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Wed, 12/18/2024 - 09:36

Parents driving the ‘talk’ supports healthy sexual behaviors in GBQ teens and young adults

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When it comes to sexual health education in the United States, one thing is abundantly clear: It’s a messy patchwork of programs, topics, and criteria. Only 29 states and the District of Columbia currently mandate sexual health education. Sixteen states have an abstinence-only curriculum, whereas 13 do not require that instruction be age-appropriate, inclusive, medically accurate, or evidence-based/informed. And this is just the tip of the iceberg, according to a 2022 report issued by the Sex Ed for Social Change organization.

Parents should take an inclusive approach to sex communication and create a safe space for discussing sex and sexual orientation, said almost all (96.7%) of male young adults who participated in a qualitative study. This would help reinforce acceptance and parents could possibly serve as a proxy for children who’ve not yet disclosed their sexual orientation. Yet, few parents are equipped or prepared to have these meaningful conversations with gay, bisexual, queer, or gender-diverse children, despite the fact that they are especially vulnerable to poor sexual health outcomes, bullying, abuse, and mental health challenges, as well as high-risk sexual behaviors.

“Parents are sexual socialization agents,” Dalmacio Dennis Flores, PhD, ACRN, assistant professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, told this news organization. “It’s through the information that they convey, the way that they normalize rituals and expectations, that they inform young people of all of societal expectations or roles they’ll be fulfilling in the future.”

Dr. Flores is lead author of a study published in the Journal of Adolescent Health. He and his colleagues collected perspectives on comprehensive, inclusive, and age-appropriate parent-child sex communications from 30 GBQ adolescent males aged 15-20 years who were already “out” to their parents. Participants were asked to sort through 28 preprinted note cards containing broad sexual health topics (for instance, human anatomy, dating, sexually transmitted infections) as well as topics theoretically specific to GBQ individuals (for example, anal sex), and were asked to add additional topics that they felt were missing. They were then directed to recommend topics along with ideal timing (that is, elementary, middle, or high school) for these conversations.

Study findings also underscored the importance of initiating comprehensive sexuality talks as early as elementary school age – namely to start preparing GBQ children for inevitable adversities that they were likely to encounter later in life, as well as to form building blocks for more mature, in-depth discussions during high school.

Importantly, these recommendations generally align with those aimed at heterosexual youth.

“When we refer to topics for elementary school, they are general parameters of what kids might be interested in or want to hear more about; it’s not planting a seed,” explained Dr. Flores.

Eva Goldfarb, PhD, LHD, MA, professor of public health at Montclair (N.J.) State University, agreed. “We always talk about (in sex education) to follow young people’s lead. If your child is asking you a question, they deserve a response,” said Dr. Goldfarb, who wasn’t involved in the study. “It doesn’t mean you have to give a detailed- level explanation but if they’re asking about it, it means that they are thinking about it. But it’s really important for all young people to know all of this information.”

Along those lines, participants deemed that fundamental issues about bodies (for example, human anatomy, reproduction), different sexual orientations, and an introduction to foundational issues (like privacy, peer or social pressure, sexual abuse) would help elementary-aged children to normalize discussions about sex, anatomy, and sexual orientation.

Middle school conversations were ideally more in-depth to reflect the time when young people are beginning to explore and accept their social and sexual identities. Topics of discussion might include types of sexual intercourse (anal, oral, and vaginal), health promotion strategies (abstinence, condoms, and contraception), possible adverse outcomes of condomless intercourse (HIV, STIs), considerations about engaging in sexual intercourse (including readiness, negotiating boundaries, virginity), and interpersonal safety (for instance, sexting, alcohol/drugs/chemsex, sexual coercion, and partner abuse/violence).

Finally, high school age recommendations focused on socio-relational topics (such as hook-up culture, technology/online dating, and multiple or concurrent sex partners), which are most relevant during a time when adolescents are most prone to experimentation and risk-taking.

Acknowledging that the study approach was novel, Dr. Flores noted that hearing about these topics from the youth perspective allowed parents to prepare. “Communication is better when it’s anticipated vs. reactive,” he said.

Last but not least, clinicians also have an important role in supporting these conversations.

“We’ve always looked at sex communication as a dyadic process, as a parent bestowing wisdom on a child who doesn’t have that knowledge yet. But it can be a triadic model,” said Dr. Flores. “Providers can encourage parents to ask if a child is dating or is familiar with ways to protect themselves or provide consent, and act as a resource exclusively to troubleshoot emergent issues.”

This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. The study also received supplementary funding from the Surgeon General C. Everett Koop HIV/AIDS Research Award. Dr. Flores and Dr. Goldfarb report no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

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When it comes to sexual health education in the United States, one thing is abundantly clear: It’s a messy patchwork of programs, topics, and criteria. Only 29 states and the District of Columbia currently mandate sexual health education. Sixteen states have an abstinence-only curriculum, whereas 13 do not require that instruction be age-appropriate, inclusive, medically accurate, or evidence-based/informed. And this is just the tip of the iceberg, according to a 2022 report issued by the Sex Ed for Social Change organization.

Parents should take an inclusive approach to sex communication and create a safe space for discussing sex and sexual orientation, said almost all (96.7%) of male young adults who participated in a qualitative study. This would help reinforce acceptance and parents could possibly serve as a proxy for children who’ve not yet disclosed their sexual orientation. Yet, few parents are equipped or prepared to have these meaningful conversations with gay, bisexual, queer, or gender-diverse children, despite the fact that they are especially vulnerable to poor sexual health outcomes, bullying, abuse, and mental health challenges, as well as high-risk sexual behaviors.

“Parents are sexual socialization agents,” Dalmacio Dennis Flores, PhD, ACRN, assistant professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, told this news organization. “It’s through the information that they convey, the way that they normalize rituals and expectations, that they inform young people of all of societal expectations or roles they’ll be fulfilling in the future.”

Dr. Flores is lead author of a study published in the Journal of Adolescent Health. He and his colleagues collected perspectives on comprehensive, inclusive, and age-appropriate parent-child sex communications from 30 GBQ adolescent males aged 15-20 years who were already “out” to their parents. Participants were asked to sort through 28 preprinted note cards containing broad sexual health topics (for instance, human anatomy, dating, sexually transmitted infections) as well as topics theoretically specific to GBQ individuals (for example, anal sex), and were asked to add additional topics that they felt were missing. They were then directed to recommend topics along with ideal timing (that is, elementary, middle, or high school) for these conversations.

Study findings also underscored the importance of initiating comprehensive sexuality talks as early as elementary school age – namely to start preparing GBQ children for inevitable adversities that they were likely to encounter later in life, as well as to form building blocks for more mature, in-depth discussions during high school.

Importantly, these recommendations generally align with those aimed at heterosexual youth.

“When we refer to topics for elementary school, they are general parameters of what kids might be interested in or want to hear more about; it’s not planting a seed,” explained Dr. Flores.

Eva Goldfarb, PhD, LHD, MA, professor of public health at Montclair (N.J.) State University, agreed. “We always talk about (in sex education) to follow young people’s lead. If your child is asking you a question, they deserve a response,” said Dr. Goldfarb, who wasn’t involved in the study. “It doesn’t mean you have to give a detailed- level explanation but if they’re asking about it, it means that they are thinking about it. But it’s really important for all young people to know all of this information.”

Along those lines, participants deemed that fundamental issues about bodies (for example, human anatomy, reproduction), different sexual orientations, and an introduction to foundational issues (like privacy, peer or social pressure, sexual abuse) would help elementary-aged children to normalize discussions about sex, anatomy, and sexual orientation.

Middle school conversations were ideally more in-depth to reflect the time when young people are beginning to explore and accept their social and sexual identities. Topics of discussion might include types of sexual intercourse (anal, oral, and vaginal), health promotion strategies (abstinence, condoms, and contraception), possible adverse outcomes of condomless intercourse (HIV, STIs), considerations about engaging in sexual intercourse (including readiness, negotiating boundaries, virginity), and interpersonal safety (for instance, sexting, alcohol/drugs/chemsex, sexual coercion, and partner abuse/violence).

Finally, high school age recommendations focused on socio-relational topics (such as hook-up culture, technology/online dating, and multiple or concurrent sex partners), which are most relevant during a time when adolescents are most prone to experimentation and risk-taking.

Acknowledging that the study approach was novel, Dr. Flores noted that hearing about these topics from the youth perspective allowed parents to prepare. “Communication is better when it’s anticipated vs. reactive,” he said.

Last but not least, clinicians also have an important role in supporting these conversations.

“We’ve always looked at sex communication as a dyadic process, as a parent bestowing wisdom on a child who doesn’t have that knowledge yet. But it can be a triadic model,” said Dr. Flores. “Providers can encourage parents to ask if a child is dating or is familiar with ways to protect themselves or provide consent, and act as a resource exclusively to troubleshoot emergent issues.”

This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. The study also received supplementary funding from the Surgeon General C. Everett Koop HIV/AIDS Research Award. Dr. Flores and Dr. Goldfarb report no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

When it comes to sexual health education in the United States, one thing is abundantly clear: It’s a messy patchwork of programs, topics, and criteria. Only 29 states and the District of Columbia currently mandate sexual health education. Sixteen states have an abstinence-only curriculum, whereas 13 do not require that instruction be age-appropriate, inclusive, medically accurate, or evidence-based/informed. And this is just the tip of the iceberg, according to a 2022 report issued by the Sex Ed for Social Change organization.

Parents should take an inclusive approach to sex communication and create a safe space for discussing sex and sexual orientation, said almost all (96.7%) of male young adults who participated in a qualitative study. This would help reinforce acceptance and parents could possibly serve as a proxy for children who’ve not yet disclosed their sexual orientation. Yet, few parents are equipped or prepared to have these meaningful conversations with gay, bisexual, queer, or gender-diverse children, despite the fact that they are especially vulnerable to poor sexual health outcomes, bullying, abuse, and mental health challenges, as well as high-risk sexual behaviors.

“Parents are sexual socialization agents,” Dalmacio Dennis Flores, PhD, ACRN, assistant professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, told this news organization. “It’s through the information that they convey, the way that they normalize rituals and expectations, that they inform young people of all of societal expectations or roles they’ll be fulfilling in the future.”

Dr. Flores is lead author of a study published in the Journal of Adolescent Health. He and his colleagues collected perspectives on comprehensive, inclusive, and age-appropriate parent-child sex communications from 30 GBQ adolescent males aged 15-20 years who were already “out” to their parents. Participants were asked to sort through 28 preprinted note cards containing broad sexual health topics (for instance, human anatomy, dating, sexually transmitted infections) as well as topics theoretically specific to GBQ individuals (for example, anal sex), and were asked to add additional topics that they felt were missing. They were then directed to recommend topics along with ideal timing (that is, elementary, middle, or high school) for these conversations.

Study findings also underscored the importance of initiating comprehensive sexuality talks as early as elementary school age – namely to start preparing GBQ children for inevitable adversities that they were likely to encounter later in life, as well as to form building blocks for more mature, in-depth discussions during high school.

Importantly, these recommendations generally align with those aimed at heterosexual youth.

“When we refer to topics for elementary school, they are general parameters of what kids might be interested in or want to hear more about; it’s not planting a seed,” explained Dr. Flores.

Eva Goldfarb, PhD, LHD, MA, professor of public health at Montclair (N.J.) State University, agreed. “We always talk about (in sex education) to follow young people’s lead. If your child is asking you a question, they deserve a response,” said Dr. Goldfarb, who wasn’t involved in the study. “It doesn’t mean you have to give a detailed- level explanation but if they’re asking about it, it means that they are thinking about it. But it’s really important for all young people to know all of this information.”

Along those lines, participants deemed that fundamental issues about bodies (for example, human anatomy, reproduction), different sexual orientations, and an introduction to foundational issues (like privacy, peer or social pressure, sexual abuse) would help elementary-aged children to normalize discussions about sex, anatomy, and sexual orientation.

Middle school conversations were ideally more in-depth to reflect the time when young people are beginning to explore and accept their social and sexual identities. Topics of discussion might include types of sexual intercourse (anal, oral, and vaginal), health promotion strategies (abstinence, condoms, and contraception), possible adverse outcomes of condomless intercourse (HIV, STIs), considerations about engaging in sexual intercourse (including readiness, negotiating boundaries, virginity), and interpersonal safety (for instance, sexting, alcohol/drugs/chemsex, sexual coercion, and partner abuse/violence).

Finally, high school age recommendations focused on socio-relational topics (such as hook-up culture, technology/online dating, and multiple or concurrent sex partners), which are most relevant during a time when adolescents are most prone to experimentation and risk-taking.

Acknowledging that the study approach was novel, Dr. Flores noted that hearing about these topics from the youth perspective allowed parents to prepare. “Communication is better when it’s anticipated vs. reactive,” he said.

Last but not least, clinicians also have an important role in supporting these conversations.

“We’ve always looked at sex communication as a dyadic process, as a parent bestowing wisdom on a child who doesn’t have that knowledge yet. But it can be a triadic model,” said Dr. Flores. “Providers can encourage parents to ask if a child is dating or is familiar with ways to protect themselves or provide consent, and act as a resource exclusively to troubleshoot emergent issues.”

This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. The study also received supplementary funding from the Surgeon General C. Everett Koop HIV/AIDS Research Award. Dr. Flores and Dr. Goldfarb report no relevant financial relationships.
 

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

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Now trending on social media: Bad birth control info

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Tue, 02/07/2023 - 12:43

Add this to the list of social media’s potential health risks: unintended pregnancy.

That’s for women who take birth control advice from influencers, particularly on YouTube, where many talk about stopping hormonal contraception and may give incomplete or inaccurate sexual health information. 

In an analysis of 50 YouTube videos, University of Delaware researchers found that nearly three-quarters of influencers talked about discontinuing birth control pills or other forms hormonal birth control. And 40% were using or had used a “natural family planning” method – when women track their cycle, sometimes using an app, to identify days they might get pregnant. 

“We know from previous research that these nonhormonal options, such as fertility tracking apps, are not always as accurate as hormonal birth control,” said lead study author Emily Pfender, who reported the findings in Health Communication. “They rely on so many different factors, like body temperature and cervical fluid, that vary widely.” 

In fact, this “natural” approach only works when women meticulously follow guidelines like measuring basal body temperature and tracking cervical fluid daily. But many influencers left that part out. Using fertility-tracking methods without the right education and tools could raise the risk of unplanned pregnancy, as failure rates using these methods vary from 2% to 23%, according to the CDC. 

Even more alarming: Of the influencers who stopped hormonal birth control, only one-third mentioned replacing it with something else, Ms. Pfender said. 

“The message that some of these videos are sending is that discontinuing [hormonal birth control] is good for if you want to improve your mental health and be more natural, but it’s not important to start another form of birth control,” she said. “This places those women at an increased risk of unplanned pregnancy, and possibly sexually transmitted diseases.” 
 

Rise of the health influencer

Taking health advice from influencers is nothing new and appears to be getting more popular.

“People have been sharing health information for decades, even before the internet, but now it is much more prevalent and easier,” said Erin Willis, PhD, an associate professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, who studies digital media and health communication.

Peer-to-peer health information is very influential, Dr. Willis said. It makes people feel understood, especially if they have the same health condition or share similar experiences or emotions. “The social support is there,” she said. “It is almost like crowdsourcing.”

In her study, Ms. Pfender and another researcher watched 50 YouTube videos posted between December 2019 and December 2021 by influencers with between 20,000 and 2.2 million followers. The top reasons influencers gave for discontinuing birth control included the desire to be more natural and to improve mental health. 

Although hormonal birth control, namely the pill, has been used for decades and is considered safe, it has been linked to side effects like depression. And people sharing their experiences with hormonal birth control online may create controversy over whether it’s safe to use. 

But Ms. Pfender found that influencers didn’t always share accurate or complete information. For example, some of the influencers talked about using the cycle tracking app Daysy, touting it as highly accurate, but none mentioned that the study backing up how well it worked was retracted in 2019 due to flaws in its research methods. 

Not all health influencers give bad information, Dr. Willis said. Many go through ethics and advocacy training and understand the sensitive position and influence they have. Still, people have different levels of “health literacy” – some may understand health information better than others. It’s crucial to analyze the info and sort the good from the bad. 

Look for information that is not linked to a particular product, the National Institutes of Health recommends. And cross-check it against reliable websites, such as those ending in “.gov” or “.org.”

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

  

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Add this to the list of social media’s potential health risks: unintended pregnancy.

That’s for women who take birth control advice from influencers, particularly on YouTube, where many talk about stopping hormonal contraception and may give incomplete or inaccurate sexual health information. 

In an analysis of 50 YouTube videos, University of Delaware researchers found that nearly three-quarters of influencers talked about discontinuing birth control pills or other forms hormonal birth control. And 40% were using or had used a “natural family planning” method – when women track their cycle, sometimes using an app, to identify days they might get pregnant. 

“We know from previous research that these nonhormonal options, such as fertility tracking apps, are not always as accurate as hormonal birth control,” said lead study author Emily Pfender, who reported the findings in Health Communication. “They rely on so many different factors, like body temperature and cervical fluid, that vary widely.” 

In fact, this “natural” approach only works when women meticulously follow guidelines like measuring basal body temperature and tracking cervical fluid daily. But many influencers left that part out. Using fertility-tracking methods without the right education and tools could raise the risk of unplanned pregnancy, as failure rates using these methods vary from 2% to 23%, according to the CDC. 

Even more alarming: Of the influencers who stopped hormonal birth control, only one-third mentioned replacing it with something else, Ms. Pfender said. 

“The message that some of these videos are sending is that discontinuing [hormonal birth control] is good for if you want to improve your mental health and be more natural, but it’s not important to start another form of birth control,” she said. “This places those women at an increased risk of unplanned pregnancy, and possibly sexually transmitted diseases.” 
 

Rise of the health influencer

Taking health advice from influencers is nothing new and appears to be getting more popular.

“People have been sharing health information for decades, even before the internet, but now it is much more prevalent and easier,” said Erin Willis, PhD, an associate professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, who studies digital media and health communication.

Peer-to-peer health information is very influential, Dr. Willis said. It makes people feel understood, especially if they have the same health condition or share similar experiences or emotions. “The social support is there,” she said. “It is almost like crowdsourcing.”

In her study, Ms. Pfender and another researcher watched 50 YouTube videos posted between December 2019 and December 2021 by influencers with between 20,000 and 2.2 million followers. The top reasons influencers gave for discontinuing birth control included the desire to be more natural and to improve mental health. 

Although hormonal birth control, namely the pill, has been used for decades and is considered safe, it has been linked to side effects like depression. And people sharing their experiences with hormonal birth control online may create controversy over whether it’s safe to use. 

But Ms. Pfender found that influencers didn’t always share accurate or complete information. For example, some of the influencers talked about using the cycle tracking app Daysy, touting it as highly accurate, but none mentioned that the study backing up how well it worked was retracted in 2019 due to flaws in its research methods. 

Not all health influencers give bad information, Dr. Willis said. Many go through ethics and advocacy training and understand the sensitive position and influence they have. Still, people have different levels of “health literacy” – some may understand health information better than others. It’s crucial to analyze the info and sort the good from the bad. 

Look for information that is not linked to a particular product, the National Institutes of Health recommends. And cross-check it against reliable websites, such as those ending in “.gov” or “.org.”

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

  

Add this to the list of social media’s potential health risks: unintended pregnancy.

That’s for women who take birth control advice from influencers, particularly on YouTube, where many talk about stopping hormonal contraception and may give incomplete or inaccurate sexual health information. 

In an analysis of 50 YouTube videos, University of Delaware researchers found that nearly three-quarters of influencers talked about discontinuing birth control pills or other forms hormonal birth control. And 40% were using or had used a “natural family planning” method – when women track their cycle, sometimes using an app, to identify days they might get pregnant. 

“We know from previous research that these nonhormonal options, such as fertility tracking apps, are not always as accurate as hormonal birth control,” said lead study author Emily Pfender, who reported the findings in Health Communication. “They rely on so many different factors, like body temperature and cervical fluid, that vary widely.” 

In fact, this “natural” approach only works when women meticulously follow guidelines like measuring basal body temperature and tracking cervical fluid daily. But many influencers left that part out. Using fertility-tracking methods without the right education and tools could raise the risk of unplanned pregnancy, as failure rates using these methods vary from 2% to 23%, according to the CDC. 

Even more alarming: Of the influencers who stopped hormonal birth control, only one-third mentioned replacing it with something else, Ms. Pfender said. 

“The message that some of these videos are sending is that discontinuing [hormonal birth control] is good for if you want to improve your mental health and be more natural, but it’s not important to start another form of birth control,” she said. “This places those women at an increased risk of unplanned pregnancy, and possibly sexually transmitted diseases.” 
 

Rise of the health influencer

Taking health advice from influencers is nothing new and appears to be getting more popular.

“People have been sharing health information for decades, even before the internet, but now it is much more prevalent and easier,” said Erin Willis, PhD, an associate professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder, who studies digital media and health communication.

Peer-to-peer health information is very influential, Dr. Willis said. It makes people feel understood, especially if they have the same health condition or share similar experiences or emotions. “The social support is there,” she said. “It is almost like crowdsourcing.”

In her study, Ms. Pfender and another researcher watched 50 YouTube videos posted between December 2019 and December 2021 by influencers with between 20,000 and 2.2 million followers. The top reasons influencers gave for discontinuing birth control included the desire to be more natural and to improve mental health. 

Although hormonal birth control, namely the pill, has been used for decades and is considered safe, it has been linked to side effects like depression. And people sharing their experiences with hormonal birth control online may create controversy over whether it’s safe to use. 

But Ms. Pfender found that influencers didn’t always share accurate or complete information. For example, some of the influencers talked about using the cycle tracking app Daysy, touting it as highly accurate, but none mentioned that the study backing up how well it worked was retracted in 2019 due to flaws in its research methods. 

Not all health influencers give bad information, Dr. Willis said. Many go through ethics and advocacy training and understand the sensitive position and influence they have. Still, people have different levels of “health literacy” – some may understand health information better than others. It’s crucial to analyze the info and sort the good from the bad. 

Look for information that is not linked to a particular product, the National Institutes of Health recommends. And cross-check it against reliable websites, such as those ending in “.gov” or “.org.”

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

  

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Little evidence to support lasers for ‘vaginal rejuvenation’

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Tue, 02/07/2023 - 13:07

Laser devices licensed in Canada to treat genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) are often marketed for vaginal rejuvenation with claims that they will tighten the vagina and improve sexual function, despite lack of evidence, a new commentary reveals.

Vaginal lasers heat the vaginal epithelium and cause thermal necrosis. This intervention induces collagen remodeling and synthesis, neovascularization, and elastin formation and may result in improved vaginal elasticity and restoration of premenopausal epithelial function, according to coauthors Blayne Welk, MD, MSc, an associate professor of urologic surgery at Western University, London, Ont., and Erin Kelly, MD, a lecturer in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Alberta, Edmonton.

Their patients’ questions and experiences with the laser devices prompted the commentary, they told this news organization.

“A large part of my practice involves addressing GSM and urinary incontinence,” said Dr. Kelly. “Many women present to the clinic having heard of vaginal laser procedures, having had vaginal laser procedures, or having been told they need vaginal laser procedures. My impression has been that these procedures are being marketed to women … without rigorous study.”

“Many women are reluctant to have mesh slings for stress incontinence due to some of the potential risks,” and they are looking for less invasive options, said Dr. Welk. Over the past few years, he has had increasing questions from patients about the use of lasers to improve this condition.

The commentary was published online in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
 

Transparency needed

The first vaginal energy device was licensed by Health Canada in 2015 to treat GSM. That meant the device was deemed to have met basic safety, effectiveness, and quality criteria. But no controlled studies are required for regulatory approval of such devices, and after licensing, some providers rebranded the device indication from GSM to vaginal rejuvenation, said Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk.

Vaginal laser therapies are offered throughout Canada, with at least one provider of vaginal rejuvenation procedures in the 10 most populous cities. Under the current system, the number of patients who pay for these procedures and the amount that they pay cannot be tracked. Nor can the number of vaginal laser systems active in Canada be tracked. Patients can refer themselves for the service, and providers’ publicly quoted costs (on websites, for example) are thousands of dollars for treatment.

The rebranding for vaginal rejuvenation “represents a difference between the licensing of a medical device by Health Canada and the way that these devices are used and marketed,” according to the commentary. “A procedure with limited high-quality evidence supporting its efficacy and a potential financial conflict of interest for providers may not be serving the best interests of people in Canada, even if the risk of adverse events is low.”

Updates to Canada’s medical devices action plan, including mandatory reporting of serious incidents and the ability to compel manufacturers to provide information on safety and effectiveness, “represent important progress,” according to Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk. However, problems persist, including lack of a requirement for peer-reviewed, controlled studies.

Furthermore, women who undergo laser treatment for GSM, urinary incontinence, or vaginal rejuvenation may not receive a proper medical evaluation and standard treatments, the authors noted.

“I would like to see more transparency and public-facing information available on approved medical devices,” said Dr. Welk. “Health Canada has an online database of approved devices, but no information around the evidence submitted during the approval process is available, nor are the indications for the various devices.”

In addition, he said, many devices in the registry are listed by a serial number rather than the name that would be familiar to the public, “making it hard to match up information.”

Dr. Kelly added the “encouraging” news that the Canadian Society for Pelvic Medicine is working with Health Canada to “improve knowledge translation when it comes to transparency regarding medical devices.”
 

 

 

Medicine before marketing

“The commentary provides an accurate and evidence-based assessment of the use of vaginal laser treatments,” Jason Abbott, B Med (Hons), PhD, professor of gynecology at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, told this news organization. “The marketing of this device is a case of putting the cart before the horse. It is essential that strong, scientific, and reproducible studies be available on efficacy and safety before there is a direct-to-consumer marketing approach.” 

Clinicians should advise patients when the treatment effect is likely to be minimal or risky, especially when there is a financial incentive to the clinician, he said. “Governments, regulators, and medical societies have a duty of care to the public to make sure that the medicine comes before the marketing. Otherwise, we are no better than snake oil sellers.

“Given the size of studies to date, the improvement in symptoms following treatment may be less than a few percent,” he noted. “That may be acceptable to some women. We don’t know.” 

Dr. Abbott’s team is conducting research to define what women would want as a minimal level of improvement, the maximum cost, and the maximum risk from the laser procedure.  

“In cancer … the benefit of a new treatment may only be a few percent for survival,” he said. “That may be completely acceptable for some or even many patients. What we cannot do, however, is extrapolate those same expectations to a treatment for a benign condition where quality of life is compromised.”  

Echoing Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk, Dr. Abbott said, “It is important that there be transparency in the clinical communication. Patients should be told that the best scientific studies that are judged based on their quality show there is no benefit to laser treatment for GSM or urinary incontinence.” 

Although the medical risks may be low, he added, “financial risk also needs to be discussed. Patients should be encouraged to participate in clinical trials where there is no cost to them to gain the information first, before wholesale uptake of the treatment. … Should patients still wish to undergo the procedure once the risks and an honest account of the evidence is given to them, that of course is their choice.” Dr. Kelly, Dr. Welk, and Dr. Abbott had no commercial funding or relevant financial relationships to report.

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

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Laser devices licensed in Canada to treat genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) are often marketed for vaginal rejuvenation with claims that they will tighten the vagina and improve sexual function, despite lack of evidence, a new commentary reveals.

Vaginal lasers heat the vaginal epithelium and cause thermal necrosis. This intervention induces collagen remodeling and synthesis, neovascularization, and elastin formation and may result in improved vaginal elasticity and restoration of premenopausal epithelial function, according to coauthors Blayne Welk, MD, MSc, an associate professor of urologic surgery at Western University, London, Ont., and Erin Kelly, MD, a lecturer in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Alberta, Edmonton.

Their patients’ questions and experiences with the laser devices prompted the commentary, they told this news organization.

“A large part of my practice involves addressing GSM and urinary incontinence,” said Dr. Kelly. “Many women present to the clinic having heard of vaginal laser procedures, having had vaginal laser procedures, or having been told they need vaginal laser procedures. My impression has been that these procedures are being marketed to women … without rigorous study.”

“Many women are reluctant to have mesh slings for stress incontinence due to some of the potential risks,” and they are looking for less invasive options, said Dr. Welk. Over the past few years, he has had increasing questions from patients about the use of lasers to improve this condition.

The commentary was published online in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
 

Transparency needed

The first vaginal energy device was licensed by Health Canada in 2015 to treat GSM. That meant the device was deemed to have met basic safety, effectiveness, and quality criteria. But no controlled studies are required for regulatory approval of such devices, and after licensing, some providers rebranded the device indication from GSM to vaginal rejuvenation, said Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk.

Vaginal laser therapies are offered throughout Canada, with at least one provider of vaginal rejuvenation procedures in the 10 most populous cities. Under the current system, the number of patients who pay for these procedures and the amount that they pay cannot be tracked. Nor can the number of vaginal laser systems active in Canada be tracked. Patients can refer themselves for the service, and providers’ publicly quoted costs (on websites, for example) are thousands of dollars for treatment.

The rebranding for vaginal rejuvenation “represents a difference between the licensing of a medical device by Health Canada and the way that these devices are used and marketed,” according to the commentary. “A procedure with limited high-quality evidence supporting its efficacy and a potential financial conflict of interest for providers may not be serving the best interests of people in Canada, even if the risk of adverse events is low.”

Updates to Canada’s medical devices action plan, including mandatory reporting of serious incidents and the ability to compel manufacturers to provide information on safety and effectiveness, “represent important progress,” according to Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk. However, problems persist, including lack of a requirement for peer-reviewed, controlled studies.

Furthermore, women who undergo laser treatment for GSM, urinary incontinence, or vaginal rejuvenation may not receive a proper medical evaluation and standard treatments, the authors noted.

“I would like to see more transparency and public-facing information available on approved medical devices,” said Dr. Welk. “Health Canada has an online database of approved devices, but no information around the evidence submitted during the approval process is available, nor are the indications for the various devices.”

In addition, he said, many devices in the registry are listed by a serial number rather than the name that would be familiar to the public, “making it hard to match up information.”

Dr. Kelly added the “encouraging” news that the Canadian Society for Pelvic Medicine is working with Health Canada to “improve knowledge translation when it comes to transparency regarding medical devices.”
 

 

 

Medicine before marketing

“The commentary provides an accurate and evidence-based assessment of the use of vaginal laser treatments,” Jason Abbott, B Med (Hons), PhD, professor of gynecology at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, told this news organization. “The marketing of this device is a case of putting the cart before the horse. It is essential that strong, scientific, and reproducible studies be available on efficacy and safety before there is a direct-to-consumer marketing approach.” 

Clinicians should advise patients when the treatment effect is likely to be minimal or risky, especially when there is a financial incentive to the clinician, he said. “Governments, regulators, and medical societies have a duty of care to the public to make sure that the medicine comes before the marketing. Otherwise, we are no better than snake oil sellers.

“Given the size of studies to date, the improvement in symptoms following treatment may be less than a few percent,” he noted. “That may be acceptable to some women. We don’t know.” 

Dr. Abbott’s team is conducting research to define what women would want as a minimal level of improvement, the maximum cost, and the maximum risk from the laser procedure.  

“In cancer … the benefit of a new treatment may only be a few percent for survival,” he said. “That may be completely acceptable for some or even many patients. What we cannot do, however, is extrapolate those same expectations to a treatment for a benign condition where quality of life is compromised.”  

Echoing Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk, Dr. Abbott said, “It is important that there be transparency in the clinical communication. Patients should be told that the best scientific studies that are judged based on their quality show there is no benefit to laser treatment for GSM or urinary incontinence.” 

Although the medical risks may be low, he added, “financial risk also needs to be discussed. Patients should be encouraged to participate in clinical trials where there is no cost to them to gain the information first, before wholesale uptake of the treatment. … Should patients still wish to undergo the procedure once the risks and an honest account of the evidence is given to them, that of course is their choice.” Dr. Kelly, Dr. Welk, and Dr. Abbott had no commercial funding or relevant financial relationships to report.

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

Laser devices licensed in Canada to treat genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) are often marketed for vaginal rejuvenation with claims that they will tighten the vagina and improve sexual function, despite lack of evidence, a new commentary reveals.

Vaginal lasers heat the vaginal epithelium and cause thermal necrosis. This intervention induces collagen remodeling and synthesis, neovascularization, and elastin formation and may result in improved vaginal elasticity and restoration of premenopausal epithelial function, according to coauthors Blayne Welk, MD, MSc, an associate professor of urologic surgery at Western University, London, Ont., and Erin Kelly, MD, a lecturer in obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Alberta, Edmonton.

Their patients’ questions and experiences with the laser devices prompted the commentary, they told this news organization.

“A large part of my practice involves addressing GSM and urinary incontinence,” said Dr. Kelly. “Many women present to the clinic having heard of vaginal laser procedures, having had vaginal laser procedures, or having been told they need vaginal laser procedures. My impression has been that these procedures are being marketed to women … without rigorous study.”

“Many women are reluctant to have mesh slings for stress incontinence due to some of the potential risks,” and they are looking for less invasive options, said Dr. Welk. Over the past few years, he has had increasing questions from patients about the use of lasers to improve this condition.

The commentary was published online in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
 

Transparency needed

The first vaginal energy device was licensed by Health Canada in 2015 to treat GSM. That meant the device was deemed to have met basic safety, effectiveness, and quality criteria. But no controlled studies are required for regulatory approval of such devices, and after licensing, some providers rebranded the device indication from GSM to vaginal rejuvenation, said Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk.

Vaginal laser therapies are offered throughout Canada, with at least one provider of vaginal rejuvenation procedures in the 10 most populous cities. Under the current system, the number of patients who pay for these procedures and the amount that they pay cannot be tracked. Nor can the number of vaginal laser systems active in Canada be tracked. Patients can refer themselves for the service, and providers’ publicly quoted costs (on websites, for example) are thousands of dollars for treatment.

The rebranding for vaginal rejuvenation “represents a difference between the licensing of a medical device by Health Canada and the way that these devices are used and marketed,” according to the commentary. “A procedure with limited high-quality evidence supporting its efficacy and a potential financial conflict of interest for providers may not be serving the best interests of people in Canada, even if the risk of adverse events is low.”

Updates to Canada’s medical devices action plan, including mandatory reporting of serious incidents and the ability to compel manufacturers to provide information on safety and effectiveness, “represent important progress,” according to Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk. However, problems persist, including lack of a requirement for peer-reviewed, controlled studies.

Furthermore, women who undergo laser treatment for GSM, urinary incontinence, or vaginal rejuvenation may not receive a proper medical evaluation and standard treatments, the authors noted.

“I would like to see more transparency and public-facing information available on approved medical devices,” said Dr. Welk. “Health Canada has an online database of approved devices, but no information around the evidence submitted during the approval process is available, nor are the indications for the various devices.”

In addition, he said, many devices in the registry are listed by a serial number rather than the name that would be familiar to the public, “making it hard to match up information.”

Dr. Kelly added the “encouraging” news that the Canadian Society for Pelvic Medicine is working with Health Canada to “improve knowledge translation when it comes to transparency regarding medical devices.”
 

 

 

Medicine before marketing

“The commentary provides an accurate and evidence-based assessment of the use of vaginal laser treatments,” Jason Abbott, B Med (Hons), PhD, professor of gynecology at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, told this news organization. “The marketing of this device is a case of putting the cart before the horse. It is essential that strong, scientific, and reproducible studies be available on efficacy and safety before there is a direct-to-consumer marketing approach.” 

Clinicians should advise patients when the treatment effect is likely to be minimal or risky, especially when there is a financial incentive to the clinician, he said. “Governments, regulators, and medical societies have a duty of care to the public to make sure that the medicine comes before the marketing. Otherwise, we are no better than snake oil sellers.

“Given the size of studies to date, the improvement in symptoms following treatment may be less than a few percent,” he noted. “That may be acceptable to some women. We don’t know.” 

Dr. Abbott’s team is conducting research to define what women would want as a minimal level of improvement, the maximum cost, and the maximum risk from the laser procedure.  

“In cancer … the benefit of a new treatment may only be a few percent for survival,” he said. “That may be completely acceptable for some or even many patients. What we cannot do, however, is extrapolate those same expectations to a treatment for a benign condition where quality of life is compromised.”  

Echoing Dr. Kelly and Dr. Welk, Dr. Abbott said, “It is important that there be transparency in the clinical communication. Patients should be told that the best scientific studies that are judged based on their quality show there is no benefit to laser treatment for GSM or urinary incontinence.” 

Although the medical risks may be low, he added, “financial risk also needs to be discussed. Patients should be encouraged to participate in clinical trials where there is no cost to them to gain the information first, before wholesale uptake of the treatment. … Should patients still wish to undergo the procedure once the risks and an honest account of the evidence is given to them, that of course is their choice.” Dr. Kelly, Dr. Welk, and Dr. Abbott had no commercial funding or relevant financial relationships to report.

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

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Use of diagnostic mammograms is inconsistent, survey finds

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A survey of physicians treating breast cancer patients finds that many use diagnostic mammograms for surveillance rather than screening mammograms, despite lack of evidence for a clinical difference.

Existing guidelines offer little help, according to Pavani Chalasani, MD, MPH, who presented the study at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. “They just say [do an] annual mammogram, but they don’t say, ‘Do we need to do screening? Do we need to do breast MRIs?’”

Her personal experience also reflected a general confusion. “I asked my colleagues and got different answers from seven colleagues,” said Dr. Chalasani, who is an oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson.

She noted that diagnostic mammograms are generally similar to screening mammograms, but the radiologist is viewing the images in real time and can take additional views as needed while the patient is still present. “That is the biggest difference,” said Dr. Chalasani. No studies have been conducted to determine which method produces better results.

To get a snapshot of current practice, she and her colleagues developed a survey, which the American Society of Clinical Oncology sent to 1,000 randomly selected members between Oct. 19 and Nov. 22, 2021. 244 individuals responded; 93.5% were physicians, and half identified as female. A total of 174 respondents were medical oncologists, 31 were radiation oncologists, and 20 were surgical oncologists. The imbalance among respondents is a limitation of the study. That “may or may not be reflective of our real-time practices (among surgeons), but we do think that since a lot of times patients are seen by medical oncologists, there could be overlap,” said Dr. Chalasani.

About 50% of respondents said that they use breast MRI in the diagnosis of 25% or fewer patients. Approximately 64% of respondents said they used diagnostic mammograms versus about 31% who used imaging mammograms at first imaging. About 53% said they ordered mammograms within the first 6 months after treatment.

38% of those who ordered diagnostic mammograms for surveillance used it for 3-5 years, while 29% continued it for 5 years or more. One-quarter employed additional imaging during follow-up, most commonly breast ultrasound. About 65% said they had no stop date for screening mammograms, as long as the patient remained healthy. The choice of screening or diagnostic mammography was about 50:50, though about 55% said they use screening mammography for patients 80 years of age or older.

Dr. Chalasani pointed out that both screening and diagnostic mammograms provide similar imaging quality. Screening mammograms are completely covered by insurance, while diagnostic mammograms typically require a copay. “We’re doing this [diagnostic mammography] with no guidelines, but there is this out of pocket cost, without knowing if it’s the right thing to do,” she said.

National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines indicate that diagnostic mammograms can be conducted for 5 years after a ductal carcinoma in situ diagnosis, but it doesn’t provide guidance for invasive cancers. Some past studies suggested that doing diagnostic mammograms for 3 years may increase diagnosis, but it isn’t clear if any such advantage would actually result in a clinical difference, according to Dr. Chalasani. “With the treatments we have, we still might cure [the cancer]. So what endpoints are we looking for? Are we changing care to add on toxicity to the patient, and stress to the patient and also for the health care system?”

She hopes that physicians will look at the results and understand that diagnostic mammograms, while they intuitively feel superior, are not supported by guidelines, and patients must incur an extra cost.

Her team also plans to conduct cost-effectiveness analysis of diagnostic mammograms.

Dr. Chalasani has no relevant financial disclosures.

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A survey of physicians treating breast cancer patients finds that many use diagnostic mammograms for surveillance rather than screening mammograms, despite lack of evidence for a clinical difference.

Existing guidelines offer little help, according to Pavani Chalasani, MD, MPH, who presented the study at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. “They just say [do an] annual mammogram, but they don’t say, ‘Do we need to do screening? Do we need to do breast MRIs?’”

Her personal experience also reflected a general confusion. “I asked my colleagues and got different answers from seven colleagues,” said Dr. Chalasani, who is an oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson.

She noted that diagnostic mammograms are generally similar to screening mammograms, but the radiologist is viewing the images in real time and can take additional views as needed while the patient is still present. “That is the biggest difference,” said Dr. Chalasani. No studies have been conducted to determine which method produces better results.

To get a snapshot of current practice, she and her colleagues developed a survey, which the American Society of Clinical Oncology sent to 1,000 randomly selected members between Oct. 19 and Nov. 22, 2021. 244 individuals responded; 93.5% were physicians, and half identified as female. A total of 174 respondents were medical oncologists, 31 were radiation oncologists, and 20 were surgical oncologists. The imbalance among respondents is a limitation of the study. That “may or may not be reflective of our real-time practices (among surgeons), but we do think that since a lot of times patients are seen by medical oncologists, there could be overlap,” said Dr. Chalasani.

About 50% of respondents said that they use breast MRI in the diagnosis of 25% or fewer patients. Approximately 64% of respondents said they used diagnostic mammograms versus about 31% who used imaging mammograms at first imaging. About 53% said they ordered mammograms within the first 6 months after treatment.

38% of those who ordered diagnostic mammograms for surveillance used it for 3-5 years, while 29% continued it for 5 years or more. One-quarter employed additional imaging during follow-up, most commonly breast ultrasound. About 65% said they had no stop date for screening mammograms, as long as the patient remained healthy. The choice of screening or diagnostic mammography was about 50:50, though about 55% said they use screening mammography for patients 80 years of age or older.

Dr. Chalasani pointed out that both screening and diagnostic mammograms provide similar imaging quality. Screening mammograms are completely covered by insurance, while diagnostic mammograms typically require a copay. “We’re doing this [diagnostic mammography] with no guidelines, but there is this out of pocket cost, without knowing if it’s the right thing to do,” she said.

National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines indicate that diagnostic mammograms can be conducted for 5 years after a ductal carcinoma in situ diagnosis, but it doesn’t provide guidance for invasive cancers. Some past studies suggested that doing diagnostic mammograms for 3 years may increase diagnosis, but it isn’t clear if any such advantage would actually result in a clinical difference, according to Dr. Chalasani. “With the treatments we have, we still might cure [the cancer]. So what endpoints are we looking for? Are we changing care to add on toxicity to the patient, and stress to the patient and also for the health care system?”

She hopes that physicians will look at the results and understand that diagnostic mammograms, while they intuitively feel superior, are not supported by guidelines, and patients must incur an extra cost.

Her team also plans to conduct cost-effectiveness analysis of diagnostic mammograms.

Dr. Chalasani has no relevant financial disclosures.

A survey of physicians treating breast cancer patients finds that many use diagnostic mammograms for surveillance rather than screening mammograms, despite lack of evidence for a clinical difference.

Existing guidelines offer little help, according to Pavani Chalasani, MD, MPH, who presented the study at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. “They just say [do an] annual mammogram, but they don’t say, ‘Do we need to do screening? Do we need to do breast MRIs?’”

Her personal experience also reflected a general confusion. “I asked my colleagues and got different answers from seven colleagues,” said Dr. Chalasani, who is an oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson.

She noted that diagnostic mammograms are generally similar to screening mammograms, but the radiologist is viewing the images in real time and can take additional views as needed while the patient is still present. “That is the biggest difference,” said Dr. Chalasani. No studies have been conducted to determine which method produces better results.

To get a snapshot of current practice, she and her colleagues developed a survey, which the American Society of Clinical Oncology sent to 1,000 randomly selected members between Oct. 19 and Nov. 22, 2021. 244 individuals responded; 93.5% were physicians, and half identified as female. A total of 174 respondents were medical oncologists, 31 were radiation oncologists, and 20 were surgical oncologists. The imbalance among respondents is a limitation of the study. That “may or may not be reflective of our real-time practices (among surgeons), but we do think that since a lot of times patients are seen by medical oncologists, there could be overlap,” said Dr. Chalasani.

About 50% of respondents said that they use breast MRI in the diagnosis of 25% or fewer patients. Approximately 64% of respondents said they used diagnostic mammograms versus about 31% who used imaging mammograms at first imaging. About 53% said they ordered mammograms within the first 6 months after treatment.

38% of those who ordered diagnostic mammograms for surveillance used it for 3-5 years, while 29% continued it for 5 years or more. One-quarter employed additional imaging during follow-up, most commonly breast ultrasound. About 65% said they had no stop date for screening mammograms, as long as the patient remained healthy. The choice of screening or diagnostic mammography was about 50:50, though about 55% said they use screening mammography for patients 80 years of age or older.

Dr. Chalasani pointed out that both screening and diagnostic mammograms provide similar imaging quality. Screening mammograms are completely covered by insurance, while diagnostic mammograms typically require a copay. “We’re doing this [diagnostic mammography] with no guidelines, but there is this out of pocket cost, without knowing if it’s the right thing to do,” she said.

National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines indicate that diagnostic mammograms can be conducted for 5 years after a ductal carcinoma in situ diagnosis, but it doesn’t provide guidance for invasive cancers. Some past studies suggested that doing diagnostic mammograms for 3 years may increase diagnosis, but it isn’t clear if any such advantage would actually result in a clinical difference, according to Dr. Chalasani. “With the treatments we have, we still might cure [the cancer]. So what endpoints are we looking for? Are we changing care to add on toxicity to the patient, and stress to the patient and also for the health care system?”

She hopes that physicians will look at the results and understand that diagnostic mammograms, while they intuitively feel superior, are not supported by guidelines, and patients must incur an extra cost.

Her team also plans to conduct cost-effectiveness analysis of diagnostic mammograms.

Dr. Chalasani has no relevant financial disclosures.

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Bacterial vaginosis linked with persistent HPV infections

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– Four in five women will be infected by one or more human papillomavirus (HPV) strains during their lifetimes. For most of these women, the HPV will be cleared from the body, but 5% of them will develop precancerous lesions in the cervix. The role of vaginal flora in persistent HPV has been brought into focus by research studies carried out over the past few years.

At a press conference ahead of the 46th meeting of the French Colposcopy and Cervical and Vaginal Diseases Society, Julia Maruani, MD, a medical gynecologist in Marseille, France, took the opportunity to discuss the importance of vaginal flora and the need to treat cases of bacterial vaginosis.
 

Striking a balance

Essential for reducing the risk of sexually transmitted infections, a healthy vaginal flora is made up of millions of microorganisms, mainly lactobacilli, as well as other bacteria (Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella, streptococcus, gonococcus), HPV, and fungi.

Lactobacilli produce lactic acid, which reduces the vagina’s pH, as well as hydrogen peroxide, which is toxic to the other bacteria.

Different factors, such as alcohol, a diet rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids and sugar, and especially smoking, can lead to an imbalance of the bacteria in the vaginal flora and thus result in vaginosis. What occurs is an abnormal multiplication of different types of anaerobic bacteria that are normally present in much lower numbers. There is a relative reduction in lactobacilli, which results in an increased vaginal pH, a greater risk of contracting an STI, and reduced clearance of the HPV infection. “Women who smoke probably experience persistent HPV infections due to an imbalance in vaginal flora,” said Dr. Maruani.
 

Vaginosis and HPV

When there are fewer lactobacilli than there should be, these bacteria can no longer protect the vaginal mucosa, which is disrupted by other bacteria. “HPV then has access to the basal cells,” said Dr. Maruani, acknowledging that the relationship between bacterial vaginosis and persistent HPV infections has been the subject of numerous research studies over the past decade or so. “For years, I would see this same link in my patients. Those with persistent vaginosis were also the ones with persistent HPV. And I’m not the only one to notice this. Studies have also been carried out investigating this exact correlation,” she added.

These studies have shown that HPV infections persist in cases of vaginosis, resulting in the appearance of epithelial lesions. Additionally, the lesions are more severe when dysbiosis is more severe.

What about probiotics? Can they treat dysbiosis and an HPV infection at the same time? “Probiotics work very well for vaginosis, provided they are used for a long time. We know that they lessen HPV infections and low-grade lesions,” said Dr. Maruani, although no randomized studies support this conclusion. “It’s not a one size fits all. We aren’t about to treat patients with precancerous lesions with probiotics.” There are currently no data concerning the efficacy of probiotics on high-grade lesions. These days, Dr. Maruani has been thinking about a new issue: the benefit of diagnosing cases of asymptomatic vaginosis – because treating them would reduce the risk of persistent HPV infection.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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– Four in five women will be infected by one or more human papillomavirus (HPV) strains during their lifetimes. For most of these women, the HPV will be cleared from the body, but 5% of them will develop precancerous lesions in the cervix. The role of vaginal flora in persistent HPV has been brought into focus by research studies carried out over the past few years.

At a press conference ahead of the 46th meeting of the French Colposcopy and Cervical and Vaginal Diseases Society, Julia Maruani, MD, a medical gynecologist in Marseille, France, took the opportunity to discuss the importance of vaginal flora and the need to treat cases of bacterial vaginosis.
 

Striking a balance

Essential for reducing the risk of sexually transmitted infections, a healthy vaginal flora is made up of millions of microorganisms, mainly lactobacilli, as well as other bacteria (Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella, streptococcus, gonococcus), HPV, and fungi.

Lactobacilli produce lactic acid, which reduces the vagina’s pH, as well as hydrogen peroxide, which is toxic to the other bacteria.

Different factors, such as alcohol, a diet rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids and sugar, and especially smoking, can lead to an imbalance of the bacteria in the vaginal flora and thus result in vaginosis. What occurs is an abnormal multiplication of different types of anaerobic bacteria that are normally present in much lower numbers. There is a relative reduction in lactobacilli, which results in an increased vaginal pH, a greater risk of contracting an STI, and reduced clearance of the HPV infection. “Women who smoke probably experience persistent HPV infections due to an imbalance in vaginal flora,” said Dr. Maruani.
 

Vaginosis and HPV

When there are fewer lactobacilli than there should be, these bacteria can no longer protect the vaginal mucosa, which is disrupted by other bacteria. “HPV then has access to the basal cells,” said Dr. Maruani, acknowledging that the relationship between bacterial vaginosis and persistent HPV infections has been the subject of numerous research studies over the past decade or so. “For years, I would see this same link in my patients. Those with persistent vaginosis were also the ones with persistent HPV. And I’m not the only one to notice this. Studies have also been carried out investigating this exact correlation,” she added.

These studies have shown that HPV infections persist in cases of vaginosis, resulting in the appearance of epithelial lesions. Additionally, the lesions are more severe when dysbiosis is more severe.

What about probiotics? Can they treat dysbiosis and an HPV infection at the same time? “Probiotics work very well for vaginosis, provided they are used for a long time. We know that they lessen HPV infections and low-grade lesions,” said Dr. Maruani, although no randomized studies support this conclusion. “It’s not a one size fits all. We aren’t about to treat patients with precancerous lesions with probiotics.” There are currently no data concerning the efficacy of probiotics on high-grade lesions. These days, Dr. Maruani has been thinking about a new issue: the benefit of diagnosing cases of asymptomatic vaginosis – because treating them would reduce the risk of persistent HPV infection.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

– Four in five women will be infected by one or more human papillomavirus (HPV) strains during their lifetimes. For most of these women, the HPV will be cleared from the body, but 5% of them will develop precancerous lesions in the cervix. The role of vaginal flora in persistent HPV has been brought into focus by research studies carried out over the past few years.

At a press conference ahead of the 46th meeting of the French Colposcopy and Cervical and Vaginal Diseases Society, Julia Maruani, MD, a medical gynecologist in Marseille, France, took the opportunity to discuss the importance of vaginal flora and the need to treat cases of bacterial vaginosis.
 

Striking a balance

Essential for reducing the risk of sexually transmitted infections, a healthy vaginal flora is made up of millions of microorganisms, mainly lactobacilli, as well as other bacteria (Gardnerella vaginalis, Atopobium vaginae, Prevotella, streptococcus, gonococcus), HPV, and fungi.

Lactobacilli produce lactic acid, which reduces the vagina’s pH, as well as hydrogen peroxide, which is toxic to the other bacteria.

Different factors, such as alcohol, a diet rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids and sugar, and especially smoking, can lead to an imbalance of the bacteria in the vaginal flora and thus result in vaginosis. What occurs is an abnormal multiplication of different types of anaerobic bacteria that are normally present in much lower numbers. There is a relative reduction in lactobacilli, which results in an increased vaginal pH, a greater risk of contracting an STI, and reduced clearance of the HPV infection. “Women who smoke probably experience persistent HPV infections due to an imbalance in vaginal flora,” said Dr. Maruani.
 

Vaginosis and HPV

When there are fewer lactobacilli than there should be, these bacteria can no longer protect the vaginal mucosa, which is disrupted by other bacteria. “HPV then has access to the basal cells,” said Dr. Maruani, acknowledging that the relationship between bacterial vaginosis and persistent HPV infections has been the subject of numerous research studies over the past decade or so. “For years, I would see this same link in my patients. Those with persistent vaginosis were also the ones with persistent HPV. And I’m not the only one to notice this. Studies have also been carried out investigating this exact correlation,” she added.

These studies have shown that HPV infections persist in cases of vaginosis, resulting in the appearance of epithelial lesions. Additionally, the lesions are more severe when dysbiosis is more severe.

What about probiotics? Can they treat dysbiosis and an HPV infection at the same time? “Probiotics work very well for vaginosis, provided they are used for a long time. We know that they lessen HPV infections and low-grade lesions,” said Dr. Maruani, although no randomized studies support this conclusion. “It’s not a one size fits all. We aren’t about to treat patients with precancerous lesions with probiotics.” There are currently no data concerning the efficacy of probiotics on high-grade lesions. These days, Dr. Maruani has been thinking about a new issue: the benefit of diagnosing cases of asymptomatic vaginosis – because treating them would reduce the risk of persistent HPV infection.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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HEGENBERGER RETRACTOR:  IS IT HELPFUL FOR PERINEAL REPAIR? 

The Hegenberger Retractor, manufactured by Hegenberger Medical (Abingdon, United Kingdom) is available for purchase in the United States through Rocket Medical. A video that I find particularly useful for explaining its use is available here: https://www.youtube.com /watch?v=p-jilXgXZLY

Background. About 85% of women having a vaginal birth experience some form of perineal trauma, and 60% to 70% receive stitches for those spontaneous tears or intentional incisions. As such, repairing perineal lacerations is a requisite skill for all obstetricians and midwives, and every provider has developed exposure techniques to perform their suturing with the goals of good tissue re-approximation, efficiency, minimized patient discomfort, reduced blood loss, and safety from needle sticks. For several millennia, the most commonly used tissue retractor for these repairs has been one’s own fingers, or those of a colleague. While cost-effective and readily available, fingers do have drawbacks as a vaginal retractor. First, their use as a retractor precludes their use for other tasks. Second, their frequent need to be inserted and replaced (see drawback #1) can be uncomfortable for patients. Third, their limited surface area is often insufficient to appropriately provide adequate tissue retraction for optimal surgical site visualization. Finally, they get tired and typically do not appreciate being stuck with needles. Given all this, it is surprising that so many centuries have passed with so little innovation for this ubiquitous procedure. Fortunately, Danish midwife Malene Hegenberger thought now was a good time to change the status quo.

Design/Functionality. The Hegenberger Retractor is brilliant in its simplicity. Its unique molded plastic design is smooth, ergonomic, nonconductive, and packaged as a single-use sterile device. Amazingly, it has a near-perfect pliability balance, making it simultaneously easy to compress for insertion while providing enough retraction tension for good visualization once it has been reexpanded. The subtle ridges on the compression points are just enough to allow for a good grip, and the notches on the sides are a convenient addition for holding extra suture if needed. The device has been cleared by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a Class 1 device and is approved for sale in the United States. In my experience with its use, I thought it was easy to place and provided excellent exposure for the repairs I was doing. In fact, I thought it provided as good if not better exposure than what I would expect from a Gelpi retractor without any of the trauma the Gelpi adds with its pointed ends. Smile emoji!

Innovation. In the early 1800s, French midwifery pioneer Marie Boivin introduced a novel pelvimeter and a revolutionary 2-part speculum to the technology of the day. Why it took more than 200 years for the ideas of another cutting-edge midwife to breach the walls of the obstetric technological establishment remains a mystery, but fortunately it has been done. While seemingly obvious, the Hegenberger Retractor is the culmination of years of work and 88 prototypes. It looks simple, but the secret to its functionality is the precision with which each dimension and every curve was designed. The device has been cleared by the FDA as a Class 1 device and is approved for sale in the United States. 

Summary. There are a lot of reasons to like the Hegenberger Retractor. I like it for its simplicity; I like it for its functionality; I like it for its ability to fill a real need. On the downside, I do not like that it is a single-use plastic device, and I am not happy about adding cost to obstetric care. Most of all, I hate that I did not invent it. 

Is the Hegenberger Retractor going to be needed to repair every obstetric laceration? No. Will it provide perfect exposure to repair every obstetric laceration? Of course not. But it is an incredibly clever device that will be very helpful in many situations, and I suspect it will soon become a mainstay on most maternity units as it gains recognition.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT www.rocketmedical.com

References
  1. McCandlish R, Bowler U, van Asten H, et al. A randomised controlled trial of care of the perineum during second stage of normal labour. Br J Obstet Gynaecol. 1998;105:1262-1272.
  2. Ferry G. Marie Boivin: from midwife to gynaecologist. Lancet. 2019;393:2192-2193. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(19)31188-2. 
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The views of the author are personal opinions and do not necessarily represent the views of OBG Management. Dr. Greenberg personally trials all the products he reviews. Dr. Greenberg has no conflicts of interest with this product or the company that produces it.

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HEGENBERGER RETRACTOR:  IS IT HELPFUL FOR PERINEAL REPAIR? 

The Hegenberger Retractor, manufactured by Hegenberger Medical (Abingdon, United Kingdom) is available for purchase in the United States through Rocket Medical. A video that I find particularly useful for explaining its use is available here: https://www.youtube.com /watch?v=p-jilXgXZLY

Background. About 85% of women having a vaginal birth experience some form of perineal trauma, and 60% to 70% receive stitches for those spontaneous tears or intentional incisions. As such, repairing perineal lacerations is a requisite skill for all obstetricians and midwives, and every provider has developed exposure techniques to perform their suturing with the goals of good tissue re-approximation, efficiency, minimized patient discomfort, reduced blood loss, and safety from needle sticks. For several millennia, the most commonly used tissue retractor for these repairs has been one’s own fingers, or those of a colleague. While cost-effective and readily available, fingers do have drawbacks as a vaginal retractor. First, their use as a retractor precludes their use for other tasks. Second, their frequent need to be inserted and replaced (see drawback #1) can be uncomfortable for patients. Third, their limited surface area is often insufficient to appropriately provide adequate tissue retraction for optimal surgical site visualization. Finally, they get tired and typically do not appreciate being stuck with needles. Given all this, it is surprising that so many centuries have passed with so little innovation for this ubiquitous procedure. Fortunately, Danish midwife Malene Hegenberger thought now was a good time to change the status quo.

Design/Functionality. The Hegenberger Retractor is brilliant in its simplicity. Its unique molded plastic design is smooth, ergonomic, nonconductive, and packaged as a single-use sterile device. Amazingly, it has a near-perfect pliability balance, making it simultaneously easy to compress for insertion while providing enough retraction tension for good visualization once it has been reexpanded. The subtle ridges on the compression points are just enough to allow for a good grip, and the notches on the sides are a convenient addition for holding extra suture if needed. The device has been cleared by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a Class 1 device and is approved for sale in the United States. In my experience with its use, I thought it was easy to place and provided excellent exposure for the repairs I was doing. In fact, I thought it provided as good if not better exposure than what I would expect from a Gelpi retractor without any of the trauma the Gelpi adds with its pointed ends. Smile emoji!

Innovation. In the early 1800s, French midwifery pioneer Marie Boivin introduced a novel pelvimeter and a revolutionary 2-part speculum to the technology of the day. Why it took more than 200 years for the ideas of another cutting-edge midwife to breach the walls of the obstetric technological establishment remains a mystery, but fortunately it has been done. While seemingly obvious, the Hegenberger Retractor is the culmination of years of work and 88 prototypes. It looks simple, but the secret to its functionality is the precision with which each dimension and every curve was designed. The device has been cleared by the FDA as a Class 1 device and is approved for sale in the United States. 

Summary. There are a lot of reasons to like the Hegenberger Retractor. I like it for its simplicity; I like it for its functionality; I like it for its ability to fill a real need. On the downside, I do not like that it is a single-use plastic device, and I am not happy about adding cost to obstetric care. Most of all, I hate that I did not invent it. 

Is the Hegenberger Retractor going to be needed to repair every obstetric laceration? No. Will it provide perfect exposure to repair every obstetric laceration? Of course not. But it is an incredibly clever device that will be very helpful in many situations, and I suspect it will soon become a mainstay on most maternity units as it gains recognition.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT www.rocketmedical.com

HEGENBERGER RETRACTOR:  IS IT HELPFUL FOR PERINEAL REPAIR? 

The Hegenberger Retractor, manufactured by Hegenberger Medical (Abingdon, United Kingdom) is available for purchase in the United States through Rocket Medical. A video that I find particularly useful for explaining its use is available here: https://www.youtube.com /watch?v=p-jilXgXZLY

Background. About 85% of women having a vaginal birth experience some form of perineal trauma, and 60% to 70% receive stitches for those spontaneous tears or intentional incisions. As such, repairing perineal lacerations is a requisite skill for all obstetricians and midwives, and every provider has developed exposure techniques to perform their suturing with the goals of good tissue re-approximation, efficiency, minimized patient discomfort, reduced blood loss, and safety from needle sticks. For several millennia, the most commonly used tissue retractor for these repairs has been one’s own fingers, or those of a colleague. While cost-effective and readily available, fingers do have drawbacks as a vaginal retractor. First, their use as a retractor precludes their use for other tasks. Second, their frequent need to be inserted and replaced (see drawback #1) can be uncomfortable for patients. Third, their limited surface area is often insufficient to appropriately provide adequate tissue retraction for optimal surgical site visualization. Finally, they get tired and typically do not appreciate being stuck with needles. Given all this, it is surprising that so many centuries have passed with so little innovation for this ubiquitous procedure. Fortunately, Danish midwife Malene Hegenberger thought now was a good time to change the status quo.

Design/Functionality. The Hegenberger Retractor is brilliant in its simplicity. Its unique molded plastic design is smooth, ergonomic, nonconductive, and packaged as a single-use sterile device. Amazingly, it has a near-perfect pliability balance, making it simultaneously easy to compress for insertion while providing enough retraction tension for good visualization once it has been reexpanded. The subtle ridges on the compression points are just enough to allow for a good grip, and the notches on the sides are a convenient addition for holding extra suture if needed. The device has been cleared by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as a Class 1 device and is approved for sale in the United States. In my experience with its use, I thought it was easy to place and provided excellent exposure for the repairs I was doing. In fact, I thought it provided as good if not better exposure than what I would expect from a Gelpi retractor without any of the trauma the Gelpi adds with its pointed ends. Smile emoji!

Innovation. In the early 1800s, French midwifery pioneer Marie Boivin introduced a novel pelvimeter and a revolutionary 2-part speculum to the technology of the day. Why it took more than 200 years for the ideas of another cutting-edge midwife to breach the walls of the obstetric technological establishment remains a mystery, but fortunately it has been done. While seemingly obvious, the Hegenberger Retractor is the culmination of years of work and 88 prototypes. It looks simple, but the secret to its functionality is the precision with which each dimension and every curve was designed. The device has been cleared by the FDA as a Class 1 device and is approved for sale in the United States. 

Summary. There are a lot of reasons to like the Hegenberger Retractor. I like it for its simplicity; I like it for its functionality; I like it for its ability to fill a real need. On the downside, I do not like that it is a single-use plastic device, and I am not happy about adding cost to obstetric care. Most of all, I hate that I did not invent it. 

Is the Hegenberger Retractor going to be needed to repair every obstetric laceration? No. Will it provide perfect exposure to repair every obstetric laceration? Of course not. But it is an incredibly clever device that will be very helpful in many situations, and I suspect it will soon become a mainstay on most maternity units as it gains recognition.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT www.rocketmedical.com

References
  1. McCandlish R, Bowler U, van Asten H, et al. A randomised controlled trial of care of the perineum during second stage of normal labour. Br J Obstet Gynaecol. 1998;105:1262-1272.
  2. Ferry G. Marie Boivin: from midwife to gynaecologist. Lancet. 2019;393:2192-2193. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(19)31188-2. 
References
  1. McCandlish R, Bowler U, van Asten H, et al. A randomised controlled trial of care of the perineum during second stage of normal labour. Br J Obstet Gynaecol. 1998;105:1262-1272.
  2. Ferry G. Marie Boivin: from midwife to gynaecologist. Lancet. 2019;393:2192-2193. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(19)31188-2. 
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COMMENT & CONTROVERSY

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Should treatment be initiated for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to improve outcomes?

JAIMEY M. PAULI, MD (JUNE 2022)

Consider this, when it comes to treating chronic hypertension

I welcome the article by Dr. Jaimey Pauli, which focuses on initiating treatment for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to reach a goal blood pressure (BP) of <140/90 mm Hg to prevent adverse maternal and fetal outcomes.1 I would like to offer 3 additional thoughts for your consideration. First, it is known that there is a physiological decrease in BP during the second trimester, which results in a normotensive presentation. Thus, it would be beneficial to see if pregnant women with high-normal BP levels before the third trimester be administered a lower dose of antihypertensives. However, there is also a concern that decreased maternal BP may compromise uteroplacental perfusion and fetal circulation, which also could be evaluated.2

Second, I would like to see how comorbidities affect the initiation of antihypertensives for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy. Research incorporating pregnant women with borderline hypertension and comorbidities such as obesity, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM) is likely to yield informative results. This is especially beneficial since, for example, chronic hypertension and DM are independent risk factors for adverse maternal and fetal outcomes; therefore, a mother with both these conditions may have additive effects on obstetric outcomes.3

Lastly, I would suggest you include a brief conversation about prepregnancy ways to manage women with chronic hypertension. Because many women who enter pregnancy with chronic hypertension have hypertension of unknown origin, it would be beneficial to optimize antihypertensive regimens before conception.4 Also, it should be further evaluated whether initiation of lifestyle modifications, such as weight reduction and the DASH diet before pregnancy, for women with chronic hypertension improves pregnancy outcomes.

Cassandra Maafoh, MD

Macon, Georgia

References

  1. Pauli JM. Should treatment be initiated for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to improve outcomes? OBG Manag. 2022;34:14-15.
  2. Brown CM, Garovic VD. Drug treatment of hypertension in pregnancy. Drugs. 2014;74:283-296. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40265-014-0187-7.
  3. Yanit KE, Snowden JM, Cheng YW, et al. The impact of chronic hypertension and pregestational diabetes on pregnancy outcomes. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2012;207. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.ajog.2012.06.066.
  4. Seely EW, Ecker J. Chronic hypertension in pregnancy. Circulation. 2014;129:1254-1261. https:// doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.113.003904. 

2022 UPDATE ON FEMALE SEXUAL HEALTH

BARBARA LEVY, MD (AUGUST 2022)

Are these new and rare syndromes’ pathophysiological mechanisms related?

I read with great interest Dr. Barbara Levy’s UPDATE in the August 2022 issue on testosterone therapy for women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), as well as her comments on persistent genital arousal disorder/genito-pelvic dysesthesia (PGAD/GPD) that was recently so coined by the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH) as a 2-component syndrome.1 The new syndrome, explains Dr. Levy, presents with “the perception of genital arousal that is involuntary, unrelated to sexual desire, without any identified cause, not relieved with orgasm, and distressing to the patient (the PGAD component),” combined with “itching, burning, tingling, or pain” (the GPD component).

Although agreeing with ISSWSH that diagnosis and management require a multidisciplinary biopsychosocial approach, in her practical advice, Dr. Levy mentioned: “neuropathic signaling” with “aberrant sensory processing” as the syndrome’s possible main pathophysiology. Interestingly, there are 2 other rare, chronic, and “poorly recognized source(s) of major distress to a small but significant group of patients.” Persistent idiopathic oro-facial pain (PIFP) disorder2 after dental interventions and burning mouth syndrome (BMS),3 defined by the absence of any local or systemic contributing etiology, also present with continuous local burning and pain (as in GPD). Consequently, PGAD/GPD may indeed have the same pathophysiological explanation—as Dr. Levy suggested—of being a (genital) peripheral chronic neuropathic pain condition.

A potentially promising new therapeutic approach for PGAD/GPD would then be to use the same, or similar, antineuropathic medications (Clonazepam, Nortriptyline, Pregabalin, etc.) in the form of topical vaginal swishing solutions similar to the presently recommended antiepileptic and/or antidepressant oral swishing treatment for PIFP and BMS. As the topical approach works well for oral neuropathic pain, vaginal swishing could potentially be the answer for PGAD/GPD peripheral neuropathic pain. Moreover, such a novel topical approach would significantly increase patient motivation for treatment by avoiding the adverse effects of ingested antiepileptic or antidepressant drugs.

This is the first time that anticonvulsant and/or antidepressant vaginal swishing is proposed as topical therapy for GPD peripheral neuropathic pain, still pending scientific/clinical validation. ●

Zwi Hoch, MD

Newton, Massachusetts

  1. Goldstein I, Komisaruk BR, Pukall CF, et al. International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH) Review of Epidemiology and Pathophysiology, and a Consensus Nomenclature and Process of Care for the Management of Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder/Genito-Pelvic Dysesthesia (PGAD/GPD). J Sex Med. 2021;18:665-697.
  2. Baad-Hansen L, Benoliel R. Neuropathic orofacial pain: facts and fiction. Cephalgia. 2017;37:670-679.
  3. Kuten-Shorer M, Treister NS, Stock S, et al. Safety and tolerability of topical clonazepam solution for management of oral dysesthesia. Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol. 2017;124: 146-151. 
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Should treatment be initiated for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to improve outcomes?

JAIMEY M. PAULI, MD (JUNE 2022)

Consider this, when it comes to treating chronic hypertension

I welcome the article by Dr. Jaimey Pauli, which focuses on initiating treatment for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to reach a goal blood pressure (BP) of <140/90 mm Hg to prevent adverse maternal and fetal outcomes.1 I would like to offer 3 additional thoughts for your consideration. First, it is known that there is a physiological decrease in BP during the second trimester, which results in a normotensive presentation. Thus, it would be beneficial to see if pregnant women with high-normal BP levels before the third trimester be administered a lower dose of antihypertensives. However, there is also a concern that decreased maternal BP may compromise uteroplacental perfusion and fetal circulation, which also could be evaluated.2

Second, I would like to see how comorbidities affect the initiation of antihypertensives for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy. Research incorporating pregnant women with borderline hypertension and comorbidities such as obesity, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM) is likely to yield informative results. This is especially beneficial since, for example, chronic hypertension and DM are independent risk factors for adverse maternal and fetal outcomes; therefore, a mother with both these conditions may have additive effects on obstetric outcomes.3

Lastly, I would suggest you include a brief conversation about prepregnancy ways to manage women with chronic hypertension. Because many women who enter pregnancy with chronic hypertension have hypertension of unknown origin, it would be beneficial to optimize antihypertensive regimens before conception.4 Also, it should be further evaluated whether initiation of lifestyle modifications, such as weight reduction and the DASH diet before pregnancy, for women with chronic hypertension improves pregnancy outcomes.

Cassandra Maafoh, MD

Macon, Georgia

References

  1. Pauli JM. Should treatment be initiated for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to improve outcomes? OBG Manag. 2022;34:14-15.
  2. Brown CM, Garovic VD. Drug treatment of hypertension in pregnancy. Drugs. 2014;74:283-296. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40265-014-0187-7.
  3. Yanit KE, Snowden JM, Cheng YW, et al. The impact of chronic hypertension and pregestational diabetes on pregnancy outcomes. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2012;207. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.ajog.2012.06.066.
  4. Seely EW, Ecker J. Chronic hypertension in pregnancy. Circulation. 2014;129:1254-1261. https:// doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.113.003904. 

2022 UPDATE ON FEMALE SEXUAL HEALTH

BARBARA LEVY, MD (AUGUST 2022)

Are these new and rare syndromes’ pathophysiological mechanisms related?

I read with great interest Dr. Barbara Levy’s UPDATE in the August 2022 issue on testosterone therapy for women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), as well as her comments on persistent genital arousal disorder/genito-pelvic dysesthesia (PGAD/GPD) that was recently so coined by the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH) as a 2-component syndrome.1 The new syndrome, explains Dr. Levy, presents with “the perception of genital arousal that is involuntary, unrelated to sexual desire, without any identified cause, not relieved with orgasm, and distressing to the patient (the PGAD component),” combined with “itching, burning, tingling, or pain” (the GPD component).

Although agreeing with ISSWSH that diagnosis and management require a multidisciplinary biopsychosocial approach, in her practical advice, Dr. Levy mentioned: “neuropathic signaling” with “aberrant sensory processing” as the syndrome’s possible main pathophysiology. Interestingly, there are 2 other rare, chronic, and “poorly recognized source(s) of major distress to a small but significant group of patients.” Persistent idiopathic oro-facial pain (PIFP) disorder2 after dental interventions and burning mouth syndrome (BMS),3 defined by the absence of any local or systemic contributing etiology, also present with continuous local burning and pain (as in GPD). Consequently, PGAD/GPD may indeed have the same pathophysiological explanation—as Dr. Levy suggested—of being a (genital) peripheral chronic neuropathic pain condition.

A potentially promising new therapeutic approach for PGAD/GPD would then be to use the same, or similar, antineuropathic medications (Clonazepam, Nortriptyline, Pregabalin, etc.) in the form of topical vaginal swishing solutions similar to the presently recommended antiepileptic and/or antidepressant oral swishing treatment for PIFP and BMS. As the topical approach works well for oral neuropathic pain, vaginal swishing could potentially be the answer for PGAD/GPD peripheral neuropathic pain. Moreover, such a novel topical approach would significantly increase patient motivation for treatment by avoiding the adverse effects of ingested antiepileptic or antidepressant drugs.

This is the first time that anticonvulsant and/or antidepressant vaginal swishing is proposed as topical therapy for GPD peripheral neuropathic pain, still pending scientific/clinical validation. ●

Zwi Hoch, MD

Newton, Massachusetts

  1. Goldstein I, Komisaruk BR, Pukall CF, et al. International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH) Review of Epidemiology and Pathophysiology, and a Consensus Nomenclature and Process of Care for the Management of Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder/Genito-Pelvic Dysesthesia (PGAD/GPD). J Sex Med. 2021;18:665-697.
  2. Baad-Hansen L, Benoliel R. Neuropathic orofacial pain: facts and fiction. Cephalgia. 2017;37:670-679.
  3. Kuten-Shorer M, Treister NS, Stock S, et al. Safety and tolerability of topical clonazepam solution for management of oral dysesthesia. Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol. 2017;124: 146-151. 

 

Should treatment be initiated for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to improve outcomes?

JAIMEY M. PAULI, MD (JUNE 2022)

Consider this, when it comes to treating chronic hypertension

I welcome the article by Dr. Jaimey Pauli, which focuses on initiating treatment for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to reach a goal blood pressure (BP) of <140/90 mm Hg to prevent adverse maternal and fetal outcomes.1 I would like to offer 3 additional thoughts for your consideration. First, it is known that there is a physiological decrease in BP during the second trimester, which results in a normotensive presentation. Thus, it would be beneficial to see if pregnant women with high-normal BP levels before the third trimester be administered a lower dose of antihypertensives. However, there is also a concern that decreased maternal BP may compromise uteroplacental perfusion and fetal circulation, which also could be evaluated.2

Second, I would like to see how comorbidities affect the initiation of antihypertensives for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy. Research incorporating pregnant women with borderline hypertension and comorbidities such as obesity, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM) is likely to yield informative results. This is especially beneficial since, for example, chronic hypertension and DM are independent risk factors for adverse maternal and fetal outcomes; therefore, a mother with both these conditions may have additive effects on obstetric outcomes.3

Lastly, I would suggest you include a brief conversation about prepregnancy ways to manage women with chronic hypertension. Because many women who enter pregnancy with chronic hypertension have hypertension of unknown origin, it would be beneficial to optimize antihypertensive regimens before conception.4 Also, it should be further evaluated whether initiation of lifestyle modifications, such as weight reduction and the DASH diet before pregnancy, for women with chronic hypertension improves pregnancy outcomes.

Cassandra Maafoh, MD

Macon, Georgia

References

  1. Pauli JM. Should treatment be initiated for mild chronic hypertension in pregnancy to improve outcomes? OBG Manag. 2022;34:14-15.
  2. Brown CM, Garovic VD. Drug treatment of hypertension in pregnancy. Drugs. 2014;74:283-296. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40265-014-0187-7.
  3. Yanit KE, Snowden JM, Cheng YW, et al. The impact of chronic hypertension and pregestational diabetes on pregnancy outcomes. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2012;207. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.ajog.2012.06.066.
  4. Seely EW, Ecker J. Chronic hypertension in pregnancy. Circulation. 2014;129:1254-1261. https:// doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.113.003904. 

2022 UPDATE ON FEMALE SEXUAL HEALTH

BARBARA LEVY, MD (AUGUST 2022)

Are these new and rare syndromes’ pathophysiological mechanisms related?

I read with great interest Dr. Barbara Levy’s UPDATE in the August 2022 issue on testosterone therapy for women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), as well as her comments on persistent genital arousal disorder/genito-pelvic dysesthesia (PGAD/GPD) that was recently so coined by the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH) as a 2-component syndrome.1 The new syndrome, explains Dr. Levy, presents with “the perception of genital arousal that is involuntary, unrelated to sexual desire, without any identified cause, not relieved with orgasm, and distressing to the patient (the PGAD component),” combined with “itching, burning, tingling, or pain” (the GPD component).

Although agreeing with ISSWSH that diagnosis and management require a multidisciplinary biopsychosocial approach, in her practical advice, Dr. Levy mentioned: “neuropathic signaling” with “aberrant sensory processing” as the syndrome’s possible main pathophysiology. Interestingly, there are 2 other rare, chronic, and “poorly recognized source(s) of major distress to a small but significant group of patients.” Persistent idiopathic oro-facial pain (PIFP) disorder2 after dental interventions and burning mouth syndrome (BMS),3 defined by the absence of any local or systemic contributing etiology, also present with continuous local burning and pain (as in GPD). Consequently, PGAD/GPD may indeed have the same pathophysiological explanation—as Dr. Levy suggested—of being a (genital) peripheral chronic neuropathic pain condition.

A potentially promising new therapeutic approach for PGAD/GPD would then be to use the same, or similar, antineuropathic medications (Clonazepam, Nortriptyline, Pregabalin, etc.) in the form of topical vaginal swishing solutions similar to the presently recommended antiepileptic and/or antidepressant oral swishing treatment for PIFP and BMS. As the topical approach works well for oral neuropathic pain, vaginal swishing could potentially be the answer for PGAD/GPD peripheral neuropathic pain. Moreover, such a novel topical approach would significantly increase patient motivation for treatment by avoiding the adverse effects of ingested antiepileptic or antidepressant drugs.

This is the first time that anticonvulsant and/or antidepressant vaginal swishing is proposed as topical therapy for GPD peripheral neuropathic pain, still pending scientific/clinical validation. ●

Zwi Hoch, MD

Newton, Massachusetts

  1. Goldstein I, Komisaruk BR, Pukall CF, et al. International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH) Review of Epidemiology and Pathophysiology, and a Consensus Nomenclature and Process of Care for the Management of Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder/Genito-Pelvic Dysesthesia (PGAD/GPD). J Sex Med. 2021;18:665-697.
  2. Baad-Hansen L, Benoliel R. Neuropathic orofacial pain: facts and fiction. Cephalgia. 2017;37:670-679.
  3. Kuten-Shorer M, Treister NS, Stock S, et al. Safety and tolerability of topical clonazepam solution for management of oral dysesthesia. Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol. 2017;124: 146-151. 
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Three wishes: The changes health professionals want

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Tue, 02/07/2023 - 09:59

As physicians well know, magic wands don’t exist. If they did, every patient would recover in the exam room, prior authorization wouldn’t exist, and continuing medical education credits would be printed on bearer bonds.

But in the spirit of suspended disbelief, we asked physicians and other contributors what their three wishes would be for their patients, practice/hospital, and health systems. Because, hey – we all need to dream.
 

Suzanne C. Boulter, MD, adjunct professor of pediatrics and community and family medicine, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H.
Patients: An end to gun violence.
Practice/hospital: Adequate staffing and pediatric bed availability.
Health system: Universal access to health insurance.

Sarah G. Candler, MD, MPH, care team medical director and director of academic relations, Iora Primary Care, Northside Clinic, Houston
Patients: Systems of health that start with communities of safety, including access to affordable housing, food, transportation, and health care.
Practice/hospital: I.N.T.E.R.O.P.E.R.A.B.I.L.I.T.Y.
Health system: Clinician leadership that has the power (often aka funding) to do what’s right, not just what’s right in front of us.

Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, bioethicist, New York University Langone Health
Patients: I wish for patients in the United States greater access to affordable primary care. There are still too many people without insurance or a reasonably accessible quality provider. And I especially wish for the rapid expansion of affordable training programs to meet staffing needs, including more scholarships, 3-year programs, and more new primary care–oriented schools.
Hospital: Increased staffing, especially nursing. There are too many retirements, too much burnout, and too much privatization into boutique practices to ensure the ability to provide high-quality, safe, patient-oriented care.
Health system: I wish for health systems to seriously move into electronic medicine. While billing has become electronic, there is still much to be done to supplement diagnosis, training, and standardized data collection on key metrics. Systems are not yet behaving in a manner consistent with the hype in this regard.

Stephen Devries, MD, executive director, Gaples Institute (nonprofit) and adjunct associate professor of nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston
Patients: Patients continue to demand more from their health care professionals and insist that they are offered evidence-based counseling on nutrition and lifestyle strategies.
Practice: Quality-based reimbursement for medical services will take hold that will incentivize much-needed preventive care.
Hospital: Hospitals will more fully embrace the role of serving as true centers of health and focus as much on preventive medicine as on the more lucrative areas of high-tech treatment.

Peter D. Friedmann, MD, MPH, chief research officer, Baystate Health, Springfield, Mass.
Seconded by: Elisabeth Poorman, MD, general internist, University of Washington Clinic, Kent

Patients: Don’t forget the ongoing epidemic of substance use disorder, a major cause of premature mortality. Descheduling of cannabis and expungement of cannabis-related convictions.
Practice/hospital: Commitment of hospitals and practices to address stigma and ensure delivery of medications for opioid use disorder in primary care, the emergency department, and inpatient settings.
Health system: Reform of antiquated methadone regulations to permit office-based prescription and pharmacy dispensing to treat opioid use disorder, as is the case in most of the world.

 

 

Robert Glatter, MD, emergency physician, New York
Patients: I want all patients to understand the enormous strain the health care system has been under – not just with the pandemic, the tripledemic, and mpox [previously called monkeypox], but well before the onset of these public health crises.
Hospital: The medical profession has endured not only burnout but a growing mental health crisis, staffing shortages, a physician addiction crisis, and increased attrition in the decade leading up to the pandemic. The pandemic was like a punch in the gut, occurring at the most inopportune time one could imagine.
Health system: The intersection of health and the state of our public health deserves important mention. Unless we take action to bolster our public health infrastructure, our health care system will be in jeopardy, unable to handle the next pandemic, which could be just around the corner.

William E. Golden, MD, medical director of Arkansas Medicaid, professor of medicine and public health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock
Patients: Affordable options for diabetes and obesity management.
Health system: Greater investment by health systems and third-party payers in primary care infrastructure.

Gregory A. Hood, MD, Baptist Health, Lexington, Ky.
Patients: To embrace the gift of getting out in the world, being active, and connecting with others – having put down the screens.
Health system: To be freed from the financial gamesmanship of the insurers as they continue to serve their goals of promoting their hedge fund investing over meaningful and productive partnering with primary care physicians, and that they gain insight that they are one of the main reasons they can’t find PCPs to connect with to render care in disadvantaged environments – because they made it economically impossible to do so.

Robert H. Hopkins Jr., MD, associate professor of internal medicine and pediatrics and director of the division of general internal medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock
Patients/Health system: I would wish for staged implementation of universal basic health coverage for all, perhaps closest to the French or Canadian model. This would need to be coupled with expanded funding for nursing education, graduate medical education, and tracing of other health-related professionals.

Harvey Hsu, MD, Banner Health, Phoenix
Patients: More clear guidelines that are simple to understand. This can apply to colonoscopy (now age 45), immunizations, blood pressure goals. I wish medications were not as expensive so patients can take the best medicine for them and not stop taking them when they hit their donut hole in coverage.
Practice: We have been functioning on a leaner basis to cut down costs. When the pandemic hit, turnover was high and we lost PAs, nurses, front-office staff, and physicians. Having adequate staffing is probably number one on many lists. One way we dealt with lack of staffing was converting in-person visits to telehealth. Video visits are paid the same as in-person visits, but if the patient could not get their video to work, then it would be a telephone visit. Now many insurances do not even pay for telephone visits. So I would wish that we could still be reimbursed for telehealth visits.
Health system: I would wish for our health system to recognize the extra work required to take care of patients while improving quality and meeting quality measures. Allowing more time for patient visits could be one way to meet those goals or having more support staff to make sure patients get their colonoscopy/mammograms done, improve their sugars, and take their medications.

 

 

Jan L. Shifren, MD, Vincent Trustees Professor, obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology, Harvard Medical School, and director of the Midlife Women’s Health Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Patients: I wish for patients to be actively involved in all aspects of their care, well informed with shared decision-making.
Practice: I wish for the enormous time demands of electronic medical records and documentation to not distract from the pleasure of caring for patients.
Health system: Patient care remains at the center of decisions and programs.

Timothy J. Joos, MD, MPH, internal medicine/pediatrics, Seattle
Health system: I wish someone could figure out how we could be reimbursed for the quality of care we provide instead of the volume of patients we see. I wish EMRs could become less complicated and more user-friendly rather than needing advanced training to use.

Peter Kovacs, MD, medical director, Kaali Institute IVF Center, Budapest
Patients: I work as an infertility specialist, so when we talk about infectious diseases and associated risks, we talk about a minimum of two (female and male partner) and ideally three (plus the pregnancy) individuals. We have learned that SARS-CoV-2 affects reproductive health. It may compromise sperm production, could delay fertility treatment, could be associated with lower success rates; and if the treatment is successful, it may harm the pregnant woman/fetus/newborn. The best preventive measure that we can offer is vaccination. One cannot overemphasize the importance of preventive measures, paying attention to personal hygiene and social distancing. Therefore, I wish those planning to become pregnant to listen to their health care provider and accept the recommended vaccines to minimize the risk of getting infected and to minimize the risk for severe disease, especially if one undergoes successful fertility treatment and achieves a long-desired pregnancy.
Practice: During the 2022 calendar year we had many days when one or more employees were out of work on sick leave. This puts extra stress on the others to allow uncompromised work in the clinic. In addition, we all have to work in a less-comfortable environment if we consider mask use every day, all day. For health care workers, vaccination is mandated but many still are affected by milder forms of coronavirus infection and other respiratory diseases. Therefore, I wish my colleagues patience toward the preventive measures to lower the individual risk for infections. As a result, hopefully we will have a less stressful 2023.
Health system: Many resources had to be delegated to dealing with acute and chronic COVID, and this was at the expense of routine daily elective and preventive medical services. I wish the health care system to return to normal daily operations, to have the personnel and financial resources to carry on with the required preventive and elective medical services to avoid long-term consequences of not being able to provide such services. It would be sad if we had to treat otherwise preventable illnesses in the upcoming years that went undiagnosed and/or were not properly managed due to limited resources as the result of the pandemic.

Alan R. Nelson, MD, internist-endocrinologist, retired
Patients: Expansion of the FDA’s authority into over-the-counter drugs, including the veracity of their advertising claims.
Practice: Make diabetes drugs available at a reasonable cost.
Health system: With the expansion of Medicaid eligibility during COVID-19 coming to a close, federal government actions are necessary for those who once again have been dropped from coverage to have their legitimate needs met.

 

 

Kevin Powell, MD, PhD, St. Louis
Patients: To be cared for and about, and not just medically, even when illness strikes and health fails.
Hospitals: To hear the thankfulness of a grateful public for the care you provide, and to hear that above the angry noise of outraged individuals who spout vitriol and focus on how they believe others have harmed them.
Health system: A truer understanding of mercy and justice.

Margaret Thew, DNP, FNP-BC, director, department of adolescent medicine, Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Seconded by: M. Susan Jay, MD, professor of pediatrics, chief of adolescent medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin and Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

My wish for patients, hospital, and system: health, calm, and grace.

Mark P. Trolice, MD, director of Fertility CARE, the IVF Center, Winter Park, Fla.
Patients: To be proactive in their health care and be their own advocates. Question when unclear and only consult credible resources.
Practice/hospital: Improve support of physicians and all health care providers to allow more input in their practice operations and growth.
Health system: Reduce interference of the “business of medicine” and ensure that the patient experience is the priority.

Charles P. Vega, MD, University of California, Irvine
Three minutes on a routine basis for everyone in health care to reflect on our blessings and the honor and gravity – as well as joy – that are integral to health care. Three minutes that will also help us to recognize our challenges and put them in the proper context. I know 3 minutes is not meeting any standard for reflective practice. But it’s 3 minutes more than I have right now.

Karen Breach Washington, MD, medical director of WellCare of North Carolina/Centene, Charlotte
Seconded by: Lillian M. Beard, MD, physician director, Children’s Pediatricians and Associates, Silver Spring, Md.

Patients: Access to affordable health care.
Hospital: Resources to care for patients (sufficient number of beds and a healthy staff).
Health system: Equity for all.

Andrew Wilner, MD, host of the podcast “The Art of Medicine with Dr. Andrew Wilner,” www.andrewwilner.com
Let’s put patients first! Too many extraneous considerations other than the patient’s best interest obstruct optimal patient care.

Here are just a few examples of patients coming last instead of first.

  • If a patient needs to start a new medication in hospital, we shouldn’t have to wait until the patient is an outpatient because “that’s when insurance will pay.”
  • If there’s a new medication that’s better than the old medication, we shouldn’t be forced to choose the old medication and provide inferior care because “that’s when insurance will pay.”
  • If patients need to stay in hospital, we shouldn’t be pressured to discharge them because the hospital has decided that decreasing “length of stay” is its highest priority.

Dr. Francis Peabody said it best in 1927: “The secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient.” How hard is that?

In 2023, why don’t we follow Dr. Peabody’s sage advice from nearly 100 years ago and see what happens?
 

 

 

James M. Wooten, PharmD, University of Missouri–Kansas City, University Health, Kansas City, Mo.
Patients: I want patients to understand and properly realize the advantage of vaccinations – not only for COVID-19 but also for influenza. There is so much misinformation that I spend a lot of time trying to convince patients to get vaccinated. Most patients don’t realize that through their lives, most of them have already been vaccinated for something just to be able to attend school. How the COVID-19 vaccine created so much stigma makes little sense to me. I also want patients to understand that COVID-19 vaccination and boosters do not always prevent infection but will many times prevent severe infection. I believe that better patient communication and education is the key and will always be the key to improving vaccination numbers. Not only communicating and educating patients on vaccination itself but also making patients realize that personal vaccination decisions may affect what happens to your neighbor. Allowing infection means that you may be more likely to infect someone else. As a society, we must take care of each other.
Health system: It will be interesting to see what happens when vaccines are no longer reimbursed by the federal government. Understanding which vaccines work best and are better tolerated will be key to choosing appropriate vaccine brands. Health care providers will need to be very selective regarding which vaccines are selected for formulary inclusion. Thorough meta-analysis studies must be done to provide more evaluable information to allow for appropriate selection. “Knowledge is power!” Appropriate knowledge will help distinguish which vaccines work best for various patient populations.

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

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As physicians well know, magic wands don’t exist. If they did, every patient would recover in the exam room, prior authorization wouldn’t exist, and continuing medical education credits would be printed on bearer bonds.

But in the spirit of suspended disbelief, we asked physicians and other contributors what their three wishes would be for their patients, practice/hospital, and health systems. Because, hey – we all need to dream.
 

Suzanne C. Boulter, MD, adjunct professor of pediatrics and community and family medicine, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H.
Patients: An end to gun violence.
Practice/hospital: Adequate staffing and pediatric bed availability.
Health system: Universal access to health insurance.

Sarah G. Candler, MD, MPH, care team medical director and director of academic relations, Iora Primary Care, Northside Clinic, Houston
Patients: Systems of health that start with communities of safety, including access to affordable housing, food, transportation, and health care.
Practice/hospital: I.N.T.E.R.O.P.E.R.A.B.I.L.I.T.Y.
Health system: Clinician leadership that has the power (often aka funding) to do what’s right, not just what’s right in front of us.

Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, bioethicist, New York University Langone Health
Patients: I wish for patients in the United States greater access to affordable primary care. There are still too many people without insurance or a reasonably accessible quality provider. And I especially wish for the rapid expansion of affordable training programs to meet staffing needs, including more scholarships, 3-year programs, and more new primary care–oriented schools.
Hospital: Increased staffing, especially nursing. There are too many retirements, too much burnout, and too much privatization into boutique practices to ensure the ability to provide high-quality, safe, patient-oriented care.
Health system: I wish for health systems to seriously move into electronic medicine. While billing has become electronic, there is still much to be done to supplement diagnosis, training, and standardized data collection on key metrics. Systems are not yet behaving in a manner consistent with the hype in this regard.

Stephen Devries, MD, executive director, Gaples Institute (nonprofit) and adjunct associate professor of nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston
Patients: Patients continue to demand more from their health care professionals and insist that they are offered evidence-based counseling on nutrition and lifestyle strategies.
Practice: Quality-based reimbursement for medical services will take hold that will incentivize much-needed preventive care.
Hospital: Hospitals will more fully embrace the role of serving as true centers of health and focus as much on preventive medicine as on the more lucrative areas of high-tech treatment.

Peter D. Friedmann, MD, MPH, chief research officer, Baystate Health, Springfield, Mass.
Seconded by: Elisabeth Poorman, MD, general internist, University of Washington Clinic, Kent

Patients: Don’t forget the ongoing epidemic of substance use disorder, a major cause of premature mortality. Descheduling of cannabis and expungement of cannabis-related convictions.
Practice/hospital: Commitment of hospitals and practices to address stigma and ensure delivery of medications for opioid use disorder in primary care, the emergency department, and inpatient settings.
Health system: Reform of antiquated methadone regulations to permit office-based prescription and pharmacy dispensing to treat opioid use disorder, as is the case in most of the world.

 

 

Robert Glatter, MD, emergency physician, New York
Patients: I want all patients to understand the enormous strain the health care system has been under – not just with the pandemic, the tripledemic, and mpox [previously called monkeypox], but well before the onset of these public health crises.
Hospital: The medical profession has endured not only burnout but a growing mental health crisis, staffing shortages, a physician addiction crisis, and increased attrition in the decade leading up to the pandemic. The pandemic was like a punch in the gut, occurring at the most inopportune time one could imagine.
Health system: The intersection of health and the state of our public health deserves important mention. Unless we take action to bolster our public health infrastructure, our health care system will be in jeopardy, unable to handle the next pandemic, which could be just around the corner.

William E. Golden, MD, medical director of Arkansas Medicaid, professor of medicine and public health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock
Patients: Affordable options for diabetes and obesity management.
Health system: Greater investment by health systems and third-party payers in primary care infrastructure.

Gregory A. Hood, MD, Baptist Health, Lexington, Ky.
Patients: To embrace the gift of getting out in the world, being active, and connecting with others – having put down the screens.
Health system: To be freed from the financial gamesmanship of the insurers as they continue to serve their goals of promoting their hedge fund investing over meaningful and productive partnering with primary care physicians, and that they gain insight that they are one of the main reasons they can’t find PCPs to connect with to render care in disadvantaged environments – because they made it economically impossible to do so.

Robert H. Hopkins Jr., MD, associate professor of internal medicine and pediatrics and director of the division of general internal medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock
Patients/Health system: I would wish for staged implementation of universal basic health coverage for all, perhaps closest to the French or Canadian model. This would need to be coupled with expanded funding for nursing education, graduate medical education, and tracing of other health-related professionals.

Harvey Hsu, MD, Banner Health, Phoenix
Patients: More clear guidelines that are simple to understand. This can apply to colonoscopy (now age 45), immunizations, blood pressure goals. I wish medications were not as expensive so patients can take the best medicine for them and not stop taking them when they hit their donut hole in coverage.
Practice: We have been functioning on a leaner basis to cut down costs. When the pandemic hit, turnover was high and we lost PAs, nurses, front-office staff, and physicians. Having adequate staffing is probably number one on many lists. One way we dealt with lack of staffing was converting in-person visits to telehealth. Video visits are paid the same as in-person visits, but if the patient could not get their video to work, then it would be a telephone visit. Now many insurances do not even pay for telephone visits. So I would wish that we could still be reimbursed for telehealth visits.
Health system: I would wish for our health system to recognize the extra work required to take care of patients while improving quality and meeting quality measures. Allowing more time for patient visits could be one way to meet those goals or having more support staff to make sure patients get their colonoscopy/mammograms done, improve their sugars, and take their medications.

 

 

Jan L. Shifren, MD, Vincent Trustees Professor, obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology, Harvard Medical School, and director of the Midlife Women’s Health Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Patients: I wish for patients to be actively involved in all aspects of their care, well informed with shared decision-making.
Practice: I wish for the enormous time demands of electronic medical records and documentation to not distract from the pleasure of caring for patients.
Health system: Patient care remains at the center of decisions and programs.

Timothy J. Joos, MD, MPH, internal medicine/pediatrics, Seattle
Health system: I wish someone could figure out how we could be reimbursed for the quality of care we provide instead of the volume of patients we see. I wish EMRs could become less complicated and more user-friendly rather than needing advanced training to use.

Peter Kovacs, MD, medical director, Kaali Institute IVF Center, Budapest
Patients: I work as an infertility specialist, so when we talk about infectious diseases and associated risks, we talk about a minimum of two (female and male partner) and ideally three (plus the pregnancy) individuals. We have learned that SARS-CoV-2 affects reproductive health. It may compromise sperm production, could delay fertility treatment, could be associated with lower success rates; and if the treatment is successful, it may harm the pregnant woman/fetus/newborn. The best preventive measure that we can offer is vaccination. One cannot overemphasize the importance of preventive measures, paying attention to personal hygiene and social distancing. Therefore, I wish those planning to become pregnant to listen to their health care provider and accept the recommended vaccines to minimize the risk of getting infected and to minimize the risk for severe disease, especially if one undergoes successful fertility treatment and achieves a long-desired pregnancy.
Practice: During the 2022 calendar year we had many days when one or more employees were out of work on sick leave. This puts extra stress on the others to allow uncompromised work in the clinic. In addition, we all have to work in a less-comfortable environment if we consider mask use every day, all day. For health care workers, vaccination is mandated but many still are affected by milder forms of coronavirus infection and other respiratory diseases. Therefore, I wish my colleagues patience toward the preventive measures to lower the individual risk for infections. As a result, hopefully we will have a less stressful 2023.
Health system: Many resources had to be delegated to dealing with acute and chronic COVID, and this was at the expense of routine daily elective and preventive medical services. I wish the health care system to return to normal daily operations, to have the personnel and financial resources to carry on with the required preventive and elective medical services to avoid long-term consequences of not being able to provide such services. It would be sad if we had to treat otherwise preventable illnesses in the upcoming years that went undiagnosed and/or were not properly managed due to limited resources as the result of the pandemic.

Alan R. Nelson, MD, internist-endocrinologist, retired
Patients: Expansion of the FDA’s authority into over-the-counter drugs, including the veracity of their advertising claims.
Practice: Make diabetes drugs available at a reasonable cost.
Health system: With the expansion of Medicaid eligibility during COVID-19 coming to a close, federal government actions are necessary for those who once again have been dropped from coverage to have their legitimate needs met.

 

 

Kevin Powell, MD, PhD, St. Louis
Patients: To be cared for and about, and not just medically, even when illness strikes and health fails.
Hospitals: To hear the thankfulness of a grateful public for the care you provide, and to hear that above the angry noise of outraged individuals who spout vitriol and focus on how they believe others have harmed them.
Health system: A truer understanding of mercy and justice.

Margaret Thew, DNP, FNP-BC, director, department of adolescent medicine, Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Seconded by: M. Susan Jay, MD, professor of pediatrics, chief of adolescent medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin and Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

My wish for patients, hospital, and system: health, calm, and grace.

Mark P. Trolice, MD, director of Fertility CARE, the IVF Center, Winter Park, Fla.
Patients: To be proactive in their health care and be their own advocates. Question when unclear and only consult credible resources.
Practice/hospital: Improve support of physicians and all health care providers to allow more input in their practice operations and growth.
Health system: Reduce interference of the “business of medicine” and ensure that the patient experience is the priority.

Charles P. Vega, MD, University of California, Irvine
Three minutes on a routine basis for everyone in health care to reflect on our blessings and the honor and gravity – as well as joy – that are integral to health care. Three minutes that will also help us to recognize our challenges and put them in the proper context. I know 3 minutes is not meeting any standard for reflective practice. But it’s 3 minutes more than I have right now.

Karen Breach Washington, MD, medical director of WellCare of North Carolina/Centene, Charlotte
Seconded by: Lillian M. Beard, MD, physician director, Children’s Pediatricians and Associates, Silver Spring, Md.

Patients: Access to affordable health care.
Hospital: Resources to care for patients (sufficient number of beds and a healthy staff).
Health system: Equity for all.

Andrew Wilner, MD, host of the podcast “The Art of Medicine with Dr. Andrew Wilner,” www.andrewwilner.com
Let’s put patients first! Too many extraneous considerations other than the patient’s best interest obstruct optimal patient care.

Here are just a few examples of patients coming last instead of first.

  • If a patient needs to start a new medication in hospital, we shouldn’t have to wait until the patient is an outpatient because “that’s when insurance will pay.”
  • If there’s a new medication that’s better than the old medication, we shouldn’t be forced to choose the old medication and provide inferior care because “that’s when insurance will pay.”
  • If patients need to stay in hospital, we shouldn’t be pressured to discharge them because the hospital has decided that decreasing “length of stay” is its highest priority.

Dr. Francis Peabody said it best in 1927: “The secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient.” How hard is that?

In 2023, why don’t we follow Dr. Peabody’s sage advice from nearly 100 years ago and see what happens?
 

 

 

James M. Wooten, PharmD, University of Missouri–Kansas City, University Health, Kansas City, Mo.
Patients: I want patients to understand and properly realize the advantage of vaccinations – not only for COVID-19 but also for influenza. There is so much misinformation that I spend a lot of time trying to convince patients to get vaccinated. Most patients don’t realize that through their lives, most of them have already been vaccinated for something just to be able to attend school. How the COVID-19 vaccine created so much stigma makes little sense to me. I also want patients to understand that COVID-19 vaccination and boosters do not always prevent infection but will many times prevent severe infection. I believe that better patient communication and education is the key and will always be the key to improving vaccination numbers. Not only communicating and educating patients on vaccination itself but also making patients realize that personal vaccination decisions may affect what happens to your neighbor. Allowing infection means that you may be more likely to infect someone else. As a society, we must take care of each other.
Health system: It will be interesting to see what happens when vaccines are no longer reimbursed by the federal government. Understanding which vaccines work best and are better tolerated will be key to choosing appropriate vaccine brands. Health care providers will need to be very selective regarding which vaccines are selected for formulary inclusion. Thorough meta-analysis studies must be done to provide more evaluable information to allow for appropriate selection. “Knowledge is power!” Appropriate knowledge will help distinguish which vaccines work best for various patient populations.

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

As physicians well know, magic wands don’t exist. If they did, every patient would recover in the exam room, prior authorization wouldn’t exist, and continuing medical education credits would be printed on bearer bonds.

But in the spirit of suspended disbelief, we asked physicians and other contributors what their three wishes would be for their patients, practice/hospital, and health systems. Because, hey – we all need to dream.
 

Suzanne C. Boulter, MD, adjunct professor of pediatrics and community and family medicine, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H.
Patients: An end to gun violence.
Practice/hospital: Adequate staffing and pediatric bed availability.
Health system: Universal access to health insurance.

Sarah G. Candler, MD, MPH, care team medical director and director of academic relations, Iora Primary Care, Northside Clinic, Houston
Patients: Systems of health that start with communities of safety, including access to affordable housing, food, transportation, and health care.
Practice/hospital: I.N.T.E.R.O.P.E.R.A.B.I.L.I.T.Y.
Health system: Clinician leadership that has the power (often aka funding) to do what’s right, not just what’s right in front of us.

Arthur L. Caplan, PhD, bioethicist, New York University Langone Health
Patients: I wish for patients in the United States greater access to affordable primary care. There are still too many people without insurance or a reasonably accessible quality provider. And I especially wish for the rapid expansion of affordable training programs to meet staffing needs, including more scholarships, 3-year programs, and more new primary care–oriented schools.
Hospital: Increased staffing, especially nursing. There are too many retirements, too much burnout, and too much privatization into boutique practices to ensure the ability to provide high-quality, safe, patient-oriented care.
Health system: I wish for health systems to seriously move into electronic medicine. While billing has become electronic, there is still much to be done to supplement diagnosis, training, and standardized data collection on key metrics. Systems are not yet behaving in a manner consistent with the hype in this regard.

Stephen Devries, MD, executive director, Gaples Institute (nonprofit) and adjunct associate professor of nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston
Patients: Patients continue to demand more from their health care professionals and insist that they are offered evidence-based counseling on nutrition and lifestyle strategies.
Practice: Quality-based reimbursement for medical services will take hold that will incentivize much-needed preventive care.
Hospital: Hospitals will more fully embrace the role of serving as true centers of health and focus as much on preventive medicine as on the more lucrative areas of high-tech treatment.

Peter D. Friedmann, MD, MPH, chief research officer, Baystate Health, Springfield, Mass.
Seconded by: Elisabeth Poorman, MD, general internist, University of Washington Clinic, Kent

Patients: Don’t forget the ongoing epidemic of substance use disorder, a major cause of premature mortality. Descheduling of cannabis and expungement of cannabis-related convictions.
Practice/hospital: Commitment of hospitals and practices to address stigma and ensure delivery of medications for opioid use disorder in primary care, the emergency department, and inpatient settings.
Health system: Reform of antiquated methadone regulations to permit office-based prescription and pharmacy dispensing to treat opioid use disorder, as is the case in most of the world.

 

 

Robert Glatter, MD, emergency physician, New York
Patients: I want all patients to understand the enormous strain the health care system has been under – not just with the pandemic, the tripledemic, and mpox [previously called monkeypox], but well before the onset of these public health crises.
Hospital: The medical profession has endured not only burnout but a growing mental health crisis, staffing shortages, a physician addiction crisis, and increased attrition in the decade leading up to the pandemic. The pandemic was like a punch in the gut, occurring at the most inopportune time one could imagine.
Health system: The intersection of health and the state of our public health deserves important mention. Unless we take action to bolster our public health infrastructure, our health care system will be in jeopardy, unable to handle the next pandemic, which could be just around the corner.

William E. Golden, MD, medical director of Arkansas Medicaid, professor of medicine and public health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock
Patients: Affordable options for diabetes and obesity management.
Health system: Greater investment by health systems and third-party payers in primary care infrastructure.

Gregory A. Hood, MD, Baptist Health, Lexington, Ky.
Patients: To embrace the gift of getting out in the world, being active, and connecting with others – having put down the screens.
Health system: To be freed from the financial gamesmanship of the insurers as they continue to serve their goals of promoting their hedge fund investing over meaningful and productive partnering with primary care physicians, and that they gain insight that they are one of the main reasons they can’t find PCPs to connect with to render care in disadvantaged environments – because they made it economically impossible to do so.

Robert H. Hopkins Jr., MD, associate professor of internal medicine and pediatrics and director of the division of general internal medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock
Patients/Health system: I would wish for staged implementation of universal basic health coverage for all, perhaps closest to the French or Canadian model. This would need to be coupled with expanded funding for nursing education, graduate medical education, and tracing of other health-related professionals.

Harvey Hsu, MD, Banner Health, Phoenix
Patients: More clear guidelines that are simple to understand. This can apply to colonoscopy (now age 45), immunizations, blood pressure goals. I wish medications were not as expensive so patients can take the best medicine for them and not stop taking them when they hit their donut hole in coverage.
Practice: We have been functioning on a leaner basis to cut down costs. When the pandemic hit, turnover was high and we lost PAs, nurses, front-office staff, and physicians. Having adequate staffing is probably number one on many lists. One way we dealt with lack of staffing was converting in-person visits to telehealth. Video visits are paid the same as in-person visits, but if the patient could not get their video to work, then it would be a telephone visit. Now many insurances do not even pay for telephone visits. So I would wish that we could still be reimbursed for telehealth visits.
Health system: I would wish for our health system to recognize the extra work required to take care of patients while improving quality and meeting quality measures. Allowing more time for patient visits could be one way to meet those goals or having more support staff to make sure patients get their colonoscopy/mammograms done, improve their sugars, and take their medications.

 

 

Jan L. Shifren, MD, Vincent Trustees Professor, obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology, Harvard Medical School, and director of the Midlife Women’s Health Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Patients: I wish for patients to be actively involved in all aspects of their care, well informed with shared decision-making.
Practice: I wish for the enormous time demands of electronic medical records and documentation to not distract from the pleasure of caring for patients.
Health system: Patient care remains at the center of decisions and programs.

Timothy J. Joos, MD, MPH, internal medicine/pediatrics, Seattle
Health system: I wish someone could figure out how we could be reimbursed for the quality of care we provide instead of the volume of patients we see. I wish EMRs could become less complicated and more user-friendly rather than needing advanced training to use.

Peter Kovacs, MD, medical director, Kaali Institute IVF Center, Budapest
Patients: I work as an infertility specialist, so when we talk about infectious diseases and associated risks, we talk about a minimum of two (female and male partner) and ideally three (plus the pregnancy) individuals. We have learned that SARS-CoV-2 affects reproductive health. It may compromise sperm production, could delay fertility treatment, could be associated with lower success rates; and if the treatment is successful, it may harm the pregnant woman/fetus/newborn. The best preventive measure that we can offer is vaccination. One cannot overemphasize the importance of preventive measures, paying attention to personal hygiene and social distancing. Therefore, I wish those planning to become pregnant to listen to their health care provider and accept the recommended vaccines to minimize the risk of getting infected and to minimize the risk for severe disease, especially if one undergoes successful fertility treatment and achieves a long-desired pregnancy.
Practice: During the 2022 calendar year we had many days when one or more employees were out of work on sick leave. This puts extra stress on the others to allow uncompromised work in the clinic. In addition, we all have to work in a less-comfortable environment if we consider mask use every day, all day. For health care workers, vaccination is mandated but many still are affected by milder forms of coronavirus infection and other respiratory diseases. Therefore, I wish my colleagues patience toward the preventive measures to lower the individual risk for infections. As a result, hopefully we will have a less stressful 2023.
Health system: Many resources had to be delegated to dealing with acute and chronic COVID, and this was at the expense of routine daily elective and preventive medical services. I wish the health care system to return to normal daily operations, to have the personnel and financial resources to carry on with the required preventive and elective medical services to avoid long-term consequences of not being able to provide such services. It would be sad if we had to treat otherwise preventable illnesses in the upcoming years that went undiagnosed and/or were not properly managed due to limited resources as the result of the pandemic.

Alan R. Nelson, MD, internist-endocrinologist, retired
Patients: Expansion of the FDA’s authority into over-the-counter drugs, including the veracity of their advertising claims.
Practice: Make diabetes drugs available at a reasonable cost.
Health system: With the expansion of Medicaid eligibility during COVID-19 coming to a close, federal government actions are necessary for those who once again have been dropped from coverage to have their legitimate needs met.

 

 

Kevin Powell, MD, PhD, St. Louis
Patients: To be cared for and about, and not just medically, even when illness strikes and health fails.
Hospitals: To hear the thankfulness of a grateful public for the care you provide, and to hear that above the angry noise of outraged individuals who spout vitriol and focus on how they believe others have harmed them.
Health system: A truer understanding of mercy and justice.

Margaret Thew, DNP, FNP-BC, director, department of adolescent medicine, Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Seconded by: M. Susan Jay, MD, professor of pediatrics, chief of adolescent medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin and Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

My wish for patients, hospital, and system: health, calm, and grace.

Mark P. Trolice, MD, director of Fertility CARE, the IVF Center, Winter Park, Fla.
Patients: To be proactive in their health care and be their own advocates. Question when unclear and only consult credible resources.
Practice/hospital: Improve support of physicians and all health care providers to allow more input in their practice operations and growth.
Health system: Reduce interference of the “business of medicine” and ensure that the patient experience is the priority.

Charles P. Vega, MD, University of California, Irvine
Three minutes on a routine basis for everyone in health care to reflect on our blessings and the honor and gravity – as well as joy – that are integral to health care. Three minutes that will also help us to recognize our challenges and put them in the proper context. I know 3 minutes is not meeting any standard for reflective practice. But it’s 3 minutes more than I have right now.

Karen Breach Washington, MD, medical director of WellCare of North Carolina/Centene, Charlotte
Seconded by: Lillian M. Beard, MD, physician director, Children’s Pediatricians and Associates, Silver Spring, Md.

Patients: Access to affordable health care.
Hospital: Resources to care for patients (sufficient number of beds and a healthy staff).
Health system: Equity for all.

Andrew Wilner, MD, host of the podcast “The Art of Medicine with Dr. Andrew Wilner,” www.andrewwilner.com
Let’s put patients first! Too many extraneous considerations other than the patient’s best interest obstruct optimal patient care.

Here are just a few examples of patients coming last instead of first.

  • If a patient needs to start a new medication in hospital, we shouldn’t have to wait until the patient is an outpatient because “that’s when insurance will pay.”
  • If there’s a new medication that’s better than the old medication, we shouldn’t be forced to choose the old medication and provide inferior care because “that’s when insurance will pay.”
  • If patients need to stay in hospital, we shouldn’t be pressured to discharge them because the hospital has decided that decreasing “length of stay” is its highest priority.

Dr. Francis Peabody said it best in 1927: “The secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient.” How hard is that?

In 2023, why don’t we follow Dr. Peabody’s sage advice from nearly 100 years ago and see what happens?
 

 

 

James M. Wooten, PharmD, University of Missouri–Kansas City, University Health, Kansas City, Mo.
Patients: I want patients to understand and properly realize the advantage of vaccinations – not only for COVID-19 but also for influenza. There is so much misinformation that I spend a lot of time trying to convince patients to get vaccinated. Most patients don’t realize that through their lives, most of them have already been vaccinated for something just to be able to attend school. How the COVID-19 vaccine created so much stigma makes little sense to me. I also want patients to understand that COVID-19 vaccination and boosters do not always prevent infection but will many times prevent severe infection. I believe that better patient communication and education is the key and will always be the key to improving vaccination numbers. Not only communicating and educating patients on vaccination itself but also making patients realize that personal vaccination decisions may affect what happens to your neighbor. Allowing infection means that you may be more likely to infect someone else. As a society, we must take care of each other.
Health system: It will be interesting to see what happens when vaccines are no longer reimbursed by the federal government. Understanding which vaccines work best and are better tolerated will be key to choosing appropriate vaccine brands. Health care providers will need to be very selective regarding which vaccines are selected for formulary inclusion. Thorough meta-analysis studies must be done to provide more evaluable information to allow for appropriate selection. “Knowledge is power!” Appropriate knowledge will help distinguish which vaccines work best for various patient populations.

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

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Inflammation and immunity troubles top long-COVID suspect list

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Thu, 02/02/2023 - 15:13

Nonstop inflammation and immune problems top the list of potential causes of long COVID, but doctors say it’s growing clear that more than one thing is to blame for the wide swath of often debilitating symptoms that could last months or even years.

“I think that it’s a much more complex picture than just inflammation, or just autoimmunity, or just immune dysregulation. And it’s probably a combination of all three causing a cascade of effects that then manifests itself as brain fog, or shortness of breath, or chronic fatigue,” says Alexander Truong, MD, a pulmonologist and assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, who also runs a long-COVID clinic.

Long COVID, post–COVID-19 condition, and postacute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC) are among the terms used by the National Institutes of Health to describe the long-term health issues faced by an estimated 10%-30% of people infected with COVID-19. Symptoms – as many as 200 – can range from inconvenient to crippling, damage multiple organ systems, come and go, and relapse. Long COVID increases the risk of worsening existing health problems and triggering new ones, including cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.

So far, research suggests there is no single cause, condition, or disease that explains why some people have an extensive range of symptoms long after the early COVID-19 infection has cleared up. Many experts believe some combination of biological processes – including the virus hanging around in our bodies, inflammation, autoimmunity, tiny blood clots, immune system problems, and even the reactivation of dormant viruses such as the Epstein-Barr virus – could be the culprit, a theory also supported by a comprehensive and in-depth review of long-COVID studies published in the journal Nature Reviews Microbiology.

“It’s become clear over the last couple of years that there are different [symptoms] of long COVID … that cannot all be lumped together,” says Michael Peluso, MD, an assistant professor of medicine and an infectious diseases doctor at the University of California, San Francisco.
 

Inflammation and a virus that hangs around

Multiple studies have shown that the virus or pieces of it can remain in many parts of the body, including the kidneys, brain, heart, and gastrointestinal system, long after the early infection. 

“One major question that I think is the area of most intense investigation now is whether there is viral persistence that is driving immune dysregulation and therefore symptoms,” says Dr. Peluso.

A small Harvard University study, for example, found evidence that reservoirs of the coronavirus could linger in patients up to a year after they’re first diagnosed. 

An earlier German study found that patients with post-COVID-19 symptoms had higher levels of three cytokines – small proteins that tell the body’s immune system what to do and are involved in the growth and activity of immune system cells and blood cells. Researchers said the results supported the theory that there is persistent reprogramming of certain immune cells, and that the uncontrolled “self-fueled hyperinflammation” during the early COVID-19 infection can become continued immune cell disruption that drives long-COVID symptoms.

“Long COVID is more likely due to either an inflammatory response by the body or reservoirs of virus that the body is still trying to clear … and the symptoms we’re seeing are a side effect of that,” says Rainu Kaushal, MD, senior associate dean for clinical research at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.

Australian researchers found that immune system recovery appeared different, compared with those who were infected with other common coronaviruses.

These findings also support concerns that some experts express over the long-term risks of COVID-19 infections in general, but especially repeat infections.

“Anything that kind of revs up inflammation in the body can boil that pot over and make the symptoms worse. That’s very easily an infection or some other insult to the body. So that’s the generalized hypothesis as to why insults to the body may worsen the symptoms,” says Dr. Truong.
 

 

 

An autoimmune condition?

But inflammation alone does not fully explain post–COVID-19 problems.

Dr. Truong and his team, for example, have been documenting inflammatory markers in patients at the post-COVID clinic he cofounded more than 2 years ago at Emory Executive Park in Atlanta. When the clinic was first launched, high-dose nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs – including ibuprofen – and prednisone were prescribed to long-COVID patients.

“It didn’t make a difference at all for any of these folks,” he says, adding that there are signs that autoimmunity is at play. But he cautions that it is still too early to suggest treating long-COVID patients with medications used for other autoimmune conditions.

In autoimmune conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and type 1 diabetes, a person’s immune system can’t tell normal cells from foreign pathogens and attacks healthy cells. There is typically no single diagnostic test, and many share similar symptoms, making detection and diagnosis potentially difficult, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

A small study published in the journal  Science Translational Medicine found that, among patients who failed to regain their sense of smell long after their initial infection, there was inflammation in the nose tissue where smell nerve cells are found, even though no detectable virus remained. Fewer olfactory sensory neurons were seen, as well – findings that researchers said resembled some kind of “autoimmune-like process.”

Meanwhile, scientists in Canada found signs of autoimmunity in blood samples taken from patients who still had fatigue and shortness of breath after their initial COVID-19 infection. Two specific proteins were present a year after infection in up to 30% of patients, many of whom still had shortness of breath and fatigue, the researchers reported in the Jan. 1 issue of the European Respiratory Journal. These patients had been healthy and had no autoimmune condition or other diseases before they were infected.
 

Immune system problems

A number of studies have suggested that a problematic immune response could also explain why symptoms persist for some people.

Researchers in France, for example, found that the immune response problems in those with severe COVID-19 infections caused exaggerated or uncontrolled formation of a type of bug-fighting defense mechanism called a neutrophil extracellular trap (NET), which in turn triggers harmful inflammation that can result in multiorgan damage. These traps are netlike structures made from fibers composed mostly of DNA strings that bind, or trap, pathogens.

Long COVID is not like an acute infectious disease, says Alexander Charney, MD, PhD, the lead principal investigator of the RECOVER adult cohort at Mount Sinai in New York, and an associate professor at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. It is more similar to other complex chronic diseases that have taken decades to understand, such as heart disease, mental illness, and rheumatologic diseases, he says.
 

Biomarkers and blood clots

Scientists are homing in on biomarkers, or detectable and measurable traits – in this case, molecular indicators – that can make diagnosing long COVID easier and give better direction for treatment. These biomarkers are also key to helping sort out the complex biology of long COVID.

In one study, data from blood samples taken from hundreds of hospitalized COVID-19 patients suggests changes are happening at the molecular level during initial severe infections. These changes may be tied to the development of longer-term symptoms, according to the study by Dr. Charney and his team at Mount Sinai published in Nature Medicine

Blood clotting issues have also been detected in long COVID patients. At least one study found signs that long-COVID patients had higher levels of a type of auto-antibody linked to the abnormal formation of clots. Researchers suspect that tiny, persistent microclots – undetectable via regular pathology tests – may be cutting off oxygen flow to tissue by blocking capillaries – and could explain many of the post-COVID symptoms described by patients.

While enormous progress has been made toward understanding long COVID, the research is still considered early and faces many challenges, including varying criteria used to define the condition, the types and quality of data used, differences in how patients are defined and recruited, and the small size of many studies. Some research also appears to conflict with other studies. And while there are specialized tools for diagnosing some aspects of the condition, standard tests often don’t detect many of the signs seen in long-COVID patients. But given the urgency and global scale of the problem, experts say more funding and support should be prioritized.

“People are suffering now, and they want answers now. ... It’s not like with COVID, where the path towards a great and meaningful solution to this unbelievable problem was clear – we need a vaccine,” says Dr. Charney. 

“It’s going to be a long haul to figure out what is going on.”

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

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Nonstop inflammation and immune problems top the list of potential causes of long COVID, but doctors say it’s growing clear that more than one thing is to blame for the wide swath of often debilitating symptoms that could last months or even years.

“I think that it’s a much more complex picture than just inflammation, or just autoimmunity, or just immune dysregulation. And it’s probably a combination of all three causing a cascade of effects that then manifests itself as brain fog, or shortness of breath, or chronic fatigue,” says Alexander Truong, MD, a pulmonologist and assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, who also runs a long-COVID clinic.

Long COVID, post–COVID-19 condition, and postacute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC) are among the terms used by the National Institutes of Health to describe the long-term health issues faced by an estimated 10%-30% of people infected with COVID-19. Symptoms – as many as 200 – can range from inconvenient to crippling, damage multiple organ systems, come and go, and relapse. Long COVID increases the risk of worsening existing health problems and triggering new ones, including cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.

So far, research suggests there is no single cause, condition, or disease that explains why some people have an extensive range of symptoms long after the early COVID-19 infection has cleared up. Many experts believe some combination of biological processes – including the virus hanging around in our bodies, inflammation, autoimmunity, tiny blood clots, immune system problems, and even the reactivation of dormant viruses such as the Epstein-Barr virus – could be the culprit, a theory also supported by a comprehensive and in-depth review of long-COVID studies published in the journal Nature Reviews Microbiology.

“It’s become clear over the last couple of years that there are different [symptoms] of long COVID … that cannot all be lumped together,” says Michael Peluso, MD, an assistant professor of medicine and an infectious diseases doctor at the University of California, San Francisco.
 

Inflammation and a virus that hangs around

Multiple studies have shown that the virus or pieces of it can remain in many parts of the body, including the kidneys, brain, heart, and gastrointestinal system, long after the early infection. 

“One major question that I think is the area of most intense investigation now is whether there is viral persistence that is driving immune dysregulation and therefore symptoms,” says Dr. Peluso.

A small Harvard University study, for example, found evidence that reservoirs of the coronavirus could linger in patients up to a year after they’re first diagnosed. 

An earlier German study found that patients with post-COVID-19 symptoms had higher levels of three cytokines – small proteins that tell the body’s immune system what to do and are involved in the growth and activity of immune system cells and blood cells. Researchers said the results supported the theory that there is persistent reprogramming of certain immune cells, and that the uncontrolled “self-fueled hyperinflammation” during the early COVID-19 infection can become continued immune cell disruption that drives long-COVID symptoms.

“Long COVID is more likely due to either an inflammatory response by the body or reservoirs of virus that the body is still trying to clear … and the symptoms we’re seeing are a side effect of that,” says Rainu Kaushal, MD, senior associate dean for clinical research at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.

Australian researchers found that immune system recovery appeared different, compared with those who were infected with other common coronaviruses.

These findings also support concerns that some experts express over the long-term risks of COVID-19 infections in general, but especially repeat infections.

“Anything that kind of revs up inflammation in the body can boil that pot over and make the symptoms worse. That’s very easily an infection or some other insult to the body. So that’s the generalized hypothesis as to why insults to the body may worsen the symptoms,” says Dr. Truong.
 

 

 

An autoimmune condition?

But inflammation alone does not fully explain post–COVID-19 problems.

Dr. Truong and his team, for example, have been documenting inflammatory markers in patients at the post-COVID clinic he cofounded more than 2 years ago at Emory Executive Park in Atlanta. When the clinic was first launched, high-dose nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs – including ibuprofen – and prednisone were prescribed to long-COVID patients.

“It didn’t make a difference at all for any of these folks,” he says, adding that there are signs that autoimmunity is at play. But he cautions that it is still too early to suggest treating long-COVID patients with medications used for other autoimmune conditions.

In autoimmune conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and type 1 diabetes, a person’s immune system can’t tell normal cells from foreign pathogens and attacks healthy cells. There is typically no single diagnostic test, and many share similar symptoms, making detection and diagnosis potentially difficult, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

A small study published in the journal  Science Translational Medicine found that, among patients who failed to regain their sense of smell long after their initial infection, there was inflammation in the nose tissue where smell nerve cells are found, even though no detectable virus remained. Fewer olfactory sensory neurons were seen, as well – findings that researchers said resembled some kind of “autoimmune-like process.”

Meanwhile, scientists in Canada found signs of autoimmunity in blood samples taken from patients who still had fatigue and shortness of breath after their initial COVID-19 infection. Two specific proteins were present a year after infection in up to 30% of patients, many of whom still had shortness of breath and fatigue, the researchers reported in the Jan. 1 issue of the European Respiratory Journal. These patients had been healthy and had no autoimmune condition or other diseases before they were infected.
 

Immune system problems

A number of studies have suggested that a problematic immune response could also explain why symptoms persist for some people.

Researchers in France, for example, found that the immune response problems in those with severe COVID-19 infections caused exaggerated or uncontrolled formation of a type of bug-fighting defense mechanism called a neutrophil extracellular trap (NET), which in turn triggers harmful inflammation that can result in multiorgan damage. These traps are netlike structures made from fibers composed mostly of DNA strings that bind, or trap, pathogens.

Long COVID is not like an acute infectious disease, says Alexander Charney, MD, PhD, the lead principal investigator of the RECOVER adult cohort at Mount Sinai in New York, and an associate professor at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. It is more similar to other complex chronic diseases that have taken decades to understand, such as heart disease, mental illness, and rheumatologic diseases, he says.
 

Biomarkers and blood clots

Scientists are homing in on biomarkers, or detectable and measurable traits – in this case, molecular indicators – that can make diagnosing long COVID easier and give better direction for treatment. These biomarkers are also key to helping sort out the complex biology of long COVID.

In one study, data from blood samples taken from hundreds of hospitalized COVID-19 patients suggests changes are happening at the molecular level during initial severe infections. These changes may be tied to the development of longer-term symptoms, according to the study by Dr. Charney and his team at Mount Sinai published in Nature Medicine

Blood clotting issues have also been detected in long COVID patients. At least one study found signs that long-COVID patients had higher levels of a type of auto-antibody linked to the abnormal formation of clots. Researchers suspect that tiny, persistent microclots – undetectable via regular pathology tests – may be cutting off oxygen flow to tissue by blocking capillaries – and could explain many of the post-COVID symptoms described by patients.

While enormous progress has been made toward understanding long COVID, the research is still considered early and faces many challenges, including varying criteria used to define the condition, the types and quality of data used, differences in how patients are defined and recruited, and the small size of many studies. Some research also appears to conflict with other studies. And while there are specialized tools for diagnosing some aspects of the condition, standard tests often don’t detect many of the signs seen in long-COVID patients. But given the urgency and global scale of the problem, experts say more funding and support should be prioritized.

“People are suffering now, and they want answers now. ... It’s not like with COVID, where the path towards a great and meaningful solution to this unbelievable problem was clear – we need a vaccine,” says Dr. Charney. 

“It’s going to be a long haul to figure out what is going on.”

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

Nonstop inflammation and immune problems top the list of potential causes of long COVID, but doctors say it’s growing clear that more than one thing is to blame for the wide swath of often debilitating symptoms that could last months or even years.

“I think that it’s a much more complex picture than just inflammation, or just autoimmunity, or just immune dysregulation. And it’s probably a combination of all three causing a cascade of effects that then manifests itself as brain fog, or shortness of breath, or chronic fatigue,” says Alexander Truong, MD, a pulmonologist and assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, who also runs a long-COVID clinic.

Long COVID, post–COVID-19 condition, and postacute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC) are among the terms used by the National Institutes of Health to describe the long-term health issues faced by an estimated 10%-30% of people infected with COVID-19. Symptoms – as many as 200 – can range from inconvenient to crippling, damage multiple organ systems, come and go, and relapse. Long COVID increases the risk of worsening existing health problems and triggering new ones, including cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.

So far, research suggests there is no single cause, condition, or disease that explains why some people have an extensive range of symptoms long after the early COVID-19 infection has cleared up. Many experts believe some combination of biological processes – including the virus hanging around in our bodies, inflammation, autoimmunity, tiny blood clots, immune system problems, and even the reactivation of dormant viruses such as the Epstein-Barr virus – could be the culprit, a theory also supported by a comprehensive and in-depth review of long-COVID studies published in the journal Nature Reviews Microbiology.

“It’s become clear over the last couple of years that there are different [symptoms] of long COVID … that cannot all be lumped together,” says Michael Peluso, MD, an assistant professor of medicine and an infectious diseases doctor at the University of California, San Francisco.
 

Inflammation and a virus that hangs around

Multiple studies have shown that the virus or pieces of it can remain in many parts of the body, including the kidneys, brain, heart, and gastrointestinal system, long after the early infection. 

“One major question that I think is the area of most intense investigation now is whether there is viral persistence that is driving immune dysregulation and therefore symptoms,” says Dr. Peluso.

A small Harvard University study, for example, found evidence that reservoirs of the coronavirus could linger in patients up to a year after they’re first diagnosed. 

An earlier German study found that patients with post-COVID-19 symptoms had higher levels of three cytokines – small proteins that tell the body’s immune system what to do and are involved in the growth and activity of immune system cells and blood cells. Researchers said the results supported the theory that there is persistent reprogramming of certain immune cells, and that the uncontrolled “self-fueled hyperinflammation” during the early COVID-19 infection can become continued immune cell disruption that drives long-COVID symptoms.

“Long COVID is more likely due to either an inflammatory response by the body or reservoirs of virus that the body is still trying to clear … and the symptoms we’re seeing are a side effect of that,” says Rainu Kaushal, MD, senior associate dean for clinical research at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.

Australian researchers found that immune system recovery appeared different, compared with those who were infected with other common coronaviruses.

These findings also support concerns that some experts express over the long-term risks of COVID-19 infections in general, but especially repeat infections.

“Anything that kind of revs up inflammation in the body can boil that pot over and make the symptoms worse. That’s very easily an infection or some other insult to the body. So that’s the generalized hypothesis as to why insults to the body may worsen the symptoms,” says Dr. Truong.
 

 

 

An autoimmune condition?

But inflammation alone does not fully explain post–COVID-19 problems.

Dr. Truong and his team, for example, have been documenting inflammatory markers in patients at the post-COVID clinic he cofounded more than 2 years ago at Emory Executive Park in Atlanta. When the clinic was first launched, high-dose nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs – including ibuprofen – and prednisone were prescribed to long-COVID patients.

“It didn’t make a difference at all for any of these folks,” he says, adding that there are signs that autoimmunity is at play. But he cautions that it is still too early to suggest treating long-COVID patients with medications used for other autoimmune conditions.

In autoimmune conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and type 1 diabetes, a person’s immune system can’t tell normal cells from foreign pathogens and attacks healthy cells. There is typically no single diagnostic test, and many share similar symptoms, making detection and diagnosis potentially difficult, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

A small study published in the journal  Science Translational Medicine found that, among patients who failed to regain their sense of smell long after their initial infection, there was inflammation in the nose tissue where smell nerve cells are found, even though no detectable virus remained. Fewer olfactory sensory neurons were seen, as well – findings that researchers said resembled some kind of “autoimmune-like process.”

Meanwhile, scientists in Canada found signs of autoimmunity in blood samples taken from patients who still had fatigue and shortness of breath after their initial COVID-19 infection. Two specific proteins were present a year after infection in up to 30% of patients, many of whom still had shortness of breath and fatigue, the researchers reported in the Jan. 1 issue of the European Respiratory Journal. These patients had been healthy and had no autoimmune condition or other diseases before they were infected.
 

Immune system problems

A number of studies have suggested that a problematic immune response could also explain why symptoms persist for some people.

Researchers in France, for example, found that the immune response problems in those with severe COVID-19 infections caused exaggerated or uncontrolled formation of a type of bug-fighting defense mechanism called a neutrophil extracellular trap (NET), which in turn triggers harmful inflammation that can result in multiorgan damage. These traps are netlike structures made from fibers composed mostly of DNA strings that bind, or trap, pathogens.

Long COVID is not like an acute infectious disease, says Alexander Charney, MD, PhD, the lead principal investigator of the RECOVER adult cohort at Mount Sinai in New York, and an associate professor at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. It is more similar to other complex chronic diseases that have taken decades to understand, such as heart disease, mental illness, and rheumatologic diseases, he says.
 

Biomarkers and blood clots

Scientists are homing in on biomarkers, or detectable and measurable traits – in this case, molecular indicators – that can make diagnosing long COVID easier and give better direction for treatment. These biomarkers are also key to helping sort out the complex biology of long COVID.

In one study, data from blood samples taken from hundreds of hospitalized COVID-19 patients suggests changes are happening at the molecular level during initial severe infections. These changes may be tied to the development of longer-term symptoms, according to the study by Dr. Charney and his team at Mount Sinai published in Nature Medicine

Blood clotting issues have also been detected in long COVID patients. At least one study found signs that long-COVID patients had higher levels of a type of auto-antibody linked to the abnormal formation of clots. Researchers suspect that tiny, persistent microclots – undetectable via regular pathology tests – may be cutting off oxygen flow to tissue by blocking capillaries – and could explain many of the post-COVID symptoms described by patients.

While enormous progress has been made toward understanding long COVID, the research is still considered early and faces many challenges, including varying criteria used to define the condition, the types and quality of data used, differences in how patients are defined and recruited, and the small size of many studies. Some research also appears to conflict with other studies. And while there are specialized tools for diagnosing some aspects of the condition, standard tests often don’t detect many of the signs seen in long-COVID patients. But given the urgency and global scale of the problem, experts say more funding and support should be prioritized.

“People are suffering now, and they want answers now. ... It’s not like with COVID, where the path towards a great and meaningful solution to this unbelievable problem was clear – we need a vaccine,” says Dr. Charney. 

“It’s going to be a long haul to figure out what is going on.”

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

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Using live pigs in residency training sparks heated debate

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Thu, 02/02/2023 - 15:14

Pigs have been long used in medical schools to teach surgical techniques and, more recently, in research trials and experimental xenotransplantation procedures. But given the rise of alternative simulation technology and mounting pressure from animal rights groups and lawmakers, animal labs for medical training have become less common.

Just last month, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a nonprofit group with a decades-long stance against the use of animals in medical education and research, placed billboards around the Portland, Ore., area demanding that Oregon Health and Science University stop using pigs to teach surgical residents.

Undergraduate medical programs no longer use live animals. But a small number of graduate medical education programs still use animals, predominantly pigs, to train physicians in subspecialties like internal medicine, emergency medicine, surgery, and anesthesiology, John Pippin, MD, FACC, director of academic affairs at PCRM, told this news organization.

Dr. Pippin says residents practice establishing emergency airways, inserting chest tubes, and accessing blood vessels on anesthetized pigs before euthanizing them.

Swine lab advocates say pigs make ideal training subjects because of their similarities to humans, including comparably sized organs like the heart, lungs, and kidneys. Pigs share about 85% of their DNA with people. Where pig skin alternatives may suffice for less invasive procedures, supporters say residents’ experiences with live tissue are irreplaceable.

In a statement, Sara Hottman, associate director of media relations at Oregon Health and Science University, told this news organization the school “only uses animal models in its surgical training program when nonanimal methods are inadequate or too dangerous for human participants.”

“We believe that the education and experience surgical trainees gain through the use of relevant animal models are essential to ensuring future surgeons have the knowledge and skills necessary to provide safe, high-quality care.”

Ms. Hottman also noted that the university continues to evaluate alternatives and looks forward to when nonanimal “surgical training methods are capable of faithfully modeling the complexity of a living system,” such as in the management of critical internal complications.

But Dr. Pippin argues that residents can gain sufficient expertise through simulators and hands-on training in the operating room, and that the differences between humans and pigs are too vast to provide meaningful clinical data or skills.

“Pigs have different genetic influences and very thick, tough skin,” he said. If you use the same pressure on a human that you learned on a pig, he added, “you’d slice right through the trachea. Whatever you think you find out in animals, you have to learn all over again with humans.”

Undergraduate medical education programs in the United States and Canada abandoned the practice of using live animals, including pigs, by 2016, with Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, last to announce their shift away from the controversial teaching model following campaigns by PCRM.

Today, most residency training programs have followed suit. Pippin said that pediatric residencies no longer use animals, and all trauma and anesthesiology programs have ceased such practices except two. Just 3% of emergency medicine programs continue to use animals, as do about 21% of surgical residencies, he said, based on PCRM’s latest surveys.
 

 

 

A public debate

Occasionally, PCRM goes public with a campaign against a residency program “if that’s the only way to win,” Dr. Pippin said.

In addition to billboards, the group has held protests, circulated petitions, and filed complaints with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, the entity responsible for overseeing the health and welfare of animals used in medical training and research.

In 2021, spurred by a complaint from PCRM, APHIS launched an investigation into the University of Cincinnati’s surgical residency program. At the time, a university spokesperson acknowledged the school’s limited use of pigs to train “highly-skilled, well-prepared surgeons in the most advanced, complex, real-world needs, procedures, and techniques,” adding that the training methods were endorsed by the American College of Surgeons and in compliance with federal guidelines.

Residency programs have caught the attention of state lawmakers, too. In 2020, bills introduced in both the Rhode Island House and Senate sought to ban the use of live animals in medical training when “there is an alternate teaching method that teaches the medical procedure or lesson without the use of an animal.” Violators would incur misdemeanor charges and monetary fines of up to $1,000 per animal.

The bills – backed by PCRM – targeted Brown University’s emergency medicine residency program, Providence, R.I., which sponsoring legislators said was the last program in New England still using the “outdated” and “unnecessary” method.

In testimony before lawmakers, the school said fewer than 15 pigs participate in the annual training, and faculty spoke about the benefits of the experience.

“If it was your brother or sister, or your mother or father who had to come in and get this procedure done, would you want the physician who’s doing it to be the one who does it for the very first time on a human being, on live tissue? Or do you want that provider to have only practiced on plastic and rubber?” said Nicholas Musisca, MD, an assistant program director with Brown University’s emergency medicine residency, NBC affiliate WJAR reported.

The bills have since stalled, and PCRM held a protest at Brown University in October 2022. In response, a university spokesperson told the Brown Daily Herald, “effective synthetic model alternatives simply do not exist for every complex medical procedure that an emergency physician must be prepared to perform,” including establishing an airway in adults and pediatric patients with severe facial trauma.
 

By the numbers

Annual reports from APHIS do not show the number of pigs dedicated solely to residency training. Instead, reporting indicates the number of animals “upon which experiments, teaching, research, surgery, or tests were conducted involving accompanying pain or distress to the animals and for which appropriate anesthetic, analgesic, or tranquilizing drugs were used.”

For fiscal year 2021 – the most recent data available – Oregon Health and Science University had 154 pigs under its control, while the University of Cincinnati and Brown University had 118 and 71 pigs, respectively, according to APHIS. Primates were more commonly used at Oregon Health and Science University and guinea pigs at the University of Cincinnati.

Similarly, the Association of American Medical Colleges supports the “use of animals to meet essential educational objectives [across] the medical education continuum. ... Further restrictions on the use of animals in biomedical and behavioral research and education threatens progress in health care and disease prevention.”

The debate will likely rage on. “The one thing we don’t do is give up,” Dr. Pippin said.

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

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Pigs have been long used in medical schools to teach surgical techniques and, more recently, in research trials and experimental xenotransplantation procedures. But given the rise of alternative simulation technology and mounting pressure from animal rights groups and lawmakers, animal labs for medical training have become less common.

Just last month, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a nonprofit group with a decades-long stance against the use of animals in medical education and research, placed billboards around the Portland, Ore., area demanding that Oregon Health and Science University stop using pigs to teach surgical residents.

Undergraduate medical programs no longer use live animals. But a small number of graduate medical education programs still use animals, predominantly pigs, to train physicians in subspecialties like internal medicine, emergency medicine, surgery, and anesthesiology, John Pippin, MD, FACC, director of academic affairs at PCRM, told this news organization.

Dr. Pippin says residents practice establishing emergency airways, inserting chest tubes, and accessing blood vessels on anesthetized pigs before euthanizing them.

Swine lab advocates say pigs make ideal training subjects because of their similarities to humans, including comparably sized organs like the heart, lungs, and kidneys. Pigs share about 85% of their DNA with people. Where pig skin alternatives may suffice for less invasive procedures, supporters say residents’ experiences with live tissue are irreplaceable.

In a statement, Sara Hottman, associate director of media relations at Oregon Health and Science University, told this news organization the school “only uses animal models in its surgical training program when nonanimal methods are inadequate or too dangerous for human participants.”

“We believe that the education and experience surgical trainees gain through the use of relevant animal models are essential to ensuring future surgeons have the knowledge and skills necessary to provide safe, high-quality care.”

Ms. Hottman also noted that the university continues to evaluate alternatives and looks forward to when nonanimal “surgical training methods are capable of faithfully modeling the complexity of a living system,” such as in the management of critical internal complications.

But Dr. Pippin argues that residents can gain sufficient expertise through simulators and hands-on training in the operating room, and that the differences between humans and pigs are too vast to provide meaningful clinical data or skills.

“Pigs have different genetic influences and very thick, tough skin,” he said. If you use the same pressure on a human that you learned on a pig, he added, “you’d slice right through the trachea. Whatever you think you find out in animals, you have to learn all over again with humans.”

Undergraduate medical education programs in the United States and Canada abandoned the practice of using live animals, including pigs, by 2016, with Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, last to announce their shift away from the controversial teaching model following campaigns by PCRM.

Today, most residency training programs have followed suit. Pippin said that pediatric residencies no longer use animals, and all trauma and anesthesiology programs have ceased such practices except two. Just 3% of emergency medicine programs continue to use animals, as do about 21% of surgical residencies, he said, based on PCRM’s latest surveys.
 

 

 

A public debate

Occasionally, PCRM goes public with a campaign against a residency program “if that’s the only way to win,” Dr. Pippin said.

In addition to billboards, the group has held protests, circulated petitions, and filed complaints with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, the entity responsible for overseeing the health and welfare of animals used in medical training and research.

In 2021, spurred by a complaint from PCRM, APHIS launched an investigation into the University of Cincinnati’s surgical residency program. At the time, a university spokesperson acknowledged the school’s limited use of pigs to train “highly-skilled, well-prepared surgeons in the most advanced, complex, real-world needs, procedures, and techniques,” adding that the training methods were endorsed by the American College of Surgeons and in compliance with federal guidelines.

Residency programs have caught the attention of state lawmakers, too. In 2020, bills introduced in both the Rhode Island House and Senate sought to ban the use of live animals in medical training when “there is an alternate teaching method that teaches the medical procedure or lesson without the use of an animal.” Violators would incur misdemeanor charges and monetary fines of up to $1,000 per animal.

The bills – backed by PCRM – targeted Brown University’s emergency medicine residency program, Providence, R.I., which sponsoring legislators said was the last program in New England still using the “outdated” and “unnecessary” method.

In testimony before lawmakers, the school said fewer than 15 pigs participate in the annual training, and faculty spoke about the benefits of the experience.

“If it was your brother or sister, or your mother or father who had to come in and get this procedure done, would you want the physician who’s doing it to be the one who does it for the very first time on a human being, on live tissue? Or do you want that provider to have only practiced on plastic and rubber?” said Nicholas Musisca, MD, an assistant program director with Brown University’s emergency medicine residency, NBC affiliate WJAR reported.

The bills have since stalled, and PCRM held a protest at Brown University in October 2022. In response, a university spokesperson told the Brown Daily Herald, “effective synthetic model alternatives simply do not exist for every complex medical procedure that an emergency physician must be prepared to perform,” including establishing an airway in adults and pediatric patients with severe facial trauma.
 

By the numbers

Annual reports from APHIS do not show the number of pigs dedicated solely to residency training. Instead, reporting indicates the number of animals “upon which experiments, teaching, research, surgery, or tests were conducted involving accompanying pain or distress to the animals and for which appropriate anesthetic, analgesic, or tranquilizing drugs were used.”

For fiscal year 2021 – the most recent data available – Oregon Health and Science University had 154 pigs under its control, while the University of Cincinnati and Brown University had 118 and 71 pigs, respectively, according to APHIS. Primates were more commonly used at Oregon Health and Science University and guinea pigs at the University of Cincinnati.

Similarly, the Association of American Medical Colleges supports the “use of animals to meet essential educational objectives [across] the medical education continuum. ... Further restrictions on the use of animals in biomedical and behavioral research and education threatens progress in health care and disease prevention.”

The debate will likely rage on. “The one thing we don’t do is give up,” Dr. Pippin said.

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

Pigs have been long used in medical schools to teach surgical techniques and, more recently, in research trials and experimental xenotransplantation procedures. But given the rise of alternative simulation technology and mounting pressure from animal rights groups and lawmakers, animal labs for medical training have become less common.

Just last month, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a nonprofit group with a decades-long stance against the use of animals in medical education and research, placed billboards around the Portland, Ore., area demanding that Oregon Health and Science University stop using pigs to teach surgical residents.

Undergraduate medical programs no longer use live animals. But a small number of graduate medical education programs still use animals, predominantly pigs, to train physicians in subspecialties like internal medicine, emergency medicine, surgery, and anesthesiology, John Pippin, MD, FACC, director of academic affairs at PCRM, told this news organization.

Dr. Pippin says residents practice establishing emergency airways, inserting chest tubes, and accessing blood vessels on anesthetized pigs before euthanizing them.

Swine lab advocates say pigs make ideal training subjects because of their similarities to humans, including comparably sized organs like the heart, lungs, and kidneys. Pigs share about 85% of their DNA with people. Where pig skin alternatives may suffice for less invasive procedures, supporters say residents’ experiences with live tissue are irreplaceable.

In a statement, Sara Hottman, associate director of media relations at Oregon Health and Science University, told this news organization the school “only uses animal models in its surgical training program when nonanimal methods are inadequate or too dangerous for human participants.”

“We believe that the education and experience surgical trainees gain through the use of relevant animal models are essential to ensuring future surgeons have the knowledge and skills necessary to provide safe, high-quality care.”

Ms. Hottman also noted that the university continues to evaluate alternatives and looks forward to when nonanimal “surgical training methods are capable of faithfully modeling the complexity of a living system,” such as in the management of critical internal complications.

But Dr. Pippin argues that residents can gain sufficient expertise through simulators and hands-on training in the operating room, and that the differences between humans and pigs are too vast to provide meaningful clinical data or skills.

“Pigs have different genetic influences and very thick, tough skin,” he said. If you use the same pressure on a human that you learned on a pig, he added, “you’d slice right through the trachea. Whatever you think you find out in animals, you have to learn all over again with humans.”

Undergraduate medical education programs in the United States and Canada abandoned the practice of using live animals, including pigs, by 2016, with Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, last to announce their shift away from the controversial teaching model following campaigns by PCRM.

Today, most residency training programs have followed suit. Pippin said that pediatric residencies no longer use animals, and all trauma and anesthesiology programs have ceased such practices except two. Just 3% of emergency medicine programs continue to use animals, as do about 21% of surgical residencies, he said, based on PCRM’s latest surveys.
 

 

 

A public debate

Occasionally, PCRM goes public with a campaign against a residency program “if that’s the only way to win,” Dr. Pippin said.

In addition to billboards, the group has held protests, circulated petitions, and filed complaints with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, the entity responsible for overseeing the health and welfare of animals used in medical training and research.

In 2021, spurred by a complaint from PCRM, APHIS launched an investigation into the University of Cincinnati’s surgical residency program. At the time, a university spokesperson acknowledged the school’s limited use of pigs to train “highly-skilled, well-prepared surgeons in the most advanced, complex, real-world needs, procedures, and techniques,” adding that the training methods were endorsed by the American College of Surgeons and in compliance with federal guidelines.

Residency programs have caught the attention of state lawmakers, too. In 2020, bills introduced in both the Rhode Island House and Senate sought to ban the use of live animals in medical training when “there is an alternate teaching method that teaches the medical procedure or lesson without the use of an animal.” Violators would incur misdemeanor charges and monetary fines of up to $1,000 per animal.

The bills – backed by PCRM – targeted Brown University’s emergency medicine residency program, Providence, R.I., which sponsoring legislators said was the last program in New England still using the “outdated” and “unnecessary” method.

In testimony before lawmakers, the school said fewer than 15 pigs participate in the annual training, and faculty spoke about the benefits of the experience.

“If it was your brother or sister, or your mother or father who had to come in and get this procedure done, would you want the physician who’s doing it to be the one who does it for the very first time on a human being, on live tissue? Or do you want that provider to have only practiced on plastic and rubber?” said Nicholas Musisca, MD, an assistant program director with Brown University’s emergency medicine residency, NBC affiliate WJAR reported.

The bills have since stalled, and PCRM held a protest at Brown University in October 2022. In response, a university spokesperson told the Brown Daily Herald, “effective synthetic model alternatives simply do not exist for every complex medical procedure that an emergency physician must be prepared to perform,” including establishing an airway in adults and pediatric patients with severe facial trauma.
 

By the numbers

Annual reports from APHIS do not show the number of pigs dedicated solely to residency training. Instead, reporting indicates the number of animals “upon which experiments, teaching, research, surgery, or tests were conducted involving accompanying pain or distress to the animals and for which appropriate anesthetic, analgesic, or tranquilizing drugs were used.”

For fiscal year 2021 – the most recent data available – Oregon Health and Science University had 154 pigs under its control, while the University of Cincinnati and Brown University had 118 and 71 pigs, respectively, according to APHIS. Primates were more commonly used at Oregon Health and Science University and guinea pigs at the University of Cincinnati.

Similarly, the Association of American Medical Colleges supports the “use of animals to meet essential educational objectives [across] the medical education continuum. ... Further restrictions on the use of animals in biomedical and behavioral research and education threatens progress in health care and disease prevention.”

The debate will likely rage on. “The one thing we don’t do is give up,” Dr. Pippin said.

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

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