The next big thing in cancer research

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Cancer research has made big strides over the past few decades, leading to better prevention efforts, improved treatment options, and longer survival. Despite the significant progress, there is still a lot of work to do. 

In an article published in Cell, cancer specialists from across the globe provided their take on the big questions worth exploring in research over the coming years.

More sex-specific research

Sherene Loi, MBBS, PhD, head of the Translational Breast Cancer Genomics and Therapeutics Laboratory at the MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, said there needs to be more research on the differences in immune-related adverse events and immune responses between the sexes.

Dr. Loi’s recent research in mouse models has revealed that immune checkpoint inhibitors can lead to reduced oocyte reserves, and if those insights are validated in humans, it could have big implications for women of childbearing age who may face premature menopause and infertility.

“It is astonishing to realize that very little research has been done to investigate the long-term reproductive or fertility consequences of new agents we investigate in the phase 3 setting and then prescribe routinely in the curative setting,” Dr. Loi said. 
 

The global cancer community

C. S. Pramesh, MMBS, MS, FRCS, director of Tata Memorial Hospital in Mumbai, India, said that cancer research should prioritize global experiences, instead of focusing so heavily on high-income countries such as the United States.

“With much of the cancer burden likely to fall on low- and middle-income countries, it seems incongruous that almost 90% of cancer research currently takes place in high-income countries,” Dr. Pramesh said. “Neither the discordance between the cancer burden and research funding in high-income countries nor the types of problems or solutions addressed in these countries are relevant to the majority of patients with cancer in the world.”

Bishal Gyawali, MD, PhD, has discussed a similar need to prioritize cancer care in low- and middle-income countries, what he has dubbed “cancer groundshot.”

Dr. Pramesh described a brainstorming session among colleagues with global cancer expertise in which they identified five broad themes especially relevant to a global community. These themes include reducing the burden of patients presenting with advanced disease as well as improving access, affordability, and outcomes through solution-oriented research – goals that are critical but often not prioritized by high-income countries or industry, he said.

“Now is the time for the global community to wake up, take notice, and change the direction of cancer research for the larger public good,” Dr. Pramesh said.
 

Prioritizing combination therapies

The next big focus in cancer research should be to develop effective combination therapies, according to René Bernards, PhD, of The Netherlands Cancer Institute.

“Resistance to therapy remains a major obstacle in the treatment of cancer,” Dr. Bernards said. But, as the AIDS pandemic has taught us, the use of multiple drugs with “nonoverlapping resistance mechanisms can make a deadly disease with a high mutation rate chronic.”

A growing body of evidence highlights the relevance of this strategy to oncology. A recent study, for instance, highlighted the effectiveness of dual immune checkpoint inhibitors to treat advanced melanoma. 

“I believe that academic researchers can deliver more clinical benefit to patients by focusing on finding highly effective combinations of existing drugs than by searching for more drug targets,” he said. “Over time, this would also contribute to affordable health care through use of more generic drugs.”
 

 

 

Cancer drugs and the heart

Cardiologist Javid Moslehi, MD, who specializes in the cardiovascular health of patients with cancer, believes cardio-oncology should be the next frontier. During his research fellowship, Dr. Moslehi discovered that “many novel cancer therapies were leading to cardiovascular adverse effects, both during treatment and survivorship.”

But, Dr. Moslehi explained, “we are entering [uncharted] waters.”

Patients who receive immune checkpoint inhibitors may, for instance, develop fulminant myocarditis. Dr. Moslehi and colleagues have also found in preclinical models that abatacept (CTLA4-Ig) may be an effective treatment for myocarditis.

“Because of the targeted nature of new cancer therapies, cardiovascular sequelae may provide insights into cardiac biology, making cardio-oncology a novel platform for cardiovascular investigation,” Dr. Moslehi explained.
 

Inside rare cancers

William Sellers, MD, director of the Broad Institute of MIT’s Cancer Program, Cambridge, Mass., said rare cancers should be the next focus.

After all, “rare cancers are only rare in isolation,” Dr. Sellers said, noting that these cancers make up 20%-24% of all cancer diagnoses.

Although funding for rare cancer research remains limited, investing more could benefit patients in the long run. In early 2023, Pfizer announced plans to explore more options for early stage treatments for rare diseases and cancers. 

“New initiatives supporting direct-to-patient cohort enrollment bridging geographic fragmentation and rare cancer model development, enabling preclinical research to accelerate, are the first steps along a path toward curing these diseases,” he said. 

The researchers reported numerous relationships with pharmaceutical companies.
 

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

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Cancer research has made big strides over the past few decades, leading to better prevention efforts, improved treatment options, and longer survival. Despite the significant progress, there is still a lot of work to do. 

In an article published in Cell, cancer specialists from across the globe provided their take on the big questions worth exploring in research over the coming years.

More sex-specific research

Sherene Loi, MBBS, PhD, head of the Translational Breast Cancer Genomics and Therapeutics Laboratory at the MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, said there needs to be more research on the differences in immune-related adverse events and immune responses between the sexes.

Dr. Loi’s recent research in mouse models has revealed that immune checkpoint inhibitors can lead to reduced oocyte reserves, and if those insights are validated in humans, it could have big implications for women of childbearing age who may face premature menopause and infertility.

“It is astonishing to realize that very little research has been done to investigate the long-term reproductive or fertility consequences of new agents we investigate in the phase 3 setting and then prescribe routinely in the curative setting,” Dr. Loi said. 
 

The global cancer community

C. S. Pramesh, MMBS, MS, FRCS, director of Tata Memorial Hospital in Mumbai, India, said that cancer research should prioritize global experiences, instead of focusing so heavily on high-income countries such as the United States.

“With much of the cancer burden likely to fall on low- and middle-income countries, it seems incongruous that almost 90% of cancer research currently takes place in high-income countries,” Dr. Pramesh said. “Neither the discordance between the cancer burden and research funding in high-income countries nor the types of problems or solutions addressed in these countries are relevant to the majority of patients with cancer in the world.”

Bishal Gyawali, MD, PhD, has discussed a similar need to prioritize cancer care in low- and middle-income countries, what he has dubbed “cancer groundshot.”

Dr. Pramesh described a brainstorming session among colleagues with global cancer expertise in which they identified five broad themes especially relevant to a global community. These themes include reducing the burden of patients presenting with advanced disease as well as improving access, affordability, and outcomes through solution-oriented research – goals that are critical but often not prioritized by high-income countries or industry, he said.

“Now is the time for the global community to wake up, take notice, and change the direction of cancer research for the larger public good,” Dr. Pramesh said.
 

Prioritizing combination therapies

The next big focus in cancer research should be to develop effective combination therapies, according to René Bernards, PhD, of The Netherlands Cancer Institute.

“Resistance to therapy remains a major obstacle in the treatment of cancer,” Dr. Bernards said. But, as the AIDS pandemic has taught us, the use of multiple drugs with “nonoverlapping resistance mechanisms can make a deadly disease with a high mutation rate chronic.”

A growing body of evidence highlights the relevance of this strategy to oncology. A recent study, for instance, highlighted the effectiveness of dual immune checkpoint inhibitors to treat advanced melanoma. 

“I believe that academic researchers can deliver more clinical benefit to patients by focusing on finding highly effective combinations of existing drugs than by searching for more drug targets,” he said. “Over time, this would also contribute to affordable health care through use of more generic drugs.”
 

 

 

Cancer drugs and the heart

Cardiologist Javid Moslehi, MD, who specializes in the cardiovascular health of patients with cancer, believes cardio-oncology should be the next frontier. During his research fellowship, Dr. Moslehi discovered that “many novel cancer therapies were leading to cardiovascular adverse effects, both during treatment and survivorship.”

But, Dr. Moslehi explained, “we are entering [uncharted] waters.”

Patients who receive immune checkpoint inhibitors may, for instance, develop fulminant myocarditis. Dr. Moslehi and colleagues have also found in preclinical models that abatacept (CTLA4-Ig) may be an effective treatment for myocarditis.

“Because of the targeted nature of new cancer therapies, cardiovascular sequelae may provide insights into cardiac biology, making cardio-oncology a novel platform for cardiovascular investigation,” Dr. Moslehi explained.
 

Inside rare cancers

William Sellers, MD, director of the Broad Institute of MIT’s Cancer Program, Cambridge, Mass., said rare cancers should be the next focus.

After all, “rare cancers are only rare in isolation,” Dr. Sellers said, noting that these cancers make up 20%-24% of all cancer diagnoses.

Although funding for rare cancer research remains limited, investing more could benefit patients in the long run. In early 2023, Pfizer announced plans to explore more options for early stage treatments for rare diseases and cancers. 

“New initiatives supporting direct-to-patient cohort enrollment bridging geographic fragmentation and rare cancer model development, enabling preclinical research to accelerate, are the first steps along a path toward curing these diseases,” he said. 

The researchers reported numerous relationships with pharmaceutical companies.
 

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

Cancer research has made big strides over the past few decades, leading to better prevention efforts, improved treatment options, and longer survival. Despite the significant progress, there is still a lot of work to do. 

In an article published in Cell, cancer specialists from across the globe provided their take on the big questions worth exploring in research over the coming years.

More sex-specific research

Sherene Loi, MBBS, PhD, head of the Translational Breast Cancer Genomics and Therapeutics Laboratory at the MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, said there needs to be more research on the differences in immune-related adverse events and immune responses between the sexes.

Dr. Loi’s recent research in mouse models has revealed that immune checkpoint inhibitors can lead to reduced oocyte reserves, and if those insights are validated in humans, it could have big implications for women of childbearing age who may face premature menopause and infertility.

“It is astonishing to realize that very little research has been done to investigate the long-term reproductive or fertility consequences of new agents we investigate in the phase 3 setting and then prescribe routinely in the curative setting,” Dr. Loi said. 
 

The global cancer community

C. S. Pramesh, MMBS, MS, FRCS, director of Tata Memorial Hospital in Mumbai, India, said that cancer research should prioritize global experiences, instead of focusing so heavily on high-income countries such as the United States.

“With much of the cancer burden likely to fall on low- and middle-income countries, it seems incongruous that almost 90% of cancer research currently takes place in high-income countries,” Dr. Pramesh said. “Neither the discordance between the cancer burden and research funding in high-income countries nor the types of problems or solutions addressed in these countries are relevant to the majority of patients with cancer in the world.”

Bishal Gyawali, MD, PhD, has discussed a similar need to prioritize cancer care in low- and middle-income countries, what he has dubbed “cancer groundshot.”

Dr. Pramesh described a brainstorming session among colleagues with global cancer expertise in which they identified five broad themes especially relevant to a global community. These themes include reducing the burden of patients presenting with advanced disease as well as improving access, affordability, and outcomes through solution-oriented research – goals that are critical but often not prioritized by high-income countries or industry, he said.

“Now is the time for the global community to wake up, take notice, and change the direction of cancer research for the larger public good,” Dr. Pramesh said.
 

Prioritizing combination therapies

The next big focus in cancer research should be to develop effective combination therapies, according to René Bernards, PhD, of The Netherlands Cancer Institute.

“Resistance to therapy remains a major obstacle in the treatment of cancer,” Dr. Bernards said. But, as the AIDS pandemic has taught us, the use of multiple drugs with “nonoverlapping resistance mechanisms can make a deadly disease with a high mutation rate chronic.”

A growing body of evidence highlights the relevance of this strategy to oncology. A recent study, for instance, highlighted the effectiveness of dual immune checkpoint inhibitors to treat advanced melanoma. 

“I believe that academic researchers can deliver more clinical benefit to patients by focusing on finding highly effective combinations of existing drugs than by searching for more drug targets,” he said. “Over time, this would also contribute to affordable health care through use of more generic drugs.”
 

 

 

Cancer drugs and the heart

Cardiologist Javid Moslehi, MD, who specializes in the cardiovascular health of patients with cancer, believes cardio-oncology should be the next frontier. During his research fellowship, Dr. Moslehi discovered that “many novel cancer therapies were leading to cardiovascular adverse effects, both during treatment and survivorship.”

But, Dr. Moslehi explained, “we are entering [uncharted] waters.”

Patients who receive immune checkpoint inhibitors may, for instance, develop fulminant myocarditis. Dr. Moslehi and colleagues have also found in preclinical models that abatacept (CTLA4-Ig) may be an effective treatment for myocarditis.

“Because of the targeted nature of new cancer therapies, cardiovascular sequelae may provide insights into cardiac biology, making cardio-oncology a novel platform for cardiovascular investigation,” Dr. Moslehi explained.
 

Inside rare cancers

William Sellers, MD, director of the Broad Institute of MIT’s Cancer Program, Cambridge, Mass., said rare cancers should be the next focus.

After all, “rare cancers are only rare in isolation,” Dr. Sellers said, noting that these cancers make up 20%-24% of all cancer diagnoses.

Although funding for rare cancer research remains limited, investing more could benefit patients in the long run. In early 2023, Pfizer announced plans to explore more options for early stage treatments for rare diseases and cancers. 

“New initiatives supporting direct-to-patient cohort enrollment bridging geographic fragmentation and rare cancer model development, enabling preclinical research to accelerate, are the first steps along a path toward curing these diseases,” he said. 

The researchers reported numerous relationships with pharmaceutical companies.
 

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

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Prostate biopsies a laughing (gas) matter?

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An old dog – nitrous oxide – can learn new tricks, managing pain in men undergoing transrectal biopsies, researchers reported at the annual meeting of the American Urological Association.

“At concentrations of less than 50%, nitrous oxide is classified as a minimal sedative, making it a promising option for many urologic outpatient procedures such as prostate biopsies,” said Heidi Rayala, MD, PhD, assistant professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston, who helped conduct the study.

Nitrous oxide is best known as a pain medication and anesthetic during dental procedures and childbirth, after trauma, and in end-of-life care.

In the new study, Dr. Rayala and her colleagues at Harvard and Beth Israel-Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, randomly assigned 128 men to self-administered nitrous oxide (SANO) or oxygen as a placebo. Patients in the SANO group had a smaller change in post-biopsy pain score (Visual Analog Scale for pain, 0.43 vs. 1.03; P = .03) and lower odds of experiencing pain during the procedure (odds ratio, 0.45; confidence interval, 0.21-0.97; P = .04).

A comparison of anxiety scores in the two groups failed to find a statistically significant difference between SANO and placebo. However, more men who received nitrous oxide said they tolerated the procedure “better than expected” (61% vs. 41%; P = 0.02), according to the researchers.

Dr. Rayala said that the researchers used the Nitrouseal system (Sedation Systems), in which the patient holds a mask to their face and works with staff to adjust the gas levels to the desired amount. The system is governed to max out at 50% nitrous oxide, ensuring “minimal sedation concentrations, so anesthesia personnel are not required,” she said.

“At levels of less than 50%, patients respond normally to verbal commands and maintain normal airway reflexes,” Dr. Rayala added. “This provides an advantage in that patients do not require the presence of anesthesia personnel.” And because the body eliminates the gas within about 5 minutes, patients do not require an escort home, she said.

This system is also self-scavenging to protect the operating urologist and other personnel from environmental exposure to nitrous oxide.

Dr. Rayala said that three patients (2.3%) found the mask uncomfortable, but in follow-up studies the clinicians have done a better job of preparing patients for the feeling of the mask, making a marked difference. Headaches and nausea are the most commonly reported complaints at concentrations above 50%.

“We did not have patients report headaches or nausea in new study (by the BIDMC group),” she said. This study has been submitted for publication.

Clinicians outside the United States have been quicker to embrace nitrous oxide for prostate procedures.

In a randomized controlled trial, researchers in Australia found no significant improvement in pain scores at 15 minutes from the use of nitrous oxide during transrectal biopsies; however, improvements were seen in patient-reported discomfort, overall experience, and willingness to undergo repeat biopsies.

Stephen McCombie, MD, a consultant at Perth Urology Clinic, Australia, who has been adapting the nitrous oxide protocol for transrectal biopsies to transperineal procedures, said that the Beth Israel study “adds to the evidence to support adjunct use of mild inhalational anesthetics and analgesics during prostate biopsies to improve the patient experience of the procedure.”

He said that the role for these agents may grow with the global trend away from transrectal prostate biopsies and toward transperineal biopsies, largely driven by increasing rates of sepsis after transrectal biopsies.

“While transperineal biopsies can be more painful then transrectal biopsies when performed under local anesthesia, perhaps due to biopsies being taken through the highly sensate perineum as opposed to above the dentate line, optimization of the technique can significantly reduce the discomfort associated with the procedure, which may be further reduced with these agents,” Dr. McCombie said.

“Studies indicate that transperineal biopsies can be more painful than the traditional transrectal biopsies,” Dr. Rayala said. “We do offer transperineal biopsies at BIDMC, and we are gearing up to repeat the SANO study” for those patients.

Dr. Rayala and Dr. McCombie have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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An old dog – nitrous oxide – can learn new tricks, managing pain in men undergoing transrectal biopsies, researchers reported at the annual meeting of the American Urological Association.

“At concentrations of less than 50%, nitrous oxide is classified as a minimal sedative, making it a promising option for many urologic outpatient procedures such as prostate biopsies,” said Heidi Rayala, MD, PhD, assistant professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston, who helped conduct the study.

Nitrous oxide is best known as a pain medication and anesthetic during dental procedures and childbirth, after trauma, and in end-of-life care.

In the new study, Dr. Rayala and her colleagues at Harvard and Beth Israel-Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, randomly assigned 128 men to self-administered nitrous oxide (SANO) or oxygen as a placebo. Patients in the SANO group had a smaller change in post-biopsy pain score (Visual Analog Scale for pain, 0.43 vs. 1.03; P = .03) and lower odds of experiencing pain during the procedure (odds ratio, 0.45; confidence interval, 0.21-0.97; P = .04).

A comparison of anxiety scores in the two groups failed to find a statistically significant difference between SANO and placebo. However, more men who received nitrous oxide said they tolerated the procedure “better than expected” (61% vs. 41%; P = 0.02), according to the researchers.

Dr. Rayala said that the researchers used the Nitrouseal system (Sedation Systems), in which the patient holds a mask to their face and works with staff to adjust the gas levels to the desired amount. The system is governed to max out at 50% nitrous oxide, ensuring “minimal sedation concentrations, so anesthesia personnel are not required,” she said.

“At levels of less than 50%, patients respond normally to verbal commands and maintain normal airway reflexes,” Dr. Rayala added. “This provides an advantage in that patients do not require the presence of anesthesia personnel.” And because the body eliminates the gas within about 5 minutes, patients do not require an escort home, she said.

This system is also self-scavenging to protect the operating urologist and other personnel from environmental exposure to nitrous oxide.

Dr. Rayala said that three patients (2.3%) found the mask uncomfortable, but in follow-up studies the clinicians have done a better job of preparing patients for the feeling of the mask, making a marked difference. Headaches and nausea are the most commonly reported complaints at concentrations above 50%.

“We did not have patients report headaches or nausea in new study (by the BIDMC group),” she said. This study has been submitted for publication.

Clinicians outside the United States have been quicker to embrace nitrous oxide for prostate procedures.

In a randomized controlled trial, researchers in Australia found no significant improvement in pain scores at 15 minutes from the use of nitrous oxide during transrectal biopsies; however, improvements were seen in patient-reported discomfort, overall experience, and willingness to undergo repeat biopsies.

Stephen McCombie, MD, a consultant at Perth Urology Clinic, Australia, who has been adapting the nitrous oxide protocol for transrectal biopsies to transperineal procedures, said that the Beth Israel study “adds to the evidence to support adjunct use of mild inhalational anesthetics and analgesics during prostate biopsies to improve the patient experience of the procedure.”

He said that the role for these agents may grow with the global trend away from transrectal prostate biopsies and toward transperineal biopsies, largely driven by increasing rates of sepsis after transrectal biopsies.

“While transperineal biopsies can be more painful then transrectal biopsies when performed under local anesthesia, perhaps due to biopsies being taken through the highly sensate perineum as opposed to above the dentate line, optimization of the technique can significantly reduce the discomfort associated with the procedure, which may be further reduced with these agents,” Dr. McCombie said.

“Studies indicate that transperineal biopsies can be more painful than the traditional transrectal biopsies,” Dr. Rayala said. “We do offer transperineal biopsies at BIDMC, and we are gearing up to repeat the SANO study” for those patients.

Dr. Rayala and Dr. McCombie have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

An old dog – nitrous oxide – can learn new tricks, managing pain in men undergoing transrectal biopsies, researchers reported at the annual meeting of the American Urological Association.

“At concentrations of less than 50%, nitrous oxide is classified as a minimal sedative, making it a promising option for many urologic outpatient procedures such as prostate biopsies,” said Heidi Rayala, MD, PhD, assistant professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston, who helped conduct the study.

Nitrous oxide is best known as a pain medication and anesthetic during dental procedures and childbirth, after trauma, and in end-of-life care.

In the new study, Dr. Rayala and her colleagues at Harvard and Beth Israel-Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, randomly assigned 128 men to self-administered nitrous oxide (SANO) or oxygen as a placebo. Patients in the SANO group had a smaller change in post-biopsy pain score (Visual Analog Scale for pain, 0.43 vs. 1.03; P = .03) and lower odds of experiencing pain during the procedure (odds ratio, 0.45; confidence interval, 0.21-0.97; P = .04).

A comparison of anxiety scores in the two groups failed to find a statistically significant difference between SANO and placebo. However, more men who received nitrous oxide said they tolerated the procedure “better than expected” (61% vs. 41%; P = 0.02), according to the researchers.

Dr. Rayala said that the researchers used the Nitrouseal system (Sedation Systems), in which the patient holds a mask to their face and works with staff to adjust the gas levels to the desired amount. The system is governed to max out at 50% nitrous oxide, ensuring “minimal sedation concentrations, so anesthesia personnel are not required,” she said.

“At levels of less than 50%, patients respond normally to verbal commands and maintain normal airway reflexes,” Dr. Rayala added. “This provides an advantage in that patients do not require the presence of anesthesia personnel.” And because the body eliminates the gas within about 5 minutes, patients do not require an escort home, she said.

This system is also self-scavenging to protect the operating urologist and other personnel from environmental exposure to nitrous oxide.

Dr. Rayala said that three patients (2.3%) found the mask uncomfortable, but in follow-up studies the clinicians have done a better job of preparing patients for the feeling of the mask, making a marked difference. Headaches and nausea are the most commonly reported complaints at concentrations above 50%.

“We did not have patients report headaches or nausea in new study (by the BIDMC group),” she said. This study has been submitted for publication.

Clinicians outside the United States have been quicker to embrace nitrous oxide for prostate procedures.

In a randomized controlled trial, researchers in Australia found no significant improvement in pain scores at 15 minutes from the use of nitrous oxide during transrectal biopsies; however, improvements were seen in patient-reported discomfort, overall experience, and willingness to undergo repeat biopsies.

Stephen McCombie, MD, a consultant at Perth Urology Clinic, Australia, who has been adapting the nitrous oxide protocol for transrectal biopsies to transperineal procedures, said that the Beth Israel study “adds to the evidence to support adjunct use of mild inhalational anesthetics and analgesics during prostate biopsies to improve the patient experience of the procedure.”

He said that the role for these agents may grow with the global trend away from transrectal prostate biopsies and toward transperineal biopsies, largely driven by increasing rates of sepsis after transrectal biopsies.

“While transperineal biopsies can be more painful then transrectal biopsies when performed under local anesthesia, perhaps due to biopsies being taken through the highly sensate perineum as opposed to above the dentate line, optimization of the technique can significantly reduce the discomfort associated with the procedure, which may be further reduced with these agents,” Dr. McCombie said.

“Studies indicate that transperineal biopsies can be more painful than the traditional transrectal biopsies,” Dr. Rayala said. “We do offer transperineal biopsies at BIDMC, and we are gearing up to repeat the SANO study” for those patients.

Dr. Rayala and Dr. McCombie have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Panel backs limited new olaparib use in prostate cancer

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A panel of independent advisers recently almost unanimously recommended to restrict a new indication for olaparib (Lynparza) alongside abiraterone (Zytiga) in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

On April 28, members of the Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee voted 11 to 1, with one abstention, that only patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation should receive olaparib as part of the combination first-line treatment for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

Olaparib is already cleared by the Food and Drug Administration for various ovarian, breast, and pancreatic cancer indications as well as later-line use in certain more advanced prostate cancers. AstraZeneca recently applied for an additional, broad indication for the poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor as an initial therapy that would include patients without BRCA or homologous recombination repair (HRR) mutations.

In reviewing the application, the FDA raised concerns about this broad new indication, highlighting limitations in the key research used to justify the expanded use and highlighting how olaparib may amount to a “toxic placebo,” a phrase agency staff used in their briefing document.

Given these concerns, the FDA reviewers asked the independent ODAC panel to vote on the following question: “As FDA reviews the proposed indication for olaparib in combination with abiraterone for initial treatment of [metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer], should the indication be restricted to patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation?”

The ODAC panel voted 11 to 1 in favor of a restricted expansion of olaparib plus abiraterone and prednisone or prednisolone to patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation. One member – Ravi A. Madan, MD, of the National Cancer Institute – abstained. The FDA staff asked panelists to abstain if they felt the combination treatment should not be approved for any indication.

Overall, the ODAC panel agreed with the FDA staff’s criticism of the research supporting the application: the PROpel study. The trial randomized 796 patients with previously untreated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer to olaparib plus abiraterone or abiraterone plus placebo. The median time for radiographic progression-free survival – the study’s primary endpoint – was nearly 25 months in the olaparib group versus 16.6 months in the placebo group.

The combination also demonstrated a 19% reduced risk of death, which was not statistically significant (hazard ratio, 0.81; P = .0544), and a median improvement of 7.4 months in the combination arm (42.1 vs. 34.7 months).

Although the study met its primary endpoint, the results were difficult to interpret given the lack of information about genetic variability in the participants’ tumors. Participants were not prospectively assessed for either BRCA or HRR status. But given the importance of BRCA status as a predictive biomarker for PARP inhibitor efficacy, “this trial design would be considered inappropriate today as the biomarker should have been prospectively evaluated,” the FDA wrote in its briefing document.

In a post hoc analysis performed by the FDA, the agency found that BRCA-positive patients accounted for most of the survival benefit of the combination, though made up only 11% of the PROpel population.

That meant the ODAC members were being asked to evaluate a drug based on “suboptimal data” resulting from a “suboptimal study design,” said Dr. Madan, who is head of the prostate cancer clinical research section in the NCI’s Center for Cancer Research.

Dr. Madan also emphasized concerns the FDA raised about the potential harms for patients whose prostate cancer was not tied to BRCA mutations. In the FDA’s briefing document, the agency said patients treated in the first-line metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer setting generally have few symptoms at baseline. Adding olaparib among patients lacking the BRCA mutation could expose them to a drug with known side effects but minimal chance to help them.

The PROpel trial also found that patients who received olaparib and abiraterone experienced greater toxicity than those who received abiraterone. These adverse events included venous thromboembolic events, myelosuppression, requirement for blood transfusions, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.

Although the FDA is not compelled to follow the recommendations of its advisory committees, it often does.

AstraZeneca expressed some disappointment about the recommendation in a press release. Susan Galbraith, executive vice president of Oncology R&D at AstraZeneca, said, “while we are pleased with the recognition of the benefit of Lynparza plus abiraterone for patients with BRCA-mutated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, we are disappointed with the outcome of today’s ODAC meeting. We strongly believe in the results of the PROpel trial, which demonstrated the clinically meaningful benefit for this combination in a broad population of patients regardless of biomarker status.”

One ODAC member, Jorge J. Nieva, MD, did support the expanded approval for olaparib, casting the single “no” vote. Dr. Nieva, an oncologist at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, disagreed with the FDA’s question about limiting use of the olaparib-abiraterone combination to patients with known BRCA mutations, citing the positive result from the PROpel trial.

People are aware that olaparib provides a great deal more benefit in the BRCA-positive group and may give “only minimal benefit if these tests are not positive,” but “these risks and benefits can be addressed at the patient and physician level,” he said.

But Terrence M. Kungel, MBA, who served as ODAC’s patient representative for the meeting, offered a counterpoint to Dr. Nieva’s assessment. Patients now often struggle to assess the options available to them and then pay for these medicines, with financial toxicity affecting many people with cancer.

“Prostate cancer patients need more treatments that are effective, not more choices,” said Mr. Kungel, who voted with the majority.

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

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A panel of independent advisers recently almost unanimously recommended to restrict a new indication for olaparib (Lynparza) alongside abiraterone (Zytiga) in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

On April 28, members of the Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee voted 11 to 1, with one abstention, that only patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation should receive olaparib as part of the combination first-line treatment for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

Olaparib is already cleared by the Food and Drug Administration for various ovarian, breast, and pancreatic cancer indications as well as later-line use in certain more advanced prostate cancers. AstraZeneca recently applied for an additional, broad indication for the poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor as an initial therapy that would include patients without BRCA or homologous recombination repair (HRR) mutations.

In reviewing the application, the FDA raised concerns about this broad new indication, highlighting limitations in the key research used to justify the expanded use and highlighting how olaparib may amount to a “toxic placebo,” a phrase agency staff used in their briefing document.

Given these concerns, the FDA reviewers asked the independent ODAC panel to vote on the following question: “As FDA reviews the proposed indication for olaparib in combination with abiraterone for initial treatment of [metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer], should the indication be restricted to patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation?”

The ODAC panel voted 11 to 1 in favor of a restricted expansion of olaparib plus abiraterone and prednisone or prednisolone to patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation. One member – Ravi A. Madan, MD, of the National Cancer Institute – abstained. The FDA staff asked panelists to abstain if they felt the combination treatment should not be approved for any indication.

Overall, the ODAC panel agreed with the FDA staff’s criticism of the research supporting the application: the PROpel study. The trial randomized 796 patients with previously untreated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer to olaparib plus abiraterone or abiraterone plus placebo. The median time for radiographic progression-free survival – the study’s primary endpoint – was nearly 25 months in the olaparib group versus 16.6 months in the placebo group.

The combination also demonstrated a 19% reduced risk of death, which was not statistically significant (hazard ratio, 0.81; P = .0544), and a median improvement of 7.4 months in the combination arm (42.1 vs. 34.7 months).

Although the study met its primary endpoint, the results were difficult to interpret given the lack of information about genetic variability in the participants’ tumors. Participants were not prospectively assessed for either BRCA or HRR status. But given the importance of BRCA status as a predictive biomarker for PARP inhibitor efficacy, “this trial design would be considered inappropriate today as the biomarker should have been prospectively evaluated,” the FDA wrote in its briefing document.

In a post hoc analysis performed by the FDA, the agency found that BRCA-positive patients accounted for most of the survival benefit of the combination, though made up only 11% of the PROpel population.

That meant the ODAC members were being asked to evaluate a drug based on “suboptimal data” resulting from a “suboptimal study design,” said Dr. Madan, who is head of the prostate cancer clinical research section in the NCI’s Center for Cancer Research.

Dr. Madan also emphasized concerns the FDA raised about the potential harms for patients whose prostate cancer was not tied to BRCA mutations. In the FDA’s briefing document, the agency said patients treated in the first-line metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer setting generally have few symptoms at baseline. Adding olaparib among patients lacking the BRCA mutation could expose them to a drug with known side effects but minimal chance to help them.

The PROpel trial also found that patients who received olaparib and abiraterone experienced greater toxicity than those who received abiraterone. These adverse events included venous thromboembolic events, myelosuppression, requirement for blood transfusions, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.

Although the FDA is not compelled to follow the recommendations of its advisory committees, it often does.

AstraZeneca expressed some disappointment about the recommendation in a press release. Susan Galbraith, executive vice president of Oncology R&D at AstraZeneca, said, “while we are pleased with the recognition of the benefit of Lynparza plus abiraterone for patients with BRCA-mutated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, we are disappointed with the outcome of today’s ODAC meeting. We strongly believe in the results of the PROpel trial, which demonstrated the clinically meaningful benefit for this combination in a broad population of patients regardless of biomarker status.”

One ODAC member, Jorge J. Nieva, MD, did support the expanded approval for olaparib, casting the single “no” vote. Dr. Nieva, an oncologist at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, disagreed with the FDA’s question about limiting use of the olaparib-abiraterone combination to patients with known BRCA mutations, citing the positive result from the PROpel trial.

People are aware that olaparib provides a great deal more benefit in the BRCA-positive group and may give “only minimal benefit if these tests are not positive,” but “these risks and benefits can be addressed at the patient and physician level,” he said.

But Terrence M. Kungel, MBA, who served as ODAC’s patient representative for the meeting, offered a counterpoint to Dr. Nieva’s assessment. Patients now often struggle to assess the options available to them and then pay for these medicines, with financial toxicity affecting many people with cancer.

“Prostate cancer patients need more treatments that are effective, not more choices,” said Mr. Kungel, who voted with the majority.

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

A panel of independent advisers recently almost unanimously recommended to restrict a new indication for olaparib (Lynparza) alongside abiraterone (Zytiga) in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

On April 28, members of the Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee voted 11 to 1, with one abstention, that only patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation should receive olaparib as part of the combination first-line treatment for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

Olaparib is already cleared by the Food and Drug Administration for various ovarian, breast, and pancreatic cancer indications as well as later-line use in certain more advanced prostate cancers. AstraZeneca recently applied for an additional, broad indication for the poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitor as an initial therapy that would include patients without BRCA or homologous recombination repair (HRR) mutations.

In reviewing the application, the FDA raised concerns about this broad new indication, highlighting limitations in the key research used to justify the expanded use and highlighting how olaparib may amount to a “toxic placebo,” a phrase agency staff used in their briefing document.

Given these concerns, the FDA reviewers asked the independent ODAC panel to vote on the following question: “As FDA reviews the proposed indication for olaparib in combination with abiraterone for initial treatment of [metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer], should the indication be restricted to patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation?”

The ODAC panel voted 11 to 1 in favor of a restricted expansion of olaparib plus abiraterone and prednisone or prednisolone to patients whose tumors have a BRCA mutation. One member – Ravi A. Madan, MD, of the National Cancer Institute – abstained. The FDA staff asked panelists to abstain if they felt the combination treatment should not be approved for any indication.

Overall, the ODAC panel agreed with the FDA staff’s criticism of the research supporting the application: the PROpel study. The trial randomized 796 patients with previously untreated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer to olaparib plus abiraterone or abiraterone plus placebo. The median time for radiographic progression-free survival – the study’s primary endpoint – was nearly 25 months in the olaparib group versus 16.6 months in the placebo group.

The combination also demonstrated a 19% reduced risk of death, which was not statistically significant (hazard ratio, 0.81; P = .0544), and a median improvement of 7.4 months in the combination arm (42.1 vs. 34.7 months).

Although the study met its primary endpoint, the results were difficult to interpret given the lack of information about genetic variability in the participants’ tumors. Participants were not prospectively assessed for either BRCA or HRR status. But given the importance of BRCA status as a predictive biomarker for PARP inhibitor efficacy, “this trial design would be considered inappropriate today as the biomarker should have been prospectively evaluated,” the FDA wrote in its briefing document.

In a post hoc analysis performed by the FDA, the agency found that BRCA-positive patients accounted for most of the survival benefit of the combination, though made up only 11% of the PROpel population.

That meant the ODAC members were being asked to evaluate a drug based on “suboptimal data” resulting from a “suboptimal study design,” said Dr. Madan, who is head of the prostate cancer clinical research section in the NCI’s Center for Cancer Research.

Dr. Madan also emphasized concerns the FDA raised about the potential harms for patients whose prostate cancer was not tied to BRCA mutations. In the FDA’s briefing document, the agency said patients treated in the first-line metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer setting generally have few symptoms at baseline. Adding olaparib among patients lacking the BRCA mutation could expose them to a drug with known side effects but minimal chance to help them.

The PROpel trial also found that patients who received olaparib and abiraterone experienced greater toxicity than those who received abiraterone. These adverse events included venous thromboembolic events, myelosuppression, requirement for blood transfusions, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.

Although the FDA is not compelled to follow the recommendations of its advisory committees, it often does.

AstraZeneca expressed some disappointment about the recommendation in a press release. Susan Galbraith, executive vice president of Oncology R&D at AstraZeneca, said, “while we are pleased with the recognition of the benefit of Lynparza plus abiraterone for patients with BRCA-mutated metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer, we are disappointed with the outcome of today’s ODAC meeting. We strongly believe in the results of the PROpel trial, which demonstrated the clinically meaningful benefit for this combination in a broad population of patients regardless of biomarker status.”

One ODAC member, Jorge J. Nieva, MD, did support the expanded approval for olaparib, casting the single “no” vote. Dr. Nieva, an oncologist at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, disagreed with the FDA’s question about limiting use of the olaparib-abiraterone combination to patients with known BRCA mutations, citing the positive result from the PROpel trial.

People are aware that olaparib provides a great deal more benefit in the BRCA-positive group and may give “only minimal benefit if these tests are not positive,” but “these risks and benefits can be addressed at the patient and physician level,” he said.

But Terrence M. Kungel, MBA, who served as ODAC’s patient representative for the meeting, offered a counterpoint to Dr. Nieva’s assessment. Patients now often struggle to assess the options available to them and then pay for these medicines, with financial toxicity affecting many people with cancer.

“Prostate cancer patients need more treatments that are effective, not more choices,” said Mr. Kungel, who voted with the majority.

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

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CPAP not only solution for sleep apnea

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Although continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines are the gold standard in the management of sleep apnea, several other treatments should be considered.

“Just because you have a hammer doesn’t mean everything is a nail,” Kimberly Hardin, MD, professor of clinical internal medicine at University of California, Davis, said at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

“Sleep has been underestimated in the health arena for many, many years,” said Dr. Hardin, who likened sound sleep to the “sixth vital sign.” “We know that sleep plays an integral role in our health.”

Dr. Hardin highlighted nasal and oral mandibular advancement devices and oral appliance therapy as alternatives to CPAP. Surgical options include nasal surgery and maxillomandibular advancement surgery, also known as double-jaw surgery. Such procedures should be considered only for patients who are unwilling or unable to use CPAP or other nonsurgical treatments.

Sleep apnea occurs in 4% of adult men and 2% of adult women aged 30-60. Most commonly, obstructive sleep apnea involves the cessation or significant decrease in airflow while sleeping. The Apnea Hypopnea Index (AHI) is the number of times a patient experiences apnea or hypopnea during one night divided by the hours of sleep. Normal sleep AHI is fewer than five events per hour on average; mild sleep apnea is five to 14 events; moderate, 15-29; and severe, at least 30 events.

To identify sleep apnea, physicians have several tools at their disposal, starting with preliminary questionnaires that query patients as to whether they are having trouble falling asleep, staying asleep, or are tired during the day. Additional assessment tools include sleep lab testing and at-home testing.

At-home testing has come to include more than the common devices that are worn around the chest and nose for a night.

“It’s not very fun looking,” Dr. Hardin said of the weighty, obtrusive monitoring devices. “So lots of folks have come up with some new ways of doing things.”

These new options incorporate headbands, wrist and finger devices, arterial tonometry, and sleep rings.

Studies show that U.S. adults do not get enough sleep, and poor-quality sleep is as inadequate as insufficient sleep. Barely a third of adults get the minimum 7 hours recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Non-Hispanic Black adults are less likely to report sleeping 7-9 hours and are more likely to report sleeping 6 or fewer hours than are non-Hispanic White and Hispanic adults.

Dr. Hardin said doctors can advise patients to keep their bedrooms quiet, dark, and cool with no TVs or electronics, to maintain regular wake and sleep times, and to stop consuming caffeine late in the day.

Insufficient or poor sleep can have wide-ranging implications on medical conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, obesity, immunodeficiency, cognitive function, mental health, and, ultimately, mortality, according to Dr. Hardin.

“Some people say, ‘Oh, never mind, I can sleep when I’m dead,’ “ Dr. Hardin said. But such a mentality can have a bearing on life expectancy.
 

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

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Although continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines are the gold standard in the management of sleep apnea, several other treatments should be considered.

“Just because you have a hammer doesn’t mean everything is a nail,” Kimberly Hardin, MD, professor of clinical internal medicine at University of California, Davis, said at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

“Sleep has been underestimated in the health arena for many, many years,” said Dr. Hardin, who likened sound sleep to the “sixth vital sign.” “We know that sleep plays an integral role in our health.”

Dr. Hardin highlighted nasal and oral mandibular advancement devices and oral appliance therapy as alternatives to CPAP. Surgical options include nasal surgery and maxillomandibular advancement surgery, also known as double-jaw surgery. Such procedures should be considered only for patients who are unwilling or unable to use CPAP or other nonsurgical treatments.

Sleep apnea occurs in 4% of adult men and 2% of adult women aged 30-60. Most commonly, obstructive sleep apnea involves the cessation or significant decrease in airflow while sleeping. The Apnea Hypopnea Index (AHI) is the number of times a patient experiences apnea or hypopnea during one night divided by the hours of sleep. Normal sleep AHI is fewer than five events per hour on average; mild sleep apnea is five to 14 events; moderate, 15-29; and severe, at least 30 events.

To identify sleep apnea, physicians have several tools at their disposal, starting with preliminary questionnaires that query patients as to whether they are having trouble falling asleep, staying asleep, or are tired during the day. Additional assessment tools include sleep lab testing and at-home testing.

At-home testing has come to include more than the common devices that are worn around the chest and nose for a night.

“It’s not very fun looking,” Dr. Hardin said of the weighty, obtrusive monitoring devices. “So lots of folks have come up with some new ways of doing things.”

These new options incorporate headbands, wrist and finger devices, arterial tonometry, and sleep rings.

Studies show that U.S. adults do not get enough sleep, and poor-quality sleep is as inadequate as insufficient sleep. Barely a third of adults get the minimum 7 hours recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Non-Hispanic Black adults are less likely to report sleeping 7-9 hours and are more likely to report sleeping 6 or fewer hours than are non-Hispanic White and Hispanic adults.

Dr. Hardin said doctors can advise patients to keep their bedrooms quiet, dark, and cool with no TVs or electronics, to maintain regular wake and sleep times, and to stop consuming caffeine late in the day.

Insufficient or poor sleep can have wide-ranging implications on medical conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, obesity, immunodeficiency, cognitive function, mental health, and, ultimately, mortality, according to Dr. Hardin.

“Some people say, ‘Oh, never mind, I can sleep when I’m dead,’ “ Dr. Hardin said. But such a mentality can have a bearing on life expectancy.
 

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

Although continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines are the gold standard in the management of sleep apnea, several other treatments should be considered.

“Just because you have a hammer doesn’t mean everything is a nail,” Kimberly Hardin, MD, professor of clinical internal medicine at University of California, Davis, said at the annual meeting of the American College of Physicians.

“Sleep has been underestimated in the health arena for many, many years,” said Dr. Hardin, who likened sound sleep to the “sixth vital sign.” “We know that sleep plays an integral role in our health.”

Dr. Hardin highlighted nasal and oral mandibular advancement devices and oral appliance therapy as alternatives to CPAP. Surgical options include nasal surgery and maxillomandibular advancement surgery, also known as double-jaw surgery. Such procedures should be considered only for patients who are unwilling or unable to use CPAP or other nonsurgical treatments.

Sleep apnea occurs in 4% of adult men and 2% of adult women aged 30-60. Most commonly, obstructive sleep apnea involves the cessation or significant decrease in airflow while sleeping. The Apnea Hypopnea Index (AHI) is the number of times a patient experiences apnea or hypopnea during one night divided by the hours of sleep. Normal sleep AHI is fewer than five events per hour on average; mild sleep apnea is five to 14 events; moderate, 15-29; and severe, at least 30 events.

To identify sleep apnea, physicians have several tools at their disposal, starting with preliminary questionnaires that query patients as to whether they are having trouble falling asleep, staying asleep, or are tired during the day. Additional assessment tools include sleep lab testing and at-home testing.

At-home testing has come to include more than the common devices that are worn around the chest and nose for a night.

“It’s not very fun looking,” Dr. Hardin said of the weighty, obtrusive monitoring devices. “So lots of folks have come up with some new ways of doing things.”

These new options incorporate headbands, wrist and finger devices, arterial tonometry, and sleep rings.

Studies show that U.S. adults do not get enough sleep, and poor-quality sleep is as inadequate as insufficient sleep. Barely a third of adults get the minimum 7 hours recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Non-Hispanic Black adults are less likely to report sleeping 7-9 hours and are more likely to report sleeping 6 or fewer hours than are non-Hispanic White and Hispanic adults.

Dr. Hardin said doctors can advise patients to keep their bedrooms quiet, dark, and cool with no TVs or electronics, to maintain regular wake and sleep times, and to stop consuming caffeine late in the day.

Insufficient or poor sleep can have wide-ranging implications on medical conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, obesity, immunodeficiency, cognitive function, mental health, and, ultimately, mortality, according to Dr. Hardin.

“Some people say, ‘Oh, never mind, I can sleep when I’m dead,’ “ Dr. Hardin said. But such a mentality can have a bearing on life expectancy.
 

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

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Wireless neurostimulation safe for urge incontinence

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Wireless tibial neurostimulation devices that are implanted to treat urinary incontinence appear to be effective at reducing the urge to void, according to new findings presented at the 2023 annual meeting of the American Urological Association.

As many as half of women in the United States aged 60 and older will experience urinary incontinence. Of those, roughly one in four experience urge urinary incontinence, marked by a sudden need to void that cannot be fully suppressed.

Researchers studied the benefits of the RENOVA iStim (BlueWind Medical) implantable tibial neuromodulation system for the treatment of overactive bladder in the OASIS trial.

Study investigator Roger R. Dmochowski, MD, MMHC, professor of urology and surgery and associate surgeon-in-chief at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn., said the first-line treatment of urinary incontinence is lifestyle changes to retrain the bladder or physical therapy, including pelvic floor and Kegel exercises, per AUA guidelines. He said the success rate is about 30% and is not sustained. Second-line treatments include medications, which most (60%) patients stop taking by 6 months.

More than three-quarters of the 151 women who received the device responded to therapy at 1 year, and 84.6% of the patients showed improvement, according to Dr. Dmochowski.

The participants (mean age, 58.8) demonstrated a mean baseline of 4.8 urge incidents per day (standard deviation, 2.9) and 10 voids/day (SD, 3.3). No device or procedure-related serious adverse events were reported at 12 months. Half of the women no longer had symptoms on three consecutive days, Dr. Dmochowski said.

Because urge urinary incontinence is a chronic condition, “treatment with the BlueWind System will be ongoing, with frequency determined based on the patient’s response,” Dr. Dmochowski said. “The patient is then empowered to control when and where they perform therapy.”

“The device is activated by the external wearable. It’s like an on-off switch. It has a receiver within it that basically has the capacity to be turned on and off by the wearable, which is the control device. The device is in an off-position until the wearable is applied,” he said.

He said the device should be worn twice a day for about 20 minutes, with many patients using it less.

Only one implanted tibial neuromodulation device has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration – eCOIN (Valencia Technologies). The RENOVA iStim is an investigational device under review by the FDA, Dr. Dmochowski said.

In installing the device, Dr. Dmochowski said urologists use a subfascial technique to enable direct visualization of the tibial nerve and suture fixation that increases the possibility of a predictable placement. Patients use an external wearable, which activates the implant, without concern for battery longevity or replacement.

“This therapy is not associated with any adverse effects and may be beneficial for patients who do not respond to other treatments for OAB such as medications or Botox,” said Carol E. Bretschneider, MD, a urogynecologic and pelvic surgeon at Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital, outside Chicago. “Neurostimulators can be a great advanced therapy option for patients who do not respond to more conservative treatments or cannot take or tolerate a medication.”

The devices do not stimulate or strengthen muscles but act by modulating the reflexes that influence the bladder, sphincter, and pelvic floor, added Dr. Bretschneider, who was not involved in the study.

Other treatments for urge incontinence can include acupuncture, or percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation, to target the posterior tibial nerve in the ankle, which shares the same nerve root that controls the bladder, according to Aron Liaw, MD, a reconstructive urologist and assistant professor of urology at Wayne State University in Detroit. This treatment has been shown to be at least as effective as available medications, but with fewer side effects, he said.

But regular stimulation is necessary to achieve and preserve efficacy, he said.

Dr. Liaw, who was not involved in the neuromodulation study, said the benefits of a device like Renova iStim are that implantation is relatively easy and can be performed in office settings, and patients can then treat themselves at home. However, because the new study did not compare the device to other treatments or a placebo device, its relative benefits are unclear, he said,

Other treatments for urge urinary incontinence, such as bladder Botox and sacral neuromodulation, also are minimally invasive and have proven benefit, “so a device like this could well be less effective with little other advantage,” he said.

“Lifestyle changes can make a big difference, but making big lifestyle changes is not always easy,” added Dr. Liaw. “I have found neuromodulation [to be] very effective, especially in conjunction with lifestyle changes.”

BlueWind Medical funds the OASIS trial. Dr. Dmochowski reported he received no grants nor has any relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bretschneider and Dr. Liaw report no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

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Wireless tibial neurostimulation devices that are implanted to treat urinary incontinence appear to be effective at reducing the urge to void, according to new findings presented at the 2023 annual meeting of the American Urological Association.

As many as half of women in the United States aged 60 and older will experience urinary incontinence. Of those, roughly one in four experience urge urinary incontinence, marked by a sudden need to void that cannot be fully suppressed.

Researchers studied the benefits of the RENOVA iStim (BlueWind Medical) implantable tibial neuromodulation system for the treatment of overactive bladder in the OASIS trial.

Study investigator Roger R. Dmochowski, MD, MMHC, professor of urology and surgery and associate surgeon-in-chief at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn., said the first-line treatment of urinary incontinence is lifestyle changes to retrain the bladder or physical therapy, including pelvic floor and Kegel exercises, per AUA guidelines. He said the success rate is about 30% and is not sustained. Second-line treatments include medications, which most (60%) patients stop taking by 6 months.

More than three-quarters of the 151 women who received the device responded to therapy at 1 year, and 84.6% of the patients showed improvement, according to Dr. Dmochowski.

The participants (mean age, 58.8) demonstrated a mean baseline of 4.8 urge incidents per day (standard deviation, 2.9) and 10 voids/day (SD, 3.3). No device or procedure-related serious adverse events were reported at 12 months. Half of the women no longer had symptoms on three consecutive days, Dr. Dmochowski said.

Because urge urinary incontinence is a chronic condition, “treatment with the BlueWind System will be ongoing, with frequency determined based on the patient’s response,” Dr. Dmochowski said. “The patient is then empowered to control when and where they perform therapy.”

“The device is activated by the external wearable. It’s like an on-off switch. It has a receiver within it that basically has the capacity to be turned on and off by the wearable, which is the control device. The device is in an off-position until the wearable is applied,” he said.

He said the device should be worn twice a day for about 20 minutes, with many patients using it less.

Only one implanted tibial neuromodulation device has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration – eCOIN (Valencia Technologies). The RENOVA iStim is an investigational device under review by the FDA, Dr. Dmochowski said.

In installing the device, Dr. Dmochowski said urologists use a subfascial technique to enable direct visualization of the tibial nerve and suture fixation that increases the possibility of a predictable placement. Patients use an external wearable, which activates the implant, without concern for battery longevity or replacement.

“This therapy is not associated with any adverse effects and may be beneficial for patients who do not respond to other treatments for OAB such as medications or Botox,” said Carol E. Bretschneider, MD, a urogynecologic and pelvic surgeon at Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital, outside Chicago. “Neurostimulators can be a great advanced therapy option for patients who do not respond to more conservative treatments or cannot take or tolerate a medication.”

The devices do not stimulate or strengthen muscles but act by modulating the reflexes that influence the bladder, sphincter, and pelvic floor, added Dr. Bretschneider, who was not involved in the study.

Other treatments for urge incontinence can include acupuncture, or percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation, to target the posterior tibial nerve in the ankle, which shares the same nerve root that controls the bladder, according to Aron Liaw, MD, a reconstructive urologist and assistant professor of urology at Wayne State University in Detroit. This treatment has been shown to be at least as effective as available medications, but with fewer side effects, he said.

But regular stimulation is necessary to achieve and preserve efficacy, he said.

Dr. Liaw, who was not involved in the neuromodulation study, said the benefits of a device like Renova iStim are that implantation is relatively easy and can be performed in office settings, and patients can then treat themselves at home. However, because the new study did not compare the device to other treatments or a placebo device, its relative benefits are unclear, he said,

Other treatments for urge urinary incontinence, such as bladder Botox and sacral neuromodulation, also are minimally invasive and have proven benefit, “so a device like this could well be less effective with little other advantage,” he said.

“Lifestyle changes can make a big difference, but making big lifestyle changes is not always easy,” added Dr. Liaw. “I have found neuromodulation [to be] very effective, especially in conjunction with lifestyle changes.”

BlueWind Medical funds the OASIS trial. Dr. Dmochowski reported he received no grants nor has any relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bretschneider and Dr. Liaw report no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

Wireless tibial neurostimulation devices that are implanted to treat urinary incontinence appear to be effective at reducing the urge to void, according to new findings presented at the 2023 annual meeting of the American Urological Association.

As many as half of women in the United States aged 60 and older will experience urinary incontinence. Of those, roughly one in four experience urge urinary incontinence, marked by a sudden need to void that cannot be fully suppressed.

Researchers studied the benefits of the RENOVA iStim (BlueWind Medical) implantable tibial neuromodulation system for the treatment of overactive bladder in the OASIS trial.

Study investigator Roger R. Dmochowski, MD, MMHC, professor of urology and surgery and associate surgeon-in-chief at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn., said the first-line treatment of urinary incontinence is lifestyle changes to retrain the bladder or physical therapy, including pelvic floor and Kegel exercises, per AUA guidelines. He said the success rate is about 30% and is not sustained. Second-line treatments include medications, which most (60%) patients stop taking by 6 months.

More than three-quarters of the 151 women who received the device responded to therapy at 1 year, and 84.6% of the patients showed improvement, according to Dr. Dmochowski.

The participants (mean age, 58.8) demonstrated a mean baseline of 4.8 urge incidents per day (standard deviation, 2.9) and 10 voids/day (SD, 3.3). No device or procedure-related serious adverse events were reported at 12 months. Half of the women no longer had symptoms on three consecutive days, Dr. Dmochowski said.

Because urge urinary incontinence is a chronic condition, “treatment with the BlueWind System will be ongoing, with frequency determined based on the patient’s response,” Dr. Dmochowski said. “The patient is then empowered to control when and where they perform therapy.”

“The device is activated by the external wearable. It’s like an on-off switch. It has a receiver within it that basically has the capacity to be turned on and off by the wearable, which is the control device. The device is in an off-position until the wearable is applied,” he said.

He said the device should be worn twice a day for about 20 minutes, with many patients using it less.

Only one implanted tibial neuromodulation device has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration – eCOIN (Valencia Technologies). The RENOVA iStim is an investigational device under review by the FDA, Dr. Dmochowski said.

In installing the device, Dr. Dmochowski said urologists use a subfascial technique to enable direct visualization of the tibial nerve and suture fixation that increases the possibility of a predictable placement. Patients use an external wearable, which activates the implant, without concern for battery longevity or replacement.

“This therapy is not associated with any adverse effects and may be beneficial for patients who do not respond to other treatments for OAB such as medications or Botox,” said Carol E. Bretschneider, MD, a urogynecologic and pelvic surgeon at Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital, outside Chicago. “Neurostimulators can be a great advanced therapy option for patients who do not respond to more conservative treatments or cannot take or tolerate a medication.”

The devices do not stimulate or strengthen muscles but act by modulating the reflexes that influence the bladder, sphincter, and pelvic floor, added Dr. Bretschneider, who was not involved in the study.

Other treatments for urge incontinence can include acupuncture, or percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation, to target the posterior tibial nerve in the ankle, which shares the same nerve root that controls the bladder, according to Aron Liaw, MD, a reconstructive urologist and assistant professor of urology at Wayne State University in Detroit. This treatment has been shown to be at least as effective as available medications, but with fewer side effects, he said.

But regular stimulation is necessary to achieve and preserve efficacy, he said.

Dr. Liaw, who was not involved in the neuromodulation study, said the benefits of a device like Renova iStim are that implantation is relatively easy and can be performed in office settings, and patients can then treat themselves at home. However, because the new study did not compare the device to other treatments or a placebo device, its relative benefits are unclear, he said,

Other treatments for urge urinary incontinence, such as bladder Botox and sacral neuromodulation, also are minimally invasive and have proven benefit, “so a device like this could well be less effective with little other advantage,” he said.

“Lifestyle changes can make a big difference, but making big lifestyle changes is not always easy,” added Dr. Liaw. “I have found neuromodulation [to be] very effective, especially in conjunction with lifestyle changes.”

BlueWind Medical funds the OASIS trial. Dr. Dmochowski reported he received no grants nor has any relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bretschneider and Dr. Liaw report no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

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Gender-diverse teens face barriers to physical activity

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Concerns about negative judgment and lack of inclusive facilities topped the list of barriers to physical activity reported by gender-diverse teens in a poster presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting. Other barriers included body dissatisfaction and discomfort or pain from binding or tucking, based on data from 160 individuals.

Previous studies suggest that gender-diverse teens have lower levels of physical activity than cisgender teens, but data on the specific barriers to physical activity reported by gender-diverse adolescents are lacking, according to Karishma Desai, BA, a medical student at Northwestern University, Chicago, and colleagues.

The researchers reviewed data from adolescents aged 13-18 years who identified as transgender or nonbinary and lived in the United States. Participants were recruited through flyers, wallet cards, email, and social media. They completed an online survey that included questions on preferred types of physical activity and potential barriers to physical activity. Major barriers were defined as items that “almost always” or “always” got in the way of physical activity.

Overall, 51% of the participants identified as female/transfeminine, 31% as male/transmasculine, 9% as genderqueer or agender, 8% as nonbinary, and 1% as unsure. A total of 86 participants were assigned male at birth, 73 were assigned female, and 1 was assigned intersex or other. Nearly all of the participants (96%) had begun social transition; approximately half (48%) reported using a chest binder, and 75% had been or were currently taking gender-affirming hormones.

Potential negative judgment from others was the top barrier to physical activity (cited by 39% of participants), followed by body dissatisfaction from gender dysphoria (38%) and discomfort with the available options for locker rooms or changing rooms (38%). Approximately one-third (36%) of respondents reported physical discomfort or pain from binding or tucking as a barrier to physical activity, and 34% cited discomfort with requirements for a physical activity uniform or athletic clothing at school. Other gender-diverse specific barriers to physical activity included bullying related to being transgender (31%) and the inability to participate in a group of choice because of gender identity (24%).

In addition, participants cited general barriers to physical activity including bullying related to weight (33%), dissatisfaction with weight or size (31%), and bullying in general or for reasons other than gender status (29%).

However, more than 50% of respondents said they were comfortable or very comfortable (4 or 5 on a 5-point Likert Scale) with physical activity in the settings of coed or all-gender teams (61%) or engaging in individual activities (71%). By contrast, 36% were comfortable or very comfortable with a team, group, or class that aligned with sex assignment at birth.

The majority of participants (81%) were comfortable or very comfortable with their homes or a private location as a setting for physical activity, 54% with a public space such as a park, and 43% with a school setting.

Increasing gender congruence was the biggest facilitator of physical activity, reported by 53% of participants, the researchers noted. Other facilitators of physical activity included increasing body satisfaction (43%), staying healthy to avoid long-term health problems in the future (43%), and staying healthy to prepare for gender-related surgery in the future (18%).

The study findings were limited by the use of self-reports and the use of a convenience sample, as well as the lack of data on race, the researchers noted. However, the results suggest that access to all-gender teams, standardizing physical activity clothing, and increasing inclusive facilities may promote greater physical activity participation by gender-diverse adolescents, and offering private or individual options may increase comfort with physical activity, they concluded.
 

 

 

Study provides teens’ perspectives

The current study is especially timely given the recent passage by the U.S. House of Representatives of the anti-trans sports bill preventing transgender women and girls from playing on sports teams “consistent with their gender identity,” said Margaret Thew, DNP, medical director of adolescent medicine at Children’s Wisconsin in Milwaukee, in an interview. Ms. Thew was not involved in the current study.

“The House bill seeks to amend federal law to require that sex shall be recognized based solely on a person’s reproductive biology and genetics at birth, for the purpose of determining compliance with Title IX in athletics,” Ms. Thew said.

“Despite political responses to sports participation for transgender adolescents, we have not heard the perspective of the teens themselves,” she emphasized. “It is imperative for parents, coaches, and clinicians to hear the adolescents’ concerns so they can advocate for the students and provide the needed support.” In addition, Ms. Thew noted, “these concerns may also provide overdue changes to the required uniforms described for specific sports.”

Ms. Thew said she was surprised by the finding of transgender teens’ comfort with coed teams and individual activities, both of which may be opportunities to promote physical activity for transgender adolescents.

However, she added that she was not surprised by some of the results. “Many transgender adolescents experience the discomfort and further body dysmorphia of being put into gender-conforming attire such as swimwear, spandex shorts for female volleyball players, or field hockey skirts, for example.”

Although many schools are establishing safe, comfortable places for all adolescents to change clothing prior to physical education and sports participation, “resources are limited, and students and parents need to advocate within the school system,” Ms. Thew noted.

“We as a society, including athletic clothing makers, need to hear the testimony of transgender adolescents on the discomfort from body modifications to better support and innovate attire to meet their needs,” she added.

The take-home message for clinicians is twofold,” said Ms. Thew. “Clinicians need to advocate for transgender patients to have the same opportunities as all teens when it comes to sports participation and physical activity. Also, clinicians need to ask all adolescents about their comfort in participating in physical activity both on club/school teams and independently,” she said. “If barriers are identified, clinicians need to work to support the adolescent with alternative activities/attire that will promote healthy physical activities for overall health.”

The current study also suggests that transgender adolescents who may have interest in, but discomfort with, physical activity should be redirected to coed or individual sports available in their communities, Ms. Thew added.

More research is needed on innovative sports attire that would improve comfort for transgender adolescents and thereby encourage physical activity, Ms. Thew told this news organization. More data also are needed on which sports transgender adolescents participate in and why, and how these activities might be promoted, she said.

Finally, more research will be needed to examine the impact of the recent House bills on physical activity for transgender youth, Ms. Thew said.

The study was supported by the Potocsnak Family Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine at Ann and Robert H. Lurie’s Children’s Hospital of Chicago. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Ms. Thew had no financial conflicts to disclose, but she serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Pediatric News.

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Concerns about negative judgment and lack of inclusive facilities topped the list of barriers to physical activity reported by gender-diverse teens in a poster presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting. Other barriers included body dissatisfaction and discomfort or pain from binding or tucking, based on data from 160 individuals.

Previous studies suggest that gender-diverse teens have lower levels of physical activity than cisgender teens, but data on the specific barriers to physical activity reported by gender-diverse adolescents are lacking, according to Karishma Desai, BA, a medical student at Northwestern University, Chicago, and colleagues.

The researchers reviewed data from adolescents aged 13-18 years who identified as transgender or nonbinary and lived in the United States. Participants were recruited through flyers, wallet cards, email, and social media. They completed an online survey that included questions on preferred types of physical activity and potential barriers to physical activity. Major barriers were defined as items that “almost always” or “always” got in the way of physical activity.

Overall, 51% of the participants identified as female/transfeminine, 31% as male/transmasculine, 9% as genderqueer or agender, 8% as nonbinary, and 1% as unsure. A total of 86 participants were assigned male at birth, 73 were assigned female, and 1 was assigned intersex or other. Nearly all of the participants (96%) had begun social transition; approximately half (48%) reported using a chest binder, and 75% had been or were currently taking gender-affirming hormones.

Potential negative judgment from others was the top barrier to physical activity (cited by 39% of participants), followed by body dissatisfaction from gender dysphoria (38%) and discomfort with the available options for locker rooms or changing rooms (38%). Approximately one-third (36%) of respondents reported physical discomfort or pain from binding or tucking as a barrier to physical activity, and 34% cited discomfort with requirements for a physical activity uniform or athletic clothing at school. Other gender-diverse specific barriers to physical activity included bullying related to being transgender (31%) and the inability to participate in a group of choice because of gender identity (24%).

In addition, participants cited general barriers to physical activity including bullying related to weight (33%), dissatisfaction with weight or size (31%), and bullying in general or for reasons other than gender status (29%).

However, more than 50% of respondents said they were comfortable or very comfortable (4 or 5 on a 5-point Likert Scale) with physical activity in the settings of coed or all-gender teams (61%) or engaging in individual activities (71%). By contrast, 36% were comfortable or very comfortable with a team, group, or class that aligned with sex assignment at birth.

The majority of participants (81%) were comfortable or very comfortable with their homes or a private location as a setting for physical activity, 54% with a public space such as a park, and 43% with a school setting.

Increasing gender congruence was the biggest facilitator of physical activity, reported by 53% of participants, the researchers noted. Other facilitators of physical activity included increasing body satisfaction (43%), staying healthy to avoid long-term health problems in the future (43%), and staying healthy to prepare for gender-related surgery in the future (18%).

The study findings were limited by the use of self-reports and the use of a convenience sample, as well as the lack of data on race, the researchers noted. However, the results suggest that access to all-gender teams, standardizing physical activity clothing, and increasing inclusive facilities may promote greater physical activity participation by gender-diverse adolescents, and offering private or individual options may increase comfort with physical activity, they concluded.
 

 

 

Study provides teens’ perspectives

The current study is especially timely given the recent passage by the U.S. House of Representatives of the anti-trans sports bill preventing transgender women and girls from playing on sports teams “consistent with their gender identity,” said Margaret Thew, DNP, medical director of adolescent medicine at Children’s Wisconsin in Milwaukee, in an interview. Ms. Thew was not involved in the current study.

“The House bill seeks to amend federal law to require that sex shall be recognized based solely on a person’s reproductive biology and genetics at birth, for the purpose of determining compliance with Title IX in athletics,” Ms. Thew said.

“Despite political responses to sports participation for transgender adolescents, we have not heard the perspective of the teens themselves,” she emphasized. “It is imperative for parents, coaches, and clinicians to hear the adolescents’ concerns so they can advocate for the students and provide the needed support.” In addition, Ms. Thew noted, “these concerns may also provide overdue changes to the required uniforms described for specific sports.”

Ms. Thew said she was surprised by the finding of transgender teens’ comfort with coed teams and individual activities, both of which may be opportunities to promote physical activity for transgender adolescents.

However, she added that she was not surprised by some of the results. “Many transgender adolescents experience the discomfort and further body dysmorphia of being put into gender-conforming attire such as swimwear, spandex shorts for female volleyball players, or field hockey skirts, for example.”

Although many schools are establishing safe, comfortable places for all adolescents to change clothing prior to physical education and sports participation, “resources are limited, and students and parents need to advocate within the school system,” Ms. Thew noted.

“We as a society, including athletic clothing makers, need to hear the testimony of transgender adolescents on the discomfort from body modifications to better support and innovate attire to meet their needs,” she added.

The take-home message for clinicians is twofold,” said Ms. Thew. “Clinicians need to advocate for transgender patients to have the same opportunities as all teens when it comes to sports participation and physical activity. Also, clinicians need to ask all adolescents about their comfort in participating in physical activity both on club/school teams and independently,” she said. “If barriers are identified, clinicians need to work to support the adolescent with alternative activities/attire that will promote healthy physical activities for overall health.”

The current study also suggests that transgender adolescents who may have interest in, but discomfort with, physical activity should be redirected to coed or individual sports available in their communities, Ms. Thew added.

More research is needed on innovative sports attire that would improve comfort for transgender adolescents and thereby encourage physical activity, Ms. Thew told this news organization. More data also are needed on which sports transgender adolescents participate in and why, and how these activities might be promoted, she said.

Finally, more research will be needed to examine the impact of the recent House bills on physical activity for transgender youth, Ms. Thew said.

The study was supported by the Potocsnak Family Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine at Ann and Robert H. Lurie’s Children’s Hospital of Chicago. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Ms. Thew had no financial conflicts to disclose, but she serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Pediatric News.

Concerns about negative judgment and lack of inclusive facilities topped the list of barriers to physical activity reported by gender-diverse teens in a poster presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies annual meeting. Other barriers included body dissatisfaction and discomfort or pain from binding or tucking, based on data from 160 individuals.

Previous studies suggest that gender-diverse teens have lower levels of physical activity than cisgender teens, but data on the specific barriers to physical activity reported by gender-diverse adolescents are lacking, according to Karishma Desai, BA, a medical student at Northwestern University, Chicago, and colleagues.

The researchers reviewed data from adolescents aged 13-18 years who identified as transgender or nonbinary and lived in the United States. Participants were recruited through flyers, wallet cards, email, and social media. They completed an online survey that included questions on preferred types of physical activity and potential barriers to physical activity. Major barriers were defined as items that “almost always” or “always” got in the way of physical activity.

Overall, 51% of the participants identified as female/transfeminine, 31% as male/transmasculine, 9% as genderqueer or agender, 8% as nonbinary, and 1% as unsure. A total of 86 participants were assigned male at birth, 73 were assigned female, and 1 was assigned intersex or other. Nearly all of the participants (96%) had begun social transition; approximately half (48%) reported using a chest binder, and 75% had been or were currently taking gender-affirming hormones.

Potential negative judgment from others was the top barrier to physical activity (cited by 39% of participants), followed by body dissatisfaction from gender dysphoria (38%) and discomfort with the available options for locker rooms or changing rooms (38%). Approximately one-third (36%) of respondents reported physical discomfort or pain from binding or tucking as a barrier to physical activity, and 34% cited discomfort with requirements for a physical activity uniform or athletic clothing at school. Other gender-diverse specific barriers to physical activity included bullying related to being transgender (31%) and the inability to participate in a group of choice because of gender identity (24%).

In addition, participants cited general barriers to physical activity including bullying related to weight (33%), dissatisfaction with weight or size (31%), and bullying in general or for reasons other than gender status (29%).

However, more than 50% of respondents said they were comfortable or very comfortable (4 or 5 on a 5-point Likert Scale) with physical activity in the settings of coed or all-gender teams (61%) or engaging in individual activities (71%). By contrast, 36% were comfortable or very comfortable with a team, group, or class that aligned with sex assignment at birth.

The majority of participants (81%) were comfortable or very comfortable with their homes or a private location as a setting for physical activity, 54% with a public space such as a park, and 43% with a school setting.

Increasing gender congruence was the biggest facilitator of physical activity, reported by 53% of participants, the researchers noted. Other facilitators of physical activity included increasing body satisfaction (43%), staying healthy to avoid long-term health problems in the future (43%), and staying healthy to prepare for gender-related surgery in the future (18%).

The study findings were limited by the use of self-reports and the use of a convenience sample, as well as the lack of data on race, the researchers noted. However, the results suggest that access to all-gender teams, standardizing physical activity clothing, and increasing inclusive facilities may promote greater physical activity participation by gender-diverse adolescents, and offering private or individual options may increase comfort with physical activity, they concluded.
 

 

 

Study provides teens’ perspectives

The current study is especially timely given the recent passage by the U.S. House of Representatives of the anti-trans sports bill preventing transgender women and girls from playing on sports teams “consistent with their gender identity,” said Margaret Thew, DNP, medical director of adolescent medicine at Children’s Wisconsin in Milwaukee, in an interview. Ms. Thew was not involved in the current study.

“The House bill seeks to amend federal law to require that sex shall be recognized based solely on a person’s reproductive biology and genetics at birth, for the purpose of determining compliance with Title IX in athletics,” Ms. Thew said.

“Despite political responses to sports participation for transgender adolescents, we have not heard the perspective of the teens themselves,” she emphasized. “It is imperative for parents, coaches, and clinicians to hear the adolescents’ concerns so they can advocate for the students and provide the needed support.” In addition, Ms. Thew noted, “these concerns may also provide overdue changes to the required uniforms described for specific sports.”

Ms. Thew said she was surprised by the finding of transgender teens’ comfort with coed teams and individual activities, both of which may be opportunities to promote physical activity for transgender adolescents.

However, she added that she was not surprised by some of the results. “Many transgender adolescents experience the discomfort and further body dysmorphia of being put into gender-conforming attire such as swimwear, spandex shorts for female volleyball players, or field hockey skirts, for example.”

Although many schools are establishing safe, comfortable places for all adolescents to change clothing prior to physical education and sports participation, “resources are limited, and students and parents need to advocate within the school system,” Ms. Thew noted.

“We as a society, including athletic clothing makers, need to hear the testimony of transgender adolescents on the discomfort from body modifications to better support and innovate attire to meet their needs,” she added.

The take-home message for clinicians is twofold,” said Ms. Thew. “Clinicians need to advocate for transgender patients to have the same opportunities as all teens when it comes to sports participation and physical activity. Also, clinicians need to ask all adolescents about their comfort in participating in physical activity both on club/school teams and independently,” she said. “If barriers are identified, clinicians need to work to support the adolescent with alternative activities/attire that will promote healthy physical activities for overall health.”

The current study also suggests that transgender adolescents who may have interest in, but discomfort with, physical activity should be redirected to coed or individual sports available in their communities, Ms. Thew added.

More research is needed on innovative sports attire that would improve comfort for transgender adolescents and thereby encourage physical activity, Ms. Thew told this news organization. More data also are needed on which sports transgender adolescents participate in and why, and how these activities might be promoted, she said.

Finally, more research will be needed to examine the impact of the recent House bills on physical activity for transgender youth, Ms. Thew said.

The study was supported by the Potocsnak Family Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine at Ann and Robert H. Lurie’s Children’s Hospital of Chicago. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Ms. Thew had no financial conflicts to disclose, but she serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Pediatric News.

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FDA expands atogepant approval to include chronic migraine

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The Food and Drug Administration has approved an expanded indication for atogepant (Qulipta, Abbvie) to include prevention of chronic migraine in adults. The approval makes atogepant the first, and only, oral calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist approved to prevent migraine across frequencies, including episodic and chronic, the company said in a news release.

The FDA initially approved atogepant in 2021 for the prevention of episodic migraine in adults.

Once-daily atogepant is available in three doses – 10 mg, 30 mg, and 60 mg – for prevention of episodic migraine. However, only the 60-mg dose of medication is indicated for the preventive treatment of chronic migraine.

The expanded indication in chronic migraine is based on positive results of the phase 3 PROGRESS trial, which evaluated atogepant in more than 700 adults with chronic migraine.

The trial met the primary endpoint of statistically significant reduction from baseline in mean monthly migraine days with atogepant compared with placebo across the 12-week treatment period.

Treatment with atogepant also led to statistically significant improvements in all six secondary endpoints, including the proportion of patients that achieved at least a 50% reduction in mean monthly migraine days across 12 weeks and improvements in function and reduction in activity impairment caused by migraine.

The efficacy results are consistent with those in the ADVANCE episodic migraine trial.

The overall safety profile of atogepant is consistent with the episodic migraine patient population, with the most common adverse events including constipation, nausea, and fatigue/sleepiness.

“The FDA approval is an important milestone, providing those most impacted by migraine with a new, safe, and effective treatment option in a convenient, once-daily pill,” Peter McAllister, MD, director of the New England Center for Neurology and Headache, Stamford, Conn., said in the news release.

The data demonstrate that atogepant “helps reduce the burden of migraine by delivering improvements in function, with high response rates and sustained efficacy over 12 weeks. These are critical factors neurologists and headache specialists consider when prescribing a treatment option, particularly for those with chronic migraine,” Dr. McAllister added.

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

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The Food and Drug Administration has approved an expanded indication for atogepant (Qulipta, Abbvie) to include prevention of chronic migraine in adults. The approval makes atogepant the first, and only, oral calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist approved to prevent migraine across frequencies, including episodic and chronic, the company said in a news release.

The FDA initially approved atogepant in 2021 for the prevention of episodic migraine in adults.

Once-daily atogepant is available in three doses – 10 mg, 30 mg, and 60 mg – for prevention of episodic migraine. However, only the 60-mg dose of medication is indicated for the preventive treatment of chronic migraine.

The expanded indication in chronic migraine is based on positive results of the phase 3 PROGRESS trial, which evaluated atogepant in more than 700 adults with chronic migraine.

The trial met the primary endpoint of statistically significant reduction from baseline in mean monthly migraine days with atogepant compared with placebo across the 12-week treatment period.

Treatment with atogepant also led to statistically significant improvements in all six secondary endpoints, including the proportion of patients that achieved at least a 50% reduction in mean monthly migraine days across 12 weeks and improvements in function and reduction in activity impairment caused by migraine.

The efficacy results are consistent with those in the ADVANCE episodic migraine trial.

The overall safety profile of atogepant is consistent with the episodic migraine patient population, with the most common adverse events including constipation, nausea, and fatigue/sleepiness.

“The FDA approval is an important milestone, providing those most impacted by migraine with a new, safe, and effective treatment option in a convenient, once-daily pill,” Peter McAllister, MD, director of the New England Center for Neurology and Headache, Stamford, Conn., said in the news release.

The data demonstrate that atogepant “helps reduce the burden of migraine by delivering improvements in function, with high response rates and sustained efficacy over 12 weeks. These are critical factors neurologists and headache specialists consider when prescribing a treatment option, particularly for those with chronic migraine,” Dr. McAllister added.

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

The Food and Drug Administration has approved an expanded indication for atogepant (Qulipta, Abbvie) to include prevention of chronic migraine in adults. The approval makes atogepant the first, and only, oral calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist approved to prevent migraine across frequencies, including episodic and chronic, the company said in a news release.

The FDA initially approved atogepant in 2021 for the prevention of episodic migraine in adults.

Once-daily atogepant is available in three doses – 10 mg, 30 mg, and 60 mg – for prevention of episodic migraine. However, only the 60-mg dose of medication is indicated for the preventive treatment of chronic migraine.

The expanded indication in chronic migraine is based on positive results of the phase 3 PROGRESS trial, which evaluated atogepant in more than 700 adults with chronic migraine.

The trial met the primary endpoint of statistically significant reduction from baseline in mean monthly migraine days with atogepant compared with placebo across the 12-week treatment period.

Treatment with atogepant also led to statistically significant improvements in all six secondary endpoints, including the proportion of patients that achieved at least a 50% reduction in mean monthly migraine days across 12 weeks and improvements in function and reduction in activity impairment caused by migraine.

The efficacy results are consistent with those in the ADVANCE episodic migraine trial.

The overall safety profile of atogepant is consistent with the episodic migraine patient population, with the most common adverse events including constipation, nausea, and fatigue/sleepiness.

“The FDA approval is an important milestone, providing those most impacted by migraine with a new, safe, and effective treatment option in a convenient, once-daily pill,” Peter McAllister, MD, director of the New England Center for Neurology and Headache, Stamford, Conn., said in the news release.

The data demonstrate that atogepant “helps reduce the burden of migraine by delivering improvements in function, with high response rates and sustained efficacy over 12 weeks. These are critical factors neurologists and headache specialists consider when prescribing a treatment option, particularly for those with chronic migraine,” Dr. McAllister added.

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

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Malaria: Not just someone else’s problem

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What is the most dangerous animal on Earth? Which one has killed more humans since we first began walking upright?

The mind leaps to the vicious and dangerous – great white sharks. lions. tigers. crocodiles. The fearsome predators of the planet But realistically, more people are killed and injured by large herbivores each year than predators. Just watch news updates from Yellowstone during their busy season.

Dr. Allan M. Block

Anyway, the correct answer is ... none of the above.

It’s the mosquito, and the many microbes it’s a vector for. Malaria, in particular. Even today, one to two people die each minute from malaria on planet Earth. Even the once-devastating bubonic plague is no longer a major concern.

What do Presidents Washington, Kennedy, Eisenhower, Lincoln, Monroe, Grant, Garfield, Jackson, Teddy Roosevelt, and other historical VIPs like Oliver Cromwell, King Tut, and numerous kings, queens, and popes all have in common? They all had malaria. Cromwell, Tut, and many royal and religious figures died of it.

You can make a solid argument that malaria is the disease that’s affected the course of history more than any other (you could make a good case for the plague, too, but it’s less relevant today). The control of malaria is what allowed the Panama canal to happen.

I’m bringing this up because, mostly overlooked in the news recently as we argued about light beer endorsements, TV pundits, and the NFL draft, is the approval and gradual increase in use of a malaria vaccine.

This is a pretty big deal given the scope of the problem and the fact that the most effective prevention up until recently was a mosquito net.

We tend to see malaria as someone else’s problem, something that affects the tropics, but forget that as recently as the 1940s it was still common in the U.S. During the Civil War as many as 1 million soldiers were infected with it. Given the right conditions it could easily return here.

Which is why we should be more aware of these things. As COVID showed, infectious diseases are never some other country’s, or continent’s, problem. They affect all of us either directly or indirectly. In the interconnected economies of the world illnesses in one area can spread to others. Even if they don’t they can still have significant effects on supply chains, since so much of what we depend on comes from somewhere else.

COVID, by comparison, is small beer. Just think about smallpox, or the plague, or polio, as to what an unchecked disease can do to a society until medicine catches up with it.

There will always be new diseases. Microbes and humans have been in a state of hostilities for a few million years now, and likely always will be. But every victory along the way is a victory for everyone, regardless of who they are or where they live.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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What is the most dangerous animal on Earth? Which one has killed more humans since we first began walking upright?

The mind leaps to the vicious and dangerous – great white sharks. lions. tigers. crocodiles. The fearsome predators of the planet But realistically, more people are killed and injured by large herbivores each year than predators. Just watch news updates from Yellowstone during their busy season.

Dr. Allan M. Block

Anyway, the correct answer is ... none of the above.

It’s the mosquito, and the many microbes it’s a vector for. Malaria, in particular. Even today, one to two people die each minute from malaria on planet Earth. Even the once-devastating bubonic plague is no longer a major concern.

What do Presidents Washington, Kennedy, Eisenhower, Lincoln, Monroe, Grant, Garfield, Jackson, Teddy Roosevelt, and other historical VIPs like Oliver Cromwell, King Tut, and numerous kings, queens, and popes all have in common? They all had malaria. Cromwell, Tut, and many royal and religious figures died of it.

You can make a solid argument that malaria is the disease that’s affected the course of history more than any other (you could make a good case for the plague, too, but it’s less relevant today). The control of malaria is what allowed the Panama canal to happen.

I’m bringing this up because, mostly overlooked in the news recently as we argued about light beer endorsements, TV pundits, and the NFL draft, is the approval and gradual increase in use of a malaria vaccine.

This is a pretty big deal given the scope of the problem and the fact that the most effective prevention up until recently was a mosquito net.

We tend to see malaria as someone else’s problem, something that affects the tropics, but forget that as recently as the 1940s it was still common in the U.S. During the Civil War as many as 1 million soldiers were infected with it. Given the right conditions it could easily return here.

Which is why we should be more aware of these things. As COVID showed, infectious diseases are never some other country’s, or continent’s, problem. They affect all of us either directly or indirectly. In the interconnected economies of the world illnesses in one area can spread to others. Even if they don’t they can still have significant effects on supply chains, since so much of what we depend on comes from somewhere else.

COVID, by comparison, is small beer. Just think about smallpox, or the plague, or polio, as to what an unchecked disease can do to a society until medicine catches up with it.

There will always be new diseases. Microbes and humans have been in a state of hostilities for a few million years now, and likely always will be. But every victory along the way is a victory for everyone, regardless of who they are or where they live.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

What is the most dangerous animal on Earth? Which one has killed more humans since we first began walking upright?

The mind leaps to the vicious and dangerous – great white sharks. lions. tigers. crocodiles. The fearsome predators of the planet But realistically, more people are killed and injured by large herbivores each year than predators. Just watch news updates from Yellowstone during their busy season.

Dr. Allan M. Block

Anyway, the correct answer is ... none of the above.

It’s the mosquito, and the many microbes it’s a vector for. Malaria, in particular. Even today, one to two people die each minute from malaria on planet Earth. Even the once-devastating bubonic plague is no longer a major concern.

What do Presidents Washington, Kennedy, Eisenhower, Lincoln, Monroe, Grant, Garfield, Jackson, Teddy Roosevelt, and other historical VIPs like Oliver Cromwell, King Tut, and numerous kings, queens, and popes all have in common? They all had malaria. Cromwell, Tut, and many royal and religious figures died of it.

You can make a solid argument that malaria is the disease that’s affected the course of history more than any other (you could make a good case for the plague, too, but it’s less relevant today). The control of malaria is what allowed the Panama canal to happen.

I’m bringing this up because, mostly overlooked in the news recently as we argued about light beer endorsements, TV pundits, and the NFL draft, is the approval and gradual increase in use of a malaria vaccine.

This is a pretty big deal given the scope of the problem and the fact that the most effective prevention up until recently was a mosquito net.

We tend to see malaria as someone else’s problem, something that affects the tropics, but forget that as recently as the 1940s it was still common in the U.S. During the Civil War as many as 1 million soldiers were infected with it. Given the right conditions it could easily return here.

Which is why we should be more aware of these things. As COVID showed, infectious diseases are never some other country’s, or continent’s, problem. They affect all of us either directly or indirectly. In the interconnected economies of the world illnesses in one area can spread to others. Even if they don’t they can still have significant effects on supply chains, since so much of what we depend on comes from somewhere else.

COVID, by comparison, is small beer. Just think about smallpox, or the plague, or polio, as to what an unchecked disease can do to a society until medicine catches up with it.

There will always be new diseases. Microbes and humans have been in a state of hostilities for a few million years now, and likely always will be. But every victory along the way is a victory for everyone, regardless of who they are or where they live.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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