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Finding mild cognitive impairment quickly in primary care
Primary care is the ideal setting to screen for mild cognitive impairment. Screening can be performed in under 10 minutes using brief cognitive assessment tools. When it comes to treatment, deprescribing is a priority, as many drug interactions contribute to cognitive disorders. Drugs also influence the value of nondrug therapies.
At the XXIX National Congress of General and Family Medicine of the Spanish Society for General and Family Physicians, Granada, Spain, Alberto Freire, MD, a family doctor and head of the society’s neurology group, presented a way to detect cognitive impairment in a few minutes during a primary care office visit. He also presented a stepwise algorithm for diagnosing and treating the condition, which is highly prevalent and underdiagnosed.
The specialist dismissed the idea that “memory problems are associated with age,” though it is true that in normal aging, “cognitive frailty develops, and some processes will move a little slower. But there won’t be significant functional impairment.” Mild cognitive impairment falls between normal aging and dementia.
“Primary care is essential for screening for mild cognitive impairment due to its high level of accessibility, proximity, and continuity, but most of all due to its longitudinal perspective, which differentiates it from other specialties,” said Dr. Freire. He pointed out that screening is not the same as diagnosis because screening merely indicates probability or well-founded suspicion that can then be confirmed in secondary care.
He also highlighted the need for assessment of cognitive function using brief cognitive tests, as well as the need for functional assessment of activities of daily living. Many cognitive function tests are available, some of which are patient oriented and some caregiver oriented.
“The patient initially comes to see us due to memory loss that he or she, or that some reliable reporter, has detected,” said Dr. Freire. He indicated that 18.5% of consultations for cognitive impairment are prompted by subjective perceptions of memory complaints, which represent the most common subtype of the condition: mild amnestic cognitive impairment.
Quick cognitive tests
Dr. Freire was in favor of picture-based tests, which he strongly recommended. “These are the most-studied tests in Spain for detecting neurocognitive impairment, and they eliminate the reading factor. They’re quick, they’re easy to use and interpret, and are well-accepted by patients. Also, they assess executive function (verbal fluency) and memory.” Dr. Freire stressed the importance of referencing categories when showing the pictures, as well as the fact that the test is available for free online.
He also questioned whether the Mini-Mental State Examination is dead because “there’s an abbreviated version that the author rejects, and the author’s permission is required to use it. It’s very appropriate for Alzheimer’s disease, but not for cognitive impairment.”
Another notable test is the episodic test (a test that avoids interfering with working memory). It has been validated for amnestic mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease, but a reliable caregiver is required to verify patient responses.
For caregiver-oriented tests, Dr. Freire pointed to AD8, which, when paired with any brief cognitive test, significantly increases detection of cognitive impairment.
He also recommended a useful website for everyday consultations created by several scientific societies, including the Spanish Society of General and Family Physicians. The site includes the AD8 and Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE) questionnaires that can be completed online. “It produces a score that indicates the likelihood that the patient has cognitive impairment, and it can be filled out by family members or caregivers to get the result during the consultation,” he said.
Functional assessment
“Functional assessment of the patient’s level of independence for their life in society is what conceptually differentiates mild cognitive impairment from dementia,” explained Dr. Freire. “There are several types of activities of daily living. The instrumental activities (cooking, laundry, talking on the phone, using transportation, managing finances, taking medications, etc.) are the activities that truly distinguish between mild cognitive impairment and dementia. They allow the person to adjust to their environment and retain their independence within the community.”
There are multiple tools for assessing activities of daily living, but Dr. Freire singled out the Mongil test (from Spain), which covers basic, instrumental, and advanced activities. The higher the score, the worse the patient’s condition, so the goal is to lower the score. On the other hand, grouping certain items together helps determine whether there is a risk of falling, sarcopenia, depression, or suicide, among other outcomes. “So, it’s not only useful for diagnosis and treatment but also detects geriatric problems and syndromes. That is, it’s useful for prevention and allows planning of preventive and therapeutic medical interventions,” he explained.
Reversible dementia
Dr. Freire presented a diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for cognitive impairment to be used when brief cognitive tests are positive. “The first thing is to perform a clinical assessment because although many cases of cognitive impairment go undiagnosed, 10% of the cases of symptomatic dementia are potentially reversible. We shouldn’t overlook these.” These cases of dementia may be brought on by medication use, alcoholism, chronic meningoencephalitis, toxins, normal pressure hydrocephalus, certain brain tumors, hypothyroidism, and nutritional deficits, among other causes. Functional assessment follows, using the scales mentioned above.
Interactions and deprescribing
“As to polypharmacy, there is underuse of good, evidence-backed medications with no major contraindications. But care must also be taken with inappropriate or off-label medications, overtreatment, drug interactions, and adherence,” said Dr. Freire.
“We need to start deprescribing because the chemical basis of cognitive impairment traces back to reduced cholinergic activity, increased dopaminergic activity in the brain, or both. There are many commonly prescribed drugs with anticholinergic interactions that can cause cognitive disorders. These could be psychotropics, hypnotics, analgesics (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), first-generation antihistamines, antihypertensives, antiarrhythmics, histamine2 blockers, and even antibiotics like penicillin and quinolones, among many others,” he emphasized.
The next step is to perform comprehensive laboratory testing to rule out vitamin and mineral deficiencies, diabetes, thyroid disorders, kidney failure, liver diseases, urinary infections, and infections of the central nervous system. After that, neuroimaging should be performed. MRI is the preferred method because it allows quantification of atrophy and volumetric measurements.
Strict cardiovascular control
“At this point, treatment can be started, and the patient can be referred to secondary care,” said Dr. Freire, as he proceeded through a therapeutic algorithm following diagnosis of the patient. Regular exercise increases coordination synapses, prevents disease onset, improves executive function, and delays the onset of dementia. “The problem lies in not knowing how much time should be spent daily and weekly on exercise to achieve these goals.
“It is known that a Mediterranean diet and omega-3 fatty acids improve cognitive impairment. However, care should be taken with omega-3s as they are no longer helpful in dementia that has already been established.” The importance of strictly controlling cardiovascular risk factors must also be kept in mind, as backed by validated studies; it has been shown that blood pressure levels below 128 mm Hg make mild cognitive impairment and dementia worse, atrial fibrillation increases the risk of dementia by a factor of 1.4-2.4, diabetes is a risk factor for developing amnestic mild cognitive impairment, tobacco use also leads to cognitive impairment – even in individuals exposed to second-hand smoke – and statins do not change the risk in cases of dyslipidemia.
Nondrug treatment
Dr. Freire also highlighted the importance of multiple nondrug therapies in this field, such as cognitive training and rehabilitation, reminiscence, music therapy, cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy, and sensory interventions, among others. He also recommended patient groups for these individuals.
He added: “In mild cognitive impairment, there is currently no drug that is an improvement over nondrug therapies.”
The drugs aim to improve memory loss, prevent or delay the onset of mild cognitive impairment, and treat initial symptoms of dementia if applicable. The most commonly prescribed drugs are citicoline alone in vascular disease and memory loss, EGb 761 (which is the only approved dose-dependent drug), and others such as phosphatidylserine, nimodipine, and memantine combined with galantamine or piracetam, Dr. Freire concluded.
Dr. Freire had declared receiving funding as a student in training and outreach activities for popular science sponsored by Ferrer, and on the topic of pain by Esteve, Grünenthal Pharma, and Menarini. He has also reported being a consultant for GSK, Lilly, and Pfizer.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Primary care is the ideal setting to screen for mild cognitive impairment. Screening can be performed in under 10 minutes using brief cognitive assessment tools. When it comes to treatment, deprescribing is a priority, as many drug interactions contribute to cognitive disorders. Drugs also influence the value of nondrug therapies.
At the XXIX National Congress of General and Family Medicine of the Spanish Society for General and Family Physicians, Granada, Spain, Alberto Freire, MD, a family doctor and head of the society’s neurology group, presented a way to detect cognitive impairment in a few minutes during a primary care office visit. He also presented a stepwise algorithm for diagnosing and treating the condition, which is highly prevalent and underdiagnosed.
The specialist dismissed the idea that “memory problems are associated with age,” though it is true that in normal aging, “cognitive frailty develops, and some processes will move a little slower. But there won’t be significant functional impairment.” Mild cognitive impairment falls between normal aging and dementia.
“Primary care is essential for screening for mild cognitive impairment due to its high level of accessibility, proximity, and continuity, but most of all due to its longitudinal perspective, which differentiates it from other specialties,” said Dr. Freire. He pointed out that screening is not the same as diagnosis because screening merely indicates probability or well-founded suspicion that can then be confirmed in secondary care.
He also highlighted the need for assessment of cognitive function using brief cognitive tests, as well as the need for functional assessment of activities of daily living. Many cognitive function tests are available, some of which are patient oriented and some caregiver oriented.
“The patient initially comes to see us due to memory loss that he or she, or that some reliable reporter, has detected,” said Dr. Freire. He indicated that 18.5% of consultations for cognitive impairment are prompted by subjective perceptions of memory complaints, which represent the most common subtype of the condition: mild amnestic cognitive impairment.
Quick cognitive tests
Dr. Freire was in favor of picture-based tests, which he strongly recommended. “These are the most-studied tests in Spain for detecting neurocognitive impairment, and they eliminate the reading factor. They’re quick, they’re easy to use and interpret, and are well-accepted by patients. Also, they assess executive function (verbal fluency) and memory.” Dr. Freire stressed the importance of referencing categories when showing the pictures, as well as the fact that the test is available for free online.
He also questioned whether the Mini-Mental State Examination is dead because “there’s an abbreviated version that the author rejects, and the author’s permission is required to use it. It’s very appropriate for Alzheimer’s disease, but not for cognitive impairment.”
Another notable test is the episodic test (a test that avoids interfering with working memory). It has been validated for amnestic mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease, but a reliable caregiver is required to verify patient responses.
For caregiver-oriented tests, Dr. Freire pointed to AD8, which, when paired with any brief cognitive test, significantly increases detection of cognitive impairment.
He also recommended a useful website for everyday consultations created by several scientific societies, including the Spanish Society of General and Family Physicians. The site includes the AD8 and Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE) questionnaires that can be completed online. “It produces a score that indicates the likelihood that the patient has cognitive impairment, and it can be filled out by family members or caregivers to get the result during the consultation,” he said.
Functional assessment
“Functional assessment of the patient’s level of independence for their life in society is what conceptually differentiates mild cognitive impairment from dementia,” explained Dr. Freire. “There are several types of activities of daily living. The instrumental activities (cooking, laundry, talking on the phone, using transportation, managing finances, taking medications, etc.) are the activities that truly distinguish between mild cognitive impairment and dementia. They allow the person to adjust to their environment and retain their independence within the community.”
There are multiple tools for assessing activities of daily living, but Dr. Freire singled out the Mongil test (from Spain), which covers basic, instrumental, and advanced activities. The higher the score, the worse the patient’s condition, so the goal is to lower the score. On the other hand, grouping certain items together helps determine whether there is a risk of falling, sarcopenia, depression, or suicide, among other outcomes. “So, it’s not only useful for diagnosis and treatment but also detects geriatric problems and syndromes. That is, it’s useful for prevention and allows planning of preventive and therapeutic medical interventions,” he explained.
Reversible dementia
Dr. Freire presented a diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for cognitive impairment to be used when brief cognitive tests are positive. “The first thing is to perform a clinical assessment because although many cases of cognitive impairment go undiagnosed, 10% of the cases of symptomatic dementia are potentially reversible. We shouldn’t overlook these.” These cases of dementia may be brought on by medication use, alcoholism, chronic meningoencephalitis, toxins, normal pressure hydrocephalus, certain brain tumors, hypothyroidism, and nutritional deficits, among other causes. Functional assessment follows, using the scales mentioned above.
Interactions and deprescribing
“As to polypharmacy, there is underuse of good, evidence-backed medications with no major contraindications. But care must also be taken with inappropriate or off-label medications, overtreatment, drug interactions, and adherence,” said Dr. Freire.
“We need to start deprescribing because the chemical basis of cognitive impairment traces back to reduced cholinergic activity, increased dopaminergic activity in the brain, or both. There are many commonly prescribed drugs with anticholinergic interactions that can cause cognitive disorders. These could be psychotropics, hypnotics, analgesics (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), first-generation antihistamines, antihypertensives, antiarrhythmics, histamine2 blockers, and even antibiotics like penicillin and quinolones, among many others,” he emphasized.
The next step is to perform comprehensive laboratory testing to rule out vitamin and mineral deficiencies, diabetes, thyroid disorders, kidney failure, liver diseases, urinary infections, and infections of the central nervous system. After that, neuroimaging should be performed. MRI is the preferred method because it allows quantification of atrophy and volumetric measurements.
Strict cardiovascular control
“At this point, treatment can be started, and the patient can be referred to secondary care,” said Dr. Freire, as he proceeded through a therapeutic algorithm following diagnosis of the patient. Regular exercise increases coordination synapses, prevents disease onset, improves executive function, and delays the onset of dementia. “The problem lies in not knowing how much time should be spent daily and weekly on exercise to achieve these goals.
“It is known that a Mediterranean diet and omega-3 fatty acids improve cognitive impairment. However, care should be taken with omega-3s as they are no longer helpful in dementia that has already been established.” The importance of strictly controlling cardiovascular risk factors must also be kept in mind, as backed by validated studies; it has been shown that blood pressure levels below 128 mm Hg make mild cognitive impairment and dementia worse, atrial fibrillation increases the risk of dementia by a factor of 1.4-2.4, diabetes is a risk factor for developing amnestic mild cognitive impairment, tobacco use also leads to cognitive impairment – even in individuals exposed to second-hand smoke – and statins do not change the risk in cases of dyslipidemia.
Nondrug treatment
Dr. Freire also highlighted the importance of multiple nondrug therapies in this field, such as cognitive training and rehabilitation, reminiscence, music therapy, cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy, and sensory interventions, among others. He also recommended patient groups for these individuals.
He added: “In mild cognitive impairment, there is currently no drug that is an improvement over nondrug therapies.”
The drugs aim to improve memory loss, prevent or delay the onset of mild cognitive impairment, and treat initial symptoms of dementia if applicable. The most commonly prescribed drugs are citicoline alone in vascular disease and memory loss, EGb 761 (which is the only approved dose-dependent drug), and others such as phosphatidylserine, nimodipine, and memantine combined with galantamine or piracetam, Dr. Freire concluded.
Dr. Freire had declared receiving funding as a student in training and outreach activities for popular science sponsored by Ferrer, and on the topic of pain by Esteve, Grünenthal Pharma, and Menarini. He has also reported being a consultant for GSK, Lilly, and Pfizer.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Primary care is the ideal setting to screen for mild cognitive impairment. Screening can be performed in under 10 minutes using brief cognitive assessment tools. When it comes to treatment, deprescribing is a priority, as many drug interactions contribute to cognitive disorders. Drugs also influence the value of nondrug therapies.
At the XXIX National Congress of General and Family Medicine of the Spanish Society for General and Family Physicians, Granada, Spain, Alberto Freire, MD, a family doctor and head of the society’s neurology group, presented a way to detect cognitive impairment in a few minutes during a primary care office visit. He also presented a stepwise algorithm for diagnosing and treating the condition, which is highly prevalent and underdiagnosed.
The specialist dismissed the idea that “memory problems are associated with age,” though it is true that in normal aging, “cognitive frailty develops, and some processes will move a little slower. But there won’t be significant functional impairment.” Mild cognitive impairment falls between normal aging and dementia.
“Primary care is essential for screening for mild cognitive impairment due to its high level of accessibility, proximity, and continuity, but most of all due to its longitudinal perspective, which differentiates it from other specialties,” said Dr. Freire. He pointed out that screening is not the same as diagnosis because screening merely indicates probability or well-founded suspicion that can then be confirmed in secondary care.
He also highlighted the need for assessment of cognitive function using brief cognitive tests, as well as the need for functional assessment of activities of daily living. Many cognitive function tests are available, some of which are patient oriented and some caregiver oriented.
“The patient initially comes to see us due to memory loss that he or she, or that some reliable reporter, has detected,” said Dr. Freire. He indicated that 18.5% of consultations for cognitive impairment are prompted by subjective perceptions of memory complaints, which represent the most common subtype of the condition: mild amnestic cognitive impairment.
Quick cognitive tests
Dr. Freire was in favor of picture-based tests, which he strongly recommended. “These are the most-studied tests in Spain for detecting neurocognitive impairment, and they eliminate the reading factor. They’re quick, they’re easy to use and interpret, and are well-accepted by patients. Also, they assess executive function (verbal fluency) and memory.” Dr. Freire stressed the importance of referencing categories when showing the pictures, as well as the fact that the test is available for free online.
He also questioned whether the Mini-Mental State Examination is dead because “there’s an abbreviated version that the author rejects, and the author’s permission is required to use it. It’s very appropriate for Alzheimer’s disease, but not for cognitive impairment.”
Another notable test is the episodic test (a test that avoids interfering with working memory). It has been validated for amnestic mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease, but a reliable caregiver is required to verify patient responses.
For caregiver-oriented tests, Dr. Freire pointed to AD8, which, when paired with any brief cognitive test, significantly increases detection of cognitive impairment.
He also recommended a useful website for everyday consultations created by several scientific societies, including the Spanish Society of General and Family Physicians. The site includes the AD8 and Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE) questionnaires that can be completed online. “It produces a score that indicates the likelihood that the patient has cognitive impairment, and it can be filled out by family members or caregivers to get the result during the consultation,” he said.
Functional assessment
“Functional assessment of the patient’s level of independence for their life in society is what conceptually differentiates mild cognitive impairment from dementia,” explained Dr. Freire. “There are several types of activities of daily living. The instrumental activities (cooking, laundry, talking on the phone, using transportation, managing finances, taking medications, etc.) are the activities that truly distinguish between mild cognitive impairment and dementia. They allow the person to adjust to their environment and retain their independence within the community.”
There are multiple tools for assessing activities of daily living, but Dr. Freire singled out the Mongil test (from Spain), which covers basic, instrumental, and advanced activities. The higher the score, the worse the patient’s condition, so the goal is to lower the score. On the other hand, grouping certain items together helps determine whether there is a risk of falling, sarcopenia, depression, or suicide, among other outcomes. “So, it’s not only useful for diagnosis and treatment but also detects geriatric problems and syndromes. That is, it’s useful for prevention and allows planning of preventive and therapeutic medical interventions,” he explained.
Reversible dementia
Dr. Freire presented a diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm for cognitive impairment to be used when brief cognitive tests are positive. “The first thing is to perform a clinical assessment because although many cases of cognitive impairment go undiagnosed, 10% of the cases of symptomatic dementia are potentially reversible. We shouldn’t overlook these.” These cases of dementia may be brought on by medication use, alcoholism, chronic meningoencephalitis, toxins, normal pressure hydrocephalus, certain brain tumors, hypothyroidism, and nutritional deficits, among other causes. Functional assessment follows, using the scales mentioned above.
Interactions and deprescribing
“As to polypharmacy, there is underuse of good, evidence-backed medications with no major contraindications. But care must also be taken with inappropriate or off-label medications, overtreatment, drug interactions, and adherence,” said Dr. Freire.
“We need to start deprescribing because the chemical basis of cognitive impairment traces back to reduced cholinergic activity, increased dopaminergic activity in the brain, or both. There are many commonly prescribed drugs with anticholinergic interactions that can cause cognitive disorders. These could be psychotropics, hypnotics, analgesics (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), first-generation antihistamines, antihypertensives, antiarrhythmics, histamine2 blockers, and even antibiotics like penicillin and quinolones, among many others,” he emphasized.
The next step is to perform comprehensive laboratory testing to rule out vitamin and mineral deficiencies, diabetes, thyroid disorders, kidney failure, liver diseases, urinary infections, and infections of the central nervous system. After that, neuroimaging should be performed. MRI is the preferred method because it allows quantification of atrophy and volumetric measurements.
Strict cardiovascular control
“At this point, treatment can be started, and the patient can be referred to secondary care,” said Dr. Freire, as he proceeded through a therapeutic algorithm following diagnosis of the patient. Regular exercise increases coordination synapses, prevents disease onset, improves executive function, and delays the onset of dementia. “The problem lies in not knowing how much time should be spent daily and weekly on exercise to achieve these goals.
“It is known that a Mediterranean diet and omega-3 fatty acids improve cognitive impairment. However, care should be taken with omega-3s as they are no longer helpful in dementia that has already been established.” The importance of strictly controlling cardiovascular risk factors must also be kept in mind, as backed by validated studies; it has been shown that blood pressure levels below 128 mm Hg make mild cognitive impairment and dementia worse, atrial fibrillation increases the risk of dementia by a factor of 1.4-2.4, diabetes is a risk factor for developing amnestic mild cognitive impairment, tobacco use also leads to cognitive impairment – even in individuals exposed to second-hand smoke – and statins do not change the risk in cases of dyslipidemia.
Nondrug treatment
Dr. Freire also highlighted the importance of multiple nondrug therapies in this field, such as cognitive training and rehabilitation, reminiscence, music therapy, cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy, and sensory interventions, among others. He also recommended patient groups for these individuals.
He added: “In mild cognitive impairment, there is currently no drug that is an improvement over nondrug therapies.”
The drugs aim to improve memory loss, prevent or delay the onset of mild cognitive impairment, and treat initial symptoms of dementia if applicable. The most commonly prescribed drugs are citicoline alone in vascular disease and memory loss, EGb 761 (which is the only approved dose-dependent drug), and others such as phosphatidylserine, nimodipine, and memantine combined with galantamine or piracetam, Dr. Freire concluded.
Dr. Freire had declared receiving funding as a student in training and outreach activities for popular science sponsored by Ferrer, and on the topic of pain by Esteve, Grünenthal Pharma, and Menarini. He has also reported being a consultant for GSK, Lilly, and Pfizer.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
High-dose vitamin D may cut risk for new atrial fibrillation
TOPLINE:
a post hoc analysis from a randomized trial conducted in Finland suggests.
METHODOLOGY:
- Observational studies have suggested that vitamin D deficiency is associated with increased risk for AFib, but few randomized trials have looked at the effect of vitamin D supplementation on AFib incidence in healthy people.
- The study, a post hoc analysis from a trial that explored the effects of vitamin D3 supplementation on incidence of cardiovascular diseases and cancer, included 2,495 vitamin D–sufficient healthy older adults, mean age 68.2 years, of whom 43% were women.
- Participants had been randomized to one of three groups in which they received vitamin D3 at either 1,600 IU/day or 3,200 IU/day, or placebo.
- Serum 25(OH)D3 concentrations were measured and data on incident AFib were gathered from national health records.
TAKEAWAY:
- Atrial fibrillation was diagnosed in 190 participants.
- Over a follow-up averaging 4.1 years, risk for incident AFib was reduced by 27% for participants who received the 1,600 IU/day dose, compared with placebo; hazard ratio, 0.73 (95% confidence interval, 0.52-1.02; P = .07), and by 32% for those in the 3,200 IU/day arm; HR, 0.68 (95% CI, 0.48-0.96; P = .03).
- The incident-AFib risk was reduced by 30% in a comparison of the two vitamin D groups combined versus the placebo group; HR, 0.70 (95% CI, 0.53-0.94; P = .02).
- After exclusion of 122 participants who reported being on antiarrhythmic medications at baseline, the 1,600 IU/day group showed a significant 27% reduction in risk for AF (95% CI, 4%-58%; P = .03) and the 3,200 IU/day group a nonsignificant 30% (95% CI, 5%-53%; P = .08) reduction in risk.
IN PRACTICE:
High-dose vitamin D3 supplementation may reduce incidence of AFib in a generally healthy, largely vitamin D–sufficient elderly population, the authors proposed. Additional controlled trials are needed, especially in diverse populations.
STUDY DETAILS:
The study was conducted by Jyrki K. Virtanen, PhD, University of Eastern Finland, Institute of Public Health and Clinical Nutrition, Kuopio, and colleagues. It was published in the American Heart Journal.
LIMITATIONS:
Atrial fibrillation was not prespecified as a primary outcome, and the results differ from those of other randomized controlled trials. Information on type of AFib (whether paroxysmal or nonparoxysmal, for example) wasn’t available nor were participants’ history of AFib. All participants were White and from Finland, limiting generalizability of the results.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was supported by the Academy of Finland, University of Eastern Finland, the Juho Vainio Foundation, Medicinska Understödsföreningen Liv och Hälsa, Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, Finnish Diabetes Research Foundation, and the Finnish Cultural Foundation. One coauthor disclosed receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health and Mars Edge. Another coauthor disclosed receipt of a grant from Orion. The other authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
a post hoc analysis from a randomized trial conducted in Finland suggests.
METHODOLOGY:
- Observational studies have suggested that vitamin D deficiency is associated with increased risk for AFib, but few randomized trials have looked at the effect of vitamin D supplementation on AFib incidence in healthy people.
- The study, a post hoc analysis from a trial that explored the effects of vitamin D3 supplementation on incidence of cardiovascular diseases and cancer, included 2,495 vitamin D–sufficient healthy older adults, mean age 68.2 years, of whom 43% were women.
- Participants had been randomized to one of three groups in which they received vitamin D3 at either 1,600 IU/day or 3,200 IU/day, or placebo.
- Serum 25(OH)D3 concentrations were measured and data on incident AFib were gathered from national health records.
TAKEAWAY:
- Atrial fibrillation was diagnosed in 190 participants.
- Over a follow-up averaging 4.1 years, risk for incident AFib was reduced by 27% for participants who received the 1,600 IU/day dose, compared with placebo; hazard ratio, 0.73 (95% confidence interval, 0.52-1.02; P = .07), and by 32% for those in the 3,200 IU/day arm; HR, 0.68 (95% CI, 0.48-0.96; P = .03).
- The incident-AFib risk was reduced by 30% in a comparison of the two vitamin D groups combined versus the placebo group; HR, 0.70 (95% CI, 0.53-0.94; P = .02).
- After exclusion of 122 participants who reported being on antiarrhythmic medications at baseline, the 1,600 IU/day group showed a significant 27% reduction in risk for AF (95% CI, 4%-58%; P = .03) and the 3,200 IU/day group a nonsignificant 30% (95% CI, 5%-53%; P = .08) reduction in risk.
IN PRACTICE:
High-dose vitamin D3 supplementation may reduce incidence of AFib in a generally healthy, largely vitamin D–sufficient elderly population, the authors proposed. Additional controlled trials are needed, especially in diverse populations.
STUDY DETAILS:
The study was conducted by Jyrki K. Virtanen, PhD, University of Eastern Finland, Institute of Public Health and Clinical Nutrition, Kuopio, and colleagues. It was published in the American Heart Journal.
LIMITATIONS:
Atrial fibrillation was not prespecified as a primary outcome, and the results differ from those of other randomized controlled trials. Information on type of AFib (whether paroxysmal or nonparoxysmal, for example) wasn’t available nor were participants’ history of AFib. All participants were White and from Finland, limiting generalizability of the results.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was supported by the Academy of Finland, University of Eastern Finland, the Juho Vainio Foundation, Medicinska Understödsföreningen Liv och Hälsa, Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, Finnish Diabetes Research Foundation, and the Finnish Cultural Foundation. One coauthor disclosed receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health and Mars Edge. Another coauthor disclosed receipt of a grant from Orion. The other authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
a post hoc analysis from a randomized trial conducted in Finland suggests.
METHODOLOGY:
- Observational studies have suggested that vitamin D deficiency is associated with increased risk for AFib, but few randomized trials have looked at the effect of vitamin D supplementation on AFib incidence in healthy people.
- The study, a post hoc analysis from a trial that explored the effects of vitamin D3 supplementation on incidence of cardiovascular diseases and cancer, included 2,495 vitamin D–sufficient healthy older adults, mean age 68.2 years, of whom 43% were women.
- Participants had been randomized to one of three groups in which they received vitamin D3 at either 1,600 IU/day or 3,200 IU/day, or placebo.
- Serum 25(OH)D3 concentrations were measured and data on incident AFib were gathered from national health records.
TAKEAWAY:
- Atrial fibrillation was diagnosed in 190 participants.
- Over a follow-up averaging 4.1 years, risk for incident AFib was reduced by 27% for participants who received the 1,600 IU/day dose, compared with placebo; hazard ratio, 0.73 (95% confidence interval, 0.52-1.02; P = .07), and by 32% for those in the 3,200 IU/day arm; HR, 0.68 (95% CI, 0.48-0.96; P = .03).
- The incident-AFib risk was reduced by 30% in a comparison of the two vitamin D groups combined versus the placebo group; HR, 0.70 (95% CI, 0.53-0.94; P = .02).
- After exclusion of 122 participants who reported being on antiarrhythmic medications at baseline, the 1,600 IU/day group showed a significant 27% reduction in risk for AF (95% CI, 4%-58%; P = .03) and the 3,200 IU/day group a nonsignificant 30% (95% CI, 5%-53%; P = .08) reduction in risk.
IN PRACTICE:
High-dose vitamin D3 supplementation may reduce incidence of AFib in a generally healthy, largely vitamin D–sufficient elderly population, the authors proposed. Additional controlled trials are needed, especially in diverse populations.
STUDY DETAILS:
The study was conducted by Jyrki K. Virtanen, PhD, University of Eastern Finland, Institute of Public Health and Clinical Nutrition, Kuopio, and colleagues. It was published in the American Heart Journal.
LIMITATIONS:
Atrial fibrillation was not prespecified as a primary outcome, and the results differ from those of other randomized controlled trials. Information on type of AFib (whether paroxysmal or nonparoxysmal, for example) wasn’t available nor were participants’ history of AFib. All participants were White and from Finland, limiting generalizability of the results.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was supported by the Academy of Finland, University of Eastern Finland, the Juho Vainio Foundation, Medicinska Understödsföreningen Liv och Hälsa, Finnish Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, Finnish Diabetes Research Foundation, and the Finnish Cultural Foundation. One coauthor disclosed receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health and Mars Edge. Another coauthor disclosed receipt of a grant from Orion. The other authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
New consensus on biomarkers for diagnosis of neurocognitive disorders
A new European consensus statement offers expert guidance on which biomarkers to use for patients presenting with cognitive complaints.
Led by Giovanni B. Frisoni, MD, laboratory of neuroimaging of aging, University of Geneva, and director of the memory clinic at Geneva University Hospital, the multidisciplinary task force set out to define a patient-centered diagnostic workflow for the rational and cost-effective use of biomarkers in memory clinics.
The new algorithm is part of a consensus statement presented at the Congress of the European Academy of Neurology 2023. An interim update was published in June in Alzheimer’s and Dementia.
Which biomarker?
Many biomarkers can aid diagnosis, said Dr. Frisoni; the challenge is choosing which biomarker to use for an individual patient.
A literature-based search, he said, yields a number of recommendations, but the vast majority of these are either disease based or biomarker based. The task force notes that “in vivo biomarkers enable early etiological diagnosis of neurocognitive disorders. While they have good analytical validity, their clinical validity and utility are uncertain.”
“When you have a patient in front of you, you don’ t know whether they have Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Frisoni said.
“You have a differential diagnosis to make, and you have a number of biomarkers – a number of weapons in your armamentarium – you have to choose. You can’t use all of them – we would like to, but we cannot.”
He added that trying to determine from the literature which biomarker is most appropriate given individual clinical conditions and all of the potential combinations is impossible.
“You will not find evidence of the comparative diagnostic value and the added diagnostic value” of one test vs, another, he noted.
“Is CSF [cerebrospinal fluid] better than amyloid PET in a particular clinical situation? What do I gain in terms of positive and negative predictive value in all the possible clinical conditions that I encounter in my clinical practice?”
Dr. Frisoni said the reality is that clinicians in memory clinics end up using biomarkers that are “based on clinical opportunities.”
For instance, “if you have a proficient nuclear medic, you use PET a lot.” In contrast, “if you have a proficient laboratory medic,” CSF markers will be favored – a situation that he said is “not ideal” and has resulted in large discrepancies in diagnostic approaches across Europe.
Harmonizing clinical practice
In a bid to harmonize clinical practice, 22 European experts from 11 European scientific societies and the executive director of Alzheimer Europe set out to develop a multidisciplinary consensus algorithm for the biomarker-based diagnosis of neurocognitive disorders in general, rather than specific neurocognitive disorders.
They used the Delphi method, in which a systematic literature review of the literature was followed by the drafting of a series of clinical statements by an executive board. These were then presented to the expert panel. If a majority consensus was reached on a given statement, it was considered closed. Questions for which there was no consensus were revised and presented to the panel again. The process was repeated until a consensus was reached.
A total of 56 statements underwent six rounds of discussion. A final online meeting led to the development of a diagnostic algorithm for patients who attend memory clinics for cognitive complaints.
The algorithm features three potential assessment waves. Wave 1 defines 11 clinical profiles that are based on the results of clinical and neuropsychological assessments, blood exams, brain imaging, and, in specific cases, electroencephalography. Wave 2 defines first-line biomarkers based on Wave 1 clinical profiles, and Wave 3 defines the second-line biomarker based on Wave 2 biomarker results.
When a patient’s clinical profile suggests Alzheimer’s disease and, in undefined cases, cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers are used first line. When CSF is inconclusive, 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is used second line.
When the clinical profile suggests frontotemporal lobar degeneration or motor tauopathies, FDG-PET is first line and CSF biomarkers second line in atypical metabolic patter cases. When the clinical profile suggests Lewy body disease, dopamine transporter SPECT is first line and cardia I23I-metaiodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy is second line.
Dr. Frisoni noted that the panel strongly recommends performing biomarker tests for patients younger than 70. For those aged 70-85 years, biomarker testing is only recommended for patients with specific clinical features. For patients older than 85, biomarker testing is recommended only in “exceptional circumstances.”
Dr. Frisoni noted that the consensus document has a number of limitations.
“First of all, we could not capture all the theoretical possible combinations” of potential diagnosis and relevant biomarker tests. “There are so many that it’s virtually impossible.”
He also noted that the agreement among the panel for the use of some markers was “relatively low” at “barely 50%,” while for others, the agreement was approximately 70%.
The consensus document also does not explicitly address patients with “mixed pathologies,” which are common. In addition, it does not include emerging biomarkers, such as neurofilament light polypeptide levels, an indicator of axonal compromise.
“Last, but not least,” Dr. Frisoni said, the consensus document requires validation.
“This is a paper and pencil exercise. We, as self-appointed experts, can recommend ... whatever we want, but we must check whether what we write is applicable, feasible.”
In other words, it must be determined whether the “real patient journey” fits with the “ideal patient journey” set out in the consensus document.
This kind of validation, Dr. Frisoni said, is “usually not done for this type of exercise,” but “we want to do it in this case.”
Pros and cons
Bogdan Draganski, MD, consultant in neurology at the department of clinical neurosciences and director of the neuroimaging research laboratory, University Hospital of Lausanne (Switzerland), who cochaired the session, told this news organization that he was “swaying between two extremes” when considering the usefulness of the consensus document.
On one hand, the “reductionist approach” of breaking down a “complex issue into an algorithm” via the Delphi method risks introducing subjective bias.
He said machine learning and artificial intelligence could answer some of the questions posed by clinicians and, by extension, the statements included in the Delphi process by assessing the available data in a more objective manner.
On the other hand, Dr. Draganski said that reducing the options available to clinicians when making a differential diagnosis into the current algorithm is, pragmatically speaking, a “good approach.”
From this standpoint, the danger of using machine learning to answer clinical questions is that it “doesn’t take the responsibility” for the final decision, which means “we’re closing the loop of subjective decision-making for an individual doctor.”
He also applauded the idea of trying to provide more uniform patient assessment across Europe, although he believes “we have a long way to go” before it can deliver on the promise of personalized medicine.
Like Dr. Frisoni, Dr. Draganski noted the fact that patients with potential neurocognitive disorders often have multiple pathologies, which can include cardiovascular problems, depression, and cancer and that that could affect the choice of diagnostic biomarkers.
The second issue, he said, concerns implementation of the consensus document, which is a political decision that centers around “how politicians will define ‘uniformity’ and equal access to technological or nontechnological platforms.”
Achieving uniformity will require a pan-regional collaboration, he noted.
The task force was supported by unrestricted grants from F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Biogen International GmbH, Eisai Europe Limited, Life Molecular Imaging GmbH, and OM Pharma Suisse SA. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
A new European consensus statement offers expert guidance on which biomarkers to use for patients presenting with cognitive complaints.
Led by Giovanni B. Frisoni, MD, laboratory of neuroimaging of aging, University of Geneva, and director of the memory clinic at Geneva University Hospital, the multidisciplinary task force set out to define a patient-centered diagnostic workflow for the rational and cost-effective use of biomarkers in memory clinics.
The new algorithm is part of a consensus statement presented at the Congress of the European Academy of Neurology 2023. An interim update was published in June in Alzheimer’s and Dementia.
Which biomarker?
Many biomarkers can aid diagnosis, said Dr. Frisoni; the challenge is choosing which biomarker to use for an individual patient.
A literature-based search, he said, yields a number of recommendations, but the vast majority of these are either disease based or biomarker based. The task force notes that “in vivo biomarkers enable early etiological diagnosis of neurocognitive disorders. While they have good analytical validity, their clinical validity and utility are uncertain.”
“When you have a patient in front of you, you don’ t know whether they have Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Frisoni said.
“You have a differential diagnosis to make, and you have a number of biomarkers – a number of weapons in your armamentarium – you have to choose. You can’t use all of them – we would like to, but we cannot.”
He added that trying to determine from the literature which biomarker is most appropriate given individual clinical conditions and all of the potential combinations is impossible.
“You will not find evidence of the comparative diagnostic value and the added diagnostic value” of one test vs, another, he noted.
“Is CSF [cerebrospinal fluid] better than amyloid PET in a particular clinical situation? What do I gain in terms of positive and negative predictive value in all the possible clinical conditions that I encounter in my clinical practice?”
Dr. Frisoni said the reality is that clinicians in memory clinics end up using biomarkers that are “based on clinical opportunities.”
For instance, “if you have a proficient nuclear medic, you use PET a lot.” In contrast, “if you have a proficient laboratory medic,” CSF markers will be favored – a situation that he said is “not ideal” and has resulted in large discrepancies in diagnostic approaches across Europe.
Harmonizing clinical practice
In a bid to harmonize clinical practice, 22 European experts from 11 European scientific societies and the executive director of Alzheimer Europe set out to develop a multidisciplinary consensus algorithm for the biomarker-based diagnosis of neurocognitive disorders in general, rather than specific neurocognitive disorders.
They used the Delphi method, in which a systematic literature review of the literature was followed by the drafting of a series of clinical statements by an executive board. These were then presented to the expert panel. If a majority consensus was reached on a given statement, it was considered closed. Questions for which there was no consensus were revised and presented to the panel again. The process was repeated until a consensus was reached.
A total of 56 statements underwent six rounds of discussion. A final online meeting led to the development of a diagnostic algorithm for patients who attend memory clinics for cognitive complaints.
The algorithm features three potential assessment waves. Wave 1 defines 11 clinical profiles that are based on the results of clinical and neuropsychological assessments, blood exams, brain imaging, and, in specific cases, electroencephalography. Wave 2 defines first-line biomarkers based on Wave 1 clinical profiles, and Wave 3 defines the second-line biomarker based on Wave 2 biomarker results.
When a patient’s clinical profile suggests Alzheimer’s disease and, in undefined cases, cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers are used first line. When CSF is inconclusive, 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is used second line.
When the clinical profile suggests frontotemporal lobar degeneration or motor tauopathies, FDG-PET is first line and CSF biomarkers second line in atypical metabolic patter cases. When the clinical profile suggests Lewy body disease, dopamine transporter SPECT is first line and cardia I23I-metaiodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy is second line.
Dr. Frisoni noted that the panel strongly recommends performing biomarker tests for patients younger than 70. For those aged 70-85 years, biomarker testing is only recommended for patients with specific clinical features. For patients older than 85, biomarker testing is recommended only in “exceptional circumstances.”
Dr. Frisoni noted that the consensus document has a number of limitations.
“First of all, we could not capture all the theoretical possible combinations” of potential diagnosis and relevant biomarker tests. “There are so many that it’s virtually impossible.”
He also noted that the agreement among the panel for the use of some markers was “relatively low” at “barely 50%,” while for others, the agreement was approximately 70%.
The consensus document also does not explicitly address patients with “mixed pathologies,” which are common. In addition, it does not include emerging biomarkers, such as neurofilament light polypeptide levels, an indicator of axonal compromise.
“Last, but not least,” Dr. Frisoni said, the consensus document requires validation.
“This is a paper and pencil exercise. We, as self-appointed experts, can recommend ... whatever we want, but we must check whether what we write is applicable, feasible.”
In other words, it must be determined whether the “real patient journey” fits with the “ideal patient journey” set out in the consensus document.
This kind of validation, Dr. Frisoni said, is “usually not done for this type of exercise,” but “we want to do it in this case.”
Pros and cons
Bogdan Draganski, MD, consultant in neurology at the department of clinical neurosciences and director of the neuroimaging research laboratory, University Hospital of Lausanne (Switzerland), who cochaired the session, told this news organization that he was “swaying between two extremes” when considering the usefulness of the consensus document.
On one hand, the “reductionist approach” of breaking down a “complex issue into an algorithm” via the Delphi method risks introducing subjective bias.
He said machine learning and artificial intelligence could answer some of the questions posed by clinicians and, by extension, the statements included in the Delphi process by assessing the available data in a more objective manner.
On the other hand, Dr. Draganski said that reducing the options available to clinicians when making a differential diagnosis into the current algorithm is, pragmatically speaking, a “good approach.”
From this standpoint, the danger of using machine learning to answer clinical questions is that it “doesn’t take the responsibility” for the final decision, which means “we’re closing the loop of subjective decision-making for an individual doctor.”
He also applauded the idea of trying to provide more uniform patient assessment across Europe, although he believes “we have a long way to go” before it can deliver on the promise of personalized medicine.
Like Dr. Frisoni, Dr. Draganski noted the fact that patients with potential neurocognitive disorders often have multiple pathologies, which can include cardiovascular problems, depression, and cancer and that that could affect the choice of diagnostic biomarkers.
The second issue, he said, concerns implementation of the consensus document, which is a political decision that centers around “how politicians will define ‘uniformity’ and equal access to technological or nontechnological platforms.”
Achieving uniformity will require a pan-regional collaboration, he noted.
The task force was supported by unrestricted grants from F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Biogen International GmbH, Eisai Europe Limited, Life Molecular Imaging GmbH, and OM Pharma Suisse SA. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
A new European consensus statement offers expert guidance on which biomarkers to use for patients presenting with cognitive complaints.
Led by Giovanni B. Frisoni, MD, laboratory of neuroimaging of aging, University of Geneva, and director of the memory clinic at Geneva University Hospital, the multidisciplinary task force set out to define a patient-centered diagnostic workflow for the rational and cost-effective use of biomarkers in memory clinics.
The new algorithm is part of a consensus statement presented at the Congress of the European Academy of Neurology 2023. An interim update was published in June in Alzheimer’s and Dementia.
Which biomarker?
Many biomarkers can aid diagnosis, said Dr. Frisoni; the challenge is choosing which biomarker to use for an individual patient.
A literature-based search, he said, yields a number of recommendations, but the vast majority of these are either disease based or biomarker based. The task force notes that “in vivo biomarkers enable early etiological diagnosis of neurocognitive disorders. While they have good analytical validity, their clinical validity and utility are uncertain.”
“When you have a patient in front of you, you don’ t know whether they have Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Frisoni said.
“You have a differential diagnosis to make, and you have a number of biomarkers – a number of weapons in your armamentarium – you have to choose. You can’t use all of them – we would like to, but we cannot.”
He added that trying to determine from the literature which biomarker is most appropriate given individual clinical conditions and all of the potential combinations is impossible.
“You will not find evidence of the comparative diagnostic value and the added diagnostic value” of one test vs, another, he noted.
“Is CSF [cerebrospinal fluid] better than amyloid PET in a particular clinical situation? What do I gain in terms of positive and negative predictive value in all the possible clinical conditions that I encounter in my clinical practice?”
Dr. Frisoni said the reality is that clinicians in memory clinics end up using biomarkers that are “based on clinical opportunities.”
For instance, “if you have a proficient nuclear medic, you use PET a lot.” In contrast, “if you have a proficient laboratory medic,” CSF markers will be favored – a situation that he said is “not ideal” and has resulted in large discrepancies in diagnostic approaches across Europe.
Harmonizing clinical practice
In a bid to harmonize clinical practice, 22 European experts from 11 European scientific societies and the executive director of Alzheimer Europe set out to develop a multidisciplinary consensus algorithm for the biomarker-based diagnosis of neurocognitive disorders in general, rather than specific neurocognitive disorders.
They used the Delphi method, in which a systematic literature review of the literature was followed by the drafting of a series of clinical statements by an executive board. These were then presented to the expert panel. If a majority consensus was reached on a given statement, it was considered closed. Questions for which there was no consensus were revised and presented to the panel again. The process was repeated until a consensus was reached.
A total of 56 statements underwent six rounds of discussion. A final online meeting led to the development of a diagnostic algorithm for patients who attend memory clinics for cognitive complaints.
The algorithm features three potential assessment waves. Wave 1 defines 11 clinical profiles that are based on the results of clinical and neuropsychological assessments, blood exams, brain imaging, and, in specific cases, electroencephalography. Wave 2 defines first-line biomarkers based on Wave 1 clinical profiles, and Wave 3 defines the second-line biomarker based on Wave 2 biomarker results.
When a patient’s clinical profile suggests Alzheimer’s disease and, in undefined cases, cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers are used first line. When CSF is inconclusive, 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is used second line.
When the clinical profile suggests frontotemporal lobar degeneration or motor tauopathies, FDG-PET is first line and CSF biomarkers second line in atypical metabolic patter cases. When the clinical profile suggests Lewy body disease, dopamine transporter SPECT is first line and cardia I23I-metaiodobenzylguanidine scintigraphy is second line.
Dr. Frisoni noted that the panel strongly recommends performing biomarker tests for patients younger than 70. For those aged 70-85 years, biomarker testing is only recommended for patients with specific clinical features. For patients older than 85, biomarker testing is recommended only in “exceptional circumstances.”
Dr. Frisoni noted that the consensus document has a number of limitations.
“First of all, we could not capture all the theoretical possible combinations” of potential diagnosis and relevant biomarker tests. “There are so many that it’s virtually impossible.”
He also noted that the agreement among the panel for the use of some markers was “relatively low” at “barely 50%,” while for others, the agreement was approximately 70%.
The consensus document also does not explicitly address patients with “mixed pathologies,” which are common. In addition, it does not include emerging biomarkers, such as neurofilament light polypeptide levels, an indicator of axonal compromise.
“Last, but not least,” Dr. Frisoni said, the consensus document requires validation.
“This is a paper and pencil exercise. We, as self-appointed experts, can recommend ... whatever we want, but we must check whether what we write is applicable, feasible.”
In other words, it must be determined whether the “real patient journey” fits with the “ideal patient journey” set out in the consensus document.
This kind of validation, Dr. Frisoni said, is “usually not done for this type of exercise,” but “we want to do it in this case.”
Pros and cons
Bogdan Draganski, MD, consultant in neurology at the department of clinical neurosciences and director of the neuroimaging research laboratory, University Hospital of Lausanne (Switzerland), who cochaired the session, told this news organization that he was “swaying between two extremes” when considering the usefulness of the consensus document.
On one hand, the “reductionist approach” of breaking down a “complex issue into an algorithm” via the Delphi method risks introducing subjective bias.
He said machine learning and artificial intelligence could answer some of the questions posed by clinicians and, by extension, the statements included in the Delphi process by assessing the available data in a more objective manner.
On the other hand, Dr. Draganski said that reducing the options available to clinicians when making a differential diagnosis into the current algorithm is, pragmatically speaking, a “good approach.”
From this standpoint, the danger of using machine learning to answer clinical questions is that it “doesn’t take the responsibility” for the final decision, which means “we’re closing the loop of subjective decision-making for an individual doctor.”
He also applauded the idea of trying to provide more uniform patient assessment across Europe, although he believes “we have a long way to go” before it can deliver on the promise of personalized medicine.
Like Dr. Frisoni, Dr. Draganski noted the fact that patients with potential neurocognitive disorders often have multiple pathologies, which can include cardiovascular problems, depression, and cancer and that that could affect the choice of diagnostic biomarkers.
The second issue, he said, concerns implementation of the consensus document, which is a political decision that centers around “how politicians will define ‘uniformity’ and equal access to technological or nontechnological platforms.”
Achieving uniformity will require a pan-regional collaboration, he noted.
The task force was supported by unrestricted grants from F. Hoffmann-La Roche, Biogen International GmbH, Eisai Europe Limited, Life Molecular Imaging GmbH, and OM Pharma Suisse SA. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Geriatric care principles should apply to ICUs as well
Baseball legend Leroy “Satchel” Paige famously said that “age is a question of mind over matter: If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
But even the strongest and most supple minds can’t avoid the effects of advanced age and accompanying physical frailty, and for community-dwelling elderly with pulmonary diseases frailty is a predictor of both hospitalization and death, investigators have found.
For example, among 1,188 community-dwelling older adults enrolled in the Toledo (Spain) Study for Healthy Aging, declining pulmonary function measured by forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC) was associated with increased risk for frailty and hospitalization, and a more than twofold greater risk for death in participants both with and without respiratory diseases. These findings were reported by Walter Sepulveda-Loyola, PT, MSC, PhD, from the Faculty of Health and Social Sciences at Universidad de Las Americas in Santiago, Chile, and colleagues in the journal Heart & Lung.
Similarly, results of a meta-analysis performed by investigators at Jiangsu (China) University showed that among 13,203 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), frailty was associated with a more than 2.6-fold relative increase in risk for death from any cause, and “prefrailty,” an intermediate state between frailty and “robustness,” was associated with a 48% relative increase in all-cause mortality. Frailty was also associated with a 2.2-fold risk for COPD exacerbations of any severity, the authors reported in JAMDA: The Journal of Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.
The good (old) USA
In June 2023 the U.S. Census Bureau announced that the median age of the U.S. population is now 38.9 years, and according to a 2016 Census Bureau report funded by the National Institutes of Health, “America’s 65-and-over population is projected to nearly double over the next three decades, from 48 million to 88 million by 2050.”
With the graying of the U.S. population the burden on pulmonary and critical care experts will almost inevitably increase, as evidenced by research from Julien Cobert, MD, from the University of California, San Francisco, and colleagues.
The investigators looked at trends over time in older adults admitted to ICUs from 1988 through 2015 using data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative, longitudinal study of older adults. They found that rates of preexisting frailty, disability, and multimorbidity increased over the study period.
“Our findings suggest a growing prevalence of geriatric conditions among older adults admitted to the ICU, suggesting a pressing need to integrate geriatric principles into critical care medicine. Further research could examine if early interventions emphasizing physical, cognitive, mental health, delirium prevention, advance care planning, and rehabilitation individualized to critically ill elderly patients with preexisting geriatric conditions could improve ICU outcomes and post-ICU recovery,” they wrote in a study published in the journal CHEST.
In an editorial accompanying the study by Dr. Cobert and colleagues, Nathan E. Brummel, MD, from The Ohio State University College of Medicine and Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute in Columbus, said “the finding that nearly 30% of overall HRS participants were admitted to the ICU provides novel data about the extent to which older Americans are affected by critical illness. Because the number of older Americans is projected to continue to increase for the next 30 years or more, these data make clear the ongoing importance of aging-focused research and clinical care.”
Dr. Brummel also noted that older adults who are admitted to the ICU today are at greater risk for poor outcomes than those admitted in prior years, as evidenced by the increased prevalence of disability, frailty, and multimorbidity.
“Moreover, because the average age of those admitted to the ICU only changed by 1 year during the study, these data show that increases in vulnerability are not simply due to chronological age, and they suggest that to identify those with greater baseline vulnerability, screening for geriatric syndromes at ICU admission may be warranted,” he wrote.
Geriatric principles in the ICU
“I think what’s most important is that we think about patients from a geriatric principles standpoint, not just when they’re admitted to the hospital but especially when they’re admitted to the ICU,” Dr. Cobert said in an interview.
“The first step is ensuring that we’re asking questions about their underlying comorbidities, especially around frailty, hearing, vision loss, falls, multimorbidities, polypharmacy – things that are primarily done on the outpatient side in geriatric clinics, but things that we should probably be a little bit more cognizant of, given that we’re starting to see higher rates of patients coming in with these issues,” he said.
Critical care specialists need to take a more holistic approach and try to understand as best they can each patients’ goals and then determine whether the ICU staff are acting in concordance with those goals, he emphasized.
For example, ICU clinicians should try to understand whether patients were losing function or having mobility difficulties before hospital and ICU admission, and what they hope to retain when or if they are discharged. ICU staff can then try as much as reasonably possible to minimize interventions that could contribute to impairment after discharge.
Frailty and COPD in the ICU
There are special considerations for frail elderly with obstructive airway disease, Dr. Cobert noted.
Patients with advanced COPD, for example, are likely to be on home oxygen.
“Home oxygen is a big deal,” he said. “It can definitely help with functioning and there’s potentially a mortality benefit in certain populations. But that said, it’s a flammable object that they have to carry around and lug with them all the time. It contributes to falls, it’s tethering, it’s life-limiting in many ways.”
In addition, many patients with COPD have multiple re-hospitalizations, and for clinicians the challenge is “understanding what their goals are, what their motivations are, especially when they live with dyspnea, with advanced lung disease. Is intubation within their goals of care? Has their functional status been declining over time? Are there things that we can optimize holistically and globally as their COPD advances over time?”
Another important component of critical care for the frail elderly is consideration of patients’ palliative care needs and what their symptoms and symptom burdens were like prior to hospitalizations.
“The ICU experience and the critical illness experience may serve as an inflexion point – more likely a downward inflection point – whereby their needs increase, their symptoms can worsen, and their health, especially their global health, worsens. Their preexisting geriatric conditions might be a moving target after another hit and another traumatic stressor like the ICU setting,” Dr. Cobert said.
The study by Dr. Cobert and colleagues was supported by the National Institute on Aging. Dr. Cobert had no reported conflicts of interest.
Baseball legend Leroy “Satchel” Paige famously said that “age is a question of mind over matter: If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
But even the strongest and most supple minds can’t avoid the effects of advanced age and accompanying physical frailty, and for community-dwelling elderly with pulmonary diseases frailty is a predictor of both hospitalization and death, investigators have found.
For example, among 1,188 community-dwelling older adults enrolled in the Toledo (Spain) Study for Healthy Aging, declining pulmonary function measured by forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC) was associated with increased risk for frailty and hospitalization, and a more than twofold greater risk for death in participants both with and without respiratory diseases. These findings were reported by Walter Sepulveda-Loyola, PT, MSC, PhD, from the Faculty of Health and Social Sciences at Universidad de Las Americas in Santiago, Chile, and colleagues in the journal Heart & Lung.
Similarly, results of a meta-analysis performed by investigators at Jiangsu (China) University showed that among 13,203 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), frailty was associated with a more than 2.6-fold relative increase in risk for death from any cause, and “prefrailty,” an intermediate state between frailty and “robustness,” was associated with a 48% relative increase in all-cause mortality. Frailty was also associated with a 2.2-fold risk for COPD exacerbations of any severity, the authors reported in JAMDA: The Journal of Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.
The good (old) USA
In June 2023 the U.S. Census Bureau announced that the median age of the U.S. population is now 38.9 years, and according to a 2016 Census Bureau report funded by the National Institutes of Health, “America’s 65-and-over population is projected to nearly double over the next three decades, from 48 million to 88 million by 2050.”
With the graying of the U.S. population the burden on pulmonary and critical care experts will almost inevitably increase, as evidenced by research from Julien Cobert, MD, from the University of California, San Francisco, and colleagues.
The investigators looked at trends over time in older adults admitted to ICUs from 1988 through 2015 using data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative, longitudinal study of older adults. They found that rates of preexisting frailty, disability, and multimorbidity increased over the study period.
“Our findings suggest a growing prevalence of geriatric conditions among older adults admitted to the ICU, suggesting a pressing need to integrate geriatric principles into critical care medicine. Further research could examine if early interventions emphasizing physical, cognitive, mental health, delirium prevention, advance care planning, and rehabilitation individualized to critically ill elderly patients with preexisting geriatric conditions could improve ICU outcomes and post-ICU recovery,” they wrote in a study published in the journal CHEST.
In an editorial accompanying the study by Dr. Cobert and colleagues, Nathan E. Brummel, MD, from The Ohio State University College of Medicine and Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute in Columbus, said “the finding that nearly 30% of overall HRS participants were admitted to the ICU provides novel data about the extent to which older Americans are affected by critical illness. Because the number of older Americans is projected to continue to increase for the next 30 years or more, these data make clear the ongoing importance of aging-focused research and clinical care.”
Dr. Brummel also noted that older adults who are admitted to the ICU today are at greater risk for poor outcomes than those admitted in prior years, as evidenced by the increased prevalence of disability, frailty, and multimorbidity.
“Moreover, because the average age of those admitted to the ICU only changed by 1 year during the study, these data show that increases in vulnerability are not simply due to chronological age, and they suggest that to identify those with greater baseline vulnerability, screening for geriatric syndromes at ICU admission may be warranted,” he wrote.
Geriatric principles in the ICU
“I think what’s most important is that we think about patients from a geriatric principles standpoint, not just when they’re admitted to the hospital but especially when they’re admitted to the ICU,” Dr. Cobert said in an interview.
“The first step is ensuring that we’re asking questions about their underlying comorbidities, especially around frailty, hearing, vision loss, falls, multimorbidities, polypharmacy – things that are primarily done on the outpatient side in geriatric clinics, but things that we should probably be a little bit more cognizant of, given that we’re starting to see higher rates of patients coming in with these issues,” he said.
Critical care specialists need to take a more holistic approach and try to understand as best they can each patients’ goals and then determine whether the ICU staff are acting in concordance with those goals, he emphasized.
For example, ICU clinicians should try to understand whether patients were losing function or having mobility difficulties before hospital and ICU admission, and what they hope to retain when or if they are discharged. ICU staff can then try as much as reasonably possible to minimize interventions that could contribute to impairment after discharge.
Frailty and COPD in the ICU
There are special considerations for frail elderly with obstructive airway disease, Dr. Cobert noted.
Patients with advanced COPD, for example, are likely to be on home oxygen.
“Home oxygen is a big deal,” he said. “It can definitely help with functioning and there’s potentially a mortality benefit in certain populations. But that said, it’s a flammable object that they have to carry around and lug with them all the time. It contributes to falls, it’s tethering, it’s life-limiting in many ways.”
In addition, many patients with COPD have multiple re-hospitalizations, and for clinicians the challenge is “understanding what their goals are, what their motivations are, especially when they live with dyspnea, with advanced lung disease. Is intubation within their goals of care? Has their functional status been declining over time? Are there things that we can optimize holistically and globally as their COPD advances over time?”
Another important component of critical care for the frail elderly is consideration of patients’ palliative care needs and what their symptoms and symptom burdens were like prior to hospitalizations.
“The ICU experience and the critical illness experience may serve as an inflexion point – more likely a downward inflection point – whereby their needs increase, their symptoms can worsen, and their health, especially their global health, worsens. Their preexisting geriatric conditions might be a moving target after another hit and another traumatic stressor like the ICU setting,” Dr. Cobert said.
The study by Dr. Cobert and colleagues was supported by the National Institute on Aging. Dr. Cobert had no reported conflicts of interest.
Baseball legend Leroy “Satchel” Paige famously said that “age is a question of mind over matter: If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
But even the strongest and most supple minds can’t avoid the effects of advanced age and accompanying physical frailty, and for community-dwelling elderly with pulmonary diseases frailty is a predictor of both hospitalization and death, investigators have found.
For example, among 1,188 community-dwelling older adults enrolled in the Toledo (Spain) Study for Healthy Aging, declining pulmonary function measured by forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC) was associated with increased risk for frailty and hospitalization, and a more than twofold greater risk for death in participants both with and without respiratory diseases. These findings were reported by Walter Sepulveda-Loyola, PT, MSC, PhD, from the Faculty of Health and Social Sciences at Universidad de Las Americas in Santiago, Chile, and colleagues in the journal Heart & Lung.
Similarly, results of a meta-analysis performed by investigators at Jiangsu (China) University showed that among 13,203 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), frailty was associated with a more than 2.6-fold relative increase in risk for death from any cause, and “prefrailty,” an intermediate state between frailty and “robustness,” was associated with a 48% relative increase in all-cause mortality. Frailty was also associated with a 2.2-fold risk for COPD exacerbations of any severity, the authors reported in JAMDA: The Journal of Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine.
The good (old) USA
In June 2023 the U.S. Census Bureau announced that the median age of the U.S. population is now 38.9 years, and according to a 2016 Census Bureau report funded by the National Institutes of Health, “America’s 65-and-over population is projected to nearly double over the next three decades, from 48 million to 88 million by 2050.”
With the graying of the U.S. population the burden on pulmonary and critical care experts will almost inevitably increase, as evidenced by research from Julien Cobert, MD, from the University of California, San Francisco, and colleagues.
The investigators looked at trends over time in older adults admitted to ICUs from 1988 through 2015 using data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative, longitudinal study of older adults. They found that rates of preexisting frailty, disability, and multimorbidity increased over the study period.
“Our findings suggest a growing prevalence of geriatric conditions among older adults admitted to the ICU, suggesting a pressing need to integrate geriatric principles into critical care medicine. Further research could examine if early interventions emphasizing physical, cognitive, mental health, delirium prevention, advance care planning, and rehabilitation individualized to critically ill elderly patients with preexisting geriatric conditions could improve ICU outcomes and post-ICU recovery,” they wrote in a study published in the journal CHEST.
In an editorial accompanying the study by Dr. Cobert and colleagues, Nathan E. Brummel, MD, from The Ohio State University College of Medicine and Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute in Columbus, said “the finding that nearly 30% of overall HRS participants were admitted to the ICU provides novel data about the extent to which older Americans are affected by critical illness. Because the number of older Americans is projected to continue to increase for the next 30 years or more, these data make clear the ongoing importance of aging-focused research and clinical care.”
Dr. Brummel also noted that older adults who are admitted to the ICU today are at greater risk for poor outcomes than those admitted in prior years, as evidenced by the increased prevalence of disability, frailty, and multimorbidity.
“Moreover, because the average age of those admitted to the ICU only changed by 1 year during the study, these data show that increases in vulnerability are not simply due to chronological age, and they suggest that to identify those with greater baseline vulnerability, screening for geriatric syndromes at ICU admission may be warranted,” he wrote.
Geriatric principles in the ICU
“I think what’s most important is that we think about patients from a geriatric principles standpoint, not just when they’re admitted to the hospital but especially when they’re admitted to the ICU,” Dr. Cobert said in an interview.
“The first step is ensuring that we’re asking questions about their underlying comorbidities, especially around frailty, hearing, vision loss, falls, multimorbidities, polypharmacy – things that are primarily done on the outpatient side in geriatric clinics, but things that we should probably be a little bit more cognizant of, given that we’re starting to see higher rates of patients coming in with these issues,” he said.
Critical care specialists need to take a more holistic approach and try to understand as best they can each patients’ goals and then determine whether the ICU staff are acting in concordance with those goals, he emphasized.
For example, ICU clinicians should try to understand whether patients were losing function or having mobility difficulties before hospital and ICU admission, and what they hope to retain when or if they are discharged. ICU staff can then try as much as reasonably possible to minimize interventions that could contribute to impairment after discharge.
Frailty and COPD in the ICU
There are special considerations for frail elderly with obstructive airway disease, Dr. Cobert noted.
Patients with advanced COPD, for example, are likely to be on home oxygen.
“Home oxygen is a big deal,” he said. “It can definitely help with functioning and there’s potentially a mortality benefit in certain populations. But that said, it’s a flammable object that they have to carry around and lug with them all the time. It contributes to falls, it’s tethering, it’s life-limiting in many ways.”
In addition, many patients with COPD have multiple re-hospitalizations, and for clinicians the challenge is “understanding what their goals are, what their motivations are, especially when they live with dyspnea, with advanced lung disease. Is intubation within their goals of care? Has their functional status been declining over time? Are there things that we can optimize holistically and globally as their COPD advances over time?”
Another important component of critical care for the frail elderly is consideration of patients’ palliative care needs and what their symptoms and symptom burdens were like prior to hospitalizations.
“The ICU experience and the critical illness experience may serve as an inflexion point – more likely a downward inflection point – whereby their needs increase, their symptoms can worsen, and their health, especially their global health, worsens. Their preexisting geriatric conditions might be a moving target after another hit and another traumatic stressor like the ICU setting,” Dr. Cobert said.
The study by Dr. Cobert and colleagues was supported by the National Institute on Aging. Dr. Cobert had no reported conflicts of interest.
Indefinite anticoagulation likely not cost effective after unprovoked VTE
Continuing anticoagulation indefinitely in patients with a first unprovoked venous thromboembolism (VTE) may have benefits for certain patients but is unlikely to be cost effective, say authors of a new study.
Continued anticoagulation for such patients “has little chance of improving life expectancy but might provide a mortality benefit in certain subgroups including patients with an initial PE (pulmonary embolism) or those at a very low risk for major bleeding,” wrote the authors, led by Faizan Khan, PhD, with the O’Brien Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary (Alta.).
Therefore, shared decision-making between patients with unprovoked VTE and physicians that includes discussion of preferences and values and use of validated prediction tools is important.
The authors noted that some patients might value avoiding morbidities of recurrent VTE the most and want to have lifelong anticoagulation. Some might be more fearful of major bleeding than VTE repercussions or don’t want the inconveniences of taking anticoagulants for a lifetime.
The findings were published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Current guidelines recommend indefinite anticoagulation
Clinical practice guidelines now recommend indefinite anticoagulation for a first unprovoked VTE.
The authors did a modeling study in a hypothetical cohort of 1,000 patients aged 55 years with a first unprovoked VTE who had completed 3-6 months of initial anticoagulation. The study found indefinite anticoagulation, compared with discontinuing anticoagulation, on average, resulted in 368 fewer recurrent VTE events and 14 fewer fatal PE events.
At the same time, indefinite coagulation in the hypothetical group induced an additional 114 major bleeding events, 30 intracerebral hemorrhages, and 11 fatal bleeding events over 40 years.
As for cost effectiveness, from the perspective of Canada’s health care system, continuing anticoagulation indefinitely, on average, increased costs by $16,014 Canadian dollars per person ($12,140 USD) without improving quality-adjusted life-years (incremental difference, 0.075 per person; 95% uncertainty interval, –0.192 to 0.017).
The authors noted that cost is a prime consideration as the estimated annual health care costs of VTE and its complications is $600 Canadian dollars ($7 billion–$10 billion USD).
High probability of small benefit
The authors spelled out the small benefit in patients with an initial PE.
According to the study, indefinite anticoagulation would result in an 80% probability of a marginal added clinical benefit (average increase of 57 days of perfect health over a lifetime) in patients with an initial PE (but with only a 24% chance of being cost effective).
“This high probability of an additional clinical benefit is plausible due to the higher proportion of recurrent VTE events presenting as PE (approximately 70% of episodes) in patients initially presenting with PE, in turn, resulting in a two- to threefold higher case-fatality rate of recurrent VTE in this patient subgroup.”
Tools to estimate bleeding risk imprecise
Scott Woller, MD, an internal medicine specialist and chair of medicine at Intermountain Medical Center, Murray, Utah, said in an interview that these results should help physicians’ discuss with their patients about duration of anticoagulation after the treatment phase.
He noted that the authors suggest that a low estimated annual risk for major bleeding should be assumed (< 0.67%) to make the choice for indefinite anticoagulation.
“This is a sticky wicket,” he said, “as tools to estimate bleeding risk among VTE patients are presently imprecise. For these reasons PCPs should take into account patient risk estimates – and the limitations that exist surrounding how we calculate these estimates – in addition to their values and preferences. This is really key in electing duration of anticoagulation.”
A limitation of the study is that the model assumed that risks for recurrent VTE and major bleeding in clinical trials at 1 year remained constant during extended anticoagulation.
Dr. Woller said about that limitation: “One might argue that this is unlikely; age is a risk factor for major bleeding and therefore risks may be underestimated. However, in the ‘real world’ those that are perceived at lowest risk and demonstrate good tolerance to anticoagulation might likely preferentially continue anticoagulants and therefore risks may be overestimated.”
One coauthor reported being a clinical investigator for trials sponsored by Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb and receiving honoraria from Pfizer, Sanofi and Aspen Pharma. The other authors disclosed no other relevant financial relationships. Dr. Woller is cochair of the CHEST guidelines on the treatment of venous thromboembolic disease.
Continuing anticoagulation indefinitely in patients with a first unprovoked venous thromboembolism (VTE) may have benefits for certain patients but is unlikely to be cost effective, say authors of a new study.
Continued anticoagulation for such patients “has little chance of improving life expectancy but might provide a mortality benefit in certain subgroups including patients with an initial PE (pulmonary embolism) or those at a very low risk for major bleeding,” wrote the authors, led by Faizan Khan, PhD, with the O’Brien Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary (Alta.).
Therefore, shared decision-making between patients with unprovoked VTE and physicians that includes discussion of preferences and values and use of validated prediction tools is important.
The authors noted that some patients might value avoiding morbidities of recurrent VTE the most and want to have lifelong anticoagulation. Some might be more fearful of major bleeding than VTE repercussions or don’t want the inconveniences of taking anticoagulants for a lifetime.
The findings were published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Current guidelines recommend indefinite anticoagulation
Clinical practice guidelines now recommend indefinite anticoagulation for a first unprovoked VTE.
The authors did a modeling study in a hypothetical cohort of 1,000 patients aged 55 years with a first unprovoked VTE who had completed 3-6 months of initial anticoagulation. The study found indefinite anticoagulation, compared with discontinuing anticoagulation, on average, resulted in 368 fewer recurrent VTE events and 14 fewer fatal PE events.
At the same time, indefinite coagulation in the hypothetical group induced an additional 114 major bleeding events, 30 intracerebral hemorrhages, and 11 fatal bleeding events over 40 years.
As for cost effectiveness, from the perspective of Canada’s health care system, continuing anticoagulation indefinitely, on average, increased costs by $16,014 Canadian dollars per person ($12,140 USD) without improving quality-adjusted life-years (incremental difference, 0.075 per person; 95% uncertainty interval, –0.192 to 0.017).
The authors noted that cost is a prime consideration as the estimated annual health care costs of VTE and its complications is $600 Canadian dollars ($7 billion–$10 billion USD).
High probability of small benefit
The authors spelled out the small benefit in patients with an initial PE.
According to the study, indefinite anticoagulation would result in an 80% probability of a marginal added clinical benefit (average increase of 57 days of perfect health over a lifetime) in patients with an initial PE (but with only a 24% chance of being cost effective).
“This high probability of an additional clinical benefit is plausible due to the higher proportion of recurrent VTE events presenting as PE (approximately 70% of episodes) in patients initially presenting with PE, in turn, resulting in a two- to threefold higher case-fatality rate of recurrent VTE in this patient subgroup.”
Tools to estimate bleeding risk imprecise
Scott Woller, MD, an internal medicine specialist and chair of medicine at Intermountain Medical Center, Murray, Utah, said in an interview that these results should help physicians’ discuss with their patients about duration of anticoagulation after the treatment phase.
He noted that the authors suggest that a low estimated annual risk for major bleeding should be assumed (< 0.67%) to make the choice for indefinite anticoagulation.
“This is a sticky wicket,” he said, “as tools to estimate bleeding risk among VTE patients are presently imprecise. For these reasons PCPs should take into account patient risk estimates – and the limitations that exist surrounding how we calculate these estimates – in addition to their values and preferences. This is really key in electing duration of anticoagulation.”
A limitation of the study is that the model assumed that risks for recurrent VTE and major bleeding in clinical trials at 1 year remained constant during extended anticoagulation.
Dr. Woller said about that limitation: “One might argue that this is unlikely; age is a risk factor for major bleeding and therefore risks may be underestimated. However, in the ‘real world’ those that are perceived at lowest risk and demonstrate good tolerance to anticoagulation might likely preferentially continue anticoagulants and therefore risks may be overestimated.”
One coauthor reported being a clinical investigator for trials sponsored by Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb and receiving honoraria from Pfizer, Sanofi and Aspen Pharma. The other authors disclosed no other relevant financial relationships. Dr. Woller is cochair of the CHEST guidelines on the treatment of venous thromboembolic disease.
Continuing anticoagulation indefinitely in patients with a first unprovoked venous thromboembolism (VTE) may have benefits for certain patients but is unlikely to be cost effective, say authors of a new study.
Continued anticoagulation for such patients “has little chance of improving life expectancy but might provide a mortality benefit in certain subgroups including patients with an initial PE (pulmonary embolism) or those at a very low risk for major bleeding,” wrote the authors, led by Faizan Khan, PhD, with the O’Brien Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary (Alta.).
Therefore, shared decision-making between patients with unprovoked VTE and physicians that includes discussion of preferences and values and use of validated prediction tools is important.
The authors noted that some patients might value avoiding morbidities of recurrent VTE the most and want to have lifelong anticoagulation. Some might be more fearful of major bleeding than VTE repercussions or don’t want the inconveniences of taking anticoagulants for a lifetime.
The findings were published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Current guidelines recommend indefinite anticoagulation
Clinical practice guidelines now recommend indefinite anticoagulation for a first unprovoked VTE.
The authors did a modeling study in a hypothetical cohort of 1,000 patients aged 55 years with a first unprovoked VTE who had completed 3-6 months of initial anticoagulation. The study found indefinite anticoagulation, compared with discontinuing anticoagulation, on average, resulted in 368 fewer recurrent VTE events and 14 fewer fatal PE events.
At the same time, indefinite coagulation in the hypothetical group induced an additional 114 major bleeding events, 30 intracerebral hemorrhages, and 11 fatal bleeding events over 40 years.
As for cost effectiveness, from the perspective of Canada’s health care system, continuing anticoagulation indefinitely, on average, increased costs by $16,014 Canadian dollars per person ($12,140 USD) without improving quality-adjusted life-years (incremental difference, 0.075 per person; 95% uncertainty interval, –0.192 to 0.017).
The authors noted that cost is a prime consideration as the estimated annual health care costs of VTE and its complications is $600 Canadian dollars ($7 billion–$10 billion USD).
High probability of small benefit
The authors spelled out the small benefit in patients with an initial PE.
According to the study, indefinite anticoagulation would result in an 80% probability of a marginal added clinical benefit (average increase of 57 days of perfect health over a lifetime) in patients with an initial PE (but with only a 24% chance of being cost effective).
“This high probability of an additional clinical benefit is plausible due to the higher proportion of recurrent VTE events presenting as PE (approximately 70% of episodes) in patients initially presenting with PE, in turn, resulting in a two- to threefold higher case-fatality rate of recurrent VTE in this patient subgroup.”
Tools to estimate bleeding risk imprecise
Scott Woller, MD, an internal medicine specialist and chair of medicine at Intermountain Medical Center, Murray, Utah, said in an interview that these results should help physicians’ discuss with their patients about duration of anticoagulation after the treatment phase.
He noted that the authors suggest that a low estimated annual risk for major bleeding should be assumed (< 0.67%) to make the choice for indefinite anticoagulation.
“This is a sticky wicket,” he said, “as tools to estimate bleeding risk among VTE patients are presently imprecise. For these reasons PCPs should take into account patient risk estimates – and the limitations that exist surrounding how we calculate these estimates – in addition to their values and preferences. This is really key in electing duration of anticoagulation.”
A limitation of the study is that the model assumed that risks for recurrent VTE and major bleeding in clinical trials at 1 year remained constant during extended anticoagulation.
Dr. Woller said about that limitation: “One might argue that this is unlikely; age is a risk factor for major bleeding and therefore risks may be underestimated. However, in the ‘real world’ those that are perceived at lowest risk and demonstrate good tolerance to anticoagulation might likely preferentially continue anticoagulants and therefore risks may be overestimated.”
One coauthor reported being a clinical investigator for trials sponsored by Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb and receiving honoraria from Pfizer, Sanofi and Aspen Pharma. The other authors disclosed no other relevant financial relationships. Dr. Woller is cochair of the CHEST guidelines on the treatment of venous thromboembolic disease.
FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
No link between heartburn meds and dementia
A new study provides reassurance about the safety of long-term proton pump inhibitor (PPIs) and histamine-2 receptor antagonist (H2RA) use in older adults, finding no increased risk for dementia or cognitive changes.
It was published online in Gastroenterology.
The post hoc observational study was led by Raaj Mehta, MD, PhD, with Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
The researchers analyzed results from the Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly clinical trial. The randomized trial of aspirin included 18,934 adults aged 65 and older from the United States and Australia. Patients’ use of PPI and H2RA was tracked, along with dementia incidence and cognitive changes.
The results showed that there was no link to new dementia diagnoses in patients who used PPIs (25%) and H2RA (2%) at baseline, versus those who did not use either heartburn medication.
Limitations of prior studies are referenced, including the potential for residual confounding and underestimation of PPI and H2RA use, the lack of data on medication dose and duration, and the absence of apo E4 allele status.
The study was funded by grants from the National Institute on Aging, the National Cancer Institute, and other institutions. Dr. Mehta has disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A new study provides reassurance about the safety of long-term proton pump inhibitor (PPIs) and histamine-2 receptor antagonist (H2RA) use in older adults, finding no increased risk for dementia or cognitive changes.
It was published online in Gastroenterology.
The post hoc observational study was led by Raaj Mehta, MD, PhD, with Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
The researchers analyzed results from the Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly clinical trial. The randomized trial of aspirin included 18,934 adults aged 65 and older from the United States and Australia. Patients’ use of PPI and H2RA was tracked, along with dementia incidence and cognitive changes.
The results showed that there was no link to new dementia diagnoses in patients who used PPIs (25%) and H2RA (2%) at baseline, versus those who did not use either heartburn medication.
Limitations of prior studies are referenced, including the potential for residual confounding and underestimation of PPI and H2RA use, the lack of data on medication dose and duration, and the absence of apo E4 allele status.
The study was funded by grants from the National Institute on Aging, the National Cancer Institute, and other institutions. Dr. Mehta has disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A new study provides reassurance about the safety of long-term proton pump inhibitor (PPIs) and histamine-2 receptor antagonist (H2RA) use in older adults, finding no increased risk for dementia or cognitive changes.
It was published online in Gastroenterology.
The post hoc observational study was led by Raaj Mehta, MD, PhD, with Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
The researchers analyzed results from the Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly clinical trial. The randomized trial of aspirin included 18,934 adults aged 65 and older from the United States and Australia. Patients’ use of PPI and H2RA was tracked, along with dementia incidence and cognitive changes.
The results showed that there was no link to new dementia diagnoses in patients who used PPIs (25%) and H2RA (2%) at baseline, versus those who did not use either heartburn medication.
Limitations of prior studies are referenced, including the potential for residual confounding and underestimation of PPI and H2RA use, the lack of data on medication dose and duration, and the absence of apo E4 allele status.
The study was funded by grants from the National Institute on Aging, the National Cancer Institute, and other institutions. Dr. Mehta has disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY
Women with atrial fibrillation more likely to develop dementia
New data suggest a significantly stronger link in women compared with men between atrial fibrillation (AF) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia.
“Our findings imply that women with AF may be at higher risk for MCI and dementia with potentially more rapid disease progression from normal cognition to MCI or dementia than women without AF or men with and without AF,” wrote authors of a new study led by Kathryn A. Wood, PhD, RN, Neil Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing at Emory University in Atlanta.
The findings were published online in Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
Researchers used the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center data with 43,630 patients and analyzed sex differences between men and women with AF and their performance on neuropsychological tests and cognitive disease progression.
Higher odds of dementia, MCI in women
According to the paper, AF is associated with higher odds of dementia (odds ratio [OR], 3.00; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.22-7.37) in women and MCI in women (OR, 3.43; 95% CI, 1.55-7.55) compared with men.
Women with AF and normal cognition at baseline had a higher risk of disease progression (hazard ratio [HR], 1.26; 95% CI, 1.06-1.50) from normal to MCI and from MCI to vascular dementia (HR, 3.27; 95% CI, 1.89-5.65) than that of men with AF or men and women without AF.
AF is a major public health problem linked with stroke and heart failure, and is an independent risk factor of increased mortality. It is associated with higher risk of cognitive impairment and dementia independent of stroke history.
Cognitive screening for AF patients
The authors wrote that cognitive screening, especially in women, should be part of yearly cardiology visits for patients with AF to help identify early those at highest risk for cognitive disease.
T. Jared Bunch, MD, professor of medicine in the division of cardiovascular medicine at University of Utah in Salt Lake City, said in an interview, “We have learned that how we treat atrial fibrillation can influence risk.”
First, he said, outcomes, including brain health, are better when rhythm control approaches are used within the first year of diagnosis.
“Restoring a normal heart rhythm improves brain perfusion and cognitive function. Next, aggressive rhythm control – such as catheter ablation – is associated with much lower long-term risks of dementia in the [patients]. Finally, early and effective use of anticoagulation in patients with atrial fibrillation lowers risk of stroke, dementia, and cognitive decline.”
Several factors unknown
Dr. Bunch said there are some unknowns in the study, such as how long patients were in atrial fibrillation.
He said one way to address the inequities is to refer women earlier as women are often referred later in disease to specialty care, which can have consequences.
He said it is not known how many people underwent early and effective rhythm control.
“Women also are less likely to receive catheter ablation, a cardioversion, or be placed on antiarrhythmic drugs,” said Dr. Bunch, who was not part of the study. “These also represent potential opportunities to improve outcomes by treating the rhythm in a similar and aggressive manner in both men and women.”
Also unknown is how many people were on effective oral anticoagulation, Dr. Bunch noted.
The study importantly highlights a significant problem surrounding the care of women with AF, he said, but there are strategies to improve outcomes.
In addition to earlier screening and referral for women, providers should recognize that men and women may present differently with different AF symptoms. He added that physicians should offer catheter ablation, the most effective treatment, equally to men and women who are candidates.
In all people, he said, it’s important “to start anticoagulation very early in the disease to lower the risk of micro- and macrothrombotic events that lead to poor brain health and function.”
The study authors and Dr. Bunch declared no relevant financial relationships.
New data suggest a significantly stronger link in women compared with men between atrial fibrillation (AF) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia.
“Our findings imply that women with AF may be at higher risk for MCI and dementia with potentially more rapid disease progression from normal cognition to MCI or dementia than women without AF or men with and without AF,” wrote authors of a new study led by Kathryn A. Wood, PhD, RN, Neil Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing at Emory University in Atlanta.
The findings were published online in Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
Researchers used the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center data with 43,630 patients and analyzed sex differences between men and women with AF and their performance on neuropsychological tests and cognitive disease progression.
Higher odds of dementia, MCI in women
According to the paper, AF is associated with higher odds of dementia (odds ratio [OR], 3.00; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.22-7.37) in women and MCI in women (OR, 3.43; 95% CI, 1.55-7.55) compared with men.
Women with AF and normal cognition at baseline had a higher risk of disease progression (hazard ratio [HR], 1.26; 95% CI, 1.06-1.50) from normal to MCI and from MCI to vascular dementia (HR, 3.27; 95% CI, 1.89-5.65) than that of men with AF or men and women without AF.
AF is a major public health problem linked with stroke and heart failure, and is an independent risk factor of increased mortality. It is associated with higher risk of cognitive impairment and dementia independent of stroke history.
Cognitive screening for AF patients
The authors wrote that cognitive screening, especially in women, should be part of yearly cardiology visits for patients with AF to help identify early those at highest risk for cognitive disease.
T. Jared Bunch, MD, professor of medicine in the division of cardiovascular medicine at University of Utah in Salt Lake City, said in an interview, “We have learned that how we treat atrial fibrillation can influence risk.”
First, he said, outcomes, including brain health, are better when rhythm control approaches are used within the first year of diagnosis.
“Restoring a normal heart rhythm improves brain perfusion and cognitive function. Next, aggressive rhythm control – such as catheter ablation – is associated with much lower long-term risks of dementia in the [patients]. Finally, early and effective use of anticoagulation in patients with atrial fibrillation lowers risk of stroke, dementia, and cognitive decline.”
Several factors unknown
Dr. Bunch said there are some unknowns in the study, such as how long patients were in atrial fibrillation.
He said one way to address the inequities is to refer women earlier as women are often referred later in disease to specialty care, which can have consequences.
He said it is not known how many people underwent early and effective rhythm control.
“Women also are less likely to receive catheter ablation, a cardioversion, or be placed on antiarrhythmic drugs,” said Dr. Bunch, who was not part of the study. “These also represent potential opportunities to improve outcomes by treating the rhythm in a similar and aggressive manner in both men and women.”
Also unknown is how many people were on effective oral anticoagulation, Dr. Bunch noted.
The study importantly highlights a significant problem surrounding the care of women with AF, he said, but there are strategies to improve outcomes.
In addition to earlier screening and referral for women, providers should recognize that men and women may present differently with different AF symptoms. He added that physicians should offer catheter ablation, the most effective treatment, equally to men and women who are candidates.
In all people, he said, it’s important “to start anticoagulation very early in the disease to lower the risk of micro- and macrothrombotic events that lead to poor brain health and function.”
The study authors and Dr. Bunch declared no relevant financial relationships.
New data suggest a significantly stronger link in women compared with men between atrial fibrillation (AF) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia.
“Our findings imply that women with AF may be at higher risk for MCI and dementia with potentially more rapid disease progression from normal cognition to MCI or dementia than women without AF or men with and without AF,” wrote authors of a new study led by Kathryn A. Wood, PhD, RN, Neil Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing at Emory University in Atlanta.
The findings were published online in Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
Researchers used the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center data with 43,630 patients and analyzed sex differences between men and women with AF and their performance on neuropsychological tests and cognitive disease progression.
Higher odds of dementia, MCI in women
According to the paper, AF is associated with higher odds of dementia (odds ratio [OR], 3.00; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.22-7.37) in women and MCI in women (OR, 3.43; 95% CI, 1.55-7.55) compared with men.
Women with AF and normal cognition at baseline had a higher risk of disease progression (hazard ratio [HR], 1.26; 95% CI, 1.06-1.50) from normal to MCI and from MCI to vascular dementia (HR, 3.27; 95% CI, 1.89-5.65) than that of men with AF or men and women without AF.
AF is a major public health problem linked with stroke and heart failure, and is an independent risk factor of increased mortality. It is associated with higher risk of cognitive impairment and dementia independent of stroke history.
Cognitive screening for AF patients
The authors wrote that cognitive screening, especially in women, should be part of yearly cardiology visits for patients with AF to help identify early those at highest risk for cognitive disease.
T. Jared Bunch, MD, professor of medicine in the division of cardiovascular medicine at University of Utah in Salt Lake City, said in an interview, “We have learned that how we treat atrial fibrillation can influence risk.”
First, he said, outcomes, including brain health, are better when rhythm control approaches are used within the first year of diagnosis.
“Restoring a normal heart rhythm improves brain perfusion and cognitive function. Next, aggressive rhythm control – such as catheter ablation – is associated with much lower long-term risks of dementia in the [patients]. Finally, early and effective use of anticoagulation in patients with atrial fibrillation lowers risk of stroke, dementia, and cognitive decline.”
Several factors unknown
Dr. Bunch said there are some unknowns in the study, such as how long patients were in atrial fibrillation.
He said one way to address the inequities is to refer women earlier as women are often referred later in disease to specialty care, which can have consequences.
He said it is not known how many people underwent early and effective rhythm control.
“Women also are less likely to receive catheter ablation, a cardioversion, or be placed on antiarrhythmic drugs,” said Dr. Bunch, who was not part of the study. “These also represent potential opportunities to improve outcomes by treating the rhythm in a similar and aggressive manner in both men and women.”
Also unknown is how many people were on effective oral anticoagulation, Dr. Bunch noted.
The study importantly highlights a significant problem surrounding the care of women with AF, he said, but there are strategies to improve outcomes.
In addition to earlier screening and referral for women, providers should recognize that men and women may present differently with different AF symptoms. He added that physicians should offer catheter ablation, the most effective treatment, equally to men and women who are candidates.
In all people, he said, it’s important “to start anticoagulation very early in the disease to lower the risk of micro- and macrothrombotic events that lead to poor brain health and function.”
The study authors and Dr. Bunch declared no relevant financial relationships.
FROM ALZHEIMER’S & DEMENTIA
CDC signs off on RSV vaccine for older adults
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has given a green light to two new vaccines to protect against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, in older adults.
CDC Director Rochelle P. Walensky, MD, MPH, agreed with and endorsed the recommendations made earlier by CDC advisors that people age 60 and over may get one of two new vaccines for RSV. Decisions should be made based on discussions with one’s health care provider about whether the vaccine is right for them, the federal health agency said.
The new vaccines, the first licensed in the United States to protect against the respiratory illness, are expected to be available this fall.
On June 21, the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), an independent panel, stopped short of recommending the vaccines for everyone age 65 and above, which was the original question the committee was to consider. The experts amended that question, changing it to whether the panel should recommend the vaccine for those 65 and above if the person and their doctor agreed. The committee voted 9 to 5 in favor.
RSV vaccines
RSV leads to 6,000 to 10,000 deaths a year in the United States among those age 65 and older and 60,000 to 160,000 hospitalizations in that group. Seniors and infants are among the most vulnerable to the lower respiratory infection, marked by runny nose, wheezing, sneezing, decreased appetite, and fever.
The FDA in May approved two vaccines — GSK’s Arexvy and Pfizer’s Abrysvo — for adults age 60 and above.
The vote recommending shared decision-making about the vaccine, instead of a routine vaccination recommended for all, “is a weaker recommendation,” said William Schaffner, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville and medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. Dr. Schaffner is a non-voting member of ACIP. He attended the meeting.
He said the experts voiced concern about a number of issues, including what some saw as a lack of sufficient data from trials on the most vulnerable groups, such as nursing home residents.
Experts also wanted more information about the duration of protection and exactly when a second dose might be needed. At the meeting, a GSK official said its vaccine was 84.6% effective after one and a half seasons, down from 94.1% after one season. A Pfizer official said its vaccine decreased the risk of RSV with three or more symptoms by 78.6% after a season and a half, down from 88.9% after one season.
The panel also wanted more data on whether the RSV vaccines could be administered at the same time as other vaccines recommended for adults.
Both companies gave a range of cost estimates. Pfizer expects its vaccine to cost $180 to $270 but said it could not guarantee that range. GSK said it expects a price of $200 to $295. Under the Inflation Reduction Act, recommended vaccines are covered under Medicare for those with Part D plans, which 51 million of 65 million Medicare patients have. Commercial insurance is likely to cover the vaccines if the CDC recommends them.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
This article was updated 7/5/23.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has given a green light to two new vaccines to protect against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, in older adults.
CDC Director Rochelle P. Walensky, MD, MPH, agreed with and endorsed the recommendations made earlier by CDC advisors that people age 60 and over may get one of two new vaccines for RSV. Decisions should be made based on discussions with one’s health care provider about whether the vaccine is right for them, the federal health agency said.
The new vaccines, the first licensed in the United States to protect against the respiratory illness, are expected to be available this fall.
On June 21, the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), an independent panel, stopped short of recommending the vaccines for everyone age 65 and above, which was the original question the committee was to consider. The experts amended that question, changing it to whether the panel should recommend the vaccine for those 65 and above if the person and their doctor agreed. The committee voted 9 to 5 in favor.
RSV vaccines
RSV leads to 6,000 to 10,000 deaths a year in the United States among those age 65 and older and 60,000 to 160,000 hospitalizations in that group. Seniors and infants are among the most vulnerable to the lower respiratory infection, marked by runny nose, wheezing, sneezing, decreased appetite, and fever.
The FDA in May approved two vaccines — GSK’s Arexvy and Pfizer’s Abrysvo — for adults age 60 and above.
The vote recommending shared decision-making about the vaccine, instead of a routine vaccination recommended for all, “is a weaker recommendation,” said William Schaffner, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville and medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. Dr. Schaffner is a non-voting member of ACIP. He attended the meeting.
He said the experts voiced concern about a number of issues, including what some saw as a lack of sufficient data from trials on the most vulnerable groups, such as nursing home residents.
Experts also wanted more information about the duration of protection and exactly when a second dose might be needed. At the meeting, a GSK official said its vaccine was 84.6% effective after one and a half seasons, down from 94.1% after one season. A Pfizer official said its vaccine decreased the risk of RSV with three or more symptoms by 78.6% after a season and a half, down from 88.9% after one season.
The panel also wanted more data on whether the RSV vaccines could be administered at the same time as other vaccines recommended for adults.
Both companies gave a range of cost estimates. Pfizer expects its vaccine to cost $180 to $270 but said it could not guarantee that range. GSK said it expects a price of $200 to $295. Under the Inflation Reduction Act, recommended vaccines are covered under Medicare for those with Part D plans, which 51 million of 65 million Medicare patients have. Commercial insurance is likely to cover the vaccines if the CDC recommends them.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
This article was updated 7/5/23.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has given a green light to two new vaccines to protect against respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, in older adults.
CDC Director Rochelle P. Walensky, MD, MPH, agreed with and endorsed the recommendations made earlier by CDC advisors that people age 60 and over may get one of two new vaccines for RSV. Decisions should be made based on discussions with one’s health care provider about whether the vaccine is right for them, the federal health agency said.
The new vaccines, the first licensed in the United States to protect against the respiratory illness, are expected to be available this fall.
On June 21, the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), an independent panel, stopped short of recommending the vaccines for everyone age 65 and above, which was the original question the committee was to consider. The experts amended that question, changing it to whether the panel should recommend the vaccine for those 65 and above if the person and their doctor agreed. The committee voted 9 to 5 in favor.
RSV vaccines
RSV leads to 6,000 to 10,000 deaths a year in the United States among those age 65 and older and 60,000 to 160,000 hospitalizations in that group. Seniors and infants are among the most vulnerable to the lower respiratory infection, marked by runny nose, wheezing, sneezing, decreased appetite, and fever.
The FDA in May approved two vaccines — GSK’s Arexvy and Pfizer’s Abrysvo — for adults age 60 and above.
The vote recommending shared decision-making about the vaccine, instead of a routine vaccination recommended for all, “is a weaker recommendation,” said William Schaffner, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville and medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. Dr. Schaffner is a non-voting member of ACIP. He attended the meeting.
He said the experts voiced concern about a number of issues, including what some saw as a lack of sufficient data from trials on the most vulnerable groups, such as nursing home residents.
Experts also wanted more information about the duration of protection and exactly when a second dose might be needed. At the meeting, a GSK official said its vaccine was 84.6% effective after one and a half seasons, down from 94.1% after one season. A Pfizer official said its vaccine decreased the risk of RSV with three or more symptoms by 78.6% after a season and a half, down from 88.9% after one season.
The panel also wanted more data on whether the RSV vaccines could be administered at the same time as other vaccines recommended for adults.
Both companies gave a range of cost estimates. Pfizer expects its vaccine to cost $180 to $270 but said it could not guarantee that range. GSK said it expects a price of $200 to $295. Under the Inflation Reduction Act, recommended vaccines are covered under Medicare for those with Part D plans, which 51 million of 65 million Medicare patients have. Commercial insurance is likely to cover the vaccines if the CDC recommends them.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
This article was updated 7/5/23.
SSRI improves cognition, major depression in early dementia
TOPLINE:
METHODOLOGY:
- The multicenter MEMORY study included 82 subjects with MDD and early-stage dementia, mean age 70.3 years, mostly female (66%) and White (95%).
- Vortioxetine, a modulator of 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor activity and an inhibitor of the 5-HT transporter, initiated at 5 mg/day (recommended starting dose in older adults) with the dose up-titrated to 10 mg/day after a week and flexible dosing thereafter.
- Depression was assessed using the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), and cognition with the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST) and Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test.
TAKEAWAY:
- There was significant and clinically meaningful improvement in the severity of depressive symptoms, as measured by MADRS total score (the primary outcome), at all assessment time points (P < .0001).
- Improvements in depressive symptoms were irrespective of dementia type.
- There were also significant improvements in DSST total score (P < .0001) and in daily functioning and health-related quality of life (HRQoL).
- Vortioxetine was well tolerated; side effects, including nausea and abdominal pain, were mostly mild to moderate.
IN PRACTICE:
“Vortioxetine demonstrated effectiveness in clinically significantly improving depressive symptoms, cognitive performance, daily and global functioning, and HRQoL in patients with MDD and comorbid early-stage dementia treated for 12 weeks” the researchers noted.
STUDY DETAILS:
The study was conducted by Michael Cronquist Christensen from pharmaceutical company H. Lundbeck, Valby, Denmark, and colleagues. It was published online in the Journal of Affective Disorders.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is open label and lacked a control group. Learning effects were possible, which could contribute to improved cognitive performance, although significant improvement on the RAVLT was not observed until week 4, suggesting earning effects were minimal.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was funded by H. Lundbeck. Mr. Christensen is an employee of H. Lundbeck.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
METHODOLOGY:
- The multicenter MEMORY study included 82 subjects with MDD and early-stage dementia, mean age 70.3 years, mostly female (66%) and White (95%).
- Vortioxetine, a modulator of 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor activity and an inhibitor of the 5-HT transporter, initiated at 5 mg/day (recommended starting dose in older adults) with the dose up-titrated to 10 mg/day after a week and flexible dosing thereafter.
- Depression was assessed using the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), and cognition with the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST) and Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test.
TAKEAWAY:
- There was significant and clinically meaningful improvement in the severity of depressive symptoms, as measured by MADRS total score (the primary outcome), at all assessment time points (P < .0001).
- Improvements in depressive symptoms were irrespective of dementia type.
- There were also significant improvements in DSST total score (P < .0001) and in daily functioning and health-related quality of life (HRQoL).
- Vortioxetine was well tolerated; side effects, including nausea and abdominal pain, were mostly mild to moderate.
IN PRACTICE:
“Vortioxetine demonstrated effectiveness in clinically significantly improving depressive symptoms, cognitive performance, daily and global functioning, and HRQoL in patients with MDD and comorbid early-stage dementia treated for 12 weeks” the researchers noted.
STUDY DETAILS:
The study was conducted by Michael Cronquist Christensen from pharmaceutical company H. Lundbeck, Valby, Denmark, and colleagues. It was published online in the Journal of Affective Disorders.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is open label and lacked a control group. Learning effects were possible, which could contribute to improved cognitive performance, although significant improvement on the RAVLT was not observed until week 4, suggesting earning effects were minimal.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was funded by H. Lundbeck. Mr. Christensen is an employee of H. Lundbeck.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
METHODOLOGY:
- The multicenter MEMORY study included 82 subjects with MDD and early-stage dementia, mean age 70.3 years, mostly female (66%) and White (95%).
- Vortioxetine, a modulator of 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor activity and an inhibitor of the 5-HT transporter, initiated at 5 mg/day (recommended starting dose in older adults) with the dose up-titrated to 10 mg/day after a week and flexible dosing thereafter.
- Depression was assessed using the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), and cognition with the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST) and Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test.
TAKEAWAY:
- There was significant and clinically meaningful improvement in the severity of depressive symptoms, as measured by MADRS total score (the primary outcome), at all assessment time points (P < .0001).
- Improvements in depressive symptoms were irrespective of dementia type.
- There were also significant improvements in DSST total score (P < .0001) and in daily functioning and health-related quality of life (HRQoL).
- Vortioxetine was well tolerated; side effects, including nausea and abdominal pain, were mostly mild to moderate.
IN PRACTICE:
“Vortioxetine demonstrated effectiveness in clinically significantly improving depressive symptoms, cognitive performance, daily and global functioning, and HRQoL in patients with MDD and comorbid early-stage dementia treated for 12 weeks” the researchers noted.
STUDY DETAILS:
The study was conducted by Michael Cronquist Christensen from pharmaceutical company H. Lundbeck, Valby, Denmark, and colleagues. It was published online in the Journal of Affective Disorders.
LIMITATIONS:
The study is open label and lacked a control group. Learning effects were possible, which could contribute to improved cognitive performance, although significant improvement on the RAVLT was not observed until week 4, suggesting earning effects were minimal.
DISCLOSURES:
The study was funded by H. Lundbeck. Mr. Christensen is an employee of H. Lundbeck.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
A ‘one-stop shop’: New guidance on hormones and aging
The idea of the statement “is to be complete, but also to clarify some misunderstandings. ...We tried to be very clear in the language about what we know, where we can go, where we shouldn’t go, and what we still need to learn,” statement coauthor Cynthia A. Stuenkel, MD, of the University of California, San Diego, said in an interview.
The document is divided into nine parts or axes: growth hormone, adrenal, ovarian, testicular, thyroid, osteoporosis, vitamin D deficiency, type 2 diabetes, and water metabolism. Each section covers natural history and observational data in older individuals, available therapies, clinical trial data on efficacy and safety in older individuals, bulleted “key points,” and research gaps.
“Hormones and Aging: An Endocrine Society Scientific Statement” was presented at the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society and published online in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
During a press briefing, writing group chair Anne R. Cappola, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said the goal is to “provide a really concise summary across each of these areas. ... There are multiple hormonal changes that occur with age, so we really couldn’t limit ourselves to just one gland or the few that we commonly think about. We wanted to cover all the axes.”
The statement tackles several controversial areas, including hormone therapy for menopausal symptoms in women and hypogonadal symptoms in men, diabetes treatment goals in older adults, distinguishing between age-associated changes in thyroid function and early hypothyroidism, and vitamin D supplementation in older adults.
“Hormones have these almost mythical qualities to some people. ... ‘If I just had my hormones back the way they were, it would all work out.’ What we want to do is make sure that patients are being treated appropriately and that their symptoms are being heard and managed and ascribed to the appropriate problems and not necessarily to hormonal problems when they are not. ... Part of what we need to do is [provide] the evidence that we have, which includes evidence of when not to prescribe as well as [when] to prescribe,” Dr. Cappola said.
Not designed to be read all at once
In the menopause section, for example, one “key point” is that menopausal symptoms are common, vary in degree and bother, and can be effectively treated with a variety of therapies proven effective in randomized clinical trials. Another key point is that menopausal hormone therapy is safest for women who are younger than 60 years and less than 10 years since starting menopause.
“It’s almost 20 years since the original Women’s Health Initiative, and that led to an incredible falloff of prescribing hormone therapy and a falloff in teaching of our students, residents, fellows, and practitioners about [menopausal] hormone therapy. ... Hopefully, by issuing this kind of aging statement it gets people to read, think, and learn more. And, hopefully, we can improve the education of physicians. ... Menopause is a universal experience. Clinicians should know about it,” noted Dr. Stuenkel, who chaired the menopause section writing panel.
In the type 2 diabetes section, in the bullet points it is noted that oral glucose tolerance testing may reveal abnormal glucose status in older adults that are not picked up with hemoglobin A1c or fasting glucose levels and that glycemic targets should be individualized.
Asked to comment on the statement, Michele Bellantoni, MD, said: “This was a huge undertaking because there are so many areas of expertise here. I thought they did a very good job of reviewing the literature and showing each of the different hormonal axes. ... It’s a good go-to review.”
“I thought it was a very good attempt to catalog and provide opportunities for policy, and particularly at [the National Institutes of Health], as they look at funding to show where are these gaps and to support appropriate research. I think the most important aspect to come of this is identifying research gaps for funding opportunities. I very much support that,” noted Dr. Bellantoni, who is clinical director of the division of geriatric medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
However, she also said that the 40-page document might be a bit much for busy clinicians, despite the bullet points at the end of each section.
“I would love to see an editorial that puts into perspective the take-home messages or a subsequent article that distills this into every day practice of care of older adults, both preventative and treatment care. ... I think that would be so useful.”
During the briefing, Dr. Cappola noted that the document need not be read all at once.
“It ended up being a large document, but you should not be intimidated by it because each section is only about 2,000 words. So, it’s really a kind of one-stop shop to be able to look across all these axes at once. We also wanted people to think about the common themes that occur across all these axes when considering what’s going on right now and for future research,” she said.
Dr. Stuenkel, Dr. Cappola, and Dr. Bellantoni reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The idea of the statement “is to be complete, but also to clarify some misunderstandings. ...We tried to be very clear in the language about what we know, where we can go, where we shouldn’t go, and what we still need to learn,” statement coauthor Cynthia A. Stuenkel, MD, of the University of California, San Diego, said in an interview.
The document is divided into nine parts or axes: growth hormone, adrenal, ovarian, testicular, thyroid, osteoporosis, vitamin D deficiency, type 2 diabetes, and water metabolism. Each section covers natural history and observational data in older individuals, available therapies, clinical trial data on efficacy and safety in older individuals, bulleted “key points,” and research gaps.
“Hormones and Aging: An Endocrine Society Scientific Statement” was presented at the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society and published online in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
During a press briefing, writing group chair Anne R. Cappola, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said the goal is to “provide a really concise summary across each of these areas. ... There are multiple hormonal changes that occur with age, so we really couldn’t limit ourselves to just one gland or the few that we commonly think about. We wanted to cover all the axes.”
The statement tackles several controversial areas, including hormone therapy for menopausal symptoms in women and hypogonadal symptoms in men, diabetes treatment goals in older adults, distinguishing between age-associated changes in thyroid function and early hypothyroidism, and vitamin D supplementation in older adults.
“Hormones have these almost mythical qualities to some people. ... ‘If I just had my hormones back the way they were, it would all work out.’ What we want to do is make sure that patients are being treated appropriately and that their symptoms are being heard and managed and ascribed to the appropriate problems and not necessarily to hormonal problems when they are not. ... Part of what we need to do is [provide] the evidence that we have, which includes evidence of when not to prescribe as well as [when] to prescribe,” Dr. Cappola said.
Not designed to be read all at once
In the menopause section, for example, one “key point” is that menopausal symptoms are common, vary in degree and bother, and can be effectively treated with a variety of therapies proven effective in randomized clinical trials. Another key point is that menopausal hormone therapy is safest for women who are younger than 60 years and less than 10 years since starting menopause.
“It’s almost 20 years since the original Women’s Health Initiative, and that led to an incredible falloff of prescribing hormone therapy and a falloff in teaching of our students, residents, fellows, and practitioners about [menopausal] hormone therapy. ... Hopefully, by issuing this kind of aging statement it gets people to read, think, and learn more. And, hopefully, we can improve the education of physicians. ... Menopause is a universal experience. Clinicians should know about it,” noted Dr. Stuenkel, who chaired the menopause section writing panel.
In the type 2 diabetes section, in the bullet points it is noted that oral glucose tolerance testing may reveal abnormal glucose status in older adults that are not picked up with hemoglobin A1c or fasting glucose levels and that glycemic targets should be individualized.
Asked to comment on the statement, Michele Bellantoni, MD, said: “This was a huge undertaking because there are so many areas of expertise here. I thought they did a very good job of reviewing the literature and showing each of the different hormonal axes. ... It’s a good go-to review.”
“I thought it was a very good attempt to catalog and provide opportunities for policy, and particularly at [the National Institutes of Health], as they look at funding to show where are these gaps and to support appropriate research. I think the most important aspect to come of this is identifying research gaps for funding opportunities. I very much support that,” noted Dr. Bellantoni, who is clinical director of the division of geriatric medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
However, she also said that the 40-page document might be a bit much for busy clinicians, despite the bullet points at the end of each section.
“I would love to see an editorial that puts into perspective the take-home messages or a subsequent article that distills this into every day practice of care of older adults, both preventative and treatment care. ... I think that would be so useful.”
During the briefing, Dr. Cappola noted that the document need not be read all at once.
“It ended up being a large document, but you should not be intimidated by it because each section is only about 2,000 words. So, it’s really a kind of one-stop shop to be able to look across all these axes at once. We also wanted people to think about the common themes that occur across all these axes when considering what’s going on right now and for future research,” she said.
Dr. Stuenkel, Dr. Cappola, and Dr. Bellantoni reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The idea of the statement “is to be complete, but also to clarify some misunderstandings. ...We tried to be very clear in the language about what we know, where we can go, where we shouldn’t go, and what we still need to learn,” statement coauthor Cynthia A. Stuenkel, MD, of the University of California, San Diego, said in an interview.
The document is divided into nine parts or axes: growth hormone, adrenal, ovarian, testicular, thyroid, osteoporosis, vitamin D deficiency, type 2 diabetes, and water metabolism. Each section covers natural history and observational data in older individuals, available therapies, clinical trial data on efficacy and safety in older individuals, bulleted “key points,” and research gaps.
“Hormones and Aging: An Endocrine Society Scientific Statement” was presented at the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society and published online in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
During a press briefing, writing group chair Anne R. Cappola, MD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said the goal is to “provide a really concise summary across each of these areas. ... There are multiple hormonal changes that occur with age, so we really couldn’t limit ourselves to just one gland or the few that we commonly think about. We wanted to cover all the axes.”
The statement tackles several controversial areas, including hormone therapy for menopausal symptoms in women and hypogonadal symptoms in men, diabetes treatment goals in older adults, distinguishing between age-associated changes in thyroid function and early hypothyroidism, and vitamin D supplementation in older adults.
“Hormones have these almost mythical qualities to some people. ... ‘If I just had my hormones back the way they were, it would all work out.’ What we want to do is make sure that patients are being treated appropriately and that their symptoms are being heard and managed and ascribed to the appropriate problems and not necessarily to hormonal problems when they are not. ... Part of what we need to do is [provide] the evidence that we have, which includes evidence of when not to prescribe as well as [when] to prescribe,” Dr. Cappola said.
Not designed to be read all at once
In the menopause section, for example, one “key point” is that menopausal symptoms are common, vary in degree and bother, and can be effectively treated with a variety of therapies proven effective in randomized clinical trials. Another key point is that menopausal hormone therapy is safest for women who are younger than 60 years and less than 10 years since starting menopause.
“It’s almost 20 years since the original Women’s Health Initiative, and that led to an incredible falloff of prescribing hormone therapy and a falloff in teaching of our students, residents, fellows, and practitioners about [menopausal] hormone therapy. ... Hopefully, by issuing this kind of aging statement it gets people to read, think, and learn more. And, hopefully, we can improve the education of physicians. ... Menopause is a universal experience. Clinicians should know about it,” noted Dr. Stuenkel, who chaired the menopause section writing panel.
In the type 2 diabetes section, in the bullet points it is noted that oral glucose tolerance testing may reveal abnormal glucose status in older adults that are not picked up with hemoglobin A1c or fasting glucose levels and that glycemic targets should be individualized.
Asked to comment on the statement, Michele Bellantoni, MD, said: “This was a huge undertaking because there are so many areas of expertise here. I thought they did a very good job of reviewing the literature and showing each of the different hormonal axes. ... It’s a good go-to review.”
“I thought it was a very good attempt to catalog and provide opportunities for policy, and particularly at [the National Institutes of Health], as they look at funding to show where are these gaps and to support appropriate research. I think the most important aspect to come of this is identifying research gaps for funding opportunities. I very much support that,” noted Dr. Bellantoni, who is clinical director of the division of geriatric medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
However, she also said that the 40-page document might be a bit much for busy clinicians, despite the bullet points at the end of each section.
“I would love to see an editorial that puts into perspective the take-home messages or a subsequent article that distills this into every day practice of care of older adults, both preventative and treatment care. ... I think that would be so useful.”
During the briefing, Dr. Cappola noted that the document need not be read all at once.
“It ended up being a large document, but you should not be intimidated by it because each section is only about 2,000 words. So, it’s really a kind of one-stop shop to be able to look across all these axes at once. We also wanted people to think about the common themes that occur across all these axes when considering what’s going on right now and for future research,” she said.
Dr. Stuenkel, Dr. Cappola, and Dr. Bellantoni reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM ENDO 2023