Insomnia? Referral, drugs not usually needed

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Chronic insomnia is often underrecognized and misunderstood in primary care, sleep expert Christopher Lettieri, MD, told attendees at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

Too often, medications are the treatment of choice, and when used long term they can perpetuate a problematic cycle, said Dr. Lettieri, professor in pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.

However, medications alone won’t work without other behavior modifications and they come with potential side effects, he said in his talk. Prescription medications typically don’t treat the cause of the insomnia, just the symptoms.

“In the 15 years I’ve been practicing sleep medicine, I can honestly say I only have a handful of patients that I treat with long-term pharmacotherapy,” Dr. Lettieri said.

He said he typically uses pharmacotherapy only when conservative measures have failed or to help jump-start patients to behavior modifications.

Restricted sleep is a good place to start for chronic insomnia, he continued.

Physicians should ask patients the latest time they can wake up to make it to school, work, etc. If that time is 6 a.m., the goal is to move bedtime back to 10 p.m.–11 p.m. If the patient, however, is unable to sleep until 12:30 a.m., move bedtime there, he said.

Though the 5.5-hour window is not ideal, it’s better to get into bed when ready for sleep. From there, try to get the patient to move bedtime back 15 minutes each week as they train themselves to fall asleep earlier, he said.

“I promise you this works in the majority of patients and doesn’t require any medication. You can also accomplish this with one or two office visits, so it is not a huge drain on resources,” he said.
 

Sleep specialists in short supply

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is “without question the best way to treat chronic insomnia and it’s recommended as first-line therapy by all published guidelines,” Dr. Lettieri said.

He defined chronic insomnia as happening most nights over at least 3 months. It affects twice as many women as men.

CBT offers a formalized way of changing sleep patterns with the help of an expert in sleep behavior disorders. It combines cognitive therapies with education about sleep and stimulus control and uses techniques such as mindfulness and relaxation.

However, most programs take 4-8 sessions with a sleep medicine provider and are usually not covered by insurance. In addition, the number of insomnia specialists is not nearly adequate to meet demand, he added.

Online and mobile-platform CBT programs are widely effective, Dr. Lettieri said. Many are free and all are convenient for patients to use. He said many of his patients use Sleepio, but many other online programs are effective.

“You can provide sufficient therapy for many of your patients and reserve CBT for patients who can’t be fixed with more conservative measures,” he said.
 

Insomnia among older patients

Interest in helping older patients with insomnia dominated the chat session associated with the talk.

Insomnia increases with age and older patients have often been using prescription or over-the-counter sleep aids for decades.

Additionally, “insomnia is the second-most common reason why people get admitted to long-term care facilities, second only to urinary incontinence,” Dr. Lettieri said.

If physicians use medications with older patients, he said, extra caution is needed. Older people have more neurocognitive impairments than younger adults and may already be taking several other medications. Sleep medications may come with longer elimination half-lives. Polypharmacy may increase risk for falls and have other consequences.

“If you have to go to a medication, try something simple like melatonin,” he said, adding that it should be pharmaceutical grade and extended release.

Also, bright lights during the day, movement throughout the day, and dim lights closer to bedtime are especially important for the elderly, Dr. Lettieri said.

Andrew Corr, MD, a geriatric specialist in primary care with the Riverside (Calif.) Medical Clinic, said in an interview the main message he will take back to his physician group is more CBT and less medication.

He said that, although he has long known CBT is the top first-line treatment, it is difficult to find experts in his area who are trained to do CBT for insomnia, so he was glad to hear online programs and self-directed reading are typically effective.

He also said there’s a common misperception that there’s no harm in prescribing medications such as trazodone (Desyrel), an antidepressant commonly used off label as a sleep aid.

Dr. Lettieri’s talk highlighted his recommendation against using trazodone for sleep. “Despite several recommendations against its use for insomnia, it is still commonly prescribed. You just shouldn’t use it for insomnia,” Dr. Lettieri said.

“It has no measurable effect in a third of patients and at least unacceptable side effects in another third.  Right off the bat, it’s not efficacious in two thirds of patients.”

Additionally, priapism, a prolonged erection, has been associated with trazodone, Dr. Lettieri said, “and I have literally never met a patient on trazodone who was counseled about this.”

Trazodone also has a black box warning from the Food and Drug Administration warning about increased risk for suicidal thoughts.

Dr. Lettieri and Dr. Corr disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Chronic insomnia is often underrecognized and misunderstood in primary care, sleep expert Christopher Lettieri, MD, told attendees at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

Too often, medications are the treatment of choice, and when used long term they can perpetuate a problematic cycle, said Dr. Lettieri, professor in pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.

However, medications alone won’t work without other behavior modifications and they come with potential side effects, he said in his talk. Prescription medications typically don’t treat the cause of the insomnia, just the symptoms.

“In the 15 years I’ve been practicing sleep medicine, I can honestly say I only have a handful of patients that I treat with long-term pharmacotherapy,” Dr. Lettieri said.

He said he typically uses pharmacotherapy only when conservative measures have failed or to help jump-start patients to behavior modifications.

Restricted sleep is a good place to start for chronic insomnia, he continued.

Physicians should ask patients the latest time they can wake up to make it to school, work, etc. If that time is 6 a.m., the goal is to move bedtime back to 10 p.m.–11 p.m. If the patient, however, is unable to sleep until 12:30 a.m., move bedtime there, he said.

Though the 5.5-hour window is not ideal, it’s better to get into bed when ready for sleep. From there, try to get the patient to move bedtime back 15 minutes each week as they train themselves to fall asleep earlier, he said.

“I promise you this works in the majority of patients and doesn’t require any medication. You can also accomplish this with one or two office visits, so it is not a huge drain on resources,” he said.
 

Sleep specialists in short supply

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is “without question the best way to treat chronic insomnia and it’s recommended as first-line therapy by all published guidelines,” Dr. Lettieri said.

He defined chronic insomnia as happening most nights over at least 3 months. It affects twice as many women as men.

CBT offers a formalized way of changing sleep patterns with the help of an expert in sleep behavior disorders. It combines cognitive therapies with education about sleep and stimulus control and uses techniques such as mindfulness and relaxation.

However, most programs take 4-8 sessions with a sleep medicine provider and are usually not covered by insurance. In addition, the number of insomnia specialists is not nearly adequate to meet demand, he added.

Online and mobile-platform CBT programs are widely effective, Dr. Lettieri said. Many are free and all are convenient for patients to use. He said many of his patients use Sleepio, but many other online programs are effective.

“You can provide sufficient therapy for many of your patients and reserve CBT for patients who can’t be fixed with more conservative measures,” he said.
 

Insomnia among older patients

Interest in helping older patients with insomnia dominated the chat session associated with the talk.

Insomnia increases with age and older patients have often been using prescription or over-the-counter sleep aids for decades.

Additionally, “insomnia is the second-most common reason why people get admitted to long-term care facilities, second only to urinary incontinence,” Dr. Lettieri said.

If physicians use medications with older patients, he said, extra caution is needed. Older people have more neurocognitive impairments than younger adults and may already be taking several other medications. Sleep medications may come with longer elimination half-lives. Polypharmacy may increase risk for falls and have other consequences.

“If you have to go to a medication, try something simple like melatonin,” he said, adding that it should be pharmaceutical grade and extended release.

Also, bright lights during the day, movement throughout the day, and dim lights closer to bedtime are especially important for the elderly, Dr. Lettieri said.

Andrew Corr, MD, a geriatric specialist in primary care with the Riverside (Calif.) Medical Clinic, said in an interview the main message he will take back to his physician group is more CBT and less medication.

He said that, although he has long known CBT is the top first-line treatment, it is difficult to find experts in his area who are trained to do CBT for insomnia, so he was glad to hear online programs and self-directed reading are typically effective.

He also said there’s a common misperception that there’s no harm in prescribing medications such as trazodone (Desyrel), an antidepressant commonly used off label as a sleep aid.

Dr. Lettieri’s talk highlighted his recommendation against using trazodone for sleep. “Despite several recommendations against its use for insomnia, it is still commonly prescribed. You just shouldn’t use it for insomnia,” Dr. Lettieri said.

“It has no measurable effect in a third of patients and at least unacceptable side effects in another third.  Right off the bat, it’s not efficacious in two thirds of patients.”

Additionally, priapism, a prolonged erection, has been associated with trazodone, Dr. Lettieri said, “and I have literally never met a patient on trazodone who was counseled about this.”

Trazodone also has a black box warning from the Food and Drug Administration warning about increased risk for suicidal thoughts.

Dr. Lettieri and Dr. Corr disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

Chronic insomnia is often underrecognized and misunderstood in primary care, sleep expert Christopher Lettieri, MD, told attendees at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

Too often, medications are the treatment of choice, and when used long term they can perpetuate a problematic cycle, said Dr. Lettieri, professor in pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.

However, medications alone won’t work without other behavior modifications and they come with potential side effects, he said in his talk. Prescription medications typically don’t treat the cause of the insomnia, just the symptoms.

“In the 15 years I’ve been practicing sleep medicine, I can honestly say I only have a handful of patients that I treat with long-term pharmacotherapy,” Dr. Lettieri said.

He said he typically uses pharmacotherapy only when conservative measures have failed or to help jump-start patients to behavior modifications.

Restricted sleep is a good place to start for chronic insomnia, he continued.

Physicians should ask patients the latest time they can wake up to make it to school, work, etc. If that time is 6 a.m., the goal is to move bedtime back to 10 p.m.–11 p.m. If the patient, however, is unable to sleep until 12:30 a.m., move bedtime there, he said.

Though the 5.5-hour window is not ideal, it’s better to get into bed when ready for sleep. From there, try to get the patient to move bedtime back 15 minutes each week as they train themselves to fall asleep earlier, he said.

“I promise you this works in the majority of patients and doesn’t require any medication. You can also accomplish this with one or two office visits, so it is not a huge drain on resources,” he said.
 

Sleep specialists in short supply

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is “without question the best way to treat chronic insomnia and it’s recommended as first-line therapy by all published guidelines,” Dr. Lettieri said.

He defined chronic insomnia as happening most nights over at least 3 months. It affects twice as many women as men.

CBT offers a formalized way of changing sleep patterns with the help of an expert in sleep behavior disorders. It combines cognitive therapies with education about sleep and stimulus control and uses techniques such as mindfulness and relaxation.

However, most programs take 4-8 sessions with a sleep medicine provider and are usually not covered by insurance. In addition, the number of insomnia specialists is not nearly adequate to meet demand, he added.

Online and mobile-platform CBT programs are widely effective, Dr. Lettieri said. Many are free and all are convenient for patients to use. He said many of his patients use Sleepio, but many other online programs are effective.

“You can provide sufficient therapy for many of your patients and reserve CBT for patients who can’t be fixed with more conservative measures,” he said.
 

Insomnia among older patients

Interest in helping older patients with insomnia dominated the chat session associated with the talk.

Insomnia increases with age and older patients have often been using prescription or over-the-counter sleep aids for decades.

Additionally, “insomnia is the second-most common reason why people get admitted to long-term care facilities, second only to urinary incontinence,” Dr. Lettieri said.

If physicians use medications with older patients, he said, extra caution is needed. Older people have more neurocognitive impairments than younger adults and may already be taking several other medications. Sleep medications may come with longer elimination half-lives. Polypharmacy may increase risk for falls and have other consequences.

“If you have to go to a medication, try something simple like melatonin,” he said, adding that it should be pharmaceutical grade and extended release.

Also, bright lights during the day, movement throughout the day, and dim lights closer to bedtime are especially important for the elderly, Dr. Lettieri said.

Andrew Corr, MD, a geriatric specialist in primary care with the Riverside (Calif.) Medical Clinic, said in an interview the main message he will take back to his physician group is more CBT and less medication.

He said that, although he has long known CBT is the top first-line treatment, it is difficult to find experts in his area who are trained to do CBT for insomnia, so he was glad to hear online programs and self-directed reading are typically effective.

He also said there’s a common misperception that there’s no harm in prescribing medications such as trazodone (Desyrel), an antidepressant commonly used off label as a sleep aid.

Dr. Lettieri’s talk highlighted his recommendation against using trazodone for sleep. “Despite several recommendations against its use for insomnia, it is still commonly prescribed. You just shouldn’t use it for insomnia,” Dr. Lettieri said.

“It has no measurable effect in a third of patients and at least unacceptable side effects in another third.  Right off the bat, it’s not efficacious in two thirds of patients.”

Additionally, priapism, a prolonged erection, has been associated with trazodone, Dr. Lettieri said, “and I have literally never met a patient on trazodone who was counseled about this.”

Trazodone also has a black box warning from the Food and Drug Administration warning about increased risk for suicidal thoughts.

Dr. Lettieri and Dr. Corr disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Prioritize goals of older patients with multimorbidities, gerontologist says

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Fri, 05/07/2021 - 08:53

When caring for older adults with multiple chronic conditions, prioritizing patient goals is more effective and efficient than trying to address each condition in isolation, said Mary Tinetti, MD, Gladys Phillips Crofoot Professor of Medicine and Public Health and chief of geriatrics at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

Dr. Mary Tinetti

During a virtual presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting, the gerontologist noted that primary care providers face a number of challenges when managing elderly patients with multimorbidity. These challenges include a lack of representative data in clinical trials, conflicting guideline recommendations, patient nonadherence, and decreased benefit from therapies due to competing conditions, she said.

“Trying to follow multiple guidelines can result in unintentional harms to these people with multiple conditions,” Dr. Tinetti said. She gave examples of the wide-ranging goals patients can have.

“Some [patients] will maximize the focus on function, regardless of how long they are likely to live,” Dr. Tinetti said. “Others will say symptom burden management is most important to them. And others will say they want to live as long as possible, and survival is most important, even if that means a reduction in their function. These individuals also vary in the care they are willing and able to receive to achieve the outcomes that matter most to them.”

For these reasons, Dr. Tinetti recommended patient priorities care, which she and her colleagues have been developing and implementing over the past 5-6 years.

“If the benefits and harms of addressing each condition in isolation is of uncertain benefit and potentially burdensome to both clinician and patient, and we know that patients vary in their health priorities ... then what else would you want to focus on in your 20-minute visit ... except each patient’s priorities?” Dr. Tinetti asked. “This is one solution to the challenge.”


 

What is patient priorities care?

Patient priorities care is a multidisciplinary, cyclical approach to clinical decision-making composed of three steps, Dr. Tinetti explained. First, a clinician identifies the patient’s health priorities. Second, this information is transmitted to comanaging providers, who decide which of their respective treatments are consistent with the patient’s priorities. And third, those decisions are disseminated to everyone involved in the patient’s care, both within and outside of the health care system, allowing all care providers to align with the patient’s priorities, she noted.

“Each person does that from their own expertise,” Dr. Tinetti said. “The social worker will do something different than the cardiologist, the physical therapist, the endocrinologist – but everybody is aiming at the same outcome – the patient’s priorities.”

In 2019, Dr. Tinetti led a nonrandomized clinical trial to test the feasibility of patient priorities care. The study involved 366 older adults with multimorbidity, among whom 203 received usual care, while 163 received this type of care. Patients in the latter group were twice as likely to have medications stopped, and significantly less likely to have self-management tasks added and diagnostic tests ordered.
 

 

 

How electronic health records can help

In an interview, Dr. Tinetti suggested that comanaging physicians communicate through electronic health records (EHRs), first to ensure that all care providers understand a patient’s goals, then to determine if recommended therapies align with those goals.

“It would be a little bit of a culture change to do that,” Dr. Tinetti said, “but the technology is there and it isn’t too terribly time consuming.”

She went on to suggest that primary care providers are typically best suited to coordinate this process; however, if a patient receives the majority of their care from a particular specialist, then that clinician may be the most suitable coordinator.
 

Systemic obstacles and solutions

According to Cynthia Boyd, MD, interim director of the division of geriatric medicine and gerontology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, clinicians may encounter obstacles when implementing patient priorities care.

Dr. Cynthia Boyd


“Our health care system doesn’t always make it easy to do this,” Dr. Boyd said. “It’s important to acknowledge this because it can be hard to do. There’s no question,” Dr. Boyd said in an interview.

Among the headwinds that clinicians may face are clinical practice guidelines, the structure of electronic health records, and quality metrics focused on specific conditions, she explained.

“There’s a lot of things that push us – in primary care and other parts of medicine – away from the approach that’s best for people with multiple chronic conditions,” Dr. Boyd said.

Dr. Tinetti said a challenge to providing this care that she expects is for clinicians, regardless of specialty, “to feel uneasy” about transitioning away from a conventional approach.

Among Dr. Tinetti’s arguments in favor of providing patient priorities care is that “it’s going to bring more joy in practice because you’re really addressing what matters to that individual while also providing good care.”

To get the most out of patient priorities care, Dr. Boyd recommended that clinicians focus on ‘the 4 M’s’: what matters most, mentation, mobility, and medications.

In an effort to address the last of these on a broad scale, Dr. Boyd is co-leading the US Deprescribing Research Network(USDeN), which aims to “improve medication use among older adults and the outcomes that are important to them,” according to the USDeN website.

To encourage deprescribing on a day-to-day level, Dr. Boyd called for strong communication between co–managing providers.

In an ideal world, there would be a better way to communicate than largely via electronic health records, she said.

“We need more than the EHR to connect us. That’s why it’s really important for primary care providers and specialists to be able to have time to actually talk to each other. This gets into how we reimburse and organize the communication and cognitive aspects of care,” Dr. Boyd noted.

Dr. Tinetti disclosed support from the John A. Hartford Foundation, the Donaghue Foundation, the National Institute on Aging, and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Dr. Boyd disclosed a relationship with UpToDate, for which she coauthored a chapter on multimorbidity.

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When caring for older adults with multiple chronic conditions, prioritizing patient goals is more effective and efficient than trying to address each condition in isolation, said Mary Tinetti, MD, Gladys Phillips Crofoot Professor of Medicine and Public Health and chief of geriatrics at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

Dr. Mary Tinetti

During a virtual presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting, the gerontologist noted that primary care providers face a number of challenges when managing elderly patients with multimorbidity. These challenges include a lack of representative data in clinical trials, conflicting guideline recommendations, patient nonadherence, and decreased benefit from therapies due to competing conditions, she said.

“Trying to follow multiple guidelines can result in unintentional harms to these people with multiple conditions,” Dr. Tinetti said. She gave examples of the wide-ranging goals patients can have.

“Some [patients] will maximize the focus on function, regardless of how long they are likely to live,” Dr. Tinetti said. “Others will say symptom burden management is most important to them. And others will say they want to live as long as possible, and survival is most important, even if that means a reduction in their function. These individuals also vary in the care they are willing and able to receive to achieve the outcomes that matter most to them.”

For these reasons, Dr. Tinetti recommended patient priorities care, which she and her colleagues have been developing and implementing over the past 5-6 years.

“If the benefits and harms of addressing each condition in isolation is of uncertain benefit and potentially burdensome to both clinician and patient, and we know that patients vary in their health priorities ... then what else would you want to focus on in your 20-minute visit ... except each patient’s priorities?” Dr. Tinetti asked. “This is one solution to the challenge.”


 

What is patient priorities care?

Patient priorities care is a multidisciplinary, cyclical approach to clinical decision-making composed of three steps, Dr. Tinetti explained. First, a clinician identifies the patient’s health priorities. Second, this information is transmitted to comanaging providers, who decide which of their respective treatments are consistent with the patient’s priorities. And third, those decisions are disseminated to everyone involved in the patient’s care, both within and outside of the health care system, allowing all care providers to align with the patient’s priorities, she noted.

“Each person does that from their own expertise,” Dr. Tinetti said. “The social worker will do something different than the cardiologist, the physical therapist, the endocrinologist – but everybody is aiming at the same outcome – the patient’s priorities.”

In 2019, Dr. Tinetti led a nonrandomized clinical trial to test the feasibility of patient priorities care. The study involved 366 older adults with multimorbidity, among whom 203 received usual care, while 163 received this type of care. Patients in the latter group were twice as likely to have medications stopped, and significantly less likely to have self-management tasks added and diagnostic tests ordered.
 

 

 

How electronic health records can help

In an interview, Dr. Tinetti suggested that comanaging physicians communicate through electronic health records (EHRs), first to ensure that all care providers understand a patient’s goals, then to determine if recommended therapies align with those goals.

“It would be a little bit of a culture change to do that,” Dr. Tinetti said, “but the technology is there and it isn’t too terribly time consuming.”

She went on to suggest that primary care providers are typically best suited to coordinate this process; however, if a patient receives the majority of their care from a particular specialist, then that clinician may be the most suitable coordinator.
 

Systemic obstacles and solutions

According to Cynthia Boyd, MD, interim director of the division of geriatric medicine and gerontology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, clinicians may encounter obstacles when implementing patient priorities care.

Dr. Cynthia Boyd


“Our health care system doesn’t always make it easy to do this,” Dr. Boyd said. “It’s important to acknowledge this because it can be hard to do. There’s no question,” Dr. Boyd said in an interview.

Among the headwinds that clinicians may face are clinical practice guidelines, the structure of electronic health records, and quality metrics focused on specific conditions, she explained.

“There’s a lot of things that push us – in primary care and other parts of medicine – away from the approach that’s best for people with multiple chronic conditions,” Dr. Boyd said.

Dr. Tinetti said a challenge to providing this care that she expects is for clinicians, regardless of specialty, “to feel uneasy” about transitioning away from a conventional approach.

Among Dr. Tinetti’s arguments in favor of providing patient priorities care is that “it’s going to bring more joy in practice because you’re really addressing what matters to that individual while also providing good care.”

To get the most out of patient priorities care, Dr. Boyd recommended that clinicians focus on ‘the 4 M’s’: what matters most, mentation, mobility, and medications.

In an effort to address the last of these on a broad scale, Dr. Boyd is co-leading the US Deprescribing Research Network(USDeN), which aims to “improve medication use among older adults and the outcomes that are important to them,” according to the USDeN website.

To encourage deprescribing on a day-to-day level, Dr. Boyd called for strong communication between co–managing providers.

In an ideal world, there would be a better way to communicate than largely via electronic health records, she said.

“We need more than the EHR to connect us. That’s why it’s really important for primary care providers and specialists to be able to have time to actually talk to each other. This gets into how we reimburse and organize the communication and cognitive aspects of care,” Dr. Boyd noted.

Dr. Tinetti disclosed support from the John A. Hartford Foundation, the Donaghue Foundation, the National Institute on Aging, and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Dr. Boyd disclosed a relationship with UpToDate, for which she coauthored a chapter on multimorbidity.

When caring for older adults with multiple chronic conditions, prioritizing patient goals is more effective and efficient than trying to address each condition in isolation, said Mary Tinetti, MD, Gladys Phillips Crofoot Professor of Medicine and Public Health and chief of geriatrics at Yale University, New Haven, Conn.

Dr. Mary Tinetti

During a virtual presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting, the gerontologist noted that primary care providers face a number of challenges when managing elderly patients with multimorbidity. These challenges include a lack of representative data in clinical trials, conflicting guideline recommendations, patient nonadherence, and decreased benefit from therapies due to competing conditions, she said.

“Trying to follow multiple guidelines can result in unintentional harms to these people with multiple conditions,” Dr. Tinetti said. She gave examples of the wide-ranging goals patients can have.

“Some [patients] will maximize the focus on function, regardless of how long they are likely to live,” Dr. Tinetti said. “Others will say symptom burden management is most important to them. And others will say they want to live as long as possible, and survival is most important, even if that means a reduction in their function. These individuals also vary in the care they are willing and able to receive to achieve the outcomes that matter most to them.”

For these reasons, Dr. Tinetti recommended patient priorities care, which she and her colleagues have been developing and implementing over the past 5-6 years.

“If the benefits and harms of addressing each condition in isolation is of uncertain benefit and potentially burdensome to both clinician and patient, and we know that patients vary in their health priorities ... then what else would you want to focus on in your 20-minute visit ... except each patient’s priorities?” Dr. Tinetti asked. “This is one solution to the challenge.”


 

What is patient priorities care?

Patient priorities care is a multidisciplinary, cyclical approach to clinical decision-making composed of three steps, Dr. Tinetti explained. First, a clinician identifies the patient’s health priorities. Second, this information is transmitted to comanaging providers, who decide which of their respective treatments are consistent with the patient’s priorities. And third, those decisions are disseminated to everyone involved in the patient’s care, both within and outside of the health care system, allowing all care providers to align with the patient’s priorities, she noted.

“Each person does that from their own expertise,” Dr. Tinetti said. “The social worker will do something different than the cardiologist, the physical therapist, the endocrinologist – but everybody is aiming at the same outcome – the patient’s priorities.”

In 2019, Dr. Tinetti led a nonrandomized clinical trial to test the feasibility of patient priorities care. The study involved 366 older adults with multimorbidity, among whom 203 received usual care, while 163 received this type of care. Patients in the latter group were twice as likely to have medications stopped, and significantly less likely to have self-management tasks added and diagnostic tests ordered.
 

 

 

How electronic health records can help

In an interview, Dr. Tinetti suggested that comanaging physicians communicate through electronic health records (EHRs), first to ensure that all care providers understand a patient’s goals, then to determine if recommended therapies align with those goals.

“It would be a little bit of a culture change to do that,” Dr. Tinetti said, “but the technology is there and it isn’t too terribly time consuming.”

She went on to suggest that primary care providers are typically best suited to coordinate this process; however, if a patient receives the majority of their care from a particular specialist, then that clinician may be the most suitable coordinator.
 

Systemic obstacles and solutions

According to Cynthia Boyd, MD, interim director of the division of geriatric medicine and gerontology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, clinicians may encounter obstacles when implementing patient priorities care.

Dr. Cynthia Boyd


“Our health care system doesn’t always make it easy to do this,” Dr. Boyd said. “It’s important to acknowledge this because it can be hard to do. There’s no question,” Dr. Boyd said in an interview.

Among the headwinds that clinicians may face are clinical practice guidelines, the structure of electronic health records, and quality metrics focused on specific conditions, she explained.

“There’s a lot of things that push us – in primary care and other parts of medicine – away from the approach that’s best for people with multiple chronic conditions,” Dr. Boyd said.

Dr. Tinetti said a challenge to providing this care that she expects is for clinicians, regardless of specialty, “to feel uneasy” about transitioning away from a conventional approach.

Among Dr. Tinetti’s arguments in favor of providing patient priorities care is that “it’s going to bring more joy in practice because you’re really addressing what matters to that individual while also providing good care.”

To get the most out of patient priorities care, Dr. Boyd recommended that clinicians focus on ‘the 4 M’s’: what matters most, mentation, mobility, and medications.

In an effort to address the last of these on a broad scale, Dr. Boyd is co-leading the US Deprescribing Research Network(USDeN), which aims to “improve medication use among older adults and the outcomes that are important to them,” according to the USDeN website.

To encourage deprescribing on a day-to-day level, Dr. Boyd called for strong communication between co–managing providers.

In an ideal world, there would be a better way to communicate than largely via electronic health records, she said.

“We need more than the EHR to connect us. That’s why it’s really important for primary care providers and specialists to be able to have time to actually talk to each other. This gets into how we reimburse and organize the communication and cognitive aspects of care,” Dr. Boyd noted.

Dr. Tinetti disclosed support from the John A. Hartford Foundation, the Donaghue Foundation, the National Institute on Aging, and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. Dr. Boyd disclosed a relationship with UpToDate, for which she coauthored a chapter on multimorbidity.

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Formal geriatric assessment should be routine

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As the number of elderly patients with cancer continues to rise – and geriatricians remain in short supply – primary care providers and community oncologists need to incorporate formal geriatric assessment into routine practice, a geriatric oncologist said during a presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting.

Dr. Grant R. Williams

A 2020 ASCO survey, which the speaker, Grant R. Williams, MD, coauthored, found that 9 out of 10 community oncologists assessed at least some older patients differently than younger patients. But only 1 out of 3 did so in a formal manner, Dr. Williams, director of the cancer and aging program at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, said during presentation at virtual meeting.

In most cases, informal geriatric assessment considers only the tip of the ‘geriatric oncology iceberg,’ including chronological age, performance status, tumor characteristics, and organ function, Dr. Williams noted.

In contrast, formal geriatric assessment dives deeper, measuring a series of additional outcome-associated factors: polypharmacy, comorbidities, falls, psychosocial dysfunction, social support, sarcopenia, nutritional deficits, cognitive impairment, and functional issues.

“All these other factors under the surface are critically important to developing a personalized and individualized cancer treatment plan for older adults,” Dr. Williams said.

He went on to explain that elderly cancer patients can be sorted into three broad categories: fit, vulnerable, and frail. Fit and frail patients are relatively easy to identify, but most elderly patients fall into the vulnerable category, Dr. Williams noted.

“It’s really more challenging to identify those individuals across the spectrum than those at the extremes,” Dr. Williams said, noting that formal geriatric assessment can detect problems not found routinely.
 

Formal geriatric assessment’s value

Geriatric assessment can be used for risk modeling and making life-expectancy calculations. It can also be used as an interventional tool, guiding cancer treatment selection, he said. Furthermore, it can open doors to general health interventions, such as occupational therapy, to reduce fall risk.

Beneficial interventions identified by geriatric assessment have been shown to improve function, reduce chemotherapy toxicities, improve quality of life, and extend survival, Dr. Williams noted.

Formal geriatric assessment may be particularly useful for primary care providers considering referral to an oncologist, he said.

“I think performing a geriatric assessment [prior to referral] would be a great idea. And that’s twofold: Even before you send them to the oncologist, it gives you an idea of how they may tolerate treatment, and frankly, it may give you an idea that they don’t need a referral to the oncologist if they’re particularly frail,” noted Dr. Williams.
 

Alternatives to formal assessments

When asked how providers can incorporate formal assessments into a busy day at the clinic, Dr. Williams encouraged the use of abbreviated formal assessments, then adding further testing if needed.

“Given known time and support staff restraints, modified geriatric assessment tools have been developed that are either mostly or completely patient-reported,” he said in an interview, referring to the Cancer and Aging Research Group (CARG) Geriatric Assessment and the Cancer and Aging Resilience Evaluation (CARE), respectively.

“[These assessments] can easily be completed before clinical visits or while in the waiting room,” Dr. Williams noted. “The additional objective tests, such as Timed Up and Go, and Mental Status Exam, can be completed if deemed necessary based on these initial assessments.”

Martine Extermann, MD, PhD, provided her suggestions in an interview for what physicians can do to get better outcomes for this patient group.

Courtesy Dr. Extermann
Dr. Martine Extermann


“The secret of successful anti-cancer treatment in an older person is to be proactive with supportive care,” said Dr. Extermann, leader of the senior adult oncology program at H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Tampa, Fla. “You have to really plan ahead, identify the support gaps, identify the potential problems, and prevent them thoroughly. The upfront work of good patient evaluation will save you a lot of trouble down the line,” she added.

Ms. Extermann also mentioned the challenges to providing care to geriatric patients with cancer, including a lack of financial incentive for physicians to specialize in geriatrics.
 

 

 

Gerontology remains a practice gap

Oncologists who don’t perform geriatric assessments are probably missing more than they think, Dr. Extermann said in an interview.

“Many oncologists don’t fully realize the importance of [geriatric assessment] yet,” Dr. Extermann said. “They kind of think that their internal medicine training will carry through, and they’ll be able to identify everything; actually, we know very well we miss half of what is found by geriatric assessment clinically.”

Gerontology remains a practice gap, Dr. Extermann said, not only within oncology, but across specialties.

“One of the big problems with the U.S. health care system is we don’t have enough geriatricians, and the reason we don’t have enough geriatricians is because we don’t pay them,” she said.

“Geriatrics is the only specialty where you do more training to be paid less, because Medicare doesn’t reimburse geriatric assessment, [and] it doesn’t reimburse geriatric consultation. [This] doesn’t motivate universities to create geriatric clinics and geriatric programs because they will lose money, basically, doing that. If we want to really solve the problem, we have to solve the reimbursement problem up front,” she explained.

Dr. Williams disclosed financial relationships with Carevive Health Systems, Cardinal Health, the National Cancer Institute, and the American Cancer Society. Dr. Extermann reported no conflicts of interest.
 

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As the number of elderly patients with cancer continues to rise – and geriatricians remain in short supply – primary care providers and community oncologists need to incorporate formal geriatric assessment into routine practice, a geriatric oncologist said during a presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting.

Dr. Grant R. Williams

A 2020 ASCO survey, which the speaker, Grant R. Williams, MD, coauthored, found that 9 out of 10 community oncologists assessed at least some older patients differently than younger patients. But only 1 out of 3 did so in a formal manner, Dr. Williams, director of the cancer and aging program at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, said during presentation at virtual meeting.

In most cases, informal geriatric assessment considers only the tip of the ‘geriatric oncology iceberg,’ including chronological age, performance status, tumor characteristics, and organ function, Dr. Williams noted.

In contrast, formal geriatric assessment dives deeper, measuring a series of additional outcome-associated factors: polypharmacy, comorbidities, falls, psychosocial dysfunction, social support, sarcopenia, nutritional deficits, cognitive impairment, and functional issues.

“All these other factors under the surface are critically important to developing a personalized and individualized cancer treatment plan for older adults,” Dr. Williams said.

He went on to explain that elderly cancer patients can be sorted into three broad categories: fit, vulnerable, and frail. Fit and frail patients are relatively easy to identify, but most elderly patients fall into the vulnerable category, Dr. Williams noted.

“It’s really more challenging to identify those individuals across the spectrum than those at the extremes,” Dr. Williams said, noting that formal geriatric assessment can detect problems not found routinely.
 

Formal geriatric assessment’s value

Geriatric assessment can be used for risk modeling and making life-expectancy calculations. It can also be used as an interventional tool, guiding cancer treatment selection, he said. Furthermore, it can open doors to general health interventions, such as occupational therapy, to reduce fall risk.

Beneficial interventions identified by geriatric assessment have been shown to improve function, reduce chemotherapy toxicities, improve quality of life, and extend survival, Dr. Williams noted.

Formal geriatric assessment may be particularly useful for primary care providers considering referral to an oncologist, he said.

“I think performing a geriatric assessment [prior to referral] would be a great idea. And that’s twofold: Even before you send them to the oncologist, it gives you an idea of how they may tolerate treatment, and frankly, it may give you an idea that they don’t need a referral to the oncologist if they’re particularly frail,” noted Dr. Williams.
 

Alternatives to formal assessments

When asked how providers can incorporate formal assessments into a busy day at the clinic, Dr. Williams encouraged the use of abbreviated formal assessments, then adding further testing if needed.

“Given known time and support staff restraints, modified geriatric assessment tools have been developed that are either mostly or completely patient-reported,” he said in an interview, referring to the Cancer and Aging Research Group (CARG) Geriatric Assessment and the Cancer and Aging Resilience Evaluation (CARE), respectively.

“[These assessments] can easily be completed before clinical visits or while in the waiting room,” Dr. Williams noted. “The additional objective tests, such as Timed Up and Go, and Mental Status Exam, can be completed if deemed necessary based on these initial assessments.”

Martine Extermann, MD, PhD, provided her suggestions in an interview for what physicians can do to get better outcomes for this patient group.

Courtesy Dr. Extermann
Dr. Martine Extermann


“The secret of successful anti-cancer treatment in an older person is to be proactive with supportive care,” said Dr. Extermann, leader of the senior adult oncology program at H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Tampa, Fla. “You have to really plan ahead, identify the support gaps, identify the potential problems, and prevent them thoroughly. The upfront work of good patient evaluation will save you a lot of trouble down the line,” she added.

Ms. Extermann also mentioned the challenges to providing care to geriatric patients with cancer, including a lack of financial incentive for physicians to specialize in geriatrics.
 

 

 

Gerontology remains a practice gap

Oncologists who don’t perform geriatric assessments are probably missing more than they think, Dr. Extermann said in an interview.

“Many oncologists don’t fully realize the importance of [geriatric assessment] yet,” Dr. Extermann said. “They kind of think that their internal medicine training will carry through, and they’ll be able to identify everything; actually, we know very well we miss half of what is found by geriatric assessment clinically.”

Gerontology remains a practice gap, Dr. Extermann said, not only within oncology, but across specialties.

“One of the big problems with the U.S. health care system is we don’t have enough geriatricians, and the reason we don’t have enough geriatricians is because we don’t pay them,” she said.

“Geriatrics is the only specialty where you do more training to be paid less, because Medicare doesn’t reimburse geriatric assessment, [and] it doesn’t reimburse geriatric consultation. [This] doesn’t motivate universities to create geriatric clinics and geriatric programs because they will lose money, basically, doing that. If we want to really solve the problem, we have to solve the reimbursement problem up front,” she explained.

Dr. Williams disclosed financial relationships with Carevive Health Systems, Cardinal Health, the National Cancer Institute, and the American Cancer Society. Dr. Extermann reported no conflicts of interest.
 

As the number of elderly patients with cancer continues to rise – and geriatricians remain in short supply – primary care providers and community oncologists need to incorporate formal geriatric assessment into routine practice, a geriatric oncologist said during a presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting.

Dr. Grant R. Williams

A 2020 ASCO survey, which the speaker, Grant R. Williams, MD, coauthored, found that 9 out of 10 community oncologists assessed at least some older patients differently than younger patients. But only 1 out of 3 did so in a formal manner, Dr. Williams, director of the cancer and aging program at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, said during presentation at virtual meeting.

In most cases, informal geriatric assessment considers only the tip of the ‘geriatric oncology iceberg,’ including chronological age, performance status, tumor characteristics, and organ function, Dr. Williams noted.

In contrast, formal geriatric assessment dives deeper, measuring a series of additional outcome-associated factors: polypharmacy, comorbidities, falls, psychosocial dysfunction, social support, sarcopenia, nutritional deficits, cognitive impairment, and functional issues.

“All these other factors under the surface are critically important to developing a personalized and individualized cancer treatment plan for older adults,” Dr. Williams said.

He went on to explain that elderly cancer patients can be sorted into three broad categories: fit, vulnerable, and frail. Fit and frail patients are relatively easy to identify, but most elderly patients fall into the vulnerable category, Dr. Williams noted.

“It’s really more challenging to identify those individuals across the spectrum than those at the extremes,” Dr. Williams said, noting that formal geriatric assessment can detect problems not found routinely.
 

Formal geriatric assessment’s value

Geriatric assessment can be used for risk modeling and making life-expectancy calculations. It can also be used as an interventional tool, guiding cancer treatment selection, he said. Furthermore, it can open doors to general health interventions, such as occupational therapy, to reduce fall risk.

Beneficial interventions identified by geriatric assessment have been shown to improve function, reduce chemotherapy toxicities, improve quality of life, and extend survival, Dr. Williams noted.

Formal geriatric assessment may be particularly useful for primary care providers considering referral to an oncologist, he said.

“I think performing a geriatric assessment [prior to referral] would be a great idea. And that’s twofold: Even before you send them to the oncologist, it gives you an idea of how they may tolerate treatment, and frankly, it may give you an idea that they don’t need a referral to the oncologist if they’re particularly frail,” noted Dr. Williams.
 

Alternatives to formal assessments

When asked how providers can incorporate formal assessments into a busy day at the clinic, Dr. Williams encouraged the use of abbreviated formal assessments, then adding further testing if needed.

“Given known time and support staff restraints, modified geriatric assessment tools have been developed that are either mostly or completely patient-reported,” he said in an interview, referring to the Cancer and Aging Research Group (CARG) Geriatric Assessment and the Cancer and Aging Resilience Evaluation (CARE), respectively.

“[These assessments] can easily be completed before clinical visits or while in the waiting room,” Dr. Williams noted. “The additional objective tests, such as Timed Up and Go, and Mental Status Exam, can be completed if deemed necessary based on these initial assessments.”

Martine Extermann, MD, PhD, provided her suggestions in an interview for what physicians can do to get better outcomes for this patient group.

Courtesy Dr. Extermann
Dr. Martine Extermann


“The secret of successful anti-cancer treatment in an older person is to be proactive with supportive care,” said Dr. Extermann, leader of the senior adult oncology program at H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Tampa, Fla. “You have to really plan ahead, identify the support gaps, identify the potential problems, and prevent them thoroughly. The upfront work of good patient evaluation will save you a lot of trouble down the line,” she added.

Ms. Extermann also mentioned the challenges to providing care to geriatric patients with cancer, including a lack of financial incentive for physicians to specialize in geriatrics.
 

 

 

Gerontology remains a practice gap

Oncologists who don’t perform geriatric assessments are probably missing more than they think, Dr. Extermann said in an interview.

“Many oncologists don’t fully realize the importance of [geriatric assessment] yet,” Dr. Extermann said. “They kind of think that their internal medicine training will carry through, and they’ll be able to identify everything; actually, we know very well we miss half of what is found by geriatric assessment clinically.”

Gerontology remains a practice gap, Dr. Extermann said, not only within oncology, but across specialties.

“One of the big problems with the U.S. health care system is we don’t have enough geriatricians, and the reason we don’t have enough geriatricians is because we don’t pay them,” she said.

“Geriatrics is the only specialty where you do more training to be paid less, because Medicare doesn’t reimburse geriatric assessment, [and] it doesn’t reimburse geriatric consultation. [This] doesn’t motivate universities to create geriatric clinics and geriatric programs because they will lose money, basically, doing that. If we want to really solve the problem, we have to solve the reimbursement problem up front,” she explained.

Dr. Williams disclosed financial relationships with Carevive Health Systems, Cardinal Health, the National Cancer Institute, and the American Cancer Society. Dr. Extermann reported no conflicts of interest.
 

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Success in LGBTQ+ medicine requires awareness of risk

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Changed
Mon, 05/03/2021 - 11:30

 

Primary care for LGBTQ+ patients should focus on early identification and management of unique health risks, according to a leading expert.

Dr. Nicole Nilsy

Patients who are transgender, for instance, are nine times more likely to commit suicide than the general population (2015 U.S. Transgender Survey (USTS). Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. 2019 May 22. doi: 10.3886/ICPSR37229.v1), and those who are also Black have an estimated HIV prevalence of 62%, demonstrating the cumulative, negative health effects of intersectionality (www.cdc.gov/hiv/group/gender/transgender/hiv-prevalence.html).

“Experiences with marginalization and stigma directly relate to some of the poor physical and mental health outcomes that these patients experience,” Megan McNamara, MD, said during a presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting.

Dr. McNamara, who is director of the Gender Identity Veteran’s Experience (GIVE) Clinic, Veterans Affairs Northeast Ohio Healthcare System, Cleveland, offered a brief guide to managing LGBTQ+ patients. She emphasized increased rates of psychological distress and substance abuse, and encouraged familiarity with specific risks associated with three subgroups: men who have sex with men (MSM), women who have sex with women (WSW), and those who are transgender.

Men who have sex with men

According to Dr. McNamara, preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) should be offered based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eligibility criteria, which require that the patient is HIV negative, has had a male sex partner in the past 6 months, is not in a monogamous relationship, and has had anal sex or a bacterial sexually transmitted infection in the past 6 months. The two PrEP options, emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide, are equally effective and have similar safety profiles, Dr. McNamara said, but patients with impaired renal function should receive the alafenamide formulation.

Dr. McNamara also advised screening gay men for extragenital STIs, noting a 13.3% increased risk. When asked about anal Pap testing for HPV, Dr. McNamara called the subject “very controversial,” and ultimately recommended against it, citing a lack of data linking anal HPV infection and dysplasia with later development of rectal carcinoma, as well as the nonactionable impact of a positive result.

“For me, the issue is ... if [a positive anal Pap test] is not going to change my management, if I don’t know that the anal HPV that I diagnose will result in cancer, should I continue to monitor it?” Dr. McNamara said.

Women who have sex with women

Beyond higher rates of psychological distress and substance abuse among lesbian and bisexual women, Dr. McNamara described increased risks of overweight and obesity, higher rates of smoking, and lower rates of Pap testing, all of which should prompt clinicians to advise accordingly, with cervical cancer screening in alignment with guidelines. Clinicians should also discuss HPV vaccination with patients, taking care to weigh benefits and risks, as “catch-up” HPV vaccination is not unilaterally recommended for adults older than 26 years.

Transgender patients

Discussing transgender patients, Dr. McNamara focused on cross-sex hormone therapy (CSHT), first noting the significant psychological benefits, including improvements in depression, somatization, interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, anxiety, phobic anxiety/agoraphobia, and quality of life.

 

 

According to Dr. McNamara, CSHT is relatively simple and may be safely administered by primary care providers. For transmasculine patients, testosterone supplementation is all that is needed, whereas transfeminine patients will require spironolactone or GnRH agonists to reduce testosterone and estradiol to increase feminizing hormones to pubertal levels.

CSHT is not without risks, Dr. McNamara said, including “very high” risks of erythrocytosis among transmasculine patients and venous thromboembolic disease among transfeminine patients; but these risks need to be considered in the context of an approximate 40% suicide rate among transgender individuals.

“I can tell you in my own practice that these [suicide] data ring true,” Dr. McNamara said. “Many, many of my patients have attempted suicide, so [CSHT] is something that you really want to think about right away.”

Even when additional risk factors are present, such as preexisting cardiovascular disease, Dr. McNamara suggested that “there are very few absolute contraindications to CSHT,” and described it as a “life-sustaining treatment” that should be viewed analogously with any other long-term management strategy, such as therapy for diabetes or hypertension.

Fostering a transgender-friendly practice

In an interview, Nicole Nisly, MD, codirector of the LGBTQ+ Clinic at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, reflected upon Dr. McNamara’s presentation, noting that primary care providers – with a little education – are the best candidates to care for transgender patients.

“I think [primary care providers] do a better job [caring for transgender patients] than endocrinologists, honestly, because they can provide care for the whole person,” Dr. Nisly said. “They can do a Pap, they can do STI screening, they can assess mood, they can [evaluate] safety, and the whole person, as opposed to endocrinologists, who do hormone therapy, but somebody else does everything else.”

Dr. Nisly emphasized the importance of personalizing care for transgender individuals, which depends upon a welcoming practice environment, with careful attention to language.

Foremost, Dr. Nisly recommended asking patients for their preferred name, sexual orientation, and gender identity.

“One of the most difficult things [for transgender patients] is to see notes with the wrong name – the name that makes them feel uncomfortable – or the wrong pronoun,” Dr. Nisly said. “That’s very important to the community.”

Dr. Nisly also recommended an alternative term for cross-sex hormone therapy.

“I hate cross-sex hormone therapy terminology, honestly,” Dr. Nisly said. “I just think it’s so unwelcoming, and I think most of our patients don’t like the terminology, so we use ‘gender-affirming hormone therapy.’”

Dr. Nisly explained that the term “cross-sex” assumes a conventional definition of sex, which is inherently flawed.

When discussing certain medical risk factors, such as pregnancy or HIV, it is helpful to know “sex assigned at birth” for both patients and their sexual partners, Dr. Nisly said. It’s best to ask in this way, instead of using terms like “boyfriend” or “girlfriend,” as “sex assigned at birth” is “terminology the community recognizes, affirms, and feels comfortable with.”

Concerning management of medical risk factors, Dr. Nisly offered some additional perspectives.

For one, she recommended giving PrEP to any patient who has a desire to be on PrEP, noting that this desire can indicate a change in future sexual practices, which the CDC criteria do not anticipate. She also advised in-hospital self-swabbing for extragenital STIs, as this can increase patient comfort and adherence. And, in contrast with Dr. McNamara, Dr. Nisly recommended anal Pap screening for any man that has sex with men and anyone with HIV of any gender. She noted that rates of anal dysplasia are “pretty high” among men who have sex with men, and that detection may reduce cancer risk.

For clinicians who would like to learn more about caring for transgender patients, Dr. Nisly recommended that they start by reading the World Professional Association for Transgender Health guidelines.

“It’s about 300 pages,” Dr. Nisly said, “but it is great.”

Dr. McNamara and Dr. Nisly reported no conflicts of interest.

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Primary care for LGBTQ+ patients should focus on early identification and management of unique health risks, according to a leading expert.

Dr. Nicole Nilsy

Patients who are transgender, for instance, are nine times more likely to commit suicide than the general population (2015 U.S. Transgender Survey (USTS). Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. 2019 May 22. doi: 10.3886/ICPSR37229.v1), and those who are also Black have an estimated HIV prevalence of 62%, demonstrating the cumulative, negative health effects of intersectionality (www.cdc.gov/hiv/group/gender/transgender/hiv-prevalence.html).

“Experiences with marginalization and stigma directly relate to some of the poor physical and mental health outcomes that these patients experience,” Megan McNamara, MD, said during a presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting.

Dr. McNamara, who is director of the Gender Identity Veteran’s Experience (GIVE) Clinic, Veterans Affairs Northeast Ohio Healthcare System, Cleveland, offered a brief guide to managing LGBTQ+ patients. She emphasized increased rates of psychological distress and substance abuse, and encouraged familiarity with specific risks associated with three subgroups: men who have sex with men (MSM), women who have sex with women (WSW), and those who are transgender.

Men who have sex with men

According to Dr. McNamara, preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) should be offered based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eligibility criteria, which require that the patient is HIV negative, has had a male sex partner in the past 6 months, is not in a monogamous relationship, and has had anal sex or a bacterial sexually transmitted infection in the past 6 months. The two PrEP options, emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide, are equally effective and have similar safety profiles, Dr. McNamara said, but patients with impaired renal function should receive the alafenamide formulation.

Dr. McNamara also advised screening gay men for extragenital STIs, noting a 13.3% increased risk. When asked about anal Pap testing for HPV, Dr. McNamara called the subject “very controversial,” and ultimately recommended against it, citing a lack of data linking anal HPV infection and dysplasia with later development of rectal carcinoma, as well as the nonactionable impact of a positive result.

“For me, the issue is ... if [a positive anal Pap test] is not going to change my management, if I don’t know that the anal HPV that I diagnose will result in cancer, should I continue to monitor it?” Dr. McNamara said.

Women who have sex with women

Beyond higher rates of psychological distress and substance abuse among lesbian and bisexual women, Dr. McNamara described increased risks of overweight and obesity, higher rates of smoking, and lower rates of Pap testing, all of which should prompt clinicians to advise accordingly, with cervical cancer screening in alignment with guidelines. Clinicians should also discuss HPV vaccination with patients, taking care to weigh benefits and risks, as “catch-up” HPV vaccination is not unilaterally recommended for adults older than 26 years.

Transgender patients

Discussing transgender patients, Dr. McNamara focused on cross-sex hormone therapy (CSHT), first noting the significant psychological benefits, including improvements in depression, somatization, interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, anxiety, phobic anxiety/agoraphobia, and quality of life.

 

 

According to Dr. McNamara, CSHT is relatively simple and may be safely administered by primary care providers. For transmasculine patients, testosterone supplementation is all that is needed, whereas transfeminine patients will require spironolactone or GnRH agonists to reduce testosterone and estradiol to increase feminizing hormones to pubertal levels.

CSHT is not without risks, Dr. McNamara said, including “very high” risks of erythrocytosis among transmasculine patients and venous thromboembolic disease among transfeminine patients; but these risks need to be considered in the context of an approximate 40% suicide rate among transgender individuals.

“I can tell you in my own practice that these [suicide] data ring true,” Dr. McNamara said. “Many, many of my patients have attempted suicide, so [CSHT] is something that you really want to think about right away.”

Even when additional risk factors are present, such as preexisting cardiovascular disease, Dr. McNamara suggested that “there are very few absolute contraindications to CSHT,” and described it as a “life-sustaining treatment” that should be viewed analogously with any other long-term management strategy, such as therapy for diabetes or hypertension.

Fostering a transgender-friendly practice

In an interview, Nicole Nisly, MD, codirector of the LGBTQ+ Clinic at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, reflected upon Dr. McNamara’s presentation, noting that primary care providers – with a little education – are the best candidates to care for transgender patients.

“I think [primary care providers] do a better job [caring for transgender patients] than endocrinologists, honestly, because they can provide care for the whole person,” Dr. Nisly said. “They can do a Pap, they can do STI screening, they can assess mood, they can [evaluate] safety, and the whole person, as opposed to endocrinologists, who do hormone therapy, but somebody else does everything else.”

Dr. Nisly emphasized the importance of personalizing care for transgender individuals, which depends upon a welcoming practice environment, with careful attention to language.

Foremost, Dr. Nisly recommended asking patients for their preferred name, sexual orientation, and gender identity.

“One of the most difficult things [for transgender patients] is to see notes with the wrong name – the name that makes them feel uncomfortable – or the wrong pronoun,” Dr. Nisly said. “That’s very important to the community.”

Dr. Nisly also recommended an alternative term for cross-sex hormone therapy.

“I hate cross-sex hormone therapy terminology, honestly,” Dr. Nisly said. “I just think it’s so unwelcoming, and I think most of our patients don’t like the terminology, so we use ‘gender-affirming hormone therapy.’”

Dr. Nisly explained that the term “cross-sex” assumes a conventional definition of sex, which is inherently flawed.

When discussing certain medical risk factors, such as pregnancy or HIV, it is helpful to know “sex assigned at birth” for both patients and their sexual partners, Dr. Nisly said. It’s best to ask in this way, instead of using terms like “boyfriend” or “girlfriend,” as “sex assigned at birth” is “terminology the community recognizes, affirms, and feels comfortable with.”

Concerning management of medical risk factors, Dr. Nisly offered some additional perspectives.

For one, she recommended giving PrEP to any patient who has a desire to be on PrEP, noting that this desire can indicate a change in future sexual practices, which the CDC criteria do not anticipate. She also advised in-hospital self-swabbing for extragenital STIs, as this can increase patient comfort and adherence. And, in contrast with Dr. McNamara, Dr. Nisly recommended anal Pap screening for any man that has sex with men and anyone with HIV of any gender. She noted that rates of anal dysplasia are “pretty high” among men who have sex with men, and that detection may reduce cancer risk.

For clinicians who would like to learn more about caring for transgender patients, Dr. Nisly recommended that they start by reading the World Professional Association for Transgender Health guidelines.

“It’s about 300 pages,” Dr. Nisly said, “but it is great.”

Dr. McNamara and Dr. Nisly reported no conflicts of interest.

 

Primary care for LGBTQ+ patients should focus on early identification and management of unique health risks, according to a leading expert.

Dr. Nicole Nilsy

Patients who are transgender, for instance, are nine times more likely to commit suicide than the general population (2015 U.S. Transgender Survey (USTS). Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. 2019 May 22. doi: 10.3886/ICPSR37229.v1), and those who are also Black have an estimated HIV prevalence of 62%, demonstrating the cumulative, negative health effects of intersectionality (www.cdc.gov/hiv/group/gender/transgender/hiv-prevalence.html).

“Experiences with marginalization and stigma directly relate to some of the poor physical and mental health outcomes that these patients experience,” Megan McNamara, MD, said during a presentation at the American College of Physicians annual Internal Medicine meeting.

Dr. McNamara, who is director of the Gender Identity Veteran’s Experience (GIVE) Clinic, Veterans Affairs Northeast Ohio Healthcare System, Cleveland, offered a brief guide to managing LGBTQ+ patients. She emphasized increased rates of psychological distress and substance abuse, and encouraged familiarity with specific risks associated with three subgroups: men who have sex with men (MSM), women who have sex with women (WSW), and those who are transgender.

Men who have sex with men

According to Dr. McNamara, preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) should be offered based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eligibility criteria, which require that the patient is HIV negative, has had a male sex partner in the past 6 months, is not in a monogamous relationship, and has had anal sex or a bacterial sexually transmitted infection in the past 6 months. The two PrEP options, emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide, are equally effective and have similar safety profiles, Dr. McNamara said, but patients with impaired renal function should receive the alafenamide formulation.

Dr. McNamara also advised screening gay men for extragenital STIs, noting a 13.3% increased risk. When asked about anal Pap testing for HPV, Dr. McNamara called the subject “very controversial,” and ultimately recommended against it, citing a lack of data linking anal HPV infection and dysplasia with later development of rectal carcinoma, as well as the nonactionable impact of a positive result.

“For me, the issue is ... if [a positive anal Pap test] is not going to change my management, if I don’t know that the anal HPV that I diagnose will result in cancer, should I continue to monitor it?” Dr. McNamara said.

Women who have sex with women

Beyond higher rates of psychological distress and substance abuse among lesbian and bisexual women, Dr. McNamara described increased risks of overweight and obesity, higher rates of smoking, and lower rates of Pap testing, all of which should prompt clinicians to advise accordingly, with cervical cancer screening in alignment with guidelines. Clinicians should also discuss HPV vaccination with patients, taking care to weigh benefits and risks, as “catch-up” HPV vaccination is not unilaterally recommended for adults older than 26 years.

Transgender patients

Discussing transgender patients, Dr. McNamara focused on cross-sex hormone therapy (CSHT), first noting the significant psychological benefits, including improvements in depression, somatization, interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, anxiety, phobic anxiety/agoraphobia, and quality of life.

 

 

According to Dr. McNamara, CSHT is relatively simple and may be safely administered by primary care providers. For transmasculine patients, testosterone supplementation is all that is needed, whereas transfeminine patients will require spironolactone or GnRH agonists to reduce testosterone and estradiol to increase feminizing hormones to pubertal levels.

CSHT is not without risks, Dr. McNamara said, including “very high” risks of erythrocytosis among transmasculine patients and venous thromboembolic disease among transfeminine patients; but these risks need to be considered in the context of an approximate 40% suicide rate among transgender individuals.

“I can tell you in my own practice that these [suicide] data ring true,” Dr. McNamara said. “Many, many of my patients have attempted suicide, so [CSHT] is something that you really want to think about right away.”

Even when additional risk factors are present, such as preexisting cardiovascular disease, Dr. McNamara suggested that “there are very few absolute contraindications to CSHT,” and described it as a “life-sustaining treatment” that should be viewed analogously with any other long-term management strategy, such as therapy for diabetes or hypertension.

Fostering a transgender-friendly practice

In an interview, Nicole Nisly, MD, codirector of the LGBTQ+ Clinic at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, reflected upon Dr. McNamara’s presentation, noting that primary care providers – with a little education – are the best candidates to care for transgender patients.

“I think [primary care providers] do a better job [caring for transgender patients] than endocrinologists, honestly, because they can provide care for the whole person,” Dr. Nisly said. “They can do a Pap, they can do STI screening, they can assess mood, they can [evaluate] safety, and the whole person, as opposed to endocrinologists, who do hormone therapy, but somebody else does everything else.”

Dr. Nisly emphasized the importance of personalizing care for transgender individuals, which depends upon a welcoming practice environment, with careful attention to language.

Foremost, Dr. Nisly recommended asking patients for their preferred name, sexual orientation, and gender identity.

“One of the most difficult things [for transgender patients] is to see notes with the wrong name – the name that makes them feel uncomfortable – or the wrong pronoun,” Dr. Nisly said. “That’s very important to the community.”

Dr. Nisly also recommended an alternative term for cross-sex hormone therapy.

“I hate cross-sex hormone therapy terminology, honestly,” Dr. Nisly said. “I just think it’s so unwelcoming, and I think most of our patients don’t like the terminology, so we use ‘gender-affirming hormone therapy.’”

Dr. Nisly explained that the term “cross-sex” assumes a conventional definition of sex, which is inherently flawed.

When discussing certain medical risk factors, such as pregnancy or HIV, it is helpful to know “sex assigned at birth” for both patients and their sexual partners, Dr. Nisly said. It’s best to ask in this way, instead of using terms like “boyfriend” or “girlfriend,” as “sex assigned at birth” is “terminology the community recognizes, affirms, and feels comfortable with.”

Concerning management of medical risk factors, Dr. Nisly offered some additional perspectives.

For one, she recommended giving PrEP to any patient who has a desire to be on PrEP, noting that this desire can indicate a change in future sexual practices, which the CDC criteria do not anticipate. She also advised in-hospital self-swabbing for extragenital STIs, as this can increase patient comfort and adherence. And, in contrast with Dr. McNamara, Dr. Nisly recommended anal Pap screening for any man that has sex with men and anyone with HIV of any gender. She noted that rates of anal dysplasia are “pretty high” among men who have sex with men, and that detection may reduce cancer risk.

For clinicians who would like to learn more about caring for transgender patients, Dr. Nisly recommended that they start by reading the World Professional Association for Transgender Health guidelines.

“It’s about 300 pages,” Dr. Nisly said, “but it is great.”

Dr. McNamara and Dr. Nisly reported no conflicts of interest.

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Most labeled penicillin-allergic are no longer intolerant

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Tue, 05/04/2021 - 16:01

 

Most people whose medical record says they are allergic to penicillin are not actually intolerant, an allergist said during the first day of sessions at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

The mislabeling has implications for patient outcomes and efforts to fight antibiotic resistance, said Olajumoke Fadugba, MD, program director for the allergy and immunology fellowship at University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia.

About 10% of the general population reports a history of penicillin allergy (up to 15% of hospitalized patients), but up to 90% of patients with that label are able to tolerate penicillin, Dr. Fadugba said. The mislabeling comes either because reactions were improperly characterized early on or people have outgrown the allergy.

“There are data that tell us penicillin IgE-mediated wanes over time and that after 10 years of avoidance of a drug, greater than 80% of patients have a resolution of their penicillin IgE.”

Data also show patients outgrow their aminopenicillin reactions (including those from amoxicillin and Ampicillin) faster than parenteral penicillin reactions, she noted.

Josune Iglesias, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, said in an interview that she often sees patients who said their parents told them when they were kids that they were allergic to penicillin and that information just keeps getting entered into their records.

She said physicians are aware the penicillin-allergic label is not always accurate, but there is hesitancy to challenge those labels.

“We are cautious because of the potential side effects and the harm that we could cause if we unlabel the patient,” she said. “I think having this information will help us unlabel those patients well so we don’t cause harm.”

Also, the threat to antibiotic resistance is real, she said, when penicillin is eliminated as an option unnecessarily.

When a person is labeled allergic to penicillin, the treatment choices often go to broad-spectrum antibiotics that are more costly, have potentially worse side effects, and may contribute to resistance.

“It’s really important, especially with older people, patients sicker with chronic conditions to really make sure we unlabel those patients [who are not truly penicillin allergic],” Dr. Iglesias said.

The label can also cause harm in the hospital setting and worsen outcomes, according to Dr. Fadugba.

She noted that the penicillin allergy label has been linked with longer hospital length of stay, higher rate of readmission, acute kidney injury, multidrug-resistant organisms such as MRSA, and nosocomial infections including Clostridioides difficile.

Getting an effective drug history is an important part of determining who really has a penicillin allergy.

A questionnaire should ask whether the patient was likely to have had an immediate hypersensitivity to penicillin, such as hives or anaphylaxis, which would be more worrisome than a delayed rash.

Knowing the time frame of the reaction helps determine how likely or unlikely people are to still have the allergy, Dr. Fadugba said. “We also want to ask, have they received a penicillin antibiotic since that initial reaction and have they tolerated it?”

She continued: “If a patient received amoxicillin 2 weeks ago, and they tolerated it, you can essentially remove the allergy label and essentially change that patient’s potential hospital course – that immediate course or future outcomes.”

After obtaining the history, there are choices to make.

If a patient is not allergic, she said, the next step is removing the label and documenting why so that in the future another clinician doesn’t see the deleted label and put it back. If a person is deemed allergic by history, clinicians should document the nature of the reaction and if the patient needs a beta-lactam during a hospitalization or in clinic, make a decision based on what kind of beta-lactam they need.

“Generally, for a fourth-generation cephalosporin, for a distant history of penicillin allergy, you can probably give the full dose or – if you’re conservative – give it cautiously, perhaps 10% initially and then monitor because cross-reactivity is known to be low, about 2%,” Dr. Fadugba said.

If the patient needs a penicillin antibiotic specifically, options are guided by the resources.

If a clinician has personnel or an allergy specialist available, skin testing may be an option and “if negative, you can rule out the allergy,” Dr. Fadugba said.

“If that’s not available and the patient really needs a penicillin, you can consider desensitization,” she said.

However, she said, “If the patient is very high risk, then you have no choice but to use an alternative, especially if you can’t desensitize.”

Dr. Fadugba is a consultant for the Health Resources & Services Administration. Dr. Iglesias disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Most people whose medical record says they are allergic to penicillin are not actually intolerant, an allergist said during the first day of sessions at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

The mislabeling has implications for patient outcomes and efforts to fight antibiotic resistance, said Olajumoke Fadugba, MD, program director for the allergy and immunology fellowship at University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia.

About 10% of the general population reports a history of penicillin allergy (up to 15% of hospitalized patients), but up to 90% of patients with that label are able to tolerate penicillin, Dr. Fadugba said. The mislabeling comes either because reactions were improperly characterized early on or people have outgrown the allergy.

“There are data that tell us penicillin IgE-mediated wanes over time and that after 10 years of avoidance of a drug, greater than 80% of patients have a resolution of their penicillin IgE.”

Data also show patients outgrow their aminopenicillin reactions (including those from amoxicillin and Ampicillin) faster than parenteral penicillin reactions, she noted.

Josune Iglesias, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, said in an interview that she often sees patients who said their parents told them when they were kids that they were allergic to penicillin and that information just keeps getting entered into their records.

She said physicians are aware the penicillin-allergic label is not always accurate, but there is hesitancy to challenge those labels.

“We are cautious because of the potential side effects and the harm that we could cause if we unlabel the patient,” she said. “I think having this information will help us unlabel those patients well so we don’t cause harm.”

Also, the threat to antibiotic resistance is real, she said, when penicillin is eliminated as an option unnecessarily.

When a person is labeled allergic to penicillin, the treatment choices often go to broad-spectrum antibiotics that are more costly, have potentially worse side effects, and may contribute to resistance.

“It’s really important, especially with older people, patients sicker with chronic conditions to really make sure we unlabel those patients [who are not truly penicillin allergic],” Dr. Iglesias said.

The label can also cause harm in the hospital setting and worsen outcomes, according to Dr. Fadugba.

She noted that the penicillin allergy label has been linked with longer hospital length of stay, higher rate of readmission, acute kidney injury, multidrug-resistant organisms such as MRSA, and nosocomial infections including Clostridioides difficile.

Getting an effective drug history is an important part of determining who really has a penicillin allergy.

A questionnaire should ask whether the patient was likely to have had an immediate hypersensitivity to penicillin, such as hives or anaphylaxis, which would be more worrisome than a delayed rash.

Knowing the time frame of the reaction helps determine how likely or unlikely people are to still have the allergy, Dr. Fadugba said. “We also want to ask, have they received a penicillin antibiotic since that initial reaction and have they tolerated it?”

She continued: “If a patient received amoxicillin 2 weeks ago, and they tolerated it, you can essentially remove the allergy label and essentially change that patient’s potential hospital course – that immediate course or future outcomes.”

After obtaining the history, there are choices to make.

If a patient is not allergic, she said, the next step is removing the label and documenting why so that in the future another clinician doesn’t see the deleted label and put it back. If a person is deemed allergic by history, clinicians should document the nature of the reaction and if the patient needs a beta-lactam during a hospitalization or in clinic, make a decision based on what kind of beta-lactam they need.

“Generally, for a fourth-generation cephalosporin, for a distant history of penicillin allergy, you can probably give the full dose or – if you’re conservative – give it cautiously, perhaps 10% initially and then monitor because cross-reactivity is known to be low, about 2%,” Dr. Fadugba said.

If the patient needs a penicillin antibiotic specifically, options are guided by the resources.

If a clinician has personnel or an allergy specialist available, skin testing may be an option and “if negative, you can rule out the allergy,” Dr. Fadugba said.

“If that’s not available and the patient really needs a penicillin, you can consider desensitization,” she said.

However, she said, “If the patient is very high risk, then you have no choice but to use an alternative, especially if you can’t desensitize.”

Dr. Fadugba is a consultant for the Health Resources & Services Administration. Dr. Iglesias disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

Most people whose medical record says they are allergic to penicillin are not actually intolerant, an allergist said during the first day of sessions at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

The mislabeling has implications for patient outcomes and efforts to fight antibiotic resistance, said Olajumoke Fadugba, MD, program director for the allergy and immunology fellowship at University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia.

About 10% of the general population reports a history of penicillin allergy (up to 15% of hospitalized patients), but up to 90% of patients with that label are able to tolerate penicillin, Dr. Fadugba said. The mislabeling comes either because reactions were improperly characterized early on or people have outgrown the allergy.

“There are data that tell us penicillin IgE-mediated wanes over time and that after 10 years of avoidance of a drug, greater than 80% of patients have a resolution of their penicillin IgE.”

Data also show patients outgrow their aminopenicillin reactions (including those from amoxicillin and Ampicillin) faster than parenteral penicillin reactions, she noted.

Josune Iglesias, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, said in an interview that she often sees patients who said their parents told them when they were kids that they were allergic to penicillin and that information just keeps getting entered into their records.

She said physicians are aware the penicillin-allergic label is not always accurate, but there is hesitancy to challenge those labels.

“We are cautious because of the potential side effects and the harm that we could cause if we unlabel the patient,” she said. “I think having this information will help us unlabel those patients well so we don’t cause harm.”

Also, the threat to antibiotic resistance is real, she said, when penicillin is eliminated as an option unnecessarily.

When a person is labeled allergic to penicillin, the treatment choices often go to broad-spectrum antibiotics that are more costly, have potentially worse side effects, and may contribute to resistance.

“It’s really important, especially with older people, patients sicker with chronic conditions to really make sure we unlabel those patients [who are not truly penicillin allergic],” Dr. Iglesias said.

The label can also cause harm in the hospital setting and worsen outcomes, according to Dr. Fadugba.

She noted that the penicillin allergy label has been linked with longer hospital length of stay, higher rate of readmission, acute kidney injury, multidrug-resistant organisms such as MRSA, and nosocomial infections including Clostridioides difficile.

Getting an effective drug history is an important part of determining who really has a penicillin allergy.

A questionnaire should ask whether the patient was likely to have had an immediate hypersensitivity to penicillin, such as hives or anaphylaxis, which would be more worrisome than a delayed rash.

Knowing the time frame of the reaction helps determine how likely or unlikely people are to still have the allergy, Dr. Fadugba said. “We also want to ask, have they received a penicillin antibiotic since that initial reaction and have they tolerated it?”

She continued: “If a patient received amoxicillin 2 weeks ago, and they tolerated it, you can essentially remove the allergy label and essentially change that patient’s potential hospital course – that immediate course or future outcomes.”

After obtaining the history, there are choices to make.

If a patient is not allergic, she said, the next step is removing the label and documenting why so that in the future another clinician doesn’t see the deleted label and put it back. If a person is deemed allergic by history, clinicians should document the nature of the reaction and if the patient needs a beta-lactam during a hospitalization or in clinic, make a decision based on what kind of beta-lactam they need.

“Generally, for a fourth-generation cephalosporin, for a distant history of penicillin allergy, you can probably give the full dose or – if you’re conservative – give it cautiously, perhaps 10% initially and then monitor because cross-reactivity is known to be low, about 2%,” Dr. Fadugba said.

If the patient needs a penicillin antibiotic specifically, options are guided by the resources.

If a clinician has personnel or an allergy specialist available, skin testing may be an option and “if negative, you can rule out the allergy,” Dr. Fadugba said.

“If that’s not available and the patient really needs a penicillin, you can consider desensitization,” she said.

However, she said, “If the patient is very high risk, then you have no choice but to use an alternative, especially if you can’t desensitize.”

Dr. Fadugba is a consultant for the Health Resources & Services Administration. Dr. Iglesias disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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