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Internet Use Good for Mental Well-Being?
Contrary to previous research that suggests internet use can have a deleterious effect on mental health, a new study of more than 2 million individuals suggested it can actually enhance well-being.
Between 2006 and 2021, investigators studied more than 2 million people between the ages of 15 and 99 years in 168 countries, focusing on their psychological well-being and their use of the internet. Many of the included countries have rarely or never been studied in this connection.
“We were surprised to find a positive correlation between well-being and internet use across the majority of the thousands of models we used for our analysis,” lead author Matti Vuorre, PhD, of Tilburg University, Tilburg, the Netherlands, and a research associate at Oxford Internet Institute in England, said in a news release.
The study was published online on May 13 in Technology, Mind, and Behavior.
A Global Phenomenon
Coauthor Andrew K. Przybylski, PhD, professor of human behavior and technology at Oxford Internet Institute, explained the motive for conducting the study.
“Whilst internet technologies and their platforms and their potential psychological consequences remain debated, research to date has been inconclusive and of limited geographic and demographic scope,” he said.
He noted that the “overwhelming majority” of studies have focused on the Global North and on younger people and “ignoring the fact that the penetration of the internet has been, and continues to be, a global phenomenon.”
The researchers set out to address this gap by analyzing “how internet access, mobility internet access, and active internet use might predict psychological well-being on a global level across the life stages,” Dr. Przybylski continued. “To our knowledge, no other research has directly grappled with these issues and addressed the worldwide scope of the debate.”
To study internet use, the investigators analyzed data from the 2022 Gallup World Poll, a nationally representative survey of each country’s civilian, non-institutionalized adult population (ie, aged ≥ 15 years), conducted between 2002 and 2022. The poll assessed well-being using face-to-face, as well as phone interviews, conducted by local interviewers in the respondents’ native languages.
The total sample size included 2,414,295 adults drawn from 186 countries (53.1% women), drawn from countries that included those located in Latin America, Asia, and Africa.
The researchers examined eight indicators of well-being: life satisfaction, daily negative and positive experiences, two indices of social well-being, physical well-being, community well-being, and experiences of purpose.
Covariates included respondents’ income, education, work, relationship status, the ability to meet basic needs (food and shelter), and whether they reported having health problems.
Greater Life Satisfaction
The researchers conducted a “multiverse” of 33,792 types of analyses, researching the average differences in well-being between individuals who had access to mobile internet or had used the internet in the past 7 days.
They found that for the average country, those who had access to the internet reported approximately 0.08 units greater life satisfaction, positive experiences, and social life satisfaction and 0.06 units lower negative experience than those without access.
They also reported approximately 0.08 units greater experiences of purpose and 0.1 unit greater physical, 0.02 units greater community, and 0.08 units greater social well-being than individuals without access.
Being an active internet user was associated with a 0.03- to 0.08-unit increase in life satisfaction, positive experiences, social well-being, and physical well-being and a 0.04-unit decrease in negative experiences. Access to a smartphone predicted increases of 0.06 and 0.07 units.
Although the standard deviations (SDs) of well-being outcomes were small (eg, the median life satisfaction difference was 0.36 SDs between individuals who did and did not have access to the internet), they were “not negligible.”
In fact, when the researchers examined the associations’ robustness across all analyses, they found that 84.9% resulted in positive and statistically significant associations between internet connectivity and well-being.
Of the 4.9% of associations between internet use and community well-being that were negative, most were observed among young women between the ages of 15 and 24 years.
While the researchers did not identify this as a causal relationship, they noted that this finding is consistent with previous reports of increased cyberbullying and negative associations between social media use and depressive symptoms in young women.
“Overall, we found that average associations were consistent across internet adoption predictors and well-being outcomes, with those who had access to or actively used the internet reporting meaningfully greater well-being than those who did not,” Dr. Przybylski said.
The study’s limitations included comparing individuals with each other, given that there “are likely myriad other feature of the human condition that are associated with both uptake of internet technologies and well-being in such a manner that they might case spurious associations or mask true associations,” the authors noted.
Moreover, longitudinal studies tracking participants over time can provide more information about the “contexts of how and why an individual might be affected by internet technologies and platforms.” In addition, the self-reported measures of technology might be “lacking.”
Dr. Przybylski hopes that the findings will “bring some greater context to the screen time debate; however, further work is still needed in this important area.”
He urged platform providers “to share their detailed data on user behavior with social scientists working in this field for transparent and independent scientific enquiry, to enable a more comprehensive understanding of internet technologies in our daily lives.”
A Starting Point
In a separate news release, Kevin McConway, PhD, MBA, emeritus professor of applied statistics, The Open University, Milton Keynes, England, noted that there has been “endless debate and considerable speculation on the possible effects of internet use on well-being, in general across all ages, but more specifically in relation to children and young people.”
The current study “certainly extends the available information beyond simple speculation and beyond previous studies that used participants mostly in relatively rich Northern countries,” noted Dr. McConway, who was not involved in the study.
However, he cautioned, the study is only “a starting point, and if nothing else, it casts very serious doubt on the view, held by some people, that the internet is bad for us all.”
In particular, the observational nature of the study meant that the positive associations between internet use and measure of well-being could have been caused by other factors and are not causative.
“It’s important to understand that none of the well-being measures used in this research has been properly validated by experts in psychological measurement,” said Dr. McConway.
No source of study funding was listed. Dr. Przybylski’s research is supported by the Huo Family Foundation and the Economic and Social Research Council. In the preceding 5 years, Dr. Przybylski has worked on research grants provided by the John Fell Fund, The Diana Award, and the children’s charity Barnardo’s. These research grants were paid to Dr. Przybylski’s employer, the Oxford Internet Institute. During this period, Dr. Przybylski has engaged unpaid consultations with several organizations including UNICEF, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, Meta Inc., UKIE, UK Research and Innovation, The UK’s DCMS, The Office of the UK’s Chief Medical Officer, the Office of the US Surgeon General, The UK’s Academy of Medical Sciences, and the UK Parliament. There were no financial products or benefits resulting from these consultations. Dr. Vuorre reported no relevant financial relationships. Neither author reported any conflicts of interest. Dr. McConway is a trustee of the Science Media Center. However, his remarks are in the capacity of an independent professional statistician.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Contrary to previous research that suggests internet use can have a deleterious effect on mental health, a new study of more than 2 million individuals suggested it can actually enhance well-being.
Between 2006 and 2021, investigators studied more than 2 million people between the ages of 15 and 99 years in 168 countries, focusing on their psychological well-being and their use of the internet. Many of the included countries have rarely or never been studied in this connection.
“We were surprised to find a positive correlation between well-being and internet use across the majority of the thousands of models we used for our analysis,” lead author Matti Vuorre, PhD, of Tilburg University, Tilburg, the Netherlands, and a research associate at Oxford Internet Institute in England, said in a news release.
The study was published online on May 13 in Technology, Mind, and Behavior.
A Global Phenomenon
Coauthor Andrew K. Przybylski, PhD, professor of human behavior and technology at Oxford Internet Institute, explained the motive for conducting the study.
“Whilst internet technologies and their platforms and their potential psychological consequences remain debated, research to date has been inconclusive and of limited geographic and demographic scope,” he said.
He noted that the “overwhelming majority” of studies have focused on the Global North and on younger people and “ignoring the fact that the penetration of the internet has been, and continues to be, a global phenomenon.”
The researchers set out to address this gap by analyzing “how internet access, mobility internet access, and active internet use might predict psychological well-being on a global level across the life stages,” Dr. Przybylski continued. “To our knowledge, no other research has directly grappled with these issues and addressed the worldwide scope of the debate.”
To study internet use, the investigators analyzed data from the 2022 Gallup World Poll, a nationally representative survey of each country’s civilian, non-institutionalized adult population (ie, aged ≥ 15 years), conducted between 2002 and 2022. The poll assessed well-being using face-to-face, as well as phone interviews, conducted by local interviewers in the respondents’ native languages.
The total sample size included 2,414,295 adults drawn from 186 countries (53.1% women), drawn from countries that included those located in Latin America, Asia, and Africa.
The researchers examined eight indicators of well-being: life satisfaction, daily negative and positive experiences, two indices of social well-being, physical well-being, community well-being, and experiences of purpose.
Covariates included respondents’ income, education, work, relationship status, the ability to meet basic needs (food and shelter), and whether they reported having health problems.
Greater Life Satisfaction
The researchers conducted a “multiverse” of 33,792 types of analyses, researching the average differences in well-being between individuals who had access to mobile internet or had used the internet in the past 7 days.
They found that for the average country, those who had access to the internet reported approximately 0.08 units greater life satisfaction, positive experiences, and social life satisfaction and 0.06 units lower negative experience than those without access.
They also reported approximately 0.08 units greater experiences of purpose and 0.1 unit greater physical, 0.02 units greater community, and 0.08 units greater social well-being than individuals without access.
Being an active internet user was associated with a 0.03- to 0.08-unit increase in life satisfaction, positive experiences, social well-being, and physical well-being and a 0.04-unit decrease in negative experiences. Access to a smartphone predicted increases of 0.06 and 0.07 units.
Although the standard deviations (SDs) of well-being outcomes were small (eg, the median life satisfaction difference was 0.36 SDs between individuals who did and did not have access to the internet), they were “not negligible.”
In fact, when the researchers examined the associations’ robustness across all analyses, they found that 84.9% resulted in positive and statistically significant associations between internet connectivity and well-being.
Of the 4.9% of associations between internet use and community well-being that were negative, most were observed among young women between the ages of 15 and 24 years.
While the researchers did not identify this as a causal relationship, they noted that this finding is consistent with previous reports of increased cyberbullying and negative associations between social media use and depressive symptoms in young women.
“Overall, we found that average associations were consistent across internet adoption predictors and well-being outcomes, with those who had access to or actively used the internet reporting meaningfully greater well-being than those who did not,” Dr. Przybylski said.
The study’s limitations included comparing individuals with each other, given that there “are likely myriad other feature of the human condition that are associated with both uptake of internet technologies and well-being in such a manner that they might case spurious associations or mask true associations,” the authors noted.
Moreover, longitudinal studies tracking participants over time can provide more information about the “contexts of how and why an individual might be affected by internet technologies and platforms.” In addition, the self-reported measures of technology might be “lacking.”
Dr. Przybylski hopes that the findings will “bring some greater context to the screen time debate; however, further work is still needed in this important area.”
He urged platform providers “to share their detailed data on user behavior with social scientists working in this field for transparent and independent scientific enquiry, to enable a more comprehensive understanding of internet technologies in our daily lives.”
A Starting Point
In a separate news release, Kevin McConway, PhD, MBA, emeritus professor of applied statistics, The Open University, Milton Keynes, England, noted that there has been “endless debate and considerable speculation on the possible effects of internet use on well-being, in general across all ages, but more specifically in relation to children and young people.”
The current study “certainly extends the available information beyond simple speculation and beyond previous studies that used participants mostly in relatively rich Northern countries,” noted Dr. McConway, who was not involved in the study.
However, he cautioned, the study is only “a starting point, and if nothing else, it casts very serious doubt on the view, held by some people, that the internet is bad for us all.”
In particular, the observational nature of the study meant that the positive associations between internet use and measure of well-being could have been caused by other factors and are not causative.
“It’s important to understand that none of the well-being measures used in this research has been properly validated by experts in psychological measurement,” said Dr. McConway.
No source of study funding was listed. Dr. Przybylski’s research is supported by the Huo Family Foundation and the Economic and Social Research Council. In the preceding 5 years, Dr. Przybylski has worked on research grants provided by the John Fell Fund, The Diana Award, and the children’s charity Barnardo’s. These research grants were paid to Dr. Przybylski’s employer, the Oxford Internet Institute. During this period, Dr. Przybylski has engaged unpaid consultations with several organizations including UNICEF, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, Meta Inc., UKIE, UK Research and Innovation, The UK’s DCMS, The Office of the UK’s Chief Medical Officer, the Office of the US Surgeon General, The UK’s Academy of Medical Sciences, and the UK Parliament. There were no financial products or benefits resulting from these consultations. Dr. Vuorre reported no relevant financial relationships. Neither author reported any conflicts of interest. Dr. McConway is a trustee of the Science Media Center. However, his remarks are in the capacity of an independent professional statistician.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Contrary to previous research that suggests internet use can have a deleterious effect on mental health, a new study of more than 2 million individuals suggested it can actually enhance well-being.
Between 2006 and 2021, investigators studied more than 2 million people between the ages of 15 and 99 years in 168 countries, focusing on their psychological well-being and their use of the internet. Many of the included countries have rarely or never been studied in this connection.
“We were surprised to find a positive correlation between well-being and internet use across the majority of the thousands of models we used for our analysis,” lead author Matti Vuorre, PhD, of Tilburg University, Tilburg, the Netherlands, and a research associate at Oxford Internet Institute in England, said in a news release.
The study was published online on May 13 in Technology, Mind, and Behavior.
A Global Phenomenon
Coauthor Andrew K. Przybylski, PhD, professor of human behavior and technology at Oxford Internet Institute, explained the motive for conducting the study.
“Whilst internet technologies and their platforms and their potential psychological consequences remain debated, research to date has been inconclusive and of limited geographic and demographic scope,” he said.
He noted that the “overwhelming majority” of studies have focused on the Global North and on younger people and “ignoring the fact that the penetration of the internet has been, and continues to be, a global phenomenon.”
The researchers set out to address this gap by analyzing “how internet access, mobility internet access, and active internet use might predict psychological well-being on a global level across the life stages,” Dr. Przybylski continued. “To our knowledge, no other research has directly grappled with these issues and addressed the worldwide scope of the debate.”
To study internet use, the investigators analyzed data from the 2022 Gallup World Poll, a nationally representative survey of each country’s civilian, non-institutionalized adult population (ie, aged ≥ 15 years), conducted between 2002 and 2022. The poll assessed well-being using face-to-face, as well as phone interviews, conducted by local interviewers in the respondents’ native languages.
The total sample size included 2,414,295 adults drawn from 186 countries (53.1% women), drawn from countries that included those located in Latin America, Asia, and Africa.
The researchers examined eight indicators of well-being: life satisfaction, daily negative and positive experiences, two indices of social well-being, physical well-being, community well-being, and experiences of purpose.
Covariates included respondents’ income, education, work, relationship status, the ability to meet basic needs (food and shelter), and whether they reported having health problems.
Greater Life Satisfaction
The researchers conducted a “multiverse” of 33,792 types of analyses, researching the average differences in well-being between individuals who had access to mobile internet or had used the internet in the past 7 days.
They found that for the average country, those who had access to the internet reported approximately 0.08 units greater life satisfaction, positive experiences, and social life satisfaction and 0.06 units lower negative experience than those without access.
They also reported approximately 0.08 units greater experiences of purpose and 0.1 unit greater physical, 0.02 units greater community, and 0.08 units greater social well-being than individuals without access.
Being an active internet user was associated with a 0.03- to 0.08-unit increase in life satisfaction, positive experiences, social well-being, and physical well-being and a 0.04-unit decrease in negative experiences. Access to a smartphone predicted increases of 0.06 and 0.07 units.
Although the standard deviations (SDs) of well-being outcomes were small (eg, the median life satisfaction difference was 0.36 SDs between individuals who did and did not have access to the internet), they were “not negligible.”
In fact, when the researchers examined the associations’ robustness across all analyses, they found that 84.9% resulted in positive and statistically significant associations between internet connectivity and well-being.
Of the 4.9% of associations between internet use and community well-being that were negative, most were observed among young women between the ages of 15 and 24 years.
While the researchers did not identify this as a causal relationship, they noted that this finding is consistent with previous reports of increased cyberbullying and negative associations between social media use and depressive symptoms in young women.
“Overall, we found that average associations were consistent across internet adoption predictors and well-being outcomes, with those who had access to or actively used the internet reporting meaningfully greater well-being than those who did not,” Dr. Przybylski said.
The study’s limitations included comparing individuals with each other, given that there “are likely myriad other feature of the human condition that are associated with both uptake of internet technologies and well-being in such a manner that they might case spurious associations or mask true associations,” the authors noted.
Moreover, longitudinal studies tracking participants over time can provide more information about the “contexts of how and why an individual might be affected by internet technologies and platforms.” In addition, the self-reported measures of technology might be “lacking.”
Dr. Przybylski hopes that the findings will “bring some greater context to the screen time debate; however, further work is still needed in this important area.”
He urged platform providers “to share their detailed data on user behavior with social scientists working in this field for transparent and independent scientific enquiry, to enable a more comprehensive understanding of internet technologies in our daily lives.”
A Starting Point
In a separate news release, Kevin McConway, PhD, MBA, emeritus professor of applied statistics, The Open University, Milton Keynes, England, noted that there has been “endless debate and considerable speculation on the possible effects of internet use on well-being, in general across all ages, but more specifically in relation to children and young people.”
The current study “certainly extends the available information beyond simple speculation and beyond previous studies that used participants mostly in relatively rich Northern countries,” noted Dr. McConway, who was not involved in the study.
However, he cautioned, the study is only “a starting point, and if nothing else, it casts very serious doubt on the view, held by some people, that the internet is bad for us all.”
In particular, the observational nature of the study meant that the positive associations between internet use and measure of well-being could have been caused by other factors and are not causative.
“It’s important to understand that none of the well-being measures used in this research has been properly validated by experts in psychological measurement,” said Dr. McConway.
No source of study funding was listed. Dr. Przybylski’s research is supported by the Huo Family Foundation and the Economic and Social Research Council. In the preceding 5 years, Dr. Przybylski has worked on research grants provided by the John Fell Fund, The Diana Award, and the children’s charity Barnardo’s. These research grants were paid to Dr. Przybylski’s employer, the Oxford Internet Institute. During this period, Dr. Przybylski has engaged unpaid consultations with several organizations including UNICEF, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, Meta Inc., UKIE, UK Research and Innovation, The UK’s DCMS, The Office of the UK’s Chief Medical Officer, the Office of the US Surgeon General, The UK’s Academy of Medical Sciences, and the UK Parliament. There were no financial products or benefits resulting from these consultations. Dr. Vuorre reported no relevant financial relationships. Neither author reported any conflicts of interest. Dr. McConway is a trustee of the Science Media Center. However, his remarks are in the capacity of an independent professional statistician.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Does Racism in Black Americans Boost Alzheimer’s Risk?
Racial discrimination in Black Americans is associated with an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in later life, new findings showed.
Researchers found that Black Americans who experience racism in their 40s and 50s are more likely to have increased serum levels of AD biomarkers p-tau181 and neurofilament light (NfL) more than a decade later.
“We know that Black Americans are at an elevated risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias compared to non-Hispanic White Americans, but we don’t fully understand all the factors that contribute to this disproportionate risk,” Michelle Mielke, PhD, co-author and professor of epidemiology and prevention at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, said in a press release.
Recent data show AD is twice as prevalent in Black Americans as in Whites, at 18.6% and 10%, respectively. Dr. Mielke said this level of disparity cannot be attributed solely to genetic differences, and evidence suggests that racism and its related stress may play a role.
The findings were published online in Alzheimer’s and Dementia.
AD Biomarker Testing
To further explore a possible link between exposure to racism and AD risk, investigators analyzed data from the Family and Community Health Study, a multisite, longitudinal investigation that included more than 800 families in the United States.
Blood samples and information on racial discrimination were collected from 255 middle-aged Black Americans between 2002 and 2005.
Blood samples were tested for serum phosphorylated tau181 (p-Tau181), a marker of AD pathology; NfL, a nonspecific marker of neurodegeneration; and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a marker of brain inflammation.
Participants answered questions about racial discrimination, which included whether they have been subjected to disrespectful treatment including racial slurs, harassment from law enforcement, or if they had ever been excluded from social activities because of their race.
The sample included 212 females and 43 males with a mean age of 46. Most participants (70%) lived in urban areas.
Stress-Related?
Investigators found no correlation between racial discrimination and increased levels of AD blood biomarkers in 2008 when participants were a mean age of 46 years. However, 11 years later, when participants were roughly 57 years old, investigators found experiencing racism in middle age was significantly correlated with higher levels of both p-Tau181 (r = 0.158; P ≤ .012) and NfL (r = 0.143; P ≤ .023). There was no significant association between reported discrimination and GFAP.
“These findings support the hypothesis that unique life stressors encountered by Black Americans in midlife become biologically embedded and contribute to AD pathology and neurodegeneration later in life,” the authors wrote.
Investigators speculated based on previous research that the stress related to discrimination may be associated with reductions in hippocampal and prefrontal cortex volumes and neurodegeneration in general.
Dr. Mielke also said it’s clear that future studies should focus on racism experienced by Black Americans to further understand their risk for dementia.
“This research can help inform policies and interventions to reduce racial disparities and reduce dementia risk,” she said.
Study limitations include the absence of amyloid biomarkers. Investigators noted that participants had non-detectable levels of amyloid, likely due to the use of serum vs cerebrospinal fluid.
The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Mielke reported serving on scientific advisory boards and/or having consulted for Acadia, Biogen, Eisai, LabCorp, Lilly, Merck, PeerView Institute, Roche, Siemens Healthineers, and Sunbird Bio.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Racial discrimination in Black Americans is associated with an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in later life, new findings showed.
Researchers found that Black Americans who experience racism in their 40s and 50s are more likely to have increased serum levels of AD biomarkers p-tau181 and neurofilament light (NfL) more than a decade later.
“We know that Black Americans are at an elevated risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias compared to non-Hispanic White Americans, but we don’t fully understand all the factors that contribute to this disproportionate risk,” Michelle Mielke, PhD, co-author and professor of epidemiology and prevention at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, said in a press release.
Recent data show AD is twice as prevalent in Black Americans as in Whites, at 18.6% and 10%, respectively. Dr. Mielke said this level of disparity cannot be attributed solely to genetic differences, and evidence suggests that racism and its related stress may play a role.
The findings were published online in Alzheimer’s and Dementia.
AD Biomarker Testing
To further explore a possible link between exposure to racism and AD risk, investigators analyzed data from the Family and Community Health Study, a multisite, longitudinal investigation that included more than 800 families in the United States.
Blood samples and information on racial discrimination were collected from 255 middle-aged Black Americans between 2002 and 2005.
Blood samples were tested for serum phosphorylated tau181 (p-Tau181), a marker of AD pathology; NfL, a nonspecific marker of neurodegeneration; and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a marker of brain inflammation.
Participants answered questions about racial discrimination, which included whether they have been subjected to disrespectful treatment including racial slurs, harassment from law enforcement, or if they had ever been excluded from social activities because of their race.
The sample included 212 females and 43 males with a mean age of 46. Most participants (70%) lived in urban areas.
Stress-Related?
Investigators found no correlation between racial discrimination and increased levels of AD blood biomarkers in 2008 when participants were a mean age of 46 years. However, 11 years later, when participants were roughly 57 years old, investigators found experiencing racism in middle age was significantly correlated with higher levels of both p-Tau181 (r = 0.158; P ≤ .012) and NfL (r = 0.143; P ≤ .023). There was no significant association between reported discrimination and GFAP.
“These findings support the hypothesis that unique life stressors encountered by Black Americans in midlife become biologically embedded and contribute to AD pathology and neurodegeneration later in life,” the authors wrote.
Investigators speculated based on previous research that the stress related to discrimination may be associated with reductions in hippocampal and prefrontal cortex volumes and neurodegeneration in general.
Dr. Mielke also said it’s clear that future studies should focus on racism experienced by Black Americans to further understand their risk for dementia.
“This research can help inform policies and interventions to reduce racial disparities and reduce dementia risk,” she said.
Study limitations include the absence of amyloid biomarkers. Investigators noted that participants had non-detectable levels of amyloid, likely due to the use of serum vs cerebrospinal fluid.
The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Mielke reported serving on scientific advisory boards and/or having consulted for Acadia, Biogen, Eisai, LabCorp, Lilly, Merck, PeerView Institute, Roche, Siemens Healthineers, and Sunbird Bio.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Racial discrimination in Black Americans is associated with an increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in later life, new findings showed.
Researchers found that Black Americans who experience racism in their 40s and 50s are more likely to have increased serum levels of AD biomarkers p-tau181 and neurofilament light (NfL) more than a decade later.
“We know that Black Americans are at an elevated risk of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias compared to non-Hispanic White Americans, but we don’t fully understand all the factors that contribute to this disproportionate risk,” Michelle Mielke, PhD, co-author and professor of epidemiology and prevention at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, said in a press release.
Recent data show AD is twice as prevalent in Black Americans as in Whites, at 18.6% and 10%, respectively. Dr. Mielke said this level of disparity cannot be attributed solely to genetic differences, and evidence suggests that racism and its related stress may play a role.
The findings were published online in Alzheimer’s and Dementia.
AD Biomarker Testing
To further explore a possible link between exposure to racism and AD risk, investigators analyzed data from the Family and Community Health Study, a multisite, longitudinal investigation that included more than 800 families in the United States.
Blood samples and information on racial discrimination were collected from 255 middle-aged Black Americans between 2002 and 2005.
Blood samples were tested for serum phosphorylated tau181 (p-Tau181), a marker of AD pathology; NfL, a nonspecific marker of neurodegeneration; and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a marker of brain inflammation.
Participants answered questions about racial discrimination, which included whether they have been subjected to disrespectful treatment including racial slurs, harassment from law enforcement, or if they had ever been excluded from social activities because of their race.
The sample included 212 females and 43 males with a mean age of 46. Most participants (70%) lived in urban areas.
Stress-Related?
Investigators found no correlation between racial discrimination and increased levels of AD blood biomarkers in 2008 when participants were a mean age of 46 years. However, 11 years later, when participants were roughly 57 years old, investigators found experiencing racism in middle age was significantly correlated with higher levels of both p-Tau181 (r = 0.158; P ≤ .012) and NfL (r = 0.143; P ≤ .023). There was no significant association between reported discrimination and GFAP.
“These findings support the hypothesis that unique life stressors encountered by Black Americans in midlife become biologically embedded and contribute to AD pathology and neurodegeneration later in life,” the authors wrote.
Investigators speculated based on previous research that the stress related to discrimination may be associated with reductions in hippocampal and prefrontal cortex volumes and neurodegeneration in general.
Dr. Mielke also said it’s clear that future studies should focus on racism experienced by Black Americans to further understand their risk for dementia.
“This research can help inform policies and interventions to reduce racial disparities and reduce dementia risk,” she said.
Study limitations include the absence of amyloid biomarkers. Investigators noted that participants had non-detectable levels of amyloid, likely due to the use of serum vs cerebrospinal fluid.
The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Mielke reported serving on scientific advisory boards and/or having consulted for Acadia, Biogen, Eisai, LabCorp, Lilly, Merck, PeerView Institute, Roche, Siemens Healthineers, and Sunbird Bio.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Lecanemab’s Promise and Peril: Alzheimer’s Treatment Dilemma
Clinicians interested in treating patients with symptoms of mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia should carefully analyze the potential benefits and harms of monoclonal amyloid beta therapy, including likelihood of side effects and overall burden on the patient, according to researchers at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society (AGS).
Lecanemab (Leqembi) may help some patients by lowering the level of beta-amyloid protein in the brain. Results from a phase 3 trial presented at the conference showed participants with Alzheimer’s disease had a 27% slower progression of the disease compared with placebo.
But clinicians must weigh that advantage against risks and contraindications, according to Esther Oh, MD, PhD, an associate professor in the Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology and co-director of the Johns Hopkins Memory and Alzheimer’s Treatment Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, who spoke during a plenary session. Lecanemab gained accelerated approval by the US Food and Drug Administration in January 2023 and full approval in July 2023.
The results from CLARITY, an 18-month, multicenter, double-blind trial involving 1795 participants aged 50-90 years, showed that the variation between treatment and placebo did not meet the criteria for a minimum clinically important difference for mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s disease.
Even more concerning to Dr. Oh was the rate of amyloid-related abnormalities on brain imaging, which can cause brain edema and hemorrhage (12.6% and 17.3%, respectively). Almost 85% of cases were asymptomatic.
The risk for abnormalities indicates that thrombolytics are contraindicated for patients taking the drug, according to Dr. Oh.
“Appropriate use recommendations exclude vitamin K antagonists such as warfarin, direct oral anticoagulants and heparin, although aspirin and other antiplatelet agents are allowed,” Dr. Oh said during the presentation.
Blood biomarkers, PET imaging, and levels of amyloid-beta proteins in cerebrospinal fluid are used to determine eligibility for lecanemab. However, tau biomarkers may indicate signs of cognitive impairment decades prior to symptoms. Some evidence indicates that the drug may be more effective in individuals with low tau levels that are evident in earlier stages of disease. Tau can also be determined from cerebrospinal fluid, however, “we do not factor in tau protein as a biomarker for treatment eligibility, but this may become an important biomarker in the future,” Dr. Oh said.
Lecanemab is cost-prohibitive for many patients, with an annual price tag of $26,000. Treatment also requires monthly infusions, a PET, intravenous administration, lab work, multiple MRIs, and potentially an APOE4 serum test.
Medicare covers the majority of services, but patients are responsible for deductibles and copays, an estimated $7000 annually, according to Shari Ling, MD, deputy chief medical officer with the US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, who also spoke during the session. Supplemental or other insurance such as Medicaid are also not included in this estimate.
The Medicare population is growing more complex over time, Dr. Ling said. In 2021, 54% of beneficiaries had five or more comorbidities, which can affect eligibility for lecanemab.
“Across the healthcare system, we are learning what is necessary for coordination of delivery, for evaluation of people who receive these treatments, and for the care that is not anticipated,” Dr. Ling noted.
Neither speaker reported any financial conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Clinicians interested in treating patients with symptoms of mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia should carefully analyze the potential benefits and harms of monoclonal amyloid beta therapy, including likelihood of side effects and overall burden on the patient, according to researchers at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society (AGS).
Lecanemab (Leqembi) may help some patients by lowering the level of beta-amyloid protein in the brain. Results from a phase 3 trial presented at the conference showed participants with Alzheimer’s disease had a 27% slower progression of the disease compared with placebo.
But clinicians must weigh that advantage against risks and contraindications, according to Esther Oh, MD, PhD, an associate professor in the Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology and co-director of the Johns Hopkins Memory and Alzheimer’s Treatment Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, who spoke during a plenary session. Lecanemab gained accelerated approval by the US Food and Drug Administration in January 2023 and full approval in July 2023.
The results from CLARITY, an 18-month, multicenter, double-blind trial involving 1795 participants aged 50-90 years, showed that the variation between treatment and placebo did not meet the criteria for a minimum clinically important difference for mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s disease.
Even more concerning to Dr. Oh was the rate of amyloid-related abnormalities on brain imaging, which can cause brain edema and hemorrhage (12.6% and 17.3%, respectively). Almost 85% of cases were asymptomatic.
The risk for abnormalities indicates that thrombolytics are contraindicated for patients taking the drug, according to Dr. Oh.
“Appropriate use recommendations exclude vitamin K antagonists such as warfarin, direct oral anticoagulants and heparin, although aspirin and other antiplatelet agents are allowed,” Dr. Oh said during the presentation.
Blood biomarkers, PET imaging, and levels of amyloid-beta proteins in cerebrospinal fluid are used to determine eligibility for lecanemab. However, tau biomarkers may indicate signs of cognitive impairment decades prior to symptoms. Some evidence indicates that the drug may be more effective in individuals with low tau levels that are evident in earlier stages of disease. Tau can also be determined from cerebrospinal fluid, however, “we do not factor in tau protein as a biomarker for treatment eligibility, but this may become an important biomarker in the future,” Dr. Oh said.
Lecanemab is cost-prohibitive for many patients, with an annual price tag of $26,000. Treatment also requires monthly infusions, a PET, intravenous administration, lab work, multiple MRIs, and potentially an APOE4 serum test.
Medicare covers the majority of services, but patients are responsible for deductibles and copays, an estimated $7000 annually, according to Shari Ling, MD, deputy chief medical officer with the US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, who also spoke during the session. Supplemental or other insurance such as Medicaid are also not included in this estimate.
The Medicare population is growing more complex over time, Dr. Ling said. In 2021, 54% of beneficiaries had five or more comorbidities, which can affect eligibility for lecanemab.
“Across the healthcare system, we are learning what is necessary for coordination of delivery, for evaluation of people who receive these treatments, and for the care that is not anticipated,” Dr. Ling noted.
Neither speaker reported any financial conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Clinicians interested in treating patients with symptoms of mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia should carefully analyze the potential benefits and harms of monoclonal amyloid beta therapy, including likelihood of side effects and overall burden on the patient, according to researchers at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society (AGS).
Lecanemab (Leqembi) may help some patients by lowering the level of beta-amyloid protein in the brain. Results from a phase 3 trial presented at the conference showed participants with Alzheimer’s disease had a 27% slower progression of the disease compared with placebo.
But clinicians must weigh that advantage against risks and contraindications, according to Esther Oh, MD, PhD, an associate professor in the Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology and co-director of the Johns Hopkins Memory and Alzheimer’s Treatment Center, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, who spoke during a plenary session. Lecanemab gained accelerated approval by the US Food and Drug Administration in January 2023 and full approval in July 2023.
The results from CLARITY, an 18-month, multicenter, double-blind trial involving 1795 participants aged 50-90 years, showed that the variation between treatment and placebo did not meet the criteria for a minimum clinically important difference for mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s disease.
Even more concerning to Dr. Oh was the rate of amyloid-related abnormalities on brain imaging, which can cause brain edema and hemorrhage (12.6% and 17.3%, respectively). Almost 85% of cases were asymptomatic.
The risk for abnormalities indicates that thrombolytics are contraindicated for patients taking the drug, according to Dr. Oh.
“Appropriate use recommendations exclude vitamin K antagonists such as warfarin, direct oral anticoagulants and heparin, although aspirin and other antiplatelet agents are allowed,” Dr. Oh said during the presentation.
Blood biomarkers, PET imaging, and levels of amyloid-beta proteins in cerebrospinal fluid are used to determine eligibility for lecanemab. However, tau biomarkers may indicate signs of cognitive impairment decades prior to symptoms. Some evidence indicates that the drug may be more effective in individuals with low tau levels that are evident in earlier stages of disease. Tau can also be determined from cerebrospinal fluid, however, “we do not factor in tau protein as a biomarker for treatment eligibility, but this may become an important biomarker in the future,” Dr. Oh said.
Lecanemab is cost-prohibitive for many patients, with an annual price tag of $26,000. Treatment also requires monthly infusions, a PET, intravenous administration, lab work, multiple MRIs, and potentially an APOE4 serum test.
Medicare covers the majority of services, but patients are responsible for deductibles and copays, an estimated $7000 annually, according to Shari Ling, MD, deputy chief medical officer with the US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, who also spoke during the session. Supplemental or other insurance such as Medicaid are also not included in this estimate.
The Medicare population is growing more complex over time, Dr. Ling said. In 2021, 54% of beneficiaries had five or more comorbidities, which can affect eligibility for lecanemab.
“Across the healthcare system, we are learning what is necessary for coordination of delivery, for evaluation of people who receive these treatments, and for the care that is not anticipated,” Dr. Ling noted.
Neither speaker reported any financial conflicts of interest.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM AGS 2024
CBT Tops Mindfulness Therapy for Prolonged Grief Disorder
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is superior to mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MT) for reducing symptom severity in patients with prolonged grief disorder, results from a randomized trial showed.
While patients receiving grief-focused CBT had a superior response compared with those receiving MT, participants in both groups experienced a significant reduction in symptoms 6 months after treatment.
“We emphasize that these results do not suggest that mindfulness-based therapy was not effective in treating grief-focused CBT, but rather that grief-focused CBT was relatively more effective in reducing prolonged grief disorder, depression, and grief-related cognitions than mindfulness-based cognitive therapy,” investigators, led by Richard Bryant, PhD, of the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, wrote.
The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry.
Barrier to Treatment
Prolonged grief disorder can affect up to 10% of bereaved individuals and is associated with increased suicide risk, cancer, immunological dysfunction, cardiac events, and functional impairment.
One barrier to treatment for individuals with prolonged grief disorder is that the treatment process can be emotionally painful. Between 15% and 25% of patients with prolonged grief offered grief-focused CBT decline to participate because they are reluctant to focus on painful emotions surrounding the death of their loved one.
To compare grief-focused CBT with mindfulness-based CT, another psychotherapeutic treatment, investigators recruited 100 adults aged 18-70 years between 2012 and 2022.
Participants who met the criteria for prolonged grief disorder were randomized on a 1:1 basis to receive either grief-focused CBT (n = 50) or CT (n = 50). All assessors were blinded to the treatment condition.
Therapy in both groups included 11 weekly 90-minute individual sessions.
Participants were assessed posttreatment at the 6-month mark for prolonged grief disorder symptom severity with the Prolonged Grief (PG)-13 Scale. They were also assessed for symptoms of depression, anxiety, and self-reported quality of life.
Grief-focused CBT entailed education on prolonged grief disorder, monitoring of daily thoughts, revisiting the death memory for several sessions, reframing maladaptive grief-related thoughts, writing a letter to the deceased loved one, relapse prevention strategies, and goal setting.
Mindfulness-based CT was adapted to problematic grief and began with psychoeducation about prolonged grief disorder. The additional sessions entailed mindfulness-orienting exercises, meditation, body scans, and how mindfulness practices can be used to tolerate aversive emotions and thoughts or to manage grief reactions.
Participants were assessed at the end of their treatment and had a mean age of 47 years, and 87% were female. The majority (71%) were White, and 21% were African, Indigenous Australian, and Pacific Islander.
While participants in both groups had similar outcomes posttreatment, at the 6-month follow-up, grief-focused CBT led to more significant reductions in scores on the PG-13 scale compared with mindfulness-based CT (mean difference, 7.1 points; 95% CI, 1.6-12.5; P = .01) with a large between-group effect size (0.8; 95% CI, 0.2-1.3).
PG-13 scores range from 11 to 55, with higher scores indicating greater prolonged grief disorder severity.
Of note, both treatment groups had a significant reduction in prolonged grief disorder symptoms (mean difference, 11.3; 95% CI, 8.6-14.1; P < .001), with a large effect size (1.2; 95% CI, 0.9-1.5).
Grief-focused CBT also led to greater reductions in depression at 6 months as measured by the Beck Depression Inventory (mean difference, 6.6; 95% CI, 0.5-12.9; P = .04). Investigators noted that this finding was unexpected and “suggests that the greater reduction of depression in participants receiving grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy may be attributed to the superior reductions in prolonged grief disorder severity, thereby leading to downstream decreases in depression.”
The investigators noted several study limitations. Most participants were White, which limits the generalizability of the results to other races and ethnicities. Therapists were not blinded to treatment conditions, and investigators did not monitor participants’ therapeutic exercises that were to be practiced posttreatment until the 6-month mark.
The study was funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr. Bryant served on the ICD Eleventh Revision Working Group on the Classification of Stress-Related Disorders. No other disclosures were reported.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is superior to mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MT) for reducing symptom severity in patients with prolonged grief disorder, results from a randomized trial showed.
While patients receiving grief-focused CBT had a superior response compared with those receiving MT, participants in both groups experienced a significant reduction in symptoms 6 months after treatment.
“We emphasize that these results do not suggest that mindfulness-based therapy was not effective in treating grief-focused CBT, but rather that grief-focused CBT was relatively more effective in reducing prolonged grief disorder, depression, and grief-related cognitions than mindfulness-based cognitive therapy,” investigators, led by Richard Bryant, PhD, of the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, wrote.
The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry.
Barrier to Treatment
Prolonged grief disorder can affect up to 10% of bereaved individuals and is associated with increased suicide risk, cancer, immunological dysfunction, cardiac events, and functional impairment.
One barrier to treatment for individuals with prolonged grief disorder is that the treatment process can be emotionally painful. Between 15% and 25% of patients with prolonged grief offered grief-focused CBT decline to participate because they are reluctant to focus on painful emotions surrounding the death of their loved one.
To compare grief-focused CBT with mindfulness-based CT, another psychotherapeutic treatment, investigators recruited 100 adults aged 18-70 years between 2012 and 2022.
Participants who met the criteria for prolonged grief disorder were randomized on a 1:1 basis to receive either grief-focused CBT (n = 50) or CT (n = 50). All assessors were blinded to the treatment condition.
Therapy in both groups included 11 weekly 90-minute individual sessions.
Participants were assessed posttreatment at the 6-month mark for prolonged grief disorder symptom severity with the Prolonged Grief (PG)-13 Scale. They were also assessed for symptoms of depression, anxiety, and self-reported quality of life.
Grief-focused CBT entailed education on prolonged grief disorder, monitoring of daily thoughts, revisiting the death memory for several sessions, reframing maladaptive grief-related thoughts, writing a letter to the deceased loved one, relapse prevention strategies, and goal setting.
Mindfulness-based CT was adapted to problematic grief and began with psychoeducation about prolonged grief disorder. The additional sessions entailed mindfulness-orienting exercises, meditation, body scans, and how mindfulness practices can be used to tolerate aversive emotions and thoughts or to manage grief reactions.
Participants were assessed at the end of their treatment and had a mean age of 47 years, and 87% were female. The majority (71%) were White, and 21% were African, Indigenous Australian, and Pacific Islander.
While participants in both groups had similar outcomes posttreatment, at the 6-month follow-up, grief-focused CBT led to more significant reductions in scores on the PG-13 scale compared with mindfulness-based CT (mean difference, 7.1 points; 95% CI, 1.6-12.5; P = .01) with a large between-group effect size (0.8; 95% CI, 0.2-1.3).
PG-13 scores range from 11 to 55, with higher scores indicating greater prolonged grief disorder severity.
Of note, both treatment groups had a significant reduction in prolonged grief disorder symptoms (mean difference, 11.3; 95% CI, 8.6-14.1; P < .001), with a large effect size (1.2; 95% CI, 0.9-1.5).
Grief-focused CBT also led to greater reductions in depression at 6 months as measured by the Beck Depression Inventory (mean difference, 6.6; 95% CI, 0.5-12.9; P = .04). Investigators noted that this finding was unexpected and “suggests that the greater reduction of depression in participants receiving grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy may be attributed to the superior reductions in prolonged grief disorder severity, thereby leading to downstream decreases in depression.”
The investigators noted several study limitations. Most participants were White, which limits the generalizability of the results to other races and ethnicities. Therapists were not blinded to treatment conditions, and investigators did not monitor participants’ therapeutic exercises that were to be practiced posttreatment until the 6-month mark.
The study was funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr. Bryant served on the ICD Eleventh Revision Working Group on the Classification of Stress-Related Disorders. No other disclosures were reported.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is superior to mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MT) for reducing symptom severity in patients with prolonged grief disorder, results from a randomized trial showed.
While patients receiving grief-focused CBT had a superior response compared with those receiving MT, participants in both groups experienced a significant reduction in symptoms 6 months after treatment.
“We emphasize that these results do not suggest that mindfulness-based therapy was not effective in treating grief-focused CBT, but rather that grief-focused CBT was relatively more effective in reducing prolonged grief disorder, depression, and grief-related cognitions than mindfulness-based cognitive therapy,” investigators, led by Richard Bryant, PhD, of the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, wrote.
The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry.
Barrier to Treatment
Prolonged grief disorder can affect up to 10% of bereaved individuals and is associated with increased suicide risk, cancer, immunological dysfunction, cardiac events, and functional impairment.
One barrier to treatment for individuals with prolonged grief disorder is that the treatment process can be emotionally painful. Between 15% and 25% of patients with prolonged grief offered grief-focused CBT decline to participate because they are reluctant to focus on painful emotions surrounding the death of their loved one.
To compare grief-focused CBT with mindfulness-based CT, another psychotherapeutic treatment, investigators recruited 100 adults aged 18-70 years between 2012 and 2022.
Participants who met the criteria for prolonged grief disorder were randomized on a 1:1 basis to receive either grief-focused CBT (n = 50) or CT (n = 50). All assessors were blinded to the treatment condition.
Therapy in both groups included 11 weekly 90-minute individual sessions.
Participants were assessed posttreatment at the 6-month mark for prolonged grief disorder symptom severity with the Prolonged Grief (PG)-13 Scale. They were also assessed for symptoms of depression, anxiety, and self-reported quality of life.
Grief-focused CBT entailed education on prolonged grief disorder, monitoring of daily thoughts, revisiting the death memory for several sessions, reframing maladaptive grief-related thoughts, writing a letter to the deceased loved one, relapse prevention strategies, and goal setting.
Mindfulness-based CT was adapted to problematic grief and began with psychoeducation about prolonged grief disorder. The additional sessions entailed mindfulness-orienting exercises, meditation, body scans, and how mindfulness practices can be used to tolerate aversive emotions and thoughts or to manage grief reactions.
Participants were assessed at the end of their treatment and had a mean age of 47 years, and 87% were female. The majority (71%) were White, and 21% were African, Indigenous Australian, and Pacific Islander.
While participants in both groups had similar outcomes posttreatment, at the 6-month follow-up, grief-focused CBT led to more significant reductions in scores on the PG-13 scale compared with mindfulness-based CT (mean difference, 7.1 points; 95% CI, 1.6-12.5; P = .01) with a large between-group effect size (0.8; 95% CI, 0.2-1.3).
PG-13 scores range from 11 to 55, with higher scores indicating greater prolonged grief disorder severity.
Of note, both treatment groups had a significant reduction in prolonged grief disorder symptoms (mean difference, 11.3; 95% CI, 8.6-14.1; P < .001), with a large effect size (1.2; 95% CI, 0.9-1.5).
Grief-focused CBT also led to greater reductions in depression at 6 months as measured by the Beck Depression Inventory (mean difference, 6.6; 95% CI, 0.5-12.9; P = .04). Investigators noted that this finding was unexpected and “suggests that the greater reduction of depression in participants receiving grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy may be attributed to the superior reductions in prolonged grief disorder severity, thereby leading to downstream decreases in depression.”
The investigators noted several study limitations. Most participants were White, which limits the generalizability of the results to other races and ethnicities. Therapists were not blinded to treatment conditions, and investigators did not monitor participants’ therapeutic exercises that were to be practiced posttreatment until the 6-month mark.
The study was funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr. Bryant served on the ICD Eleventh Revision Working Group on the Classification of Stress-Related Disorders. No other disclosures were reported.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .
FDA OKs First Multitarget Stool RNA Test for CRC Screening
ColoSense, which had breakthrough device designation by the FDA, detects colorectal neoplasia–associated RNA markers and the presence of occult hemoglobin in human stool.
A positive ColoSense test result may indicate the presence of CRC, advanced adenomas, or serrated precancerous lesions and should be followed by a colonoscopy, the company said in a news release.
The FDA approval was based on results of the CRC-PREVENT trial, which evaluated the ColoSense mt-sRNA test in a diverse group of adults undergoing colonoscopy.
The mt-sRNA test results were compared with the colonoscopy results.
Among all average-risk individuals, the sensitivity of the mt-sRNA test was 93% for CRC, 100% for early (stage I) CRC, and 45% for advanced adenomas. In a subgroup of those aged 45-49 years, the sensitivity was 100% for CRC and 44% for advanced adenomas.
The trial results were presented last year at the American College of Gastroenterology annual meeting and simultaneously published in JAMA .
CRC is the second deadliest cancer in the United States, and adherence rates to recommended colonoscopies as a screening modality have remained consistently low at roughly 60%.
Cases of CRC are also rising among people younger than age 50 years, leading the United States Preventive Services Task Force to recommend initiation of CRC screening at age 45 years.
“The growing number of adults diagnosed with colorectal cancer underscores the urgent need for innovative approaches in screening. It’s essential to eliminate obstacles and broaden the availability of screening methods for healthcare providers and patients,” Anjee Davis, president of Fight CRC, said in the news release.
“We hope that introducing new FDA-approved diagnostic tools, including stool-based tests like ColoSense, will help to advance access and increase screening rates, ultimately reducing the impact of late-stage colorectal cancer diagnoses,” Ms. Davis said.
The company plans to make ColoSense available in the United States later this year or early in 2025.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
ColoSense, which had breakthrough device designation by the FDA, detects colorectal neoplasia–associated RNA markers and the presence of occult hemoglobin in human stool.
A positive ColoSense test result may indicate the presence of CRC, advanced adenomas, or serrated precancerous lesions and should be followed by a colonoscopy, the company said in a news release.
The FDA approval was based on results of the CRC-PREVENT trial, which evaluated the ColoSense mt-sRNA test in a diverse group of adults undergoing colonoscopy.
The mt-sRNA test results were compared with the colonoscopy results.
Among all average-risk individuals, the sensitivity of the mt-sRNA test was 93% for CRC, 100% for early (stage I) CRC, and 45% for advanced adenomas. In a subgroup of those aged 45-49 years, the sensitivity was 100% for CRC and 44% for advanced adenomas.
The trial results were presented last year at the American College of Gastroenterology annual meeting and simultaneously published in JAMA .
CRC is the second deadliest cancer in the United States, and adherence rates to recommended colonoscopies as a screening modality have remained consistently low at roughly 60%.
Cases of CRC are also rising among people younger than age 50 years, leading the United States Preventive Services Task Force to recommend initiation of CRC screening at age 45 years.
“The growing number of adults diagnosed with colorectal cancer underscores the urgent need for innovative approaches in screening. It’s essential to eliminate obstacles and broaden the availability of screening methods for healthcare providers and patients,” Anjee Davis, president of Fight CRC, said in the news release.
“We hope that introducing new FDA-approved diagnostic tools, including stool-based tests like ColoSense, will help to advance access and increase screening rates, ultimately reducing the impact of late-stage colorectal cancer diagnoses,” Ms. Davis said.
The company plans to make ColoSense available in the United States later this year or early in 2025.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
ColoSense, which had breakthrough device designation by the FDA, detects colorectal neoplasia–associated RNA markers and the presence of occult hemoglobin in human stool.
A positive ColoSense test result may indicate the presence of CRC, advanced adenomas, or serrated precancerous lesions and should be followed by a colonoscopy, the company said in a news release.
The FDA approval was based on results of the CRC-PREVENT trial, which evaluated the ColoSense mt-sRNA test in a diverse group of adults undergoing colonoscopy.
The mt-sRNA test results were compared with the colonoscopy results.
Among all average-risk individuals, the sensitivity of the mt-sRNA test was 93% for CRC, 100% for early (stage I) CRC, and 45% for advanced adenomas. In a subgroup of those aged 45-49 years, the sensitivity was 100% for CRC and 44% for advanced adenomas.
The trial results were presented last year at the American College of Gastroenterology annual meeting and simultaneously published in JAMA .
CRC is the second deadliest cancer in the United States, and adherence rates to recommended colonoscopies as a screening modality have remained consistently low at roughly 60%.
Cases of CRC are also rising among people younger than age 50 years, leading the United States Preventive Services Task Force to recommend initiation of CRC screening at age 45 years.
“The growing number of adults diagnosed with colorectal cancer underscores the urgent need for innovative approaches in screening. It’s essential to eliminate obstacles and broaden the availability of screening methods for healthcare providers and patients,” Anjee Davis, president of Fight CRC, said in the news release.
“We hope that introducing new FDA-approved diagnostic tools, including stool-based tests like ColoSense, will help to advance access and increase screening rates, ultimately reducing the impact of late-stage colorectal cancer diagnoses,” Ms. Davis said.
The company plans to make ColoSense available in the United States later this year or early in 2025.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Nocturnal Hot Flashes and Alzheimer’s Risk
In a recent article in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Rebecca C. Thurston, PhD, and Pauline Maki, PhD, leading scientists in the area of menopause’s impact on brain function, presented data from their assessment of 248 late perimenopausal and postmenopausal women who reported hot flashes, also known as vasomotor symptoms (VMS).
Hot flashes are known to be associated with changes in brain white matter, carotid atherosclerosis, brain function, and memory. Dr. Thurston and colleagues objectively measured VMS over 24 hours, using skin conductance monitoring. Plasma concentrations of Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers, including the amyloid beta 42–to–amyloid beta 40 ratio, were assessed. The mean age of study participants was 59 years, and they experienced a mean of five objective VMS daily.
A key finding was that VMS, particularly those occurring during sleep, were associated with a significantly lower amyloid beta 42–to–beta 40 ratio. This finding suggests that nighttime VMS may be a marker of risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
Previous research has found that menopausal hormone therapy is associated with favorable changes in Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers. Likewise, large observational studies have shown a lower incidence of Alzheimer’s disease among women who initiate hormone therapy in their late perimenopausal or early postmenopausal years and continue such therapy long term.
The findings of this important study by Thurston and colleagues provide further evidence to support the tantalizing possibility that agents that reduce nighttime hot flashes (including hormone therapy) may lower the subsequent incidence of Alzheimer’s disease in high-risk women.
Dr. Kaunitz is a tenured professor and associate chair in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Florida College of Medicine–Jacksonville, and medical director and director of menopause and gynecologic ultrasound services at the University of Florida Southside Women’s Health, Jacksonville. He disclosed ties to Sumitomo Pharma America, Mithra, Viatris, Bayer, Merck, Mylan (Viatris), and UpToDate.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
In a recent article in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Rebecca C. Thurston, PhD, and Pauline Maki, PhD, leading scientists in the area of menopause’s impact on brain function, presented data from their assessment of 248 late perimenopausal and postmenopausal women who reported hot flashes, also known as vasomotor symptoms (VMS).
Hot flashes are known to be associated with changes in brain white matter, carotid atherosclerosis, brain function, and memory. Dr. Thurston and colleagues objectively measured VMS over 24 hours, using skin conductance monitoring. Plasma concentrations of Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers, including the amyloid beta 42–to–amyloid beta 40 ratio, were assessed. The mean age of study participants was 59 years, and they experienced a mean of five objective VMS daily.
A key finding was that VMS, particularly those occurring during sleep, were associated with a significantly lower amyloid beta 42–to–beta 40 ratio. This finding suggests that nighttime VMS may be a marker of risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
Previous research has found that menopausal hormone therapy is associated with favorable changes in Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers. Likewise, large observational studies have shown a lower incidence of Alzheimer’s disease among women who initiate hormone therapy in their late perimenopausal or early postmenopausal years and continue such therapy long term.
The findings of this important study by Thurston and colleagues provide further evidence to support the tantalizing possibility that agents that reduce nighttime hot flashes (including hormone therapy) may lower the subsequent incidence of Alzheimer’s disease in high-risk women.
Dr. Kaunitz is a tenured professor and associate chair in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Florida College of Medicine–Jacksonville, and medical director and director of menopause and gynecologic ultrasound services at the University of Florida Southside Women’s Health, Jacksonville. He disclosed ties to Sumitomo Pharma America, Mithra, Viatris, Bayer, Merck, Mylan (Viatris), and UpToDate.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
In a recent article in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Rebecca C. Thurston, PhD, and Pauline Maki, PhD, leading scientists in the area of menopause’s impact on brain function, presented data from their assessment of 248 late perimenopausal and postmenopausal women who reported hot flashes, also known as vasomotor symptoms (VMS).
Hot flashes are known to be associated with changes in brain white matter, carotid atherosclerosis, brain function, and memory. Dr. Thurston and colleagues objectively measured VMS over 24 hours, using skin conductance monitoring. Plasma concentrations of Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers, including the amyloid beta 42–to–amyloid beta 40 ratio, were assessed. The mean age of study participants was 59 years, and they experienced a mean of five objective VMS daily.
A key finding was that VMS, particularly those occurring during sleep, were associated with a significantly lower amyloid beta 42–to–beta 40 ratio. This finding suggests that nighttime VMS may be a marker of risk for Alzheimer’s disease.
Previous research has found that menopausal hormone therapy is associated with favorable changes in Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers. Likewise, large observational studies have shown a lower incidence of Alzheimer’s disease among women who initiate hormone therapy in their late perimenopausal or early postmenopausal years and continue such therapy long term.
The findings of this important study by Thurston and colleagues provide further evidence to support the tantalizing possibility that agents that reduce nighttime hot flashes (including hormone therapy) may lower the subsequent incidence of Alzheimer’s disease in high-risk women.
Dr. Kaunitz is a tenured professor and associate chair in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Florida College of Medicine–Jacksonville, and medical director and director of menopause and gynecologic ultrasound services at the University of Florida Southside Women’s Health, Jacksonville. He disclosed ties to Sumitomo Pharma America, Mithra, Viatris, Bayer, Merck, Mylan (Viatris), and UpToDate.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Pediatricians Face Competing Goals in Well Visits for LGBTQ+ Adolescents
TORONTO — , and there are different preferences for those with a gender identity different from their birth assignment or non-heterosexuals relative to those in neither of these categories.
In a study that surveyed more than 60,000 adolescents, one of the messages was that there is a “balancing act” that involves affirming the child’s self-identity while recognizing the substantial vulnerability at this step in development, reported Scott Jelinek, MD, a third-year pediatrics resident in the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania.
Based on his work, there are two aims.
“The first is to determine the comfort level of the adolescent in discussing sensitive health information,” said Dr. Jelinek, referring to the discussion of SOGI irrespective of how the adolescent responds. “To understand this is crucial because this first encounter with healthcare can be formative.”
Yet, for those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, queer, or with another sexual or gender orientation (LBGTQ+), the encounter can be more delicate, according to Dr. Jelinek. One reason is that there is greater uncertainty about acceptance of these identities from peers, parents, and others, Dr. Jelinek said.
This was reinforced by results of a cross-sectional study of 62,695 adolescents in 31 pediatric clinics in the Philadelphia area. Of these, 10,381 (16.6%) identified as LGBTQ+. The adolescents aged in range from 13 to 21 years with a mean age of 15.3.
These data were presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting. Dr. Jelinek received this year’s Society of Pediatric Research Richard D. Rowe Award for clinical research by a fellow.
Revealing Sensitive Information
With the intention of comparing responses from LBGTQ+ youth to those of cisgender heterosexuals, the first of two primary questions elicited information about comfort level discussing SOGI in the presence of parents or caregivers during a primary care visit. The second asked for a preference regarding electronic or oral capture of the information. “Almost half [49.4%] of the LGBTQ+ adolescents expressed discomfort discussing this information with the caregiver present,” reported Dr. Jelinek. This proportion, which was close to double the 25.5% rate among the cisgender heterosexual respondents, reached significance (P < .01). After adjustment for covariates, there was a 60% greater odds ratio (OR) among LBGTQ+ adolescents for expressing reluctance to share this information in front of a caregiver (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.37; 95% CI: 0.35-0.39).
The greater preference among LBGTQ+ adolescents for electronic capture of SOGI-relevant information also reached statistical significance. Even though the proportional difference was modest (74.2% vs 72.7%; P < .01), it corresponded to about a 10% greater preference for electronic data collection after adjustment (aOR 1.08; 95% CI: 1.03-1.14), Dr. Jelinek reported.
These results were generally consistent across clinics, which were located in urban, suburban, and rural areas. Responses among Black adolescents, which represented 29.7% of the study population, were similar to those provided by White adolescents, which represented 46.1%, and Hispanics, which represented about 10% of the sample.
The results are not entirely surprising in the context of the potential for LBGTQ+ stigma, but Dr. Jelinek emphasized the need for being aware that this discussion is delicate and might have ramifications after the visit for children trying to accept and affirm their self-identification.
“Let us remember that the healthcare system has the potential to be a powerful ally in the lives of LBGTQ+ youth and to meet their unique needs,” he said.
The interaction is also delicate because parents might not yet be aware of their child’s sexual orientation. Indeed, Dr. Jelinek said that completion of the Attitudes Toward Homosexuality Questionnaire (AHQ) might be the first time that these individuals have revealed this aspect of their identity to anyone.
For confirming a non-heterosexual orientation, “pediatricians are on the front line and often the first point of contact for adolescents seeking health support and affirmation,” he said.
For this reason, it is also essential to maintain confidentiality to the degree that the patient specifies. Dr. Jelinek recognizes tension when balancing visibility and affirmation against the need for privacy, but he said both are important. Even if pediatricians should provide a positive experience for adolescents revealing their sexual orientation, there might be personal, family, and social adjustments to navigate over time.
As a result, Dr. Jelinek warned that there are issues for protecting information that an adolescent is not ready to reveal.
In this regard. “there is an urgent need for innovative solutions to balance visibility with privacy in primary care,” he said, reporting that electronic medical records (EMR) do not necessarily guarantee confidentiality, particularly from family members.
When adolescents arrive at the office to complete an AHQ, front desk staff at Dr. Jelinek’s center are instructed to hand the tablet to the child, not the caregiver. However, he recognizes that this does not prevent the caregiver from reviewing the answers or in some cases taking the tablet to complete the answers.
“If I enter the exam room and see the tablet in a parent’s lap, I am going to want to have a conversation with the patient to verify the answers,” he said.
Protecting Patients
The data from this study provoke important questions about how to achieve the goals that Dr. Jelinek described, according to Ashley M. Lekach, MSN, RN, a family nurse practitioner working in pediatric endocrinology at NewYork-Presbyterian’s Methodist Hospital in Brooklyn, New York. Ms. Lekach was not involved with the study.
“My concern is that once we are given this sensitive information, how do we make sure we are going to protect the patient from unwanted disclosure?” Ms. Lekach said. She agreed that there is a risk that EMRs can be accessed by individuals to which the patient would not want SOGI information revealed.
“It is a vote of confidence for the patient to reveal this information to me, and it is clearly our job to make sure the patient feels safe,” she said.
She also expressed concern that adolescents who reveal this information might need resources to cope with issues raised by non-heterosexual identification. She agreed that discussing sexual orientation and gender identity in the clinical setting is often a major step for adolescents, particularly young adolescents, but she believes follow-up and next steps are in the interest of the patient.
Although the need for affirmation and confidentiality are not new ideas, Ms. Lekach said that the talk provided some useful context for thinking about these issues.
Dr. Jelinek and Ms. Lekach report no potential conflicts of interest.
TORONTO — , and there are different preferences for those with a gender identity different from their birth assignment or non-heterosexuals relative to those in neither of these categories.
In a study that surveyed more than 60,000 adolescents, one of the messages was that there is a “balancing act” that involves affirming the child’s self-identity while recognizing the substantial vulnerability at this step in development, reported Scott Jelinek, MD, a third-year pediatrics resident in the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania.
Based on his work, there are two aims.
“The first is to determine the comfort level of the adolescent in discussing sensitive health information,” said Dr. Jelinek, referring to the discussion of SOGI irrespective of how the adolescent responds. “To understand this is crucial because this first encounter with healthcare can be formative.”
Yet, for those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, queer, or with another sexual or gender orientation (LBGTQ+), the encounter can be more delicate, according to Dr. Jelinek. One reason is that there is greater uncertainty about acceptance of these identities from peers, parents, and others, Dr. Jelinek said.
This was reinforced by results of a cross-sectional study of 62,695 adolescents in 31 pediatric clinics in the Philadelphia area. Of these, 10,381 (16.6%) identified as LGBTQ+. The adolescents aged in range from 13 to 21 years with a mean age of 15.3.
These data were presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting. Dr. Jelinek received this year’s Society of Pediatric Research Richard D. Rowe Award for clinical research by a fellow.
Revealing Sensitive Information
With the intention of comparing responses from LBGTQ+ youth to those of cisgender heterosexuals, the first of two primary questions elicited information about comfort level discussing SOGI in the presence of parents or caregivers during a primary care visit. The second asked for a preference regarding electronic or oral capture of the information. “Almost half [49.4%] of the LGBTQ+ adolescents expressed discomfort discussing this information with the caregiver present,” reported Dr. Jelinek. This proportion, which was close to double the 25.5% rate among the cisgender heterosexual respondents, reached significance (P < .01). After adjustment for covariates, there was a 60% greater odds ratio (OR) among LBGTQ+ adolescents for expressing reluctance to share this information in front of a caregiver (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.37; 95% CI: 0.35-0.39).
The greater preference among LBGTQ+ adolescents for electronic capture of SOGI-relevant information also reached statistical significance. Even though the proportional difference was modest (74.2% vs 72.7%; P < .01), it corresponded to about a 10% greater preference for electronic data collection after adjustment (aOR 1.08; 95% CI: 1.03-1.14), Dr. Jelinek reported.
These results were generally consistent across clinics, which were located in urban, suburban, and rural areas. Responses among Black adolescents, which represented 29.7% of the study population, were similar to those provided by White adolescents, which represented 46.1%, and Hispanics, which represented about 10% of the sample.
The results are not entirely surprising in the context of the potential for LBGTQ+ stigma, but Dr. Jelinek emphasized the need for being aware that this discussion is delicate and might have ramifications after the visit for children trying to accept and affirm their self-identification.
“Let us remember that the healthcare system has the potential to be a powerful ally in the lives of LBGTQ+ youth and to meet their unique needs,” he said.
The interaction is also delicate because parents might not yet be aware of their child’s sexual orientation. Indeed, Dr. Jelinek said that completion of the Attitudes Toward Homosexuality Questionnaire (AHQ) might be the first time that these individuals have revealed this aspect of their identity to anyone.
For confirming a non-heterosexual orientation, “pediatricians are on the front line and often the first point of contact for adolescents seeking health support and affirmation,” he said.
For this reason, it is also essential to maintain confidentiality to the degree that the patient specifies. Dr. Jelinek recognizes tension when balancing visibility and affirmation against the need for privacy, but he said both are important. Even if pediatricians should provide a positive experience for adolescents revealing their sexual orientation, there might be personal, family, and social adjustments to navigate over time.
As a result, Dr. Jelinek warned that there are issues for protecting information that an adolescent is not ready to reveal.
In this regard. “there is an urgent need for innovative solutions to balance visibility with privacy in primary care,” he said, reporting that electronic medical records (EMR) do not necessarily guarantee confidentiality, particularly from family members.
When adolescents arrive at the office to complete an AHQ, front desk staff at Dr. Jelinek’s center are instructed to hand the tablet to the child, not the caregiver. However, he recognizes that this does not prevent the caregiver from reviewing the answers or in some cases taking the tablet to complete the answers.
“If I enter the exam room and see the tablet in a parent’s lap, I am going to want to have a conversation with the patient to verify the answers,” he said.
Protecting Patients
The data from this study provoke important questions about how to achieve the goals that Dr. Jelinek described, according to Ashley M. Lekach, MSN, RN, a family nurse practitioner working in pediatric endocrinology at NewYork-Presbyterian’s Methodist Hospital in Brooklyn, New York. Ms. Lekach was not involved with the study.
“My concern is that once we are given this sensitive information, how do we make sure we are going to protect the patient from unwanted disclosure?” Ms. Lekach said. She agreed that there is a risk that EMRs can be accessed by individuals to which the patient would not want SOGI information revealed.
“It is a vote of confidence for the patient to reveal this information to me, and it is clearly our job to make sure the patient feels safe,” she said.
She also expressed concern that adolescents who reveal this information might need resources to cope with issues raised by non-heterosexual identification. She agreed that discussing sexual orientation and gender identity in the clinical setting is often a major step for adolescents, particularly young adolescents, but she believes follow-up and next steps are in the interest of the patient.
Although the need for affirmation and confidentiality are not new ideas, Ms. Lekach said that the talk provided some useful context for thinking about these issues.
Dr. Jelinek and Ms. Lekach report no potential conflicts of interest.
TORONTO — , and there are different preferences for those with a gender identity different from their birth assignment or non-heterosexuals relative to those in neither of these categories.
In a study that surveyed more than 60,000 adolescents, one of the messages was that there is a “balancing act” that involves affirming the child’s self-identity while recognizing the substantial vulnerability at this step in development, reported Scott Jelinek, MD, a third-year pediatrics resident in the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania.
Based on his work, there are two aims.
“The first is to determine the comfort level of the adolescent in discussing sensitive health information,” said Dr. Jelinek, referring to the discussion of SOGI irrespective of how the adolescent responds. “To understand this is crucial because this first encounter with healthcare can be formative.”
Yet, for those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, queer, or with another sexual or gender orientation (LBGTQ+), the encounter can be more delicate, according to Dr. Jelinek. One reason is that there is greater uncertainty about acceptance of these identities from peers, parents, and others, Dr. Jelinek said.
This was reinforced by results of a cross-sectional study of 62,695 adolescents in 31 pediatric clinics in the Philadelphia area. Of these, 10,381 (16.6%) identified as LGBTQ+. The adolescents aged in range from 13 to 21 years with a mean age of 15.3.
These data were presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting. Dr. Jelinek received this year’s Society of Pediatric Research Richard D. Rowe Award for clinical research by a fellow.
Revealing Sensitive Information
With the intention of comparing responses from LBGTQ+ youth to those of cisgender heterosexuals, the first of two primary questions elicited information about comfort level discussing SOGI in the presence of parents or caregivers during a primary care visit. The second asked for a preference regarding electronic or oral capture of the information. “Almost half [49.4%] of the LGBTQ+ adolescents expressed discomfort discussing this information with the caregiver present,” reported Dr. Jelinek. This proportion, which was close to double the 25.5% rate among the cisgender heterosexual respondents, reached significance (P < .01). After adjustment for covariates, there was a 60% greater odds ratio (OR) among LBGTQ+ adolescents for expressing reluctance to share this information in front of a caregiver (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.37; 95% CI: 0.35-0.39).
The greater preference among LBGTQ+ adolescents for electronic capture of SOGI-relevant information also reached statistical significance. Even though the proportional difference was modest (74.2% vs 72.7%; P < .01), it corresponded to about a 10% greater preference for electronic data collection after adjustment (aOR 1.08; 95% CI: 1.03-1.14), Dr. Jelinek reported.
These results were generally consistent across clinics, which were located in urban, suburban, and rural areas. Responses among Black adolescents, which represented 29.7% of the study population, were similar to those provided by White adolescents, which represented 46.1%, and Hispanics, which represented about 10% of the sample.
The results are not entirely surprising in the context of the potential for LBGTQ+ stigma, but Dr. Jelinek emphasized the need for being aware that this discussion is delicate and might have ramifications after the visit for children trying to accept and affirm their self-identification.
“Let us remember that the healthcare system has the potential to be a powerful ally in the lives of LBGTQ+ youth and to meet their unique needs,” he said.
The interaction is also delicate because parents might not yet be aware of their child’s sexual orientation. Indeed, Dr. Jelinek said that completion of the Attitudes Toward Homosexuality Questionnaire (AHQ) might be the first time that these individuals have revealed this aspect of their identity to anyone.
For confirming a non-heterosexual orientation, “pediatricians are on the front line and often the first point of contact for adolescents seeking health support and affirmation,” he said.
For this reason, it is also essential to maintain confidentiality to the degree that the patient specifies. Dr. Jelinek recognizes tension when balancing visibility and affirmation against the need for privacy, but he said both are important. Even if pediatricians should provide a positive experience for adolescents revealing their sexual orientation, there might be personal, family, and social adjustments to navigate over time.
As a result, Dr. Jelinek warned that there are issues for protecting information that an adolescent is not ready to reveal.
In this regard. “there is an urgent need for innovative solutions to balance visibility with privacy in primary care,” he said, reporting that electronic medical records (EMR) do not necessarily guarantee confidentiality, particularly from family members.
When adolescents arrive at the office to complete an AHQ, front desk staff at Dr. Jelinek’s center are instructed to hand the tablet to the child, not the caregiver. However, he recognizes that this does not prevent the caregiver from reviewing the answers or in some cases taking the tablet to complete the answers.
“If I enter the exam room and see the tablet in a parent’s lap, I am going to want to have a conversation with the patient to verify the answers,” he said.
Protecting Patients
The data from this study provoke important questions about how to achieve the goals that Dr. Jelinek described, according to Ashley M. Lekach, MSN, RN, a family nurse practitioner working in pediatric endocrinology at NewYork-Presbyterian’s Methodist Hospital in Brooklyn, New York. Ms. Lekach was not involved with the study.
“My concern is that once we are given this sensitive information, how do we make sure we are going to protect the patient from unwanted disclosure?” Ms. Lekach said. She agreed that there is a risk that EMRs can be accessed by individuals to which the patient would not want SOGI information revealed.
“It is a vote of confidence for the patient to reveal this information to me, and it is clearly our job to make sure the patient feels safe,” she said.
She also expressed concern that adolescents who reveal this information might need resources to cope with issues raised by non-heterosexual identification. She agreed that discussing sexual orientation and gender identity in the clinical setting is often a major step for adolescents, particularly young adolescents, but she believes follow-up and next steps are in the interest of the patient.
Although the need for affirmation and confidentiality are not new ideas, Ms. Lekach said that the talk provided some useful context for thinking about these issues.
Dr. Jelinek and Ms. Lekach report no potential conflicts of interest.
FROM PAS 2024
Why Incorporating Obstetric History Matters for CVD Risk Management in Autoimmune Diseases
NEW YORK — Systemic autoimmune disease is well-recognized as a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), but less recognized as a cardiovascular risk factor is a history of pregnancy complications, including preeclampsia, and cardiologists and rheumatologists need to include an obstetric history when managing patients with autoimmune diseases, a specialist in reproductive health in rheumatology told attendees at the 4th Annual Cardiometabolic Risk in Inflammatory Conditions conference.
“Autoimmune diseases, lupus in particular, increase the risk for both cardiovascular disease and maternal placental syndromes,” Lisa R. Sammaritano, MD, a professor at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and a specialist in reproductive health issues in rheumatology patients, told attendees. “For those patients who have complications during pregnancy, it further increases their already increased risk for later cardiovascular disease.”
CVD Risk Double Whammy
A history of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and problematic pregnancy can be a double whammy for CVD risk. Dr. Sammaritano cited a 2022 meta-analysis that showed patients with SLE had a 2.5 times greater risk for stroke and almost three times greater risk for myocardial infarction than people without SLE.
Maternal placental syndromes include pregnancy loss, restricted fetal growth, preeclampsia, premature membrane rupture, placental abruption, and intrauterine fetal demise, Dr. Sammaritano said. Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, formerly called adverse pregnancy outcomes, she noted, include gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia.
Pregnancy complications can have an adverse effect on the mother’s postpartum cardiovascular health, Dr. Sammaritano noted, a fact borne out by the cardiovascular health after maternal placental syndromes population-based retrospective cohort study and a 2007 meta-analysis that found a history of preeclampsia doubles the risk for venous thromboembolism, stroke, and ischemic heart disease up to 15 years after pregnancy.
“It is always important to obtain a reproductive health history from patients with autoimmune diseases,” Dr. Sammaritano told this news organization in an interview. “This is an integral part of any medical history. In the usual setting, this includes not only pregnancy history but also use of contraception in reproductive-aged women. Unplanned pregnancy can lead to adverse outcomes in the setting of active or severe autoimmune disease or when teratogenic medications are used.”
Pregnancy history can be a factor in a woman’s cardiovascular health more than 15 years postpartum, even if a woman is no longer planning a pregnancy or is menopausal. “As such, this history is important in assessing every woman’s risk profile for CVD in addition to usual traditional risk factors,” Dr. Sammaritano said.
“It is even more important for women with autoimmune disorders, who have been shown to have an already increased risk for CVD independent of their pregnancy history, likely related to a chronic inflammatory state and other autoimmune-related factors such as presence of antiphospholipid antibodies [aPL] or use of corticosteroids.”
Timing of disease onset is also an issue, she said. “In patients with SLE, for example, onset of CVD is much earlier than in the general population,” Dr. Sammaritano said. “As a result, these patients should likely be assessed for risk — both traditional and other risk factors — earlier than the general population, especially if an adverse obstetric history is present.”
At the younger end of the age continuum, women with autoimmune disease, including SLE and antiphospholipid syndrome, who are pregnant should be put on guideline-directed low-dose aspirin preeclampsia prophylaxis, Dr. Sammaritano said. “Whether every patient with SLE needs this is still uncertain, but certainly, those with a history of renal disease, hypertension, or aPL antibody clearly do,” she added.
The evidence supporting hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) in these patients is controversial, but Dr. Sammaritano noted two meta-analyses, one in 2022 and the other in 2023, that showed that HCQ lowered the risk for preeclampsia in women.
“The clear benefit of HCQ in preventing maternal disease complications, including flare, means we recommend it regardless for all patients with SLE at baseline and during pregnancy [if tolerated],” Dr. Sammaritano said. “The benefit or optimal use of these medications in other autoimmune diseases is less studied and less certain.”
Dr. Sammaritano added in her presentation, “We really need better therapies and, hopefully, those will be on the way, but I think the takeaway message, particularly for practicing rheumatologists and cardiologists, is to ask the question about obstetric history. Many of us don’t. It doesn’t seem relevant in the moment, but it really is in terms of the patient’s long-term risk for cardiovascular disease.”
The Case for Treatment During Pregnancy
Prophylaxis against pregnancy complications in patients with autoimmune disease may be achievable, Taryn Youngstein, MBBS, consultant rheumatologist and codirector of the Centre of Excellence in Vasculitis Research, Imperial College London, London, England, told this news organization after Dr. Sammaritano’s presentation. At the 2023 American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting, her group reported the safety and effectiveness of continuing tocilizumab in pregnant women with Takayasu arteritis, a large-vessel vasculitis predominantly affecting women of reproductive age.
“What traditionally happens is you would stop the biologic particularly before the third trimester because of safety and concerns that the monoclonal antibody is actively transported across the placenta, which means the baby gets much more concentration of the drug than the mum,” Dr. Youngstein said.
It’s a situation physicians must monitor closely, she said. “The mum is donating their immune system to the baby, but they’re also donating drug.”
“In high-risk patients, we would share decision-making with the patient,” Dr. Youngstein continued. “We have decided it’s too high of a risk for us to stop the drug, so we have been continuing the interleukin-6 [IL-6] inhibitor throughout the entire pregnancy.”
The data from Dr. Youngstein’s group showed that pregnant women with Takayasu arteritis who continued IL-6 inhibition therapy all carried to term with healthy births.
“We’ve shown that it’s relatively safe to do that, but you have to be very careful in monitoring the baby,” she said. This includes not giving the infant any live vaccines at birth because it will have the high levels of IL-6 inhibition, she said.
Dr. Sammaritano and Dr. Youngstein had no relevant financial relationships to disclose.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW YORK — Systemic autoimmune disease is well-recognized as a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), but less recognized as a cardiovascular risk factor is a history of pregnancy complications, including preeclampsia, and cardiologists and rheumatologists need to include an obstetric history when managing patients with autoimmune diseases, a specialist in reproductive health in rheumatology told attendees at the 4th Annual Cardiometabolic Risk in Inflammatory Conditions conference.
“Autoimmune diseases, lupus in particular, increase the risk for both cardiovascular disease and maternal placental syndromes,” Lisa R. Sammaritano, MD, a professor at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and a specialist in reproductive health issues in rheumatology patients, told attendees. “For those patients who have complications during pregnancy, it further increases their already increased risk for later cardiovascular disease.”
CVD Risk Double Whammy
A history of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and problematic pregnancy can be a double whammy for CVD risk. Dr. Sammaritano cited a 2022 meta-analysis that showed patients with SLE had a 2.5 times greater risk for stroke and almost three times greater risk for myocardial infarction than people without SLE.
Maternal placental syndromes include pregnancy loss, restricted fetal growth, preeclampsia, premature membrane rupture, placental abruption, and intrauterine fetal demise, Dr. Sammaritano said. Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, formerly called adverse pregnancy outcomes, she noted, include gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia.
Pregnancy complications can have an adverse effect on the mother’s postpartum cardiovascular health, Dr. Sammaritano noted, a fact borne out by the cardiovascular health after maternal placental syndromes population-based retrospective cohort study and a 2007 meta-analysis that found a history of preeclampsia doubles the risk for venous thromboembolism, stroke, and ischemic heart disease up to 15 years after pregnancy.
“It is always important to obtain a reproductive health history from patients with autoimmune diseases,” Dr. Sammaritano told this news organization in an interview. “This is an integral part of any medical history. In the usual setting, this includes not only pregnancy history but also use of contraception in reproductive-aged women. Unplanned pregnancy can lead to adverse outcomes in the setting of active or severe autoimmune disease or when teratogenic medications are used.”
Pregnancy history can be a factor in a woman’s cardiovascular health more than 15 years postpartum, even if a woman is no longer planning a pregnancy or is menopausal. “As such, this history is important in assessing every woman’s risk profile for CVD in addition to usual traditional risk factors,” Dr. Sammaritano said.
“It is even more important for women with autoimmune disorders, who have been shown to have an already increased risk for CVD independent of their pregnancy history, likely related to a chronic inflammatory state and other autoimmune-related factors such as presence of antiphospholipid antibodies [aPL] or use of corticosteroids.”
Timing of disease onset is also an issue, she said. “In patients with SLE, for example, onset of CVD is much earlier than in the general population,” Dr. Sammaritano said. “As a result, these patients should likely be assessed for risk — both traditional and other risk factors — earlier than the general population, especially if an adverse obstetric history is present.”
At the younger end of the age continuum, women with autoimmune disease, including SLE and antiphospholipid syndrome, who are pregnant should be put on guideline-directed low-dose aspirin preeclampsia prophylaxis, Dr. Sammaritano said. “Whether every patient with SLE needs this is still uncertain, but certainly, those with a history of renal disease, hypertension, or aPL antibody clearly do,” she added.
The evidence supporting hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) in these patients is controversial, but Dr. Sammaritano noted two meta-analyses, one in 2022 and the other in 2023, that showed that HCQ lowered the risk for preeclampsia in women.
“The clear benefit of HCQ in preventing maternal disease complications, including flare, means we recommend it regardless for all patients with SLE at baseline and during pregnancy [if tolerated],” Dr. Sammaritano said. “The benefit or optimal use of these medications in other autoimmune diseases is less studied and less certain.”
Dr. Sammaritano added in her presentation, “We really need better therapies and, hopefully, those will be on the way, but I think the takeaway message, particularly for practicing rheumatologists and cardiologists, is to ask the question about obstetric history. Many of us don’t. It doesn’t seem relevant in the moment, but it really is in terms of the patient’s long-term risk for cardiovascular disease.”
The Case for Treatment During Pregnancy
Prophylaxis against pregnancy complications in patients with autoimmune disease may be achievable, Taryn Youngstein, MBBS, consultant rheumatologist and codirector of the Centre of Excellence in Vasculitis Research, Imperial College London, London, England, told this news organization after Dr. Sammaritano’s presentation. At the 2023 American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting, her group reported the safety and effectiveness of continuing tocilizumab in pregnant women with Takayasu arteritis, a large-vessel vasculitis predominantly affecting women of reproductive age.
“What traditionally happens is you would stop the biologic particularly before the third trimester because of safety and concerns that the monoclonal antibody is actively transported across the placenta, which means the baby gets much more concentration of the drug than the mum,” Dr. Youngstein said.
It’s a situation physicians must monitor closely, she said. “The mum is donating their immune system to the baby, but they’re also donating drug.”
“In high-risk patients, we would share decision-making with the patient,” Dr. Youngstein continued. “We have decided it’s too high of a risk for us to stop the drug, so we have been continuing the interleukin-6 [IL-6] inhibitor throughout the entire pregnancy.”
The data from Dr. Youngstein’s group showed that pregnant women with Takayasu arteritis who continued IL-6 inhibition therapy all carried to term with healthy births.
“We’ve shown that it’s relatively safe to do that, but you have to be very careful in monitoring the baby,” she said. This includes not giving the infant any live vaccines at birth because it will have the high levels of IL-6 inhibition, she said.
Dr. Sammaritano and Dr. Youngstein had no relevant financial relationships to disclose.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW YORK — Systemic autoimmune disease is well-recognized as a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), but less recognized as a cardiovascular risk factor is a history of pregnancy complications, including preeclampsia, and cardiologists and rheumatologists need to include an obstetric history when managing patients with autoimmune diseases, a specialist in reproductive health in rheumatology told attendees at the 4th Annual Cardiometabolic Risk in Inflammatory Conditions conference.
“Autoimmune diseases, lupus in particular, increase the risk for both cardiovascular disease and maternal placental syndromes,” Lisa R. Sammaritano, MD, a professor at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and a specialist in reproductive health issues in rheumatology patients, told attendees. “For those patients who have complications during pregnancy, it further increases their already increased risk for later cardiovascular disease.”
CVD Risk Double Whammy
A history of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and problematic pregnancy can be a double whammy for CVD risk. Dr. Sammaritano cited a 2022 meta-analysis that showed patients with SLE had a 2.5 times greater risk for stroke and almost three times greater risk for myocardial infarction than people without SLE.
Maternal placental syndromes include pregnancy loss, restricted fetal growth, preeclampsia, premature membrane rupture, placental abruption, and intrauterine fetal demise, Dr. Sammaritano said. Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, formerly called adverse pregnancy outcomes, she noted, include gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, and eclampsia.
Pregnancy complications can have an adverse effect on the mother’s postpartum cardiovascular health, Dr. Sammaritano noted, a fact borne out by the cardiovascular health after maternal placental syndromes population-based retrospective cohort study and a 2007 meta-analysis that found a history of preeclampsia doubles the risk for venous thromboembolism, stroke, and ischemic heart disease up to 15 years after pregnancy.
“It is always important to obtain a reproductive health history from patients with autoimmune diseases,” Dr. Sammaritano told this news organization in an interview. “This is an integral part of any medical history. In the usual setting, this includes not only pregnancy history but also use of contraception in reproductive-aged women. Unplanned pregnancy can lead to adverse outcomes in the setting of active or severe autoimmune disease or when teratogenic medications are used.”
Pregnancy history can be a factor in a woman’s cardiovascular health more than 15 years postpartum, even if a woman is no longer planning a pregnancy or is menopausal. “As such, this history is important in assessing every woman’s risk profile for CVD in addition to usual traditional risk factors,” Dr. Sammaritano said.
“It is even more important for women with autoimmune disorders, who have been shown to have an already increased risk for CVD independent of their pregnancy history, likely related to a chronic inflammatory state and other autoimmune-related factors such as presence of antiphospholipid antibodies [aPL] or use of corticosteroids.”
Timing of disease onset is also an issue, she said. “In patients with SLE, for example, onset of CVD is much earlier than in the general population,” Dr. Sammaritano said. “As a result, these patients should likely be assessed for risk — both traditional and other risk factors — earlier than the general population, especially if an adverse obstetric history is present.”
At the younger end of the age continuum, women with autoimmune disease, including SLE and antiphospholipid syndrome, who are pregnant should be put on guideline-directed low-dose aspirin preeclampsia prophylaxis, Dr. Sammaritano said. “Whether every patient with SLE needs this is still uncertain, but certainly, those with a history of renal disease, hypertension, or aPL antibody clearly do,” she added.
The evidence supporting hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) in these patients is controversial, but Dr. Sammaritano noted two meta-analyses, one in 2022 and the other in 2023, that showed that HCQ lowered the risk for preeclampsia in women.
“The clear benefit of HCQ in preventing maternal disease complications, including flare, means we recommend it regardless for all patients with SLE at baseline and during pregnancy [if tolerated],” Dr. Sammaritano said. “The benefit or optimal use of these medications in other autoimmune diseases is less studied and less certain.”
Dr. Sammaritano added in her presentation, “We really need better therapies and, hopefully, those will be on the way, but I think the takeaway message, particularly for practicing rheumatologists and cardiologists, is to ask the question about obstetric history. Many of us don’t. It doesn’t seem relevant in the moment, but it really is in terms of the patient’s long-term risk for cardiovascular disease.”
The Case for Treatment During Pregnancy
Prophylaxis against pregnancy complications in patients with autoimmune disease may be achievable, Taryn Youngstein, MBBS, consultant rheumatologist and codirector of the Centre of Excellence in Vasculitis Research, Imperial College London, London, England, told this news organization after Dr. Sammaritano’s presentation. At the 2023 American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting, her group reported the safety and effectiveness of continuing tocilizumab in pregnant women with Takayasu arteritis, a large-vessel vasculitis predominantly affecting women of reproductive age.
“What traditionally happens is you would stop the biologic particularly before the third trimester because of safety and concerns that the monoclonal antibody is actively transported across the placenta, which means the baby gets much more concentration of the drug than the mum,” Dr. Youngstein said.
It’s a situation physicians must monitor closely, she said. “The mum is donating their immune system to the baby, but they’re also donating drug.”
“In high-risk patients, we would share decision-making with the patient,” Dr. Youngstein continued. “We have decided it’s too high of a risk for us to stop the drug, so we have been continuing the interleukin-6 [IL-6] inhibitor throughout the entire pregnancy.”
The data from Dr. Youngstein’s group showed that pregnant women with Takayasu arteritis who continued IL-6 inhibition therapy all carried to term with healthy births.
“We’ve shown that it’s relatively safe to do that, but you have to be very careful in monitoring the baby,” she said. This includes not giving the infant any live vaccines at birth because it will have the high levels of IL-6 inhibition, she said.
Dr. Sammaritano and Dr. Youngstein had no relevant financial relationships to disclose.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Tool May Help Prioritize High-Risk Patients for Hysteroscopy
Hysteroscopy is a crucial examination for the diagnosis of endometrial cancer. In Brazil, women with postmenopausal bleeding who need to undergo this procedure in the public health system wait in line alongside patients with less severe complaints. Until now, there has been no system to prioritize patients at high risk for cancer. But this situation may change, thanks to a Brazilian study published in February in the Journal of Clinical Medicine.
Researchers from the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina in São Paulo, a public unit managed by Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, have developed the Endometrial Malignancy Prediction System (EMPS), a nomogram to identify patients at high risk for endometrial cancer and prioritize them in the hysteroscopy waiting list.
Bruna Bottura, MD, a gynecologist and obstetrician at Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein and the study’s lead author, told this news organization that the idea to create the nomogram arose during the COVID-19 pandemic. “We noticed that ... when outpatient clinics resumed, we were seeing many patients for intrauterine device (IUD) removal. We thought it was unfair for a patient with postmenopausal bleeding, who has a chance of having cancer, to have to wait in the same line as a patient needing IUD removal,” she said. This realization motivated the development of the tool, which was overseen by Renato Moretti-Marques, MD, PhD.
The EMPS Score
The team conducted a retrospective case-control study involving 1945 patients with suspected endometrial cancer who had undergone diagnostic hysteroscopy at Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein between March 2019 and March 2022. Among these patients, 107 were diagnosed with precursor lesions or endometrial cancer on the basis of biopsy. The other 1838 participants, who had had cancer ruled out by biopsy, formed the control group.
Through bivariate and multivariate linear regression analysis, the authors determined that the presence or absence of hypertension, diabetes, postmenopausal bleeding, endometrial polyps, uterine volume, number of pregnancies, body mass index, age, and endometrial thickness were the main risk factors for endometrial cancer diagnosis.
On the basis of these data, the group developed the EMPS nomogram. Physicians can use it to classify the patient’s risk according to the sum of the scores assigned to each of these factors.
The Table shows the classification system. The scoring tables available in the supplemental materials of the article can be accessed here.
Focus on Primary Care
The goal is not to remove patients classified as low risk from the hysteroscopy waiting list, but rather to prioritize those classified as high risk to get the examination, according to Dr. Bottura.
At the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina, the average wait time for hysteroscopy was 120 days. But because the unit is focused on oncologic patients and has a high level of organization, this time is much shorter than observed in other parts of Brazil’s National Health Service, said Dr. Bottura. “Many patients are on the hysteroscopy waiting list for 2 years. Considering patients in more advanced stages [of endometrial cancer], it makes a difference,” she said.
Although the nomogram was developed in tertiary care, it is aimed at professionals working in primary care. The reason is that physicians from primary care health units refer women with clinical indications for hysteroscopy to specialized national health services, such as the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina. “Our goal is the primary sector, to enable the clinic to refer this high-risk patient sooner. By the time you reach the tertiary sector, where hysteroscopies are performed, all patients will undergo the procedure. Usually, it is not the hospitals that predetermine the line, but rather the health clinics,” she explained.
The researchers hope to continue the research, starting with a prospective study. “We intend to apply and evaluate the tool within our own service to observe whether any patient with a high [EMPS] score patient ended up waiting too long to be referred. In fact, this will be a system validation step,” said Dr. Bottura.
In parallel, the team has a proposal to take the tool to health clinics in the same region as the study hospital. “We know this involves changing the protocol at a national level, so it’s more challenging,” said Dr. Bottura. She added that the final goal is to create a calculator, possibly an app, that allows primary care doctors to calculate the risk score in the office. This calculator could enable risk classification to be linked to patient referrals.
This story was translated from the Medscape Portuguese edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Hysteroscopy is a crucial examination for the diagnosis of endometrial cancer. In Brazil, women with postmenopausal bleeding who need to undergo this procedure in the public health system wait in line alongside patients with less severe complaints. Until now, there has been no system to prioritize patients at high risk for cancer. But this situation may change, thanks to a Brazilian study published in February in the Journal of Clinical Medicine.
Researchers from the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina in São Paulo, a public unit managed by Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, have developed the Endometrial Malignancy Prediction System (EMPS), a nomogram to identify patients at high risk for endometrial cancer and prioritize them in the hysteroscopy waiting list.
Bruna Bottura, MD, a gynecologist and obstetrician at Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein and the study’s lead author, told this news organization that the idea to create the nomogram arose during the COVID-19 pandemic. “We noticed that ... when outpatient clinics resumed, we were seeing many patients for intrauterine device (IUD) removal. We thought it was unfair for a patient with postmenopausal bleeding, who has a chance of having cancer, to have to wait in the same line as a patient needing IUD removal,” she said. This realization motivated the development of the tool, which was overseen by Renato Moretti-Marques, MD, PhD.
The EMPS Score
The team conducted a retrospective case-control study involving 1945 patients with suspected endometrial cancer who had undergone diagnostic hysteroscopy at Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein between March 2019 and March 2022. Among these patients, 107 were diagnosed with precursor lesions or endometrial cancer on the basis of biopsy. The other 1838 participants, who had had cancer ruled out by biopsy, formed the control group.
Through bivariate and multivariate linear regression analysis, the authors determined that the presence or absence of hypertension, diabetes, postmenopausal bleeding, endometrial polyps, uterine volume, number of pregnancies, body mass index, age, and endometrial thickness were the main risk factors for endometrial cancer diagnosis.
On the basis of these data, the group developed the EMPS nomogram. Physicians can use it to classify the patient’s risk according to the sum of the scores assigned to each of these factors.
The Table shows the classification system. The scoring tables available in the supplemental materials of the article can be accessed here.
Focus on Primary Care
The goal is not to remove patients classified as low risk from the hysteroscopy waiting list, but rather to prioritize those classified as high risk to get the examination, according to Dr. Bottura.
At the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina, the average wait time for hysteroscopy was 120 days. But because the unit is focused on oncologic patients and has a high level of organization, this time is much shorter than observed in other parts of Brazil’s National Health Service, said Dr. Bottura. “Many patients are on the hysteroscopy waiting list for 2 years. Considering patients in more advanced stages [of endometrial cancer], it makes a difference,” she said.
Although the nomogram was developed in tertiary care, it is aimed at professionals working in primary care. The reason is that physicians from primary care health units refer women with clinical indications for hysteroscopy to specialized national health services, such as the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina. “Our goal is the primary sector, to enable the clinic to refer this high-risk patient sooner. By the time you reach the tertiary sector, where hysteroscopies are performed, all patients will undergo the procedure. Usually, it is not the hospitals that predetermine the line, but rather the health clinics,” she explained.
The researchers hope to continue the research, starting with a prospective study. “We intend to apply and evaluate the tool within our own service to observe whether any patient with a high [EMPS] score patient ended up waiting too long to be referred. In fact, this will be a system validation step,” said Dr. Bottura.
In parallel, the team has a proposal to take the tool to health clinics in the same region as the study hospital. “We know this involves changing the protocol at a national level, so it’s more challenging,” said Dr. Bottura. She added that the final goal is to create a calculator, possibly an app, that allows primary care doctors to calculate the risk score in the office. This calculator could enable risk classification to be linked to patient referrals.
This story was translated from the Medscape Portuguese edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Hysteroscopy is a crucial examination for the diagnosis of endometrial cancer. In Brazil, women with postmenopausal bleeding who need to undergo this procedure in the public health system wait in line alongside patients with less severe complaints. Until now, there has been no system to prioritize patients at high risk for cancer. But this situation may change, thanks to a Brazilian study published in February in the Journal of Clinical Medicine.
Researchers from the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina in São Paulo, a public unit managed by Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, have developed the Endometrial Malignancy Prediction System (EMPS), a nomogram to identify patients at high risk for endometrial cancer and prioritize them in the hysteroscopy waiting list.
Bruna Bottura, MD, a gynecologist and obstetrician at Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein and the study’s lead author, told this news organization that the idea to create the nomogram arose during the COVID-19 pandemic. “We noticed that ... when outpatient clinics resumed, we were seeing many patients for intrauterine device (IUD) removal. We thought it was unfair for a patient with postmenopausal bleeding, who has a chance of having cancer, to have to wait in the same line as a patient needing IUD removal,” she said. This realization motivated the development of the tool, which was overseen by Renato Moretti-Marques, MD, PhD.
The EMPS Score
The team conducted a retrospective case-control study involving 1945 patients with suspected endometrial cancer who had undergone diagnostic hysteroscopy at Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein between March 2019 and March 2022. Among these patients, 107 were diagnosed with precursor lesions or endometrial cancer on the basis of biopsy. The other 1838 participants, who had had cancer ruled out by biopsy, formed the control group.
Through bivariate and multivariate linear regression analysis, the authors determined that the presence or absence of hypertension, diabetes, postmenopausal bleeding, endometrial polyps, uterine volume, number of pregnancies, body mass index, age, and endometrial thickness were the main risk factors for endometrial cancer diagnosis.
On the basis of these data, the group developed the EMPS nomogram. Physicians can use it to classify the patient’s risk according to the sum of the scores assigned to each of these factors.
The Table shows the classification system. The scoring tables available in the supplemental materials of the article can be accessed here.
Focus on Primary Care
The goal is not to remove patients classified as low risk from the hysteroscopy waiting list, but rather to prioritize those classified as high risk to get the examination, according to Dr. Bottura.
At the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina, the average wait time for hysteroscopy was 120 days. But because the unit is focused on oncologic patients and has a high level of organization, this time is much shorter than observed in other parts of Brazil’s National Health Service, said Dr. Bottura. “Many patients are on the hysteroscopy waiting list for 2 years. Considering patients in more advanced stages [of endometrial cancer], it makes a difference,” she said.
Although the nomogram was developed in tertiary care, it is aimed at professionals working in primary care. The reason is that physicians from primary care health units refer women with clinical indications for hysteroscopy to specialized national health services, such as the Municipal Hospital of Vila Santa Catarina. “Our goal is the primary sector, to enable the clinic to refer this high-risk patient sooner. By the time you reach the tertiary sector, where hysteroscopies are performed, all patients will undergo the procedure. Usually, it is not the hospitals that predetermine the line, but rather the health clinics,” she explained.
The researchers hope to continue the research, starting with a prospective study. “We intend to apply and evaluate the tool within our own service to observe whether any patient with a high [EMPS] score patient ended up waiting too long to be referred. In fact, this will be a system validation step,” said Dr. Bottura.
In parallel, the team has a proposal to take the tool to health clinics in the same region as the study hospital. “We know this involves changing the protocol at a national level, so it’s more challenging,” said Dr. Bottura. She added that the final goal is to create a calculator, possibly an app, that allows primary care doctors to calculate the risk score in the office. This calculator could enable risk classification to be linked to patient referrals.
This story was translated from the Medscape Portuguese edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Associated With Poorer Cognition in Older Adults
Lower urinary tract symptoms were significantly associated with lower scores on measures of cognitive impairment in older adults, based on data from approximately 10,000 individuals.
“We know that lower urinary tract symptoms are very common in aging men and women;” however, older adults often underreport symptoms and avoid seeking treatment, Belinda Williams, MD, of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society.
“Evidence also shows us that the incidence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) is higher in patients with dementia,” she said. However, the association between cognitive impairment and LUTS has not been well studied, she said.
To address this knowledge gap, Dr. Williams and colleagues reviewed data from older adults with and without LUTS who were enrolled in the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study, a cohort study including 30,239 Black or White adults aged 45 years and older who completed telephone or in-home assessments in 2003-2007 and in 2013-2017.
The study population included 6062 women and 4438 men who responded to questionnaires about LUTS and completed several cognitive tests via telephone in 2019-2010. The tests evaluated verbal fluency, executive function, and memory, and included the Six-Item Screener, Animal Naming, Letter F naming, and word list learning; lower scores indicated poorer cognitive performance.
Participants who met the criteria for LUTS were categorized as having mild, moderate, or severe symptoms.
The researchers controlled for age, race, education, income, and urban/rural setting in a multivariate analysis. The mean ages of the women and men were 69 years and 63 years, respectively; 41% and 32% were Black, 59% and 68% were White.
Overall, 70% of women and 62% of men reported LUTS; 6.2% and 8.2%, respectively, met criteria for cognitive impairment. The association between cognitive impairment and LUTS was statistically significant for all specific tests (P < .01), but not for the global cognitive domain tests.
Black men were more likely to report LUTS than White men, but LUTS reports were similar between Black and White women.
Moderate LUTS was the most common degree of severity for men and women (54% and 64%, respectively).
The most common symptom overall was pre-toilet leakage (urge urinary incontinence), reported by 94% of women and 91% of men. The next most common symptoms for men and women were nocturia and urgency.
“We found that, across the board, in all the cognitive tests, LUTS were associated with lower cognitive test scores,” Dr. Williams said in her presentation. Little differences were seen on the Six-Item Screener, she noted, but when they further analyzed the data using scores lower than 4 to indicate cognitive impairment, they found significant association with LUTS, she said.
The results showing that the presence of LUTS was consistently associated with lower cognitive test scores of verbal fluency, executive function, and memory, are applicable in clinical practice, Dr. Williams said in her presentation.
“Recognizing the subtle changes in cognition among older adults with LUTS may impact treatment decisions,” she said. “For example, we can encourage and advise our patients to be physically and cognitively active and to avoid anticholinergic medications.”
Next steps for research include analyzing longitudinal changes in cognition among participants with and without LUTS, said Dr. Williams.
During a question-and-answer session, Dr. Williams agreed with a comment that incorporating cognitive screening strategies in to LUTS clinical pathways might be helpful, such as conducting a baseline Montreal Cognitive Assessment Test (MoCA) in patients with LUTS. “Periodic repeat MoCAs thereafter can help assess decline in cognition,” she said.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Institute on Aging. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Lower urinary tract symptoms were significantly associated with lower scores on measures of cognitive impairment in older adults, based on data from approximately 10,000 individuals.
“We know that lower urinary tract symptoms are very common in aging men and women;” however, older adults often underreport symptoms and avoid seeking treatment, Belinda Williams, MD, of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society.
“Evidence also shows us that the incidence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) is higher in patients with dementia,” she said. However, the association between cognitive impairment and LUTS has not been well studied, she said.
To address this knowledge gap, Dr. Williams and colleagues reviewed data from older adults with and without LUTS who were enrolled in the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study, a cohort study including 30,239 Black or White adults aged 45 years and older who completed telephone or in-home assessments in 2003-2007 and in 2013-2017.
The study population included 6062 women and 4438 men who responded to questionnaires about LUTS and completed several cognitive tests via telephone in 2019-2010. The tests evaluated verbal fluency, executive function, and memory, and included the Six-Item Screener, Animal Naming, Letter F naming, and word list learning; lower scores indicated poorer cognitive performance.
Participants who met the criteria for LUTS were categorized as having mild, moderate, or severe symptoms.
The researchers controlled for age, race, education, income, and urban/rural setting in a multivariate analysis. The mean ages of the women and men were 69 years and 63 years, respectively; 41% and 32% were Black, 59% and 68% were White.
Overall, 70% of women and 62% of men reported LUTS; 6.2% and 8.2%, respectively, met criteria for cognitive impairment. The association between cognitive impairment and LUTS was statistically significant for all specific tests (P < .01), but not for the global cognitive domain tests.
Black men were more likely to report LUTS than White men, but LUTS reports were similar between Black and White women.
Moderate LUTS was the most common degree of severity for men and women (54% and 64%, respectively).
The most common symptom overall was pre-toilet leakage (urge urinary incontinence), reported by 94% of women and 91% of men. The next most common symptoms for men and women were nocturia and urgency.
“We found that, across the board, in all the cognitive tests, LUTS were associated with lower cognitive test scores,” Dr. Williams said in her presentation. Little differences were seen on the Six-Item Screener, she noted, but when they further analyzed the data using scores lower than 4 to indicate cognitive impairment, they found significant association with LUTS, she said.
The results showing that the presence of LUTS was consistently associated with lower cognitive test scores of verbal fluency, executive function, and memory, are applicable in clinical practice, Dr. Williams said in her presentation.
“Recognizing the subtle changes in cognition among older adults with LUTS may impact treatment decisions,” she said. “For example, we can encourage and advise our patients to be physically and cognitively active and to avoid anticholinergic medications.”
Next steps for research include analyzing longitudinal changes in cognition among participants with and without LUTS, said Dr. Williams.
During a question-and-answer session, Dr. Williams agreed with a comment that incorporating cognitive screening strategies in to LUTS clinical pathways might be helpful, such as conducting a baseline Montreal Cognitive Assessment Test (MoCA) in patients with LUTS. “Periodic repeat MoCAs thereafter can help assess decline in cognition,” she said.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Institute on Aging. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Lower urinary tract symptoms were significantly associated with lower scores on measures of cognitive impairment in older adults, based on data from approximately 10,000 individuals.
“We know that lower urinary tract symptoms are very common in aging men and women;” however, older adults often underreport symptoms and avoid seeking treatment, Belinda Williams, MD, of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said in a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society.
“Evidence also shows us that the incidence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) is higher in patients with dementia,” she said. However, the association between cognitive impairment and LUTS has not been well studied, she said.
To address this knowledge gap, Dr. Williams and colleagues reviewed data from older adults with and without LUTS who were enrolled in the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study, a cohort study including 30,239 Black or White adults aged 45 years and older who completed telephone or in-home assessments in 2003-2007 and in 2013-2017.
The study population included 6062 women and 4438 men who responded to questionnaires about LUTS and completed several cognitive tests via telephone in 2019-2010. The tests evaluated verbal fluency, executive function, and memory, and included the Six-Item Screener, Animal Naming, Letter F naming, and word list learning; lower scores indicated poorer cognitive performance.
Participants who met the criteria for LUTS were categorized as having mild, moderate, or severe symptoms.
The researchers controlled for age, race, education, income, and urban/rural setting in a multivariate analysis. The mean ages of the women and men were 69 years and 63 years, respectively; 41% and 32% were Black, 59% and 68% were White.
Overall, 70% of women and 62% of men reported LUTS; 6.2% and 8.2%, respectively, met criteria for cognitive impairment. The association between cognitive impairment and LUTS was statistically significant for all specific tests (P < .01), but not for the global cognitive domain tests.
Black men were more likely to report LUTS than White men, but LUTS reports were similar between Black and White women.
Moderate LUTS was the most common degree of severity for men and women (54% and 64%, respectively).
The most common symptom overall was pre-toilet leakage (urge urinary incontinence), reported by 94% of women and 91% of men. The next most common symptoms for men and women were nocturia and urgency.
“We found that, across the board, in all the cognitive tests, LUTS were associated with lower cognitive test scores,” Dr. Williams said in her presentation. Little differences were seen on the Six-Item Screener, she noted, but when they further analyzed the data using scores lower than 4 to indicate cognitive impairment, they found significant association with LUTS, she said.
The results showing that the presence of LUTS was consistently associated with lower cognitive test scores of verbal fluency, executive function, and memory, are applicable in clinical practice, Dr. Williams said in her presentation.
“Recognizing the subtle changes in cognition among older adults with LUTS may impact treatment decisions,” she said. “For example, we can encourage and advise our patients to be physically and cognitively active and to avoid anticholinergic medications.”
Next steps for research include analyzing longitudinal changes in cognition among participants with and without LUTS, said Dr. Williams.
During a question-and-answer session, Dr. Williams agreed with a comment that incorporating cognitive screening strategies in to LUTS clinical pathways might be helpful, such as conducting a baseline Montreal Cognitive Assessment Test (MoCA) in patients with LUTS. “Periodic repeat MoCAs thereafter can help assess decline in cognition,” she said.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Institute on Aging. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
FROM AGS 2024