Can asthma incidence be reduced by attention to sleep disorders?

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Changed
Fri, 04/14/2023 - 09:01

 

Early detection and management of sleep disorders could reduce asthma incidence, according to a large-scale prospective study that included nearly half a million participants. The study was published in BMJ Open Respiratory Research.

The population-attributable risk analysis indicated that 19% of asthma cases could be prevented through improving sleep traits. The investigators took into consideration polygenic risk scores (PRSs) for asthma and comprehensive sleep scores encompassing five sleep traits.

Sleep quality is generally recognized as a nongenetic driver of asthma. Poor sleep quality and obstructive sleep apnea have been reported particularly among those with severe disease. In addition, asthma is known to adversely affect sleep duration, sleep quality, napping, and daytime sleepiness.

The researchers suggest that the relationship between sleep and asthma is bidirectional, given that sleep disorders (sleep of short duration, insomnia, evening chronotype [“night owl”], snoring, excessive daytime sleepiness) are associated with specific chronic inflammatory reactions. It has remained unclear, however, whether poor sleep reflects a higher risk of early asthma progression.

Genetic factors also contribute to asthma risk, but highly variable heritability suggests that the nongenetic exposures play an important role. “However, whether healthy nongenetic exposure could decrease the risk of asthma and mitigate the adverse effect of genetic risk remains largely unknown,” the authors state. They hypothesize that healthier sleep could decrease future asthma risk and mitigate the hazards of genetic effects.

Using data from the UK Biobank, a national large, prospective cohort drawn from 22 U.K. assessment centers, they investigated the independent and combined effects of sleep pattern and PRSs on asthma incidence.

In the UK Biobank cohort (455,405 adults aged 38-73 years, who were enrolled from 2006 to 2010), 17,836 were diagnosed with asthma over 10 years of follow-up. PRSs were constructed for each participant on the basis of their having any of 17 single-nucleotide polymorphisms that are significantly associated with asthma. Participants were stratified into three groups: those at high genetic risk, those at intermediate genetic risk, and those at low genetic risk. Around 1 in 3 participants were classified as being at high genetic risk (150,429), and another third (151,970) were classified as being at intermediate risk. The remainder were classified as being at low risk. Some 7,105 people at high genetic risk and 5,748 at intermediate genetic risk were diagnosed with asthma during the monitoring period.

Comprehensive sleep scores, which ranged from 0 to 5, were constructed on the basis of self-reported sleep traits. Higher scores represented healthier sleep patterns. A healthy sleep pattern was defined as early chronotype; getting from 7 to 9 hours of sleep every night; never or rare insomnia; no snoring; and no frequent daytime sleepiness. On the basis of their responses, 73,223 people met the criteria for a healthy sleep pattern; 284,267, an intermediate sleep pattern; and 97,915, a poor sleep pattern.

“Compared with non-cases, asthma cases were more likely to have lower education levels, unhealthy sleep traits and patterns, obesity, higher PRS, more smoking, more alcohol consumption, hypertension, diabetes, depression, gastroesophageal reflux. and more air pollution exposure,” the authors report. All five healthy sleep traits were independently associated with lower risk for asthma. Never/rare insomnia and sleep duration of 7-9 hours a night were seemingly the most influential; they were associated with risk reductions of 25% and 20%, respectively.

Analysis showed that, compared with the low-risk group, the hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the highest PRS group and the poor sleep pattern group were 1.47 (95% CI, 1.41-1.52) and 1.55 (95% CI, 1.45-1.65), respectively.

Risk was twofold higher in the presence of a combination of poor sleep and high genetic susceptibility (HR, 2.22; 95% CI, 1.97-2.49; P < .001). Conversely, a healthy sleep pattern was associated with a lower risk of asthma in the low (HR, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.50-0.64), intermediate (HR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.53-0.67), and high genetic susceptibility groups (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.57-0.70). A population-attributable risk analysis indicated that improving these sleep traits would prevent 19% of asthma cases. Also, a subset analysis suggested that a healthy sleep pattern might reduce the risk of asthma among those at high genetic risk by 37%.

The study findings suggest that analysis of sleep patterns is warranted for all asthma patients, said coauthor Qing Wang, PhD, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, Jinan, China, in an interview. “In our results, the effects of sleep and genetics were independent. Therefore, what we learned about the effects of sleep on asthma could be applied to all the patients, including those with a high or low genetic predisposition. In addition, we believe that intervening among those with high genetic predisposition could be more beneficial since they are more likely to have asthma. However, because this study is observational, a large clinical trial is absolutely needed to provide causal evidence, especially before guidelines modifications can be considered.”
 

 

 

Complex and multifactorial

“Addressing relevant asthma comorbid conditions continues to be an integral part of asthma care,” commented Diego J. Maselli, MD, associate professor of medicine and interim chief, division of pulmonary diseases and critical care, UT Health, San Antonio, in an interview. “There is mounting evidence that sleep patterns and obstructive sleep apnea may influence asthma control. This association is complex and multifactorial. It is important to remember that obstructive sleep apnea may coexist with other conditions, such as obesity and gastroesophageal reflux disease, that in turn can also worsen asthma control and influence clinical outcomes.

CHEST
Dr. Diego J. Maselli

“Yet, even after controlling for these factors, sleep disturbances have been associated with poor asthma outcomes. It is reasonable, particularly in patients with uncontrolled and/or severe asthma, to screen for sleep disturbances. There are multiple questionnaires and clinical tools that can be employed to screen for coexisting sleep apnea and other conditions. Although genetic testing has shown some promise in identifying individuals at risk, these assays are not widely available and are not ready yet for routine clinical practice. Therefore, sleep studies should be reserved for patients that have symptoms and test positive for screening questionnaires and other tools.

“The study by Xiang and colleagues adds to the field of study, but further evidence is required to change practice guidelines at this time. Fortunately, sleep studies are readily available now with more widespread use of home testing, so patients can be easily tested. The majority third-party payers have identified that diagnosing these disorders is cost-effective and are able to reimburse sleep studies,” Dr. Maselli concluded.

The research was funded by the Future Program for Young Scholars and National Key Research and Development Program. The study authors and Dr. Maselli have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

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Early detection and management of sleep disorders could reduce asthma incidence, according to a large-scale prospective study that included nearly half a million participants. The study was published in BMJ Open Respiratory Research.

The population-attributable risk analysis indicated that 19% of asthma cases could be prevented through improving sleep traits. The investigators took into consideration polygenic risk scores (PRSs) for asthma and comprehensive sleep scores encompassing five sleep traits.

Sleep quality is generally recognized as a nongenetic driver of asthma. Poor sleep quality and obstructive sleep apnea have been reported particularly among those with severe disease. In addition, asthma is known to adversely affect sleep duration, sleep quality, napping, and daytime sleepiness.

The researchers suggest that the relationship between sleep and asthma is bidirectional, given that sleep disorders (sleep of short duration, insomnia, evening chronotype [“night owl”], snoring, excessive daytime sleepiness) are associated with specific chronic inflammatory reactions. It has remained unclear, however, whether poor sleep reflects a higher risk of early asthma progression.

Genetic factors also contribute to asthma risk, but highly variable heritability suggests that the nongenetic exposures play an important role. “However, whether healthy nongenetic exposure could decrease the risk of asthma and mitigate the adverse effect of genetic risk remains largely unknown,” the authors state. They hypothesize that healthier sleep could decrease future asthma risk and mitigate the hazards of genetic effects.

Using data from the UK Biobank, a national large, prospective cohort drawn from 22 U.K. assessment centers, they investigated the independent and combined effects of sleep pattern and PRSs on asthma incidence.

In the UK Biobank cohort (455,405 adults aged 38-73 years, who were enrolled from 2006 to 2010), 17,836 were diagnosed with asthma over 10 years of follow-up. PRSs were constructed for each participant on the basis of their having any of 17 single-nucleotide polymorphisms that are significantly associated with asthma. Participants were stratified into three groups: those at high genetic risk, those at intermediate genetic risk, and those at low genetic risk. Around 1 in 3 participants were classified as being at high genetic risk (150,429), and another third (151,970) were classified as being at intermediate risk. The remainder were classified as being at low risk. Some 7,105 people at high genetic risk and 5,748 at intermediate genetic risk were diagnosed with asthma during the monitoring period.

Comprehensive sleep scores, which ranged from 0 to 5, were constructed on the basis of self-reported sleep traits. Higher scores represented healthier sleep patterns. A healthy sleep pattern was defined as early chronotype; getting from 7 to 9 hours of sleep every night; never or rare insomnia; no snoring; and no frequent daytime sleepiness. On the basis of their responses, 73,223 people met the criteria for a healthy sleep pattern; 284,267, an intermediate sleep pattern; and 97,915, a poor sleep pattern.

“Compared with non-cases, asthma cases were more likely to have lower education levels, unhealthy sleep traits and patterns, obesity, higher PRS, more smoking, more alcohol consumption, hypertension, diabetes, depression, gastroesophageal reflux. and more air pollution exposure,” the authors report. All five healthy sleep traits were independently associated with lower risk for asthma. Never/rare insomnia and sleep duration of 7-9 hours a night were seemingly the most influential; they were associated with risk reductions of 25% and 20%, respectively.

Analysis showed that, compared with the low-risk group, the hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the highest PRS group and the poor sleep pattern group were 1.47 (95% CI, 1.41-1.52) and 1.55 (95% CI, 1.45-1.65), respectively.

Risk was twofold higher in the presence of a combination of poor sleep and high genetic susceptibility (HR, 2.22; 95% CI, 1.97-2.49; P < .001). Conversely, a healthy sleep pattern was associated with a lower risk of asthma in the low (HR, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.50-0.64), intermediate (HR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.53-0.67), and high genetic susceptibility groups (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.57-0.70). A population-attributable risk analysis indicated that improving these sleep traits would prevent 19% of asthma cases. Also, a subset analysis suggested that a healthy sleep pattern might reduce the risk of asthma among those at high genetic risk by 37%.

The study findings suggest that analysis of sleep patterns is warranted for all asthma patients, said coauthor Qing Wang, PhD, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, Jinan, China, in an interview. “In our results, the effects of sleep and genetics were independent. Therefore, what we learned about the effects of sleep on asthma could be applied to all the patients, including those with a high or low genetic predisposition. In addition, we believe that intervening among those with high genetic predisposition could be more beneficial since they are more likely to have asthma. However, because this study is observational, a large clinical trial is absolutely needed to provide causal evidence, especially before guidelines modifications can be considered.”
 

 

 

Complex and multifactorial

“Addressing relevant asthma comorbid conditions continues to be an integral part of asthma care,” commented Diego J. Maselli, MD, associate professor of medicine and interim chief, division of pulmonary diseases and critical care, UT Health, San Antonio, in an interview. “There is mounting evidence that sleep patterns and obstructive sleep apnea may influence asthma control. This association is complex and multifactorial. It is important to remember that obstructive sleep apnea may coexist with other conditions, such as obesity and gastroesophageal reflux disease, that in turn can also worsen asthma control and influence clinical outcomes.

CHEST
Dr. Diego J. Maselli

“Yet, even after controlling for these factors, sleep disturbances have been associated with poor asthma outcomes. It is reasonable, particularly in patients with uncontrolled and/or severe asthma, to screen for sleep disturbances. There are multiple questionnaires and clinical tools that can be employed to screen for coexisting sleep apnea and other conditions. Although genetic testing has shown some promise in identifying individuals at risk, these assays are not widely available and are not ready yet for routine clinical practice. Therefore, sleep studies should be reserved for patients that have symptoms and test positive for screening questionnaires and other tools.

“The study by Xiang and colleagues adds to the field of study, but further evidence is required to change practice guidelines at this time. Fortunately, sleep studies are readily available now with more widespread use of home testing, so patients can be easily tested. The majority third-party payers have identified that diagnosing these disorders is cost-effective and are able to reimburse sleep studies,” Dr. Maselli concluded.

The research was funded by the Future Program for Young Scholars and National Key Research and Development Program. The study authors and Dr. Maselli have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

 

Early detection and management of sleep disorders could reduce asthma incidence, according to a large-scale prospective study that included nearly half a million participants. The study was published in BMJ Open Respiratory Research.

The population-attributable risk analysis indicated that 19% of asthma cases could be prevented through improving sleep traits. The investigators took into consideration polygenic risk scores (PRSs) for asthma and comprehensive sleep scores encompassing five sleep traits.

Sleep quality is generally recognized as a nongenetic driver of asthma. Poor sleep quality and obstructive sleep apnea have been reported particularly among those with severe disease. In addition, asthma is known to adversely affect sleep duration, sleep quality, napping, and daytime sleepiness.

The researchers suggest that the relationship between sleep and asthma is bidirectional, given that sleep disorders (sleep of short duration, insomnia, evening chronotype [“night owl”], snoring, excessive daytime sleepiness) are associated with specific chronic inflammatory reactions. It has remained unclear, however, whether poor sleep reflects a higher risk of early asthma progression.

Genetic factors also contribute to asthma risk, but highly variable heritability suggests that the nongenetic exposures play an important role. “However, whether healthy nongenetic exposure could decrease the risk of asthma and mitigate the adverse effect of genetic risk remains largely unknown,” the authors state. They hypothesize that healthier sleep could decrease future asthma risk and mitigate the hazards of genetic effects.

Using data from the UK Biobank, a national large, prospective cohort drawn from 22 U.K. assessment centers, they investigated the independent and combined effects of sleep pattern and PRSs on asthma incidence.

In the UK Biobank cohort (455,405 adults aged 38-73 years, who were enrolled from 2006 to 2010), 17,836 were diagnosed with asthma over 10 years of follow-up. PRSs were constructed for each participant on the basis of their having any of 17 single-nucleotide polymorphisms that are significantly associated with asthma. Participants were stratified into three groups: those at high genetic risk, those at intermediate genetic risk, and those at low genetic risk. Around 1 in 3 participants were classified as being at high genetic risk (150,429), and another third (151,970) were classified as being at intermediate risk. The remainder were classified as being at low risk. Some 7,105 people at high genetic risk and 5,748 at intermediate genetic risk were diagnosed with asthma during the monitoring period.

Comprehensive sleep scores, which ranged from 0 to 5, were constructed on the basis of self-reported sleep traits. Higher scores represented healthier sleep patterns. A healthy sleep pattern was defined as early chronotype; getting from 7 to 9 hours of sleep every night; never or rare insomnia; no snoring; and no frequent daytime sleepiness. On the basis of their responses, 73,223 people met the criteria for a healthy sleep pattern; 284,267, an intermediate sleep pattern; and 97,915, a poor sleep pattern.

“Compared with non-cases, asthma cases were more likely to have lower education levels, unhealthy sleep traits and patterns, obesity, higher PRS, more smoking, more alcohol consumption, hypertension, diabetes, depression, gastroesophageal reflux. and more air pollution exposure,” the authors report. All five healthy sleep traits were independently associated with lower risk for asthma. Never/rare insomnia and sleep duration of 7-9 hours a night were seemingly the most influential; they were associated with risk reductions of 25% and 20%, respectively.

Analysis showed that, compared with the low-risk group, the hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the highest PRS group and the poor sleep pattern group were 1.47 (95% CI, 1.41-1.52) and 1.55 (95% CI, 1.45-1.65), respectively.

Risk was twofold higher in the presence of a combination of poor sleep and high genetic susceptibility (HR, 2.22; 95% CI, 1.97-2.49; P < .001). Conversely, a healthy sleep pattern was associated with a lower risk of asthma in the low (HR, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.50-0.64), intermediate (HR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.53-0.67), and high genetic susceptibility groups (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.57-0.70). A population-attributable risk analysis indicated that improving these sleep traits would prevent 19% of asthma cases. Also, a subset analysis suggested that a healthy sleep pattern might reduce the risk of asthma among those at high genetic risk by 37%.

The study findings suggest that analysis of sleep patterns is warranted for all asthma patients, said coauthor Qing Wang, PhD, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, Jinan, China, in an interview. “In our results, the effects of sleep and genetics were independent. Therefore, what we learned about the effects of sleep on asthma could be applied to all the patients, including those with a high or low genetic predisposition. In addition, we believe that intervening among those with high genetic predisposition could be more beneficial since they are more likely to have asthma. However, because this study is observational, a large clinical trial is absolutely needed to provide causal evidence, especially before guidelines modifications can be considered.”
 

 

 

Complex and multifactorial

“Addressing relevant asthma comorbid conditions continues to be an integral part of asthma care,” commented Diego J. Maselli, MD, associate professor of medicine and interim chief, division of pulmonary diseases and critical care, UT Health, San Antonio, in an interview. “There is mounting evidence that sleep patterns and obstructive sleep apnea may influence asthma control. This association is complex and multifactorial. It is important to remember that obstructive sleep apnea may coexist with other conditions, such as obesity and gastroesophageal reflux disease, that in turn can also worsen asthma control and influence clinical outcomes.

CHEST
Dr. Diego J. Maselli

“Yet, even after controlling for these factors, sleep disturbances have been associated with poor asthma outcomes. It is reasonable, particularly in patients with uncontrolled and/or severe asthma, to screen for sleep disturbances. There are multiple questionnaires and clinical tools that can be employed to screen for coexisting sleep apnea and other conditions. Although genetic testing has shown some promise in identifying individuals at risk, these assays are not widely available and are not ready yet for routine clinical practice. Therefore, sleep studies should be reserved for patients that have symptoms and test positive for screening questionnaires and other tools.

“The study by Xiang and colleagues adds to the field of study, but further evidence is required to change practice guidelines at this time. Fortunately, sleep studies are readily available now with more widespread use of home testing, so patients can be easily tested. The majority third-party payers have identified that diagnosing these disorders is cost-effective and are able to reimburse sleep studies,” Dr. Maselli concluded.

The research was funded by the Future Program for Young Scholars and National Key Research and Development Program. The study authors and Dr. Maselli have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

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Outpatient costs top drug costs in some insured, working women with breast cancer

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 04/11/2023 - 08:03

Among a sample of younger women with invasive breast cancer and employer-sponsored insurance, outpatient-related out-of-pocket (OOP) costs were greater than drug costs.

For these same patients, prescriptions were largely for nonproprietary anticancer drugs and entailed limited OOP costs. For women with high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) and commercially driven health plans (CDHPs), OOP costs were higher, compared with coverage by more generous plans, according to the Research Letter published in JAMA Network Open.

“You would expect that people undergoing cancer treatment should not have to face very high out-of-pocket costs associated with care regardless of treatment modality because their treatment is largely guideline-indicated, and they have no choices,” stated corresponding author Rena Conti, PhD, associate professor with the school of business, Boston University, in an interview. “If you are diagnosed with cancer and undergoing treatment, you’re following the recommendation of your doctor, and your doctor is following standard protocols for treatment. In that scenario, Economics 101 suggests that people should not have to pay anything or [should pay] very little, especially for things that are cheap and are known to be effective, because there’s no overuse. Where normally we think that out-of-pocket costs are meant to control overuse, people with breast cancer are not opting to get more than indicated chemotherapy or radiation.”

The analysis of 25,224 women with invasive breast cancer diagnosis and claims for 1 or more of 14 oral anticancer drugs revealed that OOP costs for nondrug outpatient claims represented 79.0% of total costs. OOP drug costs were modest, with a 30-day supply ranging from $0.57-$0.60 for tamoxifen to $134.08-$141.07 for palbociclib.

“We were interested in understanding to what extent women who are insured with private insurance are exposed to out-of-pocket costs for standard breast cancer treatment, both in looking at drugs, but also the other aspects of the treatments they undergo.”

High OOP costs for the oral anticancer prescription drugs that are central to breast cancer treatment are associated with treatment nonadherence and discontinuation. Little has been known, however, about OOP costs of treatment associated with invasive breast cancer among employer-insured women younger than 65 years, the paper says.

“This population may face significant financial burdens related to long-term hormonal-based prevention and enrollment in high-deductible health plans and consumer-driven health plans,” the authors state in their paper.

In the cross-sectional study, which used the national 2018 Marative MarketScan database, 23.1% were HDHP- or CDHP-insured. Fifty-one percent had no OOP costs for drugs. The total mean estimated OOP cost, however, was $1,502.23 per patient, with inpatient costs representing only $112.41 (95% confidence interval, $112.40-$112.42); outpatient costs were $1,186.27 (95% CI, $1,185.67-$1,188.16). Pharmaceutical costs were $203.55 (95% CI, $203.34-$203.78).“We were surprised to find that the vast majority were getting breast cancer treatment with older, very effective, very safe, relatively inexpensive drugs and had limited out-of-pocket costs with some variation – higher costs for the few receiving newer, expensive drugs. The backbone of treatment is the older, generic drugs, which are cheap for both the insurers and the patients. But we found also that women are facing high out-of-pocket costs for nondrug-based therapy – specifically for doctor visits, getting check-ups, diagnostic scans, and maybe other types of treatment, as well. ... It’s a very different story than the one typically being told about the preponderance of out-of-pocket costs being drug-related,” Dr. Conti said.

 

 

The explanation may be that progress in breast cancer treatment over the last decades has led to effective treatments that are largely now inexpensive. The situation is different with ovarian cancer and many blood cancers such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia and multiple myeloma. For them, the new, innovative, safe, and effective drugs are very expensive, she noted.

“I think that insurers can modulate the out-of-pocket costs associated with drug treatment through formulary design and other tools they have. It’s less easy for them to modulate out-of-pocket costs associated with other modalties of care. Still, for medical care that is obviously necessary, there needs to be a cap on what women should have to pay,” Dr. Conti said.

A further concern raised by Dr. Conti is shrinking Medicaid coverage with the expiration of COVID-specific expanded Medicaid eligibility.

“Policy folks are closely watching the size of uninsured populations and also the growing importance of the high deductible and consumer-driven plans in which patients face high out-of-pocket first dollar coverage for care. With Medicaid rolls shrinking, we’ll see more people in low-premium, not well-insured plans. Americans’ exposure to higher costs for guideline-recommended care might grow, especially as more of them are independent contractors in the gig economy and not working for big corporations.”

“We worry that if and when they get a diagnosis of breast cancer, which is common among younger women, they are going to be faced with costs associated with their care that are going to have to be paid out-of-pocket – and it’s not going to be for the drug, it’s the other types of care. Doctors should know that the younger patient population that they are serving might be facing burdens associated with their care.”

Dr. Conti added, “Among women who are underinsured, there is a clear burden associated with cancer treatment. Reform efforts have largely focused on reducing out-of-pocket costs for seniors and have not focused much on guideline-consistent care for those under 65 who are working. Their burden can be quite onerous and cause financial harm for them and their families, resulting in worse health,” she continued, “Policy attention should go to unburdening people who have a serious diagnosis and who really have to be treated. There’s very good evidence that imposing additional out-of-pocket costs for guideline-consistent care causes people to make really hard decisions about paying rent versus paying for meds, about splitting pills and not doing all the things their physician is recommending, and about staying in jobs they don’t love but are locked into [because of health coverage].”

Dr. Conti concluded, “The good news is that, in breast cancer, the drugs work and are cheap. But the bad news is that there are many people who are underinsured and therefore, their care still has a high out-of-pocket burden. ACA radically changed working age people’s ability to qualify for insurance and be insured, but that didn’t mean that they are really well-covered when they become sick. They are still in peril over high out-of-pocket costs because of the proliferation of plans that are very skimpy. Women think they are insured until they get a diagnosis.”

Noting study limitations, Dr. Conti said that OOP costs cited are an underestimate, because many patients will also be treated for other comorbidities and complications related to treatment.

The authors disclosed no conflicts of interest. The study was funded by the American Cancer Society.

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Among a sample of younger women with invasive breast cancer and employer-sponsored insurance, outpatient-related out-of-pocket (OOP) costs were greater than drug costs.

For these same patients, prescriptions were largely for nonproprietary anticancer drugs and entailed limited OOP costs. For women with high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) and commercially driven health plans (CDHPs), OOP costs were higher, compared with coverage by more generous plans, according to the Research Letter published in JAMA Network Open.

“You would expect that people undergoing cancer treatment should not have to face very high out-of-pocket costs associated with care regardless of treatment modality because their treatment is largely guideline-indicated, and they have no choices,” stated corresponding author Rena Conti, PhD, associate professor with the school of business, Boston University, in an interview. “If you are diagnosed with cancer and undergoing treatment, you’re following the recommendation of your doctor, and your doctor is following standard protocols for treatment. In that scenario, Economics 101 suggests that people should not have to pay anything or [should pay] very little, especially for things that are cheap and are known to be effective, because there’s no overuse. Where normally we think that out-of-pocket costs are meant to control overuse, people with breast cancer are not opting to get more than indicated chemotherapy or radiation.”

The analysis of 25,224 women with invasive breast cancer diagnosis and claims for 1 or more of 14 oral anticancer drugs revealed that OOP costs for nondrug outpatient claims represented 79.0% of total costs. OOP drug costs were modest, with a 30-day supply ranging from $0.57-$0.60 for tamoxifen to $134.08-$141.07 for palbociclib.

“We were interested in understanding to what extent women who are insured with private insurance are exposed to out-of-pocket costs for standard breast cancer treatment, both in looking at drugs, but also the other aspects of the treatments they undergo.”

High OOP costs for the oral anticancer prescription drugs that are central to breast cancer treatment are associated with treatment nonadherence and discontinuation. Little has been known, however, about OOP costs of treatment associated with invasive breast cancer among employer-insured women younger than 65 years, the paper says.

“This population may face significant financial burdens related to long-term hormonal-based prevention and enrollment in high-deductible health plans and consumer-driven health plans,” the authors state in their paper.

In the cross-sectional study, which used the national 2018 Marative MarketScan database, 23.1% were HDHP- or CDHP-insured. Fifty-one percent had no OOP costs for drugs. The total mean estimated OOP cost, however, was $1,502.23 per patient, with inpatient costs representing only $112.41 (95% confidence interval, $112.40-$112.42); outpatient costs were $1,186.27 (95% CI, $1,185.67-$1,188.16). Pharmaceutical costs were $203.55 (95% CI, $203.34-$203.78).“We were surprised to find that the vast majority were getting breast cancer treatment with older, very effective, very safe, relatively inexpensive drugs and had limited out-of-pocket costs with some variation – higher costs for the few receiving newer, expensive drugs. The backbone of treatment is the older, generic drugs, which are cheap for both the insurers and the patients. But we found also that women are facing high out-of-pocket costs for nondrug-based therapy – specifically for doctor visits, getting check-ups, diagnostic scans, and maybe other types of treatment, as well. ... It’s a very different story than the one typically being told about the preponderance of out-of-pocket costs being drug-related,” Dr. Conti said.

 

 

The explanation may be that progress in breast cancer treatment over the last decades has led to effective treatments that are largely now inexpensive. The situation is different with ovarian cancer and many blood cancers such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia and multiple myeloma. For them, the new, innovative, safe, and effective drugs are very expensive, she noted.

“I think that insurers can modulate the out-of-pocket costs associated with drug treatment through formulary design and other tools they have. It’s less easy for them to modulate out-of-pocket costs associated with other modalties of care. Still, for medical care that is obviously necessary, there needs to be a cap on what women should have to pay,” Dr. Conti said.

A further concern raised by Dr. Conti is shrinking Medicaid coverage with the expiration of COVID-specific expanded Medicaid eligibility.

“Policy folks are closely watching the size of uninsured populations and also the growing importance of the high deductible and consumer-driven plans in which patients face high out-of-pocket first dollar coverage for care. With Medicaid rolls shrinking, we’ll see more people in low-premium, not well-insured plans. Americans’ exposure to higher costs for guideline-recommended care might grow, especially as more of them are independent contractors in the gig economy and not working for big corporations.”

“We worry that if and when they get a diagnosis of breast cancer, which is common among younger women, they are going to be faced with costs associated with their care that are going to have to be paid out-of-pocket – and it’s not going to be for the drug, it’s the other types of care. Doctors should know that the younger patient population that they are serving might be facing burdens associated with their care.”

Dr. Conti added, “Among women who are underinsured, there is a clear burden associated with cancer treatment. Reform efforts have largely focused on reducing out-of-pocket costs for seniors and have not focused much on guideline-consistent care for those under 65 who are working. Their burden can be quite onerous and cause financial harm for them and their families, resulting in worse health,” she continued, “Policy attention should go to unburdening people who have a serious diagnosis and who really have to be treated. There’s very good evidence that imposing additional out-of-pocket costs for guideline-consistent care causes people to make really hard decisions about paying rent versus paying for meds, about splitting pills and not doing all the things their physician is recommending, and about staying in jobs they don’t love but are locked into [because of health coverage].”

Dr. Conti concluded, “The good news is that, in breast cancer, the drugs work and are cheap. But the bad news is that there are many people who are underinsured and therefore, their care still has a high out-of-pocket burden. ACA radically changed working age people’s ability to qualify for insurance and be insured, but that didn’t mean that they are really well-covered when they become sick. They are still in peril over high out-of-pocket costs because of the proliferation of plans that are very skimpy. Women think they are insured until they get a diagnosis.”

Noting study limitations, Dr. Conti said that OOP costs cited are an underestimate, because many patients will also be treated for other comorbidities and complications related to treatment.

The authors disclosed no conflicts of interest. The study was funded by the American Cancer Society.

Among a sample of younger women with invasive breast cancer and employer-sponsored insurance, outpatient-related out-of-pocket (OOP) costs were greater than drug costs.

For these same patients, prescriptions were largely for nonproprietary anticancer drugs and entailed limited OOP costs. For women with high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) and commercially driven health plans (CDHPs), OOP costs were higher, compared with coverage by more generous plans, according to the Research Letter published in JAMA Network Open.

“You would expect that people undergoing cancer treatment should not have to face very high out-of-pocket costs associated with care regardless of treatment modality because their treatment is largely guideline-indicated, and they have no choices,” stated corresponding author Rena Conti, PhD, associate professor with the school of business, Boston University, in an interview. “If you are diagnosed with cancer and undergoing treatment, you’re following the recommendation of your doctor, and your doctor is following standard protocols for treatment. In that scenario, Economics 101 suggests that people should not have to pay anything or [should pay] very little, especially for things that are cheap and are known to be effective, because there’s no overuse. Where normally we think that out-of-pocket costs are meant to control overuse, people with breast cancer are not opting to get more than indicated chemotherapy or radiation.”

The analysis of 25,224 women with invasive breast cancer diagnosis and claims for 1 or more of 14 oral anticancer drugs revealed that OOP costs for nondrug outpatient claims represented 79.0% of total costs. OOP drug costs were modest, with a 30-day supply ranging from $0.57-$0.60 for tamoxifen to $134.08-$141.07 for palbociclib.

“We were interested in understanding to what extent women who are insured with private insurance are exposed to out-of-pocket costs for standard breast cancer treatment, both in looking at drugs, but also the other aspects of the treatments they undergo.”

High OOP costs for the oral anticancer prescription drugs that are central to breast cancer treatment are associated with treatment nonadherence and discontinuation. Little has been known, however, about OOP costs of treatment associated with invasive breast cancer among employer-insured women younger than 65 years, the paper says.

“This population may face significant financial burdens related to long-term hormonal-based prevention and enrollment in high-deductible health plans and consumer-driven health plans,” the authors state in their paper.

In the cross-sectional study, which used the national 2018 Marative MarketScan database, 23.1% were HDHP- or CDHP-insured. Fifty-one percent had no OOP costs for drugs. The total mean estimated OOP cost, however, was $1,502.23 per patient, with inpatient costs representing only $112.41 (95% confidence interval, $112.40-$112.42); outpatient costs were $1,186.27 (95% CI, $1,185.67-$1,188.16). Pharmaceutical costs were $203.55 (95% CI, $203.34-$203.78).“We were surprised to find that the vast majority were getting breast cancer treatment with older, very effective, very safe, relatively inexpensive drugs and had limited out-of-pocket costs with some variation – higher costs for the few receiving newer, expensive drugs. The backbone of treatment is the older, generic drugs, which are cheap for both the insurers and the patients. But we found also that women are facing high out-of-pocket costs for nondrug-based therapy – specifically for doctor visits, getting check-ups, diagnostic scans, and maybe other types of treatment, as well. ... It’s a very different story than the one typically being told about the preponderance of out-of-pocket costs being drug-related,” Dr. Conti said.

 

 

The explanation may be that progress in breast cancer treatment over the last decades has led to effective treatments that are largely now inexpensive. The situation is different with ovarian cancer and many blood cancers such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia and multiple myeloma. For them, the new, innovative, safe, and effective drugs are very expensive, she noted.

“I think that insurers can modulate the out-of-pocket costs associated with drug treatment through formulary design and other tools they have. It’s less easy for them to modulate out-of-pocket costs associated with other modalties of care. Still, for medical care that is obviously necessary, there needs to be a cap on what women should have to pay,” Dr. Conti said.

A further concern raised by Dr. Conti is shrinking Medicaid coverage with the expiration of COVID-specific expanded Medicaid eligibility.

“Policy folks are closely watching the size of uninsured populations and also the growing importance of the high deductible and consumer-driven plans in which patients face high out-of-pocket first dollar coverage for care. With Medicaid rolls shrinking, we’ll see more people in low-premium, not well-insured plans. Americans’ exposure to higher costs for guideline-recommended care might grow, especially as more of them are independent contractors in the gig economy and not working for big corporations.”

“We worry that if and when they get a diagnosis of breast cancer, which is common among younger women, they are going to be faced with costs associated with their care that are going to have to be paid out-of-pocket – and it’s not going to be for the drug, it’s the other types of care. Doctors should know that the younger patient population that they are serving might be facing burdens associated with their care.”

Dr. Conti added, “Among women who are underinsured, there is a clear burden associated with cancer treatment. Reform efforts have largely focused on reducing out-of-pocket costs for seniors and have not focused much on guideline-consistent care for those under 65 who are working. Their burden can be quite onerous and cause financial harm for them and their families, resulting in worse health,” she continued, “Policy attention should go to unburdening people who have a serious diagnosis and who really have to be treated. There’s very good evidence that imposing additional out-of-pocket costs for guideline-consistent care causes people to make really hard decisions about paying rent versus paying for meds, about splitting pills and not doing all the things their physician is recommending, and about staying in jobs they don’t love but are locked into [because of health coverage].”

Dr. Conti concluded, “The good news is that, in breast cancer, the drugs work and are cheap. But the bad news is that there are many people who are underinsured and therefore, their care still has a high out-of-pocket burden. ACA radically changed working age people’s ability to qualify for insurance and be insured, but that didn’t mean that they are really well-covered when they become sick. They are still in peril over high out-of-pocket costs because of the proliferation of plans that are very skimpy. Women think they are insured until they get a diagnosis.”

Noting study limitations, Dr. Conti said that OOP costs cited are an underestimate, because many patients will also be treated for other comorbidities and complications related to treatment.

The authors disclosed no conflicts of interest. The study was funded by the American Cancer Society.

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Mucus plugging phenotype associated with adverse features

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Thu, 03/30/2023 - 12:04

In a real-life clinic setting study aimed at determining phenotypic associations of mucus plugging in moderate to severe asthma patients, those with mucus plugging had worse lung function, more frequent severe exacerbations needing oral corticosteroids, and higher T2 biomarkers.

Rory Chan, MBChB, of the University of Dundee (Scotland) and colleagues found conversely that the presence of these features was associated with an increased likelihood of mucus plugging.

Important pathophysiological characteristics of persistent asthma include mucus plugging, goblet cell hyperplasia, smooth muscle hypertrophy, and eosinophilic infiltration. Mucus plugging contributes significantly to airway obstruction and death in acute asthma, the investigators stated, noting further that the understanding of mucus plugging’s role in chronic asthma is increasing.

Their retrospective cohort study included 126 patients with respiratory physician-diagnosed moderate to severe asthma who had attended their clinic (January 2016–March 2022) and were receiving daily doses of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) (≥ 800 mcg) and a second-line controller. All had prior high-resolution CT (HRCT) scans with mucus plugs identified by an experienced thoracic radiologist. Prior to the start of biologic therapy, a mucus plug score (MPS) signifying the number of affected lung segments (0-20) was calculated subsequently and considered along with pulmonary function testing, T2 inflammatory markers, asthma control data, and measures of peripheral blood eosinophils (PBE), as well as total IgG and IgE antibodies to Apergillus fumigatus.

The analysis showed that reduced forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) ratio (OR, 3.01; 95% confidence interval, 1.14-7.97), two or more exacerbations per year (OR, 5.00; 95% CI, 1.55-16.11), raised PBE (OR, 3.23; 95% CI, 1.16-8.96), raised total IgE (OR, 3.20; 95% CI, 1.09-9.37), and Aspergillus fumigatus IgE titers (OR, 9.37; 95% CI, 1.82-48.20) all conferred significantly higher likelihood of the presence of mucus plugging. Highest prevalence of mucus plugs was in the right and left lower lung lobes (about 26% vs. about 10% and 14% in the middle and upper lobes).

Adjusted ORs in patients with impaired FEV1/FVC, showed the likelihood of mucus plugging to be 67% higher. In those with frequent exacerbations, they were 80% higher, and in those with raised PBE and IgE, 69% higher. Patients without mucus plugging had preserved FEV1 and FEV1/FVC.

Asthma patients with mucus plugging in the study exhibited higher levels of routinely measured T2 biomarkers, including blood eosinophils, FeNO, and total IgE, with median values all exceeding traditionally accepted cut points. Although patients with mucus plugging were receiving significantly higher ICS doses, and despite the suppressive effect of ICS on FeNO, they still had higher FeNO levels. “We therefore postulate that asthma patients with the MP phenotype might potentially experience greater treatment response to biologics targeting the underlying inflammatory endotype,” the investigators stated, adding that “the presence of mucus plugging should be recognized as a treatable trait for patients with severe asthma in terms of targeting therapy with biologics.”

They wrote that, “in a real-life clinic setting, the presence of mucus plugging detected on HRCT was associated with more severe exacerbations, more severe airflow obstruction, and greater T2 inflammation. This, in turn, suggests that imaging should be part of the routine workup of patients with poorly controlled severe asthma.”

In an accompanying editorial, Jorge Cedano, MD, Jiwoong Choi, PhD, and Mario Castro, MD, MPH, of the University of Kansas, Kansas City, cited that the prevalence and contribution of mucus plugging in the pathophysiology and morbidity of uncontrolled asthma is much greater than has been appreciated. They focused particularly on the suggestion that, even after adjusting for confounders, molds such as Apergillus may play a causal role, along with blood eosinophils, fractional exhaled nitric oxide, and total IgE, in T2 inflammation.

While current biologic therapies targeting the T2 phenotype have not yet been shown to reverse the progressive loss of lung function or lung remodeling process, the editorialists referenced a recent post hoc analysis of the CASCADE study showing mucus plugging reduction with the biologic tezepelumab versus placebo correlated with lung function improvement. “At least 20% of patients with moderate to severe asthma will experience progressive decline in lung function, more exacerbations, and worse asthma control despite the use of controller therapies. If physicians could identify the MP phenotype using computed tomography, then potentially earlier treatment with biologic therapy may improve asthma control and prevent future decline in lung function,” they said.

The study limitations listed included its retrospective observational nature and the fact that the study had only one senior thoracic radiologist interpreting the lung scans.

The study authors cited numerous conflicts of interest with pharmaceutical companies and medical societies. Dr. Castro reported affiliation or involvement in multiple organizations or entities with a financial or nonfinancial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in the article.

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In a real-life clinic setting study aimed at determining phenotypic associations of mucus plugging in moderate to severe asthma patients, those with mucus plugging had worse lung function, more frequent severe exacerbations needing oral corticosteroids, and higher T2 biomarkers.

Rory Chan, MBChB, of the University of Dundee (Scotland) and colleagues found conversely that the presence of these features was associated with an increased likelihood of mucus plugging.

Important pathophysiological characteristics of persistent asthma include mucus plugging, goblet cell hyperplasia, smooth muscle hypertrophy, and eosinophilic infiltration. Mucus plugging contributes significantly to airway obstruction and death in acute asthma, the investigators stated, noting further that the understanding of mucus plugging’s role in chronic asthma is increasing.

Their retrospective cohort study included 126 patients with respiratory physician-diagnosed moderate to severe asthma who had attended their clinic (January 2016–March 2022) and were receiving daily doses of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) (≥ 800 mcg) and a second-line controller. All had prior high-resolution CT (HRCT) scans with mucus plugs identified by an experienced thoracic radiologist. Prior to the start of biologic therapy, a mucus plug score (MPS) signifying the number of affected lung segments (0-20) was calculated subsequently and considered along with pulmonary function testing, T2 inflammatory markers, asthma control data, and measures of peripheral blood eosinophils (PBE), as well as total IgG and IgE antibodies to Apergillus fumigatus.

The analysis showed that reduced forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) ratio (OR, 3.01; 95% confidence interval, 1.14-7.97), two or more exacerbations per year (OR, 5.00; 95% CI, 1.55-16.11), raised PBE (OR, 3.23; 95% CI, 1.16-8.96), raised total IgE (OR, 3.20; 95% CI, 1.09-9.37), and Aspergillus fumigatus IgE titers (OR, 9.37; 95% CI, 1.82-48.20) all conferred significantly higher likelihood of the presence of mucus plugging. Highest prevalence of mucus plugs was in the right and left lower lung lobes (about 26% vs. about 10% and 14% in the middle and upper lobes).

Adjusted ORs in patients with impaired FEV1/FVC, showed the likelihood of mucus plugging to be 67% higher. In those with frequent exacerbations, they were 80% higher, and in those with raised PBE and IgE, 69% higher. Patients without mucus plugging had preserved FEV1 and FEV1/FVC.

Asthma patients with mucus plugging in the study exhibited higher levels of routinely measured T2 biomarkers, including blood eosinophils, FeNO, and total IgE, with median values all exceeding traditionally accepted cut points. Although patients with mucus plugging were receiving significantly higher ICS doses, and despite the suppressive effect of ICS on FeNO, they still had higher FeNO levels. “We therefore postulate that asthma patients with the MP phenotype might potentially experience greater treatment response to biologics targeting the underlying inflammatory endotype,” the investigators stated, adding that “the presence of mucus plugging should be recognized as a treatable trait for patients with severe asthma in terms of targeting therapy with biologics.”

They wrote that, “in a real-life clinic setting, the presence of mucus plugging detected on HRCT was associated with more severe exacerbations, more severe airflow obstruction, and greater T2 inflammation. This, in turn, suggests that imaging should be part of the routine workup of patients with poorly controlled severe asthma.”

In an accompanying editorial, Jorge Cedano, MD, Jiwoong Choi, PhD, and Mario Castro, MD, MPH, of the University of Kansas, Kansas City, cited that the prevalence and contribution of mucus plugging in the pathophysiology and morbidity of uncontrolled asthma is much greater than has been appreciated. They focused particularly on the suggestion that, even after adjusting for confounders, molds such as Apergillus may play a causal role, along with blood eosinophils, fractional exhaled nitric oxide, and total IgE, in T2 inflammation.

While current biologic therapies targeting the T2 phenotype have not yet been shown to reverse the progressive loss of lung function or lung remodeling process, the editorialists referenced a recent post hoc analysis of the CASCADE study showing mucus plugging reduction with the biologic tezepelumab versus placebo correlated with lung function improvement. “At least 20% of patients with moderate to severe asthma will experience progressive decline in lung function, more exacerbations, and worse asthma control despite the use of controller therapies. If physicians could identify the MP phenotype using computed tomography, then potentially earlier treatment with biologic therapy may improve asthma control and prevent future decline in lung function,” they said.

The study limitations listed included its retrospective observational nature and the fact that the study had only one senior thoracic radiologist interpreting the lung scans.

The study authors cited numerous conflicts of interest with pharmaceutical companies and medical societies. Dr. Castro reported affiliation or involvement in multiple organizations or entities with a financial or nonfinancial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in the article.

In a real-life clinic setting study aimed at determining phenotypic associations of mucus plugging in moderate to severe asthma patients, those with mucus plugging had worse lung function, more frequent severe exacerbations needing oral corticosteroids, and higher T2 biomarkers.

Rory Chan, MBChB, of the University of Dundee (Scotland) and colleagues found conversely that the presence of these features was associated with an increased likelihood of mucus plugging.

Important pathophysiological characteristics of persistent asthma include mucus plugging, goblet cell hyperplasia, smooth muscle hypertrophy, and eosinophilic infiltration. Mucus plugging contributes significantly to airway obstruction and death in acute asthma, the investigators stated, noting further that the understanding of mucus plugging’s role in chronic asthma is increasing.

Their retrospective cohort study included 126 patients with respiratory physician-diagnosed moderate to severe asthma who had attended their clinic (January 2016–March 2022) and were receiving daily doses of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) (≥ 800 mcg) and a second-line controller. All had prior high-resolution CT (HRCT) scans with mucus plugs identified by an experienced thoracic radiologist. Prior to the start of biologic therapy, a mucus plug score (MPS) signifying the number of affected lung segments (0-20) was calculated subsequently and considered along with pulmonary function testing, T2 inflammatory markers, asthma control data, and measures of peripheral blood eosinophils (PBE), as well as total IgG and IgE antibodies to Apergillus fumigatus.

The analysis showed that reduced forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1)/forced vital capacity (FVC) ratio (OR, 3.01; 95% confidence interval, 1.14-7.97), two or more exacerbations per year (OR, 5.00; 95% CI, 1.55-16.11), raised PBE (OR, 3.23; 95% CI, 1.16-8.96), raised total IgE (OR, 3.20; 95% CI, 1.09-9.37), and Aspergillus fumigatus IgE titers (OR, 9.37; 95% CI, 1.82-48.20) all conferred significantly higher likelihood of the presence of mucus plugging. Highest prevalence of mucus plugs was in the right and left lower lung lobes (about 26% vs. about 10% and 14% in the middle and upper lobes).

Adjusted ORs in patients with impaired FEV1/FVC, showed the likelihood of mucus plugging to be 67% higher. In those with frequent exacerbations, they were 80% higher, and in those with raised PBE and IgE, 69% higher. Patients without mucus plugging had preserved FEV1 and FEV1/FVC.

Asthma patients with mucus plugging in the study exhibited higher levels of routinely measured T2 biomarkers, including blood eosinophils, FeNO, and total IgE, with median values all exceeding traditionally accepted cut points. Although patients with mucus plugging were receiving significantly higher ICS doses, and despite the suppressive effect of ICS on FeNO, they still had higher FeNO levels. “We therefore postulate that asthma patients with the MP phenotype might potentially experience greater treatment response to biologics targeting the underlying inflammatory endotype,” the investigators stated, adding that “the presence of mucus plugging should be recognized as a treatable trait for patients with severe asthma in terms of targeting therapy with biologics.”

They wrote that, “in a real-life clinic setting, the presence of mucus plugging detected on HRCT was associated with more severe exacerbations, more severe airflow obstruction, and greater T2 inflammation. This, in turn, suggests that imaging should be part of the routine workup of patients with poorly controlled severe asthma.”

In an accompanying editorial, Jorge Cedano, MD, Jiwoong Choi, PhD, and Mario Castro, MD, MPH, of the University of Kansas, Kansas City, cited that the prevalence and contribution of mucus plugging in the pathophysiology and morbidity of uncontrolled asthma is much greater than has been appreciated. They focused particularly on the suggestion that, even after adjusting for confounders, molds such as Apergillus may play a causal role, along with blood eosinophils, fractional exhaled nitric oxide, and total IgE, in T2 inflammation.

While current biologic therapies targeting the T2 phenotype have not yet been shown to reverse the progressive loss of lung function or lung remodeling process, the editorialists referenced a recent post hoc analysis of the CASCADE study showing mucus plugging reduction with the biologic tezepelumab versus placebo correlated with lung function improvement. “At least 20% of patients with moderate to severe asthma will experience progressive decline in lung function, more exacerbations, and worse asthma control despite the use of controller therapies. If physicians could identify the MP phenotype using computed tomography, then potentially earlier treatment with biologic therapy may improve asthma control and prevent future decline in lung function,” they said.

The study limitations listed included its retrospective observational nature and the fact that the study had only one senior thoracic radiologist interpreting the lung scans.

The study authors cited numerous conflicts of interest with pharmaceutical companies and medical societies. Dr. Castro reported affiliation or involvement in multiple organizations or entities with a financial or nonfinancial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in the article.

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Exercise capacity and QOL linked to significant survival benefit with endobronchial valves

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Changed
Thu, 03/30/2023 - 17:09

Independent of pulmonary function, improvement in exercise capacity and quality of life after lung volume reduction using endobronchial valves (EBV) are associated with a significant survival benefit, according to study results published in Respiratory Medicine. The benefits were independent of reduction in target lobe volume or the presence of a complete lobar atelectasis.

In patients with more severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the usual treatments of smoking cessation, pharmacological therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation aiming for symptom reduction, minimizing the burden of disease, slowing disease progression, and improving exercise tolerance fall short according to Sharyn A. Roodenburg, PhD candidate in the department of pulmonary diseases, University of Groningen (the Netherlands), and colleagues.

Lung volume reduction is generally reserved for patients with COPD that has a predominantly emphysematous phenotype and severely hyperinflated lungs. While both surgical and bronchoscopic lung volume reduction (BLVR) approaches are in use, bronchoscopic approaches are less invasive and incur lower morbidity. When technically feasible, they are generally preferred over open surgery.

BLVR using endobronchial valves (EBV), the most effective and commonly employed technique, has been shown in randomized controlled trials to improve pulmonary function, exercise capacity, and health-related quality of life.

Noting a survival benefit in prior studies among patients with complete lobar atelectasis following treatment, the authors wrote that their own clinical experience has been that significant treatment responses (pulmonary function and/or exercise capacity) observed in patients with a partial lobar atelectasis may also be associated with a survival benefit. Their aim was to evaluate whether pulmonary function, radiological, health-related quality of life, and/or exercise capacity outcome responders to EBV treatment have a survival benefit over nonresponders.

Their analysis included data collected prospectively out of four clinical trials (CHARTIS, STELVIO, IMPACT, and LIBERATE) from June 2008 to Dec. 2020 at the University Medical Center Groningen. Predetermined potential predictors of survival included change in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), change in residual volume (RV), change in RV/total lung capacity (RV/TLC) ratio, change in 6-minute walk distance (6MWD), change in total score on the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), target lobe volume reduction (TLVR), and presence of complete lobar atelectasis (defined as a TLVR of 100%).

Mean age was 61.3 years among the 428 included patients (68% women). Data on both the 6MWD and SGRQ total score at baseline and 1-year follow-up were available for 252 patients. SGRQ decreased by 8.3 points or more, and 6MWD increased by 26 meters or more over baseline. Among these patients, 113 (45%) were responders on both 6MWD and SGRQ, 49 (19%) patients were responders on 6MWD only, 31 (12%) patients on SGRQ only, and 59 (23%) were nonresponders on both. Survival was significantly worse among nonresponders on 6MWD, SGRQ, or on both. 6MWD and SGRQ response were independent predictors for improved survival time (hazard ratio, 0.50; 95% confidence interval, 0.28-0.89; P = .02 and HR, 0.54; 95% confidence interval, 0.30-0.94; P = .03, respectively). Survival was not significantly affected by the presence of complete lobar atelectasis or pulmonary function improvements.

“Especially in patients with a low FEV1 (< 50% predicted), 6-minute walk distance was found to be a better predictor for mortality than pulmonary function. A possible explanation for why change in 6-minute walk distance is a better predictor for survival after EBV treatment than the change in pulmonary function and hyperinflation might be that the 6-minute walk distance not only reflects the pulmonary limitation of these patients, but also captures the extrapulmonary manifestations of COPD, such as cardiac dysfunction, musculoskeletal disorders, fatigue, and psychological symptoms, all of which can impact survival,” the authors noted

The study received no funding, and the authors did not report any disclosures.

This article was updated 3/30/23.

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Independent of pulmonary function, improvement in exercise capacity and quality of life after lung volume reduction using endobronchial valves (EBV) are associated with a significant survival benefit, according to study results published in Respiratory Medicine. The benefits were independent of reduction in target lobe volume or the presence of a complete lobar atelectasis.

In patients with more severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the usual treatments of smoking cessation, pharmacological therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation aiming for symptom reduction, minimizing the burden of disease, slowing disease progression, and improving exercise tolerance fall short according to Sharyn A. Roodenburg, PhD candidate in the department of pulmonary diseases, University of Groningen (the Netherlands), and colleagues.

Lung volume reduction is generally reserved for patients with COPD that has a predominantly emphysematous phenotype and severely hyperinflated lungs. While both surgical and bronchoscopic lung volume reduction (BLVR) approaches are in use, bronchoscopic approaches are less invasive and incur lower morbidity. When technically feasible, they are generally preferred over open surgery.

BLVR using endobronchial valves (EBV), the most effective and commonly employed technique, has been shown in randomized controlled trials to improve pulmonary function, exercise capacity, and health-related quality of life.

Noting a survival benefit in prior studies among patients with complete lobar atelectasis following treatment, the authors wrote that their own clinical experience has been that significant treatment responses (pulmonary function and/or exercise capacity) observed in patients with a partial lobar atelectasis may also be associated with a survival benefit. Their aim was to evaluate whether pulmonary function, radiological, health-related quality of life, and/or exercise capacity outcome responders to EBV treatment have a survival benefit over nonresponders.

Their analysis included data collected prospectively out of four clinical trials (CHARTIS, STELVIO, IMPACT, and LIBERATE) from June 2008 to Dec. 2020 at the University Medical Center Groningen. Predetermined potential predictors of survival included change in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), change in residual volume (RV), change in RV/total lung capacity (RV/TLC) ratio, change in 6-minute walk distance (6MWD), change in total score on the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), target lobe volume reduction (TLVR), and presence of complete lobar atelectasis (defined as a TLVR of 100%).

Mean age was 61.3 years among the 428 included patients (68% women). Data on both the 6MWD and SGRQ total score at baseline and 1-year follow-up were available for 252 patients. SGRQ decreased by 8.3 points or more, and 6MWD increased by 26 meters or more over baseline. Among these patients, 113 (45%) were responders on both 6MWD and SGRQ, 49 (19%) patients were responders on 6MWD only, 31 (12%) patients on SGRQ only, and 59 (23%) were nonresponders on both. Survival was significantly worse among nonresponders on 6MWD, SGRQ, or on both. 6MWD and SGRQ response were independent predictors for improved survival time (hazard ratio, 0.50; 95% confidence interval, 0.28-0.89; P = .02 and HR, 0.54; 95% confidence interval, 0.30-0.94; P = .03, respectively). Survival was not significantly affected by the presence of complete lobar atelectasis or pulmonary function improvements.

“Especially in patients with a low FEV1 (< 50% predicted), 6-minute walk distance was found to be a better predictor for mortality than pulmonary function. A possible explanation for why change in 6-minute walk distance is a better predictor for survival after EBV treatment than the change in pulmonary function and hyperinflation might be that the 6-minute walk distance not only reflects the pulmonary limitation of these patients, but also captures the extrapulmonary manifestations of COPD, such as cardiac dysfunction, musculoskeletal disorders, fatigue, and psychological symptoms, all of which can impact survival,” the authors noted

The study received no funding, and the authors did not report any disclosures.

This article was updated 3/30/23.

Independent of pulmonary function, improvement in exercise capacity and quality of life after lung volume reduction using endobronchial valves (EBV) are associated with a significant survival benefit, according to study results published in Respiratory Medicine. The benefits were independent of reduction in target lobe volume or the presence of a complete lobar atelectasis.

In patients with more severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the usual treatments of smoking cessation, pharmacological therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation aiming for symptom reduction, minimizing the burden of disease, slowing disease progression, and improving exercise tolerance fall short according to Sharyn A. Roodenburg, PhD candidate in the department of pulmonary diseases, University of Groningen (the Netherlands), and colleagues.

Lung volume reduction is generally reserved for patients with COPD that has a predominantly emphysematous phenotype and severely hyperinflated lungs. While both surgical and bronchoscopic lung volume reduction (BLVR) approaches are in use, bronchoscopic approaches are less invasive and incur lower morbidity. When technically feasible, they are generally preferred over open surgery.

BLVR using endobronchial valves (EBV), the most effective and commonly employed technique, has been shown in randomized controlled trials to improve pulmonary function, exercise capacity, and health-related quality of life.

Noting a survival benefit in prior studies among patients with complete lobar atelectasis following treatment, the authors wrote that their own clinical experience has been that significant treatment responses (pulmonary function and/or exercise capacity) observed in patients with a partial lobar atelectasis may also be associated with a survival benefit. Their aim was to evaluate whether pulmonary function, radiological, health-related quality of life, and/or exercise capacity outcome responders to EBV treatment have a survival benefit over nonresponders.

Their analysis included data collected prospectively out of four clinical trials (CHARTIS, STELVIO, IMPACT, and LIBERATE) from June 2008 to Dec. 2020 at the University Medical Center Groningen. Predetermined potential predictors of survival included change in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), change in residual volume (RV), change in RV/total lung capacity (RV/TLC) ratio, change in 6-minute walk distance (6MWD), change in total score on the St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), target lobe volume reduction (TLVR), and presence of complete lobar atelectasis (defined as a TLVR of 100%).

Mean age was 61.3 years among the 428 included patients (68% women). Data on both the 6MWD and SGRQ total score at baseline and 1-year follow-up were available for 252 patients. SGRQ decreased by 8.3 points or more, and 6MWD increased by 26 meters or more over baseline. Among these patients, 113 (45%) were responders on both 6MWD and SGRQ, 49 (19%) patients were responders on 6MWD only, 31 (12%) patients on SGRQ only, and 59 (23%) were nonresponders on both. Survival was significantly worse among nonresponders on 6MWD, SGRQ, or on both. 6MWD and SGRQ response were independent predictors for improved survival time (hazard ratio, 0.50; 95% confidence interval, 0.28-0.89; P = .02 and HR, 0.54; 95% confidence interval, 0.30-0.94; P = .03, respectively). Survival was not significantly affected by the presence of complete lobar atelectasis or pulmonary function improvements.

“Especially in patients with a low FEV1 (< 50% predicted), 6-minute walk distance was found to be a better predictor for mortality than pulmonary function. A possible explanation for why change in 6-minute walk distance is a better predictor for survival after EBV treatment than the change in pulmonary function and hyperinflation might be that the 6-minute walk distance not only reflects the pulmonary limitation of these patients, but also captures the extrapulmonary manifestations of COPD, such as cardiac dysfunction, musculoskeletal disorders, fatigue, and psychological symptoms, all of which can impact survival,” the authors noted

The study received no funding, and the authors did not report any disclosures.

This article was updated 3/30/23.

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Brain imaging markers of breathlessness-expectation predict COPD rehabilitation success

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Wed, 03/22/2023 - 12:37

In an experimental medicine study of D-cycloserine given during chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) rehabilitation, only models including brain imaging markers of breathlessness-expectation successfully predicted Dyspnea-12 score improvement. D-cycloserine was independently associated with breathlessness improvement, according to original research published in Thorax.

Chronic breathlessness persisting despite maximal medical therapy is a key feature of COPD. While pulmonary rehabilitation is the best treatment for chronic breathlessness in COPD, responses to treatment are variable, with 30% deriving no clinical benefit, Sarah L. Finnegan, PhD, with the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford (England), and colleagues wrote.

While recent research has shown fear and anxiety to be key components of the expectation that plays an important role in the mechanisms and maintenance of breathlessness, expectation-related effects have not previously been considered in prediction studies of pulmonary rehabilitation outcomes. The authors’ prior research showed a clear correlation between improvements in breathlessness through pulmonary rehabilitation and expectation-related brain activity in areas that include the anterior insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and prefrontal cortex. That research methodology, however, did not attempt to predict individual responses.

The current study focused on brain activity changes within preselected regions associated with breathlessness-expectation and body and symptom perception. Its purpose was to predict improvements in breathlessness during pulmonary rehabilitation by analyzing baseline data from a longitudinal experimental medicine study of D-cycloserine on breathlessness during pulmonary rehabilitation. D-cycloserine, a partial agonist of brain N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, was chosen because of its effects on neural plasticity and influence on brain expectation mechanisms associated with cognitive behavioral therapies. The authors hypothesized that baseline brain activity in response to breathlessness-related expectation would predict improvement in breathlessness through pulmonary rehabilitation, with D-cycloserine emerging as a significant factor in the prediction model.

The researchers recruited 71 participants (18 women, median age 71 years [46-85 years]) with mild to moderate COPD immediately prior to enrollment in a National Health Service–prescribed course of pulmonary rehabilitation. They were randomized double-blind to receive either 250 mg oral D-cycloserine or a matched placebo. Participants received a single dose on four occasions 30 minutes prior to the onset of the first four pulmonary rehabilitation sessions.

Baseline variables, including brain-activity, self-report questionnaires responses, clinical measures of respiratory function, and drug allocation were used to train three machine-learning models to predict the outcome, a minimally clinically relevant change in the Dyspnea-12 score.

Improvements in Dyspnea-12 score occurred only in the two models including brain imaging markers of breathlessness-expectation (sensitivity 0.88, specificity 0.77). The model that combined brain and behavior metrics produced the best classification performance (accuracy, 0.83 [95% confidence interval, 0.75-0.90]; sensitivity, 0.88; specificity, 0.77; P < 0.001). While the brain-only model was able to correctly categorize participants with statistically significant likelihood (accuracy, 0.70 [95% CI, 0.58-0.81]), it demonstrated poor goodness of fit, a measure of how well sample data fit a distribution from a population with a normal distribution. “By enriching the brain-only models with questionnaires and physiology measures improved performance considerably,” the researchers stated.

“Our findings demonstrate the first predictive model of change in breathlessness across pulmonary rehabilitation and, for the first time, the clinical relevance of expectation-related brain activity as a therapeutic target in the treatment of breathlessness. ... This was achieved using sensitive brain imaging techniques in order to capture personalized responses to breathlessness-expectation which has, until recently remained relatively unexplored.”

“This study raises interesting questions about breathlessness-expectations,” commented assistant professor of medicine Mary Jo S. Farmer, MD, PhD, director pulmonary hypertension service, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, in an interview. “There is much more to be understood about expectations pathways as to how these pathways are built upon prior experience and pave the way for reaction to future experiences. There is need for a similar study with larger sample size and clarification of the role of the effect of the agent D-cycloserine on breathlessness-expectation.”

The researchers noted their study’s limitations, pointing out that the small sample size precluded holding out a proportion of the original data to create an external validation dataset.

Dr. Finnegan and Dr. Farmer declared no disclosures relevant to this study. This work was supported by the JABBS Foundation and Dunhill Medical Trust. This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust.

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In an experimental medicine study of D-cycloserine given during chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) rehabilitation, only models including brain imaging markers of breathlessness-expectation successfully predicted Dyspnea-12 score improvement. D-cycloserine was independently associated with breathlessness improvement, according to original research published in Thorax.

Chronic breathlessness persisting despite maximal medical therapy is a key feature of COPD. While pulmonary rehabilitation is the best treatment for chronic breathlessness in COPD, responses to treatment are variable, with 30% deriving no clinical benefit, Sarah L. Finnegan, PhD, with the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford (England), and colleagues wrote.

While recent research has shown fear and anxiety to be key components of the expectation that plays an important role in the mechanisms and maintenance of breathlessness, expectation-related effects have not previously been considered in prediction studies of pulmonary rehabilitation outcomes. The authors’ prior research showed a clear correlation between improvements in breathlessness through pulmonary rehabilitation and expectation-related brain activity in areas that include the anterior insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and prefrontal cortex. That research methodology, however, did not attempt to predict individual responses.

The current study focused on brain activity changes within preselected regions associated with breathlessness-expectation and body and symptom perception. Its purpose was to predict improvements in breathlessness during pulmonary rehabilitation by analyzing baseline data from a longitudinal experimental medicine study of D-cycloserine on breathlessness during pulmonary rehabilitation. D-cycloserine, a partial agonist of brain N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, was chosen because of its effects on neural plasticity and influence on brain expectation mechanisms associated with cognitive behavioral therapies. The authors hypothesized that baseline brain activity in response to breathlessness-related expectation would predict improvement in breathlessness through pulmonary rehabilitation, with D-cycloserine emerging as a significant factor in the prediction model.

The researchers recruited 71 participants (18 women, median age 71 years [46-85 years]) with mild to moderate COPD immediately prior to enrollment in a National Health Service–prescribed course of pulmonary rehabilitation. They were randomized double-blind to receive either 250 mg oral D-cycloserine or a matched placebo. Participants received a single dose on four occasions 30 minutes prior to the onset of the first four pulmonary rehabilitation sessions.

Baseline variables, including brain-activity, self-report questionnaires responses, clinical measures of respiratory function, and drug allocation were used to train three machine-learning models to predict the outcome, a minimally clinically relevant change in the Dyspnea-12 score.

Improvements in Dyspnea-12 score occurred only in the two models including brain imaging markers of breathlessness-expectation (sensitivity 0.88, specificity 0.77). The model that combined brain and behavior metrics produced the best classification performance (accuracy, 0.83 [95% confidence interval, 0.75-0.90]; sensitivity, 0.88; specificity, 0.77; P < 0.001). While the brain-only model was able to correctly categorize participants with statistically significant likelihood (accuracy, 0.70 [95% CI, 0.58-0.81]), it demonstrated poor goodness of fit, a measure of how well sample data fit a distribution from a population with a normal distribution. “By enriching the brain-only models with questionnaires and physiology measures improved performance considerably,” the researchers stated.

“Our findings demonstrate the first predictive model of change in breathlessness across pulmonary rehabilitation and, for the first time, the clinical relevance of expectation-related brain activity as a therapeutic target in the treatment of breathlessness. ... This was achieved using sensitive brain imaging techniques in order to capture personalized responses to breathlessness-expectation which has, until recently remained relatively unexplored.”

“This study raises interesting questions about breathlessness-expectations,” commented assistant professor of medicine Mary Jo S. Farmer, MD, PhD, director pulmonary hypertension service, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, in an interview. “There is much more to be understood about expectations pathways as to how these pathways are built upon prior experience and pave the way for reaction to future experiences. There is need for a similar study with larger sample size and clarification of the role of the effect of the agent D-cycloserine on breathlessness-expectation.”

The researchers noted their study’s limitations, pointing out that the small sample size precluded holding out a proportion of the original data to create an external validation dataset.

Dr. Finnegan and Dr. Farmer declared no disclosures relevant to this study. This work was supported by the JABBS Foundation and Dunhill Medical Trust. This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust.

In an experimental medicine study of D-cycloserine given during chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) rehabilitation, only models including brain imaging markers of breathlessness-expectation successfully predicted Dyspnea-12 score improvement. D-cycloserine was independently associated with breathlessness improvement, according to original research published in Thorax.

Chronic breathlessness persisting despite maximal medical therapy is a key feature of COPD. While pulmonary rehabilitation is the best treatment for chronic breathlessness in COPD, responses to treatment are variable, with 30% deriving no clinical benefit, Sarah L. Finnegan, PhD, with the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford (England), and colleagues wrote.

While recent research has shown fear and anxiety to be key components of the expectation that plays an important role in the mechanisms and maintenance of breathlessness, expectation-related effects have not previously been considered in prediction studies of pulmonary rehabilitation outcomes. The authors’ prior research showed a clear correlation between improvements in breathlessness through pulmonary rehabilitation and expectation-related brain activity in areas that include the anterior insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and prefrontal cortex. That research methodology, however, did not attempt to predict individual responses.

The current study focused on brain activity changes within preselected regions associated with breathlessness-expectation and body and symptom perception. Its purpose was to predict improvements in breathlessness during pulmonary rehabilitation by analyzing baseline data from a longitudinal experimental medicine study of D-cycloserine on breathlessness during pulmonary rehabilitation. D-cycloserine, a partial agonist of brain N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, was chosen because of its effects on neural plasticity and influence on brain expectation mechanisms associated with cognitive behavioral therapies. The authors hypothesized that baseline brain activity in response to breathlessness-related expectation would predict improvement in breathlessness through pulmonary rehabilitation, with D-cycloserine emerging as a significant factor in the prediction model.

The researchers recruited 71 participants (18 women, median age 71 years [46-85 years]) with mild to moderate COPD immediately prior to enrollment in a National Health Service–prescribed course of pulmonary rehabilitation. They were randomized double-blind to receive either 250 mg oral D-cycloserine or a matched placebo. Participants received a single dose on four occasions 30 minutes prior to the onset of the first four pulmonary rehabilitation sessions.

Baseline variables, including brain-activity, self-report questionnaires responses, clinical measures of respiratory function, and drug allocation were used to train three machine-learning models to predict the outcome, a minimally clinically relevant change in the Dyspnea-12 score.

Improvements in Dyspnea-12 score occurred only in the two models including brain imaging markers of breathlessness-expectation (sensitivity 0.88, specificity 0.77). The model that combined brain and behavior metrics produced the best classification performance (accuracy, 0.83 [95% confidence interval, 0.75-0.90]; sensitivity, 0.88; specificity, 0.77; P < 0.001). While the brain-only model was able to correctly categorize participants with statistically significant likelihood (accuracy, 0.70 [95% CI, 0.58-0.81]), it demonstrated poor goodness of fit, a measure of how well sample data fit a distribution from a population with a normal distribution. “By enriching the brain-only models with questionnaires and physiology measures improved performance considerably,” the researchers stated.

“Our findings demonstrate the first predictive model of change in breathlessness across pulmonary rehabilitation and, for the first time, the clinical relevance of expectation-related brain activity as a therapeutic target in the treatment of breathlessness. ... This was achieved using sensitive brain imaging techniques in order to capture personalized responses to breathlessness-expectation which has, until recently remained relatively unexplored.”

“This study raises interesting questions about breathlessness-expectations,” commented assistant professor of medicine Mary Jo S. Farmer, MD, PhD, director pulmonary hypertension service, University of Massachusetts, Worcester, in an interview. “There is much more to be understood about expectations pathways as to how these pathways are built upon prior experience and pave the way for reaction to future experiences. There is need for a similar study with larger sample size and clarification of the role of the effect of the agent D-cycloserine on breathlessness-expectation.”

The researchers noted their study’s limitations, pointing out that the small sample size precluded holding out a proportion of the original data to create an external validation dataset.

Dr. Finnegan and Dr. Farmer declared no disclosures relevant to this study. This work was supported by the JABBS Foundation and Dunhill Medical Trust. This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust.

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Few women identify breast density as a breast cancer risk

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Changed
Thu, 03/16/2023 - 11:35

A qualitative study of breast cancer screening–age women finds that few women identified breast density as a risk factor for breast cancer.

Most women did not feel confident they knew what actions could mitigate breast cancer risk, leading researchers to the conclusion that comprehensive education about breast cancer risks and prevention strategies is needed.

The study was published earlier this year in JAMA Network Open.

“Forty [percent] to 50% of women who undergo mammography fall into the two highest breast density categories,” said the study’s lead author Christine Gunn, PhD, of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, N.H. “Breast cancer risk increases from 1.2-4.0 times depending on the level of breast density. By comparison, a first-degree family history of breast cancer, particularly in premenopausal women, confers a two-fold higher breast cancer risk.”

Dr. Gunn’s study is based on a survey of 2,306 women (between 40 and 76 years old) that was conducted between 2019 and 2020. The goal was to determine how well women understood cancer risks associated with dense breast tissue. The final analysis included 1,858 women (9% Asian, 27% Black, 14% Hispanic, 43% White, and 7% other race or ethnicity).

Breast density was thought to be a greater risk than not having children, drinking daily, and having had a prior breast biopsy, according to 52%, 53%, and 48% of respondents, respectively. Breast density was believed to be a lesser breast cancer risk than having a first-degree relative with breast cancer by 93% of women, and 65% of women felt it was a lesser risk than being overweight or obese.

Of the 61 women who completed follow-up interviews, 6 described breast density as a contributing factor to breast cancer risk. And, 17 women did not know whether it was possible to reduce their breast cancer risk.
 

Doctors must notify patients in writing

Breast tissue falls under one of four categories: fatty tissue, scattered areas of dense fibroglandular tissue, many areas of glandular and connective tissue, or extremely dense tissue. The tissue is considered dense if it falls under heterogeneously dense or extremely dense, and in those cases, follow-up testing with ultrasound or MRI may be necessary. This is important, Dr. Gunn said, because dense tissue can make “it harder to find cancers because connective tissue appears white on the mammogram, potentially masking tumors.”

Prior studies have found that many clinicians are uncomfortable counseling patients on the implications of breast density and cancer risk, the authors wrote.

However, under the Mammography Quality Standards Act, which was updated on March 10, the Food and Drug Administration requires that patients be provided with a mammography report summary that “identifies whether the patient has dense or nondense breast tissue.” The report, which should be written in lay language, should also specify the “significance” of the dense tissue.

While some states mandate notification regardless of the density level, most only notify women if heterogeneously dense or extremely dense tissue has been identified, Dr. Gunn said. But the rules are inconsistent, she said. In some facilities in Massachusetts, for example, women may receive a mammography report letter and a separate breast density letter. “For some, it has been really confusing. They received a letter saying that their mammography was normal and then another one saying that they have dense breasts – resulting in a lot of uncertainty and anxiety. We don’t want to overly alarm people. We want them to understand their risk,” she said.

Breast density can be considered among other risk factors, including alcohol use, obesity, diet, parity, prior breast biopsy, and inherited unfavorable genetic mutations. “If the total lifetime risk is above 20%, that opens up further screening options, such as a breast MRI, which will catch more cancers than a breast mammogram by itself,” Dr. Gunn said.

“The challenges for physicians and patients around collecting and understanding breast density information in the context of other risk factors can potentially lead to disparities in who gets to know their risk and who doesn’t,” Dr. Gunn said. It would be possible, she speculated, to create or use existing risk calculators integrated into medical records and populated with information gathered in premammography visit questionnaires. Ideally, a radiologist could hand the patient results in real time at the end of the mammography visit, integrating risk estimates with mammography findings to make recommendations.

This study was supported by grant RSG-133017-CPHPS from the American Cancer Society.
 

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A qualitative study of breast cancer screening–age women finds that few women identified breast density as a risk factor for breast cancer.

Most women did not feel confident they knew what actions could mitigate breast cancer risk, leading researchers to the conclusion that comprehensive education about breast cancer risks and prevention strategies is needed.

The study was published earlier this year in JAMA Network Open.

“Forty [percent] to 50% of women who undergo mammography fall into the two highest breast density categories,” said the study’s lead author Christine Gunn, PhD, of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, N.H. “Breast cancer risk increases from 1.2-4.0 times depending on the level of breast density. By comparison, a first-degree family history of breast cancer, particularly in premenopausal women, confers a two-fold higher breast cancer risk.”

Dr. Gunn’s study is based on a survey of 2,306 women (between 40 and 76 years old) that was conducted between 2019 and 2020. The goal was to determine how well women understood cancer risks associated with dense breast tissue. The final analysis included 1,858 women (9% Asian, 27% Black, 14% Hispanic, 43% White, and 7% other race or ethnicity).

Breast density was thought to be a greater risk than not having children, drinking daily, and having had a prior breast biopsy, according to 52%, 53%, and 48% of respondents, respectively. Breast density was believed to be a lesser breast cancer risk than having a first-degree relative with breast cancer by 93% of women, and 65% of women felt it was a lesser risk than being overweight or obese.

Of the 61 women who completed follow-up interviews, 6 described breast density as a contributing factor to breast cancer risk. And, 17 women did not know whether it was possible to reduce their breast cancer risk.
 

Doctors must notify patients in writing

Breast tissue falls under one of four categories: fatty tissue, scattered areas of dense fibroglandular tissue, many areas of glandular and connective tissue, or extremely dense tissue. The tissue is considered dense if it falls under heterogeneously dense or extremely dense, and in those cases, follow-up testing with ultrasound or MRI may be necessary. This is important, Dr. Gunn said, because dense tissue can make “it harder to find cancers because connective tissue appears white on the mammogram, potentially masking tumors.”

Prior studies have found that many clinicians are uncomfortable counseling patients on the implications of breast density and cancer risk, the authors wrote.

However, under the Mammography Quality Standards Act, which was updated on March 10, the Food and Drug Administration requires that patients be provided with a mammography report summary that “identifies whether the patient has dense or nondense breast tissue.” The report, which should be written in lay language, should also specify the “significance” of the dense tissue.

While some states mandate notification regardless of the density level, most only notify women if heterogeneously dense or extremely dense tissue has been identified, Dr. Gunn said. But the rules are inconsistent, she said. In some facilities in Massachusetts, for example, women may receive a mammography report letter and a separate breast density letter. “For some, it has been really confusing. They received a letter saying that their mammography was normal and then another one saying that they have dense breasts – resulting in a lot of uncertainty and anxiety. We don’t want to overly alarm people. We want them to understand their risk,” she said.

Breast density can be considered among other risk factors, including alcohol use, obesity, diet, parity, prior breast biopsy, and inherited unfavorable genetic mutations. “If the total lifetime risk is above 20%, that opens up further screening options, such as a breast MRI, which will catch more cancers than a breast mammogram by itself,” Dr. Gunn said.

“The challenges for physicians and patients around collecting and understanding breast density information in the context of other risk factors can potentially lead to disparities in who gets to know their risk and who doesn’t,” Dr. Gunn said. It would be possible, she speculated, to create or use existing risk calculators integrated into medical records and populated with information gathered in premammography visit questionnaires. Ideally, a radiologist could hand the patient results in real time at the end of the mammography visit, integrating risk estimates with mammography findings to make recommendations.

This study was supported by grant RSG-133017-CPHPS from the American Cancer Society.
 

A qualitative study of breast cancer screening–age women finds that few women identified breast density as a risk factor for breast cancer.

Most women did not feel confident they knew what actions could mitigate breast cancer risk, leading researchers to the conclusion that comprehensive education about breast cancer risks and prevention strategies is needed.

The study was published earlier this year in JAMA Network Open.

“Forty [percent] to 50% of women who undergo mammography fall into the two highest breast density categories,” said the study’s lead author Christine Gunn, PhD, of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, N.H. “Breast cancer risk increases from 1.2-4.0 times depending on the level of breast density. By comparison, a first-degree family history of breast cancer, particularly in premenopausal women, confers a two-fold higher breast cancer risk.”

Dr. Gunn’s study is based on a survey of 2,306 women (between 40 and 76 years old) that was conducted between 2019 and 2020. The goal was to determine how well women understood cancer risks associated with dense breast tissue. The final analysis included 1,858 women (9% Asian, 27% Black, 14% Hispanic, 43% White, and 7% other race or ethnicity).

Breast density was thought to be a greater risk than not having children, drinking daily, and having had a prior breast biopsy, according to 52%, 53%, and 48% of respondents, respectively. Breast density was believed to be a lesser breast cancer risk than having a first-degree relative with breast cancer by 93% of women, and 65% of women felt it was a lesser risk than being overweight or obese.

Of the 61 women who completed follow-up interviews, 6 described breast density as a contributing factor to breast cancer risk. And, 17 women did not know whether it was possible to reduce their breast cancer risk.
 

Doctors must notify patients in writing

Breast tissue falls under one of four categories: fatty tissue, scattered areas of dense fibroglandular tissue, many areas of glandular and connective tissue, or extremely dense tissue. The tissue is considered dense if it falls under heterogeneously dense or extremely dense, and in those cases, follow-up testing with ultrasound or MRI may be necessary. This is important, Dr. Gunn said, because dense tissue can make “it harder to find cancers because connective tissue appears white on the mammogram, potentially masking tumors.”

Prior studies have found that many clinicians are uncomfortable counseling patients on the implications of breast density and cancer risk, the authors wrote.

However, under the Mammography Quality Standards Act, which was updated on March 10, the Food and Drug Administration requires that patients be provided with a mammography report summary that “identifies whether the patient has dense or nondense breast tissue.” The report, which should be written in lay language, should also specify the “significance” of the dense tissue.

While some states mandate notification regardless of the density level, most only notify women if heterogeneously dense or extremely dense tissue has been identified, Dr. Gunn said. But the rules are inconsistent, she said. In some facilities in Massachusetts, for example, women may receive a mammography report letter and a separate breast density letter. “For some, it has been really confusing. They received a letter saying that their mammography was normal and then another one saying that they have dense breasts – resulting in a lot of uncertainty and anxiety. We don’t want to overly alarm people. We want them to understand their risk,” she said.

Breast density can be considered among other risk factors, including alcohol use, obesity, diet, parity, prior breast biopsy, and inherited unfavorable genetic mutations. “If the total lifetime risk is above 20%, that opens up further screening options, such as a breast MRI, which will catch more cancers than a breast mammogram by itself,” Dr. Gunn said.

“The challenges for physicians and patients around collecting and understanding breast density information in the context of other risk factors can potentially lead to disparities in who gets to know their risk and who doesn’t,” Dr. Gunn said. It would be possible, she speculated, to create or use existing risk calculators integrated into medical records and populated with information gathered in premammography visit questionnaires. Ideally, a radiologist could hand the patient results in real time at the end of the mammography visit, integrating risk estimates with mammography findings to make recommendations.

This study was supported by grant RSG-133017-CPHPS from the American Cancer Society.
 

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Dietitian-led weight loss program improves difficult-to-treat asthma in obese patients

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Thu, 02/23/2023 - 11:03

In a proof-of-concept feasibility study among adults with difficult-to-treat asthma and body mass index ≥ 30kg/m2, an evidence-based, dietitian-led program resulted in clinically important improvements in asthma control and quality of life over 16 weeks compared to usual care.

The Counterweight-Plus weight management program (CWP) used in the study includes 12 weeks of total diet replacement (TDR), stepwise food reintroduction in weeks 13-18, and weight loss maintenance up to 1 year, according to a report by Varun Sharma, MBChB, and fellow researchers at University of Glasgow.

Difficult-to-treat asthma, found among about 17% of asthma-affected patients, may be attributed to factors such as poor inhaler technique, treatment nonadherence, and comorbidities such as obesity. Obesity is frequently associated with difficult-to-treat, uncontrolled asthma and increased morbidity and mortality. Among multifactorial effects of obesity on asthma are direct ones on thoracic wall mechanics, increased airway closure, airway hyper-responsiveness and airway inflammation. Prior research showing that weight loss may improve asthma outcomes has been conducted among heterogeneous asthma populations, with no clear consensus regarding optimal methods of weight management, according to the authors.

They tested whether use of the CWP compared to usual care (1:1) would improve asthma control and quality of life in this population of patients with obesity. The TDR phase comprised a low-energy liquid diet consisting of 825-853 kcal/day (approximately 59% carbohydrate, 13% fat, 26% protein, 2% fiber), with meals supplied dried in sachets by the dietitian team and reconstituted with water by the participants. A review by the dietitian team at 1 week was followed by reviews every other week.

The primary outcome was difference in change in Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ6) from baseline (visit 1) to 16 weeks (visit 2), between CWP and usual care.

The single-center trial included 33 evaluable adult patients (75 years or younger; mean age 53 years; 63% women) with asthma (as per Global Initiative for Asthma guidelines) that was difficult to treat (as per Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network/British Thoracic Society guidelines). The study population consisted of patients with frequent exacerbations with uncontrolled disease as reflected by the median interquartile range (IQR) for oral corticosteroid courses in the previous 12 months of 3 (2 to 5) and mean ACQ6 of 2.8 (2.4 to 3.1). Mean overall Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) was 3.8 (3.4 to 4.2). Median weight was 101.7 (91.4 to 118.7) kg, with a median BMI of 37.5 (35.0 to 42.3) kg/m2. Recruitment was discontinued before the target of 40 patients because the CWP dropout rate (n = 2) was lower than expected.

The researchers reported that the mean change in ACQ6 over 16 weeks was –0.45 for CWP and 0.23 for usual care with a mean difference of –0.69 (P = .048) between groups. The secondary outcome of mean change in overall AQLQ was 0.81 for CWP and 0.08 for usual care with a mean difference of 0.76 (P = .013) between groups.

No unexpected serious adverse events or intervention-related adverse events were observed during the trial.

“In this pragmatic open label, randomized, controlled trial we showed that delivery of a supported low-calorie total diet replacement program (Counterweight-Plus) to patients with difficult-to treat asthma and obesity, was safe and led to significant improvements in asthma control and quality of life compared to usual care over 16 weeks,” the authors wrote.

“Findings from the study are a welcome addition to this field of study,” Diego J. Maselli, MD, associate professor of medicine and interim chief, division of pulmonary diseases and critical care, UT Health at San Antonio, said in an interview. “Over the past years there has been an increase in the focus of comorbid conditions that may influence asthma control, particularly in severe disease.  Obesity is an important comorbid condition because, although by itself it may have an effect on asthma patients, it is also associated with other comorbidities such as gastroesophageal reflux disease, obstructive sleep apnea, anxiety, depression, and others that in turn can affect asthmatics. Also, obesity may influence pulmonary physiology and it’s considered a proinflammatory state by many, and this can favor uncontrolled disease.”  

While underscoring the clinically relevant weight loss and improvements in ACQ6 and AQLQ, Dr. Maselli said that the study did not follow the patients long enough to determine if weight loss was associated with a reduction in exacerbations and other long-term outcomes in asthma such as resource utilization and changes in maintenance medications, which may be explored in future studies.

“It remains to be seen if the weight loss of these types of programs can be sustained over longer periods of time, given the considerable caloric restriction in the initial stages of the weight reduction program. Interestingly, the majority of the patients in the study did not exhibit features of type 2 inflammation and had low-T2 endotype with low eosinophil count and low FeNO [fractional exhaled nitric oxide],” Dr. Maselli added. “Although obesity has been linked to this phenotype, the vast majority of [people with asthma], about 80%, have high T2 phenotype. Future studies are still need with larger and more representative samples and with longer follow-up times to determine the effects of weight loss on asthma outcomes, especially in severe asthma,” he concluded.

The trial was funded by an NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Endowment Fund grant. Several of the authors reported having received travel awards to attend conferences and funding from Cambridge Weight Plan and one author is an employee of and another a medical adviser for Counterweight Ltd., the developer of the program used. Other authors reported receiving funding from a variety of pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Maselli reported no relevant conflicts.

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In a proof-of-concept feasibility study among adults with difficult-to-treat asthma and body mass index ≥ 30kg/m2, an evidence-based, dietitian-led program resulted in clinically important improvements in asthma control and quality of life over 16 weeks compared to usual care.

The Counterweight-Plus weight management program (CWP) used in the study includes 12 weeks of total diet replacement (TDR), stepwise food reintroduction in weeks 13-18, and weight loss maintenance up to 1 year, according to a report by Varun Sharma, MBChB, and fellow researchers at University of Glasgow.

Difficult-to-treat asthma, found among about 17% of asthma-affected patients, may be attributed to factors such as poor inhaler technique, treatment nonadherence, and comorbidities such as obesity. Obesity is frequently associated with difficult-to-treat, uncontrolled asthma and increased morbidity and mortality. Among multifactorial effects of obesity on asthma are direct ones on thoracic wall mechanics, increased airway closure, airway hyper-responsiveness and airway inflammation. Prior research showing that weight loss may improve asthma outcomes has been conducted among heterogeneous asthma populations, with no clear consensus regarding optimal methods of weight management, according to the authors.

They tested whether use of the CWP compared to usual care (1:1) would improve asthma control and quality of life in this population of patients with obesity. The TDR phase comprised a low-energy liquid diet consisting of 825-853 kcal/day (approximately 59% carbohydrate, 13% fat, 26% protein, 2% fiber), with meals supplied dried in sachets by the dietitian team and reconstituted with water by the participants. A review by the dietitian team at 1 week was followed by reviews every other week.

The primary outcome was difference in change in Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ6) from baseline (visit 1) to 16 weeks (visit 2), between CWP and usual care.

The single-center trial included 33 evaluable adult patients (75 years or younger; mean age 53 years; 63% women) with asthma (as per Global Initiative for Asthma guidelines) that was difficult to treat (as per Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network/British Thoracic Society guidelines). The study population consisted of patients with frequent exacerbations with uncontrolled disease as reflected by the median interquartile range (IQR) for oral corticosteroid courses in the previous 12 months of 3 (2 to 5) and mean ACQ6 of 2.8 (2.4 to 3.1). Mean overall Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) was 3.8 (3.4 to 4.2). Median weight was 101.7 (91.4 to 118.7) kg, with a median BMI of 37.5 (35.0 to 42.3) kg/m2. Recruitment was discontinued before the target of 40 patients because the CWP dropout rate (n = 2) was lower than expected.

The researchers reported that the mean change in ACQ6 over 16 weeks was –0.45 for CWP and 0.23 for usual care with a mean difference of –0.69 (P = .048) between groups. The secondary outcome of mean change in overall AQLQ was 0.81 for CWP and 0.08 for usual care with a mean difference of 0.76 (P = .013) between groups.

No unexpected serious adverse events or intervention-related adverse events were observed during the trial.

“In this pragmatic open label, randomized, controlled trial we showed that delivery of a supported low-calorie total diet replacement program (Counterweight-Plus) to patients with difficult-to treat asthma and obesity, was safe and led to significant improvements in asthma control and quality of life compared to usual care over 16 weeks,” the authors wrote.

“Findings from the study are a welcome addition to this field of study,” Diego J. Maselli, MD, associate professor of medicine and interim chief, division of pulmonary diseases and critical care, UT Health at San Antonio, said in an interview. “Over the past years there has been an increase in the focus of comorbid conditions that may influence asthma control, particularly in severe disease.  Obesity is an important comorbid condition because, although by itself it may have an effect on asthma patients, it is also associated with other comorbidities such as gastroesophageal reflux disease, obstructive sleep apnea, anxiety, depression, and others that in turn can affect asthmatics. Also, obesity may influence pulmonary physiology and it’s considered a proinflammatory state by many, and this can favor uncontrolled disease.”  

While underscoring the clinically relevant weight loss and improvements in ACQ6 and AQLQ, Dr. Maselli said that the study did not follow the patients long enough to determine if weight loss was associated with a reduction in exacerbations and other long-term outcomes in asthma such as resource utilization and changes in maintenance medications, which may be explored in future studies.

“It remains to be seen if the weight loss of these types of programs can be sustained over longer periods of time, given the considerable caloric restriction in the initial stages of the weight reduction program. Interestingly, the majority of the patients in the study did not exhibit features of type 2 inflammation and had low-T2 endotype with low eosinophil count and low FeNO [fractional exhaled nitric oxide],” Dr. Maselli added. “Although obesity has been linked to this phenotype, the vast majority of [people with asthma], about 80%, have high T2 phenotype. Future studies are still need with larger and more representative samples and with longer follow-up times to determine the effects of weight loss on asthma outcomes, especially in severe asthma,” he concluded.

The trial was funded by an NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Endowment Fund grant. Several of the authors reported having received travel awards to attend conferences and funding from Cambridge Weight Plan and one author is an employee of and another a medical adviser for Counterweight Ltd., the developer of the program used. Other authors reported receiving funding from a variety of pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Maselli reported no relevant conflicts.

In a proof-of-concept feasibility study among adults with difficult-to-treat asthma and body mass index ≥ 30kg/m2, an evidence-based, dietitian-led program resulted in clinically important improvements in asthma control and quality of life over 16 weeks compared to usual care.

The Counterweight-Plus weight management program (CWP) used in the study includes 12 weeks of total diet replacement (TDR), stepwise food reintroduction in weeks 13-18, and weight loss maintenance up to 1 year, according to a report by Varun Sharma, MBChB, and fellow researchers at University of Glasgow.

Difficult-to-treat asthma, found among about 17% of asthma-affected patients, may be attributed to factors such as poor inhaler technique, treatment nonadherence, and comorbidities such as obesity. Obesity is frequently associated with difficult-to-treat, uncontrolled asthma and increased morbidity and mortality. Among multifactorial effects of obesity on asthma are direct ones on thoracic wall mechanics, increased airway closure, airway hyper-responsiveness and airway inflammation. Prior research showing that weight loss may improve asthma outcomes has been conducted among heterogeneous asthma populations, with no clear consensus regarding optimal methods of weight management, according to the authors.

They tested whether use of the CWP compared to usual care (1:1) would improve asthma control and quality of life in this population of patients with obesity. The TDR phase comprised a low-energy liquid diet consisting of 825-853 kcal/day (approximately 59% carbohydrate, 13% fat, 26% protein, 2% fiber), with meals supplied dried in sachets by the dietitian team and reconstituted with water by the participants. A review by the dietitian team at 1 week was followed by reviews every other week.

The primary outcome was difference in change in Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ6) from baseline (visit 1) to 16 weeks (visit 2), between CWP and usual care.

The single-center trial included 33 evaluable adult patients (75 years or younger; mean age 53 years; 63% women) with asthma (as per Global Initiative for Asthma guidelines) that was difficult to treat (as per Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network/British Thoracic Society guidelines). The study population consisted of patients with frequent exacerbations with uncontrolled disease as reflected by the median interquartile range (IQR) for oral corticosteroid courses in the previous 12 months of 3 (2 to 5) and mean ACQ6 of 2.8 (2.4 to 3.1). Mean overall Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) was 3.8 (3.4 to 4.2). Median weight was 101.7 (91.4 to 118.7) kg, with a median BMI of 37.5 (35.0 to 42.3) kg/m2. Recruitment was discontinued before the target of 40 patients because the CWP dropout rate (n = 2) was lower than expected.

The researchers reported that the mean change in ACQ6 over 16 weeks was –0.45 for CWP and 0.23 for usual care with a mean difference of –0.69 (P = .048) between groups. The secondary outcome of mean change in overall AQLQ was 0.81 for CWP and 0.08 for usual care with a mean difference of 0.76 (P = .013) between groups.

No unexpected serious adverse events or intervention-related adverse events were observed during the trial.

“In this pragmatic open label, randomized, controlled trial we showed that delivery of a supported low-calorie total diet replacement program (Counterweight-Plus) to patients with difficult-to treat asthma and obesity, was safe and led to significant improvements in asthma control and quality of life compared to usual care over 16 weeks,” the authors wrote.

“Findings from the study are a welcome addition to this field of study,” Diego J. Maselli, MD, associate professor of medicine and interim chief, division of pulmonary diseases and critical care, UT Health at San Antonio, said in an interview. “Over the past years there has been an increase in the focus of comorbid conditions that may influence asthma control, particularly in severe disease.  Obesity is an important comorbid condition because, although by itself it may have an effect on asthma patients, it is also associated with other comorbidities such as gastroesophageal reflux disease, obstructive sleep apnea, anxiety, depression, and others that in turn can affect asthmatics. Also, obesity may influence pulmonary physiology and it’s considered a proinflammatory state by many, and this can favor uncontrolled disease.”  

While underscoring the clinically relevant weight loss and improvements in ACQ6 and AQLQ, Dr. Maselli said that the study did not follow the patients long enough to determine if weight loss was associated with a reduction in exacerbations and other long-term outcomes in asthma such as resource utilization and changes in maintenance medications, which may be explored in future studies.

“It remains to be seen if the weight loss of these types of programs can be sustained over longer periods of time, given the considerable caloric restriction in the initial stages of the weight reduction program. Interestingly, the majority of the patients in the study did not exhibit features of type 2 inflammation and had low-T2 endotype with low eosinophil count and low FeNO [fractional exhaled nitric oxide],” Dr. Maselli added. “Although obesity has been linked to this phenotype, the vast majority of [people with asthma], about 80%, have high T2 phenotype. Future studies are still need with larger and more representative samples and with longer follow-up times to determine the effects of weight loss on asthma outcomes, especially in severe asthma,” he concluded.

The trial was funded by an NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Endowment Fund grant. Several of the authors reported having received travel awards to attend conferences and funding from Cambridge Weight Plan and one author is an employee of and another a medical adviser for Counterweight Ltd., the developer of the program used. Other authors reported receiving funding from a variety of pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Maselli reported no relevant conflicts.

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Pulmonary embolism workup needed for any sudden onset of exertional dyspnea

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Tue, 02/21/2023 - 11:16

A diagnostic workup for pulmonary embolism (PE) should be performed in all patients with recent onset of exertional dyspnea, according to the authors of an article published in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis. That conclusion emerged from an analysis of PE prevalence in 417 patients with recent marked exertional dyspnea performing previously well-tolerated physical activities.

Exertional dyspnea is a frequently encountered complaint in clinical practice. Missteps in both diagnosis and early management, however, have been found to be prevalent in emergency department practices. PE diagnosis can be delayed or altogether missed through nonspecific clinical manifestations or the absence of typical signs and symptoms, with a complicated clinical course or mortality as a consequence, stated the researchers. Also, failure to diagnose PE is a common malpractice allegation.

Noting that the prevalence of PE among patients with dyspnea on exertion has not been reported, the authors hypothesized: “PE might be a frequent underlying condition in patients presenting for care complaining of marked dyspnea on exertion of recent onset.”

In a multicenter prospective, cross-sectional study among 14 university or hospital centers in Italy, patients who were referred for outpatient evaluation with recent (< 1 month) dyspnea on exertion with a severity of 3 or 4 on the modified Medical Research Council dyspnea scale were potentially eligible for the study. Prior deep-vein thrombosis (DVT), PE, and use of therapeutic anticoagulation were among exclusion criteria. All patients aged 75 years or younger with recent (< 1 month) marked exertional dyspnea had a systematic workup for PE, irrespective of concomitant signs or symptoms of venous thromboembolism and alternative explanations for dyspnea. The main study outcome was prevalence of PE in the entire cohort of patients with recent marked dyspnea on exertion.

When about 400 patients had been enrolled after an interim analysis in which the preestablished stopping rule (if the lower limit of the 95% confidence interval of the prevalence of PE exceeds 20%) was met, the study was prematurely terminated. PE was found, after exclusion of 134 patients based on low PE clinical probability and normal D-dimer, in 134 (47.3%) of the remaining 283 patients. The overall PE prevalence was 32.1% (95% confidence interval, 27.8-36.8).

PE was present in 40 of 204 (19.6%) patients without other findings suspicious for PE and in 94 of 213 patients (44.1%) with PE-suspicious findings. PE involved a main pulmonary artery in 37% and multiple lobes in 87% of the patients.

The researchers pointed out that, while the prevalence of PE was highest (44%) in patients who had concomitant signs or symptoms suspicious of PE or underlying DVT, PE was detected in almost 20% of patients without concomitant PE signs and symptoms. Also, the detected pulmonary emboli were deemed significant.

“Our findings suggest that, regardless of the diagnostic algorithm in use, physicians should rule in or out PE in patients who solely report recent onset of marked dyspnea on exertion,” they concluded.

Agreeing with the authors’ conclusions, Mary Jo S. Farmer, MD, PhD, of the department of medicine at University of Massachusetts, Worcester, stated in an interview, “The results of the current study support a diagnostic workup for pulmonary embolus in all patients with recent onset of exertional dyspnea.” She added, “Pulmonary emboli detected were significant as almost all were segmental or more proximal emboli involving multiple lobes. The observed overall prevalence of pulmonary embolus of 32% may seem high when compared with the low prevalence of 7%-13% reported in other studies of patients with suspected pulmonary embolus. However, the prevalence of pulmonary embolus among emergency department cohorts in European countries is generally higher, as is the diagnostic yield from [CT pulmonary angiogram] compared to North American countries. This could be explained by differences in applied thresholds for suspicion of pulmonary embolus. The incidence of COVID-19 and association with thrombosis was not reported.

“It has been reported that nonspecific clinical manifestations and absence of typical signs and symptoms can result in delay in diagnosis of pulmonary embolus or result in pulmonary embolus being missed, an unfortunate situation that could result in malpractice allegation.” Dr. Farmer concluded.

Among limitations of the study, the authors noted that their results are not applicable to patients older than 75 years or patients with chronic (more than 1 month) symptoms of dyspnea or less severe dyspnea (modified Medical Research Council dyspnea score of 2 or lower). Also, no attempt to stratify the clinical relevance of PE was made.

The study was funded by the Arianna Foundation on Anticoagulation, Bologna, Italy. The authors reported that they had no potential conflicts. Dr. Farmer also declared she had no relevant conflicts.

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A diagnostic workup for pulmonary embolism (PE) should be performed in all patients with recent onset of exertional dyspnea, according to the authors of an article published in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis. That conclusion emerged from an analysis of PE prevalence in 417 patients with recent marked exertional dyspnea performing previously well-tolerated physical activities.

Exertional dyspnea is a frequently encountered complaint in clinical practice. Missteps in both diagnosis and early management, however, have been found to be prevalent in emergency department practices. PE diagnosis can be delayed or altogether missed through nonspecific clinical manifestations or the absence of typical signs and symptoms, with a complicated clinical course or mortality as a consequence, stated the researchers. Also, failure to diagnose PE is a common malpractice allegation.

Noting that the prevalence of PE among patients with dyspnea on exertion has not been reported, the authors hypothesized: “PE might be a frequent underlying condition in patients presenting for care complaining of marked dyspnea on exertion of recent onset.”

In a multicenter prospective, cross-sectional study among 14 university or hospital centers in Italy, patients who were referred for outpatient evaluation with recent (< 1 month) dyspnea on exertion with a severity of 3 or 4 on the modified Medical Research Council dyspnea scale were potentially eligible for the study. Prior deep-vein thrombosis (DVT), PE, and use of therapeutic anticoagulation were among exclusion criteria. All patients aged 75 years or younger with recent (< 1 month) marked exertional dyspnea had a systematic workup for PE, irrespective of concomitant signs or symptoms of venous thromboembolism and alternative explanations for dyspnea. The main study outcome was prevalence of PE in the entire cohort of patients with recent marked dyspnea on exertion.

When about 400 patients had been enrolled after an interim analysis in which the preestablished stopping rule (if the lower limit of the 95% confidence interval of the prevalence of PE exceeds 20%) was met, the study was prematurely terminated. PE was found, after exclusion of 134 patients based on low PE clinical probability and normal D-dimer, in 134 (47.3%) of the remaining 283 patients. The overall PE prevalence was 32.1% (95% confidence interval, 27.8-36.8).

PE was present in 40 of 204 (19.6%) patients without other findings suspicious for PE and in 94 of 213 patients (44.1%) with PE-suspicious findings. PE involved a main pulmonary artery in 37% and multiple lobes in 87% of the patients.

The researchers pointed out that, while the prevalence of PE was highest (44%) in patients who had concomitant signs or symptoms suspicious of PE or underlying DVT, PE was detected in almost 20% of patients without concomitant PE signs and symptoms. Also, the detected pulmonary emboli were deemed significant.

“Our findings suggest that, regardless of the diagnostic algorithm in use, physicians should rule in or out PE in patients who solely report recent onset of marked dyspnea on exertion,” they concluded.

Agreeing with the authors’ conclusions, Mary Jo S. Farmer, MD, PhD, of the department of medicine at University of Massachusetts, Worcester, stated in an interview, “The results of the current study support a diagnostic workup for pulmonary embolus in all patients with recent onset of exertional dyspnea.” She added, “Pulmonary emboli detected were significant as almost all were segmental or more proximal emboli involving multiple lobes. The observed overall prevalence of pulmonary embolus of 32% may seem high when compared with the low prevalence of 7%-13% reported in other studies of patients with suspected pulmonary embolus. However, the prevalence of pulmonary embolus among emergency department cohorts in European countries is generally higher, as is the diagnostic yield from [CT pulmonary angiogram] compared to North American countries. This could be explained by differences in applied thresholds for suspicion of pulmonary embolus. The incidence of COVID-19 and association with thrombosis was not reported.

“It has been reported that nonspecific clinical manifestations and absence of typical signs and symptoms can result in delay in diagnosis of pulmonary embolus or result in pulmonary embolus being missed, an unfortunate situation that could result in malpractice allegation.” Dr. Farmer concluded.

Among limitations of the study, the authors noted that their results are not applicable to patients older than 75 years or patients with chronic (more than 1 month) symptoms of dyspnea or less severe dyspnea (modified Medical Research Council dyspnea score of 2 or lower). Also, no attempt to stratify the clinical relevance of PE was made.

The study was funded by the Arianna Foundation on Anticoagulation, Bologna, Italy. The authors reported that they had no potential conflicts. Dr. Farmer also declared she had no relevant conflicts.

A diagnostic workup for pulmonary embolism (PE) should be performed in all patients with recent onset of exertional dyspnea, according to the authors of an article published in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis. That conclusion emerged from an analysis of PE prevalence in 417 patients with recent marked exertional dyspnea performing previously well-tolerated physical activities.

Exertional dyspnea is a frequently encountered complaint in clinical practice. Missteps in both diagnosis and early management, however, have been found to be prevalent in emergency department practices. PE diagnosis can be delayed or altogether missed through nonspecific clinical manifestations or the absence of typical signs and symptoms, with a complicated clinical course or mortality as a consequence, stated the researchers. Also, failure to diagnose PE is a common malpractice allegation.

Noting that the prevalence of PE among patients with dyspnea on exertion has not been reported, the authors hypothesized: “PE might be a frequent underlying condition in patients presenting for care complaining of marked dyspnea on exertion of recent onset.”

In a multicenter prospective, cross-sectional study among 14 university or hospital centers in Italy, patients who were referred for outpatient evaluation with recent (< 1 month) dyspnea on exertion with a severity of 3 or 4 on the modified Medical Research Council dyspnea scale were potentially eligible for the study. Prior deep-vein thrombosis (DVT), PE, and use of therapeutic anticoagulation were among exclusion criteria. All patients aged 75 years or younger with recent (< 1 month) marked exertional dyspnea had a systematic workup for PE, irrespective of concomitant signs or symptoms of venous thromboembolism and alternative explanations for dyspnea. The main study outcome was prevalence of PE in the entire cohort of patients with recent marked dyspnea on exertion.

When about 400 patients had been enrolled after an interim analysis in which the preestablished stopping rule (if the lower limit of the 95% confidence interval of the prevalence of PE exceeds 20%) was met, the study was prematurely terminated. PE was found, after exclusion of 134 patients based on low PE clinical probability and normal D-dimer, in 134 (47.3%) of the remaining 283 patients. The overall PE prevalence was 32.1% (95% confidence interval, 27.8-36.8).

PE was present in 40 of 204 (19.6%) patients without other findings suspicious for PE and in 94 of 213 patients (44.1%) with PE-suspicious findings. PE involved a main pulmonary artery in 37% and multiple lobes in 87% of the patients.

The researchers pointed out that, while the prevalence of PE was highest (44%) in patients who had concomitant signs or symptoms suspicious of PE or underlying DVT, PE was detected in almost 20% of patients without concomitant PE signs and symptoms. Also, the detected pulmonary emboli were deemed significant.

“Our findings suggest that, regardless of the diagnostic algorithm in use, physicians should rule in or out PE in patients who solely report recent onset of marked dyspnea on exertion,” they concluded.

Agreeing with the authors’ conclusions, Mary Jo S. Farmer, MD, PhD, of the department of medicine at University of Massachusetts, Worcester, stated in an interview, “The results of the current study support a diagnostic workup for pulmonary embolus in all patients with recent onset of exertional dyspnea.” She added, “Pulmonary emboli detected were significant as almost all were segmental or more proximal emboli involving multiple lobes. The observed overall prevalence of pulmonary embolus of 32% may seem high when compared with the low prevalence of 7%-13% reported in other studies of patients with suspected pulmonary embolus. However, the prevalence of pulmonary embolus among emergency department cohorts in European countries is generally higher, as is the diagnostic yield from [CT pulmonary angiogram] compared to North American countries. This could be explained by differences in applied thresholds for suspicion of pulmonary embolus. The incidence of COVID-19 and association with thrombosis was not reported.

“It has been reported that nonspecific clinical manifestations and absence of typical signs and symptoms can result in delay in diagnosis of pulmonary embolus or result in pulmonary embolus being missed, an unfortunate situation that could result in malpractice allegation.” Dr. Farmer concluded.

Among limitations of the study, the authors noted that their results are not applicable to patients older than 75 years or patients with chronic (more than 1 month) symptoms of dyspnea or less severe dyspnea (modified Medical Research Council dyspnea score of 2 or lower). Also, no attempt to stratify the clinical relevance of PE was made.

The study was funded by the Arianna Foundation on Anticoagulation, Bologna, Italy. The authors reported that they had no potential conflicts. Dr. Farmer also declared she had no relevant conflicts.

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Spectrum of dermatologic adverse events associated with amivantamab use

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Changed
Thu, 02/09/2023 - 15:31

A case series of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) exon 20 insertion–mutated advanced non–small cell lung cancer patients with dermatologic adverse events (dAEs) subsequent to treatment with amivantamab showed classic toxic effects associated with EGFR inhibitors and atypical presentations. Toxic effects, however, were mitigated by dose interruptions, dAE management, and amivantamab dose reductions, allowing for cancer therapy continuation in all cases. Amivantamab doses were reduced in 5 out of 6 cases, according to a research letter published in JAMA Dermatology.

The EGFR exon 20 insertion–mutation portends insensitivity to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors and poor prognosis. Amivantamab, a bispecific monoclonal antibody targeting EGFR and mesenchymal epithelial transition factor (MET) is Food and Drug Administration approved for this population. Acneiform eruptions and pruritus are the most common dAEs associated with EGFR inhibitors, with xerosis, fissures, and nail and hair changes occurring additionally. While no FDA-approved monoclonal antibody targets MET exclusively, capmatinib and tepotinib (both tyrosine kinase inhibitors) inhibit MET. They have been associated with photosensitivity, acneiform rash, paronychia, xerosis, pruritus, and mucositis.

The Belzer et al. letter reviewed six consecutive cases (mean age, 58) of dAEs associated with amivantamab at two academic health centers (treated June 2021 to August 2022) in order to describe dAEs associated with amivantamab use. “I suspect the rate of dAEs with amivantamab is similar to the rate of dAEs associated with first- and second-generation EGFR inhibitors, where the majority of patients, actually 75%-90%, develop cutaneous toxicity,” said Jonathan Leventhal, MD, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., corresponding author for the Belzer et al. letter.

Time from treatment initiation with amivantamab to dAE ranged from less than 1 month to 4 months. All dAEs were grade 2 or 3 and all included acneiform eruptions. These were widespread in four cases and in another case complicated by impetiginization (culture results positive for methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus), and a further case was limited to the scalp, face, upper back, and upper chest. Others with widespread acneiform eruption included the face with hyperkeratotic crust of the scalp and dermatitis of the posterior neck. Fissuring of the palms and soles was noted in two cases with widespread acneiform eruptions. Paronychia with pyogenic granulomas was reported in four cases. Another case included onycholysis with suppurative paronychia.

In five cases amivantamab was stopped but successfully reinitiated at 67%-75% of the original dose. In one case amivantamab was continued at the original dose.

Doxycycline at 100 mg twice daily was included among all of the treatments for cutaneous dAEs. Silver nitrate cautery was applied for pyogenic granulomas in clinic. The case of grade 3 acneiform eruption of the scalp and face was treated with hydrogen peroxide soaks with debridement in clinic, doxycycline, aluminum acetate soaks, and triamcinolone ointment. All dermatologic cases resolved fully without scarring.

“It is very likely that this series highlights the more severe and unusual presentations of dAEs which were referred to oncodermatology. I suspect milder presentations were likely managed by oncologists,” Dr. Leventhal said in the interview.

“It is important for dermatologists and oncologists to be aware of the more severe and atypical dAEs associated with this novel FDA-approved targeted therapy.” Dr. Belzer said. “As amivantamab use increases, oncologists and dermatologists need to collaborate to ensure swift diagnosis and management of dAEs.”

One trial, the authors stated, revealed more than half of patients receiving EGFR inhibitors taking preemptive treatment with moisturizers, sunscreen, topical corticosteroids, and an oral tetracycline to have more than a 50% reduction in grade 2 or higher dAEs. Belzer et al. concluded that prophylactic treatment, including sun protection, should be considered before initiating treatment with amivantamab.

A limitation of the study, Belzer et al. acknowledged, was the small sample size.

Dr. Leventhal reported receiving personal fees from the advisory boards of Sanofi, Regeneron, and La Roche-Posay as well as clinical trial funding from Azitra and OnQuality Pharmaceuticals outside the submitted work.

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A case series of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) exon 20 insertion–mutated advanced non–small cell lung cancer patients with dermatologic adverse events (dAEs) subsequent to treatment with amivantamab showed classic toxic effects associated with EGFR inhibitors and atypical presentations. Toxic effects, however, were mitigated by dose interruptions, dAE management, and amivantamab dose reductions, allowing for cancer therapy continuation in all cases. Amivantamab doses were reduced in 5 out of 6 cases, according to a research letter published in JAMA Dermatology.

The EGFR exon 20 insertion–mutation portends insensitivity to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors and poor prognosis. Amivantamab, a bispecific monoclonal antibody targeting EGFR and mesenchymal epithelial transition factor (MET) is Food and Drug Administration approved for this population. Acneiform eruptions and pruritus are the most common dAEs associated with EGFR inhibitors, with xerosis, fissures, and nail and hair changes occurring additionally. While no FDA-approved monoclonal antibody targets MET exclusively, capmatinib and tepotinib (both tyrosine kinase inhibitors) inhibit MET. They have been associated with photosensitivity, acneiform rash, paronychia, xerosis, pruritus, and mucositis.

The Belzer et al. letter reviewed six consecutive cases (mean age, 58) of dAEs associated with amivantamab at two academic health centers (treated June 2021 to August 2022) in order to describe dAEs associated with amivantamab use. “I suspect the rate of dAEs with amivantamab is similar to the rate of dAEs associated with first- and second-generation EGFR inhibitors, where the majority of patients, actually 75%-90%, develop cutaneous toxicity,” said Jonathan Leventhal, MD, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., corresponding author for the Belzer et al. letter.

Time from treatment initiation with amivantamab to dAE ranged from less than 1 month to 4 months. All dAEs were grade 2 or 3 and all included acneiform eruptions. These were widespread in four cases and in another case complicated by impetiginization (culture results positive for methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus), and a further case was limited to the scalp, face, upper back, and upper chest. Others with widespread acneiform eruption included the face with hyperkeratotic crust of the scalp and dermatitis of the posterior neck. Fissuring of the palms and soles was noted in two cases with widespread acneiform eruptions. Paronychia with pyogenic granulomas was reported in four cases. Another case included onycholysis with suppurative paronychia.

In five cases amivantamab was stopped but successfully reinitiated at 67%-75% of the original dose. In one case amivantamab was continued at the original dose.

Doxycycline at 100 mg twice daily was included among all of the treatments for cutaneous dAEs. Silver nitrate cautery was applied for pyogenic granulomas in clinic. The case of grade 3 acneiform eruption of the scalp and face was treated with hydrogen peroxide soaks with debridement in clinic, doxycycline, aluminum acetate soaks, and triamcinolone ointment. All dermatologic cases resolved fully without scarring.

“It is very likely that this series highlights the more severe and unusual presentations of dAEs which were referred to oncodermatology. I suspect milder presentations were likely managed by oncologists,” Dr. Leventhal said in the interview.

“It is important for dermatologists and oncologists to be aware of the more severe and atypical dAEs associated with this novel FDA-approved targeted therapy.” Dr. Belzer said. “As amivantamab use increases, oncologists and dermatologists need to collaborate to ensure swift diagnosis and management of dAEs.”

One trial, the authors stated, revealed more than half of patients receiving EGFR inhibitors taking preemptive treatment with moisturizers, sunscreen, topical corticosteroids, and an oral tetracycline to have more than a 50% reduction in grade 2 or higher dAEs. Belzer et al. concluded that prophylactic treatment, including sun protection, should be considered before initiating treatment with amivantamab.

A limitation of the study, Belzer et al. acknowledged, was the small sample size.

Dr. Leventhal reported receiving personal fees from the advisory boards of Sanofi, Regeneron, and La Roche-Posay as well as clinical trial funding from Azitra and OnQuality Pharmaceuticals outside the submitted work.

A case series of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) exon 20 insertion–mutated advanced non–small cell lung cancer patients with dermatologic adverse events (dAEs) subsequent to treatment with amivantamab showed classic toxic effects associated with EGFR inhibitors and atypical presentations. Toxic effects, however, were mitigated by dose interruptions, dAE management, and amivantamab dose reductions, allowing for cancer therapy continuation in all cases. Amivantamab doses were reduced in 5 out of 6 cases, according to a research letter published in JAMA Dermatology.

The EGFR exon 20 insertion–mutation portends insensitivity to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors and poor prognosis. Amivantamab, a bispecific monoclonal antibody targeting EGFR and mesenchymal epithelial transition factor (MET) is Food and Drug Administration approved for this population. Acneiform eruptions and pruritus are the most common dAEs associated with EGFR inhibitors, with xerosis, fissures, and nail and hair changes occurring additionally. While no FDA-approved monoclonal antibody targets MET exclusively, capmatinib and tepotinib (both tyrosine kinase inhibitors) inhibit MET. They have been associated with photosensitivity, acneiform rash, paronychia, xerosis, pruritus, and mucositis.

The Belzer et al. letter reviewed six consecutive cases (mean age, 58) of dAEs associated with amivantamab at two academic health centers (treated June 2021 to August 2022) in order to describe dAEs associated with amivantamab use. “I suspect the rate of dAEs with amivantamab is similar to the rate of dAEs associated with first- and second-generation EGFR inhibitors, where the majority of patients, actually 75%-90%, develop cutaneous toxicity,” said Jonathan Leventhal, MD, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., corresponding author for the Belzer et al. letter.

Time from treatment initiation with amivantamab to dAE ranged from less than 1 month to 4 months. All dAEs were grade 2 or 3 and all included acneiform eruptions. These were widespread in four cases and in another case complicated by impetiginization (culture results positive for methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus), and a further case was limited to the scalp, face, upper back, and upper chest. Others with widespread acneiform eruption included the face with hyperkeratotic crust of the scalp and dermatitis of the posterior neck. Fissuring of the palms and soles was noted in two cases with widespread acneiform eruptions. Paronychia with pyogenic granulomas was reported in four cases. Another case included onycholysis with suppurative paronychia.

In five cases amivantamab was stopped but successfully reinitiated at 67%-75% of the original dose. In one case amivantamab was continued at the original dose.

Doxycycline at 100 mg twice daily was included among all of the treatments for cutaneous dAEs. Silver nitrate cautery was applied for pyogenic granulomas in clinic. The case of grade 3 acneiform eruption of the scalp and face was treated with hydrogen peroxide soaks with debridement in clinic, doxycycline, aluminum acetate soaks, and triamcinolone ointment. All dermatologic cases resolved fully without scarring.

“It is very likely that this series highlights the more severe and unusual presentations of dAEs which were referred to oncodermatology. I suspect milder presentations were likely managed by oncologists,” Dr. Leventhal said in the interview.

“It is important for dermatologists and oncologists to be aware of the more severe and atypical dAEs associated with this novel FDA-approved targeted therapy.” Dr. Belzer said. “As amivantamab use increases, oncologists and dermatologists need to collaborate to ensure swift diagnosis and management of dAEs.”

One trial, the authors stated, revealed more than half of patients receiving EGFR inhibitors taking preemptive treatment with moisturizers, sunscreen, topical corticosteroids, and an oral tetracycline to have more than a 50% reduction in grade 2 or higher dAEs. Belzer et al. concluded that prophylactic treatment, including sun protection, should be considered before initiating treatment with amivantamab.

A limitation of the study, Belzer et al. acknowledged, was the small sample size.

Dr. Leventhal reported receiving personal fees from the advisory boards of Sanofi, Regeneron, and La Roche-Posay as well as clinical trial funding from Azitra and OnQuality Pharmaceuticals outside the submitted work.

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Belimumab for pregnant women with lupus: B-cell concerns remain

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Tue, 01/17/2023 - 09:08

The largest combined analysis of birth outcome data for women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) who took belimumab (Benlysta) during pregnancy appears to indicate that the biologic is “unlikely to cause very frequent birth defects,” but the full extent of possible risk remains unknown. The drug’s effect on B cells, immune function, and infections in exposed offspring were not captured in the data, but a separate case report published after the belimumab pregnancy data report indicates that the drug does cross the placenta and builds up in the blood of the newborn, reducing B cells at birth.

Children of women with SLE have increased birth defect risks, and standard SLE therapeutic agents (for example, cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, mycophenolate mofetil) have been implicated in birth defects and pregnancy loss, but birth defect data for biologic drugs such as belimumab are limited. While belimumab animal data revealed no evidence of fetal harm or pregnancy loss rates, there was evidence of immature and mature B-cell count reductions.

Belimumab is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in patients aged 5 years and older with active, autoantibody-positive SLE who are taking standard therapy, and also for those with lupus nephritis.

Michelle Petri, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and coauthors reported in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases on data they compiled through March 8, 2020, from belimumab clinical trials, the Belimumab Pregnancy Registry (BPR), and postmarketing/spontaneous reports that encompassed 319 pregnancies with known outcomes.

Across 18 clinical trials with 223 live births, birth defects occurred in 4 of 72 (5.6%) belimumab-exposed pregnancies and in 0 of 9 in placebo-exposed pregnancies. Pregnancy loss (excluding elective terminations) occurred in 31.8% (35 of 110) of belimumab-exposed women and 43.8% (7 of 16) of placebo-exposed women in clinical trials. In the BPR retrospective cohort, 4.2% had pregnancy loss. Postmarketing and spontaneous reports had a pregnancy loss rate of 31.4% (43 of 137). Concomitant medications, confounding factors, and/or missing data were noted in all belimumab-exposed women in clinical trials and the BPR cohort. Dr. Petri and colleagues reported no consistent pattern of birth defects across datasets but stated: “Low numbers of exposed pregnancies, presence of confounding factors/other biases, and incomplete information preclude informed recommendations regarding risk of birth defects and pregnancy loss with belimumab use.”

Dr. Megan Clowse

In an interview, coauthor Megan E. B. Clowse, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and director of the division of rheumatology and immunology at Duke University, Durham, N.C., said that “the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases article provides some reassurance that belimumab is unlikely to cause very frequent birth defects. It is clearly not in the risk-range for thalidomide or mycophenolate. However, due to the complexity of collecting these data, this manuscript can’t explore the full extent of possible risks. It also did not provide information about B cells, immune function, or infection risks in exposed offspring.”

A separate case report by Helle Bitter of the department of rheumatology at Sorlandet Hospital Kristiansand (Norway) in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases is the first to show transplacental passage of belimumab in humans. Other prior reports have shown such transplacental passage for monoclonal IgG antibodies (tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and rituximab). Even though the last infusion was given late in the second trimester, belimumab was present in cord serum at birth, suggesting much higher concentrations before treatment was stopped. While B-cell numbers were reduced at birth, they returned to normal ranges by 4 months post partum when they were undetectable. In the mother, B-cell numbers remained low throughout the study period extending to 7 months after delivery. The authors stated that the child had a normal vaccination response, and except for the reduced B-cell levels at birth, had no adverse effects of prenatal exposure to maternal medication through age 6 years.

“The belimumab transfer in the case report is the level that we would anticipate based on similar studies in infant/mother pairs on other IgG1 antibody biologics like adalimumab – about 60% higher than the maternal level at birth,” Dr. Clowse said. “That the baby has very low B cells at birth is worrisome to me, demonstrating the lasting effect of maternal belimumab on the infant’s immune system, even when the drug was stopped 14 weeks prior to delivery. While this single infant did not have problems with infections, with more widespread use it seems possible that infants would be found to have higher rates of infections after in utero belimumab exposure.”

The field of lupus research greatly needs controlled studies of newer biologics in pregnancy, Dr. Clowse said. “Women with active lupus in pregnancy – particularly with active lupus nephritis – continue to suffer tragic outcomes at an alarming rate. Newer treatments for lupus nephritis provide some hope that we might be able to control lupus nephritis in pregnancy more effectively. The available data suggests the risks of these medications are not so large as to make studies unreasonable. Our current data doesn’t allow us to sufficiently balance the potential risks and benefits in a way that provides clinically useful guidance. Trials of these medications, however, would enable us to identify improved treatment strategies that could result in healthier women, pregnancies, and babies.”

GlaxoSmithKline funded the study. Dr. Clowse reported receiving consulting fees and grants from UCB and GlaxoSmithKline that relate to pregnancy in women with lupus.

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The largest combined analysis of birth outcome data for women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) who took belimumab (Benlysta) during pregnancy appears to indicate that the biologic is “unlikely to cause very frequent birth defects,” but the full extent of possible risk remains unknown. The drug’s effect on B cells, immune function, and infections in exposed offspring were not captured in the data, but a separate case report published after the belimumab pregnancy data report indicates that the drug does cross the placenta and builds up in the blood of the newborn, reducing B cells at birth.

Children of women with SLE have increased birth defect risks, and standard SLE therapeutic agents (for example, cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, mycophenolate mofetil) have been implicated in birth defects and pregnancy loss, but birth defect data for biologic drugs such as belimumab are limited. While belimumab animal data revealed no evidence of fetal harm or pregnancy loss rates, there was evidence of immature and mature B-cell count reductions.

Belimumab is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in patients aged 5 years and older with active, autoantibody-positive SLE who are taking standard therapy, and also for those with lupus nephritis.

Michelle Petri, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and coauthors reported in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases on data they compiled through March 8, 2020, from belimumab clinical trials, the Belimumab Pregnancy Registry (BPR), and postmarketing/spontaneous reports that encompassed 319 pregnancies with known outcomes.

Across 18 clinical trials with 223 live births, birth defects occurred in 4 of 72 (5.6%) belimumab-exposed pregnancies and in 0 of 9 in placebo-exposed pregnancies. Pregnancy loss (excluding elective terminations) occurred in 31.8% (35 of 110) of belimumab-exposed women and 43.8% (7 of 16) of placebo-exposed women in clinical trials. In the BPR retrospective cohort, 4.2% had pregnancy loss. Postmarketing and spontaneous reports had a pregnancy loss rate of 31.4% (43 of 137). Concomitant medications, confounding factors, and/or missing data were noted in all belimumab-exposed women in clinical trials and the BPR cohort. Dr. Petri and colleagues reported no consistent pattern of birth defects across datasets but stated: “Low numbers of exposed pregnancies, presence of confounding factors/other biases, and incomplete information preclude informed recommendations regarding risk of birth defects and pregnancy loss with belimumab use.”

Dr. Megan Clowse

In an interview, coauthor Megan E. B. Clowse, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and director of the division of rheumatology and immunology at Duke University, Durham, N.C., said that “the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases article provides some reassurance that belimumab is unlikely to cause very frequent birth defects. It is clearly not in the risk-range for thalidomide or mycophenolate. However, due to the complexity of collecting these data, this manuscript can’t explore the full extent of possible risks. It also did not provide information about B cells, immune function, or infection risks in exposed offspring.”

A separate case report by Helle Bitter of the department of rheumatology at Sorlandet Hospital Kristiansand (Norway) in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases is the first to show transplacental passage of belimumab in humans. Other prior reports have shown such transplacental passage for monoclonal IgG antibodies (tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and rituximab). Even though the last infusion was given late in the second trimester, belimumab was present in cord serum at birth, suggesting much higher concentrations before treatment was stopped. While B-cell numbers were reduced at birth, they returned to normal ranges by 4 months post partum when they were undetectable. In the mother, B-cell numbers remained low throughout the study period extending to 7 months after delivery. The authors stated that the child had a normal vaccination response, and except for the reduced B-cell levels at birth, had no adverse effects of prenatal exposure to maternal medication through age 6 years.

“The belimumab transfer in the case report is the level that we would anticipate based on similar studies in infant/mother pairs on other IgG1 antibody biologics like adalimumab – about 60% higher than the maternal level at birth,” Dr. Clowse said. “That the baby has very low B cells at birth is worrisome to me, demonstrating the lasting effect of maternal belimumab on the infant’s immune system, even when the drug was stopped 14 weeks prior to delivery. While this single infant did not have problems with infections, with more widespread use it seems possible that infants would be found to have higher rates of infections after in utero belimumab exposure.”

The field of lupus research greatly needs controlled studies of newer biologics in pregnancy, Dr. Clowse said. “Women with active lupus in pregnancy – particularly with active lupus nephritis – continue to suffer tragic outcomes at an alarming rate. Newer treatments for lupus nephritis provide some hope that we might be able to control lupus nephritis in pregnancy more effectively. The available data suggests the risks of these medications are not so large as to make studies unreasonable. Our current data doesn’t allow us to sufficiently balance the potential risks and benefits in a way that provides clinically useful guidance. Trials of these medications, however, would enable us to identify improved treatment strategies that could result in healthier women, pregnancies, and babies.”

GlaxoSmithKline funded the study. Dr. Clowse reported receiving consulting fees and grants from UCB and GlaxoSmithKline that relate to pregnancy in women with lupus.

The largest combined analysis of birth outcome data for women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) who took belimumab (Benlysta) during pregnancy appears to indicate that the biologic is “unlikely to cause very frequent birth defects,” but the full extent of possible risk remains unknown. The drug’s effect on B cells, immune function, and infections in exposed offspring were not captured in the data, but a separate case report published after the belimumab pregnancy data report indicates that the drug does cross the placenta and builds up in the blood of the newborn, reducing B cells at birth.

Children of women with SLE have increased birth defect risks, and standard SLE therapeutic agents (for example, cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, mycophenolate mofetil) have been implicated in birth defects and pregnancy loss, but birth defect data for biologic drugs such as belimumab are limited. While belimumab animal data revealed no evidence of fetal harm or pregnancy loss rates, there was evidence of immature and mature B-cell count reductions.

Belimumab is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in patients aged 5 years and older with active, autoantibody-positive SLE who are taking standard therapy, and also for those with lupus nephritis.

Michelle Petri, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and coauthors reported in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases on data they compiled through March 8, 2020, from belimumab clinical trials, the Belimumab Pregnancy Registry (BPR), and postmarketing/spontaneous reports that encompassed 319 pregnancies with known outcomes.

Across 18 clinical trials with 223 live births, birth defects occurred in 4 of 72 (5.6%) belimumab-exposed pregnancies and in 0 of 9 in placebo-exposed pregnancies. Pregnancy loss (excluding elective terminations) occurred in 31.8% (35 of 110) of belimumab-exposed women and 43.8% (7 of 16) of placebo-exposed women in clinical trials. In the BPR retrospective cohort, 4.2% had pregnancy loss. Postmarketing and spontaneous reports had a pregnancy loss rate of 31.4% (43 of 137). Concomitant medications, confounding factors, and/or missing data were noted in all belimumab-exposed women in clinical trials and the BPR cohort. Dr. Petri and colleagues reported no consistent pattern of birth defects across datasets but stated: “Low numbers of exposed pregnancies, presence of confounding factors/other biases, and incomplete information preclude informed recommendations regarding risk of birth defects and pregnancy loss with belimumab use.”

Dr. Megan Clowse

In an interview, coauthor Megan E. B. Clowse, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and director of the division of rheumatology and immunology at Duke University, Durham, N.C., said that “the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases article provides some reassurance that belimumab is unlikely to cause very frequent birth defects. It is clearly not in the risk-range for thalidomide or mycophenolate. However, due to the complexity of collecting these data, this manuscript can’t explore the full extent of possible risks. It also did not provide information about B cells, immune function, or infection risks in exposed offspring.”

A separate case report by Helle Bitter of the department of rheumatology at Sorlandet Hospital Kristiansand (Norway) in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases is the first to show transplacental passage of belimumab in humans. Other prior reports have shown such transplacental passage for monoclonal IgG antibodies (tumor necrosis factor inhibitors and rituximab). Even though the last infusion was given late in the second trimester, belimumab was present in cord serum at birth, suggesting much higher concentrations before treatment was stopped. While B-cell numbers were reduced at birth, they returned to normal ranges by 4 months post partum when they were undetectable. In the mother, B-cell numbers remained low throughout the study period extending to 7 months after delivery. The authors stated that the child had a normal vaccination response, and except for the reduced B-cell levels at birth, had no adverse effects of prenatal exposure to maternal medication through age 6 years.

“The belimumab transfer in the case report is the level that we would anticipate based on similar studies in infant/mother pairs on other IgG1 antibody biologics like adalimumab – about 60% higher than the maternal level at birth,” Dr. Clowse said. “That the baby has very low B cells at birth is worrisome to me, demonstrating the lasting effect of maternal belimumab on the infant’s immune system, even when the drug was stopped 14 weeks prior to delivery. While this single infant did not have problems with infections, with more widespread use it seems possible that infants would be found to have higher rates of infections after in utero belimumab exposure.”

The field of lupus research greatly needs controlled studies of newer biologics in pregnancy, Dr. Clowse said. “Women with active lupus in pregnancy – particularly with active lupus nephritis – continue to suffer tragic outcomes at an alarming rate. Newer treatments for lupus nephritis provide some hope that we might be able to control lupus nephritis in pregnancy more effectively. The available data suggests the risks of these medications are not so large as to make studies unreasonable. Our current data doesn’t allow us to sufficiently balance the potential risks and benefits in a way that provides clinically useful guidance. Trials of these medications, however, would enable us to identify improved treatment strategies that could result in healthier women, pregnancies, and babies.”

GlaxoSmithKline funded the study. Dr. Clowse reported receiving consulting fees and grants from UCB and GlaxoSmithKline that relate to pregnancy in women with lupus.

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