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NY Nurse Practitioners Sue State Over Pay Equity, Alleged Gender Inequality

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 10/10/2024 - 14:46

 

A group of nurse practitioners (NPs) employed by the state of New York has sued the state, alleging that their employer has them doing the work of physicians but underpays them.

The New York State Civil Service Commission understates the job function of NPs, overstates their dependence on physicians, and inadequately pays them for their work, according to the complaint filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of New York.

The nurses claim the mistreatment is a consequence of the fact that “at least 80% of the state’s employed NPs are women.”

Michael H. Sussman, a Goshen, New York–based attorney for the nurses, said in an interview that New York NPs are increasingly being used essentially as doctors at state-run facilities, including prisons, yet the state has failed to adequately pay them.

The lawsuit comes after a decade-long attempt by NPs to attain equitable pay and the ability to advance their civil service careers, he said.

“New York state has not addressed the heart of the issue, which is that the classification of this position is much lower than other positions in the state which are not so female-dominated and which engage in very similar activities,” Sussman said.

The lawsuit claims that “the work of NPs is complex, equaling that of a medical specialist, psychiatrist, or clinical physician.”

A spokesman for the New York State Civil Service Commission declined comment, saying the department does not comment on pending litigation.
 

Novel Gender Discrimination Argument

Gender discrimination is a relatively new argument avenue in the larger equal work, equal pay debate, said Joanne Spetz, PhD, director of the Institute for Health Policy Studies at the University of California, San Francisco.

“This is the first time I’ve heard of [such] a case being really gender discrimination focused,” she said in an interview. “On one level, I think it’s groundbreaking as a legal approach, but it’s also limited because it’s focused on public, state employees.”

Spetz noted that New York has significantly expanded NPs’ scope of practice, enacting in 2022 legislation that granted NPs full practice authority. The law means NPs can evaluate, order, diagnose, manage treatments, and prescribe medications for patients without physician supervision.

“They are in a role where they are stepping back and saying, ‘Wait, why are [we] not receiving equal pay for equal work?’ ” Spetz said. “It’s a totally fair area for debate, especially because they are now authorized to do essentially equal work with a high degree of autonomy.”
 

Debate Over Pay Grade

The nurses’ complaint centers on the New York State Civil Service Commission’s classification for NPs, which hasn’t changed since 2006. NPs are classified at grade 24, and they have no possibility of internal advancement associated with their title, according to the legal complaint filed on September 17.

To comply with a state legislative directive, the commission in 2018 conducted a study of the NP classification but recommended against reclassification or implementing a career ladder. The study noted the subordinate role of NPs to physicians and the substantial difference between physician classification (entry at grade 34) and that of NPs, psychologists (grade 25), and pharmacists (grade 25).

The study concluded that higher classified positions have higher levels of educational attainment and licensure requirements and no supervision or collaboration requirements, according to the complaint.

At the time, groups such as the Nurse Practitioner Association and the Public Employees Federation (PEF) criticized the findings, but the commission stuck to its classification.

Following the NP Modernization Act that allowed NPs to practice independently, PEF sought an increase for NPs to grade 28 with a progression to grade 34 depending on experience.

“But to this date, despite altering the starting salaries of NPs, defendants have failed and refused to alter the compensation offered to the substantial majority of NPs, and each plaintiff remains cabined in a grade 24 with a discriminatorily low salary when compared with males in other job classifications doing highly similar functions,” the lawsuit contended.

Six plaintiffs are named in the lawsuit, all of whom are women and work for state agencies. Plaintiff Rachel Burns, for instance, works as a psychiatric mental health NP in West Seneca and is responsible for performing psychiatric evaluations for patients, diagnosis, prescribing medication, ordering labs, and determining risks. The evaluations are identical for a psychiatrist and require her to complete the same forms, according to the suit.

Another plaintiff, Amber Hawthorne Lashway, works at a correctional facility in Altona, where for many years she was the sole medical provider, according to the lawsuit. Lashway’s duties, which include diagnoses and treatment of inmates’ medical conditions, mirror those performed by clinical physicians, the suit stated.

The plaintiffs are requesting the court accept jurisdiction of the matter and certify the class they seek to represent. They are also demanding prospective pay equity and compensatory damages for the distress caused by “the long-standing discriminatory” treatment by the state.

The Civil Service Commission and state of New York have not yet responded to the complaint. Their responses are due on November 12.
 

 

 

Attorney: Case Impact Limited

Benjamin McMichael, PhD, JD, said the New York case is not surprising as more states across the country are granting nurses more practice autonomy. The current landscape tends to favor the nurses, he said, with about half of states now allowing NPs full practice authority.

“I think the [New York] NPs are correct that they are underpaid,” said McMichael, an associate professor of law and director of the Interdisciplinary Legal Studies Initiative at The University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. “With that said, the nature of the case does not clearly lend itself to national change.”

The fact that the NP plaintiffs are employed by the state means they are using a specific set of laws to advance their cause, he said. Other NPs in other employment situations may not have access to the same laws.
 

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

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A group of nurse practitioners (NPs) employed by the state of New York has sued the state, alleging that their employer has them doing the work of physicians but underpays them.

The New York State Civil Service Commission understates the job function of NPs, overstates their dependence on physicians, and inadequately pays them for their work, according to the complaint filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of New York.

The nurses claim the mistreatment is a consequence of the fact that “at least 80% of the state’s employed NPs are women.”

Michael H. Sussman, a Goshen, New York–based attorney for the nurses, said in an interview that New York NPs are increasingly being used essentially as doctors at state-run facilities, including prisons, yet the state has failed to adequately pay them.

The lawsuit comes after a decade-long attempt by NPs to attain equitable pay and the ability to advance their civil service careers, he said.

“New York state has not addressed the heart of the issue, which is that the classification of this position is much lower than other positions in the state which are not so female-dominated and which engage in very similar activities,” Sussman said.

The lawsuit claims that “the work of NPs is complex, equaling that of a medical specialist, psychiatrist, or clinical physician.”

A spokesman for the New York State Civil Service Commission declined comment, saying the department does not comment on pending litigation.
 

Novel Gender Discrimination Argument

Gender discrimination is a relatively new argument avenue in the larger equal work, equal pay debate, said Joanne Spetz, PhD, director of the Institute for Health Policy Studies at the University of California, San Francisco.

“This is the first time I’ve heard of [such] a case being really gender discrimination focused,” she said in an interview. “On one level, I think it’s groundbreaking as a legal approach, but it’s also limited because it’s focused on public, state employees.”

Spetz noted that New York has significantly expanded NPs’ scope of practice, enacting in 2022 legislation that granted NPs full practice authority. The law means NPs can evaluate, order, diagnose, manage treatments, and prescribe medications for patients without physician supervision.

“They are in a role where they are stepping back and saying, ‘Wait, why are [we] not receiving equal pay for equal work?’ ” Spetz said. “It’s a totally fair area for debate, especially because they are now authorized to do essentially equal work with a high degree of autonomy.”
 

Debate Over Pay Grade

The nurses’ complaint centers on the New York State Civil Service Commission’s classification for NPs, which hasn’t changed since 2006. NPs are classified at grade 24, and they have no possibility of internal advancement associated with their title, according to the legal complaint filed on September 17.

To comply with a state legislative directive, the commission in 2018 conducted a study of the NP classification but recommended against reclassification or implementing a career ladder. The study noted the subordinate role of NPs to physicians and the substantial difference between physician classification (entry at grade 34) and that of NPs, psychologists (grade 25), and pharmacists (grade 25).

The study concluded that higher classified positions have higher levels of educational attainment and licensure requirements and no supervision or collaboration requirements, according to the complaint.

At the time, groups such as the Nurse Practitioner Association and the Public Employees Federation (PEF) criticized the findings, but the commission stuck to its classification.

Following the NP Modernization Act that allowed NPs to practice independently, PEF sought an increase for NPs to grade 28 with a progression to grade 34 depending on experience.

“But to this date, despite altering the starting salaries of NPs, defendants have failed and refused to alter the compensation offered to the substantial majority of NPs, and each plaintiff remains cabined in a grade 24 with a discriminatorily low salary when compared with males in other job classifications doing highly similar functions,” the lawsuit contended.

Six plaintiffs are named in the lawsuit, all of whom are women and work for state agencies. Plaintiff Rachel Burns, for instance, works as a psychiatric mental health NP in West Seneca and is responsible for performing psychiatric evaluations for patients, diagnosis, prescribing medication, ordering labs, and determining risks. The evaluations are identical for a psychiatrist and require her to complete the same forms, according to the suit.

Another plaintiff, Amber Hawthorne Lashway, works at a correctional facility in Altona, where for many years she was the sole medical provider, according to the lawsuit. Lashway’s duties, which include diagnoses and treatment of inmates’ medical conditions, mirror those performed by clinical physicians, the suit stated.

The plaintiffs are requesting the court accept jurisdiction of the matter and certify the class they seek to represent. They are also demanding prospective pay equity and compensatory damages for the distress caused by “the long-standing discriminatory” treatment by the state.

The Civil Service Commission and state of New York have not yet responded to the complaint. Their responses are due on November 12.
 

 

 

Attorney: Case Impact Limited

Benjamin McMichael, PhD, JD, said the New York case is not surprising as more states across the country are granting nurses more practice autonomy. The current landscape tends to favor the nurses, he said, with about half of states now allowing NPs full practice authority.

“I think the [New York] NPs are correct that they are underpaid,” said McMichael, an associate professor of law and director of the Interdisciplinary Legal Studies Initiative at The University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. “With that said, the nature of the case does not clearly lend itself to national change.”

The fact that the NP plaintiffs are employed by the state means they are using a specific set of laws to advance their cause, he said. Other NPs in other employment situations may not have access to the same laws.
 

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

 

A group of nurse practitioners (NPs) employed by the state of New York has sued the state, alleging that their employer has them doing the work of physicians but underpays them.

The New York State Civil Service Commission understates the job function of NPs, overstates their dependence on physicians, and inadequately pays them for their work, according to the complaint filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of New York.

The nurses claim the mistreatment is a consequence of the fact that “at least 80% of the state’s employed NPs are women.”

Michael H. Sussman, a Goshen, New York–based attorney for the nurses, said in an interview that New York NPs are increasingly being used essentially as doctors at state-run facilities, including prisons, yet the state has failed to adequately pay them.

The lawsuit comes after a decade-long attempt by NPs to attain equitable pay and the ability to advance their civil service careers, he said.

“New York state has not addressed the heart of the issue, which is that the classification of this position is much lower than other positions in the state which are not so female-dominated and which engage in very similar activities,” Sussman said.

The lawsuit claims that “the work of NPs is complex, equaling that of a medical specialist, psychiatrist, or clinical physician.”

A spokesman for the New York State Civil Service Commission declined comment, saying the department does not comment on pending litigation.
 

Novel Gender Discrimination Argument

Gender discrimination is a relatively new argument avenue in the larger equal work, equal pay debate, said Joanne Spetz, PhD, director of the Institute for Health Policy Studies at the University of California, San Francisco.

“This is the first time I’ve heard of [such] a case being really gender discrimination focused,” she said in an interview. “On one level, I think it’s groundbreaking as a legal approach, but it’s also limited because it’s focused on public, state employees.”

Spetz noted that New York has significantly expanded NPs’ scope of practice, enacting in 2022 legislation that granted NPs full practice authority. The law means NPs can evaluate, order, diagnose, manage treatments, and prescribe medications for patients without physician supervision.

“They are in a role where they are stepping back and saying, ‘Wait, why are [we] not receiving equal pay for equal work?’ ” Spetz said. “It’s a totally fair area for debate, especially because they are now authorized to do essentially equal work with a high degree of autonomy.”
 

Debate Over Pay Grade

The nurses’ complaint centers on the New York State Civil Service Commission’s classification for NPs, which hasn’t changed since 2006. NPs are classified at grade 24, and they have no possibility of internal advancement associated with their title, according to the legal complaint filed on September 17.

To comply with a state legislative directive, the commission in 2018 conducted a study of the NP classification but recommended against reclassification or implementing a career ladder. The study noted the subordinate role of NPs to physicians and the substantial difference between physician classification (entry at grade 34) and that of NPs, psychologists (grade 25), and pharmacists (grade 25).

The study concluded that higher classified positions have higher levels of educational attainment and licensure requirements and no supervision or collaboration requirements, according to the complaint.

At the time, groups such as the Nurse Practitioner Association and the Public Employees Federation (PEF) criticized the findings, but the commission stuck to its classification.

Following the NP Modernization Act that allowed NPs to practice independently, PEF sought an increase for NPs to grade 28 with a progression to grade 34 depending on experience.

“But to this date, despite altering the starting salaries of NPs, defendants have failed and refused to alter the compensation offered to the substantial majority of NPs, and each plaintiff remains cabined in a grade 24 with a discriminatorily low salary when compared with males in other job classifications doing highly similar functions,” the lawsuit contended.

Six plaintiffs are named in the lawsuit, all of whom are women and work for state agencies. Plaintiff Rachel Burns, for instance, works as a psychiatric mental health NP in West Seneca and is responsible for performing psychiatric evaluations for patients, diagnosis, prescribing medication, ordering labs, and determining risks. The evaluations are identical for a psychiatrist and require her to complete the same forms, according to the suit.

Another plaintiff, Amber Hawthorne Lashway, works at a correctional facility in Altona, where for many years she was the sole medical provider, according to the lawsuit. Lashway’s duties, which include diagnoses and treatment of inmates’ medical conditions, mirror those performed by clinical physicians, the suit stated.

The plaintiffs are requesting the court accept jurisdiction of the matter and certify the class they seek to represent. They are also demanding prospective pay equity and compensatory damages for the distress caused by “the long-standing discriminatory” treatment by the state.

The Civil Service Commission and state of New York have not yet responded to the complaint. Their responses are due on November 12.
 

 

 

Attorney: Case Impact Limited

Benjamin McMichael, PhD, JD, said the New York case is not surprising as more states across the country are granting nurses more practice autonomy. The current landscape tends to favor the nurses, he said, with about half of states now allowing NPs full practice authority.

“I think the [New York] NPs are correct that they are underpaid,” said McMichael, an associate professor of law and director of the Interdisciplinary Legal Studies Initiative at The University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. “With that said, the nature of the case does not clearly lend itself to national change.”

The fact that the NP plaintiffs are employed by the state means they are using a specific set of laws to advance their cause, he said. Other NPs in other employment situations may not have access to the same laws.
 

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

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New Evidence That Plaque Buildup Shouldn’t Be Ignored

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 10/10/2024 - 14:32

 

Subclinical disease detected on imaging predicts death, report investigators who show that plaque burden found on 3D vascular ultrasound and coronary artery calcium on CT were better predictors of death than traditional risk factors.

The work not only highlights the importance of early detection, but it also has clinical implications, said Valentin Fuster, MD, president of the Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital in New York. “It’s going to change things,” he said. “What I believe is going to happen is that we will begin to evaluate people with risk factors at age 30 using imaging. Today, we evaluate people at age 50 using clinical practice guidelines.”

Fuster’s team developed 3D vascular ultrasound to assess plaque burden and applied it in a prospective cohort study known as BioImage. The researchers assessed 6102 patients in Chicago, Illinois, and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, using 3D vascular ultrasound of the carotid artery and another well-established modality — coronary artery calcium, determined by CT.

Participants had no cardiovascular symptoms, yet their plaque burden and calcium scores at the beginning of the study were significantly associated with death during the 15 years of follow-up, even after taking risk factors and medication into account. The results are published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

“Now, there is no question that subclinical disease on imaging predicts mortality,” said Fuster.

David J. Maron, MD, a preventive cardiologist at the Stanford University School of Medicine in California, calls the finding “very important.”

“The presence of atherosclerosis is powerful knowledge to guide the intensity of therapy and to motivate patients and clinicians to treat it,” said Maron, who is the co-author of an accompanying editorial and was not involved in the study.
 

Predicting Risk Early

The research also showed that the risk for death increases if the burden of plaque in the carotid artery increases over time. Both plaque burden shown on 3D vascular ultrasound and coronary artery calcium on CT were better predictors of death than traditional risk factors.

Maron says recent studies of younger populations, such as Progression of Early Subclinical Atherosclerosis (PESA) and Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA), show that “risk factors at a young age have much more impact on arterial disease than when we measure risk factors at older age.” The CARDIA study showed signs of atherosclerosis in patients as young as in their twenties. This paradigm shift to early detection will now be possible thanks to technological advances like 3D vascular ultrasound.

Maron said he agrees with screening earlier in life. “The risk of having an event is related to the plaque burden and the number of years that a patient has been exposed to that burden. The earlier in life we can identify the burden to slow, arrest, or even reverse the plaque, the better.”

Maron points out that the study looked at an older population and did not include information on cause of death. While a study of younger people and data on cardiac causes of death would be useful, he says the study’s conclusions remain significant.
 

3D Vascular Ultrasound vs Coronary Artery Calcium

While both imaging methods in the study predicted death better than cardiovascular risk factors alone, each option has advantages.

For coronary artery calcium, “there’s a huge amount of literature demonstrating the association with cardiovascular events, there’s a standardized scoring system, there are widespread facilities for computed tomography, and there is not a lot of variability in the measurement — it’s not dependent on the operator,” said Maron.

But there is one drawback. The scoring system –— the Agatston score — can paradoxically go up following aggressive lowering of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. “Once coronary calcium is present, it is challenging to interpret a repeat scan because we don’t know if the increase in score is due to progression or increasing density of the calcium, which is a sign of healing,” said Maron.

Vascular ultrasound avoids this problem and can also identify early noncalcified plaques and monitor their progression before they would appear on CT. Furthermore, the imaging does not add to lifetime radiation dose, as CT does, Fuster said.

3D ultrasound technology will soon be available in an inexpensive, automated, and easy-to-use format, he explains. Fuster envisions a scenario in which a nurse in a low-income country, using a cell phone app, will be able to assess atherosclerosis in a patient’s femoral artery. “In less than 1 hour, we can predict disease much more rigorously than with risk factors alone,” he said. “I think this is very exciting.”
 

Progression Increases Risk

Finding any atherosclerosis means an increased risk for death, but a greater burden or amount of atherosclerosis increases that risk, said Fuster. Progression of atherosclerosis increases risk even further. 

The study looked at changes in atherosclerosis burden on vascular ultrasound in a subset of 732 patients a median of 8.9 years after their first test. Those with progression had a higher risk for death than those with regression or no atherosclerosis. “Progression is much more significant in predicting mortality than atherosclerosis findings alone,” Fuster said.

Maron said this finding points to “two great values from noninvasive imaging of atherosclerosis.” Not only does imaging detect atherosclerosis, but it can also characterize the burden and any calcification. Further, it allows doctors to monitor the response to interventions such as lifestyle changes and medical therapy. “Serial imaging of plaque burden will really enhance the management of atherosclerosis,” said Maron. “If we discover that someone is progressing rapidly, we can intensify therapy.”

He says imaging results also provide needed motivation for both clinicians and patients to take action that would prevent the deaths that result from atherosclerosis.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Subclinical disease detected on imaging predicts death, report investigators who show that plaque burden found on 3D vascular ultrasound and coronary artery calcium on CT were better predictors of death than traditional risk factors.

The work not only highlights the importance of early detection, but it also has clinical implications, said Valentin Fuster, MD, president of the Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital in New York. “It’s going to change things,” he said. “What I believe is going to happen is that we will begin to evaluate people with risk factors at age 30 using imaging. Today, we evaluate people at age 50 using clinical practice guidelines.”

Fuster’s team developed 3D vascular ultrasound to assess plaque burden and applied it in a prospective cohort study known as BioImage. The researchers assessed 6102 patients in Chicago, Illinois, and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, using 3D vascular ultrasound of the carotid artery and another well-established modality — coronary artery calcium, determined by CT.

Participants had no cardiovascular symptoms, yet their plaque burden and calcium scores at the beginning of the study were significantly associated with death during the 15 years of follow-up, even after taking risk factors and medication into account. The results are published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

“Now, there is no question that subclinical disease on imaging predicts mortality,” said Fuster.

David J. Maron, MD, a preventive cardiologist at the Stanford University School of Medicine in California, calls the finding “very important.”

“The presence of atherosclerosis is powerful knowledge to guide the intensity of therapy and to motivate patients and clinicians to treat it,” said Maron, who is the co-author of an accompanying editorial and was not involved in the study.
 

Predicting Risk Early

The research also showed that the risk for death increases if the burden of plaque in the carotid artery increases over time. Both plaque burden shown on 3D vascular ultrasound and coronary artery calcium on CT were better predictors of death than traditional risk factors.

Maron says recent studies of younger populations, such as Progression of Early Subclinical Atherosclerosis (PESA) and Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA), show that “risk factors at a young age have much more impact on arterial disease than when we measure risk factors at older age.” The CARDIA study showed signs of atherosclerosis in patients as young as in their twenties. This paradigm shift to early detection will now be possible thanks to technological advances like 3D vascular ultrasound.

Maron said he agrees with screening earlier in life. “The risk of having an event is related to the plaque burden and the number of years that a patient has been exposed to that burden. The earlier in life we can identify the burden to slow, arrest, or even reverse the plaque, the better.”

Maron points out that the study looked at an older population and did not include information on cause of death. While a study of younger people and data on cardiac causes of death would be useful, he says the study’s conclusions remain significant.
 

3D Vascular Ultrasound vs Coronary Artery Calcium

While both imaging methods in the study predicted death better than cardiovascular risk factors alone, each option has advantages.

For coronary artery calcium, “there’s a huge amount of literature demonstrating the association with cardiovascular events, there’s a standardized scoring system, there are widespread facilities for computed tomography, and there is not a lot of variability in the measurement — it’s not dependent on the operator,” said Maron.

But there is one drawback. The scoring system –— the Agatston score — can paradoxically go up following aggressive lowering of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. “Once coronary calcium is present, it is challenging to interpret a repeat scan because we don’t know if the increase in score is due to progression or increasing density of the calcium, which is a sign of healing,” said Maron.

Vascular ultrasound avoids this problem and can also identify early noncalcified plaques and monitor their progression before they would appear on CT. Furthermore, the imaging does not add to lifetime radiation dose, as CT does, Fuster said.

3D ultrasound technology will soon be available in an inexpensive, automated, and easy-to-use format, he explains. Fuster envisions a scenario in which a nurse in a low-income country, using a cell phone app, will be able to assess atherosclerosis in a patient’s femoral artery. “In less than 1 hour, we can predict disease much more rigorously than with risk factors alone,” he said. “I think this is very exciting.”
 

Progression Increases Risk

Finding any atherosclerosis means an increased risk for death, but a greater burden or amount of atherosclerosis increases that risk, said Fuster. Progression of atherosclerosis increases risk even further. 

The study looked at changes in atherosclerosis burden on vascular ultrasound in a subset of 732 patients a median of 8.9 years after their first test. Those with progression had a higher risk for death than those with regression or no atherosclerosis. “Progression is much more significant in predicting mortality than atherosclerosis findings alone,” Fuster said.

Maron said this finding points to “two great values from noninvasive imaging of atherosclerosis.” Not only does imaging detect atherosclerosis, but it can also characterize the burden and any calcification. Further, it allows doctors to monitor the response to interventions such as lifestyle changes and medical therapy. “Serial imaging of plaque burden will really enhance the management of atherosclerosis,” said Maron. “If we discover that someone is progressing rapidly, we can intensify therapy.”

He says imaging results also provide needed motivation for both clinicians and patients to take action that would prevent the deaths that result from atherosclerosis.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Subclinical disease detected on imaging predicts death, report investigators who show that plaque burden found on 3D vascular ultrasound and coronary artery calcium on CT were better predictors of death than traditional risk factors.

The work not only highlights the importance of early detection, but it also has clinical implications, said Valentin Fuster, MD, president of the Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital in New York. “It’s going to change things,” he said. “What I believe is going to happen is that we will begin to evaluate people with risk factors at age 30 using imaging. Today, we evaluate people at age 50 using clinical practice guidelines.”

Fuster’s team developed 3D vascular ultrasound to assess plaque burden and applied it in a prospective cohort study known as BioImage. The researchers assessed 6102 patients in Chicago, Illinois, and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, using 3D vascular ultrasound of the carotid artery and another well-established modality — coronary artery calcium, determined by CT.

Participants had no cardiovascular symptoms, yet their plaque burden and calcium scores at the beginning of the study were significantly associated with death during the 15 years of follow-up, even after taking risk factors and medication into account. The results are published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

“Now, there is no question that subclinical disease on imaging predicts mortality,” said Fuster.

David J. Maron, MD, a preventive cardiologist at the Stanford University School of Medicine in California, calls the finding “very important.”

“The presence of atherosclerosis is powerful knowledge to guide the intensity of therapy and to motivate patients and clinicians to treat it,” said Maron, who is the co-author of an accompanying editorial and was not involved in the study.
 

Predicting Risk Early

The research also showed that the risk for death increases if the burden of plaque in the carotid artery increases over time. Both plaque burden shown on 3D vascular ultrasound and coronary artery calcium on CT were better predictors of death than traditional risk factors.

Maron says recent studies of younger populations, such as Progression of Early Subclinical Atherosclerosis (PESA) and Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA), show that “risk factors at a young age have much more impact on arterial disease than when we measure risk factors at older age.” The CARDIA study showed signs of atherosclerosis in patients as young as in their twenties. This paradigm shift to early detection will now be possible thanks to technological advances like 3D vascular ultrasound.

Maron said he agrees with screening earlier in life. “The risk of having an event is related to the plaque burden and the number of years that a patient has been exposed to that burden. The earlier in life we can identify the burden to slow, arrest, or even reverse the plaque, the better.”

Maron points out that the study looked at an older population and did not include information on cause of death. While a study of younger people and data on cardiac causes of death would be useful, he says the study’s conclusions remain significant.
 

3D Vascular Ultrasound vs Coronary Artery Calcium

While both imaging methods in the study predicted death better than cardiovascular risk factors alone, each option has advantages.

For coronary artery calcium, “there’s a huge amount of literature demonstrating the association with cardiovascular events, there’s a standardized scoring system, there are widespread facilities for computed tomography, and there is not a lot of variability in the measurement — it’s not dependent on the operator,” said Maron.

But there is one drawback. The scoring system –— the Agatston score — can paradoxically go up following aggressive lowering of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. “Once coronary calcium is present, it is challenging to interpret a repeat scan because we don’t know if the increase in score is due to progression or increasing density of the calcium, which is a sign of healing,” said Maron.

Vascular ultrasound avoids this problem and can also identify early noncalcified plaques and monitor their progression before they would appear on CT. Furthermore, the imaging does not add to lifetime radiation dose, as CT does, Fuster said.

3D ultrasound technology will soon be available in an inexpensive, automated, and easy-to-use format, he explains. Fuster envisions a scenario in which a nurse in a low-income country, using a cell phone app, will be able to assess atherosclerosis in a patient’s femoral artery. “In less than 1 hour, we can predict disease much more rigorously than with risk factors alone,” he said. “I think this is very exciting.”
 

Progression Increases Risk

Finding any atherosclerosis means an increased risk for death, but a greater burden or amount of atherosclerosis increases that risk, said Fuster. Progression of atherosclerosis increases risk even further. 

The study looked at changes in atherosclerosis burden on vascular ultrasound in a subset of 732 patients a median of 8.9 years after their first test. Those with progression had a higher risk for death than those with regression or no atherosclerosis. “Progression is much more significant in predicting mortality than atherosclerosis findings alone,” Fuster said.

Maron said this finding points to “two great values from noninvasive imaging of atherosclerosis.” Not only does imaging detect atherosclerosis, but it can also characterize the burden and any calcification. Further, it allows doctors to monitor the response to interventions such as lifestyle changes and medical therapy. “Serial imaging of plaque burden will really enhance the management of atherosclerosis,” said Maron. “If we discover that someone is progressing rapidly, we can intensify therapy.”

He says imaging results also provide needed motivation for both clinicians and patients to take action that would prevent the deaths that result from atherosclerosis.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Beyond Scope Creep: Why Physicians and PAs Should Come Together for Patients

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Thu, 10/10/2024 - 13:44

Over the past few years, many states have attempted to address the ongoing shortage of healthcare workers by introducing new bills to increase the scope of practice for nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs). The goal of each bill was to improve access to care, particularly for patients who may live in areas where it’s difficult to find a doctor.

In response, the American Medical Association (AMA) launched a targeted campaign to fight “scope creep.” Their goal was to gain the momentum necessary to block proposed legislation to modify or expand the practice authority of nonphysicians, including PAs. A spokesperson for the organization told this news organization that the AMA “greatly values and respects the contributions of PAs as important members of the healthcare team” but emphasized that they do not have the same “skill set or breadth of experience of physicians.”

As such, the AMA argued that expanded practice authority would not only dismantle physician-led care teams but also ultimately lead to higher costs and lower-quality patient care.

The AMA has since launched a large-scale advocacy effort to fight practice expansion legislation — and has a specific page on its website to highlight those efforts. In addition, they have authored model legislation, talking points for AMA members, and a widely read article in AMA News to help them in what they call a “fight for physicians.”

These resources have also been disseminated to the greater healthcare stakeholder community.

Marilyn Suri, PA-C, chief operating officer and senior executive for Advanced Practice Professional Affairs at Vincenzo Novara MDPA and Associates, a critical care pulmonary medicine practice in Miami, Florida, said she found the AMA’s campaign to be “very misleading.”

“PAs are created in the image of physicians to help manage the physician shortage. We are trained very rigorously — to diagnose illness, develop treatment plans, and prescribe medications,” she said. “We’re not trying to expand our scope. We are trying to eliminate or lessen barriers that prevent patients from getting access to care.”

Suri is not alone. Last summer, the American Academy of Physician Associates (AAPA) requested a meeting with the AMA to find ways for the two organizations to collaborate to improve care delivery — as well as find common ground to address issues regarding patient access to care. When the AMA did not respond, the AAPA sent a second letter in September 2024, reiterating their request for a meeting.

That correspondence also included a letter, signed by more than 8000 PAs from across the country, calling for an end to what the AAPA refers to as “damaging rhetoric,” as well as data from a recent survey of PAs regarding the fallout of AMA’s scope creep messaging.

Those survey results highlighted that the vast majority of PAs surveyed feel that the AMA is doing more than just attacking proposed legislation: They believe the association is negatively influencing patients’ understanding of PA qualifications, ultimately affecting their ability to provide care.

“The campaign is unintentionally harming patients by suggesting we are doing more than what we are trained to do,” said Elisa Hock, PA-C, a behavioral health PA in Texas. “And when you work in a place with limited resources, medically speaking — including limited access to providers — this kind of campaign is really detrimental to helping patients.”

Lisa M. Gables, CEO of the AAPA, said the organization is “deeply disappointed” in the AMA’s lack of response to their letters thus far — but remains committed to working with the organization to bring forward new solutions to address healthcare’s most pressing challenges.

“AAPA remains committed to pushing for modernization of practice laws to ensure all providers can practice medicine to the fullest extent of their training, education, and experience,” she said. “That is what patients deserve and want.”

Hock agreed. She told this news organization that the public is not always aware of what PAs can offer in terms of patient care. That said, she believes newer generations of physicians understand the value of PAs and the many skills they bring to the table.

“I’ve been doing this for 17 years, and it’s been an uphill battle, at times, to educate the public about what PAs can and can’t do,” she explained. “To throw more mud in the mix that will confuse patients more about what we do doesn’t help. Healthcare works best with a team-based approach. And that team has been and always will be led by the physician. We are aware of our role and our limitations. But we also know what we can offer patients, especially in areas like El Paso, where there is a real shortage of providers.”

With a growing aging population — and the physician shortage expected to increase in the coming decade — Suri hopes that the AMA will accept AAPA’s invitation to meet — because no one wins with this kind of healthcare infighting. In fact, she said patients will suffer because of it. She hopes that future discussions and collaborations can show providers and patients what team-based healthcare can offer.

“I think it’s important for those in healthcare to be aware that none of us work alone. Even physicians collaborate with other subspecialties, as well as nurses and other healthcare professionals,” said Suri. “[Physicians and PAs] need to take a collaborative approach. We need each other. PAs are not physicians. But, just like physicians, we are considered safe and trusted care providers because of our education and training. And we can increase access to care for patients tomorrow if we start working together.”

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Over the past few years, many states have attempted to address the ongoing shortage of healthcare workers by introducing new bills to increase the scope of practice for nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs). The goal of each bill was to improve access to care, particularly for patients who may live in areas where it’s difficult to find a doctor.

In response, the American Medical Association (AMA) launched a targeted campaign to fight “scope creep.” Their goal was to gain the momentum necessary to block proposed legislation to modify or expand the practice authority of nonphysicians, including PAs. A spokesperson for the organization told this news organization that the AMA “greatly values and respects the contributions of PAs as important members of the healthcare team” but emphasized that they do not have the same “skill set or breadth of experience of physicians.”

As such, the AMA argued that expanded practice authority would not only dismantle physician-led care teams but also ultimately lead to higher costs and lower-quality patient care.

The AMA has since launched a large-scale advocacy effort to fight practice expansion legislation — and has a specific page on its website to highlight those efforts. In addition, they have authored model legislation, talking points for AMA members, and a widely read article in AMA News to help them in what they call a “fight for physicians.”

These resources have also been disseminated to the greater healthcare stakeholder community.

Marilyn Suri, PA-C, chief operating officer and senior executive for Advanced Practice Professional Affairs at Vincenzo Novara MDPA and Associates, a critical care pulmonary medicine practice in Miami, Florida, said she found the AMA’s campaign to be “very misleading.”

“PAs are created in the image of physicians to help manage the physician shortage. We are trained very rigorously — to diagnose illness, develop treatment plans, and prescribe medications,” she said. “We’re not trying to expand our scope. We are trying to eliminate or lessen barriers that prevent patients from getting access to care.”

Suri is not alone. Last summer, the American Academy of Physician Associates (AAPA) requested a meeting with the AMA to find ways for the two organizations to collaborate to improve care delivery — as well as find common ground to address issues regarding patient access to care. When the AMA did not respond, the AAPA sent a second letter in September 2024, reiterating their request for a meeting.

That correspondence also included a letter, signed by more than 8000 PAs from across the country, calling for an end to what the AAPA refers to as “damaging rhetoric,” as well as data from a recent survey of PAs regarding the fallout of AMA’s scope creep messaging.

Those survey results highlighted that the vast majority of PAs surveyed feel that the AMA is doing more than just attacking proposed legislation: They believe the association is negatively influencing patients’ understanding of PA qualifications, ultimately affecting their ability to provide care.

“The campaign is unintentionally harming patients by suggesting we are doing more than what we are trained to do,” said Elisa Hock, PA-C, a behavioral health PA in Texas. “And when you work in a place with limited resources, medically speaking — including limited access to providers — this kind of campaign is really detrimental to helping patients.”

Lisa M. Gables, CEO of the AAPA, said the organization is “deeply disappointed” in the AMA’s lack of response to their letters thus far — but remains committed to working with the organization to bring forward new solutions to address healthcare’s most pressing challenges.

“AAPA remains committed to pushing for modernization of practice laws to ensure all providers can practice medicine to the fullest extent of their training, education, and experience,” she said. “That is what patients deserve and want.”

Hock agreed. She told this news organization that the public is not always aware of what PAs can offer in terms of patient care. That said, she believes newer generations of physicians understand the value of PAs and the many skills they bring to the table.

“I’ve been doing this for 17 years, and it’s been an uphill battle, at times, to educate the public about what PAs can and can’t do,” she explained. “To throw more mud in the mix that will confuse patients more about what we do doesn’t help. Healthcare works best with a team-based approach. And that team has been and always will be led by the physician. We are aware of our role and our limitations. But we also know what we can offer patients, especially in areas like El Paso, where there is a real shortage of providers.”

With a growing aging population — and the physician shortage expected to increase in the coming decade — Suri hopes that the AMA will accept AAPA’s invitation to meet — because no one wins with this kind of healthcare infighting. In fact, she said patients will suffer because of it. She hopes that future discussions and collaborations can show providers and patients what team-based healthcare can offer.

“I think it’s important for those in healthcare to be aware that none of us work alone. Even physicians collaborate with other subspecialties, as well as nurses and other healthcare professionals,” said Suri. “[Physicians and PAs] need to take a collaborative approach. We need each other. PAs are not physicians. But, just like physicians, we are considered safe and trusted care providers because of our education and training. And we can increase access to care for patients tomorrow if we start working together.”

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Over the past few years, many states have attempted to address the ongoing shortage of healthcare workers by introducing new bills to increase the scope of practice for nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs). The goal of each bill was to improve access to care, particularly for patients who may live in areas where it’s difficult to find a doctor.

In response, the American Medical Association (AMA) launched a targeted campaign to fight “scope creep.” Their goal was to gain the momentum necessary to block proposed legislation to modify or expand the practice authority of nonphysicians, including PAs. A spokesperson for the organization told this news organization that the AMA “greatly values and respects the contributions of PAs as important members of the healthcare team” but emphasized that they do not have the same “skill set or breadth of experience of physicians.”

As such, the AMA argued that expanded practice authority would not only dismantle physician-led care teams but also ultimately lead to higher costs and lower-quality patient care.

The AMA has since launched a large-scale advocacy effort to fight practice expansion legislation — and has a specific page on its website to highlight those efforts. In addition, they have authored model legislation, talking points for AMA members, and a widely read article in AMA News to help them in what they call a “fight for physicians.”

These resources have also been disseminated to the greater healthcare stakeholder community.

Marilyn Suri, PA-C, chief operating officer and senior executive for Advanced Practice Professional Affairs at Vincenzo Novara MDPA and Associates, a critical care pulmonary medicine practice in Miami, Florida, said she found the AMA’s campaign to be “very misleading.”

“PAs are created in the image of physicians to help manage the physician shortage. We are trained very rigorously — to diagnose illness, develop treatment plans, and prescribe medications,” she said. “We’re not trying to expand our scope. We are trying to eliminate or lessen barriers that prevent patients from getting access to care.”

Suri is not alone. Last summer, the American Academy of Physician Associates (AAPA) requested a meeting with the AMA to find ways for the two organizations to collaborate to improve care delivery — as well as find common ground to address issues regarding patient access to care. When the AMA did not respond, the AAPA sent a second letter in September 2024, reiterating their request for a meeting.

That correspondence also included a letter, signed by more than 8000 PAs from across the country, calling for an end to what the AAPA refers to as “damaging rhetoric,” as well as data from a recent survey of PAs regarding the fallout of AMA’s scope creep messaging.

Those survey results highlighted that the vast majority of PAs surveyed feel that the AMA is doing more than just attacking proposed legislation: They believe the association is negatively influencing patients’ understanding of PA qualifications, ultimately affecting their ability to provide care.

“The campaign is unintentionally harming patients by suggesting we are doing more than what we are trained to do,” said Elisa Hock, PA-C, a behavioral health PA in Texas. “And when you work in a place with limited resources, medically speaking — including limited access to providers — this kind of campaign is really detrimental to helping patients.”

Lisa M. Gables, CEO of the AAPA, said the organization is “deeply disappointed” in the AMA’s lack of response to their letters thus far — but remains committed to working with the organization to bring forward new solutions to address healthcare’s most pressing challenges.

“AAPA remains committed to pushing for modernization of practice laws to ensure all providers can practice medicine to the fullest extent of their training, education, and experience,” she said. “That is what patients deserve and want.”

Hock agreed. She told this news organization that the public is not always aware of what PAs can offer in terms of patient care. That said, she believes newer generations of physicians understand the value of PAs and the many skills they bring to the table.

“I’ve been doing this for 17 years, and it’s been an uphill battle, at times, to educate the public about what PAs can and can’t do,” she explained. “To throw more mud in the mix that will confuse patients more about what we do doesn’t help. Healthcare works best with a team-based approach. And that team has been and always will be led by the physician. We are aware of our role and our limitations. But we also know what we can offer patients, especially in areas like El Paso, where there is a real shortage of providers.”

With a growing aging population — and the physician shortage expected to increase in the coming decade — Suri hopes that the AMA will accept AAPA’s invitation to meet — because no one wins with this kind of healthcare infighting. In fact, she said patients will suffer because of it. She hopes that future discussions and collaborations can show providers and patients what team-based healthcare can offer.

“I think it’s important for those in healthcare to be aware that none of us work alone. Even physicians collaborate with other subspecialties, as well as nurses and other healthcare professionals,” said Suri. “[Physicians and PAs] need to take a collaborative approach. We need each other. PAs are not physicians. But, just like physicians, we are considered safe and trusted care providers because of our education and training. And we can increase access to care for patients tomorrow if we start working together.”

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Trend Toward Higher Mortality in Patients With CF and CVD

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Wed, 10/09/2024 - 15:33

— With the remarkable advances made in therapy over the past decade, many patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) can expect to survive into their 50s and even well beyond. But as patients with CF live longer, they are increasingly likely to develop complications such as cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) that beset many older adults. And as evidence from a new study suggests, there is an increasing need for cardiovascular screening and specialized cardiac care for these patients.

Among more than 83,000 patients with CF hospitalized for any reason from 2016 through 2021, less than 1% of patients had a cardiac cause listed, but in unadjusted analyses, these patients had a more than twofold risk for in-hospital death than those with CF hospitalized for other causes, reported Adnan Bhat, MD, assistant professor of hospital medicine at the University of Florida, Gainesville.

Although the excess mortality was no longer statistically significant in analyses adjusted for potential confounding factors, the data highlight a trend that requires further exploration, he said during an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST).

“There’s a trend for people with cystic fibrosis admitted for cardiac causes to have a higher in-hospital mortality and increased rate of discharge to nursing facilities, especially for patients admitted for heart failure. The clinical implication is that there is an increased need to start screening for cardiovascular risk factors,” he said.
 

National Database Sample

Bhat and colleagues conducted a retrospective study using the National Inpatient Sample database to identify all hospitalizations among patients with CF in the United States from 2016 through 2021.

They included all hospitalizations with a principal diagnosis code for atrial fibrillation, heart failure, or myocardial infarction.

Of 83,250 total hospitalizations during the study period, 415 (0.5%) were for primary cardiac causes. These included 170 hospitalizations for atrial fibrillation, 95 for heart failure, and 150 for myocardial infarction.

Patients hospitalized for cardiac causes had a higher mean age (59.5 vs 34.5 years) and more comorbidities than patients hospitalized for other causes. These comorbidities included hyperlipidemia, chronic kidney disease, obesity, and a family history of coronary artery disease.

In all, 5% of patients hospitalized for cardiac cause died in hospital, compared with 2% of patients hospitalized for other reasons (P = .044).

However, in logistic regression analyses adjusting for age, sex, and race, this difference was no longer significant.

Similarly, an unadjusted analysis showed that patients with cardiac disease were twice as likely to be discharged to a nursing facility (8% vs 4%, respectively), but this difference too disappeared in adjusted analyses.

The risk for in-hospital mortality appeared to be highest among those patients with a primary diagnosis of heart failure, who had an 11% rate of in-hospital death, compared with 2% among patients with CF hospitalized for other causes.

The total number of deaths was too small, however, to allow for regression analysis, Bhat said.

Nonetheless, taken together, the data indicate a trend toward increased mortality from cardiovascular causes among older patients with CF, as well as the need for further research into the cardiovascular health of these patients, Bhat concluded.
 

 

 

Better Nutrition, Higher Risk

In an interview, Yuqing A. Gao, MD, from the Santa Monica Pulmonary Sleep Clinic in California, who was not involved in the study, commented that with the advent of elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor modulator therapy, patients with CF tend to have increases in body mass index and improved nutritional intake and absorption, which in turn could increase hyperlipidemia and other factors that might in turn contribute to increased CVD risk.

“It’s really an interesting area of research, and there’s hope that this will bring more focus on how to better screen [for CVD risk] because that’s something that’s very much not known at this time,” she said.

Gao was co-moderator for the session where Bhat presented the data. Bhat did not report a study funding source. Bhat and Gao reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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— With the remarkable advances made in therapy over the past decade, many patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) can expect to survive into their 50s and even well beyond. But as patients with CF live longer, they are increasingly likely to develop complications such as cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) that beset many older adults. And as evidence from a new study suggests, there is an increasing need for cardiovascular screening and specialized cardiac care for these patients.

Among more than 83,000 patients with CF hospitalized for any reason from 2016 through 2021, less than 1% of patients had a cardiac cause listed, but in unadjusted analyses, these patients had a more than twofold risk for in-hospital death than those with CF hospitalized for other causes, reported Adnan Bhat, MD, assistant professor of hospital medicine at the University of Florida, Gainesville.

Although the excess mortality was no longer statistically significant in analyses adjusted for potential confounding factors, the data highlight a trend that requires further exploration, he said during an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST).

“There’s a trend for people with cystic fibrosis admitted for cardiac causes to have a higher in-hospital mortality and increased rate of discharge to nursing facilities, especially for patients admitted for heart failure. The clinical implication is that there is an increased need to start screening for cardiovascular risk factors,” he said.
 

National Database Sample

Bhat and colleagues conducted a retrospective study using the National Inpatient Sample database to identify all hospitalizations among patients with CF in the United States from 2016 through 2021.

They included all hospitalizations with a principal diagnosis code for atrial fibrillation, heart failure, or myocardial infarction.

Of 83,250 total hospitalizations during the study period, 415 (0.5%) were for primary cardiac causes. These included 170 hospitalizations for atrial fibrillation, 95 for heart failure, and 150 for myocardial infarction.

Patients hospitalized for cardiac causes had a higher mean age (59.5 vs 34.5 years) and more comorbidities than patients hospitalized for other causes. These comorbidities included hyperlipidemia, chronic kidney disease, obesity, and a family history of coronary artery disease.

In all, 5% of patients hospitalized for cardiac cause died in hospital, compared with 2% of patients hospitalized for other reasons (P = .044).

However, in logistic regression analyses adjusting for age, sex, and race, this difference was no longer significant.

Similarly, an unadjusted analysis showed that patients with cardiac disease were twice as likely to be discharged to a nursing facility (8% vs 4%, respectively), but this difference too disappeared in adjusted analyses.

The risk for in-hospital mortality appeared to be highest among those patients with a primary diagnosis of heart failure, who had an 11% rate of in-hospital death, compared with 2% among patients with CF hospitalized for other causes.

The total number of deaths was too small, however, to allow for regression analysis, Bhat said.

Nonetheless, taken together, the data indicate a trend toward increased mortality from cardiovascular causes among older patients with CF, as well as the need for further research into the cardiovascular health of these patients, Bhat concluded.
 

 

 

Better Nutrition, Higher Risk

In an interview, Yuqing A. Gao, MD, from the Santa Monica Pulmonary Sleep Clinic in California, who was not involved in the study, commented that with the advent of elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor modulator therapy, patients with CF tend to have increases in body mass index and improved nutritional intake and absorption, which in turn could increase hyperlipidemia and other factors that might in turn contribute to increased CVD risk.

“It’s really an interesting area of research, and there’s hope that this will bring more focus on how to better screen [for CVD risk] because that’s something that’s very much not known at this time,” she said.

Gao was co-moderator for the session where Bhat presented the data. Bhat did not report a study funding source. Bhat and Gao reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

— With the remarkable advances made in therapy over the past decade, many patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) can expect to survive into their 50s and even well beyond. But as patients with CF live longer, they are increasingly likely to develop complications such as cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) that beset many older adults. And as evidence from a new study suggests, there is an increasing need for cardiovascular screening and specialized cardiac care for these patients.

Among more than 83,000 patients with CF hospitalized for any reason from 2016 through 2021, less than 1% of patients had a cardiac cause listed, but in unadjusted analyses, these patients had a more than twofold risk for in-hospital death than those with CF hospitalized for other causes, reported Adnan Bhat, MD, assistant professor of hospital medicine at the University of Florida, Gainesville.

Although the excess mortality was no longer statistically significant in analyses adjusted for potential confounding factors, the data highlight a trend that requires further exploration, he said during an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST).

“There’s a trend for people with cystic fibrosis admitted for cardiac causes to have a higher in-hospital mortality and increased rate of discharge to nursing facilities, especially for patients admitted for heart failure. The clinical implication is that there is an increased need to start screening for cardiovascular risk factors,” he said.
 

National Database Sample

Bhat and colleagues conducted a retrospective study using the National Inpatient Sample database to identify all hospitalizations among patients with CF in the United States from 2016 through 2021.

They included all hospitalizations with a principal diagnosis code for atrial fibrillation, heart failure, or myocardial infarction.

Of 83,250 total hospitalizations during the study period, 415 (0.5%) were for primary cardiac causes. These included 170 hospitalizations for atrial fibrillation, 95 for heart failure, and 150 for myocardial infarction.

Patients hospitalized for cardiac causes had a higher mean age (59.5 vs 34.5 years) and more comorbidities than patients hospitalized for other causes. These comorbidities included hyperlipidemia, chronic kidney disease, obesity, and a family history of coronary artery disease.

In all, 5% of patients hospitalized for cardiac cause died in hospital, compared with 2% of patients hospitalized for other reasons (P = .044).

However, in logistic regression analyses adjusting for age, sex, and race, this difference was no longer significant.

Similarly, an unadjusted analysis showed that patients with cardiac disease were twice as likely to be discharged to a nursing facility (8% vs 4%, respectively), but this difference too disappeared in adjusted analyses.

The risk for in-hospital mortality appeared to be highest among those patients with a primary diagnosis of heart failure, who had an 11% rate of in-hospital death, compared with 2% among patients with CF hospitalized for other causes.

The total number of deaths was too small, however, to allow for regression analysis, Bhat said.

Nonetheless, taken together, the data indicate a trend toward increased mortality from cardiovascular causes among older patients with CF, as well as the need for further research into the cardiovascular health of these patients, Bhat concluded.
 

 

 

Better Nutrition, Higher Risk

In an interview, Yuqing A. Gao, MD, from the Santa Monica Pulmonary Sleep Clinic in California, who was not involved in the study, commented that with the advent of elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor modulator therapy, patients with CF tend to have increases in body mass index and improved nutritional intake and absorption, which in turn could increase hyperlipidemia and other factors that might in turn contribute to increased CVD risk.

“It’s really an interesting area of research, and there’s hope that this will bring more focus on how to better screen [for CVD risk] because that’s something that’s very much not known at this time,” she said.

Gao was co-moderator for the session where Bhat presented the data. Bhat did not report a study funding source. Bhat and Gao reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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‘Door-to-Thrombectomy’ Time for Acute PE Linked to Better Outcomes

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Wed, 10/09/2024 - 15:28

 

The sooner that patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) get treated with mechanical thrombectomy, the greater the likelihood that they will have favorable short- and long-term outcomes, regardless of their degree of initial risk, a study of registry data showed.

Among nearly 800 patients with acute PE whose data are recorded in the FlowTriever All-Comer Registry for Patient Safety and Hemodynamics (FLASH), a prospective multicenter registry of individuals treated with mechanical thrombectomy using the FlowTriever system (Inari Medical), shorter time from admission to mechanical thrombectomy was associated with significantly greater reductions in intraprocedural mean and systolic pulmonary artery pressures (PAP), greater reductions in the right ventricular/left ventricular (RV/LV) ratio, and longer 6-minute walk times at 6 months, reported Krunal H. Patel, MD, a pulmonary and critical care fellow at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia.

“Mechanical thrombectomy in the FLASH registry showed a mortality benefit. I think as time progresses and mechanical thrombectomy becomes more popular, we’re just going to need to figure out what is the ideal time for intervention,” he said during an oral abstract session at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

“There’s mortality benefit in any case whether the patient is high-risk or intermediate-high. This is a thought-provoking retrospective analysis that says that early intervention is probably better than doing it late, but regardless, the FLASH registry trial showed that early thrombectomy or thrombectomy in general shows positive mortality benefit,” Patel said in an interview.

He likened the challenge for pulmonary and critical care specialists to that of interventional cardiologists, who have determined that the ideal window for starting percutaneous coronary interventions is within 90 minutes of the patient’s arrival at the facility.

“I think we have to get our ‘door-to-balloon’ time for PE care,” he said.
 

Study Details

Patel and colleague Parth M. Rali, MD, FCCP, associate professor of thoracic medicine at Temple, conducted a retrospective review of data on 787 US patients in the FLASH registry for whom time to mechanical thrombectomy data were available. They stratified the patients into short and long time to mechanical thrombectomy groups, with “short” defined as ≤ 12 hours of presentation and “long” as > 12 hours.

They found that the median time to thrombectomy was 19.68 hours. In all, 242 patients (31%) were treated within the short window, and the remaining 545 patients (69%) were treated after at least 12 hours had passed.

Comparing clinical characteristics between the groups, the investigators noted that significantly more patients in the short time group vs long time group were categorized as high-risk (11.2% vs 6.2%; P = .0026). This difference is likely due to the need for greater urgency among high-risk patients, Patel said.

Patients in the short time group also had significantly higher baseline RV/LV ratios and lactate levels, but baseline dyspnea scores and pre-procedure median and systolic PAP were similar between the groups.

The mean time to thrombectomy was 6.08 hours in the short time group vs 34.04 hours in the long time group. Their respective median times were 6.01 and 24.73 hours.

The procedural time was similar between the groups, at 45 and 42 minutes, respectively.

The location of the treated thrombus was central only in 35.1% and 26.5% patients in the short and long time groups, respectively. Lobar-only thrombi were treated in 7.9% and 14.3%, respectively, and both central and lobar thrombi were treated in 57.0% and 59.2%, respectively.

Both 48-hour and 30-day all-cause mortality rates were similar between the groups (0.4%/0.2% and 0.5%/1.0%).

Patients in the short time group had slightly but significantly longer post-procedure hospital and intensive care unit stays, but 30-day readmission rates — whether for PE- or non-PE–related causes — were similar.

Where the differences between the groups really showed, however, were PAP reductions over baseline, with decline in median pressures of −8.7 mm Hg in the short group vs −7.2 mm Hg in the long group (P = .0008), and drops in systolic PAP of −14.4 vs −12.1 mm Hg, respectively (P = .0011).

In addition, reductions in RV/LV ratios from baseline were also significantly greater among patients whose thrombectomies had been expedited at the 48-hour, 30-day, and 6-month follow-up periods.

At 6 months, patients who had received mechanical thrombectomy within 12 hours also had significantly longer 6-minute walk distances (442.2 vs 390.5 m; P = .0032).
 

 

 

Low Thrombolysis Rate

Following his presentation, session co-moderator Galina Glazman-Kuczaj, MD, from the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at Albany Med Health System, Albany, New York, asked Patel what percentage of patients, if any, had received thrombolytic therapy before the thrombectomy procedure.

He noted that only 1% or 2% patients in the FLASH registry received thrombolysis.

In an interview, Glazman-Kuczaj said that “it was reassuring for [Patel] to report that it was only a small population of patients who got thrombolysis beforehand in either group because you would expect that maybe people in the group that took longer to have a thrombectomy got some thrombolysis beforehand and that perhaps they were more stable, but it seems like thrombectomy was the first-line treatment in both groups.”

The FLASH Registry is funded by Inari Medical. Patel and Glazman-Kuczaj reported no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The sooner that patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) get treated with mechanical thrombectomy, the greater the likelihood that they will have favorable short- and long-term outcomes, regardless of their degree of initial risk, a study of registry data showed.

Among nearly 800 patients with acute PE whose data are recorded in the FlowTriever All-Comer Registry for Patient Safety and Hemodynamics (FLASH), a prospective multicenter registry of individuals treated with mechanical thrombectomy using the FlowTriever system (Inari Medical), shorter time from admission to mechanical thrombectomy was associated with significantly greater reductions in intraprocedural mean and systolic pulmonary artery pressures (PAP), greater reductions in the right ventricular/left ventricular (RV/LV) ratio, and longer 6-minute walk times at 6 months, reported Krunal H. Patel, MD, a pulmonary and critical care fellow at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia.

“Mechanical thrombectomy in the FLASH registry showed a mortality benefit. I think as time progresses and mechanical thrombectomy becomes more popular, we’re just going to need to figure out what is the ideal time for intervention,” he said during an oral abstract session at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

“There’s mortality benefit in any case whether the patient is high-risk or intermediate-high. This is a thought-provoking retrospective analysis that says that early intervention is probably better than doing it late, but regardless, the FLASH registry trial showed that early thrombectomy or thrombectomy in general shows positive mortality benefit,” Patel said in an interview.

He likened the challenge for pulmonary and critical care specialists to that of interventional cardiologists, who have determined that the ideal window for starting percutaneous coronary interventions is within 90 minutes of the patient’s arrival at the facility.

“I think we have to get our ‘door-to-balloon’ time for PE care,” he said.
 

Study Details

Patel and colleague Parth M. Rali, MD, FCCP, associate professor of thoracic medicine at Temple, conducted a retrospective review of data on 787 US patients in the FLASH registry for whom time to mechanical thrombectomy data were available. They stratified the patients into short and long time to mechanical thrombectomy groups, with “short” defined as ≤ 12 hours of presentation and “long” as > 12 hours.

They found that the median time to thrombectomy was 19.68 hours. In all, 242 patients (31%) were treated within the short window, and the remaining 545 patients (69%) were treated after at least 12 hours had passed.

Comparing clinical characteristics between the groups, the investigators noted that significantly more patients in the short time group vs long time group were categorized as high-risk (11.2% vs 6.2%; P = .0026). This difference is likely due to the need for greater urgency among high-risk patients, Patel said.

Patients in the short time group also had significantly higher baseline RV/LV ratios and lactate levels, but baseline dyspnea scores and pre-procedure median and systolic PAP were similar between the groups.

The mean time to thrombectomy was 6.08 hours in the short time group vs 34.04 hours in the long time group. Their respective median times were 6.01 and 24.73 hours.

The procedural time was similar between the groups, at 45 and 42 minutes, respectively.

The location of the treated thrombus was central only in 35.1% and 26.5% patients in the short and long time groups, respectively. Lobar-only thrombi were treated in 7.9% and 14.3%, respectively, and both central and lobar thrombi were treated in 57.0% and 59.2%, respectively.

Both 48-hour and 30-day all-cause mortality rates were similar between the groups (0.4%/0.2% and 0.5%/1.0%).

Patients in the short time group had slightly but significantly longer post-procedure hospital and intensive care unit stays, but 30-day readmission rates — whether for PE- or non-PE–related causes — were similar.

Where the differences between the groups really showed, however, were PAP reductions over baseline, with decline in median pressures of −8.7 mm Hg in the short group vs −7.2 mm Hg in the long group (P = .0008), and drops in systolic PAP of −14.4 vs −12.1 mm Hg, respectively (P = .0011).

In addition, reductions in RV/LV ratios from baseline were also significantly greater among patients whose thrombectomies had been expedited at the 48-hour, 30-day, and 6-month follow-up periods.

At 6 months, patients who had received mechanical thrombectomy within 12 hours also had significantly longer 6-minute walk distances (442.2 vs 390.5 m; P = .0032).
 

 

 

Low Thrombolysis Rate

Following his presentation, session co-moderator Galina Glazman-Kuczaj, MD, from the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at Albany Med Health System, Albany, New York, asked Patel what percentage of patients, if any, had received thrombolytic therapy before the thrombectomy procedure.

He noted that only 1% or 2% patients in the FLASH registry received thrombolysis.

In an interview, Glazman-Kuczaj said that “it was reassuring for [Patel] to report that it was only a small population of patients who got thrombolysis beforehand in either group because you would expect that maybe people in the group that took longer to have a thrombectomy got some thrombolysis beforehand and that perhaps they were more stable, but it seems like thrombectomy was the first-line treatment in both groups.”

The FLASH Registry is funded by Inari Medical. Patel and Glazman-Kuczaj reported no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

The sooner that patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) get treated with mechanical thrombectomy, the greater the likelihood that they will have favorable short- and long-term outcomes, regardless of their degree of initial risk, a study of registry data showed.

Among nearly 800 patients with acute PE whose data are recorded in the FlowTriever All-Comer Registry for Patient Safety and Hemodynamics (FLASH), a prospective multicenter registry of individuals treated with mechanical thrombectomy using the FlowTriever system (Inari Medical), shorter time from admission to mechanical thrombectomy was associated with significantly greater reductions in intraprocedural mean and systolic pulmonary artery pressures (PAP), greater reductions in the right ventricular/left ventricular (RV/LV) ratio, and longer 6-minute walk times at 6 months, reported Krunal H. Patel, MD, a pulmonary and critical care fellow at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia.

“Mechanical thrombectomy in the FLASH registry showed a mortality benefit. I think as time progresses and mechanical thrombectomy becomes more popular, we’re just going to need to figure out what is the ideal time for intervention,” he said during an oral abstract session at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

“There’s mortality benefit in any case whether the patient is high-risk or intermediate-high. This is a thought-provoking retrospective analysis that says that early intervention is probably better than doing it late, but regardless, the FLASH registry trial showed that early thrombectomy or thrombectomy in general shows positive mortality benefit,” Patel said in an interview.

He likened the challenge for pulmonary and critical care specialists to that of interventional cardiologists, who have determined that the ideal window for starting percutaneous coronary interventions is within 90 minutes of the patient’s arrival at the facility.

“I think we have to get our ‘door-to-balloon’ time for PE care,” he said.
 

Study Details

Patel and colleague Parth M. Rali, MD, FCCP, associate professor of thoracic medicine at Temple, conducted a retrospective review of data on 787 US patients in the FLASH registry for whom time to mechanical thrombectomy data were available. They stratified the patients into short and long time to mechanical thrombectomy groups, with “short” defined as ≤ 12 hours of presentation and “long” as > 12 hours.

They found that the median time to thrombectomy was 19.68 hours. In all, 242 patients (31%) were treated within the short window, and the remaining 545 patients (69%) were treated after at least 12 hours had passed.

Comparing clinical characteristics between the groups, the investigators noted that significantly more patients in the short time group vs long time group were categorized as high-risk (11.2% vs 6.2%; P = .0026). This difference is likely due to the need for greater urgency among high-risk patients, Patel said.

Patients in the short time group also had significantly higher baseline RV/LV ratios and lactate levels, but baseline dyspnea scores and pre-procedure median and systolic PAP were similar between the groups.

The mean time to thrombectomy was 6.08 hours in the short time group vs 34.04 hours in the long time group. Their respective median times were 6.01 and 24.73 hours.

The procedural time was similar between the groups, at 45 and 42 minutes, respectively.

The location of the treated thrombus was central only in 35.1% and 26.5% patients in the short and long time groups, respectively. Lobar-only thrombi were treated in 7.9% and 14.3%, respectively, and both central and lobar thrombi were treated in 57.0% and 59.2%, respectively.

Both 48-hour and 30-day all-cause mortality rates were similar between the groups (0.4%/0.2% and 0.5%/1.0%).

Patients in the short time group had slightly but significantly longer post-procedure hospital and intensive care unit stays, but 30-day readmission rates — whether for PE- or non-PE–related causes — were similar.

Where the differences between the groups really showed, however, were PAP reductions over baseline, with decline in median pressures of −8.7 mm Hg in the short group vs −7.2 mm Hg in the long group (P = .0008), and drops in systolic PAP of −14.4 vs −12.1 mm Hg, respectively (P = .0011).

In addition, reductions in RV/LV ratios from baseline were also significantly greater among patients whose thrombectomies had been expedited at the 48-hour, 30-day, and 6-month follow-up periods.

At 6 months, patients who had received mechanical thrombectomy within 12 hours also had significantly longer 6-minute walk distances (442.2 vs 390.5 m; P = .0032).
 

 

 

Low Thrombolysis Rate

Following his presentation, session co-moderator Galina Glazman-Kuczaj, MD, from the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at Albany Med Health System, Albany, New York, asked Patel what percentage of patients, if any, had received thrombolytic therapy before the thrombectomy procedure.

He noted that only 1% or 2% patients in the FLASH registry received thrombolysis.

In an interview, Glazman-Kuczaj said that “it was reassuring for [Patel] to report that it was only a small population of patients who got thrombolysis beforehand in either group because you would expect that maybe people in the group that took longer to have a thrombectomy got some thrombolysis beforehand and that perhaps they were more stable, but it seems like thrombectomy was the first-line treatment in both groups.”

The FLASH Registry is funded by Inari Medical. Patel and Glazman-Kuczaj reported no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Use of SGLT2 Inhibitors Associated With Better Survival in PAH

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— The use of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors is associated with reduced short- and long-term mortality among patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), according to results from a new propensity score–matched analysis.

“There are a lot of new studies that show benefits [of SGLT2 inhibitors] in heart failure, in [chronic kidney disease], and of course, in diabetes. Group one pulmonary hypertension includes not only the inflammatory cascades but also fibrotic and neurovascularization, and all these different parts of the pathophysiology are linked to each other. There are studies that show that SGLT2 inhibitors can have an impact on inflammatory cascades, fibrosis, and vascular remodeling in general. Together, all this data triggered this idea for me, and that’s when I decided to conduct further studies,” said Irakli Lemonjava, MD, who presented the study at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

The researchers drew data on 125,634 adult patients from the TriNetX database who were diagnosed with PAH after January 1, 2013. They used propensity score matching to account for demographic characteristics and 10 organ system disorders to compare patients with exposure to SGLT2 inhibitors (canagliflozin, dapagliflozin, empagliflozin, or ertugliflozin; n = 6238) with those without such exposure (n = 6243).

At 1 year, 8.1% of patients taking SGLT2 inhibitors had died, compared with 15.5% of patients not taking SGLT2 inhibitors (risk reduction [RR], 0.52; P < .0001). The values were 13% and 22.5% (RR, 0.579; P < .0001) at 3 years and 14.6% and 25% at 5 years (RR, 0.583; P < .0001).

The study generated discussion during the Q&A period following the talk. One audience member asked if the group was able to access patients both inside and outside the United States. “Because I wonder if access to GLP2 inhibitors is actually a surrogate marker for access to other medications,” the questioner said.

Although the finding is intriguing, it shouldn’t change clinical practice, according to Lemonjava. “I don’t think we can make any changes based on what I shared today. Our purpose was to trigger the question. I think the numbers are so impressive that it will trigger more studies. I think if in the future it’s demonstrated by clinical trials that [SGLT2 inhibitors are beneficial], it will not be a problem to prescribe for someone with pulmonary arterial hypertension because they do not have many side effects,” he said. Lemonjava is a resident physician at Jefferson Einstein Philadelphia Hospital, Philadelphia.

Session co-moderator said Syed Rehan Quadery, MD, praised the study but emphasized the remaining uncertainty. “It’s an excellent proof of concept study. More trials need to [be done] on it, and we don’t understand the mechanism of action in which it improves survival in patients with pulmonary artery hypertension. The majority of the patients with pulmonary hypertension are much older and they have comorbidities, including cardiovascular risk factors, and maybe that is one of the ways in which this drug helps. Plus, there are multiple mechanisms in which it may be working, including anti-inflammatory as well as antiproliferative mechanisms through inhibiting the Notch-3 signaling pathway,” said Quadery, who is a consultant respiratory physician at National Pulmonary Hypertension Unit, Dublin, Ireland.

Quadery and his co-moderator Zeenat Safdar, MD, both noted that SGLT2 inhibitors have already been demonstrated to improve outcomes in heart failure. “[SGLT2 inhibition] improves survival, it decreases hospitalization, it improves morbidity and mortality. There are a lot of things that can be shown in different [animal or in vitro] models. In humans, we actually don’t know exactly how it works, but we know that it does. If it works in left heart failure, it also [could] work in right heart failure,” said Safdar, who is the director of the Houston Methodist Lung Center, Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston.

The study was independently supported. Lemonjava, Quadery, and Safdar reported no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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— The use of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors is associated with reduced short- and long-term mortality among patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), according to results from a new propensity score–matched analysis.

“There are a lot of new studies that show benefits [of SGLT2 inhibitors] in heart failure, in [chronic kidney disease], and of course, in diabetes. Group one pulmonary hypertension includes not only the inflammatory cascades but also fibrotic and neurovascularization, and all these different parts of the pathophysiology are linked to each other. There are studies that show that SGLT2 inhibitors can have an impact on inflammatory cascades, fibrosis, and vascular remodeling in general. Together, all this data triggered this idea for me, and that’s when I decided to conduct further studies,” said Irakli Lemonjava, MD, who presented the study at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

The researchers drew data on 125,634 adult patients from the TriNetX database who were diagnosed with PAH after January 1, 2013. They used propensity score matching to account for demographic characteristics and 10 organ system disorders to compare patients with exposure to SGLT2 inhibitors (canagliflozin, dapagliflozin, empagliflozin, or ertugliflozin; n = 6238) with those without such exposure (n = 6243).

At 1 year, 8.1% of patients taking SGLT2 inhibitors had died, compared with 15.5% of patients not taking SGLT2 inhibitors (risk reduction [RR], 0.52; P < .0001). The values were 13% and 22.5% (RR, 0.579; P < .0001) at 3 years and 14.6% and 25% at 5 years (RR, 0.583; P < .0001).

The study generated discussion during the Q&A period following the talk. One audience member asked if the group was able to access patients both inside and outside the United States. “Because I wonder if access to GLP2 inhibitors is actually a surrogate marker for access to other medications,” the questioner said.

Although the finding is intriguing, it shouldn’t change clinical practice, according to Lemonjava. “I don’t think we can make any changes based on what I shared today. Our purpose was to trigger the question. I think the numbers are so impressive that it will trigger more studies. I think if in the future it’s demonstrated by clinical trials that [SGLT2 inhibitors are beneficial], it will not be a problem to prescribe for someone with pulmonary arterial hypertension because they do not have many side effects,” he said. Lemonjava is a resident physician at Jefferson Einstein Philadelphia Hospital, Philadelphia.

Session co-moderator said Syed Rehan Quadery, MD, praised the study but emphasized the remaining uncertainty. “It’s an excellent proof of concept study. More trials need to [be done] on it, and we don’t understand the mechanism of action in which it improves survival in patients with pulmonary artery hypertension. The majority of the patients with pulmonary hypertension are much older and they have comorbidities, including cardiovascular risk factors, and maybe that is one of the ways in which this drug helps. Plus, there are multiple mechanisms in which it may be working, including anti-inflammatory as well as antiproliferative mechanisms through inhibiting the Notch-3 signaling pathway,” said Quadery, who is a consultant respiratory physician at National Pulmonary Hypertension Unit, Dublin, Ireland.

Quadery and his co-moderator Zeenat Safdar, MD, both noted that SGLT2 inhibitors have already been demonstrated to improve outcomes in heart failure. “[SGLT2 inhibition] improves survival, it decreases hospitalization, it improves morbidity and mortality. There are a lot of things that can be shown in different [animal or in vitro] models. In humans, we actually don’t know exactly how it works, but we know that it does. If it works in left heart failure, it also [could] work in right heart failure,” said Safdar, who is the director of the Houston Methodist Lung Center, Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston.

The study was independently supported. Lemonjava, Quadery, and Safdar reported no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

— The use of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors is associated with reduced short- and long-term mortality among patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), according to results from a new propensity score–matched analysis.

“There are a lot of new studies that show benefits [of SGLT2 inhibitors] in heart failure, in [chronic kidney disease], and of course, in diabetes. Group one pulmonary hypertension includes not only the inflammatory cascades but also fibrotic and neurovascularization, and all these different parts of the pathophysiology are linked to each other. There are studies that show that SGLT2 inhibitors can have an impact on inflammatory cascades, fibrosis, and vascular remodeling in general. Together, all this data triggered this idea for me, and that’s when I decided to conduct further studies,” said Irakli Lemonjava, MD, who presented the study at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

The researchers drew data on 125,634 adult patients from the TriNetX database who were diagnosed with PAH after January 1, 2013. They used propensity score matching to account for demographic characteristics and 10 organ system disorders to compare patients with exposure to SGLT2 inhibitors (canagliflozin, dapagliflozin, empagliflozin, or ertugliflozin; n = 6238) with those without such exposure (n = 6243).

At 1 year, 8.1% of patients taking SGLT2 inhibitors had died, compared with 15.5% of patients not taking SGLT2 inhibitors (risk reduction [RR], 0.52; P < .0001). The values were 13% and 22.5% (RR, 0.579; P < .0001) at 3 years and 14.6% and 25% at 5 years (RR, 0.583; P < .0001).

The study generated discussion during the Q&A period following the talk. One audience member asked if the group was able to access patients both inside and outside the United States. “Because I wonder if access to GLP2 inhibitors is actually a surrogate marker for access to other medications,” the questioner said.

Although the finding is intriguing, it shouldn’t change clinical practice, according to Lemonjava. “I don’t think we can make any changes based on what I shared today. Our purpose was to trigger the question. I think the numbers are so impressive that it will trigger more studies. I think if in the future it’s demonstrated by clinical trials that [SGLT2 inhibitors are beneficial], it will not be a problem to prescribe for someone with pulmonary arterial hypertension because they do not have many side effects,” he said. Lemonjava is a resident physician at Jefferson Einstein Philadelphia Hospital, Philadelphia.

Session co-moderator said Syed Rehan Quadery, MD, praised the study but emphasized the remaining uncertainty. “It’s an excellent proof of concept study. More trials need to [be done] on it, and we don’t understand the mechanism of action in which it improves survival in patients with pulmonary artery hypertension. The majority of the patients with pulmonary hypertension are much older and they have comorbidities, including cardiovascular risk factors, and maybe that is one of the ways in which this drug helps. Plus, there are multiple mechanisms in which it may be working, including anti-inflammatory as well as antiproliferative mechanisms through inhibiting the Notch-3 signaling pathway,” said Quadery, who is a consultant respiratory physician at National Pulmonary Hypertension Unit, Dublin, Ireland.

Quadery and his co-moderator Zeenat Safdar, MD, both noted that SGLT2 inhibitors have already been demonstrated to improve outcomes in heart failure. “[SGLT2 inhibition] improves survival, it decreases hospitalization, it improves morbidity and mortality. There are a lot of things that can be shown in different [animal or in vitro] models. In humans, we actually don’t know exactly how it works, but we know that it does. If it works in left heart failure, it also [could] work in right heart failure,” said Safdar, who is the director of the Houston Methodist Lung Center, Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston.

The study was independently supported. Lemonjava, Quadery, and Safdar reported no relevant financial relationships.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Lawsuit Targets Publishers: Is Peer Review Flawed?

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The peer-review process, which is used by scientific journals to validate legitimate research, is now under legal scrutiny. The US District Court for the Southern District of New York will soon rule on whether scientific publishers have compromised this system for profit. In mid-September, University of California, Los Angeles neuroscientist Lucina Uddin filed a class action lawsuit against six leading academic publishers — Elsevier, Wolters Kluwer, Wiley, Sage Publications, Taylor & Francis, and Springer Nature — accusing them of violating antitrust laws and obstructing academic research.

The lawsuit targets several long-standing practices in scientific publishing, including the lack of compensation for peer reviewers, restrictions that require submitting to only one journal at a time, and bans on sharing manuscripts under review. Uddin’s complaint argues that these practices contribute to inefficiencies in the review process, thus delaying the publication of critical discoveries, which could hinder research, clinical advancements, and the development of new medical treatments.

The suit also noted that these publishers generated $10 billion in revenue in 2023 in peer-reviewed journals. However, the complaint seemingly overlooks the widespread practice of preprint repositories, where many manuscripts are shared while awaiting peer review.
 

Flawed Reviews

A growing number of studies have highlighted subpar or unethical behaviors among reviewers, who are supposed to adhere to the highest standards of methodological rigor, both in conducting research and reviewing work for journals. One recent study published in Scientometrics in August examined 263 reviews from 37 journals across various disciplines and found alarming patterns of duplication. Many of the reviews contained identical or highly similar language. Some reviewers were found to be suggesting that the authors expand their bibliographies to include the reviewers’ own work, thus inflating their citation counts.

As María Ángeles Oviedo-García from the University of Seville in Spain, pointed out: “The analysis of 263 review reports shows a pattern of vague, repetitive statements — often identical or very similar — along with coercive citations, ultimately resulting in misleading reviews.”

Experts in research integrity and ethics argue that while issues persist, the integrity of scientific research is improving. Increasing research and public disclosure reflect a heightened awareness of problems long overlooked.

“There is indeed a problem with research reliability, but it’s not as widespread or severe as some portray,” said Daniele Fanelli, a metascientist at the London School of Economics and Political Science in England. Speaking to this news organization, Fanelli, who has been studying scientific misconduct for about 20 years, noted that while his early work left him disillusioned, further research has replaced his cynicism with what he describes as healthy skepticism and a more optimistic outlook. Fanelli also collaborates with the Luxembourg Agency for Research Integrity and the Advisory Committee on Research Ethics and Bioethics at the Italian National Research Council (CNR), where he helped develop the first research integrity guidelines.
 

Lack of Awareness

A recurring challenge is the difficulty in distinguishing between honest mistakes and intentional misconduct. “This is why greater investment in education is essential,” said Daniel Pizzolato, European Network of Research Ethics Committees, Bonn, Germany, and the Centre for Biomedical Ethics and Law, KU Leuven in Belgium.

While Pizzolato acknowledged that institutions such as the CNR in Italy provide a positive example, awareness of research integrity is generally still lacking across much of Europe, and there are few offices dedicated to promoting research integrity. However, he pointed to promising developments in other countries. “In France and Denmark, researchers are required to be familiar with integrity norms because codes of conduct have legal standing. Some major international funding bodies like the European Molecular Biology Organization are making participation in research integrity courses a condition for receiving grants.”

Pizzolato remains optimistic. “There is a growing willingness to move past this impasse,” he said.

A recent study published in The Journal of Clinical Epidemiology reveals troubling gaps in how retracted biomedical articles are flagged and cited. Led by Caitlin Bakkera, Department of Epidemiology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands, the research sought to determine whether articles retracted because of errors or fraud were properly flagged across various databases.

The results were concerning: Less than 5% of retracted articles had consistent retraction notices across all databases that hosted them, and less than 50% of citations referenced the retraction. None of the 414 retraction notices analyzed met best-practice guidelines for completeness. Bakkera and colleagues warned that these shortcomings threaten the integrity of public health research.
 

Fanelli’s Perspective

Despite the concerns, Fanelli remains calm. “Science is based on debate and a perspective called organized skepticism, which helps reveal the truth,” he explained. “While there is often excessive skepticism today, the overall quality of clinical trials is improving.

“It’s important to remember that reliable results take time and shouldn’t depend on the outcome of a single study. It’s essential to consider the broader context, the history of the research field, and potential conflicts of interest, both financial and otherwise. Biomedical research requires constant updates,” he concluded.

This story was translated from Univadis Italy using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The peer-review process, which is used by scientific journals to validate legitimate research, is now under legal scrutiny. The US District Court for the Southern District of New York will soon rule on whether scientific publishers have compromised this system for profit. In mid-September, University of California, Los Angeles neuroscientist Lucina Uddin filed a class action lawsuit against six leading academic publishers — Elsevier, Wolters Kluwer, Wiley, Sage Publications, Taylor & Francis, and Springer Nature — accusing them of violating antitrust laws and obstructing academic research.

The lawsuit targets several long-standing practices in scientific publishing, including the lack of compensation for peer reviewers, restrictions that require submitting to only one journal at a time, and bans on sharing manuscripts under review. Uddin’s complaint argues that these practices contribute to inefficiencies in the review process, thus delaying the publication of critical discoveries, which could hinder research, clinical advancements, and the development of new medical treatments.

The suit also noted that these publishers generated $10 billion in revenue in 2023 in peer-reviewed journals. However, the complaint seemingly overlooks the widespread practice of preprint repositories, where many manuscripts are shared while awaiting peer review.
 

Flawed Reviews

A growing number of studies have highlighted subpar or unethical behaviors among reviewers, who are supposed to adhere to the highest standards of methodological rigor, both in conducting research and reviewing work for journals. One recent study published in Scientometrics in August examined 263 reviews from 37 journals across various disciplines and found alarming patterns of duplication. Many of the reviews contained identical or highly similar language. Some reviewers were found to be suggesting that the authors expand their bibliographies to include the reviewers’ own work, thus inflating their citation counts.

As María Ángeles Oviedo-García from the University of Seville in Spain, pointed out: “The analysis of 263 review reports shows a pattern of vague, repetitive statements — often identical or very similar — along with coercive citations, ultimately resulting in misleading reviews.”

Experts in research integrity and ethics argue that while issues persist, the integrity of scientific research is improving. Increasing research and public disclosure reflect a heightened awareness of problems long overlooked.

“There is indeed a problem with research reliability, but it’s not as widespread or severe as some portray,” said Daniele Fanelli, a metascientist at the London School of Economics and Political Science in England. Speaking to this news organization, Fanelli, who has been studying scientific misconduct for about 20 years, noted that while his early work left him disillusioned, further research has replaced his cynicism with what he describes as healthy skepticism and a more optimistic outlook. Fanelli also collaborates with the Luxembourg Agency for Research Integrity and the Advisory Committee on Research Ethics and Bioethics at the Italian National Research Council (CNR), where he helped develop the first research integrity guidelines.
 

Lack of Awareness

A recurring challenge is the difficulty in distinguishing between honest mistakes and intentional misconduct. “This is why greater investment in education is essential,” said Daniel Pizzolato, European Network of Research Ethics Committees, Bonn, Germany, and the Centre for Biomedical Ethics and Law, KU Leuven in Belgium.

While Pizzolato acknowledged that institutions such as the CNR in Italy provide a positive example, awareness of research integrity is generally still lacking across much of Europe, and there are few offices dedicated to promoting research integrity. However, he pointed to promising developments in other countries. “In France and Denmark, researchers are required to be familiar with integrity norms because codes of conduct have legal standing. Some major international funding bodies like the European Molecular Biology Organization are making participation in research integrity courses a condition for receiving grants.”

Pizzolato remains optimistic. “There is a growing willingness to move past this impasse,” he said.

A recent study published in The Journal of Clinical Epidemiology reveals troubling gaps in how retracted biomedical articles are flagged and cited. Led by Caitlin Bakkera, Department of Epidemiology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands, the research sought to determine whether articles retracted because of errors or fraud were properly flagged across various databases.

The results were concerning: Less than 5% of retracted articles had consistent retraction notices across all databases that hosted them, and less than 50% of citations referenced the retraction. None of the 414 retraction notices analyzed met best-practice guidelines for completeness. Bakkera and colleagues warned that these shortcomings threaten the integrity of public health research.
 

Fanelli’s Perspective

Despite the concerns, Fanelli remains calm. “Science is based on debate and a perspective called organized skepticism, which helps reveal the truth,” he explained. “While there is often excessive skepticism today, the overall quality of clinical trials is improving.

“It’s important to remember that reliable results take time and shouldn’t depend on the outcome of a single study. It’s essential to consider the broader context, the history of the research field, and potential conflicts of interest, both financial and otherwise. Biomedical research requires constant updates,” he concluded.

This story was translated from Univadis Italy using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The peer-review process, which is used by scientific journals to validate legitimate research, is now under legal scrutiny. The US District Court for the Southern District of New York will soon rule on whether scientific publishers have compromised this system for profit. In mid-September, University of California, Los Angeles neuroscientist Lucina Uddin filed a class action lawsuit against six leading academic publishers — Elsevier, Wolters Kluwer, Wiley, Sage Publications, Taylor & Francis, and Springer Nature — accusing them of violating antitrust laws and obstructing academic research.

The lawsuit targets several long-standing practices in scientific publishing, including the lack of compensation for peer reviewers, restrictions that require submitting to only one journal at a time, and bans on sharing manuscripts under review. Uddin’s complaint argues that these practices contribute to inefficiencies in the review process, thus delaying the publication of critical discoveries, which could hinder research, clinical advancements, and the development of new medical treatments.

The suit also noted that these publishers generated $10 billion in revenue in 2023 in peer-reviewed journals. However, the complaint seemingly overlooks the widespread practice of preprint repositories, where many manuscripts are shared while awaiting peer review.
 

Flawed Reviews

A growing number of studies have highlighted subpar or unethical behaviors among reviewers, who are supposed to adhere to the highest standards of methodological rigor, both in conducting research and reviewing work for journals. One recent study published in Scientometrics in August examined 263 reviews from 37 journals across various disciplines and found alarming patterns of duplication. Many of the reviews contained identical or highly similar language. Some reviewers were found to be suggesting that the authors expand their bibliographies to include the reviewers’ own work, thus inflating their citation counts.

As María Ángeles Oviedo-García from the University of Seville in Spain, pointed out: “The analysis of 263 review reports shows a pattern of vague, repetitive statements — often identical or very similar — along with coercive citations, ultimately resulting in misleading reviews.”

Experts in research integrity and ethics argue that while issues persist, the integrity of scientific research is improving. Increasing research and public disclosure reflect a heightened awareness of problems long overlooked.

“There is indeed a problem with research reliability, but it’s not as widespread or severe as some portray,” said Daniele Fanelli, a metascientist at the London School of Economics and Political Science in England. Speaking to this news organization, Fanelli, who has been studying scientific misconduct for about 20 years, noted that while his early work left him disillusioned, further research has replaced his cynicism with what he describes as healthy skepticism and a more optimistic outlook. Fanelli also collaborates with the Luxembourg Agency for Research Integrity and the Advisory Committee on Research Ethics and Bioethics at the Italian National Research Council (CNR), where he helped develop the first research integrity guidelines.
 

Lack of Awareness

A recurring challenge is the difficulty in distinguishing between honest mistakes and intentional misconduct. “This is why greater investment in education is essential,” said Daniel Pizzolato, European Network of Research Ethics Committees, Bonn, Germany, and the Centre for Biomedical Ethics and Law, KU Leuven in Belgium.

While Pizzolato acknowledged that institutions such as the CNR in Italy provide a positive example, awareness of research integrity is generally still lacking across much of Europe, and there are few offices dedicated to promoting research integrity. However, he pointed to promising developments in other countries. “In France and Denmark, researchers are required to be familiar with integrity norms because codes of conduct have legal standing. Some major international funding bodies like the European Molecular Biology Organization are making participation in research integrity courses a condition for receiving grants.”

Pizzolato remains optimistic. “There is a growing willingness to move past this impasse,” he said.

A recent study published in The Journal of Clinical Epidemiology reveals troubling gaps in how retracted biomedical articles are flagged and cited. Led by Caitlin Bakkera, Department of Epidemiology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands, the research sought to determine whether articles retracted because of errors or fraud were properly flagged across various databases.

The results were concerning: Less than 5% of retracted articles had consistent retraction notices across all databases that hosted them, and less than 50% of citations referenced the retraction. None of the 414 retraction notices analyzed met best-practice guidelines for completeness. Bakkera and colleagues warned that these shortcomings threaten the integrity of public health research.
 

Fanelli’s Perspective

Despite the concerns, Fanelli remains calm. “Science is based on debate and a perspective called organized skepticism, which helps reveal the truth,” he explained. “While there is often excessive skepticism today, the overall quality of clinical trials is improving.

“It’s important to remember that reliable results take time and shouldn’t depend on the outcome of a single study. It’s essential to consider the broader context, the history of the research field, and potential conflicts of interest, both financial and otherwise. Biomedical research requires constant updates,” he concluded.

This story was translated from Univadis Italy using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Poor Arm Position May Significantly Skew BP Readings

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Wed, 10/09/2024 - 11:31

Common arm positions for blood pressure (BP) measurements that stray from guidelines — arm in lap or hanging at side — led to substantial overestimation of hypertension in a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Guidelines for BP measurement recommend arm support on a desk with the midcuff at heart level. Overestimating BP can lead to unnecessary patient follow-up and overtreatment. Hypertension affects approximately 86 million  adults in the United States and more than 1 billion people globally.

This study has widespread implications given the number of settings where BP checks are performed and the growth in patients taking their own BP readings at home, said Donald DiPette, MD, who was not part of the research and was asked to comment on the findings. Dr. DiPette is the Distinguished Health Sciences Professor at the School of Medicine, University of South Carolina, Columbia.
 

Substantial Overestimation

In the crossover, randomized trial of 133 adults, Hairong Liu, MHS, with the Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues found that supporting the arm on the lap overestimated systolic BP (SBP) by 3.9 mmHg and diastolic BP (DBP) by 4.0 mm Hg. When the arm hung at the side, readings overestimated SBP by 6.5 mm Hg and DBP by 4.4 mm Hg, with consistent results across subgroups.

Participants were randomly assigned to get a series of BP measurements with the arm positioned in three ways: Supported on a desk; hand supported on lap; and arm unsupported at the side. Because BP readings are intrinsically variable, all had a fourth set of BP measurements with the arm supported on a desk. 

Participants’ mean age was 57 years; 48 participants (36%) had SBP of ≥ 130 mm Hg; and 55 participants (41%) had a body mass index of ≥ 30.

Two researcher team staff members conducted all the measurements. They received standardized training and completed a certification test in BP measurement, administered by a study author. Measurements were taken from 9 am to 6 pm using a validated oscillometric BP device (ProBP 2000 Digital Blood Pressure Device, Welch Allyn). Only the right arms were used unless a specific condition was present, such as an open sore.
 

Study’s Design Sets It Apart

The authors wrote that the design of the study set this work apart. “Earlier studies have shown that unsupported or arm positioning below heart level can overestimate SBP by 4-23 mm Hg and DBP by 3-12 mm Hg.” But the strength of this study is the randomized, crossover design, “which is in contrast to the majority of published studies where the order of arm positions before seated BP measurement was not randomized or not clearly described.”

Dr. DiPette, who says, “I’ve given my career to understanding hypertension,” praised the design as well.

Randomization of which position patients were assigned to first was important because the first reading is often higher than subsequent readings, Dr. DiPette said.

“That makes sense as the person acclimatizes to the environment,” he explained. BP can even vary within the same reading, he noted.
 

 

 

Incorrect Readings for Many Reasons

Incorrect measures are common given the number of settings and number of providers and patients taking blood pressure even with training, certification in the method, and educational materials.

“We recommend taking a blood pressure in any possible setting you can. Because it’s that critical,” he said. “Most of the time it’s taken in busy primary care settings. The pressures are there. Most times it’s only one reading. It’s the medical environment of today.”

He noted that although this study finds overestimation, different arm positions not recommended by guidelines could potentially result in underestimation of hypertension. 

“I liken the BP measurement to a laboratory test that has clear treatment implications. We would want the BP measurement to have the same rigorous accuracy as a blood test or radiologic machine,” he said. 

Dr. DiPette said more education is needed for patients as well as providers as patients may be monitoring their own BP at home. Patients should also know they can ask for a measurement to be repeated, know the correct arm position recommended by guidelines, and the implications of incorrect readings, he said.

This study was supported by Resolve to Save Lives, which is funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Gates Philanthropy Partners, which is funded with support from the Chan Zuckerberg Foundation. 

Ms. Liu reported grants from Resolve to Save Lives outside the submitted work. One coauthor reported grants from the National Institutes of Health and personal fees from Kowa, RhythmX AI, and Fukuda Denshi outside the submitted work. Dr. DiPette declared no relevant financial relationships. He was part of a leadership team that developed World Health Organization guidelines on hypertension.

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

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Common arm positions for blood pressure (BP) measurements that stray from guidelines — arm in lap or hanging at side — led to substantial overestimation of hypertension in a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Guidelines for BP measurement recommend arm support on a desk with the midcuff at heart level. Overestimating BP can lead to unnecessary patient follow-up and overtreatment. Hypertension affects approximately 86 million  adults in the United States and more than 1 billion people globally.

This study has widespread implications given the number of settings where BP checks are performed and the growth in patients taking their own BP readings at home, said Donald DiPette, MD, who was not part of the research and was asked to comment on the findings. Dr. DiPette is the Distinguished Health Sciences Professor at the School of Medicine, University of South Carolina, Columbia.
 

Substantial Overestimation

In the crossover, randomized trial of 133 adults, Hairong Liu, MHS, with the Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues found that supporting the arm on the lap overestimated systolic BP (SBP) by 3.9 mmHg and diastolic BP (DBP) by 4.0 mm Hg. When the arm hung at the side, readings overestimated SBP by 6.5 mm Hg and DBP by 4.4 mm Hg, with consistent results across subgroups.

Participants were randomly assigned to get a series of BP measurements with the arm positioned in three ways: Supported on a desk; hand supported on lap; and arm unsupported at the side. Because BP readings are intrinsically variable, all had a fourth set of BP measurements with the arm supported on a desk. 

Participants’ mean age was 57 years; 48 participants (36%) had SBP of ≥ 130 mm Hg; and 55 participants (41%) had a body mass index of ≥ 30.

Two researcher team staff members conducted all the measurements. They received standardized training and completed a certification test in BP measurement, administered by a study author. Measurements were taken from 9 am to 6 pm using a validated oscillometric BP device (ProBP 2000 Digital Blood Pressure Device, Welch Allyn). Only the right arms were used unless a specific condition was present, such as an open sore.
 

Study’s Design Sets It Apart

The authors wrote that the design of the study set this work apart. “Earlier studies have shown that unsupported or arm positioning below heart level can overestimate SBP by 4-23 mm Hg and DBP by 3-12 mm Hg.” But the strength of this study is the randomized, crossover design, “which is in contrast to the majority of published studies where the order of arm positions before seated BP measurement was not randomized or not clearly described.”

Dr. DiPette, who says, “I’ve given my career to understanding hypertension,” praised the design as well.

Randomization of which position patients were assigned to first was important because the first reading is often higher than subsequent readings, Dr. DiPette said.

“That makes sense as the person acclimatizes to the environment,” he explained. BP can even vary within the same reading, he noted.
 

 

 

Incorrect Readings for Many Reasons

Incorrect measures are common given the number of settings and number of providers and patients taking blood pressure even with training, certification in the method, and educational materials.

“We recommend taking a blood pressure in any possible setting you can. Because it’s that critical,” he said. “Most of the time it’s taken in busy primary care settings. The pressures are there. Most times it’s only one reading. It’s the medical environment of today.”

He noted that although this study finds overestimation, different arm positions not recommended by guidelines could potentially result in underestimation of hypertension. 

“I liken the BP measurement to a laboratory test that has clear treatment implications. We would want the BP measurement to have the same rigorous accuracy as a blood test or radiologic machine,” he said. 

Dr. DiPette said more education is needed for patients as well as providers as patients may be monitoring their own BP at home. Patients should also know they can ask for a measurement to be repeated, know the correct arm position recommended by guidelines, and the implications of incorrect readings, he said.

This study was supported by Resolve to Save Lives, which is funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Gates Philanthropy Partners, which is funded with support from the Chan Zuckerberg Foundation. 

Ms. Liu reported grants from Resolve to Save Lives outside the submitted work. One coauthor reported grants from the National Institutes of Health and personal fees from Kowa, RhythmX AI, and Fukuda Denshi outside the submitted work. Dr. DiPette declared no relevant financial relationships. He was part of a leadership team that developed World Health Organization guidelines on hypertension.

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

Common arm positions for blood pressure (BP) measurements that stray from guidelines — arm in lap or hanging at side — led to substantial overestimation of hypertension in a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Guidelines for BP measurement recommend arm support on a desk with the midcuff at heart level. Overestimating BP can lead to unnecessary patient follow-up and overtreatment. Hypertension affects approximately 86 million  adults in the United States and more than 1 billion people globally.

This study has widespread implications given the number of settings where BP checks are performed and the growth in patients taking their own BP readings at home, said Donald DiPette, MD, who was not part of the research and was asked to comment on the findings. Dr. DiPette is the Distinguished Health Sciences Professor at the School of Medicine, University of South Carolina, Columbia.
 

Substantial Overestimation

In the crossover, randomized trial of 133 adults, Hairong Liu, MHS, with the Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues found that supporting the arm on the lap overestimated systolic BP (SBP) by 3.9 mmHg and diastolic BP (DBP) by 4.0 mm Hg. When the arm hung at the side, readings overestimated SBP by 6.5 mm Hg and DBP by 4.4 mm Hg, with consistent results across subgroups.

Participants were randomly assigned to get a series of BP measurements with the arm positioned in three ways: Supported on a desk; hand supported on lap; and arm unsupported at the side. Because BP readings are intrinsically variable, all had a fourth set of BP measurements with the arm supported on a desk. 

Participants’ mean age was 57 years; 48 participants (36%) had SBP of ≥ 130 mm Hg; and 55 participants (41%) had a body mass index of ≥ 30.

Two researcher team staff members conducted all the measurements. They received standardized training and completed a certification test in BP measurement, administered by a study author. Measurements were taken from 9 am to 6 pm using a validated oscillometric BP device (ProBP 2000 Digital Blood Pressure Device, Welch Allyn). Only the right arms were used unless a specific condition was present, such as an open sore.
 

Study’s Design Sets It Apart

The authors wrote that the design of the study set this work apart. “Earlier studies have shown that unsupported or arm positioning below heart level can overestimate SBP by 4-23 mm Hg and DBP by 3-12 mm Hg.” But the strength of this study is the randomized, crossover design, “which is in contrast to the majority of published studies where the order of arm positions before seated BP measurement was not randomized or not clearly described.”

Dr. DiPette, who says, “I’ve given my career to understanding hypertension,” praised the design as well.

Randomization of which position patients were assigned to first was important because the first reading is often higher than subsequent readings, Dr. DiPette said.

“That makes sense as the person acclimatizes to the environment,” he explained. BP can even vary within the same reading, he noted.
 

 

 

Incorrect Readings for Many Reasons

Incorrect measures are common given the number of settings and number of providers and patients taking blood pressure even with training, certification in the method, and educational materials.

“We recommend taking a blood pressure in any possible setting you can. Because it’s that critical,” he said. “Most of the time it’s taken in busy primary care settings. The pressures are there. Most times it’s only one reading. It’s the medical environment of today.”

He noted that although this study finds overestimation, different arm positions not recommended by guidelines could potentially result in underestimation of hypertension. 

“I liken the BP measurement to a laboratory test that has clear treatment implications. We would want the BP measurement to have the same rigorous accuracy as a blood test or radiologic machine,” he said. 

Dr. DiPette said more education is needed for patients as well as providers as patients may be monitoring their own BP at home. Patients should also know they can ask for a measurement to be repeated, know the correct arm position recommended by guidelines, and the implications of incorrect readings, he said.

This study was supported by Resolve to Save Lives, which is funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Gates Philanthropy Partners, which is funded with support from the Chan Zuckerberg Foundation. 

Ms. Liu reported grants from Resolve to Save Lives outside the submitted work. One coauthor reported grants from the National Institutes of Health and personal fees from Kowa, RhythmX AI, and Fukuda Denshi outside the submitted work. Dr. DiPette declared no relevant financial relationships. He was part of a leadership team that developed World Health Organization guidelines on hypertension.

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

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How AI Is Revolutionizing Drug Repurposing for Faster, Broader Impact

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Changed
Tue, 10/08/2024 - 15:49

 

Summary:

In this segment, the speaker discusses how AI is revolutionizing the drug repurposing process. Previously, drug repurposing was limited by manual research on individual diseases and drugs. With AI, scientists can now analyze a vast array of drugs and diseases simultaneously, generating a ranking system based on the likelihood of success. The Center for Cytokine Storm Treatment and Laboratory, along with the platform Every Cure, uses AI to score 3000 drugs against 18,000 diseases. This platform dramatically reduces the time and resources required for drug repurposing, enabling predictions that can be tested in a fraction of the time.
 

Key Takeaways:

AI is accelerating the drug repurposing process, offering faster and more comprehensive analysis of possible drug-disease matches.

The AI-based platform assigns a likelihood score to each potential match, streamlining the process for testing and validation.

The ability to analyze global biomedical knowledge in 24 hours is unprecedented, reducing research costs and increasing the speed of drug discovery.
 

Our Editors Also Recommend: 

AI’s Drug Revolution, Part 1: Faster Trials and Approvals

From AI to Obesity Drugs to Soaring Costs: Medscape Hot Topics in the Medical Profession Report 2024

AI Voice Analysis for Diabetes Screening Shows Promise


To see the full event recording, click here.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Summary:

In this segment, the speaker discusses how AI is revolutionizing the drug repurposing process. Previously, drug repurposing was limited by manual research on individual diseases and drugs. With AI, scientists can now analyze a vast array of drugs and diseases simultaneously, generating a ranking system based on the likelihood of success. The Center for Cytokine Storm Treatment and Laboratory, along with the platform Every Cure, uses AI to score 3000 drugs against 18,000 diseases. This platform dramatically reduces the time and resources required for drug repurposing, enabling predictions that can be tested in a fraction of the time.
 

Key Takeaways:

AI is accelerating the drug repurposing process, offering faster and more comprehensive analysis of possible drug-disease matches.

The AI-based platform assigns a likelihood score to each potential match, streamlining the process for testing and validation.

The ability to analyze global biomedical knowledge in 24 hours is unprecedented, reducing research costs and increasing the speed of drug discovery.
 

Our Editors Also Recommend: 

AI’s Drug Revolution, Part 1: Faster Trials and Approvals

From AI to Obesity Drugs to Soaring Costs: Medscape Hot Topics in the Medical Profession Report 2024

AI Voice Analysis for Diabetes Screening Shows Promise


To see the full event recording, click here.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

Summary:

In this segment, the speaker discusses how AI is revolutionizing the drug repurposing process. Previously, drug repurposing was limited by manual research on individual diseases and drugs. With AI, scientists can now analyze a vast array of drugs and diseases simultaneously, generating a ranking system based on the likelihood of success. The Center for Cytokine Storm Treatment and Laboratory, along with the platform Every Cure, uses AI to score 3000 drugs against 18,000 diseases. This platform dramatically reduces the time and resources required for drug repurposing, enabling predictions that can be tested in a fraction of the time.
 

Key Takeaways:

AI is accelerating the drug repurposing process, offering faster and more comprehensive analysis of possible drug-disease matches.

The AI-based platform assigns a likelihood score to each potential match, streamlining the process for testing and validation.

The ability to analyze global biomedical knowledge in 24 hours is unprecedented, reducing research costs and increasing the speed of drug discovery.
 

Our Editors Also Recommend: 

AI’s Drug Revolution, Part 1: Faster Trials and Approvals

From AI to Obesity Drugs to Soaring Costs: Medscape Hot Topics in the Medical Profession Report 2024

AI Voice Analysis for Diabetes Screening Shows Promise


To see the full event recording, click here.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Why Residents Are Joining Unions in Droves

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Tue, 10/08/2024 - 11:04

Before the 350 residents finalized their union contract at the University of Vermont (UVM) Medical Center, Burlington, in 2022, Jesse Mostoller, DO, now a third-year pathology resident, recalls hearing about another resident at the hospital who resorted to moonlighting as an Uber driver to make ends meet.

“In Vermont, rent and childcare are expensive,” said Dr. Mostoller, adding that, thanks to union bargaining, first-year residents at UVM are now paid $71,000 per year instead of $61,000. In addition, residents now receive $1800 per year for food (up from $200-$300 annually) and a $1800 annual fund to help pay for board exams that can be carried over for 2 years. “When we were negotiating, the biggest item on our list of demands was to help alleviate the financial pressure residents have been facing for years.”

The UVM residents’ collective bargaining also includes a cap on working hours so that residents don’t work 80 hours a week, paid parental leave, affordable housing, and funds for education and wellness.

These are some of the most common challenges that are faced by residents all over the country, said A. Taylor Walker, MD, MPH, family medicine chief physician at Tufts University School of Medicine/Cambridge Health Alliance in Boston, Massachusetts, and national president of the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR), which is part of the Service Employees International Union.

For these reasons, residents at Montefiore Medical Center, Stanford Health Care, George Washington University, and the University of Pennsylvania have recently voted to unionize, according to Dr. Walker.

And while there are several small local unions that have picked up residents at local hospitals, CIR is the largest union of physicians in the United States, with a total of 33,000 residents and fellows across the country (15% of the staff at more than 60 hospitals nationwide).

“We’ve doubled in size in the last 4 years,” said Dr. Walker. “The reason is that we’re in a national reckoning on the corporatization of American medicine and the way in which graduate medical education is rooted in a cycle of exploitation that doesn’t center on the health, well-being, or safety of our doctors and ultimately negatively affects our patients.”

Here’s what residents are fighting for — right now.
 

Adequate Parental Leave

Christopher Domanski, MD, a first-year resident in psychiatry at California Pacific Medical Center (CPMC) in San Francisco, is also a new dad to a 5-month-old son and is currently in the sixth week of parental leave. One goal of CPMC’s union, started a year and a half ago, is to expand parental leave to 8 weeks.

“I started as a resident here in mid-June, but the fight with CPMC leaders has been going on for a year and a half,” Dr. Domanski said. “It can feel very frustrating because many times there’s no budge in the conversations we want to have.”

Contract negotiations here continue to be slow — and arduous.

“It goes back and forth,” said Dr. Domanski, who makes about $75,000 a year. “Sometimes they listen to our proposals, but they deny the vast majority or make a paltry increase in salary or time off. It goes like this: We’ll have a negotiation; we’ll talk about it, and then they say, ‘we’re not comfortable doing this’ and it stalls again.”

If a resident hasn’t started a family yet, access to fertility benefits and reproductive healthcare is paramount because most residents are in their 20s and 30s, Dr. Walker said.

“Our reproductive futures are really hindered by what care we have access to and what care is covered,” she added. “We don’t make enough money to pay for reproductive care out of pocket.”
 

 

 

Fair Pay

In Boston, the residents at Mass General Brigham certified their union in June 2023, but they still don’t have a contract.

“When I applied for a residency in September 2023, I spoke to the folks here, and I was basically under the impression that we would have a contract by the time I matched,” said Madison Masters, MD, a resident in internal medicine. “We are not there.”

This timeline isn’t unusual — the 1400 Penn Medicine residents who unionized in 2023 only recently secured a tentative union contract at the end of September, and at Stanford, the process to ratify their first contract took 13 months.

Still, the salary issue remains frustrating as resident compensation doesn’t line up with the cost of living or the amount of work residents do, said Dr. Masters, who says starting salaries at Mass General Brigham are $78,500 plus a $10,000 stipend for housing.

“There’s been a long tradition of underpaying residents — we’re treated like trainees, but we’re also a primary labor force,” Dr. Masters said, adding that nurse practitioners and physician assistants are paid almost twice as much as residents — some make $120,000 per year or more, while the salary range for residents nationwide is $49,000-$65,000 per year.

“Every time we discuss the contract and talk about a financial package, they offer a 1.5% raise for the next 3 years while we had asked for closer to 8%,” Dr. Masters said. “Then, when they come back for the next bargaining session, they go up a quarter of a percent each time. Recently, they said we will need to go to a mediator to try and resolve this.”
 

Adequate Healthcare

The biggest — and perhaps the most shocking — ask is for robust health insurance coverage.

“At my hospital, they’re telling us to get Amazon One Medical for health insurance,” Dr. Masters said. “They’re saying it’s hard for anyone to get primary care coverage here.”

Inadequate health insurance is a big issue, as burnout among residents and fellows remains a problem. At UVM, a $10,000 annual wellness stipend has helped address some of these issues. Even so, union members at UVM are planning to return to the table within 18 months to continue their collective bargaining.

The ability to access mental health services anywhere you want is also critical for residents, Dr. Walker said.

“If you can only go to a therapist at your own institution, there is a hesitation to utilize that specialist if that’s even offered,” Dr. Walker said. “Do you want to go to therapy with a colleague? Probably not.”

Ultimately, the residents we spoke to are committed to fighting for their workplace rights — no matter how time-consuming or difficult this has been.

“No administration wants us to have to have a union, but it’s necessary,” Dr. Mostoller said. “As an individual, you don’t have leverage to get a seat at the table, but now we have a seat at the table. We have a wonderful contract, but we’re going to keep fighting to make it even better.”

Paving the way for future residents is a key motivator, too.

“There’s this idea of leaving the campsite cleaner than you found it,” Dr. Mostoller told this news organization. “It’s the same thing here — we’re trying to fix this so that the next generation of residents won’t have to.”

 

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

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Before the 350 residents finalized their union contract at the University of Vermont (UVM) Medical Center, Burlington, in 2022, Jesse Mostoller, DO, now a third-year pathology resident, recalls hearing about another resident at the hospital who resorted to moonlighting as an Uber driver to make ends meet.

“In Vermont, rent and childcare are expensive,” said Dr. Mostoller, adding that, thanks to union bargaining, first-year residents at UVM are now paid $71,000 per year instead of $61,000. In addition, residents now receive $1800 per year for food (up from $200-$300 annually) and a $1800 annual fund to help pay for board exams that can be carried over for 2 years. “When we were negotiating, the biggest item on our list of demands was to help alleviate the financial pressure residents have been facing for years.”

The UVM residents’ collective bargaining also includes a cap on working hours so that residents don’t work 80 hours a week, paid parental leave, affordable housing, and funds for education and wellness.

These are some of the most common challenges that are faced by residents all over the country, said A. Taylor Walker, MD, MPH, family medicine chief physician at Tufts University School of Medicine/Cambridge Health Alliance in Boston, Massachusetts, and national president of the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR), which is part of the Service Employees International Union.

For these reasons, residents at Montefiore Medical Center, Stanford Health Care, George Washington University, and the University of Pennsylvania have recently voted to unionize, according to Dr. Walker.

And while there are several small local unions that have picked up residents at local hospitals, CIR is the largest union of physicians in the United States, with a total of 33,000 residents and fellows across the country (15% of the staff at more than 60 hospitals nationwide).

“We’ve doubled in size in the last 4 years,” said Dr. Walker. “The reason is that we’re in a national reckoning on the corporatization of American medicine and the way in which graduate medical education is rooted in a cycle of exploitation that doesn’t center on the health, well-being, or safety of our doctors and ultimately negatively affects our patients.”

Here’s what residents are fighting for — right now.
 

Adequate Parental Leave

Christopher Domanski, MD, a first-year resident in psychiatry at California Pacific Medical Center (CPMC) in San Francisco, is also a new dad to a 5-month-old son and is currently in the sixth week of parental leave. One goal of CPMC’s union, started a year and a half ago, is to expand parental leave to 8 weeks.

“I started as a resident here in mid-June, but the fight with CPMC leaders has been going on for a year and a half,” Dr. Domanski said. “It can feel very frustrating because many times there’s no budge in the conversations we want to have.”

Contract negotiations here continue to be slow — and arduous.

“It goes back and forth,” said Dr. Domanski, who makes about $75,000 a year. “Sometimes they listen to our proposals, but they deny the vast majority or make a paltry increase in salary or time off. It goes like this: We’ll have a negotiation; we’ll talk about it, and then they say, ‘we’re not comfortable doing this’ and it stalls again.”

If a resident hasn’t started a family yet, access to fertility benefits and reproductive healthcare is paramount because most residents are in their 20s and 30s, Dr. Walker said.

“Our reproductive futures are really hindered by what care we have access to and what care is covered,” she added. “We don’t make enough money to pay for reproductive care out of pocket.”
 

 

 

Fair Pay

In Boston, the residents at Mass General Brigham certified their union in June 2023, but they still don’t have a contract.

“When I applied for a residency in September 2023, I spoke to the folks here, and I was basically under the impression that we would have a contract by the time I matched,” said Madison Masters, MD, a resident in internal medicine. “We are not there.”

This timeline isn’t unusual — the 1400 Penn Medicine residents who unionized in 2023 only recently secured a tentative union contract at the end of September, and at Stanford, the process to ratify their first contract took 13 months.

Still, the salary issue remains frustrating as resident compensation doesn’t line up with the cost of living or the amount of work residents do, said Dr. Masters, who says starting salaries at Mass General Brigham are $78,500 plus a $10,000 stipend for housing.

“There’s been a long tradition of underpaying residents — we’re treated like trainees, but we’re also a primary labor force,” Dr. Masters said, adding that nurse practitioners and physician assistants are paid almost twice as much as residents — some make $120,000 per year or more, while the salary range for residents nationwide is $49,000-$65,000 per year.

“Every time we discuss the contract and talk about a financial package, they offer a 1.5% raise for the next 3 years while we had asked for closer to 8%,” Dr. Masters said. “Then, when they come back for the next bargaining session, they go up a quarter of a percent each time. Recently, they said we will need to go to a mediator to try and resolve this.”
 

Adequate Healthcare

The biggest — and perhaps the most shocking — ask is for robust health insurance coverage.

“At my hospital, they’re telling us to get Amazon One Medical for health insurance,” Dr. Masters said. “They’re saying it’s hard for anyone to get primary care coverage here.”

Inadequate health insurance is a big issue, as burnout among residents and fellows remains a problem. At UVM, a $10,000 annual wellness stipend has helped address some of these issues. Even so, union members at UVM are planning to return to the table within 18 months to continue their collective bargaining.

The ability to access mental health services anywhere you want is also critical for residents, Dr. Walker said.

“If you can only go to a therapist at your own institution, there is a hesitation to utilize that specialist if that’s even offered,” Dr. Walker said. “Do you want to go to therapy with a colleague? Probably not.”

Ultimately, the residents we spoke to are committed to fighting for their workplace rights — no matter how time-consuming or difficult this has been.

“No administration wants us to have to have a union, but it’s necessary,” Dr. Mostoller said. “As an individual, you don’t have leverage to get a seat at the table, but now we have a seat at the table. We have a wonderful contract, but we’re going to keep fighting to make it even better.”

Paving the way for future residents is a key motivator, too.

“There’s this idea of leaving the campsite cleaner than you found it,” Dr. Mostoller told this news organization. “It’s the same thing here — we’re trying to fix this so that the next generation of residents won’t have to.”

 

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

Before the 350 residents finalized their union contract at the University of Vermont (UVM) Medical Center, Burlington, in 2022, Jesse Mostoller, DO, now a third-year pathology resident, recalls hearing about another resident at the hospital who resorted to moonlighting as an Uber driver to make ends meet.

“In Vermont, rent and childcare are expensive,” said Dr. Mostoller, adding that, thanks to union bargaining, first-year residents at UVM are now paid $71,000 per year instead of $61,000. In addition, residents now receive $1800 per year for food (up from $200-$300 annually) and a $1800 annual fund to help pay for board exams that can be carried over for 2 years. “When we were negotiating, the biggest item on our list of demands was to help alleviate the financial pressure residents have been facing for years.”

The UVM residents’ collective bargaining also includes a cap on working hours so that residents don’t work 80 hours a week, paid parental leave, affordable housing, and funds for education and wellness.

These are some of the most common challenges that are faced by residents all over the country, said A. Taylor Walker, MD, MPH, family medicine chief physician at Tufts University School of Medicine/Cambridge Health Alliance in Boston, Massachusetts, and national president of the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR), which is part of the Service Employees International Union.

For these reasons, residents at Montefiore Medical Center, Stanford Health Care, George Washington University, and the University of Pennsylvania have recently voted to unionize, according to Dr. Walker.

And while there are several small local unions that have picked up residents at local hospitals, CIR is the largest union of physicians in the United States, with a total of 33,000 residents and fellows across the country (15% of the staff at more than 60 hospitals nationwide).

“We’ve doubled in size in the last 4 years,” said Dr. Walker. “The reason is that we’re in a national reckoning on the corporatization of American medicine and the way in which graduate medical education is rooted in a cycle of exploitation that doesn’t center on the health, well-being, or safety of our doctors and ultimately negatively affects our patients.”

Here’s what residents are fighting for — right now.
 

Adequate Parental Leave

Christopher Domanski, MD, a first-year resident in psychiatry at California Pacific Medical Center (CPMC) in San Francisco, is also a new dad to a 5-month-old son and is currently in the sixth week of parental leave. One goal of CPMC’s union, started a year and a half ago, is to expand parental leave to 8 weeks.

“I started as a resident here in mid-June, but the fight with CPMC leaders has been going on for a year and a half,” Dr. Domanski said. “It can feel very frustrating because many times there’s no budge in the conversations we want to have.”

Contract negotiations here continue to be slow — and arduous.

“It goes back and forth,” said Dr. Domanski, who makes about $75,000 a year. “Sometimes they listen to our proposals, but they deny the vast majority or make a paltry increase in salary or time off. It goes like this: We’ll have a negotiation; we’ll talk about it, and then they say, ‘we’re not comfortable doing this’ and it stalls again.”

If a resident hasn’t started a family yet, access to fertility benefits and reproductive healthcare is paramount because most residents are in their 20s and 30s, Dr. Walker said.

“Our reproductive futures are really hindered by what care we have access to and what care is covered,” she added. “We don’t make enough money to pay for reproductive care out of pocket.”
 

 

 

Fair Pay

In Boston, the residents at Mass General Brigham certified their union in June 2023, but they still don’t have a contract.

“When I applied for a residency in September 2023, I spoke to the folks here, and I was basically under the impression that we would have a contract by the time I matched,” said Madison Masters, MD, a resident in internal medicine. “We are not there.”

This timeline isn’t unusual — the 1400 Penn Medicine residents who unionized in 2023 only recently secured a tentative union contract at the end of September, and at Stanford, the process to ratify their first contract took 13 months.

Still, the salary issue remains frustrating as resident compensation doesn’t line up with the cost of living or the amount of work residents do, said Dr. Masters, who says starting salaries at Mass General Brigham are $78,500 plus a $10,000 stipend for housing.

“There’s been a long tradition of underpaying residents — we’re treated like trainees, but we’re also a primary labor force,” Dr. Masters said, adding that nurse practitioners and physician assistants are paid almost twice as much as residents — some make $120,000 per year or more, while the salary range for residents nationwide is $49,000-$65,000 per year.

“Every time we discuss the contract and talk about a financial package, they offer a 1.5% raise for the next 3 years while we had asked for closer to 8%,” Dr. Masters said. “Then, when they come back for the next bargaining session, they go up a quarter of a percent each time. Recently, they said we will need to go to a mediator to try and resolve this.”
 

Adequate Healthcare

The biggest — and perhaps the most shocking — ask is for robust health insurance coverage.

“At my hospital, they’re telling us to get Amazon One Medical for health insurance,” Dr. Masters said. “They’re saying it’s hard for anyone to get primary care coverage here.”

Inadequate health insurance is a big issue, as burnout among residents and fellows remains a problem. At UVM, a $10,000 annual wellness stipend has helped address some of these issues. Even so, union members at UVM are planning to return to the table within 18 months to continue their collective bargaining.

The ability to access mental health services anywhere you want is also critical for residents, Dr. Walker said.

“If you can only go to a therapist at your own institution, there is a hesitation to utilize that specialist if that’s even offered,” Dr. Walker said. “Do you want to go to therapy with a colleague? Probably not.”

Ultimately, the residents we spoke to are committed to fighting for their workplace rights — no matter how time-consuming or difficult this has been.

“No administration wants us to have to have a union, but it’s necessary,” Dr. Mostoller said. “As an individual, you don’t have leverage to get a seat at the table, but now we have a seat at the table. We have a wonderful contract, but we’re going to keep fighting to make it even better.”

Paving the way for future residents is a key motivator, too.

“There’s this idea of leaving the campsite cleaner than you found it,” Dr. Mostoller told this news organization. “It’s the same thing here — we’re trying to fix this so that the next generation of residents won’t have to.”

 

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

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