User login
GOLD Report 2023: Important updates and revisions
The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) Report is revised annually and is used widely throughout the world as a tool for implementing effective management.
Among the updates in the 2023 GOLD Report, the section on diagnostic criteria added a proposed new category “PRISm,” denoting “preserved ratio impaired spirometry,” encompassing individuals who present with structural lung lesions (for example, emphysema) and/or other physiological abnormalities such as low-normal forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), gas trapping, hyperinflation, reduced lung diffusing capacity and/or rapid FEV1 decline, but without airflow obstruction (FEV1/FEV ≥ 0.7 post bronchodilation). Some of these “pre-COPD” (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) individuals, who have a normal ratio but abnormal spirometry are at risk over time of developing airflow obstruction. The best treatment for them, beyond smoking cessation, needs to be determined through research, the report states.
Clinical updates
The GOLD 2023 Report also offers proposed clinical guidance, in the absence of high-quality clinical trial evidence, on initial pharmacologic management of COPD. The proposal is based on individual assessment of symptoms and exacerbation risk following use of the ABE Assessment Tool, a revised version of the ABCD Assessment Tool that recognizes the clinical relevance of exacerbations independent of symptom level.
These updates to information and figures pertaining to initial pharmacological treatment and follow-up pharmacological treatment revise the positioning of LABA (long-acting beta2 agonists) plus LAMA (long-acting muscarinic agonists) and LABA/ICS (inhaled corticosteroids). Among GOLD group A patients with 0 or 1 moderate exacerbations that do not lead to hospital admission, a bronchodilator is recommended.
The recommendation for group B patients is LABA/LAMA with the caveat that single inhaler therapy may be more convenient and effective than multiple inhalers. For group E patients with two or more moderate exacerbations or one or more leading to hospitalization, LABA/LAMA is recommended (with the same inhaler therapy caveat). With blood eosinophil levels at 300 or higher, LABA/LAMA/ICS may be considered.
Commenting on the combination recommendations in a press release, Antonio Anzueto, MD, professor of medicine, pulmonary critical care, University of Texas Health, San Antonio, stated: “From a physician’s perspective, we are always grateful to receive well-vetted and informed recommendations on how we can best utilize available treatment options to provide the most benefit to our patients. The new 2023 GOLD recommendations represent a meaningful change for the treatment of COPD by prioritizing the utilization of a fixed LAMA/LABA combination.”
More interventions
In a section on therapeutic interventions to reduce COPD mortality, the report lists studies showing mortality benefits for fixed-dose inhaled triple combinations (LABA + LAMA + ICS) versus dual inhaled long-acting bronchodilations, and for smoking cessation and pulmonary rehabilitation.
Also new is a strong emphasis on inhaler choice, education, and technique training with assessment of inhaler technique and adherence urged as a prerequisite to judging whether current therapy as insufficient. The report summarizes principles guiding inhaler type selection.
The report also added a section on chronic bronchitis, defining it as a common but variable condition in COPD patients with cough and expectorated sputum on a regular basis over a defined period in the absence of other conditions plausibly causing symptoms.
The fact that chronic bronchitis is sometimes found in never-smokers suggests the involvement of other factors such as exposure to inhaled dusts, biomass fuels, chemical fumes, or domestic heating and cooking fuels, according to the report. Gastroesophageal reflux may also be associated with chronic bronchitis.
The report discusses various taxonomic terms for different types of COPD, such as COPD-G for genetically determined COPD, COPD-D for those with abnormal lung development, and COPD-C for COPD associated with cigarette smoking, etc.
Change in exacerbations
The report also revises the definition of a COPD exacerbation as “an event characterized by increased dyspnea and/or cough and sputum that worsens in less than 14 days which may be accompanied by tachypnea and/or tachycardia and is often associated with increased local and system inflammation caused by infection, pollution, or other insult to the airways.” To overcome limitations conferred by the current grading of COPD exacerbations, the 2023 report proposes a four-step point-of-contact diagnosis and assessment tool.
Telemedicine
Given the constraints brought on by COVID-19 on top of the generally sparse availability of programs and facilities for delivering well-proven pulmonary rehabilitation methods, tele-rehabilitation has been proposed as an alternative to traditional approaches. While the evidence base is still evolving and best practices have not yet been established, the GOLD Report calls for better understanding of barriers to tele-rehabilitation success.
Comorbidities update
The GOLD Report chapter on COPD and comorbidities was also updated, and lists cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, osteoporosis, depression/anxiety, and gastroesophageal reflux disease as common comorbid conditions which may affect prognosis and, in the case of cancer, mortality. The report urges simplicity of treatment to minimize polypharmacy. While annual low-dose CT is recommended for COPD caused by smoking, it is not recommended for COPD caused by smoking; data are insufficient to establish benefit over harm.
While the GOLD Report “COVID-19 and COPD” chapter summarizes current evidence stating that individuals with COPD do not seem to be at substantially greater risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2, it underscores that they are at higher risk of hospitalization for COVID-19 and may be at higher risk for developing severe disease and death.
Many other topics are included in the updated report, among them screening, imaging, vaccinations, adherence to therapy, and surgical and bronchoscopic interventions. In its closing section, the GOLD Report 2023 reiterates its mission, stating: “The GOLD initiative will continue to work with National Leaders and other interested health care professionals to bring COPD to the attention of governments, public health officials, health care workers, and the general public, to raise awareness of the burden of COPD and to develop programs for early detection, prevention and approaches to management.
The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) Report is revised annually and is used widely throughout the world as a tool for implementing effective management.
Among the updates in the 2023 GOLD Report, the section on diagnostic criteria added a proposed new category “PRISm,” denoting “preserved ratio impaired spirometry,” encompassing individuals who present with structural lung lesions (for example, emphysema) and/or other physiological abnormalities such as low-normal forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), gas trapping, hyperinflation, reduced lung diffusing capacity and/or rapid FEV1 decline, but without airflow obstruction (FEV1/FEV ≥ 0.7 post bronchodilation). Some of these “pre-COPD” (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) individuals, who have a normal ratio but abnormal spirometry are at risk over time of developing airflow obstruction. The best treatment for them, beyond smoking cessation, needs to be determined through research, the report states.
Clinical updates
The GOLD 2023 Report also offers proposed clinical guidance, in the absence of high-quality clinical trial evidence, on initial pharmacologic management of COPD. The proposal is based on individual assessment of symptoms and exacerbation risk following use of the ABE Assessment Tool, a revised version of the ABCD Assessment Tool that recognizes the clinical relevance of exacerbations independent of symptom level.
These updates to information and figures pertaining to initial pharmacological treatment and follow-up pharmacological treatment revise the positioning of LABA (long-acting beta2 agonists) plus LAMA (long-acting muscarinic agonists) and LABA/ICS (inhaled corticosteroids). Among GOLD group A patients with 0 or 1 moderate exacerbations that do not lead to hospital admission, a bronchodilator is recommended.
The recommendation for group B patients is LABA/LAMA with the caveat that single inhaler therapy may be more convenient and effective than multiple inhalers. For group E patients with two or more moderate exacerbations or one or more leading to hospitalization, LABA/LAMA is recommended (with the same inhaler therapy caveat). With blood eosinophil levels at 300 or higher, LABA/LAMA/ICS may be considered.
Commenting on the combination recommendations in a press release, Antonio Anzueto, MD, professor of medicine, pulmonary critical care, University of Texas Health, San Antonio, stated: “From a physician’s perspective, we are always grateful to receive well-vetted and informed recommendations on how we can best utilize available treatment options to provide the most benefit to our patients. The new 2023 GOLD recommendations represent a meaningful change for the treatment of COPD by prioritizing the utilization of a fixed LAMA/LABA combination.”
More interventions
In a section on therapeutic interventions to reduce COPD mortality, the report lists studies showing mortality benefits for fixed-dose inhaled triple combinations (LABA + LAMA + ICS) versus dual inhaled long-acting bronchodilations, and for smoking cessation and pulmonary rehabilitation.
Also new is a strong emphasis on inhaler choice, education, and technique training with assessment of inhaler technique and adherence urged as a prerequisite to judging whether current therapy as insufficient. The report summarizes principles guiding inhaler type selection.
The report also added a section on chronic bronchitis, defining it as a common but variable condition in COPD patients with cough and expectorated sputum on a regular basis over a defined period in the absence of other conditions plausibly causing symptoms.
The fact that chronic bronchitis is sometimes found in never-smokers suggests the involvement of other factors such as exposure to inhaled dusts, biomass fuels, chemical fumes, or domestic heating and cooking fuels, according to the report. Gastroesophageal reflux may also be associated with chronic bronchitis.
The report discusses various taxonomic terms for different types of COPD, such as COPD-G for genetically determined COPD, COPD-D for those with abnormal lung development, and COPD-C for COPD associated with cigarette smoking, etc.
Change in exacerbations
The report also revises the definition of a COPD exacerbation as “an event characterized by increased dyspnea and/or cough and sputum that worsens in less than 14 days which may be accompanied by tachypnea and/or tachycardia and is often associated with increased local and system inflammation caused by infection, pollution, or other insult to the airways.” To overcome limitations conferred by the current grading of COPD exacerbations, the 2023 report proposes a four-step point-of-contact diagnosis and assessment tool.
Telemedicine
Given the constraints brought on by COVID-19 on top of the generally sparse availability of programs and facilities for delivering well-proven pulmonary rehabilitation methods, tele-rehabilitation has been proposed as an alternative to traditional approaches. While the evidence base is still evolving and best practices have not yet been established, the GOLD Report calls for better understanding of barriers to tele-rehabilitation success.
Comorbidities update
The GOLD Report chapter on COPD and comorbidities was also updated, and lists cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, osteoporosis, depression/anxiety, and gastroesophageal reflux disease as common comorbid conditions which may affect prognosis and, in the case of cancer, mortality. The report urges simplicity of treatment to minimize polypharmacy. While annual low-dose CT is recommended for COPD caused by smoking, it is not recommended for COPD caused by smoking; data are insufficient to establish benefit over harm.
While the GOLD Report “COVID-19 and COPD” chapter summarizes current evidence stating that individuals with COPD do not seem to be at substantially greater risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2, it underscores that they are at higher risk of hospitalization for COVID-19 and may be at higher risk for developing severe disease and death.
Many other topics are included in the updated report, among them screening, imaging, vaccinations, adherence to therapy, and surgical and bronchoscopic interventions. In its closing section, the GOLD Report 2023 reiterates its mission, stating: “The GOLD initiative will continue to work with National Leaders and other interested health care professionals to bring COPD to the attention of governments, public health officials, health care workers, and the general public, to raise awareness of the burden of COPD and to develop programs for early detection, prevention and approaches to management.
The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) Report is revised annually and is used widely throughout the world as a tool for implementing effective management.
Among the updates in the 2023 GOLD Report, the section on diagnostic criteria added a proposed new category “PRISm,” denoting “preserved ratio impaired spirometry,” encompassing individuals who present with structural lung lesions (for example, emphysema) and/or other physiological abnormalities such as low-normal forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), gas trapping, hyperinflation, reduced lung diffusing capacity and/or rapid FEV1 decline, but without airflow obstruction (FEV1/FEV ≥ 0.7 post bronchodilation). Some of these “pre-COPD” (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) individuals, who have a normal ratio but abnormal spirometry are at risk over time of developing airflow obstruction. The best treatment for them, beyond smoking cessation, needs to be determined through research, the report states.
Clinical updates
The GOLD 2023 Report also offers proposed clinical guidance, in the absence of high-quality clinical trial evidence, on initial pharmacologic management of COPD. The proposal is based on individual assessment of symptoms and exacerbation risk following use of the ABE Assessment Tool, a revised version of the ABCD Assessment Tool that recognizes the clinical relevance of exacerbations independent of symptom level.
These updates to information and figures pertaining to initial pharmacological treatment and follow-up pharmacological treatment revise the positioning of LABA (long-acting beta2 agonists) plus LAMA (long-acting muscarinic agonists) and LABA/ICS (inhaled corticosteroids). Among GOLD group A patients with 0 or 1 moderate exacerbations that do not lead to hospital admission, a bronchodilator is recommended.
The recommendation for group B patients is LABA/LAMA with the caveat that single inhaler therapy may be more convenient and effective than multiple inhalers. For group E patients with two or more moderate exacerbations or one or more leading to hospitalization, LABA/LAMA is recommended (with the same inhaler therapy caveat). With blood eosinophil levels at 300 or higher, LABA/LAMA/ICS may be considered.
Commenting on the combination recommendations in a press release, Antonio Anzueto, MD, professor of medicine, pulmonary critical care, University of Texas Health, San Antonio, stated: “From a physician’s perspective, we are always grateful to receive well-vetted and informed recommendations on how we can best utilize available treatment options to provide the most benefit to our patients. The new 2023 GOLD recommendations represent a meaningful change for the treatment of COPD by prioritizing the utilization of a fixed LAMA/LABA combination.”
More interventions
In a section on therapeutic interventions to reduce COPD mortality, the report lists studies showing mortality benefits for fixed-dose inhaled triple combinations (LABA + LAMA + ICS) versus dual inhaled long-acting bronchodilations, and for smoking cessation and pulmonary rehabilitation.
Also new is a strong emphasis on inhaler choice, education, and technique training with assessment of inhaler technique and adherence urged as a prerequisite to judging whether current therapy as insufficient. The report summarizes principles guiding inhaler type selection.
The report also added a section on chronic bronchitis, defining it as a common but variable condition in COPD patients with cough and expectorated sputum on a regular basis over a defined period in the absence of other conditions plausibly causing symptoms.
The fact that chronic bronchitis is sometimes found in never-smokers suggests the involvement of other factors such as exposure to inhaled dusts, biomass fuels, chemical fumes, or domestic heating and cooking fuels, according to the report. Gastroesophageal reflux may also be associated with chronic bronchitis.
The report discusses various taxonomic terms for different types of COPD, such as COPD-G for genetically determined COPD, COPD-D for those with abnormal lung development, and COPD-C for COPD associated with cigarette smoking, etc.
Change in exacerbations
The report also revises the definition of a COPD exacerbation as “an event characterized by increased dyspnea and/or cough and sputum that worsens in less than 14 days which may be accompanied by tachypnea and/or tachycardia and is often associated with increased local and system inflammation caused by infection, pollution, or other insult to the airways.” To overcome limitations conferred by the current grading of COPD exacerbations, the 2023 report proposes a four-step point-of-contact diagnosis and assessment tool.
Telemedicine
Given the constraints brought on by COVID-19 on top of the generally sparse availability of programs and facilities for delivering well-proven pulmonary rehabilitation methods, tele-rehabilitation has been proposed as an alternative to traditional approaches. While the evidence base is still evolving and best practices have not yet been established, the GOLD Report calls for better understanding of barriers to tele-rehabilitation success.
Comorbidities update
The GOLD Report chapter on COPD and comorbidities was also updated, and lists cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, osteoporosis, depression/anxiety, and gastroesophageal reflux disease as common comorbid conditions which may affect prognosis and, in the case of cancer, mortality. The report urges simplicity of treatment to minimize polypharmacy. While annual low-dose CT is recommended for COPD caused by smoking, it is not recommended for COPD caused by smoking; data are insufficient to establish benefit over harm.
While the GOLD Report “COVID-19 and COPD” chapter summarizes current evidence stating that individuals with COPD do not seem to be at substantially greater risk of infection with SARS-CoV-2, it underscores that they are at higher risk of hospitalization for COVID-19 and may be at higher risk for developing severe disease and death.
Many other topics are included in the updated report, among them screening, imaging, vaccinations, adherence to therapy, and surgical and bronchoscopic interventions. In its closing section, the GOLD Report 2023 reiterates its mission, stating: “The GOLD initiative will continue to work with National Leaders and other interested health care professionals to bring COPD to the attention of governments, public health officials, health care workers, and the general public, to raise awareness of the burden of COPD and to develop programs for early detection, prevention and approaches to management.
Doctor urges compassionate access to specialized radiotherapy for inoperable RCC
An individual patient data meta-analysis of patients undergoing stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy for primary renal cell carcinoma gives support for SABR as a treatment option for patients unwilling or unfit to undergo surgery, shows a study published in The Lancet Oncology.
The analysis, led by Shankar Siva, PhD, of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, also showed that single-fraction SABR might yield less local failure than multifraction SABR.
The incidence of renal cell carcinoma is rising especially in patients older than 70 years, particularly among those with a greater burden of medical comorbidities who face additional risks from anesthesia and major surgery. As alternatives to radical or partial nephrectomy, guidelines recommend nephron-sparing approaches such as thermal ablation and SABR, a noninvasive procedure that avoids anesthesia. While a 2019 meta-analysis revealed promising safety and efficacy for SABR in patients with comorbidities, tumors of stage T1b or higher (that is, ≥ 4 cm) and in solitary kidneys, follow-up was only 28 months and long term outcome data have been awaited.
The current study assessed 5-year outcomes after SABR in primary renal cell carcinoma from the International Radiosurgery Consortium of the Kidney database plus patient data from 12 new contributing institutions in Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan and the United States. The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed local failure. Among 190 patients (median age, 73.6 years), 81 patients (43%) received single-fraction SABR and 109 (57%) received multifraction SABR, with all fractions greater than 5 Gy. Median tumor diameter was 4.0 cm (interquartile range, 2.8-4.9). Among patients with operability details available, referring urologists deemed 75% inoperable; 29% had a solitary kidney.
The cumulative incidence of local failure at 5 years was 5.5% (95% confidence interval, 2.8%–9.5%) overall. Patients receiving single-fraction SABR were observed to have improved local failure and progression-free survival, but not cancer-specific survival, compared with those receiving multifraction SABR.
“We found that multifraction SABR was associated with a 6-times higher risk of local failure after adjustment for baseline characteristics. This data is provocative and needs to be tested in a randomized trial,” Dr. Siva said in a Lancet Oncology podcast interview. There were no grade 3 toxic effects or treatment-related deaths. One patient developed an acute grade 4 duodenal ulcer and late grade 4 gastritis.
Reductions in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), from a median of 60.0 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at baseline were 10.0 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at 3 years and by 14.2 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at 5 years post SABR. “Most of these patients had severe chronic kidney disease, the median eGFR being only 33 mL/min,” Dr. Siva stated. “So overall the kidney function declines were quite acceptable.”
The results show, Dr. Siva and colleagues stated, that In the audio interview, Dr. Siva said, “I would suggest that we consider SABR for those patients who have larger, inoperable kidney cancers. SABR, in this context, is particularly attractive because these patients don’t have any alternative cure or treatment options. In my opinion, this group should be given compassionate access to SABR. It would be a great place to start.”
The authors acknowledged that because toxicity data were collected retrospectively, low rates of treatment-related toxic effects might be caused by underreporting.
Dr. Siva and colleagues reported no outside funding. Dr. Siva was supported by the Cancer Council Victoria Colebatch Fellowship.
An individual patient data meta-analysis of patients undergoing stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy for primary renal cell carcinoma gives support for SABR as a treatment option for patients unwilling or unfit to undergo surgery, shows a study published in The Lancet Oncology.
The analysis, led by Shankar Siva, PhD, of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, also showed that single-fraction SABR might yield less local failure than multifraction SABR.
The incidence of renal cell carcinoma is rising especially in patients older than 70 years, particularly among those with a greater burden of medical comorbidities who face additional risks from anesthesia and major surgery. As alternatives to radical or partial nephrectomy, guidelines recommend nephron-sparing approaches such as thermal ablation and SABR, a noninvasive procedure that avoids anesthesia. While a 2019 meta-analysis revealed promising safety and efficacy for SABR in patients with comorbidities, tumors of stage T1b or higher (that is, ≥ 4 cm) and in solitary kidneys, follow-up was only 28 months and long term outcome data have been awaited.
The current study assessed 5-year outcomes after SABR in primary renal cell carcinoma from the International Radiosurgery Consortium of the Kidney database plus patient data from 12 new contributing institutions in Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan and the United States. The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed local failure. Among 190 patients (median age, 73.6 years), 81 patients (43%) received single-fraction SABR and 109 (57%) received multifraction SABR, with all fractions greater than 5 Gy. Median tumor diameter was 4.0 cm (interquartile range, 2.8-4.9). Among patients with operability details available, referring urologists deemed 75% inoperable; 29% had a solitary kidney.
The cumulative incidence of local failure at 5 years was 5.5% (95% confidence interval, 2.8%–9.5%) overall. Patients receiving single-fraction SABR were observed to have improved local failure and progression-free survival, but not cancer-specific survival, compared with those receiving multifraction SABR.
“We found that multifraction SABR was associated with a 6-times higher risk of local failure after adjustment for baseline characteristics. This data is provocative and needs to be tested in a randomized trial,” Dr. Siva said in a Lancet Oncology podcast interview. There were no grade 3 toxic effects or treatment-related deaths. One patient developed an acute grade 4 duodenal ulcer and late grade 4 gastritis.
Reductions in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), from a median of 60.0 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at baseline were 10.0 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at 3 years and by 14.2 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at 5 years post SABR. “Most of these patients had severe chronic kidney disease, the median eGFR being only 33 mL/min,” Dr. Siva stated. “So overall the kidney function declines were quite acceptable.”
The results show, Dr. Siva and colleagues stated, that In the audio interview, Dr. Siva said, “I would suggest that we consider SABR for those patients who have larger, inoperable kidney cancers. SABR, in this context, is particularly attractive because these patients don’t have any alternative cure or treatment options. In my opinion, this group should be given compassionate access to SABR. It would be a great place to start.”
The authors acknowledged that because toxicity data were collected retrospectively, low rates of treatment-related toxic effects might be caused by underreporting.
Dr. Siva and colleagues reported no outside funding. Dr. Siva was supported by the Cancer Council Victoria Colebatch Fellowship.
An individual patient data meta-analysis of patients undergoing stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy for primary renal cell carcinoma gives support for SABR as a treatment option for patients unwilling or unfit to undergo surgery, shows a study published in The Lancet Oncology.
The analysis, led by Shankar Siva, PhD, of the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, also showed that single-fraction SABR might yield less local failure than multifraction SABR.
The incidence of renal cell carcinoma is rising especially in patients older than 70 years, particularly among those with a greater burden of medical comorbidities who face additional risks from anesthesia and major surgery. As alternatives to radical or partial nephrectomy, guidelines recommend nephron-sparing approaches such as thermal ablation and SABR, a noninvasive procedure that avoids anesthesia. While a 2019 meta-analysis revealed promising safety and efficacy for SABR in patients with comorbidities, tumors of stage T1b or higher (that is, ≥ 4 cm) and in solitary kidneys, follow-up was only 28 months and long term outcome data have been awaited.
The current study assessed 5-year outcomes after SABR in primary renal cell carcinoma from the International Radiosurgery Consortium of the Kidney database plus patient data from 12 new contributing institutions in Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan and the United States. The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed local failure. Among 190 patients (median age, 73.6 years), 81 patients (43%) received single-fraction SABR and 109 (57%) received multifraction SABR, with all fractions greater than 5 Gy. Median tumor diameter was 4.0 cm (interquartile range, 2.8-4.9). Among patients with operability details available, referring urologists deemed 75% inoperable; 29% had a solitary kidney.
The cumulative incidence of local failure at 5 years was 5.5% (95% confidence interval, 2.8%–9.5%) overall. Patients receiving single-fraction SABR were observed to have improved local failure and progression-free survival, but not cancer-specific survival, compared with those receiving multifraction SABR.
“We found that multifraction SABR was associated with a 6-times higher risk of local failure after adjustment for baseline characteristics. This data is provocative and needs to be tested in a randomized trial,” Dr. Siva said in a Lancet Oncology podcast interview. There were no grade 3 toxic effects or treatment-related deaths. One patient developed an acute grade 4 duodenal ulcer and late grade 4 gastritis.
Reductions in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), from a median of 60.0 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at baseline were 10.0 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at 3 years and by 14.2 mL/min per 1.73 m2 at 5 years post SABR. “Most of these patients had severe chronic kidney disease, the median eGFR being only 33 mL/min,” Dr. Siva stated. “So overall the kidney function declines were quite acceptable.”
The results show, Dr. Siva and colleagues stated, that In the audio interview, Dr. Siva said, “I would suggest that we consider SABR for those patients who have larger, inoperable kidney cancers. SABR, in this context, is particularly attractive because these patients don’t have any alternative cure or treatment options. In my opinion, this group should be given compassionate access to SABR. It would be a great place to start.”
The authors acknowledged that because toxicity data were collected retrospectively, low rates of treatment-related toxic effects might be caused by underreporting.
Dr. Siva and colleagues reported no outside funding. Dr. Siva was supported by the Cancer Council Victoria Colebatch Fellowship.
FROM THE LANCET ONCOLOGY
Newer agents for nosocomial pneumonia: The right drug for the right bug
“The right drug at the right time with the right dose for the right bug for the right duration.” That, said professor Kristina Crothers, MD, is the general guidance for optimizing antibiotic use (while awaiting an infectious disease consult). In her oral presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians, “Choosing newer antibiotics for nosocomial pneumonia,” Dr. Crothers asked the question: “Beyond the guidelines: When should novel antimicrobials be used?”
Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) and ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) are the most common nosocomial infections at 22%, and are the leading cause of death attributable to hospital-acquired infections. They increase mortality by 20%-50%, with an economic burden of about $40,000 per patient. The incidence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) organism infections varies widely by locality, but several factors increase the likelihood: prior broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure within the past 90 days; longer hospitalization; indwelling vascular devices; tracheostomy; and ventilator dependence. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lists as “Serious Threat” the HAP/VAP MDR organisms methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PSA) with difficult-to-treat-resistance, and beta-lactamase producing Enterobacterales (ESBL). In the category of “Urgent Threat” the CDC lists: carbapenamase-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) (carbapenamase producing or non–carbapenemase producing), and carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter (CRAB), according to Dr. Crothers who is at the University of Washington Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle.
Newer antibiotics for HAP/VAP that are still beyond the guidelines include telavancin and tedizolid as gram-positive agents, and as gram-negative ones: ceftazidime-avibactam, ceftolozane-tazobactam, cefiderocol, imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam and meropenem-vaborbactam, she added.
Tedizolid, Dr. Crothers stated, is a novel oxazolidinone, and is an alternative to vancomycin and linezolid for gram-positive HAP/VAP. In the VITAL noninferiority study versus linezolid with 726 patients, it was noninferior to linezolid for 28-day all-cause mortality (28% vs. 26%), but did not achieve noninferiority for investigator-assessed clinical cure (56% vs. 64%).
Televancin, a semisynthetic derivative of vancomycin, in the ATTAIN studies vs. vancomycin had overall similar cure rates. It is FDA-approved for S. aureus HAP/VAP but not other bacterial causes. It should be reserved for those who cannot receive vancomycin or linezolid, with normal renal function, according to Dr. Crothers. Excluded from first-line treatment of gram-positive HAP/VAP are daptomycin, ceftaroline, ceftobiprole, and tigecycline.
Ceftazidime-avibactam, a third-generation cephalosporin-plus novel beta-lactamase inhibitor has wide activity (Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae, Escherichia coli, Serratia marcescens, Proteus mirabilis, PSA and Haemophilus influenzae. It is also active against some extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs), ampC beta-lactamases (AmpCs), and K. pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC)–producing Enterobacterales, but not with metallo-beta-lactamases). Ceftazidime-avibactam is also indicated for HAP/VAP, and has a toxicity profile including nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.
In the REPROVE trial of ceftazidime-avibactam vs. meropenem for 7-14 days with 527 clinically evaluable patients (37% K. pneumoniae, 30% P. aeruginosa, and 33%-35% VAP), the clinical cure at 21-25 days post randomization was 69% vs. 73%, respectively, with similar adverse events.
Ceftolozane-tazobactam, a novel fifth-generation cephalosporin plus a beta-lactamase inhibitor has activity against PSA including extensively drug-resistant PSA, AmpC, and ESBL-E, but it has limited activity against Acinetobacter and Stenotrophomonas. It is indicated for HAP/VAP, has reduced efficacy with creatine clearance of 50 mL/min or less, increases transaminases and renal impairment, and causes diarrhea. In ASPECT-NP (n = 726) ceftolozane-tazobactam versus meropenem for 8-14 days (HAP/VAP), showed a 28 day-mortality of 24% vs. 25%, respectively, with test of cure at 54% vs. 53% at 7-14 days post therapy. Adverse events were similar between groups.
Imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam, a novel beta-lactamase inhibitor plus carbapenem, is indicated for HAP/VAP and has activity against ESBL, CRE: KPC-producing Enterobacterales, PSA including AmpC. It can cause seizures (requires caution with central nervous system disorders and renal impairment). It increases transaminases, anemia, diarrhea, and reduces potassium and sodium. In RESTORE-IMI 2 (n = 537 with HAP/VAP) it was noninferior for 28-day all-cause mortality vs. piperacillin and tazobactam (16% vs. 21%), with similar adverse events.
Cefiderocol, a siderophore cephalosporin, is indicated for HAP/VAP. It has a wide spectrum of activity: ESBL, CRE, CR PSA, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Acinetobacter baumanii, Streptococcus.) It increases transaminases, diarrhea, and atrial fibrillation, and it reduces potassium and magnesium. In APEKS-NP versus linezolid plus cefiderocol or extended meropenem infusion (HAP/VAP n = 292; gram-negative pneumonia = 251; 60% invasive mechanical ventilation) it was noninferior for 14-day all-cause mortality (12.4% vs. 11.6%) with similar adverse events. In CREDIBLE-CR vs. best available therapy for carbapenem-resistant gram-negative infections, clinical cure rates were similar (50% vs. 53% in 59 HAP/VAP patients at 7 days), but with more deaths in the cefiderocol arm. Adverse events were > 90% in both groups and 34% vs. 19% died, mostly with Acinetobacter.
Meropenem-vaborbactam, a novel beta-lactamase inhibitor plus carbapenem, is approved and indicated for HAP/VAP in Europe. It has activity against MDR, Enterobacterales including CRE. Its toxicities include headache, phlebitis/infusion-site reactions and diarrhea. In TANGO-2 versus best available treatment for carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) (n = 77, 47 with confirmed CRE), clinical cure was increased and mortality decreased compared with best available therapy. Treatment- and renal-related adverse events were lower for meropenem-vaborbactam.
In closing, Dr. Crothers cited advice from the paper by Tamma et al. (“Rethinking how Antibiotics are Prescribed” JAMA. 2018) about the need to review findings after therapy has been initiated to confirm the pneumonia diagnosis: Novel agents should be kept in reserve in the absence of MDR risk factors for MRSA and gram-negative bacilli; therapy should be deescalated after 48-72 hours if MDR organisms are not detected; and therapy should be directed to the specific organism detected. Most HAP and VAP in adults can be treated for 7 days, she added.
“Know indications for new therapeutic agents approved for nosocomial pneumonia,” she concluded.
Dr. Crothers reported having no disclosures.
“The right drug at the right time with the right dose for the right bug for the right duration.” That, said professor Kristina Crothers, MD, is the general guidance for optimizing antibiotic use (while awaiting an infectious disease consult). In her oral presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians, “Choosing newer antibiotics for nosocomial pneumonia,” Dr. Crothers asked the question: “Beyond the guidelines: When should novel antimicrobials be used?”
Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) and ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) are the most common nosocomial infections at 22%, and are the leading cause of death attributable to hospital-acquired infections. They increase mortality by 20%-50%, with an economic burden of about $40,000 per patient. The incidence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) organism infections varies widely by locality, but several factors increase the likelihood: prior broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure within the past 90 days; longer hospitalization; indwelling vascular devices; tracheostomy; and ventilator dependence. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lists as “Serious Threat” the HAP/VAP MDR organisms methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PSA) with difficult-to-treat-resistance, and beta-lactamase producing Enterobacterales (ESBL). In the category of “Urgent Threat” the CDC lists: carbapenamase-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) (carbapenamase producing or non–carbapenemase producing), and carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter (CRAB), according to Dr. Crothers who is at the University of Washington Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle.
Newer antibiotics for HAP/VAP that are still beyond the guidelines include telavancin and tedizolid as gram-positive agents, and as gram-negative ones: ceftazidime-avibactam, ceftolozane-tazobactam, cefiderocol, imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam and meropenem-vaborbactam, she added.
Tedizolid, Dr. Crothers stated, is a novel oxazolidinone, and is an alternative to vancomycin and linezolid for gram-positive HAP/VAP. In the VITAL noninferiority study versus linezolid with 726 patients, it was noninferior to linezolid for 28-day all-cause mortality (28% vs. 26%), but did not achieve noninferiority for investigator-assessed clinical cure (56% vs. 64%).
Televancin, a semisynthetic derivative of vancomycin, in the ATTAIN studies vs. vancomycin had overall similar cure rates. It is FDA-approved for S. aureus HAP/VAP but not other bacterial causes. It should be reserved for those who cannot receive vancomycin or linezolid, with normal renal function, according to Dr. Crothers. Excluded from first-line treatment of gram-positive HAP/VAP are daptomycin, ceftaroline, ceftobiprole, and tigecycline.
Ceftazidime-avibactam, a third-generation cephalosporin-plus novel beta-lactamase inhibitor has wide activity (Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae, Escherichia coli, Serratia marcescens, Proteus mirabilis, PSA and Haemophilus influenzae. It is also active against some extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs), ampC beta-lactamases (AmpCs), and K. pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC)–producing Enterobacterales, but not with metallo-beta-lactamases). Ceftazidime-avibactam is also indicated for HAP/VAP, and has a toxicity profile including nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.
In the REPROVE trial of ceftazidime-avibactam vs. meropenem for 7-14 days with 527 clinically evaluable patients (37% K. pneumoniae, 30% P. aeruginosa, and 33%-35% VAP), the clinical cure at 21-25 days post randomization was 69% vs. 73%, respectively, with similar adverse events.
Ceftolozane-tazobactam, a novel fifth-generation cephalosporin plus a beta-lactamase inhibitor has activity against PSA including extensively drug-resistant PSA, AmpC, and ESBL-E, but it has limited activity against Acinetobacter and Stenotrophomonas. It is indicated for HAP/VAP, has reduced efficacy with creatine clearance of 50 mL/min or less, increases transaminases and renal impairment, and causes diarrhea. In ASPECT-NP (n = 726) ceftolozane-tazobactam versus meropenem for 8-14 days (HAP/VAP), showed a 28 day-mortality of 24% vs. 25%, respectively, with test of cure at 54% vs. 53% at 7-14 days post therapy. Adverse events were similar between groups.
Imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam, a novel beta-lactamase inhibitor plus carbapenem, is indicated for HAP/VAP and has activity against ESBL, CRE: KPC-producing Enterobacterales, PSA including AmpC. It can cause seizures (requires caution with central nervous system disorders and renal impairment). It increases transaminases, anemia, diarrhea, and reduces potassium and sodium. In RESTORE-IMI 2 (n = 537 with HAP/VAP) it was noninferior for 28-day all-cause mortality vs. piperacillin and tazobactam (16% vs. 21%), with similar adverse events.
Cefiderocol, a siderophore cephalosporin, is indicated for HAP/VAP. It has a wide spectrum of activity: ESBL, CRE, CR PSA, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Acinetobacter baumanii, Streptococcus.) It increases transaminases, diarrhea, and atrial fibrillation, and it reduces potassium and magnesium. In APEKS-NP versus linezolid plus cefiderocol or extended meropenem infusion (HAP/VAP n = 292; gram-negative pneumonia = 251; 60% invasive mechanical ventilation) it was noninferior for 14-day all-cause mortality (12.4% vs. 11.6%) with similar adverse events. In CREDIBLE-CR vs. best available therapy for carbapenem-resistant gram-negative infections, clinical cure rates were similar (50% vs. 53% in 59 HAP/VAP patients at 7 days), but with more deaths in the cefiderocol arm. Adverse events were > 90% in both groups and 34% vs. 19% died, mostly with Acinetobacter.
Meropenem-vaborbactam, a novel beta-lactamase inhibitor plus carbapenem, is approved and indicated for HAP/VAP in Europe. It has activity against MDR, Enterobacterales including CRE. Its toxicities include headache, phlebitis/infusion-site reactions and diarrhea. In TANGO-2 versus best available treatment for carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) (n = 77, 47 with confirmed CRE), clinical cure was increased and mortality decreased compared with best available therapy. Treatment- and renal-related adverse events were lower for meropenem-vaborbactam.
In closing, Dr. Crothers cited advice from the paper by Tamma et al. (“Rethinking how Antibiotics are Prescribed” JAMA. 2018) about the need to review findings after therapy has been initiated to confirm the pneumonia diagnosis: Novel agents should be kept in reserve in the absence of MDR risk factors for MRSA and gram-negative bacilli; therapy should be deescalated after 48-72 hours if MDR organisms are not detected; and therapy should be directed to the specific organism detected. Most HAP and VAP in adults can be treated for 7 days, she added.
“Know indications for new therapeutic agents approved for nosocomial pneumonia,” she concluded.
Dr. Crothers reported having no disclosures.
“The right drug at the right time with the right dose for the right bug for the right duration.” That, said professor Kristina Crothers, MD, is the general guidance for optimizing antibiotic use (while awaiting an infectious disease consult). In her oral presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians, “Choosing newer antibiotics for nosocomial pneumonia,” Dr. Crothers asked the question: “Beyond the guidelines: When should novel antimicrobials be used?”
Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) and ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) are the most common nosocomial infections at 22%, and are the leading cause of death attributable to hospital-acquired infections. They increase mortality by 20%-50%, with an economic burden of about $40,000 per patient. The incidence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) organism infections varies widely by locality, but several factors increase the likelihood: prior broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure within the past 90 days; longer hospitalization; indwelling vascular devices; tracheostomy; and ventilator dependence. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention lists as “Serious Threat” the HAP/VAP MDR organisms methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PSA) with difficult-to-treat-resistance, and beta-lactamase producing Enterobacterales (ESBL). In the category of “Urgent Threat” the CDC lists: carbapenamase-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) (carbapenamase producing or non–carbapenemase producing), and carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter (CRAB), according to Dr. Crothers who is at the University of Washington Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle.
Newer antibiotics for HAP/VAP that are still beyond the guidelines include telavancin and tedizolid as gram-positive agents, and as gram-negative ones: ceftazidime-avibactam, ceftolozane-tazobactam, cefiderocol, imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam and meropenem-vaborbactam, she added.
Tedizolid, Dr. Crothers stated, is a novel oxazolidinone, and is an alternative to vancomycin and linezolid for gram-positive HAP/VAP. In the VITAL noninferiority study versus linezolid with 726 patients, it was noninferior to linezolid for 28-day all-cause mortality (28% vs. 26%), but did not achieve noninferiority for investigator-assessed clinical cure (56% vs. 64%).
Televancin, a semisynthetic derivative of vancomycin, in the ATTAIN studies vs. vancomycin had overall similar cure rates. It is FDA-approved for S. aureus HAP/VAP but not other bacterial causes. It should be reserved for those who cannot receive vancomycin or linezolid, with normal renal function, according to Dr. Crothers. Excluded from first-line treatment of gram-positive HAP/VAP are daptomycin, ceftaroline, ceftobiprole, and tigecycline.
Ceftazidime-avibactam, a third-generation cephalosporin-plus novel beta-lactamase inhibitor has wide activity (Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae, Escherichia coli, Serratia marcescens, Proteus mirabilis, PSA and Haemophilus influenzae. It is also active against some extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs), ampC beta-lactamases (AmpCs), and K. pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC)–producing Enterobacterales, but not with metallo-beta-lactamases). Ceftazidime-avibactam is also indicated for HAP/VAP, and has a toxicity profile including nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.
In the REPROVE trial of ceftazidime-avibactam vs. meropenem for 7-14 days with 527 clinically evaluable patients (37% K. pneumoniae, 30% P. aeruginosa, and 33%-35% VAP), the clinical cure at 21-25 days post randomization was 69% vs. 73%, respectively, with similar adverse events.
Ceftolozane-tazobactam, a novel fifth-generation cephalosporin plus a beta-lactamase inhibitor has activity against PSA including extensively drug-resistant PSA, AmpC, and ESBL-E, but it has limited activity against Acinetobacter and Stenotrophomonas. It is indicated for HAP/VAP, has reduced efficacy with creatine clearance of 50 mL/min or less, increases transaminases and renal impairment, and causes diarrhea. In ASPECT-NP (n = 726) ceftolozane-tazobactam versus meropenem for 8-14 days (HAP/VAP), showed a 28 day-mortality of 24% vs. 25%, respectively, with test of cure at 54% vs. 53% at 7-14 days post therapy. Adverse events were similar between groups.
Imipenem-cilastatin-relebactam, a novel beta-lactamase inhibitor plus carbapenem, is indicated for HAP/VAP and has activity against ESBL, CRE: KPC-producing Enterobacterales, PSA including AmpC. It can cause seizures (requires caution with central nervous system disorders and renal impairment). It increases transaminases, anemia, diarrhea, and reduces potassium and sodium. In RESTORE-IMI 2 (n = 537 with HAP/VAP) it was noninferior for 28-day all-cause mortality vs. piperacillin and tazobactam (16% vs. 21%), with similar adverse events.
Cefiderocol, a siderophore cephalosporin, is indicated for HAP/VAP. It has a wide spectrum of activity: ESBL, CRE, CR PSA, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Acinetobacter baumanii, Streptococcus.) It increases transaminases, diarrhea, and atrial fibrillation, and it reduces potassium and magnesium. In APEKS-NP versus linezolid plus cefiderocol or extended meropenem infusion (HAP/VAP n = 292; gram-negative pneumonia = 251; 60% invasive mechanical ventilation) it was noninferior for 14-day all-cause mortality (12.4% vs. 11.6%) with similar adverse events. In CREDIBLE-CR vs. best available therapy for carbapenem-resistant gram-negative infections, clinical cure rates were similar (50% vs. 53% in 59 HAP/VAP patients at 7 days), but with more deaths in the cefiderocol arm. Adverse events were > 90% in both groups and 34% vs. 19% died, mostly with Acinetobacter.
Meropenem-vaborbactam, a novel beta-lactamase inhibitor plus carbapenem, is approved and indicated for HAP/VAP in Europe. It has activity against MDR, Enterobacterales including CRE. Its toxicities include headache, phlebitis/infusion-site reactions and diarrhea. In TANGO-2 versus best available treatment for carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) (n = 77, 47 with confirmed CRE), clinical cure was increased and mortality decreased compared with best available therapy. Treatment- and renal-related adverse events were lower for meropenem-vaborbactam.
In closing, Dr. Crothers cited advice from the paper by Tamma et al. (“Rethinking how Antibiotics are Prescribed” JAMA. 2018) about the need to review findings after therapy has been initiated to confirm the pneumonia diagnosis: Novel agents should be kept in reserve in the absence of MDR risk factors for MRSA and gram-negative bacilli; therapy should be deescalated after 48-72 hours if MDR organisms are not detected; and therapy should be directed to the specific organism detected. Most HAP and VAP in adults can be treated for 7 days, she added.
“Know indications for new therapeutic agents approved for nosocomial pneumonia,” she concluded.
Dr. Crothers reported having no disclosures.
FROM CHEST 2022
Skinny-label biosimilars provide substantial savings to Medicare
Recent court rulings could put such saving under threat
Competition between five biologic drugs and their skinny-label biosimilars saved Medicare an estimated $1.5 billion during 2015-2020. But these savings accruing to Medicare and the availability of those and other biosimilars through skinny labeling is under threat from recent court rulings, according to a research letter published online in JAMA Internal Medicine.
The authors highlighted the need for such savings by noting that, while biologics comprise less than 5% of prescription drug use, their price tag amounts to about 40% of U.S. drug spending, Biologic manufacturers often delay the availability of biosimilars for additional years beyond the original patent expiration through further patents for supplemental indications. To provide a counterbalance, federal law allows the Food and Drug Administration to approve “skinny-label” generics and biosimilars that carve out patent-protected indications or regulatory exclusivities. But once a generic drug reaches the market through this process with a skinny label, it may often be substituted for indications that go beyond the ones listed on the skinny label. In fact, some state laws mandate that pharmacists substitute interchangeable generics for brand-name drugs, helping to decrease drug prices. In response to legal threats to the skinny-label pathway, Alexander C. Egilman and colleagues at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, assessed the frequency of approval and marketing of skinny-label biosimilars from 2015 to 2021 and the resultant savings to Medicare.
The authors estimated annual Part B (clinician-administered) savings from skinny-label biosimilars through 2020 by comparing actual biologic and skinny-label biosimilar spending with estimated biologic spending without competition using the Medicare Dashboard. They assumed that the unit price of the biologic would increase at its 5-year compound annual growth rate prior to competition.
In that period, the FDA approved 33 biosimilars linked to 11 biologics. Among them, 22 (66.7%) had a skinny label. Of 21 biosimilars marketed before 2022, 13 (61.9%) were launched with a skinny label. Of the 8 biologics linked to these 21 biosimilars, 5 of the first-to-market biosimilars had skinny labels (bevacizumab, filgrastim, infliximab, pegfilgrastim, and rituximab), leading to earlier competition through 2021.
The estimated $1.5 billion in savings to Medicare from these skinny-label biosimilars over the 2015-2020 span represents 4.9% of the $30.2 billion that Medicare spent on the five biologics during this period. The researchers pointed out that once adalimumab (Humira) faces skinny-label biosimilar competition in 2023, savings will likely grow substantially.
In response to the research letter, an editor’s note by JAMA Internal Medicine Editorial Fellow Eric Ward, MD, and JAMA Internal Medicine Editor at Large and Online Editor Robert Steinbrook, MD, stated that, between 2015 and 2019, 24 (43%) of 56 brand-name drugs had competition from skinny-labeled generic formulations after first becoming available as generics.
The editors also referenced a JAMA Viewpoints article from 2021 that reviewed the most recent case challenging the skinny-label pathway in which GlaxoSmithKline sued Teva for its marketing of a skinny-label generic of the brand-name beta-blocker carvedilol (Coreg) that the plaintive claimed “induced physicians to prescribe carvedilol for indications that had been carved out by Teva’s skinny label, thus infringing GlaxoSmithKline’s patents.” A $235 million judgment against Teva was overturned by a district court and then reversed again by a Federal Circuit court that, after receiving criticism, reconsidered the case, and a panel affirmed the judgment against Teva.
“The Federal Circuit panel’s decision has the potential to put generic drugs that fail to adequately carve out indications from the brand name labeling at risk for damages related to infringement,” the authors wrote. Similar claims of infringement are being heard in other courts, they wrote, and they urged careful targeting of skinny-label carveouts, and suggest also that challenges to the arguments used against Teva focus on preservation of First Amendment rights as protection for lawful and accurate speech in drug labels.
“The legal uncertainties are likely to continue, as manufacturers pursue novel and complex strategies to protect the patents and regulatory exclusivities of brand-name drugs and biologics,” Dr. Ward and Dr. Steinbrook wrote, adding that “the path forward is for Congress to enact additional legislation that reaffirms and strengthens the permissibility of skinny labeling.”
The research letter’s corresponding author, Ameet Sarpatwari, PhD, JD, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, and assistant director for the Harvard Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law, echoed concerns over the Teva case in an interview. “There has certainly been concern that should the appellate decision stand, there will be a chilling effect. As the lone dissenter in that case noted, ‘no skinny-label generic is safe.’ I think many generic and biosimilar manufacturers are awaiting to see whether the Supreme Court will take the case.”
He added: “I do not believe the likelihood of skinny-label-supportive legislation making it through Congress will be greatly diminished in a divided Congress. Democrats and Republicans alike should seek to promote competition in the marketplace, which is what the skinny-labeling pathway accomplishes.”
The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest. The research was funded by a grant from Arnold Ventures.
Recent court rulings could put such saving under threat
Recent court rulings could put such saving under threat
Competition between five biologic drugs and their skinny-label biosimilars saved Medicare an estimated $1.5 billion during 2015-2020. But these savings accruing to Medicare and the availability of those and other biosimilars through skinny labeling is under threat from recent court rulings, according to a research letter published online in JAMA Internal Medicine.
The authors highlighted the need for such savings by noting that, while biologics comprise less than 5% of prescription drug use, their price tag amounts to about 40% of U.S. drug spending, Biologic manufacturers often delay the availability of biosimilars for additional years beyond the original patent expiration through further patents for supplemental indications. To provide a counterbalance, federal law allows the Food and Drug Administration to approve “skinny-label” generics and biosimilars that carve out patent-protected indications or regulatory exclusivities. But once a generic drug reaches the market through this process with a skinny label, it may often be substituted for indications that go beyond the ones listed on the skinny label. In fact, some state laws mandate that pharmacists substitute interchangeable generics for brand-name drugs, helping to decrease drug prices. In response to legal threats to the skinny-label pathway, Alexander C. Egilman and colleagues at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, assessed the frequency of approval and marketing of skinny-label biosimilars from 2015 to 2021 and the resultant savings to Medicare.
The authors estimated annual Part B (clinician-administered) savings from skinny-label biosimilars through 2020 by comparing actual biologic and skinny-label biosimilar spending with estimated biologic spending without competition using the Medicare Dashboard. They assumed that the unit price of the biologic would increase at its 5-year compound annual growth rate prior to competition.
In that period, the FDA approved 33 biosimilars linked to 11 biologics. Among them, 22 (66.7%) had a skinny label. Of 21 biosimilars marketed before 2022, 13 (61.9%) were launched with a skinny label. Of the 8 biologics linked to these 21 biosimilars, 5 of the first-to-market biosimilars had skinny labels (bevacizumab, filgrastim, infliximab, pegfilgrastim, and rituximab), leading to earlier competition through 2021.
The estimated $1.5 billion in savings to Medicare from these skinny-label biosimilars over the 2015-2020 span represents 4.9% of the $30.2 billion that Medicare spent on the five biologics during this period. The researchers pointed out that once adalimumab (Humira) faces skinny-label biosimilar competition in 2023, savings will likely grow substantially.
In response to the research letter, an editor’s note by JAMA Internal Medicine Editorial Fellow Eric Ward, MD, and JAMA Internal Medicine Editor at Large and Online Editor Robert Steinbrook, MD, stated that, between 2015 and 2019, 24 (43%) of 56 brand-name drugs had competition from skinny-labeled generic formulations after first becoming available as generics.
The editors also referenced a JAMA Viewpoints article from 2021 that reviewed the most recent case challenging the skinny-label pathway in which GlaxoSmithKline sued Teva for its marketing of a skinny-label generic of the brand-name beta-blocker carvedilol (Coreg) that the plaintive claimed “induced physicians to prescribe carvedilol for indications that had been carved out by Teva’s skinny label, thus infringing GlaxoSmithKline’s patents.” A $235 million judgment against Teva was overturned by a district court and then reversed again by a Federal Circuit court that, after receiving criticism, reconsidered the case, and a panel affirmed the judgment against Teva.
“The Federal Circuit panel’s decision has the potential to put generic drugs that fail to adequately carve out indications from the brand name labeling at risk for damages related to infringement,” the authors wrote. Similar claims of infringement are being heard in other courts, they wrote, and they urged careful targeting of skinny-label carveouts, and suggest also that challenges to the arguments used against Teva focus on preservation of First Amendment rights as protection for lawful and accurate speech in drug labels.
“The legal uncertainties are likely to continue, as manufacturers pursue novel and complex strategies to protect the patents and regulatory exclusivities of brand-name drugs and biologics,” Dr. Ward and Dr. Steinbrook wrote, adding that “the path forward is for Congress to enact additional legislation that reaffirms and strengthens the permissibility of skinny labeling.”
The research letter’s corresponding author, Ameet Sarpatwari, PhD, JD, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, and assistant director for the Harvard Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law, echoed concerns over the Teva case in an interview. “There has certainly been concern that should the appellate decision stand, there will be a chilling effect. As the lone dissenter in that case noted, ‘no skinny-label generic is safe.’ I think many generic and biosimilar manufacturers are awaiting to see whether the Supreme Court will take the case.”
He added: “I do not believe the likelihood of skinny-label-supportive legislation making it through Congress will be greatly diminished in a divided Congress. Democrats and Republicans alike should seek to promote competition in the marketplace, which is what the skinny-labeling pathway accomplishes.”
The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest. The research was funded by a grant from Arnold Ventures.
Competition between five biologic drugs and their skinny-label biosimilars saved Medicare an estimated $1.5 billion during 2015-2020. But these savings accruing to Medicare and the availability of those and other biosimilars through skinny labeling is under threat from recent court rulings, according to a research letter published online in JAMA Internal Medicine.
The authors highlighted the need for such savings by noting that, while biologics comprise less than 5% of prescription drug use, their price tag amounts to about 40% of U.S. drug spending, Biologic manufacturers often delay the availability of biosimilars for additional years beyond the original patent expiration through further patents for supplemental indications. To provide a counterbalance, federal law allows the Food and Drug Administration to approve “skinny-label” generics and biosimilars that carve out patent-protected indications or regulatory exclusivities. But once a generic drug reaches the market through this process with a skinny label, it may often be substituted for indications that go beyond the ones listed on the skinny label. In fact, some state laws mandate that pharmacists substitute interchangeable generics for brand-name drugs, helping to decrease drug prices. In response to legal threats to the skinny-label pathway, Alexander C. Egilman and colleagues at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, both in Boston, assessed the frequency of approval and marketing of skinny-label biosimilars from 2015 to 2021 and the resultant savings to Medicare.
The authors estimated annual Part B (clinician-administered) savings from skinny-label biosimilars through 2020 by comparing actual biologic and skinny-label biosimilar spending with estimated biologic spending without competition using the Medicare Dashboard. They assumed that the unit price of the biologic would increase at its 5-year compound annual growth rate prior to competition.
In that period, the FDA approved 33 biosimilars linked to 11 biologics. Among them, 22 (66.7%) had a skinny label. Of 21 biosimilars marketed before 2022, 13 (61.9%) were launched with a skinny label. Of the 8 biologics linked to these 21 biosimilars, 5 of the first-to-market biosimilars had skinny labels (bevacizumab, filgrastim, infliximab, pegfilgrastim, and rituximab), leading to earlier competition through 2021.
The estimated $1.5 billion in savings to Medicare from these skinny-label biosimilars over the 2015-2020 span represents 4.9% of the $30.2 billion that Medicare spent on the five biologics during this period. The researchers pointed out that once adalimumab (Humira) faces skinny-label biosimilar competition in 2023, savings will likely grow substantially.
In response to the research letter, an editor’s note by JAMA Internal Medicine Editorial Fellow Eric Ward, MD, and JAMA Internal Medicine Editor at Large and Online Editor Robert Steinbrook, MD, stated that, between 2015 and 2019, 24 (43%) of 56 brand-name drugs had competition from skinny-labeled generic formulations after first becoming available as generics.
The editors also referenced a JAMA Viewpoints article from 2021 that reviewed the most recent case challenging the skinny-label pathway in which GlaxoSmithKline sued Teva for its marketing of a skinny-label generic of the brand-name beta-blocker carvedilol (Coreg) that the plaintive claimed “induced physicians to prescribe carvedilol for indications that had been carved out by Teva’s skinny label, thus infringing GlaxoSmithKline’s patents.” A $235 million judgment against Teva was overturned by a district court and then reversed again by a Federal Circuit court that, after receiving criticism, reconsidered the case, and a panel affirmed the judgment against Teva.
“The Federal Circuit panel’s decision has the potential to put generic drugs that fail to adequately carve out indications from the brand name labeling at risk for damages related to infringement,” the authors wrote. Similar claims of infringement are being heard in other courts, they wrote, and they urged careful targeting of skinny-label carveouts, and suggest also that challenges to the arguments used against Teva focus on preservation of First Amendment rights as protection for lawful and accurate speech in drug labels.
“The legal uncertainties are likely to continue, as manufacturers pursue novel and complex strategies to protect the patents and regulatory exclusivities of brand-name drugs and biologics,” Dr. Ward and Dr. Steinbrook wrote, adding that “the path forward is for Congress to enact additional legislation that reaffirms and strengthens the permissibility of skinny labeling.”
The research letter’s corresponding author, Ameet Sarpatwari, PhD, JD, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, and assistant director for the Harvard Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law, echoed concerns over the Teva case in an interview. “There has certainly been concern that should the appellate decision stand, there will be a chilling effect. As the lone dissenter in that case noted, ‘no skinny-label generic is safe.’ I think many generic and biosimilar manufacturers are awaiting to see whether the Supreme Court will take the case.”
He added: “I do not believe the likelihood of skinny-label-supportive legislation making it through Congress will be greatly diminished in a divided Congress. Democrats and Republicans alike should seek to promote competition in the marketplace, which is what the skinny-labeling pathway accomplishes.”
The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest. The research was funded by a grant from Arnold Ventures.
FROM JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE
In rheumatoid arthritis, reducing inflammation reduces dementia risk
The incidence of dementia in patients with rheumatoid arthritis who took either a biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (bDMARD) or targeted synthetic DMARD (tsDMARD) was significantly lower than the rate observed in patients who take only a conventional synthetic DMARD (csDMARD) in a national database study.
The work builds on previous research indicating a higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias in people with RA. While joint pain and swelling are the cardinal symptoms of RA, its systemic inflammation leads to multiple systemic manifestations, offering biologically plausible links with cognitive decline. In addition, patients with RA have high prevalence of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, disability, and physical inactivity, all of which are risk factors for dementia.
Chronic neuroinflammation secondary to either intrinsic or systemic stimuli is thought to play a key role in dementia development, especially Alzheimer’s dementia (AD). Research showing a role of tumor necrosis factor–alpha (TNF-alpha) in the development of dementia has piqued interest in a potential protective effect of TNF inhibitors. “TNF-alpha is thought to have an important role in different stages of the pathophysiology and disease progression of Alzheimer’s disease,” study first author Sebastian E. Sattui, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and director of the University of Pittsburgh Vasculitis Center, said in an interview. “Animal models have shown that TNF inhibition reduces microgliosis, neuronal loss, and tau phosphorylation. Cognitive improvement has been seen in two trials with Alzheimer’s disease patients, but were not in rheumatoid arthritis patients.”
In the newest study, published online in Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, Dr. Sattui and colleagues suggest that a lower risk for dementia seen with bDMARDs and tsDMARDs may be attributable to an overall greater decrease in inflammation rather than any mechanism of action specific to these drugs.
In the study of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services claims during 2006-2017 for 141,326 adult patients with RA, the crude incident rates were 2.0 per 100 person-years (95% confidence interval, 1.9-2.1) for patients on csDMARDs and 1.3 (95% CI, 1.2-1.4) for patients on any b/tsDMARD. There were 3,794 cases of incident dementia during follow-up among 233,271 initiations of any DMARD. The adjusted risk for dementia among users of bDMARDs or tsDMARDs was 19% lower than the adjusted risk for patients on csDMARDs (hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.76-0.87). No significant differences were found between classes of bDMARDs or tsDMARDs.
Dr. Sattui and coauthors’ investigation included adults aged at least 40 years with two RA diagnoses by a rheumatologist more than 7 and less than 365 days apart. Those with prior dementia diagnoses were excluded. Their analysis found the risk of incident dementia to be comparable between patients receiving TNF inhibitors (HR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.80-0.93), non-TNFi bDMARDs (HR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.70-0.83), and tsDMARDs (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.53-0.90), with csDMARDs as the referent. A second subgroup analysis looking at patients with prior methotrexate use who were taking bDMARDs or tsDMARDs revealed similar decreases in risk of incident dementia, compared with patients taking bDMARDs or tsDMARDs along with methotrexate at baseline.
“NSAIDs and glucocorticoids have been studied in RCTs [randomized, controlled trials],” Dr. Sattui said in the interview. “Despite initial observational data that showed some signal for improvement, no benefit was observed in either of the RCTs. Other agents with possible anti-inflammatory effects and more benign profiles, such as curcumin, are being studied. There are also ongoing trials looking into the use of JAK [Janus kinase] inhibitors or [interleukin]-1 inhibition in dementia.”
He added: “There is a need to better study the association between cognition and disease activity, as well as treat-to-target strategies, prospectively in patients with RA. It is important to also acknowledge that any of these findings might be just specific for RA, so extrapolation to non-RA individuals might be limited.”
In commenting on the findings of the study, Rishi J. Desai, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the division of pharmacoepidemiology and pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, said that “superior inflammation control with biologics or targeted DMARDs is an interesting hypothesis explaining the observed findings. It merits further investigation and replication in diverse populations.” He added: “It should be noted that a key challenge in evaluating this hypothesis using insurance claims data is unavailability of some important factors such as socioeconomic status and patient frailty. These may be driving treatment selection between conventional DMARDs, which are cheaper with more benign adverse-event profiles, and biologic or targeted DMARDs, which are more expensive with a less favorable adverse-event profile.”
Prior research
Several studies have investigated the effect of DMARDs, including bDMARDs like tumor necrosis factor inhibitors, on incident dementia in patients with RA.
Among this research is a study by Dr. Desai and colleagues that looked at comparative risk of AD and related dementia in 22,569 Medicare beneficiaries receiving tofacitinib (a JAK inhibitor), tocilizumab (an IL-6 inhibitor), or TNF inhibitors in comparison with abatacept (a T-cell activation inhibitor). No differentiating risk associations were found in this cohort study.
Other past studies include:
- A study comparing about 21,000 patients with RA and a non-RA cohort of about 62,000 found a 37% reduction in dementia development among RA patients receiving DMARDs. The effect was dose dependent, greater with high cumulative dosages, and was found in both men and women and in subgroups younger and older than 65 years.
- A retrospective study of electronic health records from 56 million adult patients identified a subset of patients with RA, psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, ulcerative colitis, or Crohn’s disease in whom systemic inflammation increased risk for AD through a mechanism involving TNF. The risk for AD in patients was lowered by treatment with etanercept, adalimumab, infliximab, or methotrexate, with larger reductions observed in younger patients than in older patients receiving TNF blockers.
- A propensity score–matched retrospective cohort study in 2,510 U.S. veterans with RA found that use of a TNF inhibitor reduced the risk of dementia by 36%, compared with control patients (HR, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.52-0.80), and the effect was consistent over 5-20 years post RA diagnosis.
- In a retrospective, multinational, matched, case-control study of patients older than 50 years with RA, prior methotrexate use was associated with lower dementia risk (OR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.52-0.98). Use of methotrexate longer than 4 years demonstrated the lowest dementia risk (odds ratio, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.17-0.79).
These past studies, Dr. Sattui and colleagues pointed out, have multiple shortcomings, including case-control design, different definitions of exposure or outcomes, and inadequate control of confounders, underscoring the need for more rigorous studies.
Several authors of the CMS claims study disclosed research support, grants, and consulting fees from pharmaceutical companies. The research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Desai disclosed that he has received funding from the National Institute on Aging for drug repurposing studies of dementia.
The incidence of dementia in patients with rheumatoid arthritis who took either a biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (bDMARD) or targeted synthetic DMARD (tsDMARD) was significantly lower than the rate observed in patients who take only a conventional synthetic DMARD (csDMARD) in a national database study.
The work builds on previous research indicating a higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias in people with RA. While joint pain and swelling are the cardinal symptoms of RA, its systemic inflammation leads to multiple systemic manifestations, offering biologically plausible links with cognitive decline. In addition, patients with RA have high prevalence of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, disability, and physical inactivity, all of which are risk factors for dementia.
Chronic neuroinflammation secondary to either intrinsic or systemic stimuli is thought to play a key role in dementia development, especially Alzheimer’s dementia (AD). Research showing a role of tumor necrosis factor–alpha (TNF-alpha) in the development of dementia has piqued interest in a potential protective effect of TNF inhibitors. “TNF-alpha is thought to have an important role in different stages of the pathophysiology and disease progression of Alzheimer’s disease,” study first author Sebastian E. Sattui, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and director of the University of Pittsburgh Vasculitis Center, said in an interview. “Animal models have shown that TNF inhibition reduces microgliosis, neuronal loss, and tau phosphorylation. Cognitive improvement has been seen in two trials with Alzheimer’s disease patients, but were not in rheumatoid arthritis patients.”
In the newest study, published online in Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, Dr. Sattui and colleagues suggest that a lower risk for dementia seen with bDMARDs and tsDMARDs may be attributable to an overall greater decrease in inflammation rather than any mechanism of action specific to these drugs.
In the study of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services claims during 2006-2017 for 141,326 adult patients with RA, the crude incident rates were 2.0 per 100 person-years (95% confidence interval, 1.9-2.1) for patients on csDMARDs and 1.3 (95% CI, 1.2-1.4) for patients on any b/tsDMARD. There were 3,794 cases of incident dementia during follow-up among 233,271 initiations of any DMARD. The adjusted risk for dementia among users of bDMARDs or tsDMARDs was 19% lower than the adjusted risk for patients on csDMARDs (hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.76-0.87). No significant differences were found between classes of bDMARDs or tsDMARDs.
Dr. Sattui and coauthors’ investigation included adults aged at least 40 years with two RA diagnoses by a rheumatologist more than 7 and less than 365 days apart. Those with prior dementia diagnoses were excluded. Their analysis found the risk of incident dementia to be comparable between patients receiving TNF inhibitors (HR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.80-0.93), non-TNFi bDMARDs (HR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.70-0.83), and tsDMARDs (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.53-0.90), with csDMARDs as the referent. A second subgroup analysis looking at patients with prior methotrexate use who were taking bDMARDs or tsDMARDs revealed similar decreases in risk of incident dementia, compared with patients taking bDMARDs or tsDMARDs along with methotrexate at baseline.
“NSAIDs and glucocorticoids have been studied in RCTs [randomized, controlled trials],” Dr. Sattui said in the interview. “Despite initial observational data that showed some signal for improvement, no benefit was observed in either of the RCTs. Other agents with possible anti-inflammatory effects and more benign profiles, such as curcumin, are being studied. There are also ongoing trials looking into the use of JAK [Janus kinase] inhibitors or [interleukin]-1 inhibition in dementia.”
He added: “There is a need to better study the association between cognition and disease activity, as well as treat-to-target strategies, prospectively in patients with RA. It is important to also acknowledge that any of these findings might be just specific for RA, so extrapolation to non-RA individuals might be limited.”
In commenting on the findings of the study, Rishi J. Desai, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the division of pharmacoepidemiology and pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, said that “superior inflammation control with biologics or targeted DMARDs is an interesting hypothesis explaining the observed findings. It merits further investigation and replication in diverse populations.” He added: “It should be noted that a key challenge in evaluating this hypothesis using insurance claims data is unavailability of some important factors such as socioeconomic status and patient frailty. These may be driving treatment selection between conventional DMARDs, which are cheaper with more benign adverse-event profiles, and biologic or targeted DMARDs, which are more expensive with a less favorable adverse-event profile.”
Prior research
Several studies have investigated the effect of DMARDs, including bDMARDs like tumor necrosis factor inhibitors, on incident dementia in patients with RA.
Among this research is a study by Dr. Desai and colleagues that looked at comparative risk of AD and related dementia in 22,569 Medicare beneficiaries receiving tofacitinib (a JAK inhibitor), tocilizumab (an IL-6 inhibitor), or TNF inhibitors in comparison with abatacept (a T-cell activation inhibitor). No differentiating risk associations were found in this cohort study.
Other past studies include:
- A study comparing about 21,000 patients with RA and a non-RA cohort of about 62,000 found a 37% reduction in dementia development among RA patients receiving DMARDs. The effect was dose dependent, greater with high cumulative dosages, and was found in both men and women and in subgroups younger and older than 65 years.
- A retrospective study of electronic health records from 56 million adult patients identified a subset of patients with RA, psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, ulcerative colitis, or Crohn’s disease in whom systemic inflammation increased risk for AD through a mechanism involving TNF. The risk for AD in patients was lowered by treatment with etanercept, adalimumab, infliximab, or methotrexate, with larger reductions observed in younger patients than in older patients receiving TNF blockers.
- A propensity score–matched retrospective cohort study in 2,510 U.S. veterans with RA found that use of a TNF inhibitor reduced the risk of dementia by 36%, compared with control patients (HR, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.52-0.80), and the effect was consistent over 5-20 years post RA diagnosis.
- In a retrospective, multinational, matched, case-control study of patients older than 50 years with RA, prior methotrexate use was associated with lower dementia risk (OR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.52-0.98). Use of methotrexate longer than 4 years demonstrated the lowest dementia risk (odds ratio, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.17-0.79).
These past studies, Dr. Sattui and colleagues pointed out, have multiple shortcomings, including case-control design, different definitions of exposure or outcomes, and inadequate control of confounders, underscoring the need for more rigorous studies.
Several authors of the CMS claims study disclosed research support, grants, and consulting fees from pharmaceutical companies. The research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Desai disclosed that he has received funding from the National Institute on Aging for drug repurposing studies of dementia.
The incidence of dementia in patients with rheumatoid arthritis who took either a biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (bDMARD) or targeted synthetic DMARD (tsDMARD) was significantly lower than the rate observed in patients who take only a conventional synthetic DMARD (csDMARD) in a national database study.
The work builds on previous research indicating a higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias in people with RA. While joint pain and swelling are the cardinal symptoms of RA, its systemic inflammation leads to multiple systemic manifestations, offering biologically plausible links with cognitive decline. In addition, patients with RA have high prevalence of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, depression, disability, and physical inactivity, all of which are risk factors for dementia.
Chronic neuroinflammation secondary to either intrinsic or systemic stimuli is thought to play a key role in dementia development, especially Alzheimer’s dementia (AD). Research showing a role of tumor necrosis factor–alpha (TNF-alpha) in the development of dementia has piqued interest in a potential protective effect of TNF inhibitors. “TNF-alpha is thought to have an important role in different stages of the pathophysiology and disease progression of Alzheimer’s disease,” study first author Sebastian E. Sattui, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and director of the University of Pittsburgh Vasculitis Center, said in an interview. “Animal models have shown that TNF inhibition reduces microgliosis, neuronal loss, and tau phosphorylation. Cognitive improvement has been seen in two trials with Alzheimer’s disease patients, but were not in rheumatoid arthritis patients.”
In the newest study, published online in Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, Dr. Sattui and colleagues suggest that a lower risk for dementia seen with bDMARDs and tsDMARDs may be attributable to an overall greater decrease in inflammation rather than any mechanism of action specific to these drugs.
In the study of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services claims during 2006-2017 for 141,326 adult patients with RA, the crude incident rates were 2.0 per 100 person-years (95% confidence interval, 1.9-2.1) for patients on csDMARDs and 1.3 (95% CI, 1.2-1.4) for patients on any b/tsDMARD. There were 3,794 cases of incident dementia during follow-up among 233,271 initiations of any DMARD. The adjusted risk for dementia among users of bDMARDs or tsDMARDs was 19% lower than the adjusted risk for patients on csDMARDs (hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.76-0.87). No significant differences were found between classes of bDMARDs or tsDMARDs.
Dr. Sattui and coauthors’ investigation included adults aged at least 40 years with two RA diagnoses by a rheumatologist more than 7 and less than 365 days apart. Those with prior dementia diagnoses were excluded. Their analysis found the risk of incident dementia to be comparable between patients receiving TNF inhibitors (HR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.80-0.93), non-TNFi bDMARDs (HR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.70-0.83), and tsDMARDs (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.53-0.90), with csDMARDs as the referent. A second subgroup analysis looking at patients with prior methotrexate use who were taking bDMARDs or tsDMARDs revealed similar decreases in risk of incident dementia, compared with patients taking bDMARDs or tsDMARDs along with methotrexate at baseline.
“NSAIDs and glucocorticoids have been studied in RCTs [randomized, controlled trials],” Dr. Sattui said in the interview. “Despite initial observational data that showed some signal for improvement, no benefit was observed in either of the RCTs. Other agents with possible anti-inflammatory effects and more benign profiles, such as curcumin, are being studied. There are also ongoing trials looking into the use of JAK [Janus kinase] inhibitors or [interleukin]-1 inhibition in dementia.”
He added: “There is a need to better study the association between cognition and disease activity, as well as treat-to-target strategies, prospectively in patients with RA. It is important to also acknowledge that any of these findings might be just specific for RA, so extrapolation to non-RA individuals might be limited.”
In commenting on the findings of the study, Rishi J. Desai, PhD, assistant professor of medicine in the division of pharmacoepidemiology and pharmacoeconomics at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, said that “superior inflammation control with biologics or targeted DMARDs is an interesting hypothesis explaining the observed findings. It merits further investigation and replication in diverse populations.” He added: “It should be noted that a key challenge in evaluating this hypothesis using insurance claims data is unavailability of some important factors such as socioeconomic status and patient frailty. These may be driving treatment selection between conventional DMARDs, which are cheaper with more benign adverse-event profiles, and biologic or targeted DMARDs, which are more expensive with a less favorable adverse-event profile.”
Prior research
Several studies have investigated the effect of DMARDs, including bDMARDs like tumor necrosis factor inhibitors, on incident dementia in patients with RA.
Among this research is a study by Dr. Desai and colleagues that looked at comparative risk of AD and related dementia in 22,569 Medicare beneficiaries receiving tofacitinib (a JAK inhibitor), tocilizumab (an IL-6 inhibitor), or TNF inhibitors in comparison with abatacept (a T-cell activation inhibitor). No differentiating risk associations were found in this cohort study.
Other past studies include:
- A study comparing about 21,000 patients with RA and a non-RA cohort of about 62,000 found a 37% reduction in dementia development among RA patients receiving DMARDs. The effect was dose dependent, greater with high cumulative dosages, and was found in both men and women and in subgroups younger and older than 65 years.
- A retrospective study of electronic health records from 56 million adult patients identified a subset of patients with RA, psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, ulcerative colitis, or Crohn’s disease in whom systemic inflammation increased risk for AD through a mechanism involving TNF. The risk for AD in patients was lowered by treatment with etanercept, adalimumab, infliximab, or methotrexate, with larger reductions observed in younger patients than in older patients receiving TNF blockers.
- A propensity score–matched retrospective cohort study in 2,510 U.S. veterans with RA found that use of a TNF inhibitor reduced the risk of dementia by 36%, compared with control patients (HR, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.52-0.80), and the effect was consistent over 5-20 years post RA diagnosis.
- In a retrospective, multinational, matched, case-control study of patients older than 50 years with RA, prior methotrexate use was associated with lower dementia risk (OR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.52-0.98). Use of methotrexate longer than 4 years demonstrated the lowest dementia risk (odds ratio, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.17-0.79).
These past studies, Dr. Sattui and colleagues pointed out, have multiple shortcomings, including case-control design, different definitions of exposure or outcomes, and inadequate control of confounders, underscoring the need for more rigorous studies.
Several authors of the CMS claims study disclosed research support, grants, and consulting fees from pharmaceutical companies. The research was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Desai disclosed that he has received funding from the National Institute on Aging for drug repurposing studies of dementia.
FROM SEMINARS IN ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM
Race and gender: Tailoring treatment for sleep disorders is preferred and better
While trials of various interventions for obstructive sleep apnea and insomnia were effective, there was a strong suggestion that tailoring them according to the race/gender of the target populations strengthens engagement and improvements, according to a presentation by Dayna A. Johnson, PhD, MPH, at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST).
Dr. Johnson, assistant professor at Emory University in Atlanta, stated that determinants of sleep disparities are multifactorial across the lifespan, from in utero to aging, but it was also important to focus on social determinants of poor sleep.
The complexity of factors, she said, calls for multilevel interventions beyond screening and treatment.
Dr. Johnson cited the example of parents who work multiple jobs to provide for their families: “Minimum wage is not a livable wage, and parents may not be available to ensure that children have consistent bedtimes.” Interventions, she added, may have to be at the neighborhood level, including placing sleep specialists in the local neighborhood “where the need is.” Cleaning up a neighborhood reduces crime and overall health, while light shielding in public housing can lower light pollution.
Observing that African Americans have higher rates of obstructive sleep apnea, Dr. Johnson and colleagues designed a screening tool specifically for African Americans with five prediction models with increasing levels of factor measurements (from 4 to 10). The prediction accuracy across the models ascended in lockstep with the number of measures from 74.0% to 76.1%, with the simplest model including only age, body mass index, male sex, and snoring. The latter model added witnessed apneas, high depressive symptoms, two measures of waist and neck size, and sleepiness. Dr. Johnson pointed out that accuracy for well-established predictive models is notably lower: STOP-Bang score ranges from 56% to 66%; NoSAS ranges from 58% to 66% and the HCHS prediction model accuracy is 70%. Dr. Johnson said that a Latino model they developed was more accurate than the traditional models, but not as accurate as their model for African Americans.
Turning to specific interventions, and underscoring higher levels of stress and anxiety among African American and Hispanic populations, Dr. Johnson cited MINDS (Mindfulness Intervention to Improve Sleep and Reduce Diabetes Risk Among a Diverse Sample in Atlanta), her study at Emory University of mindfulness meditation. Although prior studies have confirmed sleep benefits of mindfulness meditation, studies tailored for African American or Hispanic populations have been lacking.
The MINDS pilot study investigators enrolled 17 individuals (mostly women, with a mixture of racial and ethnic groups comprising Black, White, Asian and Hispanic patients) with poor sleep quality as measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Most patients, Dr. Johnson said, were overweight. Because of COVID restrictions on clinic visits, the diabetes portion of the study was dropped. All participants received at least 3 days of instruction on mindfulness meditation, on dealing with stress and anxiety, and on optimum sleep health practices. While PSQI scores higher than 5 are considered to indicate poor sleep quality, the mean PSQI score at study outset in MINDS was 9.2, she stated.
After 30 days of the intervention, stress (on a perceived stress scale) was improved, as were PSQI scores and actigraphy measures of sleep duration, efficiency and wakefulness after sleep onset, Dr. Johnson reported. “Participants found the mindfulness app to be acceptable and appropriate, and to reduce time to falling asleep,” Dr. Johnson said.
Qualitative data gathered post intervention from four focus groups (two to six participants in each; 1-1.5 hours in length), revealed general acceptability of the MINDS app. It showed also that among those with 50% or more adherence to the intervention, time to falling asleep was reduced, as were sleep awakenings at night. The most striking finding, Dr. Johnson said, was that individuals from among racial/ethnic minorities expressed appreciation of the diversity of the meditation instructors, and said that they preferred instruction from a person of their own race and sex. Findings would be even more striking with a larger sample size, Dr. Johnson speculated.
Citing TASHE (Tailored Approach to Sleep Health Education), a further observational study on obstructive sleep apnea knowledge conducted at New York University, Dr. Johnson addressed the fact that current messages are not tailored to race/ethnic minorities with low-to-moderate symptom knowledge. Also, a 3-arm randomized clinical trial of Internet-delivered treatment (Sleep Healthy or SHUTI) with a version revised for Black women (SHUTI-BWHS) showed findings similar to those of other studies cited and suggested: “Tailoring may be necessary to increase uptake and sustainability and to improve sleep among racial/ethnic minorities.”
Dr. Johnson noted, in closing, that Black/African American individuals have higher risk for obstructive sleep apnea than that of their White counterparts and lower rates of screening for treatment.
Dr. Johnson’s research was funded by the National Institutes of Health; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; Woodruff Health Sciences Center; Synergy Award; Rollins School of Public Health Dean’s Pilot and Innovation Award; and Georgia Center for Diabetes Translation Research Pilot and Feasibility award program. She reported no relevant conflicts.
While trials of various interventions for obstructive sleep apnea and insomnia were effective, there was a strong suggestion that tailoring them according to the race/gender of the target populations strengthens engagement and improvements, according to a presentation by Dayna A. Johnson, PhD, MPH, at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST).
Dr. Johnson, assistant professor at Emory University in Atlanta, stated that determinants of sleep disparities are multifactorial across the lifespan, from in utero to aging, but it was also important to focus on social determinants of poor sleep.
The complexity of factors, she said, calls for multilevel interventions beyond screening and treatment.
Dr. Johnson cited the example of parents who work multiple jobs to provide for their families: “Minimum wage is not a livable wage, and parents may not be available to ensure that children have consistent bedtimes.” Interventions, she added, may have to be at the neighborhood level, including placing sleep specialists in the local neighborhood “where the need is.” Cleaning up a neighborhood reduces crime and overall health, while light shielding in public housing can lower light pollution.
Observing that African Americans have higher rates of obstructive sleep apnea, Dr. Johnson and colleagues designed a screening tool specifically for African Americans with five prediction models with increasing levels of factor measurements (from 4 to 10). The prediction accuracy across the models ascended in lockstep with the number of measures from 74.0% to 76.1%, with the simplest model including only age, body mass index, male sex, and snoring. The latter model added witnessed apneas, high depressive symptoms, two measures of waist and neck size, and sleepiness. Dr. Johnson pointed out that accuracy for well-established predictive models is notably lower: STOP-Bang score ranges from 56% to 66%; NoSAS ranges from 58% to 66% and the HCHS prediction model accuracy is 70%. Dr. Johnson said that a Latino model they developed was more accurate than the traditional models, but not as accurate as their model for African Americans.
Turning to specific interventions, and underscoring higher levels of stress and anxiety among African American and Hispanic populations, Dr. Johnson cited MINDS (Mindfulness Intervention to Improve Sleep and Reduce Diabetes Risk Among a Diverse Sample in Atlanta), her study at Emory University of mindfulness meditation. Although prior studies have confirmed sleep benefits of mindfulness meditation, studies tailored for African American or Hispanic populations have been lacking.
The MINDS pilot study investigators enrolled 17 individuals (mostly women, with a mixture of racial and ethnic groups comprising Black, White, Asian and Hispanic patients) with poor sleep quality as measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Most patients, Dr. Johnson said, were overweight. Because of COVID restrictions on clinic visits, the diabetes portion of the study was dropped. All participants received at least 3 days of instruction on mindfulness meditation, on dealing with stress and anxiety, and on optimum sleep health practices. While PSQI scores higher than 5 are considered to indicate poor sleep quality, the mean PSQI score at study outset in MINDS was 9.2, she stated.
After 30 days of the intervention, stress (on a perceived stress scale) was improved, as were PSQI scores and actigraphy measures of sleep duration, efficiency and wakefulness after sleep onset, Dr. Johnson reported. “Participants found the mindfulness app to be acceptable and appropriate, and to reduce time to falling asleep,” Dr. Johnson said.
Qualitative data gathered post intervention from four focus groups (two to six participants in each; 1-1.5 hours in length), revealed general acceptability of the MINDS app. It showed also that among those with 50% or more adherence to the intervention, time to falling asleep was reduced, as were sleep awakenings at night. The most striking finding, Dr. Johnson said, was that individuals from among racial/ethnic minorities expressed appreciation of the diversity of the meditation instructors, and said that they preferred instruction from a person of their own race and sex. Findings would be even more striking with a larger sample size, Dr. Johnson speculated.
Citing TASHE (Tailored Approach to Sleep Health Education), a further observational study on obstructive sleep apnea knowledge conducted at New York University, Dr. Johnson addressed the fact that current messages are not tailored to race/ethnic minorities with low-to-moderate symptom knowledge. Also, a 3-arm randomized clinical trial of Internet-delivered treatment (Sleep Healthy or SHUTI) with a version revised for Black women (SHUTI-BWHS) showed findings similar to those of other studies cited and suggested: “Tailoring may be necessary to increase uptake and sustainability and to improve sleep among racial/ethnic minorities.”
Dr. Johnson noted, in closing, that Black/African American individuals have higher risk for obstructive sleep apnea than that of their White counterparts and lower rates of screening for treatment.
Dr. Johnson’s research was funded by the National Institutes of Health; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; Woodruff Health Sciences Center; Synergy Award; Rollins School of Public Health Dean’s Pilot and Innovation Award; and Georgia Center for Diabetes Translation Research Pilot and Feasibility award program. She reported no relevant conflicts.
While trials of various interventions for obstructive sleep apnea and insomnia were effective, there was a strong suggestion that tailoring them according to the race/gender of the target populations strengthens engagement and improvements, according to a presentation by Dayna A. Johnson, PhD, MPH, at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST).
Dr. Johnson, assistant professor at Emory University in Atlanta, stated that determinants of sleep disparities are multifactorial across the lifespan, from in utero to aging, but it was also important to focus on social determinants of poor sleep.
The complexity of factors, she said, calls for multilevel interventions beyond screening and treatment.
Dr. Johnson cited the example of parents who work multiple jobs to provide for their families: “Minimum wage is not a livable wage, and parents may not be available to ensure that children have consistent bedtimes.” Interventions, she added, may have to be at the neighborhood level, including placing sleep specialists in the local neighborhood “where the need is.” Cleaning up a neighborhood reduces crime and overall health, while light shielding in public housing can lower light pollution.
Observing that African Americans have higher rates of obstructive sleep apnea, Dr. Johnson and colleagues designed a screening tool specifically for African Americans with five prediction models with increasing levels of factor measurements (from 4 to 10). The prediction accuracy across the models ascended in lockstep with the number of measures from 74.0% to 76.1%, with the simplest model including only age, body mass index, male sex, and snoring. The latter model added witnessed apneas, high depressive symptoms, two measures of waist and neck size, and sleepiness. Dr. Johnson pointed out that accuracy for well-established predictive models is notably lower: STOP-Bang score ranges from 56% to 66%; NoSAS ranges from 58% to 66% and the HCHS prediction model accuracy is 70%. Dr. Johnson said that a Latino model they developed was more accurate than the traditional models, but not as accurate as their model for African Americans.
Turning to specific interventions, and underscoring higher levels of stress and anxiety among African American and Hispanic populations, Dr. Johnson cited MINDS (Mindfulness Intervention to Improve Sleep and Reduce Diabetes Risk Among a Diverse Sample in Atlanta), her study at Emory University of mindfulness meditation. Although prior studies have confirmed sleep benefits of mindfulness meditation, studies tailored for African American or Hispanic populations have been lacking.
The MINDS pilot study investigators enrolled 17 individuals (mostly women, with a mixture of racial and ethnic groups comprising Black, White, Asian and Hispanic patients) with poor sleep quality as measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Most patients, Dr. Johnson said, were overweight. Because of COVID restrictions on clinic visits, the diabetes portion of the study was dropped. All participants received at least 3 days of instruction on mindfulness meditation, on dealing with stress and anxiety, and on optimum sleep health practices. While PSQI scores higher than 5 are considered to indicate poor sleep quality, the mean PSQI score at study outset in MINDS was 9.2, she stated.
After 30 days of the intervention, stress (on a perceived stress scale) was improved, as were PSQI scores and actigraphy measures of sleep duration, efficiency and wakefulness after sleep onset, Dr. Johnson reported. “Participants found the mindfulness app to be acceptable and appropriate, and to reduce time to falling asleep,” Dr. Johnson said.
Qualitative data gathered post intervention from four focus groups (two to six participants in each; 1-1.5 hours in length), revealed general acceptability of the MINDS app. It showed also that among those with 50% or more adherence to the intervention, time to falling asleep was reduced, as were sleep awakenings at night. The most striking finding, Dr. Johnson said, was that individuals from among racial/ethnic minorities expressed appreciation of the diversity of the meditation instructors, and said that they preferred instruction from a person of their own race and sex. Findings would be even more striking with a larger sample size, Dr. Johnson speculated.
Citing TASHE (Tailored Approach to Sleep Health Education), a further observational study on obstructive sleep apnea knowledge conducted at New York University, Dr. Johnson addressed the fact that current messages are not tailored to race/ethnic minorities with low-to-moderate symptom knowledge. Also, a 3-arm randomized clinical trial of Internet-delivered treatment (Sleep Healthy or SHUTI) with a version revised for Black women (SHUTI-BWHS) showed findings similar to those of other studies cited and suggested: “Tailoring may be necessary to increase uptake and sustainability and to improve sleep among racial/ethnic minorities.”
Dr. Johnson noted, in closing, that Black/African American individuals have higher risk for obstructive sleep apnea than that of their White counterparts and lower rates of screening for treatment.
Dr. Johnson’s research was funded by the National Institutes of Health; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; Woodruff Health Sciences Center; Synergy Award; Rollins School of Public Health Dean’s Pilot and Innovation Award; and Georgia Center for Diabetes Translation Research Pilot and Feasibility award program. She reported no relevant conflicts.
FROM CHEST 2022
Achieving diversity, equity and inclusion: Invite everyone and build a team
What you really don’t want to do, if you want to improve diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) at your academic institution, is to recruit diverse people to your program and then have them come and feel not included, said Vivian Asare, MD. “That can work against your efforts,” she stated in an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST). Dr. Asare is assistant professor and vice chief of DEI for Yale Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, and associate medical director of Yale Centers for Sleep Medicine, New Haven, Conn.
In offering a path to successful DEI, Dr. Asare said: “The first step is to build a team and discuss your mission. Invite everyone to participate and include your leadership because they’re the ones who set the stage, ensure sustainability, and can be a liaison with faculty.” Then a DEI leader should be elected, she added.
The next and very important step is to survey the current institutional climate. That entails speaking directly with the stakeholders (faculty, staff, trainees) and identifying their specific concerns and what they think is lacking. Retreats, serious group discussions, and self-reflecting (asking “what initiatives would be good for us?”), and meeting one-on-one with individuals for a truly personalized approach are among potentially productive strategies for identifying the priorities and DEI-related topics specific to a particular academic sleep program.
Dr. Asare offered up a sample DEI survey (Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Nov;223[5]:715.e1-715.e7), that made direct statements inviting the respondent to check off one of the following responses: Yes, No, Somewhat, Do not know, and Not applicable. Among sample statements:
- Our department is actively committed to issues of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
- Faculty searches in the department regularly attract a diverse pool of highly qualified candidates and/or attract a pool that represents the availability of MDs in this field.
- Our outreach and recruitment processes employ targeted practices for attracting diverse populations.
Dr. Asare said that a survey can be a simple approach for garnering information that can be useful for prioritizing DEI topics of concern and igniting interest in them. Engagement requires regular DEI committee meetings with minutes or a newsletter and with updates and topics brought to faculty meetings.
Key DEI areas of focus
Dr. Asare listed several key DEI areas: Recruitment/retention, mentorship, scholarship, and inclusion and community engagement. Under scholarship, for example, she cited topics for potential inclusion in a DEI curriculum: Unconscious bias and anti-racism training, racism, discrimination and microaggression education (bystander/deescalation training), cultural competency and awareness, workplace civility, and health disparities. “We all know that implicit bias in providers is a reality, unfortunately,” Dr. Asare said. Being aware of these implicit biases is a start, but instruction on how to actively overcome them has to be provided. Tools may include perspective-taking, exploring common identity, and self-reflection.
To create an inclusive environment for all faculty, trainees, and staff may involve establishing a “welcome committee” for new faculty, perhaps with designating a “peer buddy,” creating social events and other opportunities for all opinions and ideas to be heard and valued. Particularly for underserved and disadvantaged patient populations, patient advocacy and community service need to be fostered through support groups and provision of resources.
Summarizing, Dr. Asare reiterated several key elements for a successful DEI program: Build a team and discuss the mission, survey the current climate allowing open communication and dialogue, plan and engage, organize, and form areas of DEI focus. Find out where you are and where you want to be with respect to DEI, she concluded.
Dr. Asare declared that she had no conflicts of interest.
What you really don’t want to do, if you want to improve diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) at your academic institution, is to recruit diverse people to your program and then have them come and feel not included, said Vivian Asare, MD. “That can work against your efforts,” she stated in an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST). Dr. Asare is assistant professor and vice chief of DEI for Yale Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, and associate medical director of Yale Centers for Sleep Medicine, New Haven, Conn.
In offering a path to successful DEI, Dr. Asare said: “The first step is to build a team and discuss your mission. Invite everyone to participate and include your leadership because they’re the ones who set the stage, ensure sustainability, and can be a liaison with faculty.” Then a DEI leader should be elected, she added.
The next and very important step is to survey the current institutional climate. That entails speaking directly with the stakeholders (faculty, staff, trainees) and identifying their specific concerns and what they think is lacking. Retreats, serious group discussions, and self-reflecting (asking “what initiatives would be good for us?”), and meeting one-on-one with individuals for a truly personalized approach are among potentially productive strategies for identifying the priorities and DEI-related topics specific to a particular academic sleep program.
Dr. Asare offered up a sample DEI survey (Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Nov;223[5]:715.e1-715.e7), that made direct statements inviting the respondent to check off one of the following responses: Yes, No, Somewhat, Do not know, and Not applicable. Among sample statements:
- Our department is actively committed to issues of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
- Faculty searches in the department regularly attract a diverse pool of highly qualified candidates and/or attract a pool that represents the availability of MDs in this field.
- Our outreach and recruitment processes employ targeted practices for attracting diverse populations.
Dr. Asare said that a survey can be a simple approach for garnering information that can be useful for prioritizing DEI topics of concern and igniting interest in them. Engagement requires regular DEI committee meetings with minutes or a newsletter and with updates and topics brought to faculty meetings.
Key DEI areas of focus
Dr. Asare listed several key DEI areas: Recruitment/retention, mentorship, scholarship, and inclusion and community engagement. Under scholarship, for example, she cited topics for potential inclusion in a DEI curriculum: Unconscious bias and anti-racism training, racism, discrimination and microaggression education (bystander/deescalation training), cultural competency and awareness, workplace civility, and health disparities. “We all know that implicit bias in providers is a reality, unfortunately,” Dr. Asare said. Being aware of these implicit biases is a start, but instruction on how to actively overcome them has to be provided. Tools may include perspective-taking, exploring common identity, and self-reflection.
To create an inclusive environment for all faculty, trainees, and staff may involve establishing a “welcome committee” for new faculty, perhaps with designating a “peer buddy,” creating social events and other opportunities for all opinions and ideas to be heard and valued. Particularly for underserved and disadvantaged patient populations, patient advocacy and community service need to be fostered through support groups and provision of resources.
Summarizing, Dr. Asare reiterated several key elements for a successful DEI program: Build a team and discuss the mission, survey the current climate allowing open communication and dialogue, plan and engage, organize, and form areas of DEI focus. Find out where you are and where you want to be with respect to DEI, she concluded.
Dr. Asare declared that she had no conflicts of interest.
What you really don’t want to do, if you want to improve diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) at your academic institution, is to recruit diverse people to your program and then have them come and feel not included, said Vivian Asare, MD. “That can work against your efforts,” she stated in an oral presentation at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST). Dr. Asare is assistant professor and vice chief of DEI for Yale Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, and associate medical director of Yale Centers for Sleep Medicine, New Haven, Conn.
In offering a path to successful DEI, Dr. Asare said: “The first step is to build a team and discuss your mission. Invite everyone to participate and include your leadership because they’re the ones who set the stage, ensure sustainability, and can be a liaison with faculty.” Then a DEI leader should be elected, she added.
The next and very important step is to survey the current institutional climate. That entails speaking directly with the stakeholders (faculty, staff, trainees) and identifying their specific concerns and what they think is lacking. Retreats, serious group discussions, and self-reflecting (asking “what initiatives would be good for us?”), and meeting one-on-one with individuals for a truly personalized approach are among potentially productive strategies for identifying the priorities and DEI-related topics specific to a particular academic sleep program.
Dr. Asare offered up a sample DEI survey (Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020 Nov;223[5]:715.e1-715.e7), that made direct statements inviting the respondent to check off one of the following responses: Yes, No, Somewhat, Do not know, and Not applicable. Among sample statements:
- Our department is actively committed to issues of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
- Faculty searches in the department regularly attract a diverse pool of highly qualified candidates and/or attract a pool that represents the availability of MDs in this field.
- Our outreach and recruitment processes employ targeted practices for attracting diverse populations.
Dr. Asare said that a survey can be a simple approach for garnering information that can be useful for prioritizing DEI topics of concern and igniting interest in them. Engagement requires regular DEI committee meetings with minutes or a newsletter and with updates and topics brought to faculty meetings.
Key DEI areas of focus
Dr. Asare listed several key DEI areas: Recruitment/retention, mentorship, scholarship, and inclusion and community engagement. Under scholarship, for example, she cited topics for potential inclusion in a DEI curriculum: Unconscious bias and anti-racism training, racism, discrimination and microaggression education (bystander/deescalation training), cultural competency and awareness, workplace civility, and health disparities. “We all know that implicit bias in providers is a reality, unfortunately,” Dr. Asare said. Being aware of these implicit biases is a start, but instruction on how to actively overcome them has to be provided. Tools may include perspective-taking, exploring common identity, and self-reflection.
To create an inclusive environment for all faculty, trainees, and staff may involve establishing a “welcome committee” for new faculty, perhaps with designating a “peer buddy,” creating social events and other opportunities for all opinions and ideas to be heard and valued. Particularly for underserved and disadvantaged patient populations, patient advocacy and community service need to be fostered through support groups and provision of resources.
Summarizing, Dr. Asare reiterated several key elements for a successful DEI program: Build a team and discuss the mission, survey the current climate allowing open communication and dialogue, plan and engage, organize, and form areas of DEI focus. Find out where you are and where you want to be with respect to DEI, she concluded.
Dr. Asare declared that she had no conflicts of interest.
FROM CHEST 2022
Airway structure in women leads to worse COPD outcomes
A study aimed at determining whether behind some of the sex differences in chronic obstructive airway disease (COPD) prevalence and clinical outcomes lie structural differences in airways found that airway lumen sizes quantified through chest CT were smaller in women than in men.
The findings, published in Radiology, took into account height and lung size. for equivalent changes, compared with men.
Among key findings in a secondary analysis of consecutive participants (9,363 ever-smokers and 420 never-smokers) enrolled in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) study, airway lumen dimensions were lower in never-smoker women than in men (segmental lumen diameter, 8.1 mm vs. 9.1 mm; P < .001). Also, ever-smoker women had narrower segmental lumen diameter (7.8 mm ± 0.05 vs. 8.7 mm ± 0.04; P < .001). The investigators found also that a unit change in wall thickness or lumen area resulted in more severe airflow obstruction, more dyspnea, worse respiratory quality of life, lower 6-minute walk distance, and worse survival in women, compared with men.
While COPD is diagnosed more often in men than women, changes in smoking behavior and increasing urbanization have led to COPD prevalence in women fast approaching the rate in men. Although age-adjusted rates for COPD-related deaths have continued to decline in men, in women they have not. Indeed, never-smoking women accounted for two-thirds of COPD in a population-based study.
COPDGene, a prospective, multicenter, observational cohort study, enrolled current and former smokers, as well as never-smokers, aged 45-80 years at 21 clinical centers across the United States from January 2008 to June 2011 with longitudinal follow-up until November 2020. The investigators quantified airway disease through CT imaging using the following metrics: airway wall thickness of segmental airways, wall area percent of segmental airways, the square root of the wall area of a hypothetical airway with 10-mm internal perimeter, total airway count, lumen diameter of segmental airways, airway volume, and airway fractal dimension.
“Not all sex differences in prevalence of COPD have been explained, and structural differences may explain some of these differences. Our findings may have implications for patient selection for clinical trials,” corresponding author Surya P. Bhatt, MD, associate professor of medicine and director of the University of Alabama Imaging Core at Birmingham, said in an interview.
The investigators wrote: “Our findings have implications for airflow limitation and the consequent clinical outcomes. ... We confirmed that men have more emphysema than women with equivalent smoking burden, and our results suggest that the lower reserve conferred by smaller airways predisposes women to develop airflow limitation predominantly through the airway phenotype. All airway remodeling changes were associated with more dyspnea, worse respiratory quality of life, and lower functional capacity in women than in men. The smaller airways in women can result in higher airway resistance and more turbulent airflow, and thus place a higher ventilatory constraint during exertion. Alteration in each airway measure was also associated with worse survival in women than in men, partially explaining the comparable mortality between the sexes for COPD despite the differing degrees of emphysema.”
“I think these findings highlight underappreciated sex differences in the natural history of COPD,” Mohsen Sadatsafavi, MD, PhD, associate professor, faculty of pharmaceutical sciences, at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said in an interview. “To me, first and foremost, the Bhatt et al. findings highlight how the ‘one size fits all’ approach to COPD management of using exacerbation history alone to guide preventive therapies is incorrect. These findings have the potential to change the management paradigm of COPD in the long term, but before getting there, I think we need to relate these findings to clinically relevant and patient-reported outcomes.”
Noting study limitations, the authors stated that a higher proportion of men were active smokers, compared with women, and despite adjustments for smoking status, some of the airway wall differences may be from the impact of active cigarette smoking on airway wall thickness.
Five study authors reported receiving support from various government and industry sources and disclosed conflicts of interest based on relationships with industry. The rest reported no conflicts of interest.
A study aimed at determining whether behind some of the sex differences in chronic obstructive airway disease (COPD) prevalence and clinical outcomes lie structural differences in airways found that airway lumen sizes quantified through chest CT were smaller in women than in men.
The findings, published in Radiology, took into account height and lung size. for equivalent changes, compared with men.
Among key findings in a secondary analysis of consecutive participants (9,363 ever-smokers and 420 never-smokers) enrolled in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) study, airway lumen dimensions were lower in never-smoker women than in men (segmental lumen diameter, 8.1 mm vs. 9.1 mm; P < .001). Also, ever-smoker women had narrower segmental lumen diameter (7.8 mm ± 0.05 vs. 8.7 mm ± 0.04; P < .001). The investigators found also that a unit change in wall thickness or lumen area resulted in more severe airflow obstruction, more dyspnea, worse respiratory quality of life, lower 6-minute walk distance, and worse survival in women, compared with men.
While COPD is diagnosed more often in men than women, changes in smoking behavior and increasing urbanization have led to COPD prevalence in women fast approaching the rate in men. Although age-adjusted rates for COPD-related deaths have continued to decline in men, in women they have not. Indeed, never-smoking women accounted for two-thirds of COPD in a population-based study.
COPDGene, a prospective, multicenter, observational cohort study, enrolled current and former smokers, as well as never-smokers, aged 45-80 years at 21 clinical centers across the United States from January 2008 to June 2011 with longitudinal follow-up until November 2020. The investigators quantified airway disease through CT imaging using the following metrics: airway wall thickness of segmental airways, wall area percent of segmental airways, the square root of the wall area of a hypothetical airway with 10-mm internal perimeter, total airway count, lumen diameter of segmental airways, airway volume, and airway fractal dimension.
“Not all sex differences in prevalence of COPD have been explained, and structural differences may explain some of these differences. Our findings may have implications for patient selection for clinical trials,” corresponding author Surya P. Bhatt, MD, associate professor of medicine and director of the University of Alabama Imaging Core at Birmingham, said in an interview.
The investigators wrote: “Our findings have implications for airflow limitation and the consequent clinical outcomes. ... We confirmed that men have more emphysema than women with equivalent smoking burden, and our results suggest that the lower reserve conferred by smaller airways predisposes women to develop airflow limitation predominantly through the airway phenotype. All airway remodeling changes were associated with more dyspnea, worse respiratory quality of life, and lower functional capacity in women than in men. The smaller airways in women can result in higher airway resistance and more turbulent airflow, and thus place a higher ventilatory constraint during exertion. Alteration in each airway measure was also associated with worse survival in women than in men, partially explaining the comparable mortality between the sexes for COPD despite the differing degrees of emphysema.”
“I think these findings highlight underappreciated sex differences in the natural history of COPD,” Mohsen Sadatsafavi, MD, PhD, associate professor, faculty of pharmaceutical sciences, at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said in an interview. “To me, first and foremost, the Bhatt et al. findings highlight how the ‘one size fits all’ approach to COPD management of using exacerbation history alone to guide preventive therapies is incorrect. These findings have the potential to change the management paradigm of COPD in the long term, but before getting there, I think we need to relate these findings to clinically relevant and patient-reported outcomes.”
Noting study limitations, the authors stated that a higher proportion of men were active smokers, compared with women, and despite adjustments for smoking status, some of the airway wall differences may be from the impact of active cigarette smoking on airway wall thickness.
Five study authors reported receiving support from various government and industry sources and disclosed conflicts of interest based on relationships with industry. The rest reported no conflicts of interest.
A study aimed at determining whether behind some of the sex differences in chronic obstructive airway disease (COPD) prevalence and clinical outcomes lie structural differences in airways found that airway lumen sizes quantified through chest CT were smaller in women than in men.
The findings, published in Radiology, took into account height and lung size. for equivalent changes, compared with men.
Among key findings in a secondary analysis of consecutive participants (9,363 ever-smokers and 420 never-smokers) enrolled in the Genetic Epidemiology of COPD (COPDGene) study, airway lumen dimensions were lower in never-smoker women than in men (segmental lumen diameter, 8.1 mm vs. 9.1 mm; P < .001). Also, ever-smoker women had narrower segmental lumen diameter (7.8 mm ± 0.05 vs. 8.7 mm ± 0.04; P < .001). The investigators found also that a unit change in wall thickness or lumen area resulted in more severe airflow obstruction, more dyspnea, worse respiratory quality of life, lower 6-minute walk distance, and worse survival in women, compared with men.
While COPD is diagnosed more often in men than women, changes in smoking behavior and increasing urbanization have led to COPD prevalence in women fast approaching the rate in men. Although age-adjusted rates for COPD-related deaths have continued to decline in men, in women they have not. Indeed, never-smoking women accounted for two-thirds of COPD in a population-based study.
COPDGene, a prospective, multicenter, observational cohort study, enrolled current and former smokers, as well as never-smokers, aged 45-80 years at 21 clinical centers across the United States from January 2008 to June 2011 with longitudinal follow-up until November 2020. The investigators quantified airway disease through CT imaging using the following metrics: airway wall thickness of segmental airways, wall area percent of segmental airways, the square root of the wall area of a hypothetical airway with 10-mm internal perimeter, total airway count, lumen diameter of segmental airways, airway volume, and airway fractal dimension.
“Not all sex differences in prevalence of COPD have been explained, and structural differences may explain some of these differences. Our findings may have implications for patient selection for clinical trials,” corresponding author Surya P. Bhatt, MD, associate professor of medicine and director of the University of Alabama Imaging Core at Birmingham, said in an interview.
The investigators wrote: “Our findings have implications for airflow limitation and the consequent clinical outcomes. ... We confirmed that men have more emphysema than women with equivalent smoking burden, and our results suggest that the lower reserve conferred by smaller airways predisposes women to develop airflow limitation predominantly through the airway phenotype. All airway remodeling changes were associated with more dyspnea, worse respiratory quality of life, and lower functional capacity in women than in men. The smaller airways in women can result in higher airway resistance and more turbulent airflow, and thus place a higher ventilatory constraint during exertion. Alteration in each airway measure was also associated with worse survival in women than in men, partially explaining the comparable mortality between the sexes for COPD despite the differing degrees of emphysema.”
“I think these findings highlight underappreciated sex differences in the natural history of COPD,” Mohsen Sadatsafavi, MD, PhD, associate professor, faculty of pharmaceutical sciences, at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said in an interview. “To me, first and foremost, the Bhatt et al. findings highlight how the ‘one size fits all’ approach to COPD management of using exacerbation history alone to guide preventive therapies is incorrect. These findings have the potential to change the management paradigm of COPD in the long term, but before getting there, I think we need to relate these findings to clinically relevant and patient-reported outcomes.”
Noting study limitations, the authors stated that a higher proportion of men were active smokers, compared with women, and despite adjustments for smoking status, some of the airway wall differences may be from the impact of active cigarette smoking on airway wall thickness.
Five study authors reported receiving support from various government and industry sources and disclosed conflicts of interest based on relationships with industry. The rest reported no conflicts of interest.
FROM RADIOLOGY
COVID-19 and IPF: Fundamental similarities found
An AI-guided analysis of more than 1,000 human lung transcriptomic datasets found that COVID-19 resembles idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) at a fundamental level, according to a study published in eBiomedicine, part of The Lancet Discovery Science.
In the aftermath of COVID-19, a significant number of patients develop a fibrotic lung disease, for which insights into pathogenesis, disease models, or treatment options are lacking, according to researchers Dr. Sinha and colleagues. This long-haul form of the disease culminates in a fibrotic type of interstitial lung disease (ILD). While the actual prevalence of post–COVID-19 ILD (PCLD) is still emerging, early analysis indicates that more than a third of COVID-19 survivors develop fibrotic abnormalities, according to the authors.
Previous research has shown that one of the important determinants for PCLD is the duration of disease. Among patients who developed fibrosis, approximately 4% of patients had a disease duration of less than 1 week; approximately 24% had a disease duration between 1 and 3 weeks; and around 61% had a disease duration longer than 3 weeks, the authors stated.
The lung transcriptomic datasets compared in their study were associated with various lung conditions. The researchers used two viral pandemic signatures (ViP and sViP) and one COVID lung-derived signature. They found that the resemblances included that COVID-19 recapitulates the gene expression patterns (ViP and IPF signatures), cytokine storm (IL15-centric), and the AT2 cytopathic changes, for example, injury, DNA damage, arrest in a transient, damage-induced progenitor state, and senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP).
In laboratory experiments, Dr. Sinha and colleagues were able to induce these same immunocytopathic features in preclinical COVID-19 models (human adult lung organoid and hamster) and to reverse them in the hamster model with effective anti–CoV-2 therapeutics.
PPI-network analyses pinpointed endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress as one of the shared early triggers of both IPF and COVID-19, and immunohistochemistry studies validated the same in the lungs of deceased subjects with COVID-19 and the SARS-CoV-2–challenged hamster lungs. Additionally, lungs from transgenic mice, in which ER stress was induced specifically in the AT2 cells, faithfully recapitulated the host immune response and alveolar cytopathic changes that are induced by SARS-CoV-2.
stated corresponding author Pradipta Ghosh, MD, professor in the departments of medicine and cellular and molecular medicine, University of California, San Diego. “If proven in prospective studies, this biomarker could indicate who is at greatest risk for progressive fibrosis and may require lung transplantation,” she said in an interview.
Dr. Ghosh stated further, “When it comes to therapeutics in COVID lung or IPF, we also found that shared fundamental pathogenic mechanisms present excellent opportunities for developing therapeutics that can arrest the fibrogenic drivers in both diseases. One clue that emerged is a specific cytokine that is at the heart of the smoldering inflammation which is invariably associated with fibrosis. That is interleukin 15 [IL-15] and its receptor.” Dr. Ghosh observed that there are two Food and Drug Administration–approved drugs for IPF. “None are very effective in arresting this invariably fatal disease. Hence, finding better options to treat IPF is an urgent and an unmet need.”
Preclinical testing of hypotheses, Dr. Ghosh said, is next on the path to clinical trials. “We have the advantage of using human lung organoids (mini-lungs grown using stem cells) in a dish, adding additional cells to the system (like fibroblasts and immune cells), infecting them with the virus, or subjecting them to the IL-15 cytokine and monitoring lung fibrosis progression in a dish. Anti–IL-15 therapy can then be initiated to observe reversal of the fibrogenic cascade.” Hamsters have also been shown to provide appropriate models for mimicking lung fibrosis, Dr. Ghosh said.
“The report by Sinha and colleagues describes the fascinating similarities between drivers of post-COVID lung disease and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis,” stated David Bowton, MD, professor emeritus, section on critical care, department of anesthesiology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., in an interview. He added that, “Central to the mechanisms of induction of fibrosis in both disorders appears to be endoplasmic reticulum stress in alveolar type II cells (AT2). ER stress induces the unfolded protein response (UPR) that halts protein translation and promotes the degradation of misfolded proteins. Prolonged UPR can reprogram the cell or trigger apoptosis pathways. ER stress in the lung has been reported in a variety of cell lines including AT2 in IPF, bronchial and alveolar epithelial cells in asthma and [chronic obstructive pulmonary disease], and endothelial cells in pulmonary hypertension.”
Dr. Bowton commented further, including a caution, “Sinha and colleagues suggest that the identification of these gene signatures and mechanisms will be a fruitful avenue for developing effective therapeutics for IPF and other fibrotic lung diseases. I am hopeful that these data may offer clues that expedite this process. However, the redundancy of triggers for effector pathways in biologic systems argues that, even if successful, this will be [a] long and fraught process.”
The research study was supported by National Institutes of Health grants and funding from the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program.
Dr. Sinha, Dr. Ghosh, and Dr. Bowton reported no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
An AI-guided analysis of more than 1,000 human lung transcriptomic datasets found that COVID-19 resembles idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) at a fundamental level, according to a study published in eBiomedicine, part of The Lancet Discovery Science.
In the aftermath of COVID-19, a significant number of patients develop a fibrotic lung disease, for which insights into pathogenesis, disease models, or treatment options are lacking, according to researchers Dr. Sinha and colleagues. This long-haul form of the disease culminates in a fibrotic type of interstitial lung disease (ILD). While the actual prevalence of post–COVID-19 ILD (PCLD) is still emerging, early analysis indicates that more than a third of COVID-19 survivors develop fibrotic abnormalities, according to the authors.
Previous research has shown that one of the important determinants for PCLD is the duration of disease. Among patients who developed fibrosis, approximately 4% of patients had a disease duration of less than 1 week; approximately 24% had a disease duration between 1 and 3 weeks; and around 61% had a disease duration longer than 3 weeks, the authors stated.
The lung transcriptomic datasets compared in their study were associated with various lung conditions. The researchers used two viral pandemic signatures (ViP and sViP) and one COVID lung-derived signature. They found that the resemblances included that COVID-19 recapitulates the gene expression patterns (ViP and IPF signatures), cytokine storm (IL15-centric), and the AT2 cytopathic changes, for example, injury, DNA damage, arrest in a transient, damage-induced progenitor state, and senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP).
In laboratory experiments, Dr. Sinha and colleagues were able to induce these same immunocytopathic features in preclinical COVID-19 models (human adult lung organoid and hamster) and to reverse them in the hamster model with effective anti–CoV-2 therapeutics.
PPI-network analyses pinpointed endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress as one of the shared early triggers of both IPF and COVID-19, and immunohistochemistry studies validated the same in the lungs of deceased subjects with COVID-19 and the SARS-CoV-2–challenged hamster lungs. Additionally, lungs from transgenic mice, in which ER stress was induced specifically in the AT2 cells, faithfully recapitulated the host immune response and alveolar cytopathic changes that are induced by SARS-CoV-2.
stated corresponding author Pradipta Ghosh, MD, professor in the departments of medicine and cellular and molecular medicine, University of California, San Diego. “If proven in prospective studies, this biomarker could indicate who is at greatest risk for progressive fibrosis and may require lung transplantation,” she said in an interview.
Dr. Ghosh stated further, “When it comes to therapeutics in COVID lung or IPF, we also found that shared fundamental pathogenic mechanisms present excellent opportunities for developing therapeutics that can arrest the fibrogenic drivers in both diseases. One clue that emerged is a specific cytokine that is at the heart of the smoldering inflammation which is invariably associated with fibrosis. That is interleukin 15 [IL-15] and its receptor.” Dr. Ghosh observed that there are two Food and Drug Administration–approved drugs for IPF. “None are very effective in arresting this invariably fatal disease. Hence, finding better options to treat IPF is an urgent and an unmet need.”
Preclinical testing of hypotheses, Dr. Ghosh said, is next on the path to clinical trials. “We have the advantage of using human lung organoids (mini-lungs grown using stem cells) in a dish, adding additional cells to the system (like fibroblasts and immune cells), infecting them with the virus, or subjecting them to the IL-15 cytokine and monitoring lung fibrosis progression in a dish. Anti–IL-15 therapy can then be initiated to observe reversal of the fibrogenic cascade.” Hamsters have also been shown to provide appropriate models for mimicking lung fibrosis, Dr. Ghosh said.
“The report by Sinha and colleagues describes the fascinating similarities between drivers of post-COVID lung disease and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis,” stated David Bowton, MD, professor emeritus, section on critical care, department of anesthesiology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., in an interview. He added that, “Central to the mechanisms of induction of fibrosis in both disorders appears to be endoplasmic reticulum stress in alveolar type II cells (AT2). ER stress induces the unfolded protein response (UPR) that halts protein translation and promotes the degradation of misfolded proteins. Prolonged UPR can reprogram the cell or trigger apoptosis pathways. ER stress in the lung has been reported in a variety of cell lines including AT2 in IPF, bronchial and alveolar epithelial cells in asthma and [chronic obstructive pulmonary disease], and endothelial cells in pulmonary hypertension.”
Dr. Bowton commented further, including a caution, “Sinha and colleagues suggest that the identification of these gene signatures and mechanisms will be a fruitful avenue for developing effective therapeutics for IPF and other fibrotic lung diseases. I am hopeful that these data may offer clues that expedite this process. However, the redundancy of triggers for effector pathways in biologic systems argues that, even if successful, this will be [a] long and fraught process.”
The research study was supported by National Institutes of Health grants and funding from the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program.
Dr. Sinha, Dr. Ghosh, and Dr. Bowton reported no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
An AI-guided analysis of more than 1,000 human lung transcriptomic datasets found that COVID-19 resembles idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) at a fundamental level, according to a study published in eBiomedicine, part of The Lancet Discovery Science.
In the aftermath of COVID-19, a significant number of patients develop a fibrotic lung disease, for which insights into pathogenesis, disease models, or treatment options are lacking, according to researchers Dr. Sinha and colleagues. This long-haul form of the disease culminates in a fibrotic type of interstitial lung disease (ILD). While the actual prevalence of post–COVID-19 ILD (PCLD) is still emerging, early analysis indicates that more than a third of COVID-19 survivors develop fibrotic abnormalities, according to the authors.
Previous research has shown that one of the important determinants for PCLD is the duration of disease. Among patients who developed fibrosis, approximately 4% of patients had a disease duration of less than 1 week; approximately 24% had a disease duration between 1 and 3 weeks; and around 61% had a disease duration longer than 3 weeks, the authors stated.
The lung transcriptomic datasets compared in their study were associated with various lung conditions. The researchers used two viral pandemic signatures (ViP and sViP) and one COVID lung-derived signature. They found that the resemblances included that COVID-19 recapitulates the gene expression patterns (ViP and IPF signatures), cytokine storm (IL15-centric), and the AT2 cytopathic changes, for example, injury, DNA damage, arrest in a transient, damage-induced progenitor state, and senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP).
In laboratory experiments, Dr. Sinha and colleagues were able to induce these same immunocytopathic features in preclinical COVID-19 models (human adult lung organoid and hamster) and to reverse them in the hamster model with effective anti–CoV-2 therapeutics.
PPI-network analyses pinpointed endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress as one of the shared early triggers of both IPF and COVID-19, and immunohistochemistry studies validated the same in the lungs of deceased subjects with COVID-19 and the SARS-CoV-2–challenged hamster lungs. Additionally, lungs from transgenic mice, in which ER stress was induced specifically in the AT2 cells, faithfully recapitulated the host immune response and alveolar cytopathic changes that are induced by SARS-CoV-2.
stated corresponding author Pradipta Ghosh, MD, professor in the departments of medicine and cellular and molecular medicine, University of California, San Diego. “If proven in prospective studies, this biomarker could indicate who is at greatest risk for progressive fibrosis and may require lung transplantation,” she said in an interview.
Dr. Ghosh stated further, “When it comes to therapeutics in COVID lung or IPF, we also found that shared fundamental pathogenic mechanisms present excellent opportunities for developing therapeutics that can arrest the fibrogenic drivers in both diseases. One clue that emerged is a specific cytokine that is at the heart of the smoldering inflammation which is invariably associated with fibrosis. That is interleukin 15 [IL-15] and its receptor.” Dr. Ghosh observed that there are two Food and Drug Administration–approved drugs for IPF. “None are very effective in arresting this invariably fatal disease. Hence, finding better options to treat IPF is an urgent and an unmet need.”
Preclinical testing of hypotheses, Dr. Ghosh said, is next on the path to clinical trials. “We have the advantage of using human lung organoids (mini-lungs grown using stem cells) in a dish, adding additional cells to the system (like fibroblasts and immune cells), infecting them with the virus, or subjecting them to the IL-15 cytokine and monitoring lung fibrosis progression in a dish. Anti–IL-15 therapy can then be initiated to observe reversal of the fibrogenic cascade.” Hamsters have also been shown to provide appropriate models for mimicking lung fibrosis, Dr. Ghosh said.
“The report by Sinha and colleagues describes the fascinating similarities between drivers of post-COVID lung disease and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis,” stated David Bowton, MD, professor emeritus, section on critical care, department of anesthesiology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C., in an interview. He added that, “Central to the mechanisms of induction of fibrosis in both disorders appears to be endoplasmic reticulum stress in alveolar type II cells (AT2). ER stress induces the unfolded protein response (UPR) that halts protein translation and promotes the degradation of misfolded proteins. Prolonged UPR can reprogram the cell or trigger apoptosis pathways. ER stress in the lung has been reported in a variety of cell lines including AT2 in IPF, bronchial and alveolar epithelial cells in asthma and [chronic obstructive pulmonary disease], and endothelial cells in pulmonary hypertension.”
Dr. Bowton commented further, including a caution, “Sinha and colleagues suggest that the identification of these gene signatures and mechanisms will be a fruitful avenue for developing effective therapeutics for IPF and other fibrotic lung diseases. I am hopeful that these data may offer clues that expedite this process. However, the redundancy of triggers for effector pathways in biologic systems argues that, even if successful, this will be [a] long and fraught process.”
The research study was supported by National Institutes of Health grants and funding from the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program.
Dr. Sinha, Dr. Ghosh, and Dr. Bowton reported no relevant disclosures.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM eBIOMEDICINE
Immune checkpoint and VEGF inhibitors superior in renal cell carcinoma treatment
Treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors has made a notable dent in survival statistics for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma, but up to 20% of patients will only ever achieve progressive disease status and at 1 year, 20% of patients will have died from the condition.
The treatment is still superior to doublet immune checkpoint blockade therapy, shows a cohort study among patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma published in JAMA Network Open.
The investigation also found that objective imaging responses were associated with improvement in overall survival among patients receiving either type of therapy. Led by Vishal Navani, MBBS, University of Calgary (Alta.), this was a multicenter international cohort study of 899 patients (median age 62.8 years; 74.2% male) with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) nested in routine clinical practice (International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium [IMDC]). Complete or partial responses were independently more likely with first-line VEGF inhibitor therapy (IOVE) (including axitinib-avelumab, axitinib-pembrolizumab, cabozantinib-nivolumab, and lenvatinib-pembrolizumab therapies) than with the first-line immuno-oncology doublet (IOIO) of ipilimumab-nivolumab (odds ratio [OR], 1.89; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.26-2.81; P = .002). Analysis of factors affecting responses showed they were more likely to occur in the presence of lung metastases (OR, 1.49: 95% CI, 1.01-2.20), receipt of cytoreductive nephrectomy (OR, 1.59; 95% CI, 1.04-2.43), and favorable IMDC risk.
Beyond imaging response, Dr. Navani and colleagues tested the association between objective imaging response and overall survival as a secondary endpoint. Among responders versus nonresponders, median overall survival was not estimable (95%CI, 48.2 months to not estimable) versus 31.6 months (95%CI, 24.2-41.4 months; log rank P < .001). The overall survival advantage for objective imaging response versus nonresponse persisted in both the IOIO and IOVE groups taken separately (log rank P < .001 and log rank P = .02, respectively).
A large proportion of patients (27.5%) in the IOIO group experienced progressive disease as the best overall response, with significantly reduced median overall survival of 8.4 months (95%CI, 7.2-13.0 months). In the IOVE group, by contrast, 12.2% experienced progressive disease as the best overall response, with improved median overall survival of 18.5 months (95%CI, 4.9-22.4 months).
While first-line combination therapies have brought meaningful overall survival benefits in this population, up to 20% of patients, the researchers wrote, have progressive disease as their best overall response, and all-cause mortality in clinical trials is as high as 20% at 1 year. Improving the survival curve has been hampered by the lack of biomarkers to predict objective imaging response or survival benefit with first-line therapies. Also, the association between treatment with first-line immuno-oncology combination therapies and physician-assessed objective imaging response among patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma has remained uncharacterized. particularly if tumor reduction is needed to inhibit life-limiting disease progression and to palliate tumor-induced symptoms.
The authors pointed out the study’s strength, citing the inclusion of a large data set from a 90% nonclinical trial population, and its limitations, which include a lack of independent blinded centralized imaging review.
They declared no relevant disclosures.
Treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors has made a notable dent in survival statistics for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma, but up to 20% of patients will only ever achieve progressive disease status and at 1 year, 20% of patients will have died from the condition.
The treatment is still superior to doublet immune checkpoint blockade therapy, shows a cohort study among patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma published in JAMA Network Open.
The investigation also found that objective imaging responses were associated with improvement in overall survival among patients receiving either type of therapy. Led by Vishal Navani, MBBS, University of Calgary (Alta.), this was a multicenter international cohort study of 899 patients (median age 62.8 years; 74.2% male) with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) nested in routine clinical practice (International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium [IMDC]). Complete or partial responses were independently more likely with first-line VEGF inhibitor therapy (IOVE) (including axitinib-avelumab, axitinib-pembrolizumab, cabozantinib-nivolumab, and lenvatinib-pembrolizumab therapies) than with the first-line immuno-oncology doublet (IOIO) of ipilimumab-nivolumab (odds ratio [OR], 1.89; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.26-2.81; P = .002). Analysis of factors affecting responses showed they were more likely to occur in the presence of lung metastases (OR, 1.49: 95% CI, 1.01-2.20), receipt of cytoreductive nephrectomy (OR, 1.59; 95% CI, 1.04-2.43), and favorable IMDC risk.
Beyond imaging response, Dr. Navani and colleagues tested the association between objective imaging response and overall survival as a secondary endpoint. Among responders versus nonresponders, median overall survival was not estimable (95%CI, 48.2 months to not estimable) versus 31.6 months (95%CI, 24.2-41.4 months; log rank P < .001). The overall survival advantage for objective imaging response versus nonresponse persisted in both the IOIO and IOVE groups taken separately (log rank P < .001 and log rank P = .02, respectively).
A large proportion of patients (27.5%) in the IOIO group experienced progressive disease as the best overall response, with significantly reduced median overall survival of 8.4 months (95%CI, 7.2-13.0 months). In the IOVE group, by contrast, 12.2% experienced progressive disease as the best overall response, with improved median overall survival of 18.5 months (95%CI, 4.9-22.4 months).
While first-line combination therapies have brought meaningful overall survival benefits in this population, up to 20% of patients, the researchers wrote, have progressive disease as their best overall response, and all-cause mortality in clinical trials is as high as 20% at 1 year. Improving the survival curve has been hampered by the lack of biomarkers to predict objective imaging response or survival benefit with first-line therapies. Also, the association between treatment with first-line immuno-oncology combination therapies and physician-assessed objective imaging response among patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma has remained uncharacterized. particularly if tumor reduction is needed to inhibit life-limiting disease progression and to palliate tumor-induced symptoms.
The authors pointed out the study’s strength, citing the inclusion of a large data set from a 90% nonclinical trial population, and its limitations, which include a lack of independent blinded centralized imaging review.
They declared no relevant disclosures.
Treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors has made a notable dent in survival statistics for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma, but up to 20% of patients will only ever achieve progressive disease status and at 1 year, 20% of patients will have died from the condition.
The treatment is still superior to doublet immune checkpoint blockade therapy, shows a cohort study among patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma published in JAMA Network Open.
The investigation also found that objective imaging responses were associated with improvement in overall survival among patients receiving either type of therapy. Led by Vishal Navani, MBBS, University of Calgary (Alta.), this was a multicenter international cohort study of 899 patients (median age 62.8 years; 74.2% male) with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) nested in routine clinical practice (International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium [IMDC]). Complete or partial responses were independently more likely with first-line VEGF inhibitor therapy (IOVE) (including axitinib-avelumab, axitinib-pembrolizumab, cabozantinib-nivolumab, and lenvatinib-pembrolizumab therapies) than with the first-line immuno-oncology doublet (IOIO) of ipilimumab-nivolumab (odds ratio [OR], 1.89; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.26-2.81; P = .002). Analysis of factors affecting responses showed they were more likely to occur in the presence of lung metastases (OR, 1.49: 95% CI, 1.01-2.20), receipt of cytoreductive nephrectomy (OR, 1.59; 95% CI, 1.04-2.43), and favorable IMDC risk.
Beyond imaging response, Dr. Navani and colleagues tested the association between objective imaging response and overall survival as a secondary endpoint. Among responders versus nonresponders, median overall survival was not estimable (95%CI, 48.2 months to not estimable) versus 31.6 months (95%CI, 24.2-41.4 months; log rank P < .001). The overall survival advantage for objective imaging response versus nonresponse persisted in both the IOIO and IOVE groups taken separately (log rank P < .001 and log rank P = .02, respectively).
A large proportion of patients (27.5%) in the IOIO group experienced progressive disease as the best overall response, with significantly reduced median overall survival of 8.4 months (95%CI, 7.2-13.0 months). In the IOVE group, by contrast, 12.2% experienced progressive disease as the best overall response, with improved median overall survival of 18.5 months (95%CI, 4.9-22.4 months).
While first-line combination therapies have brought meaningful overall survival benefits in this population, up to 20% of patients, the researchers wrote, have progressive disease as their best overall response, and all-cause mortality in clinical trials is as high as 20% at 1 year. Improving the survival curve has been hampered by the lack of biomarkers to predict objective imaging response or survival benefit with first-line therapies. Also, the association between treatment with first-line immuno-oncology combination therapies and physician-assessed objective imaging response among patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma has remained uncharacterized. particularly if tumor reduction is needed to inhibit life-limiting disease progression and to palliate tumor-induced symptoms.
The authors pointed out the study’s strength, citing the inclusion of a large data set from a 90% nonclinical trial population, and its limitations, which include a lack of independent blinded centralized imaging review.
They declared no relevant disclosures.
FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN