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You’ve quit smoking with vaping. Now what?
This article is part of a series from Medscape on vaping.
Every day, Sonia Sharma, PA, meets people like Natalie H., who is trying to quit vaping.
Natalie, a member of the nicotine addiction support group at the University of California San Francisco’s Fontana Tobacco Treatment Center, switched from traditional cigarettes to vaping but found the electronic version just as addictive and eventually decided to quit using nicotine completely.
“I went from being an occasional cigarette smoker, a few a month, to a daily vaper,” said Natalie, who preferred not to give her last name to protect her privacy. “Vaping made my nicotine addiction worse, not better.”
“We have people tell us they vape before their feet hit the ground in the morning,” said Ms. Sharma, who coleads Natalie’s support group at UCSF. Ms. Sharma has met individuals who had smoked four to five cigarettes a day, switched to e-cigarettes to quit smoking, then vaped the equivalent of a pack a day. Others had switched to vapes to quit but ended up both vaping and smoking again. And others picked up vaping without ever smoking. They want to quit, she said, but are not sure how.
Researchers from the National Institutes of Health in 2020 reported that 5.6 million adults in the United States vaped. A little over 57% of people said they started using e-cigarettes to quit smoking traditional cigarettes. Another study in 2021 based on survey data found that about 60% of e-cigarette users wanted to quit their vaping habit.
Vaping has been marketed as a way to help people kick their smoking habit. Research is inconclusive on this claim. But unlike cessation tools like nicotine gums or lozenges, using vapes for cessation is uncharted territory. Vapers lack guidance for how to use the devices to quit, and they have even less direction on what to do if they develop an addiction to the vapes themselves.
A new addiction?
Monica Hanna, MPH, assistant director of the Nicotine and Tobacco Recovery Program at RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery in New Jersey, said she has witnessed a higher level of nicotine addiction in the vapers with whom she has worked.
“When someone takes a hit from a vaping device, it doesn’t generate the burn it would from traditional tobacco,” Ms. Hanna said. “This causes people to take a deeper pull, and when they take a deeper pull, they establish a higher level of nicotine dependence over time.”
A 2019 study of nearly 900 people published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that smokers who used vapes for cessation were twice as likely to have quit smoking cigarettes as those who used other nicotine replacement therapy. However, 80% of people who switched to vaping were using e-cigarettes a year after they tried to quit smoking.
Given that potential for addiction, Nancy Rigotti, MD, director of Massachusetts General Hospital’s Tobacco Research and Treatment Center in Boston, said patients must use vapes “properly” for cessation. That means giving up smoking completely and quitting vapes as soon as patients are sure they will not go back to smoking tobacco.
“We are going to need to help these people to stop vaping,” said Dr. Rigotti, who is working with Achieve Life Sciences, a pharmaceutical company developing a prescription drug to treat nicotine addiction from vapes and cigarettes.
And many nicotine users who have tried vaping to quit smoking end up becoming dual users.
“It’s important to stress that health benefits [of switching to vaping] only occur if the switch to vapes is complete and permanent. So far, that appears difficult to do for most people who smoke, and in my anecdotal experience it has not worked,” said J. Taylor Hays, MD, the former medical director of Mayo Clinic’s Nicotine Dependence Center in Rochester, Minn.
Besides challenges in communicating the current evidence, no established method exists to help vapers quit, according to Nigar Nargis, PhD, senior scientific director of tobacco control research at the American Cancer Society.
“There are some experimental methods like using social interventions, counseling, and some educational campaigns,” Dr. Nargis said. “[Little] progress has been done in terms of clinical interventions.”
Unlike cessation products such as gum or a nicotine patch, which have clear recommendations for duration of use, similar guidelines don’t exist for vapes, in part because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration hasn’t yet granted approval of vapes as cessation products.
Alex Clark, the CEO of Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association, a nonprofit group that supports vaping, said people could vape for longer and still benefit from making the switch from traditional cigarettes.
“The most important thing is that people start replacing cigarettes with a smoke-free product and continue until they’ve completely switched,” said Mr. Clark, whose group accepts donations from the e-cigarette industry. “Following switching, people are encouraged to continue with the product for as long as they feel necessary.”
But 2013 guidelines from the FDA advised makers of nicotine-replacement therapies – including gums, patches, and lozenges – to include labeling that advises users to complete treatment. According to the agency, if a person feels like they “need to use [the NRT product] for a longer period to keep from smoking, talk to your health care provider.”
Dr. Hays, who is now an emeritus professor at the Mayo Clinic, said he would not recommend patients try vaping as a cessation device given the availability of more proven techniques such as patches and gums. If a patient insists, vaping could be considered under the medical guidance of a cessation professional. He also advised people purchase products only from large tobacco companies that are likely to have “reasonable quality control.” Hundreds of vaping devices are on the market, and they are not all equivalent, he said.
But when an e-cigarette user wants to quit vaping, guidance might boil down to using traditional tobacco cessation methods like gums and lozenges because few tools exist to help people with a vaping-specific addiction.
The long-term health outcomes of vaping are also unclear, and decades will pass before scientists are able to make conclusions, according to Thomas Eissenberg, PhD, codirector of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco Products in Richmond.
“I don’t think anyone knows what the long-term effects of heated propylene glycol and vegetable glycerin and flavors intended as food ingredients are, especially when these compounds are inhaled hundreds of times a day, week after week, year after year,” Dr. Eissenberg said.
Dr. Rigotti reported that she receives no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry. She is working with Achieve Life Sciences to develop a tool for vaping cessation. Dr. Eissenberg, Ms. Hanna, Dr. Hays, Dr. Nargis, and Ms. Sharma reported no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
This article is part of a series from Medscape on vaping.
Every day, Sonia Sharma, PA, meets people like Natalie H., who is trying to quit vaping.
Natalie, a member of the nicotine addiction support group at the University of California San Francisco’s Fontana Tobacco Treatment Center, switched from traditional cigarettes to vaping but found the electronic version just as addictive and eventually decided to quit using nicotine completely.
“I went from being an occasional cigarette smoker, a few a month, to a daily vaper,” said Natalie, who preferred not to give her last name to protect her privacy. “Vaping made my nicotine addiction worse, not better.”
“We have people tell us they vape before their feet hit the ground in the morning,” said Ms. Sharma, who coleads Natalie’s support group at UCSF. Ms. Sharma has met individuals who had smoked four to five cigarettes a day, switched to e-cigarettes to quit smoking, then vaped the equivalent of a pack a day. Others had switched to vapes to quit but ended up both vaping and smoking again. And others picked up vaping without ever smoking. They want to quit, she said, but are not sure how.
Researchers from the National Institutes of Health in 2020 reported that 5.6 million adults in the United States vaped. A little over 57% of people said they started using e-cigarettes to quit smoking traditional cigarettes. Another study in 2021 based on survey data found that about 60% of e-cigarette users wanted to quit their vaping habit.
Vaping has been marketed as a way to help people kick their smoking habit. Research is inconclusive on this claim. But unlike cessation tools like nicotine gums or lozenges, using vapes for cessation is uncharted territory. Vapers lack guidance for how to use the devices to quit, and they have even less direction on what to do if they develop an addiction to the vapes themselves.
A new addiction?
Monica Hanna, MPH, assistant director of the Nicotine and Tobacco Recovery Program at RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery in New Jersey, said she has witnessed a higher level of nicotine addiction in the vapers with whom she has worked.
“When someone takes a hit from a vaping device, it doesn’t generate the burn it would from traditional tobacco,” Ms. Hanna said. “This causes people to take a deeper pull, and when they take a deeper pull, they establish a higher level of nicotine dependence over time.”
A 2019 study of nearly 900 people published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that smokers who used vapes for cessation were twice as likely to have quit smoking cigarettes as those who used other nicotine replacement therapy. However, 80% of people who switched to vaping were using e-cigarettes a year after they tried to quit smoking.
Given that potential for addiction, Nancy Rigotti, MD, director of Massachusetts General Hospital’s Tobacco Research and Treatment Center in Boston, said patients must use vapes “properly” for cessation. That means giving up smoking completely and quitting vapes as soon as patients are sure they will not go back to smoking tobacco.
“We are going to need to help these people to stop vaping,” said Dr. Rigotti, who is working with Achieve Life Sciences, a pharmaceutical company developing a prescription drug to treat nicotine addiction from vapes and cigarettes.
And many nicotine users who have tried vaping to quit smoking end up becoming dual users.
“It’s important to stress that health benefits [of switching to vaping] only occur if the switch to vapes is complete and permanent. So far, that appears difficult to do for most people who smoke, and in my anecdotal experience it has not worked,” said J. Taylor Hays, MD, the former medical director of Mayo Clinic’s Nicotine Dependence Center in Rochester, Minn.
Besides challenges in communicating the current evidence, no established method exists to help vapers quit, according to Nigar Nargis, PhD, senior scientific director of tobacco control research at the American Cancer Society.
“There are some experimental methods like using social interventions, counseling, and some educational campaigns,” Dr. Nargis said. “[Little] progress has been done in terms of clinical interventions.”
Unlike cessation products such as gum or a nicotine patch, which have clear recommendations for duration of use, similar guidelines don’t exist for vapes, in part because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration hasn’t yet granted approval of vapes as cessation products.
Alex Clark, the CEO of Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association, a nonprofit group that supports vaping, said people could vape for longer and still benefit from making the switch from traditional cigarettes.
“The most important thing is that people start replacing cigarettes with a smoke-free product and continue until they’ve completely switched,” said Mr. Clark, whose group accepts donations from the e-cigarette industry. “Following switching, people are encouraged to continue with the product for as long as they feel necessary.”
But 2013 guidelines from the FDA advised makers of nicotine-replacement therapies – including gums, patches, and lozenges – to include labeling that advises users to complete treatment. According to the agency, if a person feels like they “need to use [the NRT product] for a longer period to keep from smoking, talk to your health care provider.”
Dr. Hays, who is now an emeritus professor at the Mayo Clinic, said he would not recommend patients try vaping as a cessation device given the availability of more proven techniques such as patches and gums. If a patient insists, vaping could be considered under the medical guidance of a cessation professional. He also advised people purchase products only from large tobacco companies that are likely to have “reasonable quality control.” Hundreds of vaping devices are on the market, and they are not all equivalent, he said.
But when an e-cigarette user wants to quit vaping, guidance might boil down to using traditional tobacco cessation methods like gums and lozenges because few tools exist to help people with a vaping-specific addiction.
The long-term health outcomes of vaping are also unclear, and decades will pass before scientists are able to make conclusions, according to Thomas Eissenberg, PhD, codirector of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco Products in Richmond.
“I don’t think anyone knows what the long-term effects of heated propylene glycol and vegetable glycerin and flavors intended as food ingredients are, especially when these compounds are inhaled hundreds of times a day, week after week, year after year,” Dr. Eissenberg said.
Dr. Rigotti reported that she receives no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry. She is working with Achieve Life Sciences to develop a tool for vaping cessation. Dr. Eissenberg, Ms. Hanna, Dr. Hays, Dr. Nargis, and Ms. Sharma reported no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
This article is part of a series from Medscape on vaping.
Every day, Sonia Sharma, PA, meets people like Natalie H., who is trying to quit vaping.
Natalie, a member of the nicotine addiction support group at the University of California San Francisco’s Fontana Tobacco Treatment Center, switched from traditional cigarettes to vaping but found the electronic version just as addictive and eventually decided to quit using nicotine completely.
“I went from being an occasional cigarette smoker, a few a month, to a daily vaper,” said Natalie, who preferred not to give her last name to protect her privacy. “Vaping made my nicotine addiction worse, not better.”
“We have people tell us they vape before their feet hit the ground in the morning,” said Ms. Sharma, who coleads Natalie’s support group at UCSF. Ms. Sharma has met individuals who had smoked four to five cigarettes a day, switched to e-cigarettes to quit smoking, then vaped the equivalent of a pack a day. Others had switched to vapes to quit but ended up both vaping and smoking again. And others picked up vaping without ever smoking. They want to quit, she said, but are not sure how.
Researchers from the National Institutes of Health in 2020 reported that 5.6 million adults in the United States vaped. A little over 57% of people said they started using e-cigarettes to quit smoking traditional cigarettes. Another study in 2021 based on survey data found that about 60% of e-cigarette users wanted to quit their vaping habit.
Vaping has been marketed as a way to help people kick their smoking habit. Research is inconclusive on this claim. But unlike cessation tools like nicotine gums or lozenges, using vapes for cessation is uncharted territory. Vapers lack guidance for how to use the devices to quit, and they have even less direction on what to do if they develop an addiction to the vapes themselves.
A new addiction?
Monica Hanna, MPH, assistant director of the Nicotine and Tobacco Recovery Program at RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery in New Jersey, said she has witnessed a higher level of nicotine addiction in the vapers with whom she has worked.
“When someone takes a hit from a vaping device, it doesn’t generate the burn it would from traditional tobacco,” Ms. Hanna said. “This causes people to take a deeper pull, and when they take a deeper pull, they establish a higher level of nicotine dependence over time.”
A 2019 study of nearly 900 people published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that smokers who used vapes for cessation were twice as likely to have quit smoking cigarettes as those who used other nicotine replacement therapy. However, 80% of people who switched to vaping were using e-cigarettes a year after they tried to quit smoking.
Given that potential for addiction, Nancy Rigotti, MD, director of Massachusetts General Hospital’s Tobacco Research and Treatment Center in Boston, said patients must use vapes “properly” for cessation. That means giving up smoking completely and quitting vapes as soon as patients are sure they will not go back to smoking tobacco.
“We are going to need to help these people to stop vaping,” said Dr. Rigotti, who is working with Achieve Life Sciences, a pharmaceutical company developing a prescription drug to treat nicotine addiction from vapes and cigarettes.
And many nicotine users who have tried vaping to quit smoking end up becoming dual users.
“It’s important to stress that health benefits [of switching to vaping] only occur if the switch to vapes is complete and permanent. So far, that appears difficult to do for most people who smoke, and in my anecdotal experience it has not worked,” said J. Taylor Hays, MD, the former medical director of Mayo Clinic’s Nicotine Dependence Center in Rochester, Minn.
Besides challenges in communicating the current evidence, no established method exists to help vapers quit, according to Nigar Nargis, PhD, senior scientific director of tobacco control research at the American Cancer Society.
“There are some experimental methods like using social interventions, counseling, and some educational campaigns,” Dr. Nargis said. “[Little] progress has been done in terms of clinical interventions.”
Unlike cessation products such as gum or a nicotine patch, which have clear recommendations for duration of use, similar guidelines don’t exist for vapes, in part because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration hasn’t yet granted approval of vapes as cessation products.
Alex Clark, the CEO of Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association, a nonprofit group that supports vaping, said people could vape for longer and still benefit from making the switch from traditional cigarettes.
“The most important thing is that people start replacing cigarettes with a smoke-free product and continue until they’ve completely switched,” said Mr. Clark, whose group accepts donations from the e-cigarette industry. “Following switching, people are encouraged to continue with the product for as long as they feel necessary.”
But 2013 guidelines from the FDA advised makers of nicotine-replacement therapies – including gums, patches, and lozenges – to include labeling that advises users to complete treatment. According to the agency, if a person feels like they “need to use [the NRT product] for a longer period to keep from smoking, talk to your health care provider.”
Dr. Hays, who is now an emeritus professor at the Mayo Clinic, said he would not recommend patients try vaping as a cessation device given the availability of more proven techniques such as patches and gums. If a patient insists, vaping could be considered under the medical guidance of a cessation professional. He also advised people purchase products only from large tobacco companies that are likely to have “reasonable quality control.” Hundreds of vaping devices are on the market, and they are not all equivalent, he said.
But when an e-cigarette user wants to quit vaping, guidance might boil down to using traditional tobacco cessation methods like gums and lozenges because few tools exist to help people with a vaping-specific addiction.
The long-term health outcomes of vaping are also unclear, and decades will pass before scientists are able to make conclusions, according to Thomas Eissenberg, PhD, codirector of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco Products in Richmond.
“I don’t think anyone knows what the long-term effects of heated propylene glycol and vegetable glycerin and flavors intended as food ingredients are, especially when these compounds are inhaled hundreds of times a day, week after week, year after year,” Dr. Eissenberg said.
Dr. Rigotti reported that she receives no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry. She is working with Achieve Life Sciences to develop a tool for vaping cessation. Dr. Eissenberg, Ms. Hanna, Dr. Hays, Dr. Nargis, and Ms. Sharma reported no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Should you recommend e-cigs to help patients quit smoking?
In 2014, after smoking cigarettes for 40 years, Kati Markowitz decided to switch to vaping. She had heard the newer electronic cigarettes might be less harmful. And, at the time, she said, she wasn’t aware of other options to try to quit smoking.
For 7 years, she vaped every day.
Then Ms. Markowitz received news she’d hoped never to hear: She had lung cancer. A nodule detected in a CT scan had grown. She was scheduled for treatment – the removal of an entire lobe from her right lung. But first, she said, her surgeon told her she had to quit vaping, which reduces the risk for post-operative complications and enables a healthy recovery.
Ms. Markowitz had thought switching to vaping would be less harmful than smoking cigarettes. Now, she no longer believes that’s true.
“Did I fool myself by hoping to get lucky and not have any bad repercussions? Yes, I did,” Ms. Markowitz said, adding that she wonders if vaping contributed to her lung cancer or if she’ll experience other negative health effects in the future.
Researchers are divided on if e-cigarettes are as effective in smoking cessation as other nicotine replacement therapies like gums and lozenges. They also say more research is needed on the long-term health impacts of vaping to ultimately determine if vapes are a safe replacement for cigarettes.
“There is scientific research to support vaping as a cessation tool, but we wouldn’t use it as a first line of defense because we still need longitudinal studies to understand the long-term risk of e-cigarettes,” said Monica Hanna, MPH, assistant director of the Nicotine and Tobacco Recovery Program at RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery, Eatontown, N.J. “We also need research to understand exactly how we could use e-cigarettes as a cessation device.”
Vaping to quit
The first prototypes of e-cigarettes were developed in the 1930s, although what are now known as vapes weren’t sold by manufacturers until the 2000s in the United States, following an invention by a former health official in China. The vape was touted by both researchers and manufacturers over the years of development as a way to quit smoking cigarettes.
The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association, a nonprofit group that supports vaping and accepts donations from the e-cigarette industry, has compiled more than 13,000 testimonials from people who say vaping helped them give up smoking.
Studies show mixed results that using vapes can help traditional smokers quit.
A November 2022 Cochrane review showed a “high certainty of evidence that people are more likely to stop smoking traditional cigarettes for at least 6 months using e-cigarettes, or ‘vapes,’ than using nicotine replacement therapies, such as patches and gums.” The meta-analysis examined 78 studies with more than 22,000 participants. And a 2019 study with 886 participants, published in the New England Journal Medicine, found smokers who tried vaping to quit were twice as likely after a year to have stopped smoking cigarettes than those who used nicotine replacement therapy.
“In terms of the global research, it’s pretty clear that vaping can help smokers quit,” said Peter Shields, MD, a professor in the department of internal medicine at The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, who specializes in the treatment of lung cancer.
But a 2013 study published in the Lancet, and another from the Lancet in 2019, found only a modest improvement in cessation outcomes when participants used e-cigarettes paired with patches, compared with patches alone.
“For a disruptive technology that was supposed to end combustible tobacco use, there seems very little large-scale disruption,” said Thomas Eissenberg, PhD, co-director of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco Products, Richmond.
Michael Joseph Blaha, MD, MPH, director of clinical research at the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, Baltimore, pointed to research that shows a portion of people who start vaping to quit smoking end up using both products – or become so-called “dual” users.
“I do think there is fairly high-quality evidence that vaping can lead to more cessation, but at the tradeoff of more long-term dual users and more overall nicotine addiction,” Dr. Blaha said. “Vaping remains a third-line clinical tool after nicotine replacement therapy and FDA-approved cessation medications.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved any e-cigarette or vaping device for smoking cessation, like it has for patches and gums, which means manufacturers cannot market their products as helping tobacco smokers quit.
“ Ms. Hanna, from RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery, said.
Reducing harm and improving health?
Vapes have also been touted as a boon to individual and public health since cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable disease and disability in the United States, responsible for more than 480,000 deaths per year in the U.S., according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Quitting smoking lowers the risk of developing various cancers, heart disease, stroke, and other serious diseases. The aim of nicotine replacement therapy is to help smokers quit by gradually providing the body with smaller doses of nicotine over time, without exposing the body to toxic chemicals found in cigarettes.
“No one should say that e-cigarettes are safe, but compared to cigarettes, the data is consistent: They are not as harmful, and when a smoker switches, it’s better for them,” Dr. Shields said. “Like with other nicotine replacement therapies, if there is a risk that someone stops vaping and returns to smoking, I would rather have them as long-term vapers since it is generally considered to be less harmful than combustible tobacco.”
The FDA has allowed a handful of companies to market their electronic nicotine delivery systems as safer than traditional cigarettes by gaining approval through the Premarket Tobacco Product Applications process. In 2021, the agency announced its first PMTA authorization of an electronic cigarette to R.J. Reynolds for three of its tobacco-flavored vaping products. Regulators approved more products from three additional companies in 2022.
But the FDA has also denied others, including two products in 2023 from R.J. Reynolds, stating that, “the applications lacked sufficient evidence to demonstrate that permitting the marketing of the products would be appropriate for the protection of the public health.”
Questions remain among some researchers on the effects of vaping if used long term. Data on the health effects of vapes are just beginning to emerge and are mainly from studies of animals or cells. Measuring health effects among vape users will entail decades more of study, since Americans only gained access to the products in the 2000s.
Dr. Eissenberg said vaping likely does not cause the same diseases as cigarette smoking, but that does not mean they are not harmful. Ingredients found in e-cigarettes, such as heated propylene glycol, vegetable glycerin, and flavors, have only been used as food ingredients. The potential diseases caused by vapes are still unknown, because inhaling these heated ingredients is new. He also said he had “no issue” with an adult smoker vaping to help them quit smoking – as long they do so for a short period.
“I am very concerned that long-term use in adults could lead to considerable disease and death,” Dr. Eissenberg said. “Simply put, the human lung evolved for one purpose: gas exchange of oxygen in, carbon dioxide out. Anything else that enters the lung is a challenge to the organ.”
But Kenneth Warner, PhD, dean emeritus at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, said breaking the addiction to traditional cigarettes could reduce high rates of lung cancer in lower income communities where rates of smoking are comparatively high.
About three times as many Americans smoked (12.6%) than vaped (4.7%) in 2021, but those who live in households with lower incomes are more likely to smoke. According to the CDC, use of tobacco is higher among adults who were uninsured (27.3%) or who had Medicaid coverage (28.6%) than among those with private insurance (16.4%). People with annual family incomes of less than $12,500 also are more likely to be diagnosed with lung cancer than those with family incomes of $50,000 or more. Public health researchers have attributed those disparities in part to higher rates of smoking in lower-income households.
Dr. Warner said many lower-income and other Americans may never quit smoking cigarettes because they believe making the switch to e-cigarettes will not benefit their health. A 2022 study, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, found that the percent of Americans who thought vaping was more harmful than smoking quadrupled between 2018 and 2020, from 6.8% to 28.3%. A third of respondents thought vaping was as harmful as smoking.
“We’ve convinced a large percentage of the American public that vaping is as harmful as smoking when it could be helping people quit smoking,” Dr. Warner said. “People are dying right now.”
Ms. Markowitz did quit smoking by taking up vaping. But now she questions if her lung cancer prognosis would have been delayed, or even avoided, if she’d tried a traditional method like a lozenge or gum instead. She vaped once an hour for most of her 7 years of using the devices.
“For people who are trying to stop smoking, I would recommend something like the patch instead,” Ms. Markowitz said.
The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives receives funding from the vaping industry. Dr. Blaha, Dr. Eissenberg, Ms. Hanna, Dr. Shields, and Dr. Warner reported no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry. Dr. Blaha and Dr. Warner receive tobacco-related research funding from the FDA. Dr. Warner is a member of the FDA’s Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In 2014, after smoking cigarettes for 40 years, Kati Markowitz decided to switch to vaping. She had heard the newer electronic cigarettes might be less harmful. And, at the time, she said, she wasn’t aware of other options to try to quit smoking.
For 7 years, she vaped every day.
Then Ms. Markowitz received news she’d hoped never to hear: She had lung cancer. A nodule detected in a CT scan had grown. She was scheduled for treatment – the removal of an entire lobe from her right lung. But first, she said, her surgeon told her she had to quit vaping, which reduces the risk for post-operative complications and enables a healthy recovery.
Ms. Markowitz had thought switching to vaping would be less harmful than smoking cigarettes. Now, she no longer believes that’s true.
“Did I fool myself by hoping to get lucky and not have any bad repercussions? Yes, I did,” Ms. Markowitz said, adding that she wonders if vaping contributed to her lung cancer or if she’ll experience other negative health effects in the future.
Researchers are divided on if e-cigarettes are as effective in smoking cessation as other nicotine replacement therapies like gums and lozenges. They also say more research is needed on the long-term health impacts of vaping to ultimately determine if vapes are a safe replacement for cigarettes.
“There is scientific research to support vaping as a cessation tool, but we wouldn’t use it as a first line of defense because we still need longitudinal studies to understand the long-term risk of e-cigarettes,” said Monica Hanna, MPH, assistant director of the Nicotine and Tobacco Recovery Program at RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery, Eatontown, N.J. “We also need research to understand exactly how we could use e-cigarettes as a cessation device.”
Vaping to quit
The first prototypes of e-cigarettes were developed in the 1930s, although what are now known as vapes weren’t sold by manufacturers until the 2000s in the United States, following an invention by a former health official in China. The vape was touted by both researchers and manufacturers over the years of development as a way to quit smoking cigarettes.
The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association, a nonprofit group that supports vaping and accepts donations from the e-cigarette industry, has compiled more than 13,000 testimonials from people who say vaping helped them give up smoking.
Studies show mixed results that using vapes can help traditional smokers quit.
A November 2022 Cochrane review showed a “high certainty of evidence that people are more likely to stop smoking traditional cigarettes for at least 6 months using e-cigarettes, or ‘vapes,’ than using nicotine replacement therapies, such as patches and gums.” The meta-analysis examined 78 studies with more than 22,000 participants. And a 2019 study with 886 participants, published in the New England Journal Medicine, found smokers who tried vaping to quit were twice as likely after a year to have stopped smoking cigarettes than those who used nicotine replacement therapy.
“In terms of the global research, it’s pretty clear that vaping can help smokers quit,” said Peter Shields, MD, a professor in the department of internal medicine at The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, who specializes in the treatment of lung cancer.
But a 2013 study published in the Lancet, and another from the Lancet in 2019, found only a modest improvement in cessation outcomes when participants used e-cigarettes paired with patches, compared with patches alone.
“For a disruptive technology that was supposed to end combustible tobacco use, there seems very little large-scale disruption,” said Thomas Eissenberg, PhD, co-director of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco Products, Richmond.
Michael Joseph Blaha, MD, MPH, director of clinical research at the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, Baltimore, pointed to research that shows a portion of people who start vaping to quit smoking end up using both products – or become so-called “dual” users.
“I do think there is fairly high-quality evidence that vaping can lead to more cessation, but at the tradeoff of more long-term dual users and more overall nicotine addiction,” Dr. Blaha said. “Vaping remains a third-line clinical tool after nicotine replacement therapy and FDA-approved cessation medications.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved any e-cigarette or vaping device for smoking cessation, like it has for patches and gums, which means manufacturers cannot market their products as helping tobacco smokers quit.
“ Ms. Hanna, from RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery, said.
Reducing harm and improving health?
Vapes have also been touted as a boon to individual and public health since cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable disease and disability in the United States, responsible for more than 480,000 deaths per year in the U.S., according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Quitting smoking lowers the risk of developing various cancers, heart disease, stroke, and other serious diseases. The aim of nicotine replacement therapy is to help smokers quit by gradually providing the body with smaller doses of nicotine over time, without exposing the body to toxic chemicals found in cigarettes.
“No one should say that e-cigarettes are safe, but compared to cigarettes, the data is consistent: They are not as harmful, and when a smoker switches, it’s better for them,” Dr. Shields said. “Like with other nicotine replacement therapies, if there is a risk that someone stops vaping and returns to smoking, I would rather have them as long-term vapers since it is generally considered to be less harmful than combustible tobacco.”
The FDA has allowed a handful of companies to market their electronic nicotine delivery systems as safer than traditional cigarettes by gaining approval through the Premarket Tobacco Product Applications process. In 2021, the agency announced its first PMTA authorization of an electronic cigarette to R.J. Reynolds for three of its tobacco-flavored vaping products. Regulators approved more products from three additional companies in 2022.
But the FDA has also denied others, including two products in 2023 from R.J. Reynolds, stating that, “the applications lacked sufficient evidence to demonstrate that permitting the marketing of the products would be appropriate for the protection of the public health.”
Questions remain among some researchers on the effects of vaping if used long term. Data on the health effects of vapes are just beginning to emerge and are mainly from studies of animals or cells. Measuring health effects among vape users will entail decades more of study, since Americans only gained access to the products in the 2000s.
Dr. Eissenberg said vaping likely does not cause the same diseases as cigarette smoking, but that does not mean they are not harmful. Ingredients found in e-cigarettes, such as heated propylene glycol, vegetable glycerin, and flavors, have only been used as food ingredients. The potential diseases caused by vapes are still unknown, because inhaling these heated ingredients is new. He also said he had “no issue” with an adult smoker vaping to help them quit smoking – as long they do so for a short period.
“I am very concerned that long-term use in adults could lead to considerable disease and death,” Dr. Eissenberg said. “Simply put, the human lung evolved for one purpose: gas exchange of oxygen in, carbon dioxide out. Anything else that enters the lung is a challenge to the organ.”
But Kenneth Warner, PhD, dean emeritus at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, said breaking the addiction to traditional cigarettes could reduce high rates of lung cancer in lower income communities where rates of smoking are comparatively high.
About three times as many Americans smoked (12.6%) than vaped (4.7%) in 2021, but those who live in households with lower incomes are more likely to smoke. According to the CDC, use of tobacco is higher among adults who were uninsured (27.3%) or who had Medicaid coverage (28.6%) than among those with private insurance (16.4%). People with annual family incomes of less than $12,500 also are more likely to be diagnosed with lung cancer than those with family incomes of $50,000 or more. Public health researchers have attributed those disparities in part to higher rates of smoking in lower-income households.
Dr. Warner said many lower-income and other Americans may never quit smoking cigarettes because they believe making the switch to e-cigarettes will not benefit their health. A 2022 study, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, found that the percent of Americans who thought vaping was more harmful than smoking quadrupled between 2018 and 2020, from 6.8% to 28.3%. A third of respondents thought vaping was as harmful as smoking.
“We’ve convinced a large percentage of the American public that vaping is as harmful as smoking when it could be helping people quit smoking,” Dr. Warner said. “People are dying right now.”
Ms. Markowitz did quit smoking by taking up vaping. But now she questions if her lung cancer prognosis would have been delayed, or even avoided, if she’d tried a traditional method like a lozenge or gum instead. She vaped once an hour for most of her 7 years of using the devices.
“For people who are trying to stop smoking, I would recommend something like the patch instead,” Ms. Markowitz said.
The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives receives funding from the vaping industry. Dr. Blaha, Dr. Eissenberg, Ms. Hanna, Dr. Shields, and Dr. Warner reported no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry. Dr. Blaha and Dr. Warner receive tobacco-related research funding from the FDA. Dr. Warner is a member of the FDA’s Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
In 2014, after smoking cigarettes for 40 years, Kati Markowitz decided to switch to vaping. She had heard the newer electronic cigarettes might be less harmful. And, at the time, she said, she wasn’t aware of other options to try to quit smoking.
For 7 years, she vaped every day.
Then Ms. Markowitz received news she’d hoped never to hear: She had lung cancer. A nodule detected in a CT scan had grown. She was scheduled for treatment – the removal of an entire lobe from her right lung. But first, she said, her surgeon told her she had to quit vaping, which reduces the risk for post-operative complications and enables a healthy recovery.
Ms. Markowitz had thought switching to vaping would be less harmful than smoking cigarettes. Now, she no longer believes that’s true.
“Did I fool myself by hoping to get lucky and not have any bad repercussions? Yes, I did,” Ms. Markowitz said, adding that she wonders if vaping contributed to her lung cancer or if she’ll experience other negative health effects in the future.
Researchers are divided on if e-cigarettes are as effective in smoking cessation as other nicotine replacement therapies like gums and lozenges. They also say more research is needed on the long-term health impacts of vaping to ultimately determine if vapes are a safe replacement for cigarettes.
“There is scientific research to support vaping as a cessation tool, but we wouldn’t use it as a first line of defense because we still need longitudinal studies to understand the long-term risk of e-cigarettes,” said Monica Hanna, MPH, assistant director of the Nicotine and Tobacco Recovery Program at RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery, Eatontown, N.J. “We also need research to understand exactly how we could use e-cigarettes as a cessation device.”
Vaping to quit
The first prototypes of e-cigarettes were developed in the 1930s, although what are now known as vapes weren’t sold by manufacturers until the 2000s in the United States, following an invention by a former health official in China. The vape was touted by both researchers and manufacturers over the years of development as a way to quit smoking cigarettes.
The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives Association, a nonprofit group that supports vaping and accepts donations from the e-cigarette industry, has compiled more than 13,000 testimonials from people who say vaping helped them give up smoking.
Studies show mixed results that using vapes can help traditional smokers quit.
A November 2022 Cochrane review showed a “high certainty of evidence that people are more likely to stop smoking traditional cigarettes for at least 6 months using e-cigarettes, or ‘vapes,’ than using nicotine replacement therapies, such as patches and gums.” The meta-analysis examined 78 studies with more than 22,000 participants. And a 2019 study with 886 participants, published in the New England Journal Medicine, found smokers who tried vaping to quit were twice as likely after a year to have stopped smoking cigarettes than those who used nicotine replacement therapy.
“In terms of the global research, it’s pretty clear that vaping can help smokers quit,” said Peter Shields, MD, a professor in the department of internal medicine at The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, who specializes in the treatment of lung cancer.
But a 2013 study published in the Lancet, and another from the Lancet in 2019, found only a modest improvement in cessation outcomes when participants used e-cigarettes paired with patches, compared with patches alone.
“For a disruptive technology that was supposed to end combustible tobacco use, there seems very little large-scale disruption,” said Thomas Eissenberg, PhD, co-director of Virginia Commonwealth University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco Products, Richmond.
Michael Joseph Blaha, MD, MPH, director of clinical research at the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, Baltimore, pointed to research that shows a portion of people who start vaping to quit smoking end up using both products – or become so-called “dual” users.
“I do think there is fairly high-quality evidence that vaping can lead to more cessation, but at the tradeoff of more long-term dual users and more overall nicotine addiction,” Dr. Blaha said. “Vaping remains a third-line clinical tool after nicotine replacement therapy and FDA-approved cessation medications.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved any e-cigarette or vaping device for smoking cessation, like it has for patches and gums, which means manufacturers cannot market their products as helping tobacco smokers quit.
“ Ms. Hanna, from RWJBarnabas Health’s Institute for Prevention and Recovery, said.
Reducing harm and improving health?
Vapes have also been touted as a boon to individual and public health since cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable disease and disability in the United States, responsible for more than 480,000 deaths per year in the U.S., according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Quitting smoking lowers the risk of developing various cancers, heart disease, stroke, and other serious diseases. The aim of nicotine replacement therapy is to help smokers quit by gradually providing the body with smaller doses of nicotine over time, without exposing the body to toxic chemicals found in cigarettes.
“No one should say that e-cigarettes are safe, but compared to cigarettes, the data is consistent: They are not as harmful, and when a smoker switches, it’s better for them,” Dr. Shields said. “Like with other nicotine replacement therapies, if there is a risk that someone stops vaping and returns to smoking, I would rather have them as long-term vapers since it is generally considered to be less harmful than combustible tobacco.”
The FDA has allowed a handful of companies to market their electronic nicotine delivery systems as safer than traditional cigarettes by gaining approval through the Premarket Tobacco Product Applications process. In 2021, the agency announced its first PMTA authorization of an electronic cigarette to R.J. Reynolds for three of its tobacco-flavored vaping products. Regulators approved more products from three additional companies in 2022.
But the FDA has also denied others, including two products in 2023 from R.J. Reynolds, stating that, “the applications lacked sufficient evidence to demonstrate that permitting the marketing of the products would be appropriate for the protection of the public health.”
Questions remain among some researchers on the effects of vaping if used long term. Data on the health effects of vapes are just beginning to emerge and are mainly from studies of animals or cells. Measuring health effects among vape users will entail decades more of study, since Americans only gained access to the products in the 2000s.
Dr. Eissenberg said vaping likely does not cause the same diseases as cigarette smoking, but that does not mean they are not harmful. Ingredients found in e-cigarettes, such as heated propylene glycol, vegetable glycerin, and flavors, have only been used as food ingredients. The potential diseases caused by vapes are still unknown, because inhaling these heated ingredients is new. He also said he had “no issue” with an adult smoker vaping to help them quit smoking – as long they do so for a short period.
“I am very concerned that long-term use in adults could lead to considerable disease and death,” Dr. Eissenberg said. “Simply put, the human lung evolved for one purpose: gas exchange of oxygen in, carbon dioxide out. Anything else that enters the lung is a challenge to the organ.”
But Kenneth Warner, PhD, dean emeritus at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, said breaking the addiction to traditional cigarettes could reduce high rates of lung cancer in lower income communities where rates of smoking are comparatively high.
About three times as many Americans smoked (12.6%) than vaped (4.7%) in 2021, but those who live in households with lower incomes are more likely to smoke. According to the CDC, use of tobacco is higher among adults who were uninsured (27.3%) or who had Medicaid coverage (28.6%) than among those with private insurance (16.4%). People with annual family incomes of less than $12,500 also are more likely to be diagnosed with lung cancer than those with family incomes of $50,000 or more. Public health researchers have attributed those disparities in part to higher rates of smoking in lower-income households.
Dr. Warner said many lower-income and other Americans may never quit smoking cigarettes because they believe making the switch to e-cigarettes will not benefit their health. A 2022 study, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, found that the percent of Americans who thought vaping was more harmful than smoking quadrupled between 2018 and 2020, from 6.8% to 28.3%. A third of respondents thought vaping was as harmful as smoking.
“We’ve convinced a large percentage of the American public that vaping is as harmful as smoking when it could be helping people quit smoking,” Dr. Warner said. “People are dying right now.”
Ms. Markowitz did quit smoking by taking up vaping. But now she questions if her lung cancer prognosis would have been delayed, or even avoided, if she’d tried a traditional method like a lozenge or gum instead. She vaped once an hour for most of her 7 years of using the devices.
“For people who are trying to stop smoking, I would recommend something like the patch instead,” Ms. Markowitz said.
The Consumer Advocates for Smoke-free Alternatives receives funding from the vaping industry. Dr. Blaha, Dr. Eissenberg, Ms. Hanna, Dr. Shields, and Dr. Warner reported no funding from the tobacco or e-cigarette industry. Dr. Blaha and Dr. Warner receive tobacco-related research funding from the FDA. Dr. Warner is a member of the FDA’s Tobacco Products Scientific Advisory Committee.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
New technology a sepsis breakthrough?
Sepsis is among the most feared conditions for health care providers. These blood infections strike with such rapid intensity that treating them demands a mix of both clinical skill and luck – recognizing symptoms early enough while choosing the right drug to tame the bacterial culprit before the germs have overwhelmed the body’s immune system.
All too often, sepsis wins the race. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at least 1.7 million people in this country develop sepsis annually. About 350,000 die during hospitalization or are discharged to hospice.
But new research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offers hope that clinicians may one day be able to detect and treat sepsis more quickly.
The researchers broke down whole blood and dried it by heating, resulting in a solid porous structure with the bacterial DNA trapped inside. They then used chemicals – primers and enzymes – to reach inside the porous structure and amplify the target DNA.
The team was able to detect four causes of bloodstream infections – the bacteria methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA), gram-negative Escherichia coli, and the fungal species Candida albicans. They validated their method against clinical laboratory results that used blood cultures and DNA analyses to detect sepsis.
The technique took just 2.5 hours and required roughly 1 mL of blood, according to the researchers.
“This technique can have broad applications in detection of bacterial infection and presence of bacteria in large values of blood,” Rashid Bashir, PhD, dean of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign’s Grainger College of Engineering, and a co-author of the study, told this news organization.
While infection control experts and sepsis prevention advocates said the new study offers no clues about how to treat sepsis once detected, they hope the innovation eventually could save lives.
A rapid killer
Sepsis occurs when the body overreacts to an infection. The severe response can lead to tissue damage, organ failure, and death.
Thomas Heymann, MBA, president and CEO of Sepsis Alliance, an advocacy group, said mortality can rise 8% for each hour treatment is delayed.
Infants born prematurely are particularly vulnerable. Dr. Bashir and his colleagues noted that 25% of all infants admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit are diagnosed with sepsis. Of those, as many as 35% may die from infection. Sepsis is the most expensive condition treated in U.S. hospitals, accounting for $23.7 billion in costs annually, they added.
Despite high mortality rates and hospital costs, according to a Sepsis Alliance survey, only 66% of Americans are aware of the term sepsis. Only 19% can name the four primary signs of the condition: Altered body Temperature, an Infection, Mental decline, and feeling Extremely ill, or “TIME.”
Getting the appropriate antibiotics to sepsis patients quickly can greatly improve chances of survival, but Dr. Bashir said the current method of confirming the diagnosis is too slow.
Blood cultures too slow
Traditional blood cultures are among the most common methods of determining if a patient has a bloodstream infection. But the process takes about 24 hours for a culture to detect the category of bacteria and an additional day to determine exactly which bacteria is present, according to Cindy Hou, DO, infection control officer and medical director of research at Jefferson Health, Voorhees Township, New Jersey. At 72 hours, Dr. Hou said, a blood culture will finally be able to produce a “sensitivity” result, which tells doctors which antibiotics will be most effective against the pathogen.
By then, patients often are already past the point of saving. The bottom line, according to Dr. Bashir and his colleagues: Blood cultures are “too slow and cumbersome to allow for initial management of patients and thus contribute to high mortality.”
Dr. Hou called the ability to identify the type of infection in just 2.5 hours an “amazing” feat.
,” she said. “These researchers are pushing the bar for what rapid means.”
The new detection method is not yet available commercially. Dr. Bashir said he and his colleagues plan to scale their study and hope to find a way to bypass the long culture steps to identify target pathogens directly from a large volume of blood.
Dr. Hou said she believes a blood culture would still be necessary since clinicians would need sensitivity results to guide targeted treatment of infections.
“There is a lot more we need, but this paper is a call to arms for the field of rapid diagnostics to make rapid as fast as it really needs to be, but we still need to find solutions which are affordable,” Dr. Hou said.
Even without a blood culture, Dr. Bashir’s technology could improve care. Mr. Heymann said the technology could help convince clinicians worried about antibiotic resistance to prescribe treatment faster.
“We know we’re overusing antibiotics, and that’s creating a new big problem” when it comes to sepsis treatment, he said. “Getting a diagnostic read earlier is a game changer.”
Combined with a blood culture that can later confirm or help adjust the course of treatment, Dr. Hou said this new method of sepsis detection could improve care, especially in places where rapid diagnostics are not available and particularly if combined with physician education so they understand what treatment is best for various types of infection.
Mr. Heymann agreed. Sepsis Alliance also operates the Sepsis Innovation Collaborative, a group that supports public-private innovation on sepsis care.
“We’re losing someone every 90 seconds in the United States to sepsis,” Mr. Heymann said. “There is a huge opportunity to do better, and it’s this kind of innovation that is really inspiring.”
Dr. Hou is chief medical officer for Sepsis Alliance, a medical advisor for the Sepsis Innovation Collaborative, an advisor for Janssen, and a key opinion leader for T2 Biosystems. Dr. Bashir and Mr. Heymann report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Sepsis is among the most feared conditions for health care providers. These blood infections strike with such rapid intensity that treating them demands a mix of both clinical skill and luck – recognizing symptoms early enough while choosing the right drug to tame the bacterial culprit before the germs have overwhelmed the body’s immune system.
All too often, sepsis wins the race. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at least 1.7 million people in this country develop sepsis annually. About 350,000 die during hospitalization or are discharged to hospice.
But new research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offers hope that clinicians may one day be able to detect and treat sepsis more quickly.
The researchers broke down whole blood and dried it by heating, resulting in a solid porous structure with the bacterial DNA trapped inside. They then used chemicals – primers and enzymes – to reach inside the porous structure and amplify the target DNA.
The team was able to detect four causes of bloodstream infections – the bacteria methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA), gram-negative Escherichia coli, and the fungal species Candida albicans. They validated their method against clinical laboratory results that used blood cultures and DNA analyses to detect sepsis.
The technique took just 2.5 hours and required roughly 1 mL of blood, according to the researchers.
“This technique can have broad applications in detection of bacterial infection and presence of bacteria in large values of blood,” Rashid Bashir, PhD, dean of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign’s Grainger College of Engineering, and a co-author of the study, told this news organization.
While infection control experts and sepsis prevention advocates said the new study offers no clues about how to treat sepsis once detected, they hope the innovation eventually could save lives.
A rapid killer
Sepsis occurs when the body overreacts to an infection. The severe response can lead to tissue damage, organ failure, and death.
Thomas Heymann, MBA, president and CEO of Sepsis Alliance, an advocacy group, said mortality can rise 8% for each hour treatment is delayed.
Infants born prematurely are particularly vulnerable. Dr. Bashir and his colleagues noted that 25% of all infants admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit are diagnosed with sepsis. Of those, as many as 35% may die from infection. Sepsis is the most expensive condition treated in U.S. hospitals, accounting for $23.7 billion in costs annually, they added.
Despite high mortality rates and hospital costs, according to a Sepsis Alliance survey, only 66% of Americans are aware of the term sepsis. Only 19% can name the four primary signs of the condition: Altered body Temperature, an Infection, Mental decline, and feeling Extremely ill, or “TIME.”
Getting the appropriate antibiotics to sepsis patients quickly can greatly improve chances of survival, but Dr. Bashir said the current method of confirming the diagnosis is too slow.
Blood cultures too slow
Traditional blood cultures are among the most common methods of determining if a patient has a bloodstream infection. But the process takes about 24 hours for a culture to detect the category of bacteria and an additional day to determine exactly which bacteria is present, according to Cindy Hou, DO, infection control officer and medical director of research at Jefferson Health, Voorhees Township, New Jersey. At 72 hours, Dr. Hou said, a blood culture will finally be able to produce a “sensitivity” result, which tells doctors which antibiotics will be most effective against the pathogen.
By then, patients often are already past the point of saving. The bottom line, according to Dr. Bashir and his colleagues: Blood cultures are “too slow and cumbersome to allow for initial management of patients and thus contribute to high mortality.”
Dr. Hou called the ability to identify the type of infection in just 2.5 hours an “amazing” feat.
,” she said. “These researchers are pushing the bar for what rapid means.”
The new detection method is not yet available commercially. Dr. Bashir said he and his colleagues plan to scale their study and hope to find a way to bypass the long culture steps to identify target pathogens directly from a large volume of blood.
Dr. Hou said she believes a blood culture would still be necessary since clinicians would need sensitivity results to guide targeted treatment of infections.
“There is a lot more we need, but this paper is a call to arms for the field of rapid diagnostics to make rapid as fast as it really needs to be, but we still need to find solutions which are affordable,” Dr. Hou said.
Even without a blood culture, Dr. Bashir’s technology could improve care. Mr. Heymann said the technology could help convince clinicians worried about antibiotic resistance to prescribe treatment faster.
“We know we’re overusing antibiotics, and that’s creating a new big problem” when it comes to sepsis treatment, he said. “Getting a diagnostic read earlier is a game changer.”
Combined with a blood culture that can later confirm or help adjust the course of treatment, Dr. Hou said this new method of sepsis detection could improve care, especially in places where rapid diagnostics are not available and particularly if combined with physician education so they understand what treatment is best for various types of infection.
Mr. Heymann agreed. Sepsis Alliance also operates the Sepsis Innovation Collaborative, a group that supports public-private innovation on sepsis care.
“We’re losing someone every 90 seconds in the United States to sepsis,” Mr. Heymann said. “There is a huge opportunity to do better, and it’s this kind of innovation that is really inspiring.”
Dr. Hou is chief medical officer for Sepsis Alliance, a medical advisor for the Sepsis Innovation Collaborative, an advisor for Janssen, and a key opinion leader for T2 Biosystems. Dr. Bashir and Mr. Heymann report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Sepsis is among the most feared conditions for health care providers. These blood infections strike with such rapid intensity that treating them demands a mix of both clinical skill and luck – recognizing symptoms early enough while choosing the right drug to tame the bacterial culprit before the germs have overwhelmed the body’s immune system.
All too often, sepsis wins the race. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, at least 1.7 million people in this country develop sepsis annually. About 350,000 die during hospitalization or are discharged to hospice.
But new research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offers hope that clinicians may one day be able to detect and treat sepsis more quickly.
The researchers broke down whole blood and dried it by heating, resulting in a solid porous structure with the bacterial DNA trapped inside. They then used chemicals – primers and enzymes – to reach inside the porous structure and amplify the target DNA.
The team was able to detect four causes of bloodstream infections – the bacteria methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA), gram-negative Escherichia coli, and the fungal species Candida albicans. They validated their method against clinical laboratory results that used blood cultures and DNA analyses to detect sepsis.
The technique took just 2.5 hours and required roughly 1 mL of blood, according to the researchers.
“This technique can have broad applications in detection of bacterial infection and presence of bacteria in large values of blood,” Rashid Bashir, PhD, dean of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign’s Grainger College of Engineering, and a co-author of the study, told this news organization.
While infection control experts and sepsis prevention advocates said the new study offers no clues about how to treat sepsis once detected, they hope the innovation eventually could save lives.
A rapid killer
Sepsis occurs when the body overreacts to an infection. The severe response can lead to tissue damage, organ failure, and death.
Thomas Heymann, MBA, president and CEO of Sepsis Alliance, an advocacy group, said mortality can rise 8% for each hour treatment is delayed.
Infants born prematurely are particularly vulnerable. Dr. Bashir and his colleagues noted that 25% of all infants admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit are diagnosed with sepsis. Of those, as many as 35% may die from infection. Sepsis is the most expensive condition treated in U.S. hospitals, accounting for $23.7 billion in costs annually, they added.
Despite high mortality rates and hospital costs, according to a Sepsis Alliance survey, only 66% of Americans are aware of the term sepsis. Only 19% can name the four primary signs of the condition: Altered body Temperature, an Infection, Mental decline, and feeling Extremely ill, or “TIME.”
Getting the appropriate antibiotics to sepsis patients quickly can greatly improve chances of survival, but Dr. Bashir said the current method of confirming the diagnosis is too slow.
Blood cultures too slow
Traditional blood cultures are among the most common methods of determining if a patient has a bloodstream infection. But the process takes about 24 hours for a culture to detect the category of bacteria and an additional day to determine exactly which bacteria is present, according to Cindy Hou, DO, infection control officer and medical director of research at Jefferson Health, Voorhees Township, New Jersey. At 72 hours, Dr. Hou said, a blood culture will finally be able to produce a “sensitivity” result, which tells doctors which antibiotics will be most effective against the pathogen.
By then, patients often are already past the point of saving. The bottom line, according to Dr. Bashir and his colleagues: Blood cultures are “too slow and cumbersome to allow for initial management of patients and thus contribute to high mortality.”
Dr. Hou called the ability to identify the type of infection in just 2.5 hours an “amazing” feat.
,” she said. “These researchers are pushing the bar for what rapid means.”
The new detection method is not yet available commercially. Dr. Bashir said he and his colleagues plan to scale their study and hope to find a way to bypass the long culture steps to identify target pathogens directly from a large volume of blood.
Dr. Hou said she believes a blood culture would still be necessary since clinicians would need sensitivity results to guide targeted treatment of infections.
“There is a lot more we need, but this paper is a call to arms for the field of rapid diagnostics to make rapid as fast as it really needs to be, but we still need to find solutions which are affordable,” Dr. Hou said.
Even without a blood culture, Dr. Bashir’s technology could improve care. Mr. Heymann said the technology could help convince clinicians worried about antibiotic resistance to prescribe treatment faster.
“We know we’re overusing antibiotics, and that’s creating a new big problem” when it comes to sepsis treatment, he said. “Getting a diagnostic read earlier is a game changer.”
Combined with a blood culture that can later confirm or help adjust the course of treatment, Dr. Hou said this new method of sepsis detection could improve care, especially in places where rapid diagnostics are not available and particularly if combined with physician education so they understand what treatment is best for various types of infection.
Mr. Heymann agreed. Sepsis Alliance also operates the Sepsis Innovation Collaborative, a group that supports public-private innovation on sepsis care.
“We’re losing someone every 90 seconds in the United States to sepsis,” Mr. Heymann said. “There is a huge opportunity to do better, and it’s this kind of innovation that is really inspiring.”
Dr. Hou is chief medical officer for Sepsis Alliance, a medical advisor for the Sepsis Innovation Collaborative, an advisor for Janssen, and a key opinion leader for T2 Biosystems. Dr. Bashir and Mr. Heymann report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Docs gain new flexibility treating osteoporosis from steroids
Doctors caring for patients taking steroids now have broader flexibility for which drugs to use to prevent osteoporosis associated with the medications.
The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) has released an updated guideline that advises treatment providers on when and how long to prescribe therapies that prevent or treat glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis (GIOP). Since the ACR last updated the guideline in 2017, the Food and Drug Administration has approved new treatments for osteoporosis, which are now included in the recommendations.
The new guideline also advises physicians that they may need to transition patients to a second treatment after concluding a first course – so-called sequential therapy – to better protect them against bone loss and fracture. It also offers detailed instructions for which drugs to use, when, and how long these medications should be administered for patients taking glucocorticoids over a long period of time.
The guideline’s inclusion of sequential therapy is significant and will be helpful to practicing clinicians, according to S.B. Tanner IV, MD, director of the Osteoporosis Clinic at Vanderbilt Health, Nashville, Tenn.
“For the first time, the ACR has offered guidance for starting and stopping treatments,” Dr. Tanner said. “This guideline supports awareness that osteoporosis is lifelong – something that will consistently need monitoring.”
An estimated 2.5 million Americans use glucocorticoids, according to a 2013 study in Arthritis Care & Research. Meanwhile, a 2019 study of residents in Denmark found 3% of people in the country were prescribed glucocorticoids annually. That study estimated 54% of glucocorticoid users were female and found the percentage of people taking glucocorticoids increased with age.
Glucocorticoids are used to treat a variety of inflammatory conditions, from multiple sclerosis to lupus, and often are prescribed to transplant patients to prevent their immune systems from rejecting new organs. When taken over time these medications can cause osteoporosis, which in turn raises the risk of fracture.
More than 10% of patients who receive long-term glucocorticoid treatment are diagnosed with clinical fractures. In addition, even low-dose glucocorticoid therapy is associated with a bone loss rate of 10% per year for a patient.
Osteoporosis prevention
After stopping some prevention therapies for GIOP, a high risk of bone loss or fracture still persists, according to Linda A. Russell, MD, director of the Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone Health Center for the Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, and co-principal investigator of the new guideline.
“We wanted to be sure the need for sequential treatment is adequately communicated, including to patients who might not know they need to start a second medication,” Dr. Russell said.
Physicians and patients must be aware that when completing a course of one GIOP treatment, another drug for the condition should be started, as specified in the guideline.
“Early intervention can prevent glucocorticoid-induced fractures that can lead to substantial morbidity and increased mortality,” said Mary Beth Humphrey, MD, PhD, interim vice president for research at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City and co-principal investigator of the ACR guideline.
Janet Rubin, MD, vice chair for research in the Department of medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said she is hopeful the guideline will change practice.”The risk of bone loss, fractures, and osteoporosis due to glucocorticoids has been known since the beginning of time, but the guideline reinforces the risk and treatment strategies for rheumatologists,” she said. “Such recommendations are known to influence doctor prescribing habits.”
Anyone can fracture
While age and other risk factors, including menopause, increase the risk of developing GIOP, bone loss can occur rapidly for a patient of any age.
Even a glucocorticoid dose as low as 2.5 mg will increase the risk of vertebral fractures, with some occurring as soon as 3 months after treatment starts, Dr. Humphrey said. For patients taking up to 7.5 mg daily, the risk of vertebral fracture doubles. Doses greater than 10 mg daily for more than 3 months raise the likelihood of a vertebral fracture by a factor of 14, and result in a 300% increase in the likelihood of hip fractures, according to Dr. Humphrey.
“When on steroids, even patients with high bone density scores can fracture,” Dr. Tanner said. “The 2017 guideline was almost too elaborate in its effort to calculate risk. The updated guideline acknowledges moderate risk and suggests that this is a group of patients who need treatment.”
Rank ordering adds flexibility
The updated ACR guideline no longer ranks medications based on patient fracture data, side effects, cost care, and whether the drug is provided through injection, pill, or IV.
All of the preventive treatments the panel recommends reduce the risk of steroid-induced bone loss, Dr. Humphrey said.
“We thought the 2017 guideline was too restrictive,” Dr. Russell said. “We’re giving physicians and patients more leeway to choose a medication based on their preferences.”
Patient preference of delivery mechanism – such as a desire for pills only – can now be weighed more heavily into drug treatment decisions.
“In the exam room, there are three dynamics going on: What the patient wants, what the doctor knows is most effective, and what the insurer will pay,” Dr. Tanner said. “Doing away with rank ordering opens up the conversation beyond cost to consider all those factors.”
The guideline team conducted a systematic literature review for clinical questions on nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic treatment addressed in the 2017 guideline, and for questions on new pharmacologic treatments, discontinuation of medications, and sequential and combination therapy. The voting panel consisted of two patient representatives and 13 experts representing adult and pediatric rheumatology and endocrinology, nephrology, and gastroenterology.
A full manuscript has been submitted for publication in Arthritis & Rheumatology and Arthritis Care and Research for peer review, and is expected to publish in early 2023.
Dr. Humphrey and Dr. Russell, the co-principal investigators for the guideline, and Dr. Rubin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Tanner reported a current research grant funded by Amgen through the University of Alabama at Birmingham and being a paid course instructor for the International Society for Clinical Densitometry bone density course, Osteoporosis Essentials.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Doctors caring for patients taking steroids now have broader flexibility for which drugs to use to prevent osteoporosis associated with the medications.
The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) has released an updated guideline that advises treatment providers on when and how long to prescribe therapies that prevent or treat glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis (GIOP). Since the ACR last updated the guideline in 2017, the Food and Drug Administration has approved new treatments for osteoporosis, which are now included in the recommendations.
The new guideline also advises physicians that they may need to transition patients to a second treatment after concluding a first course – so-called sequential therapy – to better protect them against bone loss and fracture. It also offers detailed instructions for which drugs to use, when, and how long these medications should be administered for patients taking glucocorticoids over a long period of time.
The guideline’s inclusion of sequential therapy is significant and will be helpful to practicing clinicians, according to S.B. Tanner IV, MD, director of the Osteoporosis Clinic at Vanderbilt Health, Nashville, Tenn.
“For the first time, the ACR has offered guidance for starting and stopping treatments,” Dr. Tanner said. “This guideline supports awareness that osteoporosis is lifelong – something that will consistently need monitoring.”
An estimated 2.5 million Americans use glucocorticoids, according to a 2013 study in Arthritis Care & Research. Meanwhile, a 2019 study of residents in Denmark found 3% of people in the country were prescribed glucocorticoids annually. That study estimated 54% of glucocorticoid users were female and found the percentage of people taking glucocorticoids increased with age.
Glucocorticoids are used to treat a variety of inflammatory conditions, from multiple sclerosis to lupus, and often are prescribed to transplant patients to prevent their immune systems from rejecting new organs. When taken over time these medications can cause osteoporosis, which in turn raises the risk of fracture.
More than 10% of patients who receive long-term glucocorticoid treatment are diagnosed with clinical fractures. In addition, even low-dose glucocorticoid therapy is associated with a bone loss rate of 10% per year for a patient.
Osteoporosis prevention
After stopping some prevention therapies for GIOP, a high risk of bone loss or fracture still persists, according to Linda A. Russell, MD, director of the Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone Health Center for the Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, and co-principal investigator of the new guideline.
“We wanted to be sure the need for sequential treatment is adequately communicated, including to patients who might not know they need to start a second medication,” Dr. Russell said.
Physicians and patients must be aware that when completing a course of one GIOP treatment, another drug for the condition should be started, as specified in the guideline.
“Early intervention can prevent glucocorticoid-induced fractures that can lead to substantial morbidity and increased mortality,” said Mary Beth Humphrey, MD, PhD, interim vice president for research at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City and co-principal investigator of the ACR guideline.
Janet Rubin, MD, vice chair for research in the Department of medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said she is hopeful the guideline will change practice.”The risk of bone loss, fractures, and osteoporosis due to glucocorticoids has been known since the beginning of time, but the guideline reinforces the risk and treatment strategies for rheumatologists,” she said. “Such recommendations are known to influence doctor prescribing habits.”
Anyone can fracture
While age and other risk factors, including menopause, increase the risk of developing GIOP, bone loss can occur rapidly for a patient of any age.
Even a glucocorticoid dose as low as 2.5 mg will increase the risk of vertebral fractures, with some occurring as soon as 3 months after treatment starts, Dr. Humphrey said. For patients taking up to 7.5 mg daily, the risk of vertebral fracture doubles. Doses greater than 10 mg daily for more than 3 months raise the likelihood of a vertebral fracture by a factor of 14, and result in a 300% increase in the likelihood of hip fractures, according to Dr. Humphrey.
“When on steroids, even patients with high bone density scores can fracture,” Dr. Tanner said. “The 2017 guideline was almost too elaborate in its effort to calculate risk. The updated guideline acknowledges moderate risk and suggests that this is a group of patients who need treatment.”
Rank ordering adds flexibility
The updated ACR guideline no longer ranks medications based on patient fracture data, side effects, cost care, and whether the drug is provided through injection, pill, or IV.
All of the preventive treatments the panel recommends reduce the risk of steroid-induced bone loss, Dr. Humphrey said.
“We thought the 2017 guideline was too restrictive,” Dr. Russell said. “We’re giving physicians and patients more leeway to choose a medication based on their preferences.”
Patient preference of delivery mechanism – such as a desire for pills only – can now be weighed more heavily into drug treatment decisions.
“In the exam room, there are three dynamics going on: What the patient wants, what the doctor knows is most effective, and what the insurer will pay,” Dr. Tanner said. “Doing away with rank ordering opens up the conversation beyond cost to consider all those factors.”
The guideline team conducted a systematic literature review for clinical questions on nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic treatment addressed in the 2017 guideline, and for questions on new pharmacologic treatments, discontinuation of medications, and sequential and combination therapy. The voting panel consisted of two patient representatives and 13 experts representing adult and pediatric rheumatology and endocrinology, nephrology, and gastroenterology.
A full manuscript has been submitted for publication in Arthritis & Rheumatology and Arthritis Care and Research for peer review, and is expected to publish in early 2023.
Dr. Humphrey and Dr. Russell, the co-principal investigators for the guideline, and Dr. Rubin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Tanner reported a current research grant funded by Amgen through the University of Alabama at Birmingham and being a paid course instructor for the International Society for Clinical Densitometry bone density course, Osteoporosis Essentials.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Doctors caring for patients taking steroids now have broader flexibility for which drugs to use to prevent osteoporosis associated with the medications.
The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) has released an updated guideline that advises treatment providers on when and how long to prescribe therapies that prevent or treat glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis (GIOP). Since the ACR last updated the guideline in 2017, the Food and Drug Administration has approved new treatments for osteoporosis, which are now included in the recommendations.
The new guideline also advises physicians that they may need to transition patients to a second treatment after concluding a first course – so-called sequential therapy – to better protect them against bone loss and fracture. It also offers detailed instructions for which drugs to use, when, and how long these medications should be administered for patients taking glucocorticoids over a long period of time.
The guideline’s inclusion of sequential therapy is significant and will be helpful to practicing clinicians, according to S.B. Tanner IV, MD, director of the Osteoporosis Clinic at Vanderbilt Health, Nashville, Tenn.
“For the first time, the ACR has offered guidance for starting and stopping treatments,” Dr. Tanner said. “This guideline supports awareness that osteoporosis is lifelong – something that will consistently need monitoring.”
An estimated 2.5 million Americans use glucocorticoids, according to a 2013 study in Arthritis Care & Research. Meanwhile, a 2019 study of residents in Denmark found 3% of people in the country were prescribed glucocorticoids annually. That study estimated 54% of glucocorticoid users were female and found the percentage of people taking glucocorticoids increased with age.
Glucocorticoids are used to treat a variety of inflammatory conditions, from multiple sclerosis to lupus, and often are prescribed to transplant patients to prevent their immune systems from rejecting new organs. When taken over time these medications can cause osteoporosis, which in turn raises the risk of fracture.
More than 10% of patients who receive long-term glucocorticoid treatment are diagnosed with clinical fractures. In addition, even low-dose glucocorticoid therapy is associated with a bone loss rate of 10% per year for a patient.
Osteoporosis prevention
After stopping some prevention therapies for GIOP, a high risk of bone loss or fracture still persists, according to Linda A. Russell, MD, director of the Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone Health Center for the Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, and co-principal investigator of the new guideline.
“We wanted to be sure the need for sequential treatment is adequately communicated, including to patients who might not know they need to start a second medication,” Dr. Russell said.
Physicians and patients must be aware that when completing a course of one GIOP treatment, another drug for the condition should be started, as specified in the guideline.
“Early intervention can prevent glucocorticoid-induced fractures that can lead to substantial morbidity and increased mortality,” said Mary Beth Humphrey, MD, PhD, interim vice president for research at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City and co-principal investigator of the ACR guideline.
Janet Rubin, MD, vice chair for research in the Department of medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said she is hopeful the guideline will change practice.”The risk of bone loss, fractures, and osteoporosis due to glucocorticoids has been known since the beginning of time, but the guideline reinforces the risk and treatment strategies for rheumatologists,” she said. “Such recommendations are known to influence doctor prescribing habits.”
Anyone can fracture
While age and other risk factors, including menopause, increase the risk of developing GIOP, bone loss can occur rapidly for a patient of any age.
Even a glucocorticoid dose as low as 2.5 mg will increase the risk of vertebral fractures, with some occurring as soon as 3 months after treatment starts, Dr. Humphrey said. For patients taking up to 7.5 mg daily, the risk of vertebral fracture doubles. Doses greater than 10 mg daily for more than 3 months raise the likelihood of a vertebral fracture by a factor of 14, and result in a 300% increase in the likelihood of hip fractures, according to Dr. Humphrey.
“When on steroids, even patients with high bone density scores can fracture,” Dr. Tanner said. “The 2017 guideline was almost too elaborate in its effort to calculate risk. The updated guideline acknowledges moderate risk and suggests that this is a group of patients who need treatment.”
Rank ordering adds flexibility
The updated ACR guideline no longer ranks medications based on patient fracture data, side effects, cost care, and whether the drug is provided through injection, pill, or IV.
All of the preventive treatments the panel recommends reduce the risk of steroid-induced bone loss, Dr. Humphrey said.
“We thought the 2017 guideline was too restrictive,” Dr. Russell said. “We’re giving physicians and patients more leeway to choose a medication based on their preferences.”
Patient preference of delivery mechanism – such as a desire for pills only – can now be weighed more heavily into drug treatment decisions.
“In the exam room, there are three dynamics going on: What the patient wants, what the doctor knows is most effective, and what the insurer will pay,” Dr. Tanner said. “Doing away with rank ordering opens up the conversation beyond cost to consider all those factors.”
The guideline team conducted a systematic literature review for clinical questions on nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic treatment addressed in the 2017 guideline, and for questions on new pharmacologic treatments, discontinuation of medications, and sequential and combination therapy. The voting panel consisted of two patient representatives and 13 experts representing adult and pediatric rheumatology and endocrinology, nephrology, and gastroenterology.
A full manuscript has been submitted for publication in Arthritis & Rheumatology and Arthritis Care and Research for peer review, and is expected to publish in early 2023.
Dr. Humphrey and Dr. Russell, the co-principal investigators for the guideline, and Dr. Rubin have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Tanner reported a current research grant funded by Amgen through the University of Alabama at Birmingham and being a paid course instructor for the International Society for Clinical Densitometry bone density course, Osteoporosis Essentials.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Early PT for lower back pain sends fewer patients to specialists
The study found that patients who were referred to physical therapists within 2 weeks of seeing their physicians for LBP were significantly less likely to make visits to a chiropractor, pain specialist, or orthopedist.
Patients also filed fewer claims for advanced imaging or epidural steroid injections and were half as likely to visit an emergency department (ED) within 30 days compared with those who did not start early physical therapy (PT), according to the study, published in BMC Health Services Research.
“Some lower back pain resolves itself, but often, that recovery is incomplete, leading to increased health care and opioid use,” said Richard L. Skolasky Jr., ScD, director of the Spine Outcomes Research Center at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, and a coauthor of the study. “Our hope is this study helps more primary care physicians embrace nonpharmacologic, first-line treatments.”
LBP accounts for an estimated $1.8 billion annually in health care costs among the patients who do not receive surgery for the condition, according to a 2019 JAMA analysis of commercial insurance and Medicare claims. In addition, LBP accounts for approximately 2.7 million ED visits annually, a 2010 study published in Spine showed.
Dr. Skolasky and his colleagues assessed 980,000 outpatient claims over a period of almost 4 years that ended in 2014. The researchers used Truven MarketScan, a group of U.S.-based administrative commercial health care insurance claims databases. Patients who had a history of conditions that cause LBP, such as endometriosis and spinal fracture, were excluded from the analysis. Approximately 11% of patients in the total sample received early PT, defined as PT received within 2 weeks of their initial visit to a primary care clinician.
After adjustment for sex, age, and Charlson Morbidity Index, patients who received PT were about half as likely as were those who didn’t to see chiropractor or a pain specialist or have an ED visit within 30 days of their initial appointment. They were about one-third as likely to receive an epidural steroid injection, and they were 43% less likely to have claims for advanced imaging, according to the researchers (P < .001 for all).
In addition, the cost of claims was lower for patients who received early PT ($747 vs. $799), the researchers found.
The effects diminished somewhat over time but remained statistically significant.
At 1 year, patients who received early PT had slightly higher health care costs than did those who did not undergo PT ($2,588 vs. $2,510). Dr. Skolasky hypothesized that the increase was attributable to therapy visits and not having as many specialist visits. He said additional research could investigate whether early PT reduces the health care costs associated with LBP over a longer period.
“Physical therapy addresses a patient’s current pain and physical limitations and arms them with resources, exercises, and nonpharmacologic ways to deal with recurrences,” Dr. Skolasky said in an interview. “If we can follow patients even longer than a year, we may see a longer-term reduction in cost.”
Michael Knight, MD, associate chief quality and population health officer at George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates, Washington, said he refers patients to physical therapists if their pain has not resolved within 2 weeks of stretching at home and taking over-the-counter analgesics.
Dr. Knight recalled one patient who had strained her back doing yard work. When home exercises did not help, Dr. Knight referred her to a physical therapist, who created a customized treatment plan. Within 4 weeks, her condition had improved.
“She was then able to take what she learned and continue those exercises at home,” Dr. Knight said. “She got better, and we avoided MRI costs for her and the health care system.”
Dr. Skolasky and his fellow researchers found significant regional differences in the number of patients referred for early PT. The odds of PT utilization within 90 days after the onset of LBP were 1.6 times higher in the Northeast and 0.82 times lower in the South.
“There are health care deserts,” Dr. Skolasky said. “This study should spark a conversation about the inadequacy of distribution of physical resources to meet the needs of patients with LBP.”
Dr. Skolasky said telehealth could be one option for serving patients in these health care deserts – including those with LBP. He has conducted several studies that concluded that patients benefit from and are happy with telehealth PT.
Dr. Knight said Dr. Skolasky’s study will help patients better understand their options.
“Sometimes patients have an expectation – they want an MRI or pain medication when it’s not necessary,” he said. “This kind of evidence helps strengthen our recommendation for early intervention that really can help.”
The study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Aging. Dr. Skolasky reports no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The study found that patients who were referred to physical therapists within 2 weeks of seeing their physicians for LBP were significantly less likely to make visits to a chiropractor, pain specialist, or orthopedist.
Patients also filed fewer claims for advanced imaging or epidural steroid injections and were half as likely to visit an emergency department (ED) within 30 days compared with those who did not start early physical therapy (PT), according to the study, published in BMC Health Services Research.
“Some lower back pain resolves itself, but often, that recovery is incomplete, leading to increased health care and opioid use,” said Richard L. Skolasky Jr., ScD, director of the Spine Outcomes Research Center at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, and a coauthor of the study. “Our hope is this study helps more primary care physicians embrace nonpharmacologic, first-line treatments.”
LBP accounts for an estimated $1.8 billion annually in health care costs among the patients who do not receive surgery for the condition, according to a 2019 JAMA analysis of commercial insurance and Medicare claims. In addition, LBP accounts for approximately 2.7 million ED visits annually, a 2010 study published in Spine showed.
Dr. Skolasky and his colleagues assessed 980,000 outpatient claims over a period of almost 4 years that ended in 2014. The researchers used Truven MarketScan, a group of U.S.-based administrative commercial health care insurance claims databases. Patients who had a history of conditions that cause LBP, such as endometriosis and spinal fracture, were excluded from the analysis. Approximately 11% of patients in the total sample received early PT, defined as PT received within 2 weeks of their initial visit to a primary care clinician.
After adjustment for sex, age, and Charlson Morbidity Index, patients who received PT were about half as likely as were those who didn’t to see chiropractor or a pain specialist or have an ED visit within 30 days of their initial appointment. They were about one-third as likely to receive an epidural steroid injection, and they were 43% less likely to have claims for advanced imaging, according to the researchers (P < .001 for all).
In addition, the cost of claims was lower for patients who received early PT ($747 vs. $799), the researchers found.
The effects diminished somewhat over time but remained statistically significant.
At 1 year, patients who received early PT had slightly higher health care costs than did those who did not undergo PT ($2,588 vs. $2,510). Dr. Skolasky hypothesized that the increase was attributable to therapy visits and not having as many specialist visits. He said additional research could investigate whether early PT reduces the health care costs associated with LBP over a longer period.
“Physical therapy addresses a patient’s current pain and physical limitations and arms them with resources, exercises, and nonpharmacologic ways to deal with recurrences,” Dr. Skolasky said in an interview. “If we can follow patients even longer than a year, we may see a longer-term reduction in cost.”
Michael Knight, MD, associate chief quality and population health officer at George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates, Washington, said he refers patients to physical therapists if their pain has not resolved within 2 weeks of stretching at home and taking over-the-counter analgesics.
Dr. Knight recalled one patient who had strained her back doing yard work. When home exercises did not help, Dr. Knight referred her to a physical therapist, who created a customized treatment plan. Within 4 weeks, her condition had improved.
“She was then able to take what she learned and continue those exercises at home,” Dr. Knight said. “She got better, and we avoided MRI costs for her and the health care system.”
Dr. Skolasky and his fellow researchers found significant regional differences in the number of patients referred for early PT. The odds of PT utilization within 90 days after the onset of LBP were 1.6 times higher in the Northeast and 0.82 times lower in the South.
“There are health care deserts,” Dr. Skolasky said. “This study should spark a conversation about the inadequacy of distribution of physical resources to meet the needs of patients with LBP.”
Dr. Skolasky said telehealth could be one option for serving patients in these health care deserts – including those with LBP. He has conducted several studies that concluded that patients benefit from and are happy with telehealth PT.
Dr. Knight said Dr. Skolasky’s study will help patients better understand their options.
“Sometimes patients have an expectation – they want an MRI or pain medication when it’s not necessary,” he said. “This kind of evidence helps strengthen our recommendation for early intervention that really can help.”
The study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Aging. Dr. Skolasky reports no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The study found that patients who were referred to physical therapists within 2 weeks of seeing their physicians for LBP were significantly less likely to make visits to a chiropractor, pain specialist, or orthopedist.
Patients also filed fewer claims for advanced imaging or epidural steroid injections and were half as likely to visit an emergency department (ED) within 30 days compared with those who did not start early physical therapy (PT), according to the study, published in BMC Health Services Research.
“Some lower back pain resolves itself, but often, that recovery is incomplete, leading to increased health care and opioid use,” said Richard L. Skolasky Jr., ScD, director of the Spine Outcomes Research Center at Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, and a coauthor of the study. “Our hope is this study helps more primary care physicians embrace nonpharmacologic, first-line treatments.”
LBP accounts for an estimated $1.8 billion annually in health care costs among the patients who do not receive surgery for the condition, according to a 2019 JAMA analysis of commercial insurance and Medicare claims. In addition, LBP accounts for approximately 2.7 million ED visits annually, a 2010 study published in Spine showed.
Dr. Skolasky and his colleagues assessed 980,000 outpatient claims over a period of almost 4 years that ended in 2014. The researchers used Truven MarketScan, a group of U.S.-based administrative commercial health care insurance claims databases. Patients who had a history of conditions that cause LBP, such as endometriosis and spinal fracture, were excluded from the analysis. Approximately 11% of patients in the total sample received early PT, defined as PT received within 2 weeks of their initial visit to a primary care clinician.
After adjustment for sex, age, and Charlson Morbidity Index, patients who received PT were about half as likely as were those who didn’t to see chiropractor or a pain specialist or have an ED visit within 30 days of their initial appointment. They were about one-third as likely to receive an epidural steroid injection, and they were 43% less likely to have claims for advanced imaging, according to the researchers (P < .001 for all).
In addition, the cost of claims was lower for patients who received early PT ($747 vs. $799), the researchers found.
The effects diminished somewhat over time but remained statistically significant.
At 1 year, patients who received early PT had slightly higher health care costs than did those who did not undergo PT ($2,588 vs. $2,510). Dr. Skolasky hypothesized that the increase was attributable to therapy visits and not having as many specialist visits. He said additional research could investigate whether early PT reduces the health care costs associated with LBP over a longer period.
“Physical therapy addresses a patient’s current pain and physical limitations and arms them with resources, exercises, and nonpharmacologic ways to deal with recurrences,” Dr. Skolasky said in an interview. “If we can follow patients even longer than a year, we may see a longer-term reduction in cost.”
Michael Knight, MD, associate chief quality and population health officer at George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates, Washington, said he refers patients to physical therapists if their pain has not resolved within 2 weeks of stretching at home and taking over-the-counter analgesics.
Dr. Knight recalled one patient who had strained her back doing yard work. When home exercises did not help, Dr. Knight referred her to a physical therapist, who created a customized treatment plan. Within 4 weeks, her condition had improved.
“She was then able to take what she learned and continue those exercises at home,” Dr. Knight said. “She got better, and we avoided MRI costs for her and the health care system.”
Dr. Skolasky and his fellow researchers found significant regional differences in the number of patients referred for early PT. The odds of PT utilization within 90 days after the onset of LBP were 1.6 times higher in the Northeast and 0.82 times lower in the South.
“There are health care deserts,” Dr. Skolasky said. “This study should spark a conversation about the inadequacy of distribution of physical resources to meet the needs of patients with LBP.”
Dr. Skolasky said telehealth could be one option for serving patients in these health care deserts – including those with LBP. He has conducted several studies that concluded that patients benefit from and are happy with telehealth PT.
Dr. Knight said Dr. Skolasky’s study will help patients better understand their options.
“Sometimes patients have an expectation – they want an MRI or pain medication when it’s not necessary,” he said. “This kind of evidence helps strengthen our recommendation for early intervention that really can help.”
The study was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Aging. Dr. Skolasky reports no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.