Ginger consumption may mitigate neutrophil dysfunction and inflammation

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Fri, 09/22/2023 - 15:37

 

TOPLINE:

Blood samples from healthy adults show an inhibition of neutrophil extracellular trap formation (NET) after 1 week of daily ginger supplements.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers recruited nine healthy adults aged 18-38 years to receive a 100-mg oral ginger supplement daily for 7 consecutive days.
  • Blood samples were collected at baseline and on days 7 and 14, with isolation of neutrophils, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and plasma.
  • The researchers measured NET formation (NETosis) as a way to show the effect of ginger on inflammation.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Measures of neutrophil cyclic AMP (cAMP) were significantly higher after 7 days of ginger supplements, compared with baseline levels, although these levels returned to near baseline by 1 week after discontinuing ginger consumption.
  • Oral ginger supplements reduced neutrophil phosphodiesterase (PDE) activity by 40% from baseline, similar to results seen with synthetic PDE4 inhibitors.
  • The results build on previous studies showing inhibition of neutrophil hyperactivity in mice with antiphospholipid syndrome and lupus after injection with a purified ginger preparation.
  • Researchers replicated the results showing effects of oral ginger on neutrophils in eight additional healthy adults who also showed reduced NETosis and increased cAMP after 1 week of ginger supplements.

IN PRACTICE:

The results show biologic support for the potential of ginger to affect neutrophil function in humans; therefore, “ginger may have a real ability to complement treatment programs that are already underway,” said corresponding author Jason Knight, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in a press release.

SOURCE:

First author Ramadan A. Ali, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues reported their study in JCI Insight.

LIMITATIONS:

More research is needed in humans with inflammatory and autoimmune diseases to confirm the findings and explore ginger as an adjuvant therapeutic intervention.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no outside funding. The researchers report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Blood samples from healthy adults show an inhibition of neutrophil extracellular trap formation (NET) after 1 week of daily ginger supplements.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers recruited nine healthy adults aged 18-38 years to receive a 100-mg oral ginger supplement daily for 7 consecutive days.
  • Blood samples were collected at baseline and on days 7 and 14, with isolation of neutrophils, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and plasma.
  • The researchers measured NET formation (NETosis) as a way to show the effect of ginger on inflammation.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Measures of neutrophil cyclic AMP (cAMP) were significantly higher after 7 days of ginger supplements, compared with baseline levels, although these levels returned to near baseline by 1 week after discontinuing ginger consumption.
  • Oral ginger supplements reduced neutrophil phosphodiesterase (PDE) activity by 40% from baseline, similar to results seen with synthetic PDE4 inhibitors.
  • The results build on previous studies showing inhibition of neutrophil hyperactivity in mice with antiphospholipid syndrome and lupus after injection with a purified ginger preparation.
  • Researchers replicated the results showing effects of oral ginger on neutrophils in eight additional healthy adults who also showed reduced NETosis and increased cAMP after 1 week of ginger supplements.

IN PRACTICE:

The results show biologic support for the potential of ginger to affect neutrophil function in humans; therefore, “ginger may have a real ability to complement treatment programs that are already underway,” said corresponding author Jason Knight, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in a press release.

SOURCE:

First author Ramadan A. Ali, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues reported their study in JCI Insight.

LIMITATIONS:

More research is needed in humans with inflammatory and autoimmune diseases to confirm the findings and explore ginger as an adjuvant therapeutic intervention.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no outside funding. The researchers report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Blood samples from healthy adults show an inhibition of neutrophil extracellular trap formation (NET) after 1 week of daily ginger supplements.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers recruited nine healthy adults aged 18-38 years to receive a 100-mg oral ginger supplement daily for 7 consecutive days.
  • Blood samples were collected at baseline and on days 7 and 14, with isolation of neutrophils, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and plasma.
  • The researchers measured NET formation (NETosis) as a way to show the effect of ginger on inflammation.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Measures of neutrophil cyclic AMP (cAMP) were significantly higher after 7 days of ginger supplements, compared with baseline levels, although these levels returned to near baseline by 1 week after discontinuing ginger consumption.
  • Oral ginger supplements reduced neutrophil phosphodiesterase (PDE) activity by 40% from baseline, similar to results seen with synthetic PDE4 inhibitors.
  • The results build on previous studies showing inhibition of neutrophil hyperactivity in mice with antiphospholipid syndrome and lupus after injection with a purified ginger preparation.
  • Researchers replicated the results showing effects of oral ginger on neutrophils in eight additional healthy adults who also showed reduced NETosis and increased cAMP after 1 week of ginger supplements.

IN PRACTICE:

The results show biologic support for the potential of ginger to affect neutrophil function in humans; therefore, “ginger may have a real ability to complement treatment programs that are already underway,” said corresponding author Jason Knight, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, in a press release.

SOURCE:

First author Ramadan A. Ali, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and colleagues reported their study in JCI Insight.

LIMITATIONS:

More research is needed in humans with inflammatory and autoimmune diseases to confirm the findings and explore ginger as an adjuvant therapeutic intervention.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no outside funding. The researchers report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Mortality in ankylosing spondylitis: CV disease, drug abuse are big contributors

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Changed
Fri, 09/22/2023 - 13:10

 

TOPLINE:

Drug use disorder increased the likelihood of in-hospital mortality more than 10-fold in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), compared with patients who did not die while hospitalized.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers reviewed data from 2,125 adults with AS who were hospitalized between 2015 and 2017, using the Cerner Health Facts Database.
  • The final analysis included 41 patients with AS who died while hospitalized and 260 random control patients with AS who did not die.
  • The mean age of the deceased patients with AS was 70 years, 85% were male, and 81% were White; 71% had hypertension, 32% had kidney disease, and 22% had congestive heart failure.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the patients with AS, cardiovascular disease was the most frequent cause of death, followed by infection, respiratory failure, and fracture/trauma in 15, 14, 8, and 7 patients, respectively. (Some patients had more than one cause of death recorded in the discharge summary.)
  • The most common cardiac causes of death were myocardial infarction and cardiac arrest, while the top causes of acute respiratory failure were pneumonia and pulmonary embolism.
  • Drug abuse, including opioid dependence, was significantly associated with death among hospitalized patients with AS (adjusted odds ratio, 10.9; P = .001).
  • Heart failure and kidney disease were the comorbidities most strongly associated with mortality; the odds of death in the presence of heart failure rose 2.76-fold, and it increased 2.46-fold in the presence of kidney disease.

IN PRACTICE:

Underlying comorbidities, especially cardiac and renal, are associated with mortality in AS, and patients should be screened early on for these comorbidities to help reduce the odds of death.

SOURCE:

First author Mohamad Bittar, MD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, and colleagues reported their findings in Clinical Rheumatology).

LIMITATIONS:

The study lacked AS-specific data such as disease activity scores, which were not in the database. Also missing were variables linked to disease activity and mortality, including smoking, BMI levels, and C-reactive protein levels.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no outside funding. Several coauthors disclosed financial relationships with UCB, Amgen, Pfizer, AbbVie, Novartis, and Eli Lilly.

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

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TOPLINE:

Drug use disorder increased the likelihood of in-hospital mortality more than 10-fold in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), compared with patients who did not die while hospitalized.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers reviewed data from 2,125 adults with AS who were hospitalized between 2015 and 2017, using the Cerner Health Facts Database.
  • The final analysis included 41 patients with AS who died while hospitalized and 260 random control patients with AS who did not die.
  • The mean age of the deceased patients with AS was 70 years, 85% were male, and 81% were White; 71% had hypertension, 32% had kidney disease, and 22% had congestive heart failure.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the patients with AS, cardiovascular disease was the most frequent cause of death, followed by infection, respiratory failure, and fracture/trauma in 15, 14, 8, and 7 patients, respectively. (Some patients had more than one cause of death recorded in the discharge summary.)
  • The most common cardiac causes of death were myocardial infarction and cardiac arrest, while the top causes of acute respiratory failure were pneumonia and pulmonary embolism.
  • Drug abuse, including opioid dependence, was significantly associated with death among hospitalized patients with AS (adjusted odds ratio, 10.9; P = .001).
  • Heart failure and kidney disease were the comorbidities most strongly associated with mortality; the odds of death in the presence of heart failure rose 2.76-fold, and it increased 2.46-fold in the presence of kidney disease.

IN PRACTICE:

Underlying comorbidities, especially cardiac and renal, are associated with mortality in AS, and patients should be screened early on for these comorbidities to help reduce the odds of death.

SOURCE:

First author Mohamad Bittar, MD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, and colleagues reported their findings in Clinical Rheumatology).

LIMITATIONS:

The study lacked AS-specific data such as disease activity scores, which were not in the database. Also missing were variables linked to disease activity and mortality, including smoking, BMI levels, and C-reactive protein levels.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no outside funding. Several coauthors disclosed financial relationships with UCB, Amgen, Pfizer, AbbVie, Novartis, and Eli Lilly.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Drug use disorder increased the likelihood of in-hospital mortality more than 10-fold in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), compared with patients who did not die while hospitalized.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers reviewed data from 2,125 adults with AS who were hospitalized between 2015 and 2017, using the Cerner Health Facts Database.
  • The final analysis included 41 patients with AS who died while hospitalized and 260 random control patients with AS who did not die.
  • The mean age of the deceased patients with AS was 70 years, 85% were male, and 81% were White; 71% had hypertension, 32% had kidney disease, and 22% had congestive heart failure.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the patients with AS, cardiovascular disease was the most frequent cause of death, followed by infection, respiratory failure, and fracture/trauma in 15, 14, 8, and 7 patients, respectively. (Some patients had more than one cause of death recorded in the discharge summary.)
  • The most common cardiac causes of death were myocardial infarction and cardiac arrest, while the top causes of acute respiratory failure were pneumonia and pulmonary embolism.
  • Drug abuse, including opioid dependence, was significantly associated with death among hospitalized patients with AS (adjusted odds ratio, 10.9; P = .001).
  • Heart failure and kidney disease were the comorbidities most strongly associated with mortality; the odds of death in the presence of heart failure rose 2.76-fold, and it increased 2.46-fold in the presence of kidney disease.

IN PRACTICE:

Underlying comorbidities, especially cardiac and renal, are associated with mortality in AS, and patients should be screened early on for these comorbidities to help reduce the odds of death.

SOURCE:

First author Mohamad Bittar, MD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, and colleagues reported their findings in Clinical Rheumatology).

LIMITATIONS:

The study lacked AS-specific data such as disease activity scores, which were not in the database. Also missing were variables linked to disease activity and mortality, including smoking, BMI levels, and C-reactive protein levels.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no outside funding. Several coauthors disclosed financial relationships with UCB, Amgen, Pfizer, AbbVie, Novartis, and Eli Lilly.

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

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Three antibiotic regimens show similar effectiveness for CAP

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Changed
Fri, 09/22/2023 - 12:51

Adults with nonsevere community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) responded nearly equally to three first-line and alternative antibiotic regimens, based on data from more than 23,000 individuals.

Current recommendations for the treatment of CAP vary across guidelines, wrote Anthony D. Bai, MD, of Queen’s University, Kingston, Ont., and colleagues. However, most guidelines were based on studies that were not powered to examine the effect of treatments on mortality, they said.

“Large observational studies could fill this gap by comparing multiple treatment arms, including patients not well represented in trials, and having a large sample size powered to detect a difference in mortality,” they noted.

In a study published in Chest, the researchers reviewed data from 23,512 consecutive patients admitted to 19 hospitals in Canada for CAP between 2015 and 2021. Patients were treated with one of four initial antibiotic regimens: beta-lactam plus macrolide (BL+M), beta-lactam alone (BL), respiratory fluoroquinolone (FQ), or beta-lactam plus doxycycline (BL+D). Of these, BL+M is generally considered the first-line regimen, the researchers noted.

Patients were divided into four groups according to their initial antibiotic treatment within 48 hours of admission; 9,340 patients received BL+M, 9,146 received BL, 4,510 received FQ, and 516 received BL+D. The duration of any antibiotic that was active against CAP was at least 4 days, or until hospital discharge or death.

The primary outcome was all-cause in-hospital mortality, which was 7.5%, 9.7%, 6.7%, and 6.0% for patients in each of the four treatment groups, respectively. Relative to the first-line therapy of BL+M, the adjusted risk differences for BL, FQ, and BL+D were 1.5%, –0.9%, and –1.9%, respectively.

The adjusted in-hospital mortality was not significantly different between BL+M and either FQ or BL+D, but the difference of 1.5% seen with BL alone suggested a “small but clinically important difference,” the researchers noted.

Key secondary outcomes were the length of hospital stay and being discharged alive. The median length of stay was 4.6 days for BL+M, 5.2 days for BL, 4.6 days for FQ, and 6.0 days for BL+D. Patients treated with BL also had a longer time to hospital discharge, which suggests that BL may not be as effective as the other regimens, the researchers said. In addition, patients in the BL group had a subdistribution hazard ratio of 0.90 for being discharged alive, compared with the BL+M group after adjustment with propensity scores and overlap weighting.

Overall, the results support dropping BL as a first-line regimen in the current ATS/IDSA guidelines, and support the recommendation of BL+M, FQ, and BL+D as similarly effective options as listed in other guidelines, applied according to other patient characteristics. For example, “Doxycycline may be preferred over a macrolide in many cases such as macrolide allergy, prolonged QT, or high [Clostridioides] difficile risk,” the researchers said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the lack of follow-up data after hospital discharge.

However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size and use of a comprehensive database that allowed adjustment for many variables, as well as the availability of complete follow-up data for the time spent in the hospital. Based on this study, clinicians may choose a respiratory fluoroquinolone, a beta-lactam plus macrolide, or a beta-lactam plus doxycycline for equally effective antibiotic treatment of CAP, based on the best fit for each individual patient, the researchers concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Adults with nonsevere community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) responded nearly equally to three first-line and alternative antibiotic regimens, based on data from more than 23,000 individuals.

Current recommendations for the treatment of CAP vary across guidelines, wrote Anthony D. Bai, MD, of Queen’s University, Kingston, Ont., and colleagues. However, most guidelines were based on studies that were not powered to examine the effect of treatments on mortality, they said.

“Large observational studies could fill this gap by comparing multiple treatment arms, including patients not well represented in trials, and having a large sample size powered to detect a difference in mortality,” they noted.

In a study published in Chest, the researchers reviewed data from 23,512 consecutive patients admitted to 19 hospitals in Canada for CAP between 2015 and 2021. Patients were treated with one of four initial antibiotic regimens: beta-lactam plus macrolide (BL+M), beta-lactam alone (BL), respiratory fluoroquinolone (FQ), or beta-lactam plus doxycycline (BL+D). Of these, BL+M is generally considered the first-line regimen, the researchers noted.

Patients were divided into four groups according to their initial antibiotic treatment within 48 hours of admission; 9,340 patients received BL+M, 9,146 received BL, 4,510 received FQ, and 516 received BL+D. The duration of any antibiotic that was active against CAP was at least 4 days, or until hospital discharge or death.

The primary outcome was all-cause in-hospital mortality, which was 7.5%, 9.7%, 6.7%, and 6.0% for patients in each of the four treatment groups, respectively. Relative to the first-line therapy of BL+M, the adjusted risk differences for BL, FQ, and BL+D were 1.5%, –0.9%, and –1.9%, respectively.

The adjusted in-hospital mortality was not significantly different between BL+M and either FQ or BL+D, but the difference of 1.5% seen with BL alone suggested a “small but clinically important difference,” the researchers noted.

Key secondary outcomes were the length of hospital stay and being discharged alive. The median length of stay was 4.6 days for BL+M, 5.2 days for BL, 4.6 days for FQ, and 6.0 days for BL+D. Patients treated with BL also had a longer time to hospital discharge, which suggests that BL may not be as effective as the other regimens, the researchers said. In addition, patients in the BL group had a subdistribution hazard ratio of 0.90 for being discharged alive, compared with the BL+M group after adjustment with propensity scores and overlap weighting.

Overall, the results support dropping BL as a first-line regimen in the current ATS/IDSA guidelines, and support the recommendation of BL+M, FQ, and BL+D as similarly effective options as listed in other guidelines, applied according to other patient characteristics. For example, “Doxycycline may be preferred over a macrolide in many cases such as macrolide allergy, prolonged QT, or high [Clostridioides] difficile risk,” the researchers said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the lack of follow-up data after hospital discharge.

However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size and use of a comprehensive database that allowed adjustment for many variables, as well as the availability of complete follow-up data for the time spent in the hospital. Based on this study, clinicians may choose a respiratory fluoroquinolone, a beta-lactam plus macrolide, or a beta-lactam plus doxycycline for equally effective antibiotic treatment of CAP, based on the best fit for each individual patient, the researchers concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

Adults with nonsevere community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) responded nearly equally to three first-line and alternative antibiotic regimens, based on data from more than 23,000 individuals.

Current recommendations for the treatment of CAP vary across guidelines, wrote Anthony D. Bai, MD, of Queen’s University, Kingston, Ont., and colleagues. However, most guidelines were based on studies that were not powered to examine the effect of treatments on mortality, they said.

“Large observational studies could fill this gap by comparing multiple treatment arms, including patients not well represented in trials, and having a large sample size powered to detect a difference in mortality,” they noted.

In a study published in Chest, the researchers reviewed data from 23,512 consecutive patients admitted to 19 hospitals in Canada for CAP between 2015 and 2021. Patients were treated with one of four initial antibiotic regimens: beta-lactam plus macrolide (BL+M), beta-lactam alone (BL), respiratory fluoroquinolone (FQ), or beta-lactam plus doxycycline (BL+D). Of these, BL+M is generally considered the first-line regimen, the researchers noted.

Patients were divided into four groups according to their initial antibiotic treatment within 48 hours of admission; 9,340 patients received BL+M, 9,146 received BL, 4,510 received FQ, and 516 received BL+D. The duration of any antibiotic that was active against CAP was at least 4 days, or until hospital discharge or death.

The primary outcome was all-cause in-hospital mortality, which was 7.5%, 9.7%, 6.7%, and 6.0% for patients in each of the four treatment groups, respectively. Relative to the first-line therapy of BL+M, the adjusted risk differences for BL, FQ, and BL+D were 1.5%, –0.9%, and –1.9%, respectively.

The adjusted in-hospital mortality was not significantly different between BL+M and either FQ or BL+D, but the difference of 1.5% seen with BL alone suggested a “small but clinically important difference,” the researchers noted.

Key secondary outcomes were the length of hospital stay and being discharged alive. The median length of stay was 4.6 days for BL+M, 5.2 days for BL, 4.6 days for FQ, and 6.0 days for BL+D. Patients treated with BL also had a longer time to hospital discharge, which suggests that BL may not be as effective as the other regimens, the researchers said. In addition, patients in the BL group had a subdistribution hazard ratio of 0.90 for being discharged alive, compared with the BL+M group after adjustment with propensity scores and overlap weighting.

Overall, the results support dropping BL as a first-line regimen in the current ATS/IDSA guidelines, and support the recommendation of BL+M, FQ, and BL+D as similarly effective options as listed in other guidelines, applied according to other patient characteristics. For example, “Doxycycline may be preferred over a macrolide in many cases such as macrolide allergy, prolonged QT, or high [Clostridioides] difficile risk,” the researchers said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the lack of follow-up data after hospital discharge.

However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size and use of a comprehensive database that allowed adjustment for many variables, as well as the availability of complete follow-up data for the time spent in the hospital. Based on this study, clinicians may choose a respiratory fluoroquinolone, a beta-lactam plus macrolide, or a beta-lactam plus doxycycline for equally effective antibiotic treatment of CAP, based on the best fit for each individual patient, the researchers concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Hypertensive disorders screening recommended for all pregnant women

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Changed
Fri, 09/22/2023 - 10:08

All pregnant women should undergo screening for hypertensive disorders, with evidence-based management for those screening positive, according to a new recommendation from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in the United States increased from approximately 500 cases per 10,000 deliveries to 1,021 cases per 10,000 deliveries from 1993 to 2016-2017, and remain a leading cause of maternal morbidity and mortality, wrote Task Force Chair Michael J. Barry, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and colleagues in the final recommendation statement published in JAMA.

The USPSTF commissioned a systematic review to assess the risks and benefits of hypertensive screening for asymptomatic pregnant women. The resulting grade B recommendation indicates that screening for hypertensive disorders in pregnancy using blood pressure measurements yields a substantial net benefit.

The recommendation applies to “all pregnant women and pregnant persons of all genders without a known diagnosis of a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy or chronic hypertension,” the authors said.

The recommendation calls for the use of blood pressure measurements to evaluate hypertensive disorders, with measurements taken at each prenatal visit. A positive result for new-onset hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure of 140 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure 90 mm Hg in the absence of chronic hypertension, based on two measurements at least 4 hours apart. Regular review of blood pressure can help identify and manage potentially fatal conditions.

However, screening alone is insufficient to improve inequities in health outcomes associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the authors emphasized. Data from previous studies have shown that Black patients are at increased risk for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and severe complications, and that Black and Hispanic patients have twice the risk of stroke with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy as White patients.

In the evidence report that supported the recommendation, Jillian T. Henderson, PhD, of Kaiser Permanente in Portland, Ore., and colleagues reviewed six studies including 10,165 individuals. The studies (five clinical trials and one nonrandomized study) compared changes in prenatal screening with usual care.

Overall, the review yielded no evidence that any other screening strategies were more useful than routine blood pressure measurement to identify hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in asymptomatic women.

The findings cited to support the recommendation were limited by several factors, including the lack of power to detect pregnancy health outcomes and potential harms of different screening programs, and the lack of power to evaluate outcomes for American Indian, Alaska Native, or Black individuals, who have disproportionately high rates of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the authors said.

More research is needed to identify which screening approaches may lead to improved disease detection and better health outcomes, but the results of the review support the grade B recommendation for hypertensive screening of all pregnant women, they concluded.
 

Early identification makes a difference

The new recommendation is important because it can help all moms and babies to be healthier, said Wanda Nicholson, MD, vice chair of the task force, in an interview.

Dr. Wanda Nicholson

“We are recommending that all pregnant persons have a blood pressure check at every visit throughout pregnancy,” said Dr. Nicholson, an ob.gyn. by training who also serves as professor of prevention and community health at George Washington University in Washington. “We know that there is a maternal health crisis in this country, and we know that hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are one of the key factors related to that,” she said.

Unfortunately, barriers to routine screening for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy persist, said Dr. Nicholson. The incidence of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy is higher in many of the same populations who also have challenges in accessing regular prenatal care, notably those who are Black, Native American, or Alaska Native, she noted.

The new recommendation also serves as an opportunity to call attention to the health care disparities for these populations, not only during pregnancy, but in general, she emphasized.

In clinical practice, the definition of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy involves three different diagnoses – gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia – that can be seen as points on a continuum, said Dr. Nicholson. The sooner patients are identified with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the sooner intervention and treatment can begin, she said. To that end, she added the clinical pearl of using a properly sized blood pressure cuff to obtain an accurate reading and avoid missed diagnoses.

The task force also outlined several key areas for additional research, said Dr. Nicholson. First, more research is needed on alternative screening strategies, such as at-home blood pressure monitoring for patients, as well as teleheath visits. Second, more studies are needed to address the disparities in prenatal care and include more diverse populations in clinical research. Third, future studies need to consider social determinants of health and other factors that might impact maternal health outcomes. “These steps will help achieve the larger goal of healthier mothers and babies,” Dr. Nicholson said.
 

 

 

Back to basics to improve women’s health

Some clinicians may be disappointed by the Evidence Report’s primary finding that no alternative screening strategies outperformed routine blood pressure measurement, wrote Anne E. Denoble, MD, and Christian M. Pettker, MD, both of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in an accompanying editorial.

While potentially frustrating at first glance, the findings of the Evidence Report provide a foundation for improvement and reassurance that the best existing screening methods are basic and fundamental: regular prenatal visits with routine, in-office blood pressure measurements, and urine protein screening when clinically indicated, they said.

However, the USPSTF review also noted persistent research gaps that must be addressed to significantly improve maternal health outcomes, they said. Notable gaps include the disproportionately low numbers of Black patients in current studies, and the need for studies of alternate models of prenatal care, including the use of remote blood pressure monitoring, and the use of biomarkers to screen for and predict hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.

The most striking limitation may be the focus on prenatal care, with lack of attention to postpartum mortality risk, given that more than half of pregnancy-related deaths occur postpartum, the authors noted.

Although current screening tools may be used in practice “with skill and might,” more effort at multiple levels is needed to address the larger maternal health crisis in the United States, they said.
 

Expand screening, engage primary care for long-term benefits

Screening for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy “can and should be within the purview of internists,” wrote Srilakshmi Mitta, MD; Cary P. Gross, MD; Melissa A. Simon, MD, of Brown University, Yale University, and Northwestern University, respectively, in a separate editorial. The recommendation to extend screening beyond preeclampsia is timely, given the consistent increase in all hypertensive disorders of pregnancy since 1990, the authors said.

Pregnancy is not the only time for screening, counseling, and management of hypertensive disorders, they emphasized. “All persons who have reproductive capacity and/or are planning pregnancy, along with those who are post partum, should be screened for hypertensive disorders, aligning the USPSTF with guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American College of Cardiology, and the American Heart Association,” they said, and all clinicians should be on board to identify and treat hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, especially in underserved racial and ethnic minorities for whom primary care may be their only source of health care.

“Pregnancy is a window of opportunity to influence current and future life course, not just of the individual, but also of the fetus(es),other children, and family,” and timely intervention has the potential for great public health impact, they said.

Dr. Denoble disclosed grants from the HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research and from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Simon serves on the Advisory Committee for Research on Women’s Health for the National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women’s Health and serves as a member of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Preventive Services Task Force; she was a member of the USPSTF from 2017 to 2020. Dr. Gross disclosed grants from Johnson and Johnson and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (through a grant to the NCCN from AstraZeneca) and personal fees from Genentech.

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All pregnant women should undergo screening for hypertensive disorders, with evidence-based management for those screening positive, according to a new recommendation from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in the United States increased from approximately 500 cases per 10,000 deliveries to 1,021 cases per 10,000 deliveries from 1993 to 2016-2017, and remain a leading cause of maternal morbidity and mortality, wrote Task Force Chair Michael J. Barry, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and colleagues in the final recommendation statement published in JAMA.

The USPSTF commissioned a systematic review to assess the risks and benefits of hypertensive screening for asymptomatic pregnant women. The resulting grade B recommendation indicates that screening for hypertensive disorders in pregnancy using blood pressure measurements yields a substantial net benefit.

The recommendation applies to “all pregnant women and pregnant persons of all genders without a known diagnosis of a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy or chronic hypertension,” the authors said.

The recommendation calls for the use of blood pressure measurements to evaluate hypertensive disorders, with measurements taken at each prenatal visit. A positive result for new-onset hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure of 140 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure 90 mm Hg in the absence of chronic hypertension, based on two measurements at least 4 hours apart. Regular review of blood pressure can help identify and manage potentially fatal conditions.

However, screening alone is insufficient to improve inequities in health outcomes associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the authors emphasized. Data from previous studies have shown that Black patients are at increased risk for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and severe complications, and that Black and Hispanic patients have twice the risk of stroke with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy as White patients.

In the evidence report that supported the recommendation, Jillian T. Henderson, PhD, of Kaiser Permanente in Portland, Ore., and colleagues reviewed six studies including 10,165 individuals. The studies (five clinical trials and one nonrandomized study) compared changes in prenatal screening with usual care.

Overall, the review yielded no evidence that any other screening strategies were more useful than routine blood pressure measurement to identify hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in asymptomatic women.

The findings cited to support the recommendation were limited by several factors, including the lack of power to detect pregnancy health outcomes and potential harms of different screening programs, and the lack of power to evaluate outcomes for American Indian, Alaska Native, or Black individuals, who have disproportionately high rates of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the authors said.

More research is needed to identify which screening approaches may lead to improved disease detection and better health outcomes, but the results of the review support the grade B recommendation for hypertensive screening of all pregnant women, they concluded.
 

Early identification makes a difference

The new recommendation is important because it can help all moms and babies to be healthier, said Wanda Nicholson, MD, vice chair of the task force, in an interview.

Dr. Wanda Nicholson

“We are recommending that all pregnant persons have a blood pressure check at every visit throughout pregnancy,” said Dr. Nicholson, an ob.gyn. by training who also serves as professor of prevention and community health at George Washington University in Washington. “We know that there is a maternal health crisis in this country, and we know that hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are one of the key factors related to that,” she said.

Unfortunately, barriers to routine screening for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy persist, said Dr. Nicholson. The incidence of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy is higher in many of the same populations who also have challenges in accessing regular prenatal care, notably those who are Black, Native American, or Alaska Native, she noted.

The new recommendation also serves as an opportunity to call attention to the health care disparities for these populations, not only during pregnancy, but in general, she emphasized.

In clinical practice, the definition of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy involves three different diagnoses – gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia – that can be seen as points on a continuum, said Dr. Nicholson. The sooner patients are identified with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the sooner intervention and treatment can begin, she said. To that end, she added the clinical pearl of using a properly sized blood pressure cuff to obtain an accurate reading and avoid missed diagnoses.

The task force also outlined several key areas for additional research, said Dr. Nicholson. First, more research is needed on alternative screening strategies, such as at-home blood pressure monitoring for patients, as well as teleheath visits. Second, more studies are needed to address the disparities in prenatal care and include more diverse populations in clinical research. Third, future studies need to consider social determinants of health and other factors that might impact maternal health outcomes. “These steps will help achieve the larger goal of healthier mothers and babies,” Dr. Nicholson said.
 

 

 

Back to basics to improve women’s health

Some clinicians may be disappointed by the Evidence Report’s primary finding that no alternative screening strategies outperformed routine blood pressure measurement, wrote Anne E. Denoble, MD, and Christian M. Pettker, MD, both of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in an accompanying editorial.

While potentially frustrating at first glance, the findings of the Evidence Report provide a foundation for improvement and reassurance that the best existing screening methods are basic and fundamental: regular prenatal visits with routine, in-office blood pressure measurements, and urine protein screening when clinically indicated, they said.

However, the USPSTF review also noted persistent research gaps that must be addressed to significantly improve maternal health outcomes, they said. Notable gaps include the disproportionately low numbers of Black patients in current studies, and the need for studies of alternate models of prenatal care, including the use of remote blood pressure monitoring, and the use of biomarkers to screen for and predict hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.

The most striking limitation may be the focus on prenatal care, with lack of attention to postpartum mortality risk, given that more than half of pregnancy-related deaths occur postpartum, the authors noted.

Although current screening tools may be used in practice “with skill and might,” more effort at multiple levels is needed to address the larger maternal health crisis in the United States, they said.
 

Expand screening, engage primary care for long-term benefits

Screening for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy “can and should be within the purview of internists,” wrote Srilakshmi Mitta, MD; Cary P. Gross, MD; Melissa A. Simon, MD, of Brown University, Yale University, and Northwestern University, respectively, in a separate editorial. The recommendation to extend screening beyond preeclampsia is timely, given the consistent increase in all hypertensive disorders of pregnancy since 1990, the authors said.

Pregnancy is not the only time for screening, counseling, and management of hypertensive disorders, they emphasized. “All persons who have reproductive capacity and/or are planning pregnancy, along with those who are post partum, should be screened for hypertensive disorders, aligning the USPSTF with guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American College of Cardiology, and the American Heart Association,” they said, and all clinicians should be on board to identify and treat hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, especially in underserved racial and ethnic minorities for whom primary care may be their only source of health care.

“Pregnancy is a window of opportunity to influence current and future life course, not just of the individual, but also of the fetus(es),other children, and family,” and timely intervention has the potential for great public health impact, they said.

Dr. Denoble disclosed grants from the HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research and from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Simon serves on the Advisory Committee for Research on Women’s Health for the National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women’s Health and serves as a member of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Preventive Services Task Force; she was a member of the USPSTF from 2017 to 2020. Dr. Gross disclosed grants from Johnson and Johnson and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (through a grant to the NCCN from AstraZeneca) and personal fees from Genentech.

All pregnant women should undergo screening for hypertensive disorders, with evidence-based management for those screening positive, according to a new recommendation from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in the United States increased from approximately 500 cases per 10,000 deliveries to 1,021 cases per 10,000 deliveries from 1993 to 2016-2017, and remain a leading cause of maternal morbidity and mortality, wrote Task Force Chair Michael J. Barry, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and colleagues in the final recommendation statement published in JAMA.

The USPSTF commissioned a systematic review to assess the risks and benefits of hypertensive screening for asymptomatic pregnant women. The resulting grade B recommendation indicates that screening for hypertensive disorders in pregnancy using blood pressure measurements yields a substantial net benefit.

The recommendation applies to “all pregnant women and pregnant persons of all genders without a known diagnosis of a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy or chronic hypertension,” the authors said.

The recommendation calls for the use of blood pressure measurements to evaluate hypertensive disorders, with measurements taken at each prenatal visit. A positive result for new-onset hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure of 140 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure 90 mm Hg in the absence of chronic hypertension, based on two measurements at least 4 hours apart. Regular review of blood pressure can help identify and manage potentially fatal conditions.

However, screening alone is insufficient to improve inequities in health outcomes associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the authors emphasized. Data from previous studies have shown that Black patients are at increased risk for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and severe complications, and that Black and Hispanic patients have twice the risk of stroke with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy as White patients.

In the evidence report that supported the recommendation, Jillian T. Henderson, PhD, of Kaiser Permanente in Portland, Ore., and colleagues reviewed six studies including 10,165 individuals. The studies (five clinical trials and one nonrandomized study) compared changes in prenatal screening with usual care.

Overall, the review yielded no evidence that any other screening strategies were more useful than routine blood pressure measurement to identify hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in asymptomatic women.

The findings cited to support the recommendation were limited by several factors, including the lack of power to detect pregnancy health outcomes and potential harms of different screening programs, and the lack of power to evaluate outcomes for American Indian, Alaska Native, or Black individuals, who have disproportionately high rates of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the authors said.

More research is needed to identify which screening approaches may lead to improved disease detection and better health outcomes, but the results of the review support the grade B recommendation for hypertensive screening of all pregnant women, they concluded.
 

Early identification makes a difference

The new recommendation is important because it can help all moms and babies to be healthier, said Wanda Nicholson, MD, vice chair of the task force, in an interview.

Dr. Wanda Nicholson

“We are recommending that all pregnant persons have a blood pressure check at every visit throughout pregnancy,” said Dr. Nicholson, an ob.gyn. by training who also serves as professor of prevention and community health at George Washington University in Washington. “We know that there is a maternal health crisis in this country, and we know that hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are one of the key factors related to that,” she said.

Unfortunately, barriers to routine screening for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy persist, said Dr. Nicholson. The incidence of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy is higher in many of the same populations who also have challenges in accessing regular prenatal care, notably those who are Black, Native American, or Alaska Native, she noted.

The new recommendation also serves as an opportunity to call attention to the health care disparities for these populations, not only during pregnancy, but in general, she emphasized.

In clinical practice, the definition of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy involves three different diagnoses – gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia – that can be seen as points on a continuum, said Dr. Nicholson. The sooner patients are identified with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, the sooner intervention and treatment can begin, she said. To that end, she added the clinical pearl of using a properly sized blood pressure cuff to obtain an accurate reading and avoid missed diagnoses.

The task force also outlined several key areas for additional research, said Dr. Nicholson. First, more research is needed on alternative screening strategies, such as at-home blood pressure monitoring for patients, as well as teleheath visits. Second, more studies are needed to address the disparities in prenatal care and include more diverse populations in clinical research. Third, future studies need to consider social determinants of health and other factors that might impact maternal health outcomes. “These steps will help achieve the larger goal of healthier mothers and babies,” Dr. Nicholson said.
 

 

 

Back to basics to improve women’s health

Some clinicians may be disappointed by the Evidence Report’s primary finding that no alternative screening strategies outperformed routine blood pressure measurement, wrote Anne E. Denoble, MD, and Christian M. Pettker, MD, both of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in an accompanying editorial.

While potentially frustrating at first glance, the findings of the Evidence Report provide a foundation for improvement and reassurance that the best existing screening methods are basic and fundamental: regular prenatal visits with routine, in-office blood pressure measurements, and urine protein screening when clinically indicated, they said.

However, the USPSTF review also noted persistent research gaps that must be addressed to significantly improve maternal health outcomes, they said. Notable gaps include the disproportionately low numbers of Black patients in current studies, and the need for studies of alternate models of prenatal care, including the use of remote blood pressure monitoring, and the use of biomarkers to screen for and predict hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.

The most striking limitation may be the focus on prenatal care, with lack of attention to postpartum mortality risk, given that more than half of pregnancy-related deaths occur postpartum, the authors noted.

Although current screening tools may be used in practice “with skill and might,” more effort at multiple levels is needed to address the larger maternal health crisis in the United States, they said.
 

Expand screening, engage primary care for long-term benefits

Screening for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy “can and should be within the purview of internists,” wrote Srilakshmi Mitta, MD; Cary P. Gross, MD; Melissa A. Simon, MD, of Brown University, Yale University, and Northwestern University, respectively, in a separate editorial. The recommendation to extend screening beyond preeclampsia is timely, given the consistent increase in all hypertensive disorders of pregnancy since 1990, the authors said.

Pregnancy is not the only time for screening, counseling, and management of hypertensive disorders, they emphasized. “All persons who have reproductive capacity and/or are planning pregnancy, along with those who are post partum, should be screened for hypertensive disorders, aligning the USPSTF with guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American College of Cardiology, and the American Heart Association,” they said, and all clinicians should be on board to identify and treat hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, especially in underserved racial and ethnic minorities for whom primary care may be their only source of health care.

“Pregnancy is a window of opportunity to influence current and future life course, not just of the individual, but also of the fetus(es),other children, and family,” and timely intervention has the potential for great public health impact, they said.

Dr. Denoble disclosed grants from the HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research and from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Dr. Simon serves on the Advisory Committee for Research on Women’s Health for the National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women’s Health and serves as a member of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Community Preventive Services Task Force; she was a member of the USPSTF from 2017 to 2020. Dr. Gross disclosed grants from Johnson and Johnson and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (through a grant to the NCCN from AstraZeneca) and personal fees from Genentech.

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Dialectical behavior therapy decreased suicide attempts in bipolar teens

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 09/19/2023 - 13:08

Use of dialectical behavior therapy significantly reduced suicide attempts in adolescents with bipolar disorder, compared with standard of care, based on data from 100 individuals aged 12-18 years.

University of Pittsburgh
Dr. Tina R. Goldstein

Bipolar spectrum disorder (BP) is known to substantially increase the risk for suicide in youth, but no psychosocial intervention for this population has targeted suicidal behavior in particular, wrote Tina R. Goldstein, PhD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues.

Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) had shown effectiveness for decreasing suicide attempts in adults with borderline personality disorder, and previous studies of DBT have shown reduced suicidal ideation, self-harm, and suicide attempts in suicidal adolescents, but these studies have mainly excluded BP teens, the researchers said.

In a study published in JAMA Psychiatry, the researchers recruited adolescents aged 12-18 years with a diagnosis of BP who were treated at an outpatient clinic between November 2014 and September 2019. Of these, 47 were randomized to 1 year of DBT (a total of 36 sessions) and 53 to standard of care (SOC) psychotherapy. All participants also received medication using a flexible algorithm.

The primary outcomes were suicide attempts over a 1-year period and measurements of mood symptoms and states, specifically depression and hypomania/mania. Secondary analyses included the effect of DBT on individuals with a history of suicide attempt and on improving emotion dysregulation. The mean age of the participants was 16.1 years; 85 were female, and 74% were White.

Participants in both DBT and SOC groups reported similar rates of suicide attempt rates at study enrollment based on the Adolescent Longitudinal Follow-Up Evaluation (ALIFE) with a mean of 2.0 and 1.8 attempts, respectively (P = .80). Based on the Columbia–Suicide Severity Rating Scale Pediatric Version (C-SSRS), participants in the DBT group had slightly more suicide attempts than the SOC group at study enrollment, with a mean of 1.4 and 0.6 attempts, respectively (P = .02).

Controlling for baseline attempts, participants in the DBT group had significantly fewer suicide attempts over the study period, compared with the SOC group as measured by both ALIFE (mean 0.2 vs. 1.1) and C-SSRS (mean 0.04 vs. 0.10, P = .03 for both measures). The incidence rate ratios for reduced suicide attempts were 0.32 for ALIFE and 0.13 for C-SSRS, both significant in favor of DBT, compared with SOC.

Overall, both groups showed similarly significant improvement on measures of mood symptoms and episodes over the study period. The standardized depression rating scale slope was –0.17 and the standardized mania rating scale slope was –0.24.

DBT was significantly more effective than SOC psychotherapy at decreasing suicide attempts over 1 year (ALIFE: incidence rate ratio, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.11-0.96; C-SSRS: IRR, 0.13; 95% CI, 0.02-0.78).

On further analysis, the decrease in suicide attempts in the DBT group was greater over time and among those with a lifetime history of suicide attempts (IRR, 0.23). “Decreased risk of suicide attempt in DBT was mediated by improvement in emotion dysregulation, particularly for those with high baseline emotion dysregulation,” the researchers wrote in their discussion.

The findings were limited by several factors including the mainly female, non-Hispanic White study population, and controlled clinical setting, the researchers noted. Data from a forthcoming community implementation field trial will address some generalizability issues, although more work is needed to address disparities in BP diagnosis and treatment, they added.

However, the results support the potential of DBT for mood management and for reducing suicide attempts in a high-risk adolescent population, especially those with high levels of emotional dysregulation, on par with other established psychosocial treatments, the researchers concluded.
 

 

 

More options needed to manage increased risk

“It was important to conduct this study at this time because, while still relatively rare, bipolar spectrum disorders in adolescents confer increased risk for suicide,” Peter L. Loper Jr., MD, of the University of South Carolina, Columbia, said in an interview. The complexity of BP and the increased risk of suicide in these patients challenge clinicians to identify robust evidence-based interventions beyond pharmacotherapy that mitigate this risk, said Dr. Loper, who is triple board certified in pediatrics, general psychiatry, and child & adolescent psychiatry, but was not involved in the study.

Dr. Peter L. Loper Jr.

The current study findings were not surprising, because DBT has proven effective in decreasing suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in other high-risk adolescent patient populations, Dr. Loper said. “Given the therapeutic content of DBT, with emphasis on mindfulness, distress tolerance, social skills, and emotional regulation, I think it is reasonable to hypothesize that DBT might be a globally applicable intervention, independent of mental health diagnosis or etiology of suicidal ideation,” he said.

The take-home message for clinicians is that the results support the efficacy of DBT as an intervention for adolescents with BP and suicidal ideation, self-injurious behavior, or suicide attempts, said Dr. Loper. For these patients, given their increased suicide risk, “DBT should certainly be recommended as a component of their treatment plan,” he said.

However, barriers to the use of DBT in clinical practice exist, notably access and cost, Dr. Loper noted. “I think that the most prominent barrier in accessing DBT in clinical practice is the availability of certified, structured DBT treatment programs, and particularly those willing to provide services to adolescents,” he said. “Additionally, certified DBT programs, which are the gold standard, are often not covered by third-party payers, making cost yet another potential barrier.”

Looking ahead, Dr. Loper agreed with the study authors that additional research with a more diverse patient population representative of adolescents with bipolar spectrum disorder “is a crucial area of focus.”

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health through a grant to Dr. Goldstein, who also disclosed royalties from Guilford Press unrelated to the current study. Dr. Loper had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

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Use of dialectical behavior therapy significantly reduced suicide attempts in adolescents with bipolar disorder, compared with standard of care, based on data from 100 individuals aged 12-18 years.

University of Pittsburgh
Dr. Tina R. Goldstein

Bipolar spectrum disorder (BP) is known to substantially increase the risk for suicide in youth, but no psychosocial intervention for this population has targeted suicidal behavior in particular, wrote Tina R. Goldstein, PhD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues.

Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) had shown effectiveness for decreasing suicide attempts in adults with borderline personality disorder, and previous studies of DBT have shown reduced suicidal ideation, self-harm, and suicide attempts in suicidal adolescents, but these studies have mainly excluded BP teens, the researchers said.

In a study published in JAMA Psychiatry, the researchers recruited adolescents aged 12-18 years with a diagnosis of BP who were treated at an outpatient clinic between November 2014 and September 2019. Of these, 47 were randomized to 1 year of DBT (a total of 36 sessions) and 53 to standard of care (SOC) psychotherapy. All participants also received medication using a flexible algorithm.

The primary outcomes were suicide attempts over a 1-year period and measurements of mood symptoms and states, specifically depression and hypomania/mania. Secondary analyses included the effect of DBT on individuals with a history of suicide attempt and on improving emotion dysregulation. The mean age of the participants was 16.1 years; 85 were female, and 74% were White.

Participants in both DBT and SOC groups reported similar rates of suicide attempt rates at study enrollment based on the Adolescent Longitudinal Follow-Up Evaluation (ALIFE) with a mean of 2.0 and 1.8 attempts, respectively (P = .80). Based on the Columbia–Suicide Severity Rating Scale Pediatric Version (C-SSRS), participants in the DBT group had slightly more suicide attempts than the SOC group at study enrollment, with a mean of 1.4 and 0.6 attempts, respectively (P = .02).

Controlling for baseline attempts, participants in the DBT group had significantly fewer suicide attempts over the study period, compared with the SOC group as measured by both ALIFE (mean 0.2 vs. 1.1) and C-SSRS (mean 0.04 vs. 0.10, P = .03 for both measures). The incidence rate ratios for reduced suicide attempts were 0.32 for ALIFE and 0.13 for C-SSRS, both significant in favor of DBT, compared with SOC.

Overall, both groups showed similarly significant improvement on measures of mood symptoms and episodes over the study period. The standardized depression rating scale slope was –0.17 and the standardized mania rating scale slope was –0.24.

DBT was significantly more effective than SOC psychotherapy at decreasing suicide attempts over 1 year (ALIFE: incidence rate ratio, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.11-0.96; C-SSRS: IRR, 0.13; 95% CI, 0.02-0.78).

On further analysis, the decrease in suicide attempts in the DBT group was greater over time and among those with a lifetime history of suicide attempts (IRR, 0.23). “Decreased risk of suicide attempt in DBT was mediated by improvement in emotion dysregulation, particularly for those with high baseline emotion dysregulation,” the researchers wrote in their discussion.

The findings were limited by several factors including the mainly female, non-Hispanic White study population, and controlled clinical setting, the researchers noted. Data from a forthcoming community implementation field trial will address some generalizability issues, although more work is needed to address disparities in BP diagnosis and treatment, they added.

However, the results support the potential of DBT for mood management and for reducing suicide attempts in a high-risk adolescent population, especially those with high levels of emotional dysregulation, on par with other established psychosocial treatments, the researchers concluded.
 

 

 

More options needed to manage increased risk

“It was important to conduct this study at this time because, while still relatively rare, bipolar spectrum disorders in adolescents confer increased risk for suicide,” Peter L. Loper Jr., MD, of the University of South Carolina, Columbia, said in an interview. The complexity of BP and the increased risk of suicide in these patients challenge clinicians to identify robust evidence-based interventions beyond pharmacotherapy that mitigate this risk, said Dr. Loper, who is triple board certified in pediatrics, general psychiatry, and child & adolescent psychiatry, but was not involved in the study.

Dr. Peter L. Loper Jr.

The current study findings were not surprising, because DBT has proven effective in decreasing suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in other high-risk adolescent patient populations, Dr. Loper said. “Given the therapeutic content of DBT, with emphasis on mindfulness, distress tolerance, social skills, and emotional regulation, I think it is reasonable to hypothesize that DBT might be a globally applicable intervention, independent of mental health diagnosis or etiology of suicidal ideation,” he said.

The take-home message for clinicians is that the results support the efficacy of DBT as an intervention for adolescents with BP and suicidal ideation, self-injurious behavior, or suicide attempts, said Dr. Loper. For these patients, given their increased suicide risk, “DBT should certainly be recommended as a component of their treatment plan,” he said.

However, barriers to the use of DBT in clinical practice exist, notably access and cost, Dr. Loper noted. “I think that the most prominent barrier in accessing DBT in clinical practice is the availability of certified, structured DBT treatment programs, and particularly those willing to provide services to adolescents,” he said. “Additionally, certified DBT programs, which are the gold standard, are often not covered by third-party payers, making cost yet another potential barrier.”

Looking ahead, Dr. Loper agreed with the study authors that additional research with a more diverse patient population representative of adolescents with bipolar spectrum disorder “is a crucial area of focus.”

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health through a grant to Dr. Goldstein, who also disclosed royalties from Guilford Press unrelated to the current study. Dr. Loper had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

Use of dialectical behavior therapy significantly reduced suicide attempts in adolescents with bipolar disorder, compared with standard of care, based on data from 100 individuals aged 12-18 years.

University of Pittsburgh
Dr. Tina R. Goldstein

Bipolar spectrum disorder (BP) is known to substantially increase the risk for suicide in youth, but no psychosocial intervention for this population has targeted suicidal behavior in particular, wrote Tina R. Goldstein, PhD, of the University of Pittsburgh, and colleagues.

Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) had shown effectiveness for decreasing suicide attempts in adults with borderline personality disorder, and previous studies of DBT have shown reduced suicidal ideation, self-harm, and suicide attempts in suicidal adolescents, but these studies have mainly excluded BP teens, the researchers said.

In a study published in JAMA Psychiatry, the researchers recruited adolescents aged 12-18 years with a diagnosis of BP who were treated at an outpatient clinic between November 2014 and September 2019. Of these, 47 were randomized to 1 year of DBT (a total of 36 sessions) and 53 to standard of care (SOC) psychotherapy. All participants also received medication using a flexible algorithm.

The primary outcomes were suicide attempts over a 1-year period and measurements of mood symptoms and states, specifically depression and hypomania/mania. Secondary analyses included the effect of DBT on individuals with a history of suicide attempt and on improving emotion dysregulation. The mean age of the participants was 16.1 years; 85 were female, and 74% were White.

Participants in both DBT and SOC groups reported similar rates of suicide attempt rates at study enrollment based on the Adolescent Longitudinal Follow-Up Evaluation (ALIFE) with a mean of 2.0 and 1.8 attempts, respectively (P = .80). Based on the Columbia–Suicide Severity Rating Scale Pediatric Version (C-SSRS), participants in the DBT group had slightly more suicide attempts than the SOC group at study enrollment, with a mean of 1.4 and 0.6 attempts, respectively (P = .02).

Controlling for baseline attempts, participants in the DBT group had significantly fewer suicide attempts over the study period, compared with the SOC group as measured by both ALIFE (mean 0.2 vs. 1.1) and C-SSRS (mean 0.04 vs. 0.10, P = .03 for both measures). The incidence rate ratios for reduced suicide attempts were 0.32 for ALIFE and 0.13 for C-SSRS, both significant in favor of DBT, compared with SOC.

Overall, both groups showed similarly significant improvement on measures of mood symptoms and episodes over the study period. The standardized depression rating scale slope was –0.17 and the standardized mania rating scale slope was –0.24.

DBT was significantly more effective than SOC psychotherapy at decreasing suicide attempts over 1 year (ALIFE: incidence rate ratio, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.11-0.96; C-SSRS: IRR, 0.13; 95% CI, 0.02-0.78).

On further analysis, the decrease in suicide attempts in the DBT group was greater over time and among those with a lifetime history of suicide attempts (IRR, 0.23). “Decreased risk of suicide attempt in DBT was mediated by improvement in emotion dysregulation, particularly for those with high baseline emotion dysregulation,” the researchers wrote in their discussion.

The findings were limited by several factors including the mainly female, non-Hispanic White study population, and controlled clinical setting, the researchers noted. Data from a forthcoming community implementation field trial will address some generalizability issues, although more work is needed to address disparities in BP diagnosis and treatment, they added.

However, the results support the potential of DBT for mood management and for reducing suicide attempts in a high-risk adolescent population, especially those with high levels of emotional dysregulation, on par with other established psychosocial treatments, the researchers concluded.
 

 

 

More options needed to manage increased risk

“It was important to conduct this study at this time because, while still relatively rare, bipolar spectrum disorders in adolescents confer increased risk for suicide,” Peter L. Loper Jr., MD, of the University of South Carolina, Columbia, said in an interview. The complexity of BP and the increased risk of suicide in these patients challenge clinicians to identify robust evidence-based interventions beyond pharmacotherapy that mitigate this risk, said Dr. Loper, who is triple board certified in pediatrics, general psychiatry, and child & adolescent psychiatry, but was not involved in the study.

Dr. Peter L. Loper Jr.

The current study findings were not surprising, because DBT has proven effective in decreasing suicidal ideation and suicide attempts in other high-risk adolescent patient populations, Dr. Loper said. “Given the therapeutic content of DBT, with emphasis on mindfulness, distress tolerance, social skills, and emotional regulation, I think it is reasonable to hypothesize that DBT might be a globally applicable intervention, independent of mental health diagnosis or etiology of suicidal ideation,” he said.

The take-home message for clinicians is that the results support the efficacy of DBT as an intervention for adolescents with BP and suicidal ideation, self-injurious behavior, or suicide attempts, said Dr. Loper. For these patients, given their increased suicide risk, “DBT should certainly be recommended as a component of their treatment plan,” he said.

However, barriers to the use of DBT in clinical practice exist, notably access and cost, Dr. Loper noted. “I think that the most prominent barrier in accessing DBT in clinical practice is the availability of certified, structured DBT treatment programs, and particularly those willing to provide services to adolescents,” he said. “Additionally, certified DBT programs, which are the gold standard, are often not covered by third-party payers, making cost yet another potential barrier.”

Looking ahead, Dr. Loper agreed with the study authors that additional research with a more diverse patient population representative of adolescents with bipolar spectrum disorder “is a crucial area of focus.”

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health through a grant to Dr. Goldstein, who also disclosed royalties from Guilford Press unrelated to the current study. Dr. Loper had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

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Lupus may overlap in many patients with systemic sclerosis

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 09/18/2023 - 09:27

 

TOPLINE:

Patients with both systemic sclerosis (SSc) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are more likely to be female, Black, and diagnosed with limited cutaneous SSc.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers used the 2019 SLE classification criteria from the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology and American College of Rheumatology to identify patients with SSc who also met criteria for SLE at a single academic center.
  • The study population included 402 adults with SSc.
  • The researchers compared demographics, laboratory data, clinical features, and mortality between patients with SSc-SLE and patients with SSc only.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the 402 patients with SSc who were analyzed, 40 (10%) met the 2019 EULAR/ACR Classification Criteria for SLE.
  • Patients with both SSc and SLE were significantly more likely to be female and Black, which is consistent with previous studies; patients with both conditions also were more likely than those with SSc alone to have limited cutaneous SSc (75% vs. 52.2%; P = .006).
  • The prevalence of anti-U1-RNP antibody positivity, a classic marker for mixed connective tissue disease, was 30% in SSc-SLE patients and 6.6% in those with SSc only (P < .001).
  • Mortality was similar between the two groups, and similar rates were also seen between the two for severe SSc-related end-organ damage, including pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary hypertension, and scleroderma renal crisis.

IN PRACTICE:

The results highlight the need for clinicians to recognize the SSc-SLE overlap syndrome and to watch for scleroderma organ involvement in patients with features of SLE, Raynaud syndrome, anti-U1-RNP antibody positivity, or an isolated nucleolar pattern of antinuclear antibodies.

SOURCE:

First author Ronald D. Bass, MD, MBA, of Georgetown University, Washington, and colleagues published their report online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The primary cohort was designed to compare Black to non-Black patients with SSc, and the process of matching these patients may have introduced unmeasured selection bias. Also, since the study was based on classification criteria and not diagnostic criteria, the overlapping patients may not reflect patients with true overlapping of both conditions.

DISCLOSURES:

No outside funding source was listed by the authors. The researchers report no relevant financial relationships.

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

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TOPLINE:

Patients with both systemic sclerosis (SSc) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are more likely to be female, Black, and diagnosed with limited cutaneous SSc.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers used the 2019 SLE classification criteria from the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology and American College of Rheumatology to identify patients with SSc who also met criteria for SLE at a single academic center.
  • The study population included 402 adults with SSc.
  • The researchers compared demographics, laboratory data, clinical features, and mortality between patients with SSc-SLE and patients with SSc only.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the 402 patients with SSc who were analyzed, 40 (10%) met the 2019 EULAR/ACR Classification Criteria for SLE.
  • Patients with both SSc and SLE were significantly more likely to be female and Black, which is consistent with previous studies; patients with both conditions also were more likely than those with SSc alone to have limited cutaneous SSc (75% vs. 52.2%; P = .006).
  • The prevalence of anti-U1-RNP antibody positivity, a classic marker for mixed connective tissue disease, was 30% in SSc-SLE patients and 6.6% in those with SSc only (P < .001).
  • Mortality was similar between the two groups, and similar rates were also seen between the two for severe SSc-related end-organ damage, including pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary hypertension, and scleroderma renal crisis.

IN PRACTICE:

The results highlight the need for clinicians to recognize the SSc-SLE overlap syndrome and to watch for scleroderma organ involvement in patients with features of SLE, Raynaud syndrome, anti-U1-RNP antibody positivity, or an isolated nucleolar pattern of antinuclear antibodies.

SOURCE:

First author Ronald D. Bass, MD, MBA, of Georgetown University, Washington, and colleagues published their report online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The primary cohort was designed to compare Black to non-Black patients with SSc, and the process of matching these patients may have introduced unmeasured selection bias. Also, since the study was based on classification criteria and not diagnostic criteria, the overlapping patients may not reflect patients with true overlapping of both conditions.

DISCLOSURES:

No outside funding source was listed by the authors. The researchers report no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Patients with both systemic sclerosis (SSc) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are more likely to be female, Black, and diagnosed with limited cutaneous SSc.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers used the 2019 SLE classification criteria from the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology and American College of Rheumatology to identify patients with SSc who also met criteria for SLE at a single academic center.
  • The study population included 402 adults with SSc.
  • The researchers compared demographics, laboratory data, clinical features, and mortality between patients with SSc-SLE and patients with SSc only.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the 402 patients with SSc who were analyzed, 40 (10%) met the 2019 EULAR/ACR Classification Criteria for SLE.
  • Patients with both SSc and SLE were significantly more likely to be female and Black, which is consistent with previous studies; patients with both conditions also were more likely than those with SSc alone to have limited cutaneous SSc (75% vs. 52.2%; P = .006).
  • The prevalence of anti-U1-RNP antibody positivity, a classic marker for mixed connective tissue disease, was 30% in SSc-SLE patients and 6.6% in those with SSc only (P < .001).
  • Mortality was similar between the two groups, and similar rates were also seen between the two for severe SSc-related end-organ damage, including pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary hypertension, and scleroderma renal crisis.

IN PRACTICE:

The results highlight the need for clinicians to recognize the SSc-SLE overlap syndrome and to watch for scleroderma organ involvement in patients with features of SLE, Raynaud syndrome, anti-U1-RNP antibody positivity, or an isolated nucleolar pattern of antinuclear antibodies.

SOURCE:

First author Ronald D. Bass, MD, MBA, of Georgetown University, Washington, and colleagues published their report online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The primary cohort was designed to compare Black to non-Black patients with SSc, and the process of matching these patients may have introduced unmeasured selection bias. Also, since the study was based on classification criteria and not diagnostic criteria, the overlapping patients may not reflect patients with true overlapping of both conditions.

DISCLOSURES:

No outside funding source was listed by the authors. The researchers report no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Extra-articular RA manifestations are in decline, but mortality is still a problem

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Mon, 09/18/2023 - 09:15

 

TOPLINE:

The incidence of extra-articular manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis (ExRA) has declined over time, but the manifestations’ association with increased mortality risk has not changed.

METHODOLOGY:

  • A retrospective, population-based cohort study that included 907 adults with incident RA diagnosed during 1985-1999 (n = 296) or 2000-2014 (n = 611) in Olmsted County, Minn.
  • Researchers assessed the cumulative incidence of ExRA in groups from both time periods.
  • Cox proportional hazard models were used to identify associations between mortality and ExRA.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Patients with ExRA had double the risk for premature mortality compared with those without ExRA (hazard ratio, 2.0), with increased mortality for both severe and nonsevere cases of ExRA (HR, 3.05 and 1.83, respectively).
  • The 10-year cumulative incidence of developing any ExRA decreased significantly between the 1985-1999 group and the 2000-2014 group (45.1% vs. 31.6%; P = .001).
  • The incidence of subcutaneous rheumatoid nodules decreased significantly between the two time periods (30.9% vs. 15.8%, respectively; P < .001), as did the incidence of nonsevere ExRA (41.4% vs. 28.8%, respectively; P < .001).
  • Rheumatoid nodules were associated with increased mortality risk, and rheumatoid factor positivity was the strongest risk factor for developing ExRA and rheumatoid nodules.

IN PRACTICE:

The results illustrate the need to recognize the increased mortality risk for patients with severe or nonsevere ExRA.

SOURCE:

First author Bradly A. Kimbrough, MD, and colleagues at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., published their report online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The single geographic region and demographics of the study limit its generalizability, and its interpretation is affected by a lack of data on disease activity and the impact of improved therapeutics and management strategies.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by grants from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and SkinDiseases, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. Dr. Kimbrough had no financial conflicts to disclose. Two coauthors reported financial relationships with one or more pharmaceutical companies.

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

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TOPLINE:

The incidence of extra-articular manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis (ExRA) has declined over time, but the manifestations’ association with increased mortality risk has not changed.

METHODOLOGY:

  • A retrospective, population-based cohort study that included 907 adults with incident RA diagnosed during 1985-1999 (n = 296) or 2000-2014 (n = 611) in Olmsted County, Minn.
  • Researchers assessed the cumulative incidence of ExRA in groups from both time periods.
  • Cox proportional hazard models were used to identify associations between mortality and ExRA.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Patients with ExRA had double the risk for premature mortality compared with those without ExRA (hazard ratio, 2.0), with increased mortality for both severe and nonsevere cases of ExRA (HR, 3.05 and 1.83, respectively).
  • The 10-year cumulative incidence of developing any ExRA decreased significantly between the 1985-1999 group and the 2000-2014 group (45.1% vs. 31.6%; P = .001).
  • The incidence of subcutaneous rheumatoid nodules decreased significantly between the two time periods (30.9% vs. 15.8%, respectively; P < .001), as did the incidence of nonsevere ExRA (41.4% vs. 28.8%, respectively; P < .001).
  • Rheumatoid nodules were associated with increased mortality risk, and rheumatoid factor positivity was the strongest risk factor for developing ExRA and rheumatoid nodules.

IN PRACTICE:

The results illustrate the need to recognize the increased mortality risk for patients with severe or nonsevere ExRA.

SOURCE:

First author Bradly A. Kimbrough, MD, and colleagues at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., published their report online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The single geographic region and demographics of the study limit its generalizability, and its interpretation is affected by a lack of data on disease activity and the impact of improved therapeutics and management strategies.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by grants from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and SkinDiseases, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. Dr. Kimbrough had no financial conflicts to disclose. Two coauthors reported financial relationships with one or more pharmaceutical companies.

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

 

TOPLINE:

The incidence of extra-articular manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis (ExRA) has declined over time, but the manifestations’ association with increased mortality risk has not changed.

METHODOLOGY:

  • A retrospective, population-based cohort study that included 907 adults with incident RA diagnosed during 1985-1999 (n = 296) or 2000-2014 (n = 611) in Olmsted County, Minn.
  • Researchers assessed the cumulative incidence of ExRA in groups from both time periods.
  • Cox proportional hazard models were used to identify associations between mortality and ExRA.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Patients with ExRA had double the risk for premature mortality compared with those without ExRA (hazard ratio, 2.0), with increased mortality for both severe and nonsevere cases of ExRA (HR, 3.05 and 1.83, respectively).
  • The 10-year cumulative incidence of developing any ExRA decreased significantly between the 1985-1999 group and the 2000-2014 group (45.1% vs. 31.6%; P = .001).
  • The incidence of subcutaneous rheumatoid nodules decreased significantly between the two time periods (30.9% vs. 15.8%, respectively; P < .001), as did the incidence of nonsevere ExRA (41.4% vs. 28.8%, respectively; P < .001).
  • Rheumatoid nodules were associated with increased mortality risk, and rheumatoid factor positivity was the strongest risk factor for developing ExRA and rheumatoid nodules.

IN PRACTICE:

The results illustrate the need to recognize the increased mortality risk for patients with severe or nonsevere ExRA.

SOURCE:

First author Bradly A. Kimbrough, MD, and colleagues at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., published their report online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The single geographic region and demographics of the study limit its generalizability, and its interpretation is affected by a lack of data on disease activity and the impact of improved therapeutics and management strategies.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by grants from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and SkinDiseases, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. Dr. Kimbrough had no financial conflicts to disclose. Two coauthors reported financial relationships with one or more pharmaceutical companies.

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

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Social media use may promote depression in pregnancy

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Changed
Thu, 09/14/2023 - 13:04

More time spent on social media spent in ways defined as problematic was significantly associated with increased depressive symptoms during pregnancy, based on data from more than 600 individuals.

Depressive symptoms among pregnant women have risen in recent years, but the potential impact of social media use on depression in pregnancy has not been well studied, wrote Lotte Muskens, a PhD candidate at Tilburg (the Netherlands) University and colleagues.

In a study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, the researchers surveyed 697 pregnant women aged 19-42 years who were part of a larger longitudinal prospective study (the Brabant Study) in the Netherlands. The mean age of the participants was 31 years; 96% were employed, 99% had a partner, and 71% had a bachelor’s degree or higher. Depressive symptoms were assessed at 12, 20, and 28 weeks of pregnancy using the Dutch version of the 10-item Edinburgh Depression Scale (EDS).

SonerCdem/Thinkstock

The researchers categorized the participants into trajectories of depressive symptoms during pregnancy, with 489 identified as low stable (mean EDS scores 2.8-3.0), 183 as intermediate stable (mean EDS scores 8.4-8.8), and 25 as high stable (mean EDS scores 15.1-16.9).

Problematic SMU was identified using the six-item Bergen Social Media Addiction Scale (BSMAS) at 12 weeks of pregnancy; scores ranged from 6 to 30, with higher scores representing more problematic SMU.

The mean BSMAS scores were 9.0, 10.7, and 12.6 for the low-stable, intermediate-stable, and high-stable depression groups, respectively.

Data on social media use (SMU) were collected at 12 weeks of pregnancy. Social media was defined as common platforms including Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter, and YouTube.

SMU was defined in terms of intensity, measured by time and frequency. Time was measured by asking participants to list how many hours per day they used social media on a scale of 1 (no use of social media) to 9 (7 or more hours per day). Frequency was measured by asking how often participants visited the various social media platforms, on a scale of 1 (no use of social media) to 7 (five or more visits per day). Overall, the participants averaged 1.6 hours per day and 19.5 visits per week on SMU.

Increased time and frequency of SMU was significantly associated with increased odds of being in the high-stable group, compared with the low-stable group in an adjusted analysis (odds ratios, 1.51 and 1.05, respectively; P = .017 and P = .019, respectively).

In addition, problematic SMU (as defined by higher BSMAS scores) remained significantly associated with increased odds of belonging to the intermediate-stable or high-stable classes in an adjusted analysis (odds ratios, 1.17 and 1.31; P < .001 for both).

“While our results suggest that SMU can have negative consequences for pregnant women’s mental wellbeing, it is important to note that SMU during pregnancy may also be helpful for some pregnant women,” as many women, especially first-time mothers, find information and support through social media, the researchers wrote in their discussion.

The findings were limited by several factors, including the variation in group sizes for depressive symptoms, reliance on self-reports, and the collection of data during the COVID-19 pandemic, which may have affected the results, the researchers noted.

However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size and longitudinal design that allowed measurement of trajectories. More research is needed to determine causal relationships, but the data indicate an association between higher levels of depression during pregnancy and more intense and problematic SMU use, and health care providers should discuss SMU in addition to other risk factors for depression in pregnant women, the researchers concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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More time spent on social media spent in ways defined as problematic was significantly associated with increased depressive symptoms during pregnancy, based on data from more than 600 individuals.

Depressive symptoms among pregnant women have risen in recent years, but the potential impact of social media use on depression in pregnancy has not been well studied, wrote Lotte Muskens, a PhD candidate at Tilburg (the Netherlands) University and colleagues.

In a study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, the researchers surveyed 697 pregnant women aged 19-42 years who were part of a larger longitudinal prospective study (the Brabant Study) in the Netherlands. The mean age of the participants was 31 years; 96% were employed, 99% had a partner, and 71% had a bachelor’s degree or higher. Depressive symptoms were assessed at 12, 20, and 28 weeks of pregnancy using the Dutch version of the 10-item Edinburgh Depression Scale (EDS).

SonerCdem/Thinkstock

The researchers categorized the participants into trajectories of depressive symptoms during pregnancy, with 489 identified as low stable (mean EDS scores 2.8-3.0), 183 as intermediate stable (mean EDS scores 8.4-8.8), and 25 as high stable (mean EDS scores 15.1-16.9).

Problematic SMU was identified using the six-item Bergen Social Media Addiction Scale (BSMAS) at 12 weeks of pregnancy; scores ranged from 6 to 30, with higher scores representing more problematic SMU.

The mean BSMAS scores were 9.0, 10.7, and 12.6 for the low-stable, intermediate-stable, and high-stable depression groups, respectively.

Data on social media use (SMU) were collected at 12 weeks of pregnancy. Social media was defined as common platforms including Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter, and YouTube.

SMU was defined in terms of intensity, measured by time and frequency. Time was measured by asking participants to list how many hours per day they used social media on a scale of 1 (no use of social media) to 9 (7 or more hours per day). Frequency was measured by asking how often participants visited the various social media platforms, on a scale of 1 (no use of social media) to 7 (five or more visits per day). Overall, the participants averaged 1.6 hours per day and 19.5 visits per week on SMU.

Increased time and frequency of SMU was significantly associated with increased odds of being in the high-stable group, compared with the low-stable group in an adjusted analysis (odds ratios, 1.51 and 1.05, respectively; P = .017 and P = .019, respectively).

In addition, problematic SMU (as defined by higher BSMAS scores) remained significantly associated with increased odds of belonging to the intermediate-stable or high-stable classes in an adjusted analysis (odds ratios, 1.17 and 1.31; P < .001 for both).

“While our results suggest that SMU can have negative consequences for pregnant women’s mental wellbeing, it is important to note that SMU during pregnancy may also be helpful for some pregnant women,” as many women, especially first-time mothers, find information and support through social media, the researchers wrote in their discussion.

The findings were limited by several factors, including the variation in group sizes for depressive symptoms, reliance on self-reports, and the collection of data during the COVID-19 pandemic, which may have affected the results, the researchers noted.

However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size and longitudinal design that allowed measurement of trajectories. More research is needed to determine causal relationships, but the data indicate an association between higher levels of depression during pregnancy and more intense and problematic SMU use, and health care providers should discuss SMU in addition to other risk factors for depression in pregnant women, the researchers concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

More time spent on social media spent in ways defined as problematic was significantly associated with increased depressive symptoms during pregnancy, based on data from more than 600 individuals.

Depressive symptoms among pregnant women have risen in recent years, but the potential impact of social media use on depression in pregnancy has not been well studied, wrote Lotte Muskens, a PhD candidate at Tilburg (the Netherlands) University and colleagues.

In a study published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, the researchers surveyed 697 pregnant women aged 19-42 years who were part of a larger longitudinal prospective study (the Brabant Study) in the Netherlands. The mean age of the participants was 31 years; 96% were employed, 99% had a partner, and 71% had a bachelor’s degree or higher. Depressive symptoms were assessed at 12, 20, and 28 weeks of pregnancy using the Dutch version of the 10-item Edinburgh Depression Scale (EDS).

SonerCdem/Thinkstock

The researchers categorized the participants into trajectories of depressive symptoms during pregnancy, with 489 identified as low stable (mean EDS scores 2.8-3.0), 183 as intermediate stable (mean EDS scores 8.4-8.8), and 25 as high stable (mean EDS scores 15.1-16.9).

Problematic SMU was identified using the six-item Bergen Social Media Addiction Scale (BSMAS) at 12 weeks of pregnancy; scores ranged from 6 to 30, with higher scores representing more problematic SMU.

The mean BSMAS scores were 9.0, 10.7, and 12.6 for the low-stable, intermediate-stable, and high-stable depression groups, respectively.

Data on social media use (SMU) were collected at 12 weeks of pregnancy. Social media was defined as common platforms including Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter, and YouTube.

SMU was defined in terms of intensity, measured by time and frequency. Time was measured by asking participants to list how many hours per day they used social media on a scale of 1 (no use of social media) to 9 (7 or more hours per day). Frequency was measured by asking how often participants visited the various social media platforms, on a scale of 1 (no use of social media) to 7 (five or more visits per day). Overall, the participants averaged 1.6 hours per day and 19.5 visits per week on SMU.

Increased time and frequency of SMU was significantly associated with increased odds of being in the high-stable group, compared with the low-stable group in an adjusted analysis (odds ratios, 1.51 and 1.05, respectively; P = .017 and P = .019, respectively).

In addition, problematic SMU (as defined by higher BSMAS scores) remained significantly associated with increased odds of belonging to the intermediate-stable or high-stable classes in an adjusted analysis (odds ratios, 1.17 and 1.31; P < .001 for both).

“While our results suggest that SMU can have negative consequences for pregnant women’s mental wellbeing, it is important to note that SMU during pregnancy may also be helpful for some pregnant women,” as many women, especially first-time mothers, find information and support through social media, the researchers wrote in their discussion.

The findings were limited by several factors, including the variation in group sizes for depressive symptoms, reliance on self-reports, and the collection of data during the COVID-19 pandemic, which may have affected the results, the researchers noted.

However, the results were strengthened by the large sample size and longitudinal design that allowed measurement of trajectories. More research is needed to determine causal relationships, but the data indicate an association between higher levels of depression during pregnancy and more intense and problematic SMU use, and health care providers should discuss SMU in addition to other risk factors for depression in pregnant women, the researchers concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Benralizumab hits target for eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis

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Changed
Wed, 03/06/2024 - 10:12

A single monthly injection of benralizumab (Fasenra) was noninferior to a series of three injections per month of mepolizumab (Nucala) for the treatment of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA), based on data from 140 individuals.

The unpublished topline results of the phase 3 MANDARA study were shared in a press release from benralizumab’s manufacturer, AstraZeneca. More detailed findings are scheduled to be presented at a future medical meeting, according to the company.

EGPA, although rare, can damage multiple organs including the heart, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, skin, and nerves, and can be fatal if left untreated, but treatment options are limited, and mepolizumab, an anti-interleukin (IL)-5 monoclonal antibody, is the only currently approved treatment.

In the study, adults with EGPA were randomized to a single 30-mg subcutaneous injection of benralizumab or three separate 100-mg subcutaneous injections of mepolizumab once every 4 weeks. The primary endpoint was remission rates after 36 and 48 weeks of treatment. Remission was defined as a Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score of 0 and use of 4 mg/day or less of oral corticosteroids.

At 36 weeks and 48 weeks, remission rates for benralizumab were noninferior to mepolizumab. According to Clinicaltrials.gov, the study is scheduled to last for 52 weeks to compare the remission rates with the two treatments, and collect data from an extension that allows each patient at least 1 year of treatment in an open-label format.

Benralizumab, also a monoclonal antibody, differs in action from mepolizumab by binding directly to the IL-5 receptor alpha on eosinophils.

“This trial demonstrates that a biologic medicine given in a single monthly injection could help patients achieve remission rates comparable to the current standard of care, adding to the importance of benralizumab as a potential treatment option for eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis,” Michael Wechsler, MD, principal investigator on the MANDARA study, said in the press release.

The safety and tolerability of benralizumab in the MANDARA study were consistent with drug’s known profile, according to the company.

Benralizumab is currently approved as an add-on maintenance treatment for severe eosinophilic asthma in the United States, the European Union, and Japan, among other countries, and for self-administration in the United States, the European Union, and other countries, according to the company.

Benralizumab also is in development for other eosinophilic diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, and hypereosinophilic syndrome, and received an Orphan Drug Designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2018, according to the company.
 

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A single monthly injection of benralizumab (Fasenra) was noninferior to a series of three injections per month of mepolizumab (Nucala) for the treatment of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA), based on data from 140 individuals.

The unpublished topline results of the phase 3 MANDARA study were shared in a press release from benralizumab’s manufacturer, AstraZeneca. More detailed findings are scheduled to be presented at a future medical meeting, according to the company.

EGPA, although rare, can damage multiple organs including the heart, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, skin, and nerves, and can be fatal if left untreated, but treatment options are limited, and mepolizumab, an anti-interleukin (IL)-5 monoclonal antibody, is the only currently approved treatment.

In the study, adults with EGPA were randomized to a single 30-mg subcutaneous injection of benralizumab or three separate 100-mg subcutaneous injections of mepolizumab once every 4 weeks. The primary endpoint was remission rates after 36 and 48 weeks of treatment. Remission was defined as a Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score of 0 and use of 4 mg/day or less of oral corticosteroids.

At 36 weeks and 48 weeks, remission rates for benralizumab were noninferior to mepolizumab. According to Clinicaltrials.gov, the study is scheduled to last for 52 weeks to compare the remission rates with the two treatments, and collect data from an extension that allows each patient at least 1 year of treatment in an open-label format.

Benralizumab, also a monoclonal antibody, differs in action from mepolizumab by binding directly to the IL-5 receptor alpha on eosinophils.

“This trial demonstrates that a biologic medicine given in a single monthly injection could help patients achieve remission rates comparable to the current standard of care, adding to the importance of benralizumab as a potential treatment option for eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis,” Michael Wechsler, MD, principal investigator on the MANDARA study, said in the press release.

The safety and tolerability of benralizumab in the MANDARA study were consistent with drug’s known profile, according to the company.

Benralizumab is currently approved as an add-on maintenance treatment for severe eosinophilic asthma in the United States, the European Union, and Japan, among other countries, and for self-administration in the United States, the European Union, and other countries, according to the company.

Benralizumab also is in development for other eosinophilic diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, and hypereosinophilic syndrome, and received an Orphan Drug Designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2018, according to the company.
 

A single monthly injection of benralizumab (Fasenra) was noninferior to a series of three injections per month of mepolizumab (Nucala) for the treatment of eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA), based on data from 140 individuals.

The unpublished topline results of the phase 3 MANDARA study were shared in a press release from benralizumab’s manufacturer, AstraZeneca. More detailed findings are scheduled to be presented at a future medical meeting, according to the company.

EGPA, although rare, can damage multiple organs including the heart, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, skin, and nerves, and can be fatal if left untreated, but treatment options are limited, and mepolizumab, an anti-interleukin (IL)-5 monoclonal antibody, is the only currently approved treatment.

In the study, adults with EGPA were randomized to a single 30-mg subcutaneous injection of benralizumab or three separate 100-mg subcutaneous injections of mepolizumab once every 4 weeks. The primary endpoint was remission rates after 36 and 48 weeks of treatment. Remission was defined as a Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score of 0 and use of 4 mg/day or less of oral corticosteroids.

At 36 weeks and 48 weeks, remission rates for benralizumab were noninferior to mepolizumab. According to Clinicaltrials.gov, the study is scheduled to last for 52 weeks to compare the remission rates with the two treatments, and collect data from an extension that allows each patient at least 1 year of treatment in an open-label format.

Benralizumab, also a monoclonal antibody, differs in action from mepolizumab by binding directly to the IL-5 receptor alpha on eosinophils.

“This trial demonstrates that a biologic medicine given in a single monthly injection could help patients achieve remission rates comparable to the current standard of care, adding to the importance of benralizumab as a potential treatment option for eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis,” Michael Wechsler, MD, principal investigator on the MANDARA study, said in the press release.

The safety and tolerability of benralizumab in the MANDARA study were consistent with drug’s known profile, according to the company.

Benralizumab is currently approved as an add-on maintenance treatment for severe eosinophilic asthma in the United States, the European Union, and Japan, among other countries, and for self-administration in the United States, the European Union, and other countries, according to the company.

Benralizumab also is in development for other eosinophilic diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, and hypereosinophilic syndrome, and received an Orphan Drug Designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2018, according to the company.
 

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Comorbidities, CV risk factors common in early PsA

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Mon, 09/11/2023 - 16:37

 

TOPLINE:

Patients with early psoriatic arthritis (PsA) were significantly more likely to have multiple comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors than controls.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study population included 67 adults with early PsA and 61 healthy matched controls with mean ages of 47.9 years and 45 years, respectively.
  • Early PsA was defined as symptom duration of less than 2 years; patients with conditions including active infection, malignancy, or other rheumatic or systemic disease were excluded.
  • The researchers examined the prevalence of comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors in treatment-naive, newly diagnosed patients with PsA at baseline and after 1 year.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Adults with early PsA were significantly more likely to have two or more comorbidities and multiple cardiovascular risk factors at baseline, compared with healthy controls (odds ratios, 1.9 and 2.1, respectively).
  • Dyslipidemia was the most prevalent comorbidity among patients with PsA and was more prevalent than in controls (64.2% vs. 39.3%; OR, 1.7).
  • Obesity was more common in patients with PsA, compared with controls (40.3% vs. 18.3%, respectively), and more patients with PsA had cardiovascular disease at baseline than did controls (20.9% vs. 6.6%; OR, 3.2).
  • Disease activity scores improved after 1 year, but the proportion of patients with comorbidities and CV risk factors remained stable.

IN PRACTICE:

The results support the early assessment of patients with PsA for comorbidities to inform treatment and suggest that comorbidities and CV risk factors are more than a consequence of long-term PsA and chronic systemic inflammation.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Alla Ishchenko, MD, and colleagues in the division of rheumatology at University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium. The study was published online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was exploratory in nature, with a short follow-up period and a relatively small sample size.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Ishchenko disclosed support from PARTNER, an international fellowship program to study disease mechanisms in psoriatic arthritis, as well as grants from Lilly and from the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis.

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

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TOPLINE:

Patients with early psoriatic arthritis (PsA) were significantly more likely to have multiple comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors than controls.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study population included 67 adults with early PsA and 61 healthy matched controls with mean ages of 47.9 years and 45 years, respectively.
  • Early PsA was defined as symptom duration of less than 2 years; patients with conditions including active infection, malignancy, or other rheumatic or systemic disease were excluded.
  • The researchers examined the prevalence of comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors in treatment-naive, newly diagnosed patients with PsA at baseline and after 1 year.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Adults with early PsA were significantly more likely to have two or more comorbidities and multiple cardiovascular risk factors at baseline, compared with healthy controls (odds ratios, 1.9 and 2.1, respectively).
  • Dyslipidemia was the most prevalent comorbidity among patients with PsA and was more prevalent than in controls (64.2% vs. 39.3%; OR, 1.7).
  • Obesity was more common in patients with PsA, compared with controls (40.3% vs. 18.3%, respectively), and more patients with PsA had cardiovascular disease at baseline than did controls (20.9% vs. 6.6%; OR, 3.2).
  • Disease activity scores improved after 1 year, but the proportion of patients with comorbidities and CV risk factors remained stable.

IN PRACTICE:

The results support the early assessment of patients with PsA for comorbidities to inform treatment and suggest that comorbidities and CV risk factors are more than a consequence of long-term PsA and chronic systemic inflammation.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Alla Ishchenko, MD, and colleagues in the division of rheumatology at University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium. The study was published online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was exploratory in nature, with a short follow-up period and a relatively small sample size.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Ishchenko disclosed support from PARTNER, an international fellowship program to study disease mechanisms in psoriatic arthritis, as well as grants from Lilly and from the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Patients with early psoriatic arthritis (PsA) were significantly more likely to have multiple comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors than controls.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study population included 67 adults with early PsA and 61 healthy matched controls with mean ages of 47.9 years and 45 years, respectively.
  • Early PsA was defined as symptom duration of less than 2 years; patients with conditions including active infection, malignancy, or other rheumatic or systemic disease were excluded.
  • The researchers examined the prevalence of comorbidities and cardiovascular risk factors in treatment-naive, newly diagnosed patients with PsA at baseline and after 1 year.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Adults with early PsA were significantly more likely to have two or more comorbidities and multiple cardiovascular risk factors at baseline, compared with healthy controls (odds ratios, 1.9 and 2.1, respectively).
  • Dyslipidemia was the most prevalent comorbidity among patients with PsA and was more prevalent than in controls (64.2% vs. 39.3%; OR, 1.7).
  • Obesity was more common in patients with PsA, compared with controls (40.3% vs. 18.3%, respectively), and more patients with PsA had cardiovascular disease at baseline than did controls (20.9% vs. 6.6%; OR, 3.2).
  • Disease activity scores improved after 1 year, but the proportion of patients with comorbidities and CV risk factors remained stable.

IN PRACTICE:

The results support the early assessment of patients with PsA for comorbidities to inform treatment and suggest that comorbidities and CV risk factors are more than a consequence of long-term PsA and chronic systemic inflammation.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Alla Ishchenko, MD, and colleagues in the division of rheumatology at University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium. The study was published online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was exploratory in nature, with a short follow-up period and a relatively small sample size.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Ishchenko disclosed support from PARTNER, an international fellowship program to study disease mechanisms in psoriatic arthritis, as well as grants from Lilly and from the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis.

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

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