Novel virus targeting deadly brain tumors shows early promise

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A novel virus engineered to target malignant gliomas, which are particularly aggressive brain tumors, may prolong survival, according to a recent phase 1 study.

The findings, published June 29 in The Lancet Oncology, show early promise in targeting malignant gliomas, which have been notoriously difficult to treat. Only 1 in 4 patients are alive 2 years after diagnosis. The median overall survival from diagnosis is 14.6-16.7 months.

In a study of a novel therapy called NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 – an oncolytic adenovirus delivered across the blood-brain barrier by neural stem cells – overall survival improved by several months for patients with malignant gliomas.

“To my knowledge, this is the first time neural stem cells have been used as a delivery strategy for an oncolytic virus,” said Terence Burns, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurosurgery at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., who was not involved in the research.

In this open-label, dose-escalation trial, researchers enrolled 12 patients with newly diagnosed malignant gliomas between April 2017 and November 2019. After neurosurgical tumor resection, patients were placed in one of three cohorts distinguished by dose of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7. Three patients received the lowest dose of 6.25×1010 viral particles administered by 5.00×10⁷ neural stem cells (NSCs), three received a more moderate dose of 1.25×10 viral particles administered by 1.00×108 NSCs, and the remaining six patients received a dose of 1.875×1011 viral particles administered by 1.50×108 NSCs. Within 10-14 days, the investigators also initiated treatment with temozolomide and radiotherapy.

The investigators report that after a median 18-month follow-up period, median progression-free survival was 9.1 months, and median overall survival of 18.4 months. In a subgroup of patients with unmethylated MGMT promoters – DNA repair enzymes that make tumor cells more resistant to treatment – median progression-free survival was 8.8 months, and median overall survival was 18.0 months.

There was no dose-limiting toxicity, and there were no treatment-related deaths. One patient developed viral meningitis, owing to the inadvertent ventricular injection of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7, and fully recovered after hospitalization.

Patients tolerated the treatment well, which is critical because “drugs that could fight gliomas might also have serious adverse effects,” first author Jawad Fares, MD, a postdoctoral fellow in neurological surgery at Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview.
 

A novel approach

A significant challenge to delivering drugs to the site of malignant gliomas is the blood-brain barrier, which blocks entry of many chemotherapeutic drugs.

“Because of this barrier, physicians often employ other strategies, such as direct injection in the brain cavity, but even with an injection, it is problematic to disseminate the drug so that the medication spreads throughout the tumor mass,” said Dr. Fares. “Our innovative approach, which employs the use of neural stem cells as shuttles to deliver viruses, seeks to address this problem. Neural stem cells tend to travel within hours to areas of injury, areas of stroke or brain tumors, and could disperse the oncolytic virus.”

Gliomas create an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, which uses tissue cells, blood vessels, immune cells, and other parts of the body to blunt antitumor immune responses. Using NSCs to deliver NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 directly to the tumor has the advantage of “giving the virus more time to replicate and kill tumor cells,” said Marta Alonso Roldán, MD, Clinica Universidad de Navarra, in Spain, in an interview.

Although NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 appeared to improve survival in this cohort by a few months, follow-up trials with larger sample sizes and control groups are necessary to demonstrate efficacy.

Moreover, patients in this trial may not be representative of the average patient, said Dr. Burns. “For instance, three of the patients had relatively small tumors in nicely operable areas with a high likelihood of getting a gross total resection. These things do stack your odds in favor of having a longer survival.”

Moving forward, “this trial sets the stage for a phase 2/3 study in which the efficacy of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 in eliciting an antiglioma immune response and prolonging survival in a larger cohort of patients with controlled conditions can be explored,” Dr. Fares said.

The study was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Dr. Fares, Dr. Burns, and Dr. Roldán have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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A novel virus engineered to target malignant gliomas, which are particularly aggressive brain tumors, may prolong survival, according to a recent phase 1 study.

The findings, published June 29 in The Lancet Oncology, show early promise in targeting malignant gliomas, which have been notoriously difficult to treat. Only 1 in 4 patients are alive 2 years after diagnosis. The median overall survival from diagnosis is 14.6-16.7 months.

In a study of a novel therapy called NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 – an oncolytic adenovirus delivered across the blood-brain barrier by neural stem cells – overall survival improved by several months for patients with malignant gliomas.

“To my knowledge, this is the first time neural stem cells have been used as a delivery strategy for an oncolytic virus,” said Terence Burns, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurosurgery at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., who was not involved in the research.

In this open-label, dose-escalation trial, researchers enrolled 12 patients with newly diagnosed malignant gliomas between April 2017 and November 2019. After neurosurgical tumor resection, patients were placed in one of three cohorts distinguished by dose of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7. Three patients received the lowest dose of 6.25×1010 viral particles administered by 5.00×10⁷ neural stem cells (NSCs), three received a more moderate dose of 1.25×10 viral particles administered by 1.00×108 NSCs, and the remaining six patients received a dose of 1.875×1011 viral particles administered by 1.50×108 NSCs. Within 10-14 days, the investigators also initiated treatment with temozolomide and radiotherapy.

The investigators report that after a median 18-month follow-up period, median progression-free survival was 9.1 months, and median overall survival of 18.4 months. In a subgroup of patients with unmethylated MGMT promoters – DNA repair enzymes that make tumor cells more resistant to treatment – median progression-free survival was 8.8 months, and median overall survival was 18.0 months.

There was no dose-limiting toxicity, and there were no treatment-related deaths. One patient developed viral meningitis, owing to the inadvertent ventricular injection of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7, and fully recovered after hospitalization.

Patients tolerated the treatment well, which is critical because “drugs that could fight gliomas might also have serious adverse effects,” first author Jawad Fares, MD, a postdoctoral fellow in neurological surgery at Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview.
 

A novel approach

A significant challenge to delivering drugs to the site of malignant gliomas is the blood-brain barrier, which blocks entry of many chemotherapeutic drugs.

“Because of this barrier, physicians often employ other strategies, such as direct injection in the brain cavity, but even with an injection, it is problematic to disseminate the drug so that the medication spreads throughout the tumor mass,” said Dr. Fares. “Our innovative approach, which employs the use of neural stem cells as shuttles to deliver viruses, seeks to address this problem. Neural stem cells tend to travel within hours to areas of injury, areas of stroke or brain tumors, and could disperse the oncolytic virus.”

Gliomas create an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, which uses tissue cells, blood vessels, immune cells, and other parts of the body to blunt antitumor immune responses. Using NSCs to deliver NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 directly to the tumor has the advantage of “giving the virus more time to replicate and kill tumor cells,” said Marta Alonso Roldán, MD, Clinica Universidad de Navarra, in Spain, in an interview.

Although NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 appeared to improve survival in this cohort by a few months, follow-up trials with larger sample sizes and control groups are necessary to demonstrate efficacy.

Moreover, patients in this trial may not be representative of the average patient, said Dr. Burns. “For instance, three of the patients had relatively small tumors in nicely operable areas with a high likelihood of getting a gross total resection. These things do stack your odds in favor of having a longer survival.”

Moving forward, “this trial sets the stage for a phase 2/3 study in which the efficacy of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 in eliciting an antiglioma immune response and prolonging survival in a larger cohort of patients with controlled conditions can be explored,” Dr. Fares said.

The study was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Dr. Fares, Dr. Burns, and Dr. Roldán have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

A novel virus engineered to target malignant gliomas, which are particularly aggressive brain tumors, may prolong survival, according to a recent phase 1 study.

The findings, published June 29 in The Lancet Oncology, show early promise in targeting malignant gliomas, which have been notoriously difficult to treat. Only 1 in 4 patients are alive 2 years after diagnosis. The median overall survival from diagnosis is 14.6-16.7 months.

In a study of a novel therapy called NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 – an oncolytic adenovirus delivered across the blood-brain barrier by neural stem cells – overall survival improved by several months for patients with malignant gliomas.

“To my knowledge, this is the first time neural stem cells have been used as a delivery strategy for an oncolytic virus,” said Terence Burns, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurosurgery at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., who was not involved in the research.

In this open-label, dose-escalation trial, researchers enrolled 12 patients with newly diagnosed malignant gliomas between April 2017 and November 2019. After neurosurgical tumor resection, patients were placed in one of three cohorts distinguished by dose of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7. Three patients received the lowest dose of 6.25×1010 viral particles administered by 5.00×10⁷ neural stem cells (NSCs), three received a more moderate dose of 1.25×10 viral particles administered by 1.00×108 NSCs, and the remaining six patients received a dose of 1.875×1011 viral particles administered by 1.50×108 NSCs. Within 10-14 days, the investigators also initiated treatment with temozolomide and radiotherapy.

The investigators report that after a median 18-month follow-up period, median progression-free survival was 9.1 months, and median overall survival of 18.4 months. In a subgroup of patients with unmethylated MGMT promoters – DNA repair enzymes that make tumor cells more resistant to treatment – median progression-free survival was 8.8 months, and median overall survival was 18.0 months.

There was no dose-limiting toxicity, and there were no treatment-related deaths. One patient developed viral meningitis, owing to the inadvertent ventricular injection of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7, and fully recovered after hospitalization.

Patients tolerated the treatment well, which is critical because “drugs that could fight gliomas might also have serious adverse effects,” first author Jawad Fares, MD, a postdoctoral fellow in neurological surgery at Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview.
 

A novel approach

A significant challenge to delivering drugs to the site of malignant gliomas is the blood-brain barrier, which blocks entry of many chemotherapeutic drugs.

“Because of this barrier, physicians often employ other strategies, such as direct injection in the brain cavity, but even with an injection, it is problematic to disseminate the drug so that the medication spreads throughout the tumor mass,” said Dr. Fares. “Our innovative approach, which employs the use of neural stem cells as shuttles to deliver viruses, seeks to address this problem. Neural stem cells tend to travel within hours to areas of injury, areas of stroke or brain tumors, and could disperse the oncolytic virus.”

Gliomas create an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, which uses tissue cells, blood vessels, immune cells, and other parts of the body to blunt antitumor immune responses. Using NSCs to deliver NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 directly to the tumor has the advantage of “giving the virus more time to replicate and kill tumor cells,” said Marta Alonso Roldán, MD, Clinica Universidad de Navarra, in Spain, in an interview.

Although NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 appeared to improve survival in this cohort by a few months, follow-up trials with larger sample sizes and control groups are necessary to demonstrate efficacy.

Moreover, patients in this trial may not be representative of the average patient, said Dr. Burns. “For instance, three of the patients had relatively small tumors in nicely operable areas with a high likelihood of getting a gross total resection. These things do stack your odds in favor of having a longer survival.”

Moving forward, “this trial sets the stage for a phase 2/3 study in which the efficacy of NSC-CRAd-S-pk7 in eliciting an antiglioma immune response and prolonging survival in a larger cohort of patients with controlled conditions can be explored,” Dr. Fares said.

The study was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health. Dr. Fares, Dr. Burns, and Dr. Roldán have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Increased risk of hospitalization and death with Parkinson’s drug

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 15:40

Pimavanserin, a novel antipsychotic drug used to manage hallucinations and delusions in Parkinson’s disease, may lead to increased hospitalizations and deaths, according to a new study.

A retrospective cohort study of elderly patients with Parkinson’s disease who were in long-term care facilities found that the use of pimavanserin (Nuplazid) was associated with an increased risk of 30-day hospitalization and mortality for up to a year.

“Given that a previous study showed typical and atypical antipsychotics more than doubled mortality risk in patients with Parkinson’s disease, we aimed to assess the risk of hospitalization and death associated with pimavanserin,” wrote lead author Y. Joseph Hwang, MD, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and colleagues in the paper. “These findings, in a large real-world cohort within long-term care facilities, may help to inform decisions regarding its risk-benefit balance among patients with Parkinson’s disease.”

The findings were published online Aug. 13 in Neurology.

The researchers enrolled 2,186 patients with Parkinson’s disease aged 65 years and older in Medicare-certified long-term care facilities who also had a pimavanserin prescription and 18,212 nonusers of pimavanserin between Nov. 1, 2015, and December 31, 2018. Patients in the pimavanserin group used the drug over the course of the entire study period. Hospitalization and mortality were calculated from the date of pimavanserin prescription. Propensity score–based inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to balance the two groups on 24 baseline characteristics such as age, sex, and comorbidities.

Pimavanserin use was associated with a 24% higher risk of 30-day hospitalization (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.24; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.43). However, “the association did not reach statistical significance in a smaller subcohort of propensity score-matched users and nonusers,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues wrote.

Pimavanserin use was also linked to higher mortality at:

  • 90 days (aHR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.02-1.41).
  • 180 days (aHR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.13-1.45).
  • 365 days (aHR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.42-1.72).

No associations were found between pimavanserin use and 90-day hospitalization (aHR, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.99-1.24) nor with 30-day mortality (aHR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.56-1.03).
 

Important considerations

“This study raises three important points to consider for any practicing neurology provider: 1) how to address and interpret risks associated with pimavanserin use in this patient population 2) utility of pimavanserin 3) interpretation of data showing increased mortality in patients being treated for Parkinson’s disease psychosis,” wrote Farwa Ali, MBBS, of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., in an accompanying editorial published in Neurology.

Hallucinations and delusions are highly prevalent in Parkinson’s disease; as many as 60% of patients will develop psychosis over the course of their illness. Pimavanserin is a selective serotonin inverse agonist which targets 5-HT2A serotonin receptors in the brain, decreasing their activity in order to attenuate hallucinations and delusions.

“Pimavanserin has been approved by the FDA [Food and Drug Administration] for Parkinson’s disease psychosis, but its safety has been called into question based on previous reports of increased mortality risk, compared with a rather modest benefit seen in a 6-week clinical trial, the duration of which limits determination of long-term safety,” wrote Dr. Ali.

Pimavanserin carries a boxed warning that elderly patients with dementia may be at an increased risk of death. After its approval in 2016, the U.S. FDA later reviewed 893 deaths in association with pimavanserin during the postmarketing surveillance period – “an unexpected number in a new drug,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues noted. “It [the FDA] noted that most reports occurred in a population with high underlying death rates and did not signal any additional risk beyond the current warning for all antipsychotics, which could have resulted in annual mortality rates of up to 60%.”

As the first cohort study to examine hospitalization and death between pimavanserin users and nonusers, “the study confirms previous concerns regarding safety of pimavanserin and more importantly brings to attention the importance of carefully considering risks and benefits of pharmacotherapy in Parkinson’s disease psychosis, clear communication with patients and families, and close observation to ensure safety,” wrote Dr. Ali.

The study limitations include its observational design, which subjected the findings to residual confounding.

“While we developed models to maximize the strength of causal inference, our comparison group was pimavanserin nonusers and the very reason for prescription of pimavanserin could have predisposed its users to the outcomes of hospitalization and death, introducing confounding by indication,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues wrote in the paper.

Additionally, “while robust analyses were conducted to ensure pimavanserin users and nonusers were comparable, Dr. Hwang et al. did find that pimavanserin users were more likely to concomitantly use other antipsychotic drugs which has been demonstrated as increasing the mortality risk,” Dr. Ali pointed out.

Since patients living in long-term care facilities may have a higher risk of mortality because of more severe or later-stage Parkinson’s disease, the study results “may not be generalizable to community-dwelling PD patients,” Dr. Ali wrote. “These factors are important to consider while making individual management decisions.”

Dr. Hwang and Dr. Ali disclosed no relevant financial relationships. The study authors reported no targeted funding.

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Pimavanserin, a novel antipsychotic drug used to manage hallucinations and delusions in Parkinson’s disease, may lead to increased hospitalizations and deaths, according to a new study.

A retrospective cohort study of elderly patients with Parkinson’s disease who were in long-term care facilities found that the use of pimavanserin (Nuplazid) was associated with an increased risk of 30-day hospitalization and mortality for up to a year.

“Given that a previous study showed typical and atypical antipsychotics more than doubled mortality risk in patients with Parkinson’s disease, we aimed to assess the risk of hospitalization and death associated with pimavanserin,” wrote lead author Y. Joseph Hwang, MD, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and colleagues in the paper. “These findings, in a large real-world cohort within long-term care facilities, may help to inform decisions regarding its risk-benefit balance among patients with Parkinson’s disease.”

The findings were published online Aug. 13 in Neurology.

The researchers enrolled 2,186 patients with Parkinson’s disease aged 65 years and older in Medicare-certified long-term care facilities who also had a pimavanserin prescription and 18,212 nonusers of pimavanserin between Nov. 1, 2015, and December 31, 2018. Patients in the pimavanserin group used the drug over the course of the entire study period. Hospitalization and mortality were calculated from the date of pimavanserin prescription. Propensity score–based inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to balance the two groups on 24 baseline characteristics such as age, sex, and comorbidities.

Pimavanserin use was associated with a 24% higher risk of 30-day hospitalization (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.24; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.43). However, “the association did not reach statistical significance in a smaller subcohort of propensity score-matched users and nonusers,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues wrote.

Pimavanserin use was also linked to higher mortality at:

  • 90 days (aHR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.02-1.41).
  • 180 days (aHR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.13-1.45).
  • 365 days (aHR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.42-1.72).

No associations were found between pimavanserin use and 90-day hospitalization (aHR, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.99-1.24) nor with 30-day mortality (aHR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.56-1.03).
 

Important considerations

“This study raises three important points to consider for any practicing neurology provider: 1) how to address and interpret risks associated with pimavanserin use in this patient population 2) utility of pimavanserin 3) interpretation of data showing increased mortality in patients being treated for Parkinson’s disease psychosis,” wrote Farwa Ali, MBBS, of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., in an accompanying editorial published in Neurology.

Hallucinations and delusions are highly prevalent in Parkinson’s disease; as many as 60% of patients will develop psychosis over the course of their illness. Pimavanserin is a selective serotonin inverse agonist which targets 5-HT2A serotonin receptors in the brain, decreasing their activity in order to attenuate hallucinations and delusions.

“Pimavanserin has been approved by the FDA [Food and Drug Administration] for Parkinson’s disease psychosis, but its safety has been called into question based on previous reports of increased mortality risk, compared with a rather modest benefit seen in a 6-week clinical trial, the duration of which limits determination of long-term safety,” wrote Dr. Ali.

Pimavanserin carries a boxed warning that elderly patients with dementia may be at an increased risk of death. After its approval in 2016, the U.S. FDA later reviewed 893 deaths in association with pimavanserin during the postmarketing surveillance period – “an unexpected number in a new drug,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues noted. “It [the FDA] noted that most reports occurred in a population with high underlying death rates and did not signal any additional risk beyond the current warning for all antipsychotics, which could have resulted in annual mortality rates of up to 60%.”

As the first cohort study to examine hospitalization and death between pimavanserin users and nonusers, “the study confirms previous concerns regarding safety of pimavanserin and more importantly brings to attention the importance of carefully considering risks and benefits of pharmacotherapy in Parkinson’s disease psychosis, clear communication with patients and families, and close observation to ensure safety,” wrote Dr. Ali.

The study limitations include its observational design, which subjected the findings to residual confounding.

“While we developed models to maximize the strength of causal inference, our comparison group was pimavanserin nonusers and the very reason for prescription of pimavanserin could have predisposed its users to the outcomes of hospitalization and death, introducing confounding by indication,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues wrote in the paper.

Additionally, “while robust analyses were conducted to ensure pimavanserin users and nonusers were comparable, Dr. Hwang et al. did find that pimavanserin users were more likely to concomitantly use other antipsychotic drugs which has been demonstrated as increasing the mortality risk,” Dr. Ali pointed out.

Since patients living in long-term care facilities may have a higher risk of mortality because of more severe or later-stage Parkinson’s disease, the study results “may not be generalizable to community-dwelling PD patients,” Dr. Ali wrote. “These factors are important to consider while making individual management decisions.”

Dr. Hwang and Dr. Ali disclosed no relevant financial relationships. The study authors reported no targeted funding.

Pimavanserin, a novel antipsychotic drug used to manage hallucinations and delusions in Parkinson’s disease, may lead to increased hospitalizations and deaths, according to a new study.

A retrospective cohort study of elderly patients with Parkinson’s disease who were in long-term care facilities found that the use of pimavanserin (Nuplazid) was associated with an increased risk of 30-day hospitalization and mortality for up to a year.

“Given that a previous study showed typical and atypical antipsychotics more than doubled mortality risk in patients with Parkinson’s disease, we aimed to assess the risk of hospitalization and death associated with pimavanserin,” wrote lead author Y. Joseph Hwang, MD, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and colleagues in the paper. “These findings, in a large real-world cohort within long-term care facilities, may help to inform decisions regarding its risk-benefit balance among patients with Parkinson’s disease.”

The findings were published online Aug. 13 in Neurology.

The researchers enrolled 2,186 patients with Parkinson’s disease aged 65 years and older in Medicare-certified long-term care facilities who also had a pimavanserin prescription and 18,212 nonusers of pimavanserin between Nov. 1, 2015, and December 31, 2018. Patients in the pimavanserin group used the drug over the course of the entire study period. Hospitalization and mortality were calculated from the date of pimavanserin prescription. Propensity score–based inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to balance the two groups on 24 baseline characteristics such as age, sex, and comorbidities.

Pimavanserin use was associated with a 24% higher risk of 30-day hospitalization (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.24; 95% confidence interval, 1.06-1.43). However, “the association did not reach statistical significance in a smaller subcohort of propensity score-matched users and nonusers,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues wrote.

Pimavanserin use was also linked to higher mortality at:

  • 90 days (aHR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.02-1.41).
  • 180 days (aHR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.13-1.45).
  • 365 days (aHR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.42-1.72).

No associations were found between pimavanserin use and 90-day hospitalization (aHR, 1.10; 95% CI, 0.99-1.24) nor with 30-day mortality (aHR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.56-1.03).
 

Important considerations

“This study raises three important points to consider for any practicing neurology provider: 1) how to address and interpret risks associated with pimavanserin use in this patient population 2) utility of pimavanserin 3) interpretation of data showing increased mortality in patients being treated for Parkinson’s disease psychosis,” wrote Farwa Ali, MBBS, of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., in an accompanying editorial published in Neurology.

Hallucinations and delusions are highly prevalent in Parkinson’s disease; as many as 60% of patients will develop psychosis over the course of their illness. Pimavanserin is a selective serotonin inverse agonist which targets 5-HT2A serotonin receptors in the brain, decreasing their activity in order to attenuate hallucinations and delusions.

“Pimavanserin has been approved by the FDA [Food and Drug Administration] for Parkinson’s disease psychosis, but its safety has been called into question based on previous reports of increased mortality risk, compared with a rather modest benefit seen in a 6-week clinical trial, the duration of which limits determination of long-term safety,” wrote Dr. Ali.

Pimavanserin carries a boxed warning that elderly patients with dementia may be at an increased risk of death. After its approval in 2016, the U.S. FDA later reviewed 893 deaths in association with pimavanserin during the postmarketing surveillance period – “an unexpected number in a new drug,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues noted. “It [the FDA] noted that most reports occurred in a population with high underlying death rates and did not signal any additional risk beyond the current warning for all antipsychotics, which could have resulted in annual mortality rates of up to 60%.”

As the first cohort study to examine hospitalization and death between pimavanserin users and nonusers, “the study confirms previous concerns regarding safety of pimavanserin and more importantly brings to attention the importance of carefully considering risks and benefits of pharmacotherapy in Parkinson’s disease psychosis, clear communication with patients and families, and close observation to ensure safety,” wrote Dr. Ali.

The study limitations include its observational design, which subjected the findings to residual confounding.

“While we developed models to maximize the strength of causal inference, our comparison group was pimavanserin nonusers and the very reason for prescription of pimavanserin could have predisposed its users to the outcomes of hospitalization and death, introducing confounding by indication,” Dr. Hwang and colleagues wrote in the paper.

Additionally, “while robust analyses were conducted to ensure pimavanserin users and nonusers were comparable, Dr. Hwang et al. did find that pimavanserin users were more likely to concomitantly use other antipsychotic drugs which has been demonstrated as increasing the mortality risk,” Dr. Ali pointed out.

Since patients living in long-term care facilities may have a higher risk of mortality because of more severe or later-stage Parkinson’s disease, the study results “may not be generalizable to community-dwelling PD patients,” Dr. Ali wrote. “These factors are important to consider while making individual management decisions.”

Dr. Hwang and Dr. Ali disclosed no relevant financial relationships. The study authors reported no targeted funding.

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Trial finds that intranasal DHE is well tolerated and may reduce migraine symptoms

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Intranasal dihydroergotamine mesylate (DHE) may provide safe and effective migraine relief, a new study suggests.

A phase 3, open-label trial of INP104, or Trudhesa – Impel NeuroPharma’s proprietary Precision Olfactory Delivery of DHE – found that most patients experienced symptom relief within 2 hours and reported that the medication was easy to use and preferable to their current therapy.
 

Another treatment option?

Of about 18 million diagnosed migraine patients in the United States, 4 million receive prescription treatment. Nearly 80% of migraine therapies involve triptans, but 30%-40% of patients don’t find adequate relief with triptans. Moreover, the majority of patients who do respond to triptans report that they’d like to try a different therapy.

“INP104 has the potential to deliver rapid symptom relief, without injection, that is well tolerated and suitable for outpatient us,” lead author Timothy Smith, MD, of StudyMetrix Research, St. Louis, and colleagues wrote in the paper.

The results were published online Aug. 7 in Headache.

A total of 360 patients aged 18-65 years with a diagnosis of migraine with or without aura with at least two attacks per month over the course of the previous 6 months were enrolled in the 24-week safety study, which had a 28-week extension period. Participants used their “best usual care” to treat their migraines during the initial 28-day screening period. Afterward, they were given 1.45-mg doses of INP04 to self-administer into the upper nasal space to treat self-recognized attacks. No more than two doses per 24 hours and three doses per 7 days were allowed. The Full Safety Set analysis comprised 354 patients who dosed at least once. The Primary Safety Set involved 185 patients who administered an average of two or more doses per 28-day period during the 24-week treatment period. A total of 4,515 self-recognized migraines were treated during the 24-week period; 6,332 doses of INP04 were analyzed.

Nearly 37% (130/354) of patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs); 6.8% (24/354) discontinued treatment because of the TEAEs over the 24 weeks. The most common TEAE was nasal congestion (15%, 53/354), followed by nausea (6.8%, 24/354).

Within an hour of INP104 administration, 47.6% of patients reported pain relief. After 2 hours of INP104 administration, 38% reported pain freedom and 66.3% reported pain relief. Headache recurrence was observed in 7.1% and 14.3% of patients at 24 and 48 hours, respectively.

In a questionnaire, 84% of patients agreed or strongly agreed that INP04 was easy to use. Most reported that INP104 slowed the recurrence of their migraines and was more rapidly and consistently effective than their previous best usual care treatment.

Intranasal delivery of DHE was developed in response to the challenges of traditional IV administration.

“While intravenous (IV) dihydroergotamine (DHE) mesylate has a long, established history as an effective migraine therapy, its use as an acute treatment can be limited by the high rate of nausea and vomiting reported by patients, which often requires pretreatment with antiemetics,” Dr. Smith and colleagues wrote. “Furthermore, IV DHE mesylate needs to be administered in emergency room settings or by headache specialists, limiting convenience.”
 

 

 

A novel delivery system

“There’s already a nasal spray on the market right now which doesn’t seem to work that well in a large number of people. This device [INP04] was designed to get the same substances to a part of the nose that’s higher and farther back, where there may be better absorption,” said Alan Rapoport, MD, clinical professor of neurology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in an interview. Dr. Rapoport was not involved with the study.

The proprietary Precision Olfactory Delivery (POD) is meant to improve on current nasal delivery methods such as sprays, droppers, and pumps, which may deliver “less than 5% of the active drug to the upper nasal space,” according to a press release from Impel NeuroPharma.

Nasal delivery also may have advantages over oral medications. People with migraines may be more likely to have gastroparesis – delayed stomach emptying – which may affect their ability to absorb oral medications and delay symptom relief. However, patients may hesitate to agree to a medication that involves nasal delivery, Dr. Rapoport said.

“I will say it’s a little more difficult getting your patients to take a nasal spray,” Dr. Rapoport said. “Patients are used to taking tablets for their headaches,” he said. “But if the doctor spends a little more time with the patient and says, ‘Look, this could work faster for your migraine as a nasal spray. Why don’t you try it a couple of times and see if you like it or not?’ patients are usually willing to give it a try.”

The study’s limitations include the lack of a control group given that it was an open-label trial. It was carried out at 38 sites in one geographical area, which may affect the generalizability of the results. The study did not assess patients with new-onset migraine or chronic migraine.

The Food and Drug Administration approved Trudhesa on Sept. 2, 2021.

The study was funded by Impel NeuroPharma. Dr. Smith has received funding from a number of pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Rapoport disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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Intranasal dihydroergotamine mesylate (DHE) may provide safe and effective migraine relief, a new study suggests.

A phase 3, open-label trial of INP104, or Trudhesa – Impel NeuroPharma’s proprietary Precision Olfactory Delivery of DHE – found that most patients experienced symptom relief within 2 hours and reported that the medication was easy to use and preferable to their current therapy.
 

Another treatment option?

Of about 18 million diagnosed migraine patients in the United States, 4 million receive prescription treatment. Nearly 80% of migraine therapies involve triptans, but 30%-40% of patients don’t find adequate relief with triptans. Moreover, the majority of patients who do respond to triptans report that they’d like to try a different therapy.

“INP104 has the potential to deliver rapid symptom relief, without injection, that is well tolerated and suitable for outpatient us,” lead author Timothy Smith, MD, of StudyMetrix Research, St. Louis, and colleagues wrote in the paper.

The results were published online Aug. 7 in Headache.

A total of 360 patients aged 18-65 years with a diagnosis of migraine with or without aura with at least two attacks per month over the course of the previous 6 months were enrolled in the 24-week safety study, which had a 28-week extension period. Participants used their “best usual care” to treat their migraines during the initial 28-day screening period. Afterward, they were given 1.45-mg doses of INP04 to self-administer into the upper nasal space to treat self-recognized attacks. No more than two doses per 24 hours and three doses per 7 days were allowed. The Full Safety Set analysis comprised 354 patients who dosed at least once. The Primary Safety Set involved 185 patients who administered an average of two or more doses per 28-day period during the 24-week treatment period. A total of 4,515 self-recognized migraines were treated during the 24-week period; 6,332 doses of INP04 were analyzed.

Nearly 37% (130/354) of patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs); 6.8% (24/354) discontinued treatment because of the TEAEs over the 24 weeks. The most common TEAE was nasal congestion (15%, 53/354), followed by nausea (6.8%, 24/354).

Within an hour of INP104 administration, 47.6% of patients reported pain relief. After 2 hours of INP104 administration, 38% reported pain freedom and 66.3% reported pain relief. Headache recurrence was observed in 7.1% and 14.3% of patients at 24 and 48 hours, respectively.

In a questionnaire, 84% of patients agreed or strongly agreed that INP04 was easy to use. Most reported that INP104 slowed the recurrence of their migraines and was more rapidly and consistently effective than their previous best usual care treatment.

Intranasal delivery of DHE was developed in response to the challenges of traditional IV administration.

“While intravenous (IV) dihydroergotamine (DHE) mesylate has a long, established history as an effective migraine therapy, its use as an acute treatment can be limited by the high rate of nausea and vomiting reported by patients, which often requires pretreatment with antiemetics,” Dr. Smith and colleagues wrote. “Furthermore, IV DHE mesylate needs to be administered in emergency room settings or by headache specialists, limiting convenience.”
 

 

 

A novel delivery system

“There’s already a nasal spray on the market right now which doesn’t seem to work that well in a large number of people. This device [INP04] was designed to get the same substances to a part of the nose that’s higher and farther back, where there may be better absorption,” said Alan Rapoport, MD, clinical professor of neurology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in an interview. Dr. Rapoport was not involved with the study.

The proprietary Precision Olfactory Delivery (POD) is meant to improve on current nasal delivery methods such as sprays, droppers, and pumps, which may deliver “less than 5% of the active drug to the upper nasal space,” according to a press release from Impel NeuroPharma.

Nasal delivery also may have advantages over oral medications. People with migraines may be more likely to have gastroparesis – delayed stomach emptying – which may affect their ability to absorb oral medications and delay symptom relief. However, patients may hesitate to agree to a medication that involves nasal delivery, Dr. Rapoport said.

“I will say it’s a little more difficult getting your patients to take a nasal spray,” Dr. Rapoport said. “Patients are used to taking tablets for their headaches,” he said. “But if the doctor spends a little more time with the patient and says, ‘Look, this could work faster for your migraine as a nasal spray. Why don’t you try it a couple of times and see if you like it or not?’ patients are usually willing to give it a try.”

The study’s limitations include the lack of a control group given that it was an open-label trial. It was carried out at 38 sites in one geographical area, which may affect the generalizability of the results. The study did not assess patients with new-onset migraine or chronic migraine.

The Food and Drug Administration approved Trudhesa on Sept. 2, 2021.

The study was funded by Impel NeuroPharma. Dr. Smith has received funding from a number of pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Rapoport disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Intranasal dihydroergotamine mesylate (DHE) may provide safe and effective migraine relief, a new study suggests.

A phase 3, open-label trial of INP104, or Trudhesa – Impel NeuroPharma’s proprietary Precision Olfactory Delivery of DHE – found that most patients experienced symptom relief within 2 hours and reported that the medication was easy to use and preferable to their current therapy.
 

Another treatment option?

Of about 18 million diagnosed migraine patients in the United States, 4 million receive prescription treatment. Nearly 80% of migraine therapies involve triptans, but 30%-40% of patients don’t find adequate relief with triptans. Moreover, the majority of patients who do respond to triptans report that they’d like to try a different therapy.

“INP104 has the potential to deliver rapid symptom relief, without injection, that is well tolerated and suitable for outpatient us,” lead author Timothy Smith, MD, of StudyMetrix Research, St. Louis, and colleagues wrote in the paper.

The results were published online Aug. 7 in Headache.

A total of 360 patients aged 18-65 years with a diagnosis of migraine with or without aura with at least two attacks per month over the course of the previous 6 months were enrolled in the 24-week safety study, which had a 28-week extension period. Participants used their “best usual care” to treat their migraines during the initial 28-day screening period. Afterward, they were given 1.45-mg doses of INP04 to self-administer into the upper nasal space to treat self-recognized attacks. No more than two doses per 24 hours and three doses per 7 days were allowed. The Full Safety Set analysis comprised 354 patients who dosed at least once. The Primary Safety Set involved 185 patients who administered an average of two or more doses per 28-day period during the 24-week treatment period. A total of 4,515 self-recognized migraines were treated during the 24-week period; 6,332 doses of INP04 were analyzed.

Nearly 37% (130/354) of patients reported treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs); 6.8% (24/354) discontinued treatment because of the TEAEs over the 24 weeks. The most common TEAE was nasal congestion (15%, 53/354), followed by nausea (6.8%, 24/354).

Within an hour of INP104 administration, 47.6% of patients reported pain relief. After 2 hours of INP104 administration, 38% reported pain freedom and 66.3% reported pain relief. Headache recurrence was observed in 7.1% and 14.3% of patients at 24 and 48 hours, respectively.

In a questionnaire, 84% of patients agreed or strongly agreed that INP04 was easy to use. Most reported that INP104 slowed the recurrence of their migraines and was more rapidly and consistently effective than their previous best usual care treatment.

Intranasal delivery of DHE was developed in response to the challenges of traditional IV administration.

“While intravenous (IV) dihydroergotamine (DHE) mesylate has a long, established history as an effective migraine therapy, its use as an acute treatment can be limited by the high rate of nausea and vomiting reported by patients, which often requires pretreatment with antiemetics,” Dr. Smith and colleagues wrote. “Furthermore, IV DHE mesylate needs to be administered in emergency room settings or by headache specialists, limiting convenience.”
 

 

 

A novel delivery system

“There’s already a nasal spray on the market right now which doesn’t seem to work that well in a large number of people. This device [INP04] was designed to get the same substances to a part of the nose that’s higher and farther back, where there may be better absorption,” said Alan Rapoport, MD, clinical professor of neurology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in an interview. Dr. Rapoport was not involved with the study.

The proprietary Precision Olfactory Delivery (POD) is meant to improve on current nasal delivery methods such as sprays, droppers, and pumps, which may deliver “less than 5% of the active drug to the upper nasal space,” according to a press release from Impel NeuroPharma.

Nasal delivery also may have advantages over oral medications. People with migraines may be more likely to have gastroparesis – delayed stomach emptying – which may affect their ability to absorb oral medications and delay symptom relief. However, patients may hesitate to agree to a medication that involves nasal delivery, Dr. Rapoport said.

“I will say it’s a little more difficult getting your patients to take a nasal spray,” Dr. Rapoport said. “Patients are used to taking tablets for their headaches,” he said. “But if the doctor spends a little more time with the patient and says, ‘Look, this could work faster for your migraine as a nasal spray. Why don’t you try it a couple of times and see if you like it or not?’ patients are usually willing to give it a try.”

The study’s limitations include the lack of a control group given that it was an open-label trial. It was carried out at 38 sites in one geographical area, which may affect the generalizability of the results. The study did not assess patients with new-onset migraine or chronic migraine.

The Food and Drug Administration approved Trudhesa on Sept. 2, 2021.

The study was funded by Impel NeuroPharma. Dr. Smith has received funding from a number of pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Rapoport disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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Aerobic exercise reduces BP in resistant hypertension

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Aerobic exercise may help reduce blood pressure in patients whose hypertension responds poorly to medications, a new study suggests.

A randomized controlled clinical trial showed that patients with resistant hypertension assigned to a moderate-intensity aerobic exercise training program had lower blood pressure compared with patients who received usual care.

“Resistant hypertension persists as a big clinical challenge because the available treatment options to lower blood pressure in this clinical population, namely drugs and renal denervation, show limited success,” Fernando Ribeiro, PhD, University of Aveiro, Portugal, told this news organization. “Aerobic exercise was safe and associated with a significant and clinically relevant reduction in 24-hour, daytime ambulatory, and office blood pressure.”

The findings were published online August 4 in JAMA Cardiology.

The researchers enrolled 53 patients aged 40-75 years with a diagnosis of resistant hypertension in this prospective, single-blinded trial. Nearly half (24) were women.

Resistant hypertension was defined as having a “mean systolic BP of 130 mm Hg or greater on 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring and/or 135 mm Hg or greater during daytime hours while taking maximally tolerated doses of at least 3 antihypertensive agents, including a diuretic, or to have a controlled BP while taking 4 or more antihypertensive agents.”

From March 2017 to December 2019 at two sites in Portugal, 26 patients were randomly assigned to a 12-week aerobic exercise training program involving three 40-minute supervised sessions per week in addition to usual care. Another 27 patients in the control group were allocated to receive usual care only.

24-hour ambulatory systolic blood pressure was reduced by 7.1 mm Hg (95% confidence interval, -12.8 to -1.4; P = .02) in patients in the exercise group compared with the control group. In the exercise group, there were additional reductions of:

  • -5.1 mm Hg of 24-hour ambulatory diastolic blood pressure (95% CI, -7.9 to -2.3; P = .001)
  • -8.4 mm Hg of daytime systolic blood pressure (95% CI, -14.3 to -2.5, P = .006)
  • -5.7 mm Hg of daytime diastolic blood pressure (95% CI, -9.0 to -2.4; P = .001)
  • -10.0 mm Hg of office systolic blood pressure (95% CI, -17.6 to -2.5; P = .01)

Additionally, a significant improvement in cardiorespiratory fitness (5.05 mL/kg per minute of oxygen consumption; 95% CI, 3.5-6.6; P < .001) was observed in the exercise group compared with the control group.



Although prior research has suggested that exercise may lower blood pressure, this study is particularly useful because it “outlines very specifically what types of exercise you can recommend,” said Daniel Lackland, DrPH, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.

Although important, exercise is “one part of the overall management of high blood pressure. If people are being prescribed medication, they should continue taking it and work on lifestyle changes like reducing salt intake and drinking in moderation,” added Dr. Lackland, who was not involved in the research.

Also commenting on the findings, Wanpen Vongpatanasin, MD, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, pointed out that there are many potential benefits from exercise training. “It might improve endothelial function, decrease vascular stiffness and nervous system reactivity to stress, and improve quality of life for patients,” she said.

The study has several limitations, including a small sample size and a patient population that mostly has “relatively mild hypertension,” Dr. Vongpatanasin said, adding, “We don’t know whether these findings will apply to patients with more severe hypertension.”

It would also have been helpful if investigators monitored patient adherence to prescribed medications through urine or blood samples rather than a questionnaire, and to measure nighttime blood pressure, which is a more important predictor of cardiovascular outcomes, said Dr. Vongpatanasin, who was not associated with the research.

Moving forward, it will be important to “investigate why some patients are nonresponders to the exercise intervention and why some are super-responders,” study author Dr. Ribeiro said.

Dr. Ribeiro, Dr. Lackland, and Dr. Vongpatanasin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. This study was funded by the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund Operational Competitiveness Factors Program (COMPETE) and by the Portuguese government through the Foundation for Science and Technology. The funders had no role in the study.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Aerobic exercise may help reduce blood pressure in patients whose hypertension responds poorly to medications, a new study suggests.

A randomized controlled clinical trial showed that patients with resistant hypertension assigned to a moderate-intensity aerobic exercise training program had lower blood pressure compared with patients who received usual care.

“Resistant hypertension persists as a big clinical challenge because the available treatment options to lower blood pressure in this clinical population, namely drugs and renal denervation, show limited success,” Fernando Ribeiro, PhD, University of Aveiro, Portugal, told this news organization. “Aerobic exercise was safe and associated with a significant and clinically relevant reduction in 24-hour, daytime ambulatory, and office blood pressure.”

The findings were published online August 4 in JAMA Cardiology.

The researchers enrolled 53 patients aged 40-75 years with a diagnosis of resistant hypertension in this prospective, single-blinded trial. Nearly half (24) were women.

Resistant hypertension was defined as having a “mean systolic BP of 130 mm Hg or greater on 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring and/or 135 mm Hg or greater during daytime hours while taking maximally tolerated doses of at least 3 antihypertensive agents, including a diuretic, or to have a controlled BP while taking 4 or more antihypertensive agents.”

From March 2017 to December 2019 at two sites in Portugal, 26 patients were randomly assigned to a 12-week aerobic exercise training program involving three 40-minute supervised sessions per week in addition to usual care. Another 27 patients in the control group were allocated to receive usual care only.

24-hour ambulatory systolic blood pressure was reduced by 7.1 mm Hg (95% confidence interval, -12.8 to -1.4; P = .02) in patients in the exercise group compared with the control group. In the exercise group, there were additional reductions of:

  • -5.1 mm Hg of 24-hour ambulatory diastolic blood pressure (95% CI, -7.9 to -2.3; P = .001)
  • -8.4 mm Hg of daytime systolic blood pressure (95% CI, -14.3 to -2.5, P = .006)
  • -5.7 mm Hg of daytime diastolic blood pressure (95% CI, -9.0 to -2.4; P = .001)
  • -10.0 mm Hg of office systolic blood pressure (95% CI, -17.6 to -2.5; P = .01)

Additionally, a significant improvement in cardiorespiratory fitness (5.05 mL/kg per minute of oxygen consumption; 95% CI, 3.5-6.6; P < .001) was observed in the exercise group compared with the control group.



Although prior research has suggested that exercise may lower blood pressure, this study is particularly useful because it “outlines very specifically what types of exercise you can recommend,” said Daniel Lackland, DrPH, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.

Although important, exercise is “one part of the overall management of high blood pressure. If people are being prescribed medication, they should continue taking it and work on lifestyle changes like reducing salt intake and drinking in moderation,” added Dr. Lackland, who was not involved in the research.

Also commenting on the findings, Wanpen Vongpatanasin, MD, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, pointed out that there are many potential benefits from exercise training. “It might improve endothelial function, decrease vascular stiffness and nervous system reactivity to stress, and improve quality of life for patients,” she said.

The study has several limitations, including a small sample size and a patient population that mostly has “relatively mild hypertension,” Dr. Vongpatanasin said, adding, “We don’t know whether these findings will apply to patients with more severe hypertension.”

It would also have been helpful if investigators monitored patient adherence to prescribed medications through urine or blood samples rather than a questionnaire, and to measure nighttime blood pressure, which is a more important predictor of cardiovascular outcomes, said Dr. Vongpatanasin, who was not associated with the research.

Moving forward, it will be important to “investigate why some patients are nonresponders to the exercise intervention and why some are super-responders,” study author Dr. Ribeiro said.

Dr. Ribeiro, Dr. Lackland, and Dr. Vongpatanasin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. This study was funded by the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund Operational Competitiveness Factors Program (COMPETE) and by the Portuguese government through the Foundation for Science and Technology. The funders had no role in the study.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Aerobic exercise may help reduce blood pressure in patients whose hypertension responds poorly to medications, a new study suggests.

A randomized controlled clinical trial showed that patients with resistant hypertension assigned to a moderate-intensity aerobic exercise training program had lower blood pressure compared with patients who received usual care.

“Resistant hypertension persists as a big clinical challenge because the available treatment options to lower blood pressure in this clinical population, namely drugs and renal denervation, show limited success,” Fernando Ribeiro, PhD, University of Aveiro, Portugal, told this news organization. “Aerobic exercise was safe and associated with a significant and clinically relevant reduction in 24-hour, daytime ambulatory, and office blood pressure.”

The findings were published online August 4 in JAMA Cardiology.

The researchers enrolled 53 patients aged 40-75 years with a diagnosis of resistant hypertension in this prospective, single-blinded trial. Nearly half (24) were women.

Resistant hypertension was defined as having a “mean systolic BP of 130 mm Hg or greater on 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring and/or 135 mm Hg or greater during daytime hours while taking maximally tolerated doses of at least 3 antihypertensive agents, including a diuretic, or to have a controlled BP while taking 4 or more antihypertensive agents.”

From March 2017 to December 2019 at two sites in Portugal, 26 patients were randomly assigned to a 12-week aerobic exercise training program involving three 40-minute supervised sessions per week in addition to usual care. Another 27 patients in the control group were allocated to receive usual care only.

24-hour ambulatory systolic blood pressure was reduced by 7.1 mm Hg (95% confidence interval, -12.8 to -1.4; P = .02) in patients in the exercise group compared with the control group. In the exercise group, there were additional reductions of:

  • -5.1 mm Hg of 24-hour ambulatory diastolic blood pressure (95% CI, -7.9 to -2.3; P = .001)
  • -8.4 mm Hg of daytime systolic blood pressure (95% CI, -14.3 to -2.5, P = .006)
  • -5.7 mm Hg of daytime diastolic blood pressure (95% CI, -9.0 to -2.4; P = .001)
  • -10.0 mm Hg of office systolic blood pressure (95% CI, -17.6 to -2.5; P = .01)

Additionally, a significant improvement in cardiorespiratory fitness (5.05 mL/kg per minute of oxygen consumption; 95% CI, 3.5-6.6; P < .001) was observed in the exercise group compared with the control group.



Although prior research has suggested that exercise may lower blood pressure, this study is particularly useful because it “outlines very specifically what types of exercise you can recommend,” said Daniel Lackland, DrPH, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.

Although important, exercise is “one part of the overall management of high blood pressure. If people are being prescribed medication, they should continue taking it and work on lifestyle changes like reducing salt intake and drinking in moderation,” added Dr. Lackland, who was not involved in the research.

Also commenting on the findings, Wanpen Vongpatanasin, MD, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, pointed out that there are many potential benefits from exercise training. “It might improve endothelial function, decrease vascular stiffness and nervous system reactivity to stress, and improve quality of life for patients,” she said.

The study has several limitations, including a small sample size and a patient population that mostly has “relatively mild hypertension,” Dr. Vongpatanasin said, adding, “We don’t know whether these findings will apply to patients with more severe hypertension.”

It would also have been helpful if investigators monitored patient adherence to prescribed medications through urine or blood samples rather than a questionnaire, and to measure nighttime blood pressure, which is a more important predictor of cardiovascular outcomes, said Dr. Vongpatanasin, who was not associated with the research.

Moving forward, it will be important to “investigate why some patients are nonresponders to the exercise intervention and why some are super-responders,” study author Dr. Ribeiro said.

Dr. Ribeiro, Dr. Lackland, and Dr. Vongpatanasin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. This study was funded by the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund Operational Competitiveness Factors Program (COMPETE) and by the Portuguese government through the Foundation for Science and Technology. The funders had no role in the study.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Mobile stroke teams treat patients faster and reduce disability

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 15:40

 

Having a mobile interventional stroke team (MIST) travel to treat stroke patients soon after stroke onset may improve patient outcomes, according to a new study. A retrospective analysis of a pilot program in New York found that patients who were treated on the ground by the MIST team rather than transferred to a specialized stroke center received faster care and were almost twice as likely to be functionally independent 3 months later.

“The use of a Mobile Interventional Stroke Team (MIST) traveling to Thrombectomy Capable Stroke Centers to perform endovascular thrombectomy has been shown to be significantly faster with improved discharge outcomes,” wrote lead author Jacob Morey, a doctoral Candidate at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York and coauthors in the paper. Prior to this study, “the effect of the MIST model stratified by time of presentation” had yet to be studied.

The findings were published online on Aug. 5 in Stroke.
 

MIST model versus drip-and-ship

The researchers analyzed 226 patients who underwent endovascular thrombectomy between January 2017 and February 2020 at four hospitals in the Mount Sinai health system using the NYC MIST Trial and a stroke database. At baseline, all patients were functionally independent as assessed by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS, score of 0-2). 106 patients were treated by a MIST team – staffed by a neurointerventionalist, a fellow or physician assistant, and radiologic technologist – that traveled to the patient’s location. A total of 120 patients were transferred to a comprehensive stroke center (CSC) or a hospital with endovascular thrombectomy expertise. The analysis was stratified based on whether the patient presented in the early time window (≤ 6 hours) or late time window (> 6 hours).

Patients treated in the early time window were significantly more likely to be mobile and able to perform daily tasks (mRS ≤ 2) 90 days after the procedure in the MIST group (54%), compared with the transferred group (28%, P < 0.01). Outcomes did not differ significantly between groups in the late time window (35% vs. 41%, P = 0.77).

Similarly, early-time-window patients in the MIST group were more likely to have higher functionality at discharge, compared with transferred patients, based on the on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (median score of 5.0 vs. 12.0, P < 0.01). There was no significant difference between groups treated in the late time window (median score of 5.0 vs. 11.0, P = 0.11).

“Ischemic strokes often progress rapidly and can cause severe damage because brain tissue dies quickly without oxygen, resulting in serious long-term disabilities or death,“ said Johanna Fifi, MD, of Icahn School of Medicine, said in a statement to the American Heart Association. “Assessing and treating stroke patients in the early window means that a greater number of fast-progressing strokes are identified and treated.”

Time is brain

Endovascular thrombectomy is a time-sensitive surgical procedure to remove large blood clots in acute ischemic stroke that has “historically been limited to comprehensive stroke centers,” the authors wrote in their paper. It is considered the standard of care in ischemic strokes, which make up 90% of all strokes. “Less than 50% of Americans have direct access to endovascular thrombectomy, the others must be transferred to a thrombectomy-capable hospital for treatment, often losing over 2 hours of time to treatment,” said Dr. Fifi. “Every minute is precious in treating stroke, and getting to a center that offers thrombectomy is very important. The MIST model would address this by providing faster access to this potentially life-saving, disability-reducing procedure.”

Access to timely endovascular thrombectomy is gradually improving as “more institutions and cities have implemented the [MIST] model.” Dr. Fifi said.

“This study stresses the importance of ‘time is brain,’ especially for patients in the early time window. Although the study is limited by the observational, retrospective design and was performed at a single integrated center, the findings are provocative,” said Louise McCullough, MD, of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston said in a statement to the American Heart Association. “The use of a MIST model highlights the potential benefit of early and urgent treatment for patients with large-vessel stroke. Stroke systems of care need to take advantage of any opportunity to treat patients early, wherever they are.”

The study was partly funded by a Stryker Foundation grant.

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Having a mobile interventional stroke team (MIST) travel to treat stroke patients soon after stroke onset may improve patient outcomes, according to a new study. A retrospective analysis of a pilot program in New York found that patients who were treated on the ground by the MIST team rather than transferred to a specialized stroke center received faster care and were almost twice as likely to be functionally independent 3 months later.

“The use of a Mobile Interventional Stroke Team (MIST) traveling to Thrombectomy Capable Stroke Centers to perform endovascular thrombectomy has been shown to be significantly faster with improved discharge outcomes,” wrote lead author Jacob Morey, a doctoral Candidate at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York and coauthors in the paper. Prior to this study, “the effect of the MIST model stratified by time of presentation” had yet to be studied.

The findings were published online on Aug. 5 in Stroke.
 

MIST model versus drip-and-ship

The researchers analyzed 226 patients who underwent endovascular thrombectomy between January 2017 and February 2020 at four hospitals in the Mount Sinai health system using the NYC MIST Trial and a stroke database. At baseline, all patients were functionally independent as assessed by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS, score of 0-2). 106 patients were treated by a MIST team – staffed by a neurointerventionalist, a fellow or physician assistant, and radiologic technologist – that traveled to the patient’s location. A total of 120 patients were transferred to a comprehensive stroke center (CSC) or a hospital with endovascular thrombectomy expertise. The analysis was stratified based on whether the patient presented in the early time window (≤ 6 hours) or late time window (> 6 hours).

Patients treated in the early time window were significantly more likely to be mobile and able to perform daily tasks (mRS ≤ 2) 90 days after the procedure in the MIST group (54%), compared with the transferred group (28%, P < 0.01). Outcomes did not differ significantly between groups in the late time window (35% vs. 41%, P = 0.77).

Similarly, early-time-window patients in the MIST group were more likely to have higher functionality at discharge, compared with transferred patients, based on the on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (median score of 5.0 vs. 12.0, P < 0.01). There was no significant difference between groups treated in the late time window (median score of 5.0 vs. 11.0, P = 0.11).

“Ischemic strokes often progress rapidly and can cause severe damage because brain tissue dies quickly without oxygen, resulting in serious long-term disabilities or death,“ said Johanna Fifi, MD, of Icahn School of Medicine, said in a statement to the American Heart Association. “Assessing and treating stroke patients in the early window means that a greater number of fast-progressing strokes are identified and treated.”

Time is brain

Endovascular thrombectomy is a time-sensitive surgical procedure to remove large blood clots in acute ischemic stroke that has “historically been limited to comprehensive stroke centers,” the authors wrote in their paper. It is considered the standard of care in ischemic strokes, which make up 90% of all strokes. “Less than 50% of Americans have direct access to endovascular thrombectomy, the others must be transferred to a thrombectomy-capable hospital for treatment, often losing over 2 hours of time to treatment,” said Dr. Fifi. “Every minute is precious in treating stroke, and getting to a center that offers thrombectomy is very important. The MIST model would address this by providing faster access to this potentially life-saving, disability-reducing procedure.”

Access to timely endovascular thrombectomy is gradually improving as “more institutions and cities have implemented the [MIST] model.” Dr. Fifi said.

“This study stresses the importance of ‘time is brain,’ especially for patients in the early time window. Although the study is limited by the observational, retrospective design and was performed at a single integrated center, the findings are provocative,” said Louise McCullough, MD, of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston said in a statement to the American Heart Association. “The use of a MIST model highlights the potential benefit of early and urgent treatment for patients with large-vessel stroke. Stroke systems of care need to take advantage of any opportunity to treat patients early, wherever they are.”

The study was partly funded by a Stryker Foundation grant.

 

Having a mobile interventional stroke team (MIST) travel to treat stroke patients soon after stroke onset may improve patient outcomes, according to a new study. A retrospective analysis of a pilot program in New York found that patients who were treated on the ground by the MIST team rather than transferred to a specialized stroke center received faster care and were almost twice as likely to be functionally independent 3 months later.

“The use of a Mobile Interventional Stroke Team (MIST) traveling to Thrombectomy Capable Stroke Centers to perform endovascular thrombectomy has been shown to be significantly faster with improved discharge outcomes,” wrote lead author Jacob Morey, a doctoral Candidate at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York and coauthors in the paper. Prior to this study, “the effect of the MIST model stratified by time of presentation” had yet to be studied.

The findings were published online on Aug. 5 in Stroke.
 

MIST model versus drip-and-ship

The researchers analyzed 226 patients who underwent endovascular thrombectomy between January 2017 and February 2020 at four hospitals in the Mount Sinai health system using the NYC MIST Trial and a stroke database. At baseline, all patients were functionally independent as assessed by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS, score of 0-2). 106 patients were treated by a MIST team – staffed by a neurointerventionalist, a fellow or physician assistant, and radiologic technologist – that traveled to the patient’s location. A total of 120 patients were transferred to a comprehensive stroke center (CSC) or a hospital with endovascular thrombectomy expertise. The analysis was stratified based on whether the patient presented in the early time window (≤ 6 hours) or late time window (> 6 hours).

Patients treated in the early time window were significantly more likely to be mobile and able to perform daily tasks (mRS ≤ 2) 90 days after the procedure in the MIST group (54%), compared with the transferred group (28%, P < 0.01). Outcomes did not differ significantly between groups in the late time window (35% vs. 41%, P = 0.77).

Similarly, early-time-window patients in the MIST group were more likely to have higher functionality at discharge, compared with transferred patients, based on the on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (median score of 5.0 vs. 12.0, P < 0.01). There was no significant difference between groups treated in the late time window (median score of 5.0 vs. 11.0, P = 0.11).

“Ischemic strokes often progress rapidly and can cause severe damage because brain tissue dies quickly without oxygen, resulting in serious long-term disabilities or death,“ said Johanna Fifi, MD, of Icahn School of Medicine, said in a statement to the American Heart Association. “Assessing and treating stroke patients in the early window means that a greater number of fast-progressing strokes are identified and treated.”

Time is brain

Endovascular thrombectomy is a time-sensitive surgical procedure to remove large blood clots in acute ischemic stroke that has “historically been limited to comprehensive stroke centers,” the authors wrote in their paper. It is considered the standard of care in ischemic strokes, which make up 90% of all strokes. “Less than 50% of Americans have direct access to endovascular thrombectomy, the others must be transferred to a thrombectomy-capable hospital for treatment, often losing over 2 hours of time to treatment,” said Dr. Fifi. “Every minute is precious in treating stroke, and getting to a center that offers thrombectomy is very important. The MIST model would address this by providing faster access to this potentially life-saving, disability-reducing procedure.”

Access to timely endovascular thrombectomy is gradually improving as “more institutions and cities have implemented the [MIST] model.” Dr. Fifi said.

“This study stresses the importance of ‘time is brain,’ especially for patients in the early time window. Although the study is limited by the observational, retrospective design and was performed at a single integrated center, the findings are provocative,” said Louise McCullough, MD, of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston said in a statement to the American Heart Association. “The use of a MIST model highlights the potential benefit of early and urgent treatment for patients with large-vessel stroke. Stroke systems of care need to take advantage of any opportunity to treat patients early, wherever they are.”

The study was partly funded by a Stryker Foundation grant.

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Occipital nerve stimulation offers relief for patients with intractable chronic cluster headache

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Occipital nerve stimulation may help safely prevent attacks of medically intractable chronic cluster headache, according to a new study.

Medically intractable chronic cluster headaches are unilateral headaches that cause excruciating pain during attacks, which may happen as frequently as eight times per day. They are refractory to, or intolerant of, preventive medications typically used in chronic cluster headaches.

In a randomized controlled trial of patients with medically intractable chronic cluster headache, occipital nerve stimulation (ONS) was found to offer relief by reducing the frequency of attacks.

“ONS was associated with a major, rapid, and sustained improvement of severe and long-lasting medically intractable chronic cluster headache, both at high and low intensity,” Leopoldine A. Wilbrink, MD, of Leiden (the Netherlands) University Medical Centre, and coauthors wrote in their paper.

The findings were published online.

The multicenter, randomized, double-blind, phase 3 clinical trial was carried out at seven hospitals in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, and Hungary. A total of 150 patients with suspected medically intractable chronic cluster headache were enrolled between October 2010 and December 2017, and observed for 12 weeks at baseline. Of those initially enrolled, 131 patients with at least four medically intractable chronic cluster headache attacks per week and a history of nonresponsiveness to at least three standard preventive medications were randomly allocated to one of two groups: Sixty-five patients received 24 weeks of ONS at high intensity (100% intensity, or the intensity 10% below the threshold of discomfort as reported by the patient) while 66 received low-intensity (30%) ONS. At 25-48 weeks, the patients received open-label ONS.
 

Safe and well tolerated

“Because ONS causes paraesthesia, preventing masked comparison versus placebo, we compared high-intensity versus low-intensity ONS, which are hypothesised to cause similar paraesthesia, but with different efficacy,” wrote Dr. Wilbrink and colleagues.

From baseline to weeks 21-24, the median weekly mean attack frequencies decreased to 7.38 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.5-18.5, P < .0001). A median decrease in 5.21 attacks per week (–11.18 to –0.19, P < .0001) was observed.

The 100% ONS group saw a decrease in mean attack frequency from 17.58 at baseline (range, 9.83-29.33) to 9.5 (3-21.25) at 21-24 weeks with a median change of –4.08 (–11.92 to –0.25). In the 30% ONS group, the mean attack frequency decreased from 15 (9.25 to 22.33) to 6.75 (1.5-16.5) with a median change of –6.5 (–10.83 to –0.08).

At weeks 21-24, the difference in median weekly mean attack frequency between the groups was –2.42 (–5.17 to 3.33).

The authors stated that, in both groups, ONS was “safe and well tolerated.” A total of 129 adverse events were reported in the 100% ONS group and 95 in the 30% ONS group, of which 17 and 9 were considered serious, respectively. The serious adverse events required a short hospital stay to resolve minor hardware issues. The adverse events most frequently observed were local pain, impaired wound healing, neck stiffness, and hardware damage.
 

Low intensity stimulation may be best

“The main limitation of the study comes from the difficulty in defining the electrical dose, which was not constant across patients within each group, but individually adjusted depending on the perception of the ONS-induced paraesthesia,” Denys Fontaine, MD, and Michel Lanteri-Minet, MD, both from Université Cote D’Azur in France, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Given that the primary outcome did not differ significantly between the treatment groups, the editorialists stated that “the lowest stimulation intensity that induces paraesthesia is sufficient to obtain an effect in the patients who respond. Increasing the electrical dose or intensity does not seem to bring better efficacy and might even induce discomfort (painful paraesthesia or shock-like sensations) that might substantially reduce the tolerance of this approach.”

While the trial did not provide convincing evidence of high intensity ONS in medically intractable chronic cluster headache, the editorialists are otherwise optimistic about the findings: “… considering the significant difference between baseline and the end of the randomised stimulation phase in both groups (about half of the patients showed a 50% decrease in attack frequency), the findings of this study support the favourable results of previous real-world studies, and indicate that a substantial proportion of patients with intractable chronic cluster headache, although not all, could have their condition substantially improved by ONS.” Dr. Fontaine and Dr. Lanteri-Minet added that they hope that “these data will help health authorities to recognise the efficacy of ONS and consider its approval for use in patients with intractable chronic cluster headache.”

Priorities for future research in this area should “focus on optimising stimulation protocols and disentangling the underlying mechanism of action,” Dr. Wilbrink and colleagues wrote.

The study was funded by the Spinoza 2009 Lifetime Scientific Research Achievement Premium, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, the Dutch Ministry of Health (as part of a national provisional reimbursement program for promising new treatments), the NutsOhra Foundation from the Dutch Health Insurance Companies, and an unrestricted grant from Medtronic, all to Dr. Ferrari.

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Occipital nerve stimulation may help safely prevent attacks of medically intractable chronic cluster headache, according to a new study.

Medically intractable chronic cluster headaches are unilateral headaches that cause excruciating pain during attacks, which may happen as frequently as eight times per day. They are refractory to, or intolerant of, preventive medications typically used in chronic cluster headaches.

In a randomized controlled trial of patients with medically intractable chronic cluster headache, occipital nerve stimulation (ONS) was found to offer relief by reducing the frequency of attacks.

“ONS was associated with a major, rapid, and sustained improvement of severe and long-lasting medically intractable chronic cluster headache, both at high and low intensity,” Leopoldine A. Wilbrink, MD, of Leiden (the Netherlands) University Medical Centre, and coauthors wrote in their paper.

The findings were published online.

The multicenter, randomized, double-blind, phase 3 clinical trial was carried out at seven hospitals in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, and Hungary. A total of 150 patients with suspected medically intractable chronic cluster headache were enrolled between October 2010 and December 2017, and observed for 12 weeks at baseline. Of those initially enrolled, 131 patients with at least four medically intractable chronic cluster headache attacks per week and a history of nonresponsiveness to at least three standard preventive medications were randomly allocated to one of two groups: Sixty-five patients received 24 weeks of ONS at high intensity (100% intensity, or the intensity 10% below the threshold of discomfort as reported by the patient) while 66 received low-intensity (30%) ONS. At 25-48 weeks, the patients received open-label ONS.
 

Safe and well tolerated

“Because ONS causes paraesthesia, preventing masked comparison versus placebo, we compared high-intensity versus low-intensity ONS, which are hypothesised to cause similar paraesthesia, but with different efficacy,” wrote Dr. Wilbrink and colleagues.

From baseline to weeks 21-24, the median weekly mean attack frequencies decreased to 7.38 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.5-18.5, P < .0001). A median decrease in 5.21 attacks per week (–11.18 to –0.19, P < .0001) was observed.

The 100% ONS group saw a decrease in mean attack frequency from 17.58 at baseline (range, 9.83-29.33) to 9.5 (3-21.25) at 21-24 weeks with a median change of –4.08 (–11.92 to –0.25). In the 30% ONS group, the mean attack frequency decreased from 15 (9.25 to 22.33) to 6.75 (1.5-16.5) with a median change of –6.5 (–10.83 to –0.08).

At weeks 21-24, the difference in median weekly mean attack frequency between the groups was –2.42 (–5.17 to 3.33).

The authors stated that, in both groups, ONS was “safe and well tolerated.” A total of 129 adverse events were reported in the 100% ONS group and 95 in the 30% ONS group, of which 17 and 9 were considered serious, respectively. The serious adverse events required a short hospital stay to resolve minor hardware issues. The adverse events most frequently observed were local pain, impaired wound healing, neck stiffness, and hardware damage.
 

Low intensity stimulation may be best

“The main limitation of the study comes from the difficulty in defining the electrical dose, which was not constant across patients within each group, but individually adjusted depending on the perception of the ONS-induced paraesthesia,” Denys Fontaine, MD, and Michel Lanteri-Minet, MD, both from Université Cote D’Azur in France, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Given that the primary outcome did not differ significantly between the treatment groups, the editorialists stated that “the lowest stimulation intensity that induces paraesthesia is sufficient to obtain an effect in the patients who respond. Increasing the electrical dose or intensity does not seem to bring better efficacy and might even induce discomfort (painful paraesthesia or shock-like sensations) that might substantially reduce the tolerance of this approach.”

While the trial did not provide convincing evidence of high intensity ONS in medically intractable chronic cluster headache, the editorialists are otherwise optimistic about the findings: “… considering the significant difference between baseline and the end of the randomised stimulation phase in both groups (about half of the patients showed a 50% decrease in attack frequency), the findings of this study support the favourable results of previous real-world studies, and indicate that a substantial proportion of patients with intractable chronic cluster headache, although not all, could have their condition substantially improved by ONS.” Dr. Fontaine and Dr. Lanteri-Minet added that they hope that “these data will help health authorities to recognise the efficacy of ONS and consider its approval for use in patients with intractable chronic cluster headache.”

Priorities for future research in this area should “focus on optimising stimulation protocols and disentangling the underlying mechanism of action,” Dr. Wilbrink and colleagues wrote.

The study was funded by the Spinoza 2009 Lifetime Scientific Research Achievement Premium, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, the Dutch Ministry of Health (as part of a national provisional reimbursement program for promising new treatments), the NutsOhra Foundation from the Dutch Health Insurance Companies, and an unrestricted grant from Medtronic, all to Dr. Ferrari.

 

Occipital nerve stimulation may help safely prevent attacks of medically intractable chronic cluster headache, according to a new study.

Medically intractable chronic cluster headaches are unilateral headaches that cause excruciating pain during attacks, which may happen as frequently as eight times per day. They are refractory to, or intolerant of, preventive medications typically used in chronic cluster headaches.

In a randomized controlled trial of patients with medically intractable chronic cluster headache, occipital nerve stimulation (ONS) was found to offer relief by reducing the frequency of attacks.

“ONS was associated with a major, rapid, and sustained improvement of severe and long-lasting medically intractable chronic cluster headache, both at high and low intensity,” Leopoldine A. Wilbrink, MD, of Leiden (the Netherlands) University Medical Centre, and coauthors wrote in their paper.

The findings were published online.

The multicenter, randomized, double-blind, phase 3 clinical trial was carried out at seven hospitals in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, and Hungary. A total of 150 patients with suspected medically intractable chronic cluster headache were enrolled between October 2010 and December 2017, and observed for 12 weeks at baseline. Of those initially enrolled, 131 patients with at least four medically intractable chronic cluster headache attacks per week and a history of nonresponsiveness to at least three standard preventive medications were randomly allocated to one of two groups: Sixty-five patients received 24 weeks of ONS at high intensity (100% intensity, or the intensity 10% below the threshold of discomfort as reported by the patient) while 66 received low-intensity (30%) ONS. At 25-48 weeks, the patients received open-label ONS.
 

Safe and well tolerated

“Because ONS causes paraesthesia, preventing masked comparison versus placebo, we compared high-intensity versus low-intensity ONS, which are hypothesised to cause similar paraesthesia, but with different efficacy,” wrote Dr. Wilbrink and colleagues.

From baseline to weeks 21-24, the median weekly mean attack frequencies decreased to 7.38 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.5-18.5, P < .0001). A median decrease in 5.21 attacks per week (–11.18 to –0.19, P < .0001) was observed.

The 100% ONS group saw a decrease in mean attack frequency from 17.58 at baseline (range, 9.83-29.33) to 9.5 (3-21.25) at 21-24 weeks with a median change of –4.08 (–11.92 to –0.25). In the 30% ONS group, the mean attack frequency decreased from 15 (9.25 to 22.33) to 6.75 (1.5-16.5) with a median change of –6.5 (–10.83 to –0.08).

At weeks 21-24, the difference in median weekly mean attack frequency between the groups was –2.42 (–5.17 to 3.33).

The authors stated that, in both groups, ONS was “safe and well tolerated.” A total of 129 adverse events were reported in the 100% ONS group and 95 in the 30% ONS group, of which 17 and 9 were considered serious, respectively. The serious adverse events required a short hospital stay to resolve minor hardware issues. The adverse events most frequently observed were local pain, impaired wound healing, neck stiffness, and hardware damage.
 

Low intensity stimulation may be best

“The main limitation of the study comes from the difficulty in defining the electrical dose, which was not constant across patients within each group, but individually adjusted depending on the perception of the ONS-induced paraesthesia,” Denys Fontaine, MD, and Michel Lanteri-Minet, MD, both from Université Cote D’Azur in France, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Given that the primary outcome did not differ significantly between the treatment groups, the editorialists stated that “the lowest stimulation intensity that induces paraesthesia is sufficient to obtain an effect in the patients who respond. Increasing the electrical dose or intensity does not seem to bring better efficacy and might even induce discomfort (painful paraesthesia or shock-like sensations) that might substantially reduce the tolerance of this approach.”

While the trial did not provide convincing evidence of high intensity ONS in medically intractable chronic cluster headache, the editorialists are otherwise optimistic about the findings: “… considering the significant difference between baseline and the end of the randomised stimulation phase in both groups (about half of the patients showed a 50% decrease in attack frequency), the findings of this study support the favourable results of previous real-world studies, and indicate that a substantial proportion of patients with intractable chronic cluster headache, although not all, could have their condition substantially improved by ONS.” Dr. Fontaine and Dr. Lanteri-Minet added that they hope that “these data will help health authorities to recognise the efficacy of ONS and consider its approval for use in patients with intractable chronic cluster headache.”

Priorities for future research in this area should “focus on optimising stimulation protocols and disentangling the underlying mechanism of action,” Dr. Wilbrink and colleagues wrote.

The study was funded by the Spinoza 2009 Lifetime Scientific Research Achievement Premium, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, the Dutch Ministry of Health (as part of a national provisional reimbursement program for promising new treatments), the NutsOhra Foundation from the Dutch Health Insurance Companies, and an unrestricted grant from Medtronic, all to Dr. Ferrari.

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Chronic stress and genetics can raise the risk of Alzheimer’s disease

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A review of human and animal epidemiological studies found that long-term stress and genetic factors may act through the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis – a pathway in the brain that mediates stress responses – to contribute to the development of Alzheimer’s disease. The researchers also proposed a mechanism to account for how genetic factors may affect HPA axis reactivity and lead to inflammation, which is a core component of neurodegeneration.

Ayeisha Milligran Armstrong

“Chronic stress can impact the way immune cells in the brain function and increase inflammation. Genetic variants within that stress response can further affect the function of immune cells,” lead author Ayeisha Milligan Armstrong, a PhD candidate at Curtin Health Innovation Research Institute in Perth, Australia, said in an interview.

The findings were published online June 22 in Biological Reviews).

Research has found that long-term stress during early and mid-life is increasingly associated with cognitive decline and neurodegeneration. There is already evidence to suggest that chronic stress is a risk factor for the “sporadic” or late-onset subtype of Alzheimer’s disease.
 

A cascade of events

Stress activates the HPA, which in turn regulates bodily levels of cortisol, a glucocorticoid stress hormone. Increased levels of cortisol are frequently observed in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and “make a major contribution to the disease process,” the authors wrote. For example, the hippocampus – a part of the brain involved in processing and forming memories – has numerous glucocorticoid receptors and is “therefore particularly sensitive to the effects of glucocorticoids.” However, the molecular mechanisms involved remain poorly understood.

“There is an intimate interplay between exposure to chronic stress and pathways influencing the body’s reaction to such stress,” senior author David Groth, PhD, said in a statement. Dr. Groth is an associate professor at Curtin University in Perth, Australia.

There is variation between individuals with regard to how sensitive they are to stress and glucocorticoid responses. Environmental factors such as stress are thought to be at least partly responsible, as are genetic factors such as genetic polymorphisms and epigenetics. “Genetic variations within these pathways can influence the way the brain’s immune system behaves, leading to a dysfunctional response. In the brain, this leads to a chronic disruption of normal brain processes, increasing the risk of subsequent neurodegeneration and ultimately dementia,” Dr. Groth said.

The researchers suggested that these variations may prime the immune cells of the brain, the microglia, to cause inflammation in the brain. Normally, microglia are involved in monitoring the brain tissue for and responding to damage and infections to keep the brain healthy. However, in an inflammatory state, the microglia instead contribute to a “more neurotoxic environment through the production of proinflammatory cytokines, altered synaptic pruning, and the reduced production of protective neurotrophic factors,” the authors wrote. Microglia may also promote the accumulation of amyloid beta and tau protein, which damage the brain tissue and can cause neurodegeneration. There are different groups of microglia in the brain, each of which may respond differently to genetic and environmental stressors.

“Genome-wide association studies have found that of the genes identified as being associated with Alzheimer’s disease, 60.5% are expressed in microglia,” the authors noted.

To connect the roles of chronic stress and brain inflammation in Alzheimer’s disease, the researchers proposed a “two-hit” hypothesis: Early or mid-life exposure to stress primes the microglia to enter an inflammatory state in response to a secondary stimulus later in life.
 

 

 

Pay attention to stress

For clinicians, this paper highlights the importance of managing stress in patients and their families.

“Clinicians need to be attuned to the effects of stress on patients and their caregivers, and how that [stress] can affect their morbidity and mortality,” Cynthia Munro, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview. She added that attention must be paid to modifiable risk factors such as poor sleep and diet.

Dr. Cynthia Munro

Although managing stress is important, that doesn’t mean that everyone who’s experienced chronic stress will develop Alzheimer’s disease. “Chronic stress can alter the HPA axis but it doesn’t necessarily do so in everyone. A cascade of events needs to occur,” said Dr. Munro. “People should always try to reduce the effects of stress to the extent that they can. Stress can lead to a whole host of negative health outcomes, not just Alzheimer’s disease.”
 

Next steps

Moving forward, the researchers plan to further investigate the molecular mechanisms responsible for the role of stress in Alzheimer’s disease and how genetic variants affect neurodegeneration, Ms. Armstrong said. Ultimately, understanding how stress and genetics contribute to Alzheimer’s disease may lead to the identification of possible therapeutic targets.

Ms. Armstrong and Dr. Munro declared no relevant financial relationships. The study was independently funded.

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A review of human and animal epidemiological studies found that long-term stress and genetic factors may act through the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis – a pathway in the brain that mediates stress responses – to contribute to the development of Alzheimer’s disease. The researchers also proposed a mechanism to account for how genetic factors may affect HPA axis reactivity and lead to inflammation, which is a core component of neurodegeneration.

Ayeisha Milligran Armstrong

“Chronic stress can impact the way immune cells in the brain function and increase inflammation. Genetic variants within that stress response can further affect the function of immune cells,” lead author Ayeisha Milligan Armstrong, a PhD candidate at Curtin Health Innovation Research Institute in Perth, Australia, said in an interview.

The findings were published online June 22 in Biological Reviews).

Research has found that long-term stress during early and mid-life is increasingly associated with cognitive decline and neurodegeneration. There is already evidence to suggest that chronic stress is a risk factor for the “sporadic” or late-onset subtype of Alzheimer’s disease.
 

A cascade of events

Stress activates the HPA, which in turn regulates bodily levels of cortisol, a glucocorticoid stress hormone. Increased levels of cortisol are frequently observed in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and “make a major contribution to the disease process,” the authors wrote. For example, the hippocampus – a part of the brain involved in processing and forming memories – has numerous glucocorticoid receptors and is “therefore particularly sensitive to the effects of glucocorticoids.” However, the molecular mechanisms involved remain poorly understood.

“There is an intimate interplay between exposure to chronic stress and pathways influencing the body’s reaction to such stress,” senior author David Groth, PhD, said in a statement. Dr. Groth is an associate professor at Curtin University in Perth, Australia.

There is variation between individuals with regard to how sensitive they are to stress and glucocorticoid responses. Environmental factors such as stress are thought to be at least partly responsible, as are genetic factors such as genetic polymorphisms and epigenetics. “Genetic variations within these pathways can influence the way the brain’s immune system behaves, leading to a dysfunctional response. In the brain, this leads to a chronic disruption of normal brain processes, increasing the risk of subsequent neurodegeneration and ultimately dementia,” Dr. Groth said.

The researchers suggested that these variations may prime the immune cells of the brain, the microglia, to cause inflammation in the brain. Normally, microglia are involved in monitoring the brain tissue for and responding to damage and infections to keep the brain healthy. However, in an inflammatory state, the microglia instead contribute to a “more neurotoxic environment through the production of proinflammatory cytokines, altered synaptic pruning, and the reduced production of protective neurotrophic factors,” the authors wrote. Microglia may also promote the accumulation of amyloid beta and tau protein, which damage the brain tissue and can cause neurodegeneration. There are different groups of microglia in the brain, each of which may respond differently to genetic and environmental stressors.

“Genome-wide association studies have found that of the genes identified as being associated with Alzheimer’s disease, 60.5% are expressed in microglia,” the authors noted.

To connect the roles of chronic stress and brain inflammation in Alzheimer’s disease, the researchers proposed a “two-hit” hypothesis: Early or mid-life exposure to stress primes the microglia to enter an inflammatory state in response to a secondary stimulus later in life.
 

 

 

Pay attention to stress

For clinicians, this paper highlights the importance of managing stress in patients and their families.

“Clinicians need to be attuned to the effects of stress on patients and their caregivers, and how that [stress] can affect their morbidity and mortality,” Cynthia Munro, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview. She added that attention must be paid to modifiable risk factors such as poor sleep and diet.

Dr. Cynthia Munro

Although managing stress is important, that doesn’t mean that everyone who’s experienced chronic stress will develop Alzheimer’s disease. “Chronic stress can alter the HPA axis but it doesn’t necessarily do so in everyone. A cascade of events needs to occur,” said Dr. Munro. “People should always try to reduce the effects of stress to the extent that they can. Stress can lead to a whole host of negative health outcomes, not just Alzheimer’s disease.”
 

Next steps

Moving forward, the researchers plan to further investigate the molecular mechanisms responsible for the role of stress in Alzheimer’s disease and how genetic variants affect neurodegeneration, Ms. Armstrong said. Ultimately, understanding how stress and genetics contribute to Alzheimer’s disease may lead to the identification of possible therapeutic targets.

Ms. Armstrong and Dr. Munro declared no relevant financial relationships. The study was independently funded.

 

A review of human and animal epidemiological studies found that long-term stress and genetic factors may act through the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis – a pathway in the brain that mediates stress responses – to contribute to the development of Alzheimer’s disease. The researchers also proposed a mechanism to account for how genetic factors may affect HPA axis reactivity and lead to inflammation, which is a core component of neurodegeneration.

Ayeisha Milligran Armstrong

“Chronic stress can impact the way immune cells in the brain function and increase inflammation. Genetic variants within that stress response can further affect the function of immune cells,” lead author Ayeisha Milligan Armstrong, a PhD candidate at Curtin Health Innovation Research Institute in Perth, Australia, said in an interview.

The findings were published online June 22 in Biological Reviews).

Research has found that long-term stress during early and mid-life is increasingly associated with cognitive decline and neurodegeneration. There is already evidence to suggest that chronic stress is a risk factor for the “sporadic” or late-onset subtype of Alzheimer’s disease.
 

A cascade of events

Stress activates the HPA, which in turn regulates bodily levels of cortisol, a glucocorticoid stress hormone. Increased levels of cortisol are frequently observed in patients with Alzheimer’s disease and “make a major contribution to the disease process,” the authors wrote. For example, the hippocampus – a part of the brain involved in processing and forming memories – has numerous glucocorticoid receptors and is “therefore particularly sensitive to the effects of glucocorticoids.” However, the molecular mechanisms involved remain poorly understood.

“There is an intimate interplay between exposure to chronic stress and pathways influencing the body’s reaction to such stress,” senior author David Groth, PhD, said in a statement. Dr. Groth is an associate professor at Curtin University in Perth, Australia.

There is variation between individuals with regard to how sensitive they are to stress and glucocorticoid responses. Environmental factors such as stress are thought to be at least partly responsible, as are genetic factors such as genetic polymorphisms and epigenetics. “Genetic variations within these pathways can influence the way the brain’s immune system behaves, leading to a dysfunctional response. In the brain, this leads to a chronic disruption of normal brain processes, increasing the risk of subsequent neurodegeneration and ultimately dementia,” Dr. Groth said.

The researchers suggested that these variations may prime the immune cells of the brain, the microglia, to cause inflammation in the brain. Normally, microglia are involved in monitoring the brain tissue for and responding to damage and infections to keep the brain healthy. However, in an inflammatory state, the microglia instead contribute to a “more neurotoxic environment through the production of proinflammatory cytokines, altered synaptic pruning, and the reduced production of protective neurotrophic factors,” the authors wrote. Microglia may also promote the accumulation of amyloid beta and tau protein, which damage the brain tissue and can cause neurodegeneration. There are different groups of microglia in the brain, each of which may respond differently to genetic and environmental stressors.

“Genome-wide association studies have found that of the genes identified as being associated with Alzheimer’s disease, 60.5% are expressed in microglia,” the authors noted.

To connect the roles of chronic stress and brain inflammation in Alzheimer’s disease, the researchers proposed a “two-hit” hypothesis: Early or mid-life exposure to stress primes the microglia to enter an inflammatory state in response to a secondary stimulus later in life.
 

 

 

Pay attention to stress

For clinicians, this paper highlights the importance of managing stress in patients and their families.

“Clinicians need to be attuned to the effects of stress on patients and their caregivers, and how that [stress] can affect their morbidity and mortality,” Cynthia Munro, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview. She added that attention must be paid to modifiable risk factors such as poor sleep and diet.

Dr. Cynthia Munro

Although managing stress is important, that doesn’t mean that everyone who’s experienced chronic stress will develop Alzheimer’s disease. “Chronic stress can alter the HPA axis but it doesn’t necessarily do so in everyone. A cascade of events needs to occur,” said Dr. Munro. “People should always try to reduce the effects of stress to the extent that they can. Stress can lead to a whole host of negative health outcomes, not just Alzheimer’s disease.”
 

Next steps

Moving forward, the researchers plan to further investigate the molecular mechanisms responsible for the role of stress in Alzheimer’s disease and how genetic variants affect neurodegeneration, Ms. Armstrong said. Ultimately, understanding how stress and genetics contribute to Alzheimer’s disease may lead to the identification of possible therapeutic targets.

Ms. Armstrong and Dr. Munro declared no relevant financial relationships. The study was independently funded.

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Midlife change in wealth may be costly for heart health

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Thu, 07/08/2021 - 08:07

Midlife changes in wealth may affect a patient’s risk of cardiovascular disease, a new cohort study suggests.

It found that upward wealth mobility relative to peers was independently associated with protection against cardiovascular disease after age 65. In contrast, downward wealth mobility during middle age was linked to an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular events.

“A lot of studies have shown an inverse relationship between wealth and health in cross section at a single timepoint. What we really wanted to understand is whether this risk is modifiable and if this relationship changes over time,” senior author Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Heart & Vascular Center, Boston, said in an interview.

The results were published online June 15 in JAMA Cardiology.  

For the primary analysis, the researchers collected data from 5,579 U.S. adults aged 50 years and older with no known cardiovascular disease at baseline who participated in the RAND Health and Retirement Study, a longitudinal survey that measures changes in health and wealth every 2 years. The participants had been interviewed in at least two of three 5-year age intervals (50-54, 55-59, 60-64 years) and had follow-up data available after age 65. Survey data from Jan. 1, 1992 to Dec. 31, 2016 was used.

Participants were grouped into quintiles based on wealth, defined as total nonhousing assets in 2012 U.S. dollars, and were further stratified by birth cohort (1931-1935, 1936-1940, 1941-1945, 1946-1950). Upward relative wealth mobility involved an increase of one or more wealth quintiles during the observation period, while downward relative wealth mobility was defined as a decrease of one or more wealth quintiles. Participants who remained in the same quintile were described as having stable wealth.

Across the birth cohorts, the bottom wealth quintile ranged from -$581,447 to $7,460 and the top wealth quintile ranged from $327,064 to $22,661,450.



Over a mean 16.9 years of follow-up, the primary outcome of cardiovascular death or a nonfatal cardiovascular event such as a heart attack or stroke occurred in 1,336 participants, including 22.5% whose wealth increased by one quintile versus 28.1% whose wealth decreased by one quintile.

In adjusted analyses, higher initial wealth was associated with lower cardiovascular risk after turning 65 (adjusted hazard ratio per quintile, 0.89; 95% confidence interval, 0.84-0.95; P = .001). Additionally, experiencing relative upward wealth mobility by at least one quintile was independently associated with a lower risk of a nonfatal cardiovascular event or cardiovascular death, compared with stable wealth (aHR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.73-0.97; P = .02).

Downward wealth mobility was associated with worse cardiovascular outcomes (aHR, 1.15; 95% CI, 1.00-1.32; P = .046). This effect was also observed on the risk of cardiovascular death in a secondary analysis of 3,360 participants who had a previous history of cardiovascular disease (aHR, 1.48; 95% CI, 1.13-1.93; P = .004).

“We estimate that each $100,000 increase in wealth was associated with a roughly 1% lower hazard of cardiovascular outcome in follow-up,” the authors write.

The protective effect of wealth on cardiovascular health may be the result of factors such as “better access to care, having more time to adhere to a healthier diet or exercise regularly, and reduced stress,” Kiarri Kershaw, PhD, a social epidemiologist at Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview. Dr. Kershaw, who was not involved in the study, added that “stress can affect health through both biological and behavioral pathways.”

The study did not find a statistical relationship between race, wealth, and health. However, it was observed that the overall risk of cardiovascular events among non-Hispanic Black and Black participants was lower. The authors noted that “these findings are likely a byproduct of collider bias, in which Black and Hispanic participants who experience downward wealth mobility are more likely to experience barriers to care and subsequently less likely to receive a diagnosis of cardiovascular disease.”

Moving forward, the researchers plan to investigate health policy interventions that “best promote and sustain economic opportunity and wealth formed among low-income individuals,” Dr. Vaduganathan said.

The study was funded independently. Dr. Vaduganathan and Dr. Kershaw have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Midlife changes in wealth may affect a patient’s risk of cardiovascular disease, a new cohort study suggests.

It found that upward wealth mobility relative to peers was independently associated with protection against cardiovascular disease after age 65. In contrast, downward wealth mobility during middle age was linked to an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular events.

“A lot of studies have shown an inverse relationship between wealth and health in cross section at a single timepoint. What we really wanted to understand is whether this risk is modifiable and if this relationship changes over time,” senior author Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Heart & Vascular Center, Boston, said in an interview.

The results were published online June 15 in JAMA Cardiology.  

For the primary analysis, the researchers collected data from 5,579 U.S. adults aged 50 years and older with no known cardiovascular disease at baseline who participated in the RAND Health and Retirement Study, a longitudinal survey that measures changes in health and wealth every 2 years. The participants had been interviewed in at least two of three 5-year age intervals (50-54, 55-59, 60-64 years) and had follow-up data available after age 65. Survey data from Jan. 1, 1992 to Dec. 31, 2016 was used.

Participants were grouped into quintiles based on wealth, defined as total nonhousing assets in 2012 U.S. dollars, and were further stratified by birth cohort (1931-1935, 1936-1940, 1941-1945, 1946-1950). Upward relative wealth mobility involved an increase of one or more wealth quintiles during the observation period, while downward relative wealth mobility was defined as a decrease of one or more wealth quintiles. Participants who remained in the same quintile were described as having stable wealth.

Across the birth cohorts, the bottom wealth quintile ranged from -$581,447 to $7,460 and the top wealth quintile ranged from $327,064 to $22,661,450.



Over a mean 16.9 years of follow-up, the primary outcome of cardiovascular death or a nonfatal cardiovascular event such as a heart attack or stroke occurred in 1,336 participants, including 22.5% whose wealth increased by one quintile versus 28.1% whose wealth decreased by one quintile.

In adjusted analyses, higher initial wealth was associated with lower cardiovascular risk after turning 65 (adjusted hazard ratio per quintile, 0.89; 95% confidence interval, 0.84-0.95; P = .001). Additionally, experiencing relative upward wealth mobility by at least one quintile was independently associated with a lower risk of a nonfatal cardiovascular event or cardiovascular death, compared with stable wealth (aHR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.73-0.97; P = .02).

Downward wealth mobility was associated with worse cardiovascular outcomes (aHR, 1.15; 95% CI, 1.00-1.32; P = .046). This effect was also observed on the risk of cardiovascular death in a secondary analysis of 3,360 participants who had a previous history of cardiovascular disease (aHR, 1.48; 95% CI, 1.13-1.93; P = .004).

“We estimate that each $100,000 increase in wealth was associated with a roughly 1% lower hazard of cardiovascular outcome in follow-up,” the authors write.

The protective effect of wealth on cardiovascular health may be the result of factors such as “better access to care, having more time to adhere to a healthier diet or exercise regularly, and reduced stress,” Kiarri Kershaw, PhD, a social epidemiologist at Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview. Dr. Kershaw, who was not involved in the study, added that “stress can affect health through both biological and behavioral pathways.”

The study did not find a statistical relationship between race, wealth, and health. However, it was observed that the overall risk of cardiovascular events among non-Hispanic Black and Black participants was lower. The authors noted that “these findings are likely a byproduct of collider bias, in which Black and Hispanic participants who experience downward wealth mobility are more likely to experience barriers to care and subsequently less likely to receive a diagnosis of cardiovascular disease.”

Moving forward, the researchers plan to investigate health policy interventions that “best promote and sustain economic opportunity and wealth formed among low-income individuals,” Dr. Vaduganathan said.

The study was funded independently. Dr. Vaduganathan and Dr. Kershaw have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Midlife changes in wealth may affect a patient’s risk of cardiovascular disease, a new cohort study suggests.

It found that upward wealth mobility relative to peers was independently associated with protection against cardiovascular disease after age 65. In contrast, downward wealth mobility during middle age was linked to an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular events.

“A lot of studies have shown an inverse relationship between wealth and health in cross section at a single timepoint. What we really wanted to understand is whether this risk is modifiable and if this relationship changes over time,” senior author Muthiah Vaduganathan, MD, MPH, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Heart & Vascular Center, Boston, said in an interview.

The results were published online June 15 in JAMA Cardiology.  

For the primary analysis, the researchers collected data from 5,579 U.S. adults aged 50 years and older with no known cardiovascular disease at baseline who participated in the RAND Health and Retirement Study, a longitudinal survey that measures changes in health and wealth every 2 years. The participants had been interviewed in at least two of three 5-year age intervals (50-54, 55-59, 60-64 years) and had follow-up data available after age 65. Survey data from Jan. 1, 1992 to Dec. 31, 2016 was used.

Participants were grouped into quintiles based on wealth, defined as total nonhousing assets in 2012 U.S. dollars, and were further stratified by birth cohort (1931-1935, 1936-1940, 1941-1945, 1946-1950). Upward relative wealth mobility involved an increase of one or more wealth quintiles during the observation period, while downward relative wealth mobility was defined as a decrease of one or more wealth quintiles. Participants who remained in the same quintile were described as having stable wealth.

Across the birth cohorts, the bottom wealth quintile ranged from -$581,447 to $7,460 and the top wealth quintile ranged from $327,064 to $22,661,450.



Over a mean 16.9 years of follow-up, the primary outcome of cardiovascular death or a nonfatal cardiovascular event such as a heart attack or stroke occurred in 1,336 participants, including 22.5% whose wealth increased by one quintile versus 28.1% whose wealth decreased by one quintile.

In adjusted analyses, higher initial wealth was associated with lower cardiovascular risk after turning 65 (adjusted hazard ratio per quintile, 0.89; 95% confidence interval, 0.84-0.95; P = .001). Additionally, experiencing relative upward wealth mobility by at least one quintile was independently associated with a lower risk of a nonfatal cardiovascular event or cardiovascular death, compared with stable wealth (aHR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.73-0.97; P = .02).

Downward wealth mobility was associated with worse cardiovascular outcomes (aHR, 1.15; 95% CI, 1.00-1.32; P = .046). This effect was also observed on the risk of cardiovascular death in a secondary analysis of 3,360 participants who had a previous history of cardiovascular disease (aHR, 1.48; 95% CI, 1.13-1.93; P = .004).

“We estimate that each $100,000 increase in wealth was associated with a roughly 1% lower hazard of cardiovascular outcome in follow-up,” the authors write.

The protective effect of wealth on cardiovascular health may be the result of factors such as “better access to care, having more time to adhere to a healthier diet or exercise regularly, and reduced stress,” Kiarri Kershaw, PhD, a social epidemiologist at Northwestern University, Chicago, said in an interview. Dr. Kershaw, who was not involved in the study, added that “stress can affect health through both biological and behavioral pathways.”

The study did not find a statistical relationship between race, wealth, and health. However, it was observed that the overall risk of cardiovascular events among non-Hispanic Black and Black participants was lower. The authors noted that “these findings are likely a byproduct of collider bias, in which Black and Hispanic participants who experience downward wealth mobility are more likely to experience barriers to care and subsequently less likely to receive a diagnosis of cardiovascular disease.”

Moving forward, the researchers plan to investigate health policy interventions that “best promote and sustain economic opportunity and wealth formed among low-income individuals,” Dr. Vaduganathan said.

The study was funded independently. Dr. Vaduganathan and Dr. Kershaw have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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