, past director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in an interview.
“There is no reason why it couldn’t be administered through pharmacies or through physicians’ offices as long as it’s done in a controlled and careful way,” said Leshner.
Leshner chaired the committee that produced the 2019 report Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Save Lives.
“We learned during COVID that increasing the amount of take-home methadone and increasing access does not lead to an increase in deaths or an increase in overdose, so it’s hard to find a reason not to do it,” he said.
Change Finally on the Horizon?
Several recent and proposed policy changes could revolutionize methadone delivery in the United States.
In March 2022, in response to the pandemic, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allowed hospitals to dispense up to a 3-day supply of methadone (known as the 72-hour rule) to bridge care transitions without needing OTPs.
In April 2024, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and DEA codified many methadone and buprenorphine delivery flexibilities granted temporarily during the pandemic, including increased use of telehealth assessments and earlier access to take-home methadone doses.
Another contemporary policy change is expansion of the Americans with Disabilities Act mandating that patients taking medications for opioid use disorder, such as methadone, be able to continue treatment when transitioning to settings such as hospitals, jails, and skilled nursing facilities.
At the state level, California Governor Gavin Newsom recently signed a bill, effective immediately, that expands access to methadone treatment in his state.
On the horizon at the federal level is the Modernizing Opioid Treatment Access Act (MOTAA) — the bipartisan and bicameral bill introduced by Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), along with Rep. Donald Norcross (D-NJ) and Rep. Don Bacon, (R-NE) — that would allow methadone to be prescribed by addiction specialists and dispensed in community pharmacies.
An Ethical Imperative
“With only about 2000 OTP clinics clustered in urban areas, less than 25% of people who are diagnosed with opioid use disorder are actually able to access methadone,” Caty Simon, with the National Survivors Union, Greensboro, North Carolina, and coauthor of the JAMA Viewpoint, said in an interview.
While MOTAA represents a major step forward, limiting methadone prescribing to addiction specialists may not fully address the treatment gap, particularly in rural and underserved areas, Simon said.
To optimize methadone’s potential, she’d like to see further expansion of prescribing privileges to general healthcare providers.
“As someone with lived and living experience of opioid use and treatment, and somebody who works nationally and locally in organizations of people impacted by drug use, I know people in my area right now — marginalized people of color — who would have much better chances of survival if they were able to access methadone. If MOTAA passed tomorrow, we could save so many lives. There is an ethical imperative to pass it,” Simon said.
Leshner said he is “always very concerned about access, particularly for underserved populations, poor people, people living in rural areas. If you can access the medications you need, you’re in big trouble.”
Is this methadone’s moment? “I’m a little optimistic, but I haven’t seen the progress I would like to see,” Leshner said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FDA Okays Abuse-Deterrent Opioid for Severe Pain
Roxybond, an immediate-release (IR) formulation of oxycodone hydrochloride, is made with Protega’s SentryBond technology, which makes it harder for people to crush, inject, or snort, according to the company.
In a statement from Protega, Paul Howe, the company’s chief commercial officer, said the drug meets an “unmet need for an IR opioid with abuse-deterrent technology that may reduce misuse and abuse while providing pain relief to medically appropriate patients when used as indicated.”
To determine the tablet’s ability to withstand manipulation, more than 2000 in vitro tests were conducted, according to the release. The findings indicate Roxybond reduces — but does not entirely negate — the potential for intranasal and intravenous abuse.
Roxybond was previously approved in 5-, 15-, and 30-mg doses. The 10 mg option provides clinicians with the ability to better modify side effects, manage titration, and provide precision care for patients on opioid therapy, according to Protega.
“For patients, the range of doses can provide better pain control, reduce the risk of side effects, and provide a smoother transition during dosing transitions,” the company stated.
Roxybond is contraindicated in patients with significant respiratory depression, acute or severe bronchial asthma, gastrointestinal obstruction, or hypersensitivity to oxycodone. The drug is not intended for long-term use unless otherwise determined by a clinician. Roxybond also is subject to the FDA’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for opioids.
“The development of Roxybond with SentryBond is a step forward in fighting the national epidemic of prescription opioid overdose,” said Eric Kinzler, PhD, vice president of medical and regulatory affairs for Protega, in a release. “Protega is dedicated to our mission to block the path to abuse and work with healthcare professionals across the continuum of care to reduce misuse and abuse.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Roxybond, an immediate-release (IR) formulation of oxycodone hydrochloride, is made with Protega’s SentryBond technology, which makes it harder for people to crush, inject, or snort, according to the company.
In a statement from Protega, Paul Howe, the company’s chief commercial officer, said the drug meets an “unmet need for an IR opioid with abuse-deterrent technology that may reduce misuse and abuse while providing pain relief to medically appropriate patients when used as indicated.”
To determine the tablet’s ability to withstand manipulation, more than 2000 in vitro tests were conducted, according to the release. The findings indicate Roxybond reduces — but does not entirely negate — the potential for intranasal and intravenous abuse.
Roxybond was previously approved in 5-, 15-, and 30-mg doses. The 10 mg option provides clinicians with the ability to better modify side effects, manage titration, and provide precision care for patients on opioid therapy, according to Protega.
“For patients, the range of doses can provide better pain control, reduce the risk of side effects, and provide a smoother transition during dosing transitions,” the company stated.
Roxybond is contraindicated in patients with significant respiratory depression, acute or severe bronchial asthma, gastrointestinal obstruction, or hypersensitivity to oxycodone. The drug is not intended for long-term use unless otherwise determined by a clinician. Roxybond also is subject to the FDA’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for opioids.
“The development of Roxybond with SentryBond is a step forward in fighting the national epidemic of prescription opioid overdose,” said Eric Kinzler, PhD, vice president of medical and regulatory affairs for Protega, in a release. “Protega is dedicated to our mission to block the path to abuse and work with healthcare professionals across the continuum of care to reduce misuse and abuse.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Roxybond, an immediate-release (IR) formulation of oxycodone hydrochloride, is made with Protega’s SentryBond technology, which makes it harder for people to crush, inject, or snort, according to the company.
In a statement from Protega, Paul Howe, the company’s chief commercial officer, said the drug meets an “unmet need for an IR opioid with abuse-deterrent technology that may reduce misuse and abuse while providing pain relief to medically appropriate patients when used as indicated.”
To determine the tablet’s ability to withstand manipulation, more than 2000 in vitro tests were conducted, according to the release. The findings indicate Roxybond reduces — but does not entirely negate — the potential for intranasal and intravenous abuse.
Roxybond was previously approved in 5-, 15-, and 30-mg doses. The 10 mg option provides clinicians with the ability to better modify side effects, manage titration, and provide precision care for patients on opioid therapy, according to Protega.
“For patients, the range of doses can provide better pain control, reduce the risk of side effects, and provide a smoother transition during dosing transitions,” the company stated.
Roxybond is contraindicated in patients with significant respiratory depression, acute or severe bronchial asthma, gastrointestinal obstruction, or hypersensitivity to oxycodone. The drug is not intended for long-term use unless otherwise determined by a clinician. Roxybond also is subject to the FDA’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for opioids.
“The development of Roxybond with SentryBond is a step forward in fighting the national epidemic of prescription opioid overdose,” said Eric Kinzler, PhD, vice president of medical and regulatory affairs for Protega, in a release. “Protega is dedicated to our mission to block the path to abuse and work with healthcare professionals across the continuum of care to reduce misuse and abuse.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
More Evidence Avatar Therapy Quiets Auditory Hallucinations in Psychosis
, results from the largest study of avatar therapy to date show.
The therapy allows patients to interact with a “digital embodiment” of the voice they hear, which is represented by a computer-generated face, also known as an avatar.
In the randomized, multisite, phase 2/3 AVATAR2 trial, patients who received AVATAR-Extended therapy, which included a personalized series of voiced dialogues based on their life history, plus treatment as usual (TAU) showed significantly greater improvement in distress and voice severity levels at 16 weeks vs those who received TAU only. They also had significant reductions in voice frequency at 16 and 28 weeks.
Patients in a third arm who were assigned to TAU plus AVATAR-Brief therapy, which included six sessions of a standardized version of the therapy, also showed improvements at 16 weeks, compared with TAU alone — but the clinical impact was stronger with the extended version.
“I was surprised at the extent to which the extended version seemed to be a more optimal version, and it should be the way forward with this therapy,” said study investigator Philippa A. Garety, PhD, professor emerita of clinical psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience at King’s College, London, England.
With more than 300 participants, AVATAR2 is the largest trial to access avatar therapy to date, Garety noted.
“What’s unique about this work is that technology allows us to create safe face-to-face encounters with a representation of a person’s voice and allows them to relate to that voice in a new way,” she added.
The findings were published online in Nature Medicine.
A Decade of Research
Auditory verbal hallucinations are common in patients with schizophrenia, but currently available therapies can be ineffective, investigators wrote.
The therapy allows patients to customize how the avatar looks and sounds. Face-to-face dialogues are then conducted between the patients and avatars in order to build empowerment. A trained therapist provides support during these sessions.
As previously reported, the creator of avatar therapy, Julian Leff, MD, presented promising results from a pilot study of 26 patients at the International Congress of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2014.
“Opening up a dialogue between a patient and the voice they’ve been hearing is powerful,” said Leff, who was emeritus professor at the Institute of Psychiatry in London at the time.
In 2018, a randomized single-site study (AVATAR1) of 150 participants showed that the intervention was associated with a greater decrease in voice severity at 12 weeks vs supportive therapy. Past research led to the idea of incorporating personalization to better optimize the experience.
Garety noted that AVATAR2 is the largest trial to date of the therapy, as well as the first multisite trial to test the intervention, which was important in order to determine whether it could work outside of a research setting.
The study included 345 participants (61.4% men; mean age, 39.6 years) from three sites in England and one in Scotland. All were randomly assigned to receive TAU alone (n = 115), TAU plus AVATAR-Brief (n = 116), or TAU plus AVATAR-Extended (n = 114).
TAU typically included use of antipsychotics, as well as outpatient psychiatric visits and follow-up by case managers and care coordinators.
“We didn’t interfere with treatment as usual. We wanted to test whether adding this therapy to [TAU] would enhance effects and provide better treatment for their voices,” Garety noted.
AVATAR-Brief included a standardized process that focused on such things as self-esteem and assertiveness. AVATAR-Extended had two phases. In the first, participants received AVATAR-Brief therapy, whereas the second phase offered a more personalized intervention.
An ‘Unusual Finding’
The study’s primary outcome was voice-related distress at 16 and 28 weeks. Although the TAU plus AVATAR-Extended group did show a significant decrease in distress at 16 weeks vs TAU alone (–1.6 points; P = .029), the improvement was no longer significant at the 28-week follow-up (P = .175). The same was also true for the key secondary outcome of reduction in voice severity (–2.32 points; P = .009 at 16 weeks but P =.1 at 28 weeks).
The investigators noted that this might be caused by the number of dropouts in the AVATAR-Extended group by the 28-week timepoint. The completion rate for those patients was only 58%. The completion rate for the shorter, AVATAR-Brief group was 82%.
On the other hand, the other key secondary outcome of voice frequency was significantly reduced with AVATAR-Extended at both 16 weeks (–0.62 point; P = .01) and 28 weeks (–0.89 point; P = .003).
“This is an unusual finding. We’re not aware of any other psychological therapy that shows a reduction in the occurrence of the voice,” Garety said.
For TAU plus AVATAR-Brief, there were improvements at 16 weeks for distress (-1.05 points; P = .035) vs TAU alone. However, the researchers noted that this version of the therapy was just below the prespecified threshold for a clinically significant change and was at the threshold for statistical significance.
Although the shorter therapy was associated with a reduction in voice severity level at 16 weeks (–2.04 points; P = .017) vs TAU alone, there was no reduction in distress or voice severity at 28 weeks. There was no improvement in voice frequency at either timepoint.
Both the brief and the extended versions of AVATAR therapy showed improved mood and anxiety levels at 16 weeks and sustained improvement in well-being and recovery, the researchers noted.
“The short version, as expected, did deliver benefits posttreatment, but clearly the extended, optimized version outperformed the brief version. It had stronger and more lasting effects across quite a wide range of outcomes that matter to people who hear voices,” Garety said.
“In the extended version, people felt more empowered. And in just that version, the frequency of voices was reduced, which is a very important outcome,” she added.
Safety Issues?
There were 58 serious adverse events (SAEs) in total, with 51% of those occurring in the AVATAR-Extended group. Two participants in that group died; however, independent reviews deemed these events as not related to the intervention.
In addition, there were no “definitely related” SAEs and only a small number of “possibly related” SAEs, which typically included hospitalization with other contributory factors.
Garety noted during a press briefing that AVATAR therapy has now been demonstrated to be safe across two large trials.
Study limitations cited included no direct comparison between AVATAR-Brief and AVATAR-Extended or between AVATAR therapy and a different type of psychological treatment.
Overall, “we recommend that future development and provision of AVATAR therapy is primarily guided” by the AVATAR-Extended protocol, the investigators wrote.
Because the therapy was recommended by a National Institute for Health and Care Excellence Early Value Assessment, the investigators are now seeking to provide it in routine National Health Service settings to gather further real-world evidence of effectiveness over the next 3 years.
Next Steps
Although the intervention isn’t currently available to everybody who might be seeking it, “there’s a pipeline of movement from research into treatment and it’s moving towards the next stage of delivery,” Garety said.
Investigators are also looking into cultural adaptations for the therapy so it can be used in different locales, including Ethiopia and India, she added. There isn’t a US version yet, but Garety noted that investigators in Canada are looking at similar research and suspects that will also occur in the United States soon.
“We’re pioneers in this work, and it now needs to be going international and into services,” she said. “We have had many people who hear voices say what an amazing experience this has been. So, I feel very proud and excited to have been able to be part of this.”
At the press briefing, Miranda Wolpert, director of mental health at Wellcome, which funded the study, noted that it is encouraging to see the development of a new intervention that could potentially change the lives of patients across the world.
“We know that psychosis can start early in life, stopping people from having the jobs and relationships they want and from achieving the goals they want. This intervention was developed with those people to help them address an issue that really troubles them,” Wolpert said.
“For me, this represents part of a revolution we are starting to see in terms of mental health interventions and the potential impact on mental health science,” she added.
Digital Placebo Effect?
Commenting on the findings, John Torous, MD, a psychiatrist and director of digital psychiatry at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, said there is a need for new treatments for schizophrenia that work with different mechanisms.
“We have a lot of medication studies but not as many innovative therapy studies. I think it’s exciting that the results, at least in the shorter-term outcome, were positive. And I think that’s something that can give people hope in using these new technologies,” said Torous, who is also an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and was not involved with the research.
Still, he did note some study limitations, including whether there could have been some type of “digital placebo effect” from the therapy.
“If you tell people they’re getting high-tech advanced digital care, that may have some effect,” he said, adding that “it’s always interesting” to tease out the benefit being delivered by the technology vs the delivery mechanism itself — or some combination of both.
Torous added, though, that it’s very difficult to have a rigorous digital control group. “It’s not necessarily a fault of their study, but it’s something to keep in mind when interpreting what the results are.”
He also noted that he would have liked to have seen a direct comparison between this new kind of psychological therapy vs standard psychological therapy, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy.
In addition, he wondered about expenses and scalability of the intervention, and whether patients would need to go to a specialized center to undergo treatment. Torous mentioned that a version involving virtual reality could perhaps make this more scalable in the future.
Overall, he said that what the investigators are currently doing is very innovative. “It’s exciting that we’re talking about the next steps. Giving people new options for psychological therapy that may be effective for their disorders is really wonderful to see,” Torous said.
The study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), the Wellcome Trust King’s Clinical Research Facility, the NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, King’s College London, the Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, and NHS Research Scotland, as well as by a grant from Wellcome. Garety reports being an unpaid scientific adviser to Avatar Therapy. Financial disclosures for the other investigators are fully listed in the original article. Torous reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, results from the largest study of avatar therapy to date show.
The therapy allows patients to interact with a “digital embodiment” of the voice they hear, which is represented by a computer-generated face, also known as an avatar.
In the randomized, multisite, phase 2/3 AVATAR2 trial, patients who received AVATAR-Extended therapy, which included a personalized series of voiced dialogues based on their life history, plus treatment as usual (TAU) showed significantly greater improvement in distress and voice severity levels at 16 weeks vs those who received TAU only. They also had significant reductions in voice frequency at 16 and 28 weeks.
Patients in a third arm who were assigned to TAU plus AVATAR-Brief therapy, which included six sessions of a standardized version of the therapy, also showed improvements at 16 weeks, compared with TAU alone — but the clinical impact was stronger with the extended version.
“I was surprised at the extent to which the extended version seemed to be a more optimal version, and it should be the way forward with this therapy,” said study investigator Philippa A. Garety, PhD, professor emerita of clinical psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience at King’s College, London, England.
With more than 300 participants, AVATAR2 is the largest trial to access avatar therapy to date, Garety noted.
“What’s unique about this work is that technology allows us to create safe face-to-face encounters with a representation of a person’s voice and allows them to relate to that voice in a new way,” she added.
The findings were published online in Nature Medicine.
A Decade of Research
Auditory verbal hallucinations are common in patients with schizophrenia, but currently available therapies can be ineffective, investigators wrote.
The therapy allows patients to customize how the avatar looks and sounds. Face-to-face dialogues are then conducted between the patients and avatars in order to build empowerment. A trained therapist provides support during these sessions.
As previously reported, the creator of avatar therapy, Julian Leff, MD, presented promising results from a pilot study of 26 patients at the International Congress of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2014.
“Opening up a dialogue between a patient and the voice they’ve been hearing is powerful,” said Leff, who was emeritus professor at the Institute of Psychiatry in London at the time.
In 2018, a randomized single-site study (AVATAR1) of 150 participants showed that the intervention was associated with a greater decrease in voice severity at 12 weeks vs supportive therapy. Past research led to the idea of incorporating personalization to better optimize the experience.
Garety noted that AVATAR2 is the largest trial to date of the therapy, as well as the first multisite trial to test the intervention, which was important in order to determine whether it could work outside of a research setting.
The study included 345 participants (61.4% men; mean age, 39.6 years) from three sites in England and one in Scotland. All were randomly assigned to receive TAU alone (n = 115), TAU plus AVATAR-Brief (n = 116), or TAU plus AVATAR-Extended (n = 114).
TAU typically included use of antipsychotics, as well as outpatient psychiatric visits and follow-up by case managers and care coordinators.
“We didn’t interfere with treatment as usual. We wanted to test whether adding this therapy to [TAU] would enhance effects and provide better treatment for their voices,” Garety noted.
AVATAR-Brief included a standardized process that focused on such things as self-esteem and assertiveness. AVATAR-Extended had two phases. In the first, participants received AVATAR-Brief therapy, whereas the second phase offered a more personalized intervention.
An ‘Unusual Finding’
The study’s primary outcome was voice-related distress at 16 and 28 weeks. Although the TAU plus AVATAR-Extended group did show a significant decrease in distress at 16 weeks vs TAU alone (–1.6 points; P = .029), the improvement was no longer significant at the 28-week follow-up (P = .175). The same was also true for the key secondary outcome of reduction in voice severity (–2.32 points; P = .009 at 16 weeks but P =.1 at 28 weeks).
The investigators noted that this might be caused by the number of dropouts in the AVATAR-Extended group by the 28-week timepoint. The completion rate for those patients was only 58%. The completion rate for the shorter, AVATAR-Brief group was 82%.
On the other hand, the other key secondary outcome of voice frequency was significantly reduced with AVATAR-Extended at both 16 weeks (–0.62 point; P = .01) and 28 weeks (–0.89 point; P = .003).
“This is an unusual finding. We’re not aware of any other psychological therapy that shows a reduction in the occurrence of the voice,” Garety said.
For TAU plus AVATAR-Brief, there were improvements at 16 weeks for distress (-1.05 points; P = .035) vs TAU alone. However, the researchers noted that this version of the therapy was just below the prespecified threshold for a clinically significant change and was at the threshold for statistical significance.
Although the shorter therapy was associated with a reduction in voice severity level at 16 weeks (–2.04 points; P = .017) vs TAU alone, there was no reduction in distress or voice severity at 28 weeks. There was no improvement in voice frequency at either timepoint.
Both the brief and the extended versions of AVATAR therapy showed improved mood and anxiety levels at 16 weeks and sustained improvement in well-being and recovery, the researchers noted.
“The short version, as expected, did deliver benefits posttreatment, but clearly the extended, optimized version outperformed the brief version. It had stronger and more lasting effects across quite a wide range of outcomes that matter to people who hear voices,” Garety said.
“In the extended version, people felt more empowered. And in just that version, the frequency of voices was reduced, which is a very important outcome,” she added.
Safety Issues?
There were 58 serious adverse events (SAEs) in total, with 51% of those occurring in the AVATAR-Extended group. Two participants in that group died; however, independent reviews deemed these events as not related to the intervention.
In addition, there were no “definitely related” SAEs and only a small number of “possibly related” SAEs, which typically included hospitalization with other contributory factors.
Garety noted during a press briefing that AVATAR therapy has now been demonstrated to be safe across two large trials.
Study limitations cited included no direct comparison between AVATAR-Brief and AVATAR-Extended or between AVATAR therapy and a different type of psychological treatment.
Overall, “we recommend that future development and provision of AVATAR therapy is primarily guided” by the AVATAR-Extended protocol, the investigators wrote.
Because the therapy was recommended by a National Institute for Health and Care Excellence Early Value Assessment, the investigators are now seeking to provide it in routine National Health Service settings to gather further real-world evidence of effectiveness over the next 3 years.
Next Steps
Although the intervention isn’t currently available to everybody who might be seeking it, “there’s a pipeline of movement from research into treatment and it’s moving towards the next stage of delivery,” Garety said.
Investigators are also looking into cultural adaptations for the therapy so it can be used in different locales, including Ethiopia and India, she added. There isn’t a US version yet, but Garety noted that investigators in Canada are looking at similar research and suspects that will also occur in the United States soon.
“We’re pioneers in this work, and it now needs to be going international and into services,” she said. “We have had many people who hear voices say what an amazing experience this has been. So, I feel very proud and excited to have been able to be part of this.”
At the press briefing, Miranda Wolpert, director of mental health at Wellcome, which funded the study, noted that it is encouraging to see the development of a new intervention that could potentially change the lives of patients across the world.
“We know that psychosis can start early in life, stopping people from having the jobs and relationships they want and from achieving the goals they want. This intervention was developed with those people to help them address an issue that really troubles them,” Wolpert said.
“For me, this represents part of a revolution we are starting to see in terms of mental health interventions and the potential impact on mental health science,” she added.
Digital Placebo Effect?
Commenting on the findings, John Torous, MD, a psychiatrist and director of digital psychiatry at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, said there is a need for new treatments for schizophrenia that work with different mechanisms.
“We have a lot of medication studies but not as many innovative therapy studies. I think it’s exciting that the results, at least in the shorter-term outcome, were positive. And I think that’s something that can give people hope in using these new technologies,” said Torous, who is also an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and was not involved with the research.
Still, he did note some study limitations, including whether there could have been some type of “digital placebo effect” from the therapy.
“If you tell people they’re getting high-tech advanced digital care, that may have some effect,” he said, adding that “it’s always interesting” to tease out the benefit being delivered by the technology vs the delivery mechanism itself — or some combination of both.
Torous added, though, that it’s very difficult to have a rigorous digital control group. “It’s not necessarily a fault of their study, but it’s something to keep in mind when interpreting what the results are.”
He also noted that he would have liked to have seen a direct comparison between this new kind of psychological therapy vs standard psychological therapy, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy.
In addition, he wondered about expenses and scalability of the intervention, and whether patients would need to go to a specialized center to undergo treatment. Torous mentioned that a version involving virtual reality could perhaps make this more scalable in the future.
Overall, he said that what the investigators are currently doing is very innovative. “It’s exciting that we’re talking about the next steps. Giving people new options for psychological therapy that may be effective for their disorders is really wonderful to see,” Torous said.
The study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), the Wellcome Trust King’s Clinical Research Facility, the NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, King’s College London, the Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, and NHS Research Scotland, as well as by a grant from Wellcome. Garety reports being an unpaid scientific adviser to Avatar Therapy. Financial disclosures for the other investigators are fully listed in the original article. Torous reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
, results from the largest study of avatar therapy to date show.
The therapy allows patients to interact with a “digital embodiment” of the voice they hear, which is represented by a computer-generated face, also known as an avatar.
In the randomized, multisite, phase 2/3 AVATAR2 trial, patients who received AVATAR-Extended therapy, which included a personalized series of voiced dialogues based on their life history, plus treatment as usual (TAU) showed significantly greater improvement in distress and voice severity levels at 16 weeks vs those who received TAU only. They also had significant reductions in voice frequency at 16 and 28 weeks.
Patients in a third arm who were assigned to TAU plus AVATAR-Brief therapy, which included six sessions of a standardized version of the therapy, also showed improvements at 16 weeks, compared with TAU alone — but the clinical impact was stronger with the extended version.
“I was surprised at the extent to which the extended version seemed to be a more optimal version, and it should be the way forward with this therapy,” said study investigator Philippa A. Garety, PhD, professor emerita of clinical psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience at King’s College, London, England.
With more than 300 participants, AVATAR2 is the largest trial to access avatar therapy to date, Garety noted.
“What’s unique about this work is that technology allows us to create safe face-to-face encounters with a representation of a person’s voice and allows them to relate to that voice in a new way,” she added.
The findings were published online in Nature Medicine.
A Decade of Research
Auditory verbal hallucinations are common in patients with schizophrenia, but currently available therapies can be ineffective, investigators wrote.
The therapy allows patients to customize how the avatar looks and sounds. Face-to-face dialogues are then conducted between the patients and avatars in order to build empowerment. A trained therapist provides support during these sessions.
As previously reported, the creator of avatar therapy, Julian Leff, MD, presented promising results from a pilot study of 26 patients at the International Congress of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2014.
“Opening up a dialogue between a patient and the voice they’ve been hearing is powerful,” said Leff, who was emeritus professor at the Institute of Psychiatry in London at the time.
In 2018, a randomized single-site study (AVATAR1) of 150 participants showed that the intervention was associated with a greater decrease in voice severity at 12 weeks vs supportive therapy. Past research led to the idea of incorporating personalization to better optimize the experience.
Garety noted that AVATAR2 is the largest trial to date of the therapy, as well as the first multisite trial to test the intervention, which was important in order to determine whether it could work outside of a research setting.
The study included 345 participants (61.4% men; mean age, 39.6 years) from three sites in England and one in Scotland. All were randomly assigned to receive TAU alone (n = 115), TAU plus AVATAR-Brief (n = 116), or TAU plus AVATAR-Extended (n = 114).
TAU typically included use of antipsychotics, as well as outpatient psychiatric visits and follow-up by case managers and care coordinators.
“We didn’t interfere with treatment as usual. We wanted to test whether adding this therapy to [TAU] would enhance effects and provide better treatment for their voices,” Garety noted.
AVATAR-Brief included a standardized process that focused on such things as self-esteem and assertiveness. AVATAR-Extended had two phases. In the first, participants received AVATAR-Brief therapy, whereas the second phase offered a more personalized intervention.
An ‘Unusual Finding’
The study’s primary outcome was voice-related distress at 16 and 28 weeks. Although the TAU plus AVATAR-Extended group did show a significant decrease in distress at 16 weeks vs TAU alone (–1.6 points; P = .029), the improvement was no longer significant at the 28-week follow-up (P = .175). The same was also true for the key secondary outcome of reduction in voice severity (–2.32 points; P = .009 at 16 weeks but P =.1 at 28 weeks).
The investigators noted that this might be caused by the number of dropouts in the AVATAR-Extended group by the 28-week timepoint. The completion rate for those patients was only 58%. The completion rate for the shorter, AVATAR-Brief group was 82%.
On the other hand, the other key secondary outcome of voice frequency was significantly reduced with AVATAR-Extended at both 16 weeks (–0.62 point; P = .01) and 28 weeks (–0.89 point; P = .003).
“This is an unusual finding. We’re not aware of any other psychological therapy that shows a reduction in the occurrence of the voice,” Garety said.
For TAU plus AVATAR-Brief, there were improvements at 16 weeks for distress (-1.05 points; P = .035) vs TAU alone. However, the researchers noted that this version of the therapy was just below the prespecified threshold for a clinically significant change and was at the threshold for statistical significance.
Although the shorter therapy was associated with a reduction in voice severity level at 16 weeks (–2.04 points; P = .017) vs TAU alone, there was no reduction in distress or voice severity at 28 weeks. There was no improvement in voice frequency at either timepoint.
Both the brief and the extended versions of AVATAR therapy showed improved mood and anxiety levels at 16 weeks and sustained improvement in well-being and recovery, the researchers noted.
“The short version, as expected, did deliver benefits posttreatment, but clearly the extended, optimized version outperformed the brief version. It had stronger and more lasting effects across quite a wide range of outcomes that matter to people who hear voices,” Garety said.
“In the extended version, people felt more empowered. And in just that version, the frequency of voices was reduced, which is a very important outcome,” she added.
Safety Issues?
There were 58 serious adverse events (SAEs) in total, with 51% of those occurring in the AVATAR-Extended group. Two participants in that group died; however, independent reviews deemed these events as not related to the intervention.
In addition, there were no “definitely related” SAEs and only a small number of “possibly related” SAEs, which typically included hospitalization with other contributory factors.
Garety noted during a press briefing that AVATAR therapy has now been demonstrated to be safe across two large trials.
Study limitations cited included no direct comparison between AVATAR-Brief and AVATAR-Extended or between AVATAR therapy and a different type of psychological treatment.
Overall, “we recommend that future development and provision of AVATAR therapy is primarily guided” by the AVATAR-Extended protocol, the investigators wrote.
Because the therapy was recommended by a National Institute for Health and Care Excellence Early Value Assessment, the investigators are now seeking to provide it in routine National Health Service settings to gather further real-world evidence of effectiveness over the next 3 years.
Next Steps
Although the intervention isn’t currently available to everybody who might be seeking it, “there’s a pipeline of movement from research into treatment and it’s moving towards the next stage of delivery,” Garety said.
Investigators are also looking into cultural adaptations for the therapy so it can be used in different locales, including Ethiopia and India, she added. There isn’t a US version yet, but Garety noted that investigators in Canada are looking at similar research and suspects that will also occur in the United States soon.
“We’re pioneers in this work, and it now needs to be going international and into services,” she said. “We have had many people who hear voices say what an amazing experience this has been. So, I feel very proud and excited to have been able to be part of this.”
At the press briefing, Miranda Wolpert, director of mental health at Wellcome, which funded the study, noted that it is encouraging to see the development of a new intervention that could potentially change the lives of patients across the world.
“We know that psychosis can start early in life, stopping people from having the jobs and relationships they want and from achieving the goals they want. This intervention was developed with those people to help them address an issue that really troubles them,” Wolpert said.
“For me, this represents part of a revolution we are starting to see in terms of mental health interventions and the potential impact on mental health science,” she added.
Digital Placebo Effect?
Commenting on the findings, John Torous, MD, a psychiatrist and director of digital psychiatry at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, said there is a need for new treatments for schizophrenia that work with different mechanisms.
“We have a lot of medication studies but not as many innovative therapy studies. I think it’s exciting that the results, at least in the shorter-term outcome, were positive. And I think that’s something that can give people hope in using these new technologies,” said Torous, who is also an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and was not involved with the research.
Still, he did note some study limitations, including whether there could have been some type of “digital placebo effect” from the therapy.
“If you tell people they’re getting high-tech advanced digital care, that may have some effect,” he said, adding that “it’s always interesting” to tease out the benefit being delivered by the technology vs the delivery mechanism itself — or some combination of both.
Torous added, though, that it’s very difficult to have a rigorous digital control group. “It’s not necessarily a fault of their study, but it’s something to keep in mind when interpreting what the results are.”
He also noted that he would have liked to have seen a direct comparison between this new kind of psychological therapy vs standard psychological therapy, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy.
In addition, he wondered about expenses and scalability of the intervention, and whether patients would need to go to a specialized center to undergo treatment. Torous mentioned that a version involving virtual reality could perhaps make this more scalable in the future.
Overall, he said that what the investigators are currently doing is very innovative. “It’s exciting that we’re talking about the next steps. Giving people new options for psychological therapy that may be effective for their disorders is really wonderful to see,” Torous said.
The study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), the Wellcome Trust King’s Clinical Research Facility, the NIHR Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, King’s College London, the Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, and NHS Research Scotland, as well as by a grant from Wellcome. Garety reports being an unpaid scientific adviser to Avatar Therapy. Financial disclosures for the other investigators are fully listed in the original article. Torous reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM NATURE MEDICINE
Will Psychedelics Break the Major Depression Logjam?
With tens of millions of Euros in the offing, researchers across the European Union have eagerly taken up the gauntlet to find novel interventions for difficult-to-treat mental health and pain conditions. Their target is psychedelics, including classic compounds like psilocybin and atypical ones like ketamine and MDMA. Some of these still carry a stigma as party drugs and spiritual gateways to holotropic experiences.
Twelve groups make up the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology’s psychedelic research network. Along with several affiliates, the groups span nine countries (Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Greece, and the United Kingdom) and are focused on the use of psychedelic compounds as potential treatments for psychiatric conditions like treatment-resistant depression, addiction, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, anorexia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
One of the largest endeavors is PsyPal, a 4-year, randomized controlled trial investigating the potential of psilocybin for treating psychological distress in palliative care patients with life-limiting conditions. PsyPal is the first multisite clinical trial funded by the European Union to explore psychedelic-assisted therapy.
At PsyPal’s helm is Robert Schoevers, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and Department Head at University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), Groningen, the Netherlands, a major hub for psychedelic research.
Schoevers is a bit of a pioneer who said he entered psychedelic research somewhat reluctantly. A decade ago, a colleague showed him a few papers on ketamine and depression. Because UMCG has a large population of patients with treatment-resistant depression, he agreed to do a pilot study. Since then, he has put together an interdisciplinary team of 25 researchers, published numerous papers, and currently has seven studies, including PsyPal, in various stages of progress.
Schoevers is also building a large national consortium that aims to investigate and, if shown effective, implement novel psychiatry treatments much more rapidly and efficiently than current drug development and approval processes, which can take 12 years or longer. He has just secured millions in government funding to start this process.
Next year, Schoevers and his team will decide to test either MDMA for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or psilocybin for depression in a large clinical trial, with the aim of getting a treatment as near to formal registration as possible. This will involve working with the European Medicines Agency and its Dutch counterpart, talking to experts who are familiar with the US Food and Drug Administration’s rejection of Lykos Therapeutics’ MDMA treatment for PTSD, and working directly with patients through the National Patient Alliance. The team is also talking to insurers and pharma companies.
The ultimate goal is to “see if we can build a platform in the Netherlands that would have a European perspective, serve as a point of entry for researchers with good ideas, and [attract] public funding as well as companies who have interesting compounds we think would be worthwhile to study,” Schoevers said.
His multiple endeavors emphasize a transdisciplinary and transdiagnostic approach he has been honing for decades. He and his colleagues are investigating the clinical, psychological, and neurobiological parallels between different treatment- resistant conditions and seeking to understand how contextual factors might influence patients, experiences, and outcomes.
Connecting the Dots
Jens H. van Dalfsen, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher in biological psychiatry, is the principal investigator of another UMCG group looking into the neurobiological mechanisms of major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression. His team’s strategy entails an elaborate coordination between the preclinical and clinical research settings.
For example, Sarah Massetti, a PhD candidate in biological psychiatry, is using blood samples collected in clinical trials to investigate the molecular mechanisms underpinning the neuroplasticity and immune-modulating effects produced by psychedelic compounds.
Another line of research spearheaded by Rutger Boesjes, a PhD candidate in biological psychiatry, is exploring the interactions between drugs like ketamine and the circadian system and how they might relate to antidepressant responses in animal models. It could be that the timing of administration of these drugs is relevant, he explained.
The Patient Factor
How psychedelics work and in whom is a big question for the UMCG team and across the research landscape.
“When researchers and the general public talk about psychedelics, they frequently refer to how they promote synaptic plasticity and new connections in the brain,” said van Dalfsen. “But traditional compounds also do that. So the ultimate question that we’ve been exploring is whether findings reflect an actual pharmacological effect or if expectancy also plays a role. In other words: How can we explain why psychedelics might or might not be effective in treatment-resistant patients?” he explained.
This is where the connection to the clinical experience becomes paramount and Joost Breeksema, PhD, comes in.
Breeksema divides his time between UMCG research and his role as executive director and co-founder of the Open Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to advancing scientific psychedelic research. The work he’s doing outside the university is helping to frame the investigations of the wider group.
So far he has conducted two qualitative studies.
One was an off-label study in which patients with treatment-resistant depression were administered esketamine.
The other was a randomized clinical trial in which participants were blinded to a single 10- or 25-mg dose of psilocybin versus a 1-mg psilocybin microdose placebo that is too small to invoke any effects.
A key insight was the degree to which participants were unprepared for the intensity of their experiences, especially with regards to ketamine. Breeksema said the sessions might not have been so intense or negative for some participants had they been informed beforehand to expect the drugs could provoke “quite overwhelming experiences” and had they been accompanied by an experienced guide providing reassurance and support.
The format for the psilocybin trial met part of this criteria. Participants received a micro (placebo), medium, or high dose in a single session accompanied by two trained therapists. They then engaged in two sessions afterward to process their experiences. A single psilocybin experience appeared to be not enough or too much depending on the dose they were assigned and if they had prior experience with the compound.
Trial participants also felt they needed more help making sense of the experience. “This is a common and important theme,” said Breeksema. “Think about it. If you’ve been depressed for 10, 15 years and … you uncover something and break through something that’s been stuck, you need to process it.”
Jeanine Kamphuis, PhD, a psychiatrist and senior researcher at UMCG and one of the trial study co-authors, explained that they want to find a way to identify who will be too overwhelmed by these experiences if the dose should be adjusted or if some time needs to pass between dosing sessions. They also want to spend more time preparing patients for these sessions.
She emphasized that the studies have provided a reality check. “These are not wonder pills or wonder experiences. And in these types of patients, they’re not intended for a personal growth experience,” she said. “You have a patient who is sitting in front of you who seeks therapy and relief from very severe mood complaints, and the suffering is high,” she said, adding that expectancy bias further complicates patient participation and, likely, outcomes.
The Challenges
For all the potential and opportunity that psychedelics may hold for treatment, UMCG’s work has underscored some challenges.
The field of psychedelic research is characterized by methodological issues, explained van Dalfsen, such as blinding, expectancy, and overestimation of treatment effects. When looking at efficacy, “Is it the compound or the expectancy and promise? This is why it’s important to study how the drugs differ from each other in their biological effects and why they are or are not effective,” he said.
The team has also experienced issues with trial recruitment.
Martijn Godschalk, MD, a PhD candidate in psychiatry, has been addressing this problem while working on RESET-TRD, a phase 3, randomized controlled trial comparing an oral esketamine drink with electroconvulsive therapy in patients with treatment-resistant depression.
He’s been coordinating with local university hospitals, general hospitals, and municipal healthcare clinics to meet inclusion criteria and ensure the trial has enough power to demonstrate effectiveness. In turn, these sites are able to participate in a trial they wouldn’t normally be involved in due to lack of resources.
But Godschalk said he was concerned that many patients have gotten wind of the hype surrounding psychedelic treatments within psychiatry — a factor that has contributed to recruitment challenges. “There are a lot of patients who are interested in the non-registered drug and don’t necessarily have an interest in the other [control] arm,” he said.
Despite the challenges, the classic psychedelics such as MDMA and psilocybin “seem to catalyze a psychological process that may be harder to get with regular psychotherapies,” said Schoevers.
He remains cautious, noting there are still unanswered questions, such as who are the best candidates for these drugs and whether they might cause harm in certain patients while benefiting others. “I do think that this is the first time in 20 or 30 years that there is a group of potential treatments that would really make a difference.”
Schoevers received grants and other funding from The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research & Development, Horizon 2020, Horizon 2023, the National Institute of Mental Health (USA), UMCG, Stichting tot Steun VCVGZ, Nationaal programma Groningen, Healthcare Innovation Funds, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Compass Pathways, Clexio Biosciences, and GH research.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
With tens of millions of Euros in the offing, researchers across the European Union have eagerly taken up the gauntlet to find novel interventions for difficult-to-treat mental health and pain conditions. Their target is psychedelics, including classic compounds like psilocybin and atypical ones like ketamine and MDMA. Some of these still carry a stigma as party drugs and spiritual gateways to holotropic experiences.
Twelve groups make up the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology’s psychedelic research network. Along with several affiliates, the groups span nine countries (Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Greece, and the United Kingdom) and are focused on the use of psychedelic compounds as potential treatments for psychiatric conditions like treatment-resistant depression, addiction, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, anorexia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
One of the largest endeavors is PsyPal, a 4-year, randomized controlled trial investigating the potential of psilocybin for treating psychological distress in palliative care patients with life-limiting conditions. PsyPal is the first multisite clinical trial funded by the European Union to explore psychedelic-assisted therapy.
At PsyPal’s helm is Robert Schoevers, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and Department Head at University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), Groningen, the Netherlands, a major hub for psychedelic research.
Schoevers is a bit of a pioneer who said he entered psychedelic research somewhat reluctantly. A decade ago, a colleague showed him a few papers on ketamine and depression. Because UMCG has a large population of patients with treatment-resistant depression, he agreed to do a pilot study. Since then, he has put together an interdisciplinary team of 25 researchers, published numerous papers, and currently has seven studies, including PsyPal, in various stages of progress.
Schoevers is also building a large national consortium that aims to investigate and, if shown effective, implement novel psychiatry treatments much more rapidly and efficiently than current drug development and approval processes, which can take 12 years or longer. He has just secured millions in government funding to start this process.
Next year, Schoevers and his team will decide to test either MDMA for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or psilocybin for depression in a large clinical trial, with the aim of getting a treatment as near to formal registration as possible. This will involve working with the European Medicines Agency and its Dutch counterpart, talking to experts who are familiar with the US Food and Drug Administration’s rejection of Lykos Therapeutics’ MDMA treatment for PTSD, and working directly with patients through the National Patient Alliance. The team is also talking to insurers and pharma companies.
The ultimate goal is to “see if we can build a platform in the Netherlands that would have a European perspective, serve as a point of entry for researchers with good ideas, and [attract] public funding as well as companies who have interesting compounds we think would be worthwhile to study,” Schoevers said.
His multiple endeavors emphasize a transdisciplinary and transdiagnostic approach he has been honing for decades. He and his colleagues are investigating the clinical, psychological, and neurobiological parallels between different treatment- resistant conditions and seeking to understand how contextual factors might influence patients, experiences, and outcomes.
Connecting the Dots
Jens H. van Dalfsen, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher in biological psychiatry, is the principal investigator of another UMCG group looking into the neurobiological mechanisms of major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression. His team’s strategy entails an elaborate coordination between the preclinical and clinical research settings.
For example, Sarah Massetti, a PhD candidate in biological psychiatry, is using blood samples collected in clinical trials to investigate the molecular mechanisms underpinning the neuroplasticity and immune-modulating effects produced by psychedelic compounds.
Another line of research spearheaded by Rutger Boesjes, a PhD candidate in biological psychiatry, is exploring the interactions between drugs like ketamine and the circadian system and how they might relate to antidepressant responses in animal models. It could be that the timing of administration of these drugs is relevant, he explained.
The Patient Factor
How psychedelics work and in whom is a big question for the UMCG team and across the research landscape.
“When researchers and the general public talk about psychedelics, they frequently refer to how they promote synaptic plasticity and new connections in the brain,” said van Dalfsen. “But traditional compounds also do that. So the ultimate question that we’ve been exploring is whether findings reflect an actual pharmacological effect or if expectancy also plays a role. In other words: How can we explain why psychedelics might or might not be effective in treatment-resistant patients?” he explained.
This is where the connection to the clinical experience becomes paramount and Joost Breeksema, PhD, comes in.
Breeksema divides his time between UMCG research and his role as executive director and co-founder of the Open Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to advancing scientific psychedelic research. The work he’s doing outside the university is helping to frame the investigations of the wider group.
So far he has conducted two qualitative studies.
One was an off-label study in which patients with treatment-resistant depression were administered esketamine.
The other was a randomized clinical trial in which participants were blinded to a single 10- or 25-mg dose of psilocybin versus a 1-mg psilocybin microdose placebo that is too small to invoke any effects.
A key insight was the degree to which participants were unprepared for the intensity of their experiences, especially with regards to ketamine. Breeksema said the sessions might not have been so intense or negative for some participants had they been informed beforehand to expect the drugs could provoke “quite overwhelming experiences” and had they been accompanied by an experienced guide providing reassurance and support.
The format for the psilocybin trial met part of this criteria. Participants received a micro (placebo), medium, or high dose in a single session accompanied by two trained therapists. They then engaged in two sessions afterward to process their experiences. A single psilocybin experience appeared to be not enough or too much depending on the dose they were assigned and if they had prior experience with the compound.
Trial participants also felt they needed more help making sense of the experience. “This is a common and important theme,” said Breeksema. “Think about it. If you’ve been depressed for 10, 15 years and … you uncover something and break through something that’s been stuck, you need to process it.”
Jeanine Kamphuis, PhD, a psychiatrist and senior researcher at UMCG and one of the trial study co-authors, explained that they want to find a way to identify who will be too overwhelmed by these experiences if the dose should be adjusted or if some time needs to pass between dosing sessions. They also want to spend more time preparing patients for these sessions.
She emphasized that the studies have provided a reality check. “These are not wonder pills or wonder experiences. And in these types of patients, they’re not intended for a personal growth experience,” she said. “You have a patient who is sitting in front of you who seeks therapy and relief from very severe mood complaints, and the suffering is high,” she said, adding that expectancy bias further complicates patient participation and, likely, outcomes.
The Challenges
For all the potential and opportunity that psychedelics may hold for treatment, UMCG’s work has underscored some challenges.
The field of psychedelic research is characterized by methodological issues, explained van Dalfsen, such as blinding, expectancy, and overestimation of treatment effects. When looking at efficacy, “Is it the compound or the expectancy and promise? This is why it’s important to study how the drugs differ from each other in their biological effects and why they are or are not effective,” he said.
The team has also experienced issues with trial recruitment.
Martijn Godschalk, MD, a PhD candidate in psychiatry, has been addressing this problem while working on RESET-TRD, a phase 3, randomized controlled trial comparing an oral esketamine drink with electroconvulsive therapy in patients with treatment-resistant depression.
He’s been coordinating with local university hospitals, general hospitals, and municipal healthcare clinics to meet inclusion criteria and ensure the trial has enough power to demonstrate effectiveness. In turn, these sites are able to participate in a trial they wouldn’t normally be involved in due to lack of resources.
But Godschalk said he was concerned that many patients have gotten wind of the hype surrounding psychedelic treatments within psychiatry — a factor that has contributed to recruitment challenges. “There are a lot of patients who are interested in the non-registered drug and don’t necessarily have an interest in the other [control] arm,” he said.
Despite the challenges, the classic psychedelics such as MDMA and psilocybin “seem to catalyze a psychological process that may be harder to get with regular psychotherapies,” said Schoevers.
He remains cautious, noting there are still unanswered questions, such as who are the best candidates for these drugs and whether they might cause harm in certain patients while benefiting others. “I do think that this is the first time in 20 or 30 years that there is a group of potential treatments that would really make a difference.”
Schoevers received grants and other funding from The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research & Development, Horizon 2020, Horizon 2023, the National Institute of Mental Health (USA), UMCG, Stichting tot Steun VCVGZ, Nationaal programma Groningen, Healthcare Innovation Funds, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Compass Pathways, Clexio Biosciences, and GH research.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
With tens of millions of Euros in the offing, researchers across the European Union have eagerly taken up the gauntlet to find novel interventions for difficult-to-treat mental health and pain conditions. Their target is psychedelics, including classic compounds like psilocybin and atypical ones like ketamine and MDMA. Some of these still carry a stigma as party drugs and spiritual gateways to holotropic experiences.
Twelve groups make up the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology’s psychedelic research network. Along with several affiliates, the groups span nine countries (Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Greece, and the United Kingdom) and are focused on the use of psychedelic compounds as potential treatments for psychiatric conditions like treatment-resistant depression, addiction, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, anorexia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
One of the largest endeavors is PsyPal, a 4-year, randomized controlled trial investigating the potential of psilocybin for treating psychological distress in palliative care patients with life-limiting conditions. PsyPal is the first multisite clinical trial funded by the European Union to explore psychedelic-assisted therapy.
At PsyPal’s helm is Robert Schoevers, MD, PhD, professor of psychiatry and Department Head at University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), Groningen, the Netherlands, a major hub for psychedelic research.
Schoevers is a bit of a pioneer who said he entered psychedelic research somewhat reluctantly. A decade ago, a colleague showed him a few papers on ketamine and depression. Because UMCG has a large population of patients with treatment-resistant depression, he agreed to do a pilot study. Since then, he has put together an interdisciplinary team of 25 researchers, published numerous papers, and currently has seven studies, including PsyPal, in various stages of progress.
Schoevers is also building a large national consortium that aims to investigate and, if shown effective, implement novel psychiatry treatments much more rapidly and efficiently than current drug development and approval processes, which can take 12 years or longer. He has just secured millions in government funding to start this process.
Next year, Schoevers and his team will decide to test either MDMA for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or psilocybin for depression in a large clinical trial, with the aim of getting a treatment as near to formal registration as possible. This will involve working with the European Medicines Agency and its Dutch counterpart, talking to experts who are familiar with the US Food and Drug Administration’s rejection of Lykos Therapeutics’ MDMA treatment for PTSD, and working directly with patients through the National Patient Alliance. The team is also talking to insurers and pharma companies.
The ultimate goal is to “see if we can build a platform in the Netherlands that would have a European perspective, serve as a point of entry for researchers with good ideas, and [attract] public funding as well as companies who have interesting compounds we think would be worthwhile to study,” Schoevers said.
His multiple endeavors emphasize a transdisciplinary and transdiagnostic approach he has been honing for decades. He and his colleagues are investigating the clinical, psychological, and neurobiological parallels between different treatment- resistant conditions and seeking to understand how contextual factors might influence patients, experiences, and outcomes.
Connecting the Dots
Jens H. van Dalfsen, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher in biological psychiatry, is the principal investigator of another UMCG group looking into the neurobiological mechanisms of major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression. His team’s strategy entails an elaborate coordination between the preclinical and clinical research settings.
For example, Sarah Massetti, a PhD candidate in biological psychiatry, is using blood samples collected in clinical trials to investigate the molecular mechanisms underpinning the neuroplasticity and immune-modulating effects produced by psychedelic compounds.
Another line of research spearheaded by Rutger Boesjes, a PhD candidate in biological psychiatry, is exploring the interactions between drugs like ketamine and the circadian system and how they might relate to antidepressant responses in animal models. It could be that the timing of administration of these drugs is relevant, he explained.
The Patient Factor
How psychedelics work and in whom is a big question for the UMCG team and across the research landscape.
“When researchers and the general public talk about psychedelics, they frequently refer to how they promote synaptic plasticity and new connections in the brain,” said van Dalfsen. “But traditional compounds also do that. So the ultimate question that we’ve been exploring is whether findings reflect an actual pharmacological effect or if expectancy also plays a role. In other words: How can we explain why psychedelics might or might not be effective in treatment-resistant patients?” he explained.
This is where the connection to the clinical experience becomes paramount and Joost Breeksema, PhD, comes in.
Breeksema divides his time between UMCG research and his role as executive director and co-founder of the Open Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to advancing scientific psychedelic research. The work he’s doing outside the university is helping to frame the investigations of the wider group.
So far he has conducted two qualitative studies.
One was an off-label study in which patients with treatment-resistant depression were administered esketamine.
The other was a randomized clinical trial in which participants were blinded to a single 10- or 25-mg dose of psilocybin versus a 1-mg psilocybin microdose placebo that is too small to invoke any effects.
A key insight was the degree to which participants were unprepared for the intensity of their experiences, especially with regards to ketamine. Breeksema said the sessions might not have been so intense or negative for some participants had they been informed beforehand to expect the drugs could provoke “quite overwhelming experiences” and had they been accompanied by an experienced guide providing reassurance and support.
The format for the psilocybin trial met part of this criteria. Participants received a micro (placebo), medium, or high dose in a single session accompanied by two trained therapists. They then engaged in two sessions afterward to process their experiences. A single psilocybin experience appeared to be not enough or too much depending on the dose they were assigned and if they had prior experience with the compound.
Trial participants also felt they needed more help making sense of the experience. “This is a common and important theme,” said Breeksema. “Think about it. If you’ve been depressed for 10, 15 years and … you uncover something and break through something that’s been stuck, you need to process it.”
Jeanine Kamphuis, PhD, a psychiatrist and senior researcher at UMCG and one of the trial study co-authors, explained that they want to find a way to identify who will be too overwhelmed by these experiences if the dose should be adjusted or if some time needs to pass between dosing sessions. They also want to spend more time preparing patients for these sessions.
She emphasized that the studies have provided a reality check. “These are not wonder pills or wonder experiences. And in these types of patients, they’re not intended for a personal growth experience,” she said. “You have a patient who is sitting in front of you who seeks therapy and relief from very severe mood complaints, and the suffering is high,” she said, adding that expectancy bias further complicates patient participation and, likely, outcomes.
The Challenges
For all the potential and opportunity that psychedelics may hold for treatment, UMCG’s work has underscored some challenges.
The field of psychedelic research is characterized by methodological issues, explained van Dalfsen, such as blinding, expectancy, and overestimation of treatment effects. When looking at efficacy, “Is it the compound or the expectancy and promise? This is why it’s important to study how the drugs differ from each other in their biological effects and why they are or are not effective,” he said.
The team has also experienced issues with trial recruitment.
Martijn Godschalk, MD, a PhD candidate in psychiatry, has been addressing this problem while working on RESET-TRD, a phase 3, randomized controlled trial comparing an oral esketamine drink with electroconvulsive therapy in patients with treatment-resistant depression.
He’s been coordinating with local university hospitals, general hospitals, and municipal healthcare clinics to meet inclusion criteria and ensure the trial has enough power to demonstrate effectiveness. In turn, these sites are able to participate in a trial they wouldn’t normally be involved in due to lack of resources.
But Godschalk said he was concerned that many patients have gotten wind of the hype surrounding psychedelic treatments within psychiatry — a factor that has contributed to recruitment challenges. “There are a lot of patients who are interested in the non-registered drug and don’t necessarily have an interest in the other [control] arm,” he said.
Despite the challenges, the classic psychedelics such as MDMA and psilocybin “seem to catalyze a psychological process that may be harder to get with regular psychotherapies,” said Schoevers.
He remains cautious, noting there are still unanswered questions, such as who are the best candidates for these drugs and whether they might cause harm in certain patients while benefiting others. “I do think that this is the first time in 20 or 30 years that there is a group of potential treatments that would really make a difference.”
Schoevers received grants and other funding from The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research & Development, Horizon 2020, Horizon 2023, the National Institute of Mental Health (USA), UMCG, Stichting tot Steun VCVGZ, Nationaal programma Groningen, Healthcare Innovation Funds, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Novartis, Compass Pathways, Clexio Biosciences, and GH research.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.