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OSA in women: Different symptoms, risks and consequences
The reported prevalence and severity of obstructive sleep apnea in women is lower, compared with men, but the consequences of the disease are “at least the same, if not worse,” with women appearing to have greater susceptibility to adverse OSA-related cardiovascular consequences – particularly as it pertains to endothelial dysfunction, Reena Mehra, MD, MS, said at the virtual annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.
Women more so than men have endothelial dysfunction associated with OSA, “suggesting there is an enhanced sensitivity of the female vascular endothelium to intermittent hypoxia,” said Dr. Mehra, director of sleep disorders research at the Cleveland Clinic and professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University, also in Cleveland.
Sex-specific differences in the anatomic and physiological characteristics of the upper airway, in fat distribution and in respiratory stability as they relate to OSA have been documented for some time – and today, these and other differences relating to the diagnosis, treatment, and consequences of sleep apnea continue to be studied and elucidated, said Dr. Mehra, Anita Rajagopal, MD, and Chitra Lal, MD, in a session on OSA in women. Each spoke about the breath and implications of these differences, and of increasing recognition of the significance of OSA in women.
Likely underdiagnosis
Epidemiologic studies have suggested a three- to fivefold higher prevalence of OSA in men than in women in the general population. But it has also been estimated that 17%-25% of women have sleep apnea, and the prevalence reported in various studies has generally increased with time, said Dr. Rajagopal, department medical director for sleep medicine at Community Physician Network in Indianapolis, and medical director of the Community Health Network Sleep/Wake Disorders Center, also in Indianapolis.
One population-based study in Sweden, reported in 2013, found OSA (defined as an apnea-hypopnea index [AHI] ≥5) in 50% of women aged 20-70, she noted.
It’s quite possible women are being misdiagnosed or underdiagnosed because of their reporting of different symptoms, Dr. Rajagopal said. The Epworth Sleepiness Scale, commonly used to screen for OSA, has not been validated for use in women and has not been strongly associated with daytime sleepiness in women in population-based studies, she said, noting that women who report similar levels of daytime sleepiness to men are less likely to have an ESS score greater than 10.
“We shouldn’t rule out obstructive sleep apnea in women with a low ESS,” Dr. Rajagopal said in an interview after the meeting. Attentiveness to the symptoms more often reported by women – generalized daytime fatigue/lack of energy, insomnia, morning headaches, mood disturbances, and nightmares – is important, as is performance of overnight polysomnography when a home sleep study is negative and there is clinical suspicion of OSA.Respiratory disturbances in women are frequently associated with arousals – which induce less ventilatory instability in women than in men – rather than oxygen desaturations, leading to underestimation of OSA on home sleep testing. Insomnia associated with OSA in women may also increase the likelihood of a false negative result, Dr. Rajagopal said at the meeting.
“It’s really important [in sleep testing] to consider your AHI values in women,” she said. “The AHI value may not provide a true indication of the degree of sleep fragmentation being experienced by patients.” That OSA symptoms manifest in women with lower AHIs has been elucidated in research showing, for instance, that those with an AHI of 2-5 per hour have a similar level of symptoms to men with an AHI of at least 15 per hour, she said.
Women tend to have a clustering of apnea during REM sleep, and it’s possible that “the long-term effects of REM disruption contribute to greater symptomatology at lower AHI values in women compared to men,” Dr. Rajagopal said.
Also at play are when it comes to testing and diagnosis are several other key sex differences, she said. For one, the upper airways in women are less collapsible and more stable during sleep (most evident during non-REM sleep), and respiratory events during sleep are less frequently associated with complete upper airway collapse.
Women also have shorter apneic episodes, but “the longest apneas are associated with a more severe oxygen desaturation,” she said. Moreover, they have more episodes of upper airway resistance during sleep, which in and of itself “has been shown to produce clinical symptoms such as daytime fatigue and clinical depression.”
In her presentation, Dr. Mehra similarly commented on a likely underdiagnosis of OSA in women. In addition to differing symptoms, including palpitations, “women are less likely to have arousals, and have a lesser degree of nocturnal hypoxia compared to men ... perhaps leading to even more of an underdiagnosis.”
Unique consequences
Differences in upper airway physiology and other sex-specific differences impacting OSA susceptibility are at least partly attributable to sex hormones, said Dr. Mehra and Dr. Lal, associate professor of medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
A significant increase in prevalence is seen after menopause, and research has shown that each additional year in menopause is associated with a greater AHI – a “dose-response effect,” Dr. Lal said. An inverse association between hormone replacement therapy and OSA severity has been seen in epidemiological studies including the Sleep Heart Health Study, Dr. Mehra said. But in prospective studies, Dr. Lal noted, hormone replacement therapy has not been shown to decrease AHI.
Experimental and clinical studies suggest that the vascular endothelium is influenced by sex hormones, Dr. Mehra said. Estrogen is known to improve endothelial function by inducing increased nitric oxide bioavailability – important in the setting of hypoxemia, which leads to reduced bioavailability of nitric oxide. “Alterations of sex-specific hormones in OSA may represent a key factor in increasing vulnerability to vascular dysfunction,” Dr. Mehra added.
The Sleep Heart Health Study also documented sex-specific differences, showing a graded increase of troponin with increasing OSA severity category as well as an increase in left ventricular mass thickness, and a 30% increased risk of heart failure or death in women with moderate/severe OSA, compared with women without OSA or with mild OSA, Dr. Mehra said. These findings were not observed in men.
The dominance of REM-related OSA in women raises risk because sleep disturbances during REM sleep are associated with adverse cardiometabolic outcomes including prevalent and incident hypertension, Dr. Mehra noted. “REM-related OSA may also adversely impact glucose metabolism,” she said, “even in the absence of non-REM obstructive sleep apnea.”
Regarding OSA treatment and responsivity, Dr. Mehra said that preliminary, post hoc data from a randomized, controlled trial of the impact of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy on cardiovascular biomarkers showed a sex-specific effect. “There were differences in men versus women in terms of responsiveness with regards to biomarkers of inflammation and oxidative stress ... with reductions from CPAP observed in women but not in men,” said Dr. Mehra, a co-investigator of the study.
The data suggests, she said that “these biomarkers may be more responsive to treatment and a reversal of sleep apnea pathophysiology in women.”
Women also appear to respond better than men to upper airway nerve stimulation (UAS), she said, referring to an international registry study showing a 3.6-fold higher odds of responsiveness to the therapy relative to men. Women in the study were 60% less likely to be approved by insurance for UAS, however, making it “a public policy issue, said Dr. Mehra, a coinvestigator.
Dr. Rajagopal, Dr. Mehra, and Dr. Lal all reported that they had no potential conflicts of interest.
The reported prevalence and severity of obstructive sleep apnea in women is lower, compared with men, but the consequences of the disease are “at least the same, if not worse,” with women appearing to have greater susceptibility to adverse OSA-related cardiovascular consequences – particularly as it pertains to endothelial dysfunction, Reena Mehra, MD, MS, said at the virtual annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.
Women more so than men have endothelial dysfunction associated with OSA, “suggesting there is an enhanced sensitivity of the female vascular endothelium to intermittent hypoxia,” said Dr. Mehra, director of sleep disorders research at the Cleveland Clinic and professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University, also in Cleveland.
Sex-specific differences in the anatomic and physiological characteristics of the upper airway, in fat distribution and in respiratory stability as they relate to OSA have been documented for some time – and today, these and other differences relating to the diagnosis, treatment, and consequences of sleep apnea continue to be studied and elucidated, said Dr. Mehra, Anita Rajagopal, MD, and Chitra Lal, MD, in a session on OSA in women. Each spoke about the breath and implications of these differences, and of increasing recognition of the significance of OSA in women.
Likely underdiagnosis
Epidemiologic studies have suggested a three- to fivefold higher prevalence of OSA in men than in women in the general population. But it has also been estimated that 17%-25% of women have sleep apnea, and the prevalence reported in various studies has generally increased with time, said Dr. Rajagopal, department medical director for sleep medicine at Community Physician Network in Indianapolis, and medical director of the Community Health Network Sleep/Wake Disorders Center, also in Indianapolis.
One population-based study in Sweden, reported in 2013, found OSA (defined as an apnea-hypopnea index [AHI] ≥5) in 50% of women aged 20-70, she noted.
It’s quite possible women are being misdiagnosed or underdiagnosed because of their reporting of different symptoms, Dr. Rajagopal said. The Epworth Sleepiness Scale, commonly used to screen for OSA, has not been validated for use in women and has not been strongly associated with daytime sleepiness in women in population-based studies, she said, noting that women who report similar levels of daytime sleepiness to men are less likely to have an ESS score greater than 10.
“We shouldn’t rule out obstructive sleep apnea in women with a low ESS,” Dr. Rajagopal said in an interview after the meeting. Attentiveness to the symptoms more often reported by women – generalized daytime fatigue/lack of energy, insomnia, morning headaches, mood disturbances, and nightmares – is important, as is performance of overnight polysomnography when a home sleep study is negative and there is clinical suspicion of OSA.Respiratory disturbances in women are frequently associated with arousals – which induce less ventilatory instability in women than in men – rather than oxygen desaturations, leading to underestimation of OSA on home sleep testing. Insomnia associated with OSA in women may also increase the likelihood of a false negative result, Dr. Rajagopal said at the meeting.
“It’s really important [in sleep testing] to consider your AHI values in women,” she said. “The AHI value may not provide a true indication of the degree of sleep fragmentation being experienced by patients.” That OSA symptoms manifest in women with lower AHIs has been elucidated in research showing, for instance, that those with an AHI of 2-5 per hour have a similar level of symptoms to men with an AHI of at least 15 per hour, she said.
Women tend to have a clustering of apnea during REM sleep, and it’s possible that “the long-term effects of REM disruption contribute to greater symptomatology at lower AHI values in women compared to men,” Dr. Rajagopal said.
Also at play are when it comes to testing and diagnosis are several other key sex differences, she said. For one, the upper airways in women are less collapsible and more stable during sleep (most evident during non-REM sleep), and respiratory events during sleep are less frequently associated with complete upper airway collapse.
Women also have shorter apneic episodes, but “the longest apneas are associated with a more severe oxygen desaturation,” she said. Moreover, they have more episodes of upper airway resistance during sleep, which in and of itself “has been shown to produce clinical symptoms such as daytime fatigue and clinical depression.”
In her presentation, Dr. Mehra similarly commented on a likely underdiagnosis of OSA in women. In addition to differing symptoms, including palpitations, “women are less likely to have arousals, and have a lesser degree of nocturnal hypoxia compared to men ... perhaps leading to even more of an underdiagnosis.”
Unique consequences
Differences in upper airway physiology and other sex-specific differences impacting OSA susceptibility are at least partly attributable to sex hormones, said Dr. Mehra and Dr. Lal, associate professor of medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
A significant increase in prevalence is seen after menopause, and research has shown that each additional year in menopause is associated with a greater AHI – a “dose-response effect,” Dr. Lal said. An inverse association between hormone replacement therapy and OSA severity has been seen in epidemiological studies including the Sleep Heart Health Study, Dr. Mehra said. But in prospective studies, Dr. Lal noted, hormone replacement therapy has not been shown to decrease AHI.
Experimental and clinical studies suggest that the vascular endothelium is influenced by sex hormones, Dr. Mehra said. Estrogen is known to improve endothelial function by inducing increased nitric oxide bioavailability – important in the setting of hypoxemia, which leads to reduced bioavailability of nitric oxide. “Alterations of sex-specific hormones in OSA may represent a key factor in increasing vulnerability to vascular dysfunction,” Dr. Mehra added.
The Sleep Heart Health Study also documented sex-specific differences, showing a graded increase of troponin with increasing OSA severity category as well as an increase in left ventricular mass thickness, and a 30% increased risk of heart failure or death in women with moderate/severe OSA, compared with women without OSA or with mild OSA, Dr. Mehra said. These findings were not observed in men.
The dominance of REM-related OSA in women raises risk because sleep disturbances during REM sleep are associated with adverse cardiometabolic outcomes including prevalent and incident hypertension, Dr. Mehra noted. “REM-related OSA may also adversely impact glucose metabolism,” she said, “even in the absence of non-REM obstructive sleep apnea.”
Regarding OSA treatment and responsivity, Dr. Mehra said that preliminary, post hoc data from a randomized, controlled trial of the impact of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy on cardiovascular biomarkers showed a sex-specific effect. “There were differences in men versus women in terms of responsiveness with regards to biomarkers of inflammation and oxidative stress ... with reductions from CPAP observed in women but not in men,” said Dr. Mehra, a co-investigator of the study.
The data suggests, she said that “these biomarkers may be more responsive to treatment and a reversal of sleep apnea pathophysiology in women.”
Women also appear to respond better than men to upper airway nerve stimulation (UAS), she said, referring to an international registry study showing a 3.6-fold higher odds of responsiveness to the therapy relative to men. Women in the study were 60% less likely to be approved by insurance for UAS, however, making it “a public policy issue, said Dr. Mehra, a coinvestigator.
Dr. Rajagopal, Dr. Mehra, and Dr. Lal all reported that they had no potential conflicts of interest.
The reported prevalence and severity of obstructive sleep apnea in women is lower, compared with men, but the consequences of the disease are “at least the same, if not worse,” with women appearing to have greater susceptibility to adverse OSA-related cardiovascular consequences – particularly as it pertains to endothelial dysfunction, Reena Mehra, MD, MS, said at the virtual annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.
Women more so than men have endothelial dysfunction associated with OSA, “suggesting there is an enhanced sensitivity of the female vascular endothelium to intermittent hypoxia,” said Dr. Mehra, director of sleep disorders research at the Cleveland Clinic and professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University, also in Cleveland.
Sex-specific differences in the anatomic and physiological characteristics of the upper airway, in fat distribution and in respiratory stability as they relate to OSA have been documented for some time – and today, these and other differences relating to the diagnosis, treatment, and consequences of sleep apnea continue to be studied and elucidated, said Dr. Mehra, Anita Rajagopal, MD, and Chitra Lal, MD, in a session on OSA in women. Each spoke about the breath and implications of these differences, and of increasing recognition of the significance of OSA in women.
Likely underdiagnosis
Epidemiologic studies have suggested a three- to fivefold higher prevalence of OSA in men than in women in the general population. But it has also been estimated that 17%-25% of women have sleep apnea, and the prevalence reported in various studies has generally increased with time, said Dr. Rajagopal, department medical director for sleep medicine at Community Physician Network in Indianapolis, and medical director of the Community Health Network Sleep/Wake Disorders Center, also in Indianapolis.
One population-based study in Sweden, reported in 2013, found OSA (defined as an apnea-hypopnea index [AHI] ≥5) in 50% of women aged 20-70, she noted.
It’s quite possible women are being misdiagnosed or underdiagnosed because of their reporting of different symptoms, Dr. Rajagopal said. The Epworth Sleepiness Scale, commonly used to screen for OSA, has not been validated for use in women and has not been strongly associated with daytime sleepiness in women in population-based studies, she said, noting that women who report similar levels of daytime sleepiness to men are less likely to have an ESS score greater than 10.
“We shouldn’t rule out obstructive sleep apnea in women with a low ESS,” Dr. Rajagopal said in an interview after the meeting. Attentiveness to the symptoms more often reported by women – generalized daytime fatigue/lack of energy, insomnia, morning headaches, mood disturbances, and nightmares – is important, as is performance of overnight polysomnography when a home sleep study is negative and there is clinical suspicion of OSA.Respiratory disturbances in women are frequently associated with arousals – which induce less ventilatory instability in women than in men – rather than oxygen desaturations, leading to underestimation of OSA on home sleep testing. Insomnia associated with OSA in women may also increase the likelihood of a false negative result, Dr. Rajagopal said at the meeting.
“It’s really important [in sleep testing] to consider your AHI values in women,” she said. “The AHI value may not provide a true indication of the degree of sleep fragmentation being experienced by patients.” That OSA symptoms manifest in women with lower AHIs has been elucidated in research showing, for instance, that those with an AHI of 2-5 per hour have a similar level of symptoms to men with an AHI of at least 15 per hour, she said.
Women tend to have a clustering of apnea during REM sleep, and it’s possible that “the long-term effects of REM disruption contribute to greater symptomatology at lower AHI values in women compared to men,” Dr. Rajagopal said.
Also at play are when it comes to testing and diagnosis are several other key sex differences, she said. For one, the upper airways in women are less collapsible and more stable during sleep (most evident during non-REM sleep), and respiratory events during sleep are less frequently associated with complete upper airway collapse.
Women also have shorter apneic episodes, but “the longest apneas are associated with a more severe oxygen desaturation,” she said. Moreover, they have more episodes of upper airway resistance during sleep, which in and of itself “has been shown to produce clinical symptoms such as daytime fatigue and clinical depression.”
In her presentation, Dr. Mehra similarly commented on a likely underdiagnosis of OSA in women. In addition to differing symptoms, including palpitations, “women are less likely to have arousals, and have a lesser degree of nocturnal hypoxia compared to men ... perhaps leading to even more of an underdiagnosis.”
Unique consequences
Differences in upper airway physiology and other sex-specific differences impacting OSA susceptibility are at least partly attributable to sex hormones, said Dr. Mehra and Dr. Lal, associate professor of medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
A significant increase in prevalence is seen after menopause, and research has shown that each additional year in menopause is associated with a greater AHI – a “dose-response effect,” Dr. Lal said. An inverse association between hormone replacement therapy and OSA severity has been seen in epidemiological studies including the Sleep Heart Health Study, Dr. Mehra said. But in prospective studies, Dr. Lal noted, hormone replacement therapy has not been shown to decrease AHI.
Experimental and clinical studies suggest that the vascular endothelium is influenced by sex hormones, Dr. Mehra said. Estrogen is known to improve endothelial function by inducing increased nitric oxide bioavailability – important in the setting of hypoxemia, which leads to reduced bioavailability of nitric oxide. “Alterations of sex-specific hormones in OSA may represent a key factor in increasing vulnerability to vascular dysfunction,” Dr. Mehra added.
The Sleep Heart Health Study also documented sex-specific differences, showing a graded increase of troponin with increasing OSA severity category as well as an increase in left ventricular mass thickness, and a 30% increased risk of heart failure or death in women with moderate/severe OSA, compared with women without OSA or with mild OSA, Dr. Mehra said. These findings were not observed in men.
The dominance of REM-related OSA in women raises risk because sleep disturbances during REM sleep are associated with adverse cardiometabolic outcomes including prevalent and incident hypertension, Dr. Mehra noted. “REM-related OSA may also adversely impact glucose metabolism,” she said, “even in the absence of non-REM obstructive sleep apnea.”
Regarding OSA treatment and responsivity, Dr. Mehra said that preliminary, post hoc data from a randomized, controlled trial of the impact of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy on cardiovascular biomarkers showed a sex-specific effect. “There were differences in men versus women in terms of responsiveness with regards to biomarkers of inflammation and oxidative stress ... with reductions from CPAP observed in women but not in men,” said Dr. Mehra, a co-investigator of the study.
The data suggests, she said that “these biomarkers may be more responsive to treatment and a reversal of sleep apnea pathophysiology in women.”
Women also appear to respond better than men to upper airway nerve stimulation (UAS), she said, referring to an international registry study showing a 3.6-fold higher odds of responsiveness to the therapy relative to men. Women in the study were 60% less likely to be approved by insurance for UAS, however, making it “a public policy issue, said Dr. Mehra, a coinvestigator.
Dr. Rajagopal, Dr. Mehra, and Dr. Lal all reported that they had no potential conflicts of interest.
FROM SLEEP 2021
Pregnant women no longer detained by ICE
Immigration and Customs Enforcement will no longer detain most migrant women who are pregnant, postpartum, or nursing for deportation. This reverses the policy previously put in place by the Trump administration.
Under the new directive, ICE officials generally will not detain or arrest women who are pregnant or nursing, or who have given birth within the previous year. In a July 1 memo signed by ICE Acting Director Tae Johnson, ICE officers are directed to house women in “an appropriate facility to manage their care.”
The memo goes on to state that “generally ICE should not detain, arrest, or take into custody for an administrative violation of the immigration laws individuals known to be pregnant, post partum, or nursing unless release is prohibited by law or exceptional circumstances exist.”
In addition, ICE is also required to evaluate those individuals who are already in custody “to determine if continued detention is appropriate.”
During the Obama administration, pregnant women were generally not detained except under extraordinary circumstances. However, these policies were reversed after Donald Trump took office, and there was an 80% increase in the number of times ICE detained pregnant women in the year that followed implementation of the new directive – from 1,160 in 2017 to 2,097 in 2018.
The new guidance now goes even further than the directive issued under President Obama as it also includes women who are nursing and the 1-year postpartum period.
This policy stems from the Biden-Harris administration’s plan to reform the immigration system, part of which was to create a more humane asylum system. In a statement released early in February 2021, the White House stated that the “Trump administration’s policies at the border have caused chaos, cruelty, and confusion,” and that they will now “begin to roll back the most damaging policies adopted by the prior administration, while taking effective action to manage migration across the region.” After migrant women are taken into custody, pregnancy tests are administered as part of regular health screenings. If women are found to be pregnant, the new ICE policy states that they “generally” should be released from detention.
However, there will still be circumstances when pregnant and postpartum women may be detained, such as when there is a high risk that the individual is violent or a national security concern. In these cases, a field office director must approve the arrest and detention as well as making sure that the women receive appropriate medical care.
“The harmful consequences of immigration detention have been documented for years,” said Rebekah Wolf, JD, staff attorney with the American Immigration Council. “Our 2017 joint complaint urging a thorough investigation into the increasing numbers of pregnant women facing harm in detention, illustrated the disturbing practice of detaining pregnant women and the lack of quality medical care provided to these women.”
She added that the “federal government should not be in the business of detaining pregnant or nursing individuals, and it’s good to see the Biden administration directing ICE to finally take meaningful steps to limit enforcement activities in this manner. We are hopeful that this announcement is an indication of a broader shift on detention policy.”
There are currently 13 pregnant women in ICE custody, and they are being considered for release under the new policy.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement will no longer detain most migrant women who are pregnant, postpartum, or nursing for deportation. This reverses the policy previously put in place by the Trump administration.
Under the new directive, ICE officials generally will not detain or arrest women who are pregnant or nursing, or who have given birth within the previous year. In a July 1 memo signed by ICE Acting Director Tae Johnson, ICE officers are directed to house women in “an appropriate facility to manage their care.”
The memo goes on to state that “generally ICE should not detain, arrest, or take into custody for an administrative violation of the immigration laws individuals known to be pregnant, post partum, or nursing unless release is prohibited by law or exceptional circumstances exist.”
In addition, ICE is also required to evaluate those individuals who are already in custody “to determine if continued detention is appropriate.”
During the Obama administration, pregnant women were generally not detained except under extraordinary circumstances. However, these policies were reversed after Donald Trump took office, and there was an 80% increase in the number of times ICE detained pregnant women in the year that followed implementation of the new directive – from 1,160 in 2017 to 2,097 in 2018.
The new guidance now goes even further than the directive issued under President Obama as it also includes women who are nursing and the 1-year postpartum period.
This policy stems from the Biden-Harris administration’s plan to reform the immigration system, part of which was to create a more humane asylum system. In a statement released early in February 2021, the White House stated that the “Trump administration’s policies at the border have caused chaos, cruelty, and confusion,” and that they will now “begin to roll back the most damaging policies adopted by the prior administration, while taking effective action to manage migration across the region.” After migrant women are taken into custody, pregnancy tests are administered as part of regular health screenings. If women are found to be pregnant, the new ICE policy states that they “generally” should be released from detention.
However, there will still be circumstances when pregnant and postpartum women may be detained, such as when there is a high risk that the individual is violent or a national security concern. In these cases, a field office director must approve the arrest and detention as well as making sure that the women receive appropriate medical care.
“The harmful consequences of immigration detention have been documented for years,” said Rebekah Wolf, JD, staff attorney with the American Immigration Council. “Our 2017 joint complaint urging a thorough investigation into the increasing numbers of pregnant women facing harm in detention, illustrated the disturbing practice of detaining pregnant women and the lack of quality medical care provided to these women.”
She added that the “federal government should not be in the business of detaining pregnant or nursing individuals, and it’s good to see the Biden administration directing ICE to finally take meaningful steps to limit enforcement activities in this manner. We are hopeful that this announcement is an indication of a broader shift on detention policy.”
There are currently 13 pregnant women in ICE custody, and they are being considered for release under the new policy.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement will no longer detain most migrant women who are pregnant, postpartum, or nursing for deportation. This reverses the policy previously put in place by the Trump administration.
Under the new directive, ICE officials generally will not detain or arrest women who are pregnant or nursing, or who have given birth within the previous year. In a July 1 memo signed by ICE Acting Director Tae Johnson, ICE officers are directed to house women in “an appropriate facility to manage their care.”
The memo goes on to state that “generally ICE should not detain, arrest, or take into custody for an administrative violation of the immigration laws individuals known to be pregnant, post partum, or nursing unless release is prohibited by law or exceptional circumstances exist.”
In addition, ICE is also required to evaluate those individuals who are already in custody “to determine if continued detention is appropriate.”
During the Obama administration, pregnant women were generally not detained except under extraordinary circumstances. However, these policies were reversed after Donald Trump took office, and there was an 80% increase in the number of times ICE detained pregnant women in the year that followed implementation of the new directive – from 1,160 in 2017 to 2,097 in 2018.
The new guidance now goes even further than the directive issued under President Obama as it also includes women who are nursing and the 1-year postpartum period.
This policy stems from the Biden-Harris administration’s plan to reform the immigration system, part of which was to create a more humane asylum system. In a statement released early in February 2021, the White House stated that the “Trump administration’s policies at the border have caused chaos, cruelty, and confusion,” and that they will now “begin to roll back the most damaging policies adopted by the prior administration, while taking effective action to manage migration across the region.” After migrant women are taken into custody, pregnancy tests are administered as part of regular health screenings. If women are found to be pregnant, the new ICE policy states that they “generally” should be released from detention.
However, there will still be circumstances when pregnant and postpartum women may be detained, such as when there is a high risk that the individual is violent or a national security concern. In these cases, a field office director must approve the arrest and detention as well as making sure that the women receive appropriate medical care.
“The harmful consequences of immigration detention have been documented for years,” said Rebekah Wolf, JD, staff attorney with the American Immigration Council. “Our 2017 joint complaint urging a thorough investigation into the increasing numbers of pregnant women facing harm in detention, illustrated the disturbing practice of detaining pregnant women and the lack of quality medical care provided to these women.”
She added that the “federal government should not be in the business of detaining pregnant or nursing individuals, and it’s good to see the Biden administration directing ICE to finally take meaningful steps to limit enforcement activities in this manner. We are hopeful that this announcement is an indication of a broader shift on detention policy.”
There are currently 13 pregnant women in ICE custody, and they are being considered for release under the new policy.
Limited English proficiency linked with less health care in U.S.
Jessica Himmelstein, MD, a Harvard research fellow and primary care physician at Cambridge Health Alliance in Cambridge, Mass., led a study of more than 120,000 adults published July 6, 2021. The study population included 17,776 Hispanic adults with limited English proficiency, 14,936 Hispanic adults proficient in English and 87,834 non-Hispanic, English-proficient adults.
Researchers compared several measures of care usage from information in the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s Medical Expenditure Panel Survey from 1998 to 2018.
They found that, in adjusted analyses, total use of care per capita from 2014-2018, measured by health care expenditures, was $1,463 lower (98% confidence interval, $1,030-$1,897), or 35% lower for primary-Spanish speakers than for Hispanic adults who were English proficient and $2,802 lower (98% CI, $2,356-$3,247), or 42% lower versus non-Hispanic adults who were English proficient.
Spanish speakers also had 36% fewer outpatient visits and 48% fewer prescription medications than non-Hispanic adults, and 35% fewer outpatient visits and 37% fewer prescription medications than English-proficient Hispanic adults.
Even when accounting for differences in health, age, sex, income and insurance, adults with language barriers fared worse.
Gaps span all types of care
The services that those with limited English skills are missing are “the types of care people need to lead a healthy life,” from routine visits and medications to urgent or emergency care, Dr. Himmelstein said in an interview.
She said the gaps were greater in outpatient care and in medication use, compared with emergency department visits and inpatient care, but the inequities were present in all the categories she and her coinvestigators studied.
Underlying causes for having less care may include that people who struggle with English may not feel comfortable accessing the health system or may feel unwelcome or discriminated against.
“An undercurrent of biases, including racism, could also be contributing,” she said.
The data show that, despite several federal policy changes aimed at promoting language services in hospitals and clinics, several language-based disparities have not improved over 2 decades.
Some of the changes have included an executive order in 2000 requiring interpreters to be available in federally funded health facilities. In 2010, the Affordable Care Act enhanced the definition of meaningful access to language services and setting standards for qualified interpreters.
Gap widened over 2 decades
The adjusted gap in annual health care expenditures per capita between adults with limited English skills and non-Hispanic, English-proficient adults widened by $1,596 (98% CI, $837-$2,356) between 1999-2000 and 2017-2018, after accounting for inflation.
Dr. Himmelstein said that though this study period predated COVID-19, its findings may help explain the disproportionate burden the pandemic placed on the Hispanic population.
“This is a community that traditionally wasn’t getting access to care and then suddenly something like COVID-19 comes and they were even more devastated,” she noted.
Telehealth, which proved an important way to access care during the pandemic, also added a degree of communication difficulty for those with fewer English skills, she said.
Many of the telehealth changes are here to stay, and it will be important to ask: “Are we ensuring equity in telehealth use for individuals who face language barriers?” Dr. Himmelstein said.
Olga Garcia-Bedoya, MD, an associate professor at University of Illinois at Chicago’s department of medicine and medical director of UIC’s Institute for Minority Health Research, said having access to interpreters with high accuracy is key to narrowing the gaps.
“The literature is very clear that access to professional medical interpreters is associated with decreased health disparities for patients with limited English proficiency,” she said.
More cultural training for clinicians is needed surrounding beliefs about illness and that some care may be declined not because of a person’s limited English proficiency, but because their beliefs may keep them from getting care, Dr. Garcia-Bedoya added. When it comes to getting a flu shot, for example, sometimes belief systems, rather than English proficiency, keep people from accessing care.
What can be done?
Addressing barriers caused by lack of English proficiency will likely take change in policies, including one related reimbursement for medical interpreters, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Currently, only 15 states’ Medicaid programs or Children’s Health Insurance Programs reimburse providers for language services, the paper notes, and neither Medicare nor private insurers routinely pay for those services.
Recruiting bilingual providers and staff at health care facilities and in medical and nursing schools will also be important to narrow the gaps, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Strengthening standards for interpreters also will help. “Currently such standards vary by state or by institution and are not necessarily enforced,” she explained.
It will also be important to make sure patients know that they are entitled by law to care, free of discriminatory practices and to have certain language services including qualified interpreters, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Dr. Garcia-Bedoya said changes need to come from health systems working in combination with clinicians, providing resources so that quality interpreters can be accessed and making sure that equipment supports clear communication in telehealth. Patients’ language preferences should also be noted as soon as they make the appointment.
The findings of the study may have large significance as one in seven people in the United States speak Spanish at home, and 25 million people in the United States have limited English proficiency, the authors noted.
Dr. Himmelstein receives funding support from an Institutional National Research Service Award. Dr. Garcia-Bedoya reports no relevant financial relationships.
Jessica Himmelstein, MD, a Harvard research fellow and primary care physician at Cambridge Health Alliance in Cambridge, Mass., led a study of more than 120,000 adults published July 6, 2021. The study population included 17,776 Hispanic adults with limited English proficiency, 14,936 Hispanic adults proficient in English and 87,834 non-Hispanic, English-proficient adults.
Researchers compared several measures of care usage from information in the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s Medical Expenditure Panel Survey from 1998 to 2018.
They found that, in adjusted analyses, total use of care per capita from 2014-2018, measured by health care expenditures, was $1,463 lower (98% confidence interval, $1,030-$1,897), or 35% lower for primary-Spanish speakers than for Hispanic adults who were English proficient and $2,802 lower (98% CI, $2,356-$3,247), or 42% lower versus non-Hispanic adults who were English proficient.
Spanish speakers also had 36% fewer outpatient visits and 48% fewer prescription medications than non-Hispanic adults, and 35% fewer outpatient visits and 37% fewer prescription medications than English-proficient Hispanic adults.
Even when accounting for differences in health, age, sex, income and insurance, adults with language barriers fared worse.
Gaps span all types of care
The services that those with limited English skills are missing are “the types of care people need to lead a healthy life,” from routine visits and medications to urgent or emergency care, Dr. Himmelstein said in an interview.
She said the gaps were greater in outpatient care and in medication use, compared with emergency department visits and inpatient care, but the inequities were present in all the categories she and her coinvestigators studied.
Underlying causes for having less care may include that people who struggle with English may not feel comfortable accessing the health system or may feel unwelcome or discriminated against.
“An undercurrent of biases, including racism, could also be contributing,” she said.
The data show that, despite several federal policy changes aimed at promoting language services in hospitals and clinics, several language-based disparities have not improved over 2 decades.
Some of the changes have included an executive order in 2000 requiring interpreters to be available in federally funded health facilities. In 2010, the Affordable Care Act enhanced the definition of meaningful access to language services and setting standards for qualified interpreters.
Gap widened over 2 decades
The adjusted gap in annual health care expenditures per capita between adults with limited English skills and non-Hispanic, English-proficient adults widened by $1,596 (98% CI, $837-$2,356) between 1999-2000 and 2017-2018, after accounting for inflation.
Dr. Himmelstein said that though this study period predated COVID-19, its findings may help explain the disproportionate burden the pandemic placed on the Hispanic population.
“This is a community that traditionally wasn’t getting access to care and then suddenly something like COVID-19 comes and they were even more devastated,” she noted.
Telehealth, which proved an important way to access care during the pandemic, also added a degree of communication difficulty for those with fewer English skills, she said.
Many of the telehealth changes are here to stay, and it will be important to ask: “Are we ensuring equity in telehealth use for individuals who face language barriers?” Dr. Himmelstein said.
Olga Garcia-Bedoya, MD, an associate professor at University of Illinois at Chicago’s department of medicine and medical director of UIC’s Institute for Minority Health Research, said having access to interpreters with high accuracy is key to narrowing the gaps.
“The literature is very clear that access to professional medical interpreters is associated with decreased health disparities for patients with limited English proficiency,” she said.
More cultural training for clinicians is needed surrounding beliefs about illness and that some care may be declined not because of a person’s limited English proficiency, but because their beliefs may keep them from getting care, Dr. Garcia-Bedoya added. When it comes to getting a flu shot, for example, sometimes belief systems, rather than English proficiency, keep people from accessing care.
What can be done?
Addressing barriers caused by lack of English proficiency will likely take change in policies, including one related reimbursement for medical interpreters, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Currently, only 15 states’ Medicaid programs or Children’s Health Insurance Programs reimburse providers for language services, the paper notes, and neither Medicare nor private insurers routinely pay for those services.
Recruiting bilingual providers and staff at health care facilities and in medical and nursing schools will also be important to narrow the gaps, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Strengthening standards for interpreters also will help. “Currently such standards vary by state or by institution and are not necessarily enforced,” she explained.
It will also be important to make sure patients know that they are entitled by law to care, free of discriminatory practices and to have certain language services including qualified interpreters, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Dr. Garcia-Bedoya said changes need to come from health systems working in combination with clinicians, providing resources so that quality interpreters can be accessed and making sure that equipment supports clear communication in telehealth. Patients’ language preferences should also be noted as soon as they make the appointment.
The findings of the study may have large significance as one in seven people in the United States speak Spanish at home, and 25 million people in the United States have limited English proficiency, the authors noted.
Dr. Himmelstein receives funding support from an Institutional National Research Service Award. Dr. Garcia-Bedoya reports no relevant financial relationships.
Jessica Himmelstein, MD, a Harvard research fellow and primary care physician at Cambridge Health Alliance in Cambridge, Mass., led a study of more than 120,000 adults published July 6, 2021. The study population included 17,776 Hispanic adults with limited English proficiency, 14,936 Hispanic adults proficient in English and 87,834 non-Hispanic, English-proficient adults.
Researchers compared several measures of care usage from information in the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s Medical Expenditure Panel Survey from 1998 to 2018.
They found that, in adjusted analyses, total use of care per capita from 2014-2018, measured by health care expenditures, was $1,463 lower (98% confidence interval, $1,030-$1,897), or 35% lower for primary-Spanish speakers than for Hispanic adults who were English proficient and $2,802 lower (98% CI, $2,356-$3,247), or 42% lower versus non-Hispanic adults who were English proficient.
Spanish speakers also had 36% fewer outpatient visits and 48% fewer prescription medications than non-Hispanic adults, and 35% fewer outpatient visits and 37% fewer prescription medications than English-proficient Hispanic adults.
Even when accounting for differences in health, age, sex, income and insurance, adults with language barriers fared worse.
Gaps span all types of care
The services that those with limited English skills are missing are “the types of care people need to lead a healthy life,” from routine visits and medications to urgent or emergency care, Dr. Himmelstein said in an interview.
She said the gaps were greater in outpatient care and in medication use, compared with emergency department visits and inpatient care, but the inequities were present in all the categories she and her coinvestigators studied.
Underlying causes for having less care may include that people who struggle with English may not feel comfortable accessing the health system or may feel unwelcome or discriminated against.
“An undercurrent of biases, including racism, could also be contributing,” she said.
The data show that, despite several federal policy changes aimed at promoting language services in hospitals and clinics, several language-based disparities have not improved over 2 decades.
Some of the changes have included an executive order in 2000 requiring interpreters to be available in federally funded health facilities. In 2010, the Affordable Care Act enhanced the definition of meaningful access to language services and setting standards for qualified interpreters.
Gap widened over 2 decades
The adjusted gap in annual health care expenditures per capita between adults with limited English skills and non-Hispanic, English-proficient adults widened by $1,596 (98% CI, $837-$2,356) between 1999-2000 and 2017-2018, after accounting for inflation.
Dr. Himmelstein said that though this study period predated COVID-19, its findings may help explain the disproportionate burden the pandemic placed on the Hispanic population.
“This is a community that traditionally wasn’t getting access to care and then suddenly something like COVID-19 comes and they were even more devastated,” she noted.
Telehealth, which proved an important way to access care during the pandemic, also added a degree of communication difficulty for those with fewer English skills, she said.
Many of the telehealth changes are here to stay, and it will be important to ask: “Are we ensuring equity in telehealth use for individuals who face language barriers?” Dr. Himmelstein said.
Olga Garcia-Bedoya, MD, an associate professor at University of Illinois at Chicago’s department of medicine and medical director of UIC’s Institute for Minority Health Research, said having access to interpreters with high accuracy is key to narrowing the gaps.
“The literature is very clear that access to professional medical interpreters is associated with decreased health disparities for patients with limited English proficiency,” she said.
More cultural training for clinicians is needed surrounding beliefs about illness and that some care may be declined not because of a person’s limited English proficiency, but because their beliefs may keep them from getting care, Dr. Garcia-Bedoya added. When it comes to getting a flu shot, for example, sometimes belief systems, rather than English proficiency, keep people from accessing care.
What can be done?
Addressing barriers caused by lack of English proficiency will likely take change in policies, including one related reimbursement for medical interpreters, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Currently, only 15 states’ Medicaid programs or Children’s Health Insurance Programs reimburse providers for language services, the paper notes, and neither Medicare nor private insurers routinely pay for those services.
Recruiting bilingual providers and staff at health care facilities and in medical and nursing schools will also be important to narrow the gaps, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Strengthening standards for interpreters also will help. “Currently such standards vary by state or by institution and are not necessarily enforced,” she explained.
It will also be important to make sure patients know that they are entitled by law to care, free of discriminatory practices and to have certain language services including qualified interpreters, Dr. Himmelstein said.
Dr. Garcia-Bedoya said changes need to come from health systems working in combination with clinicians, providing resources so that quality interpreters can be accessed and making sure that equipment supports clear communication in telehealth. Patients’ language preferences should also be noted as soon as they make the appointment.
The findings of the study may have large significance as one in seven people in the United States speak Spanish at home, and 25 million people in the United States have limited English proficiency, the authors noted.
Dr. Himmelstein receives funding support from an Institutional National Research Service Award. Dr. Garcia-Bedoya reports no relevant financial relationships.
FROM HEALTH AFFAIRS
California to pay victims of forced, coerced sterilizations
SACRAMENTO (AP) – California is poised to approve reparations of up to $25,000 to some of the thousands of people – some as young as 13 – who were sterilized decades ago because the government deemed them unfit to have children.
The payments will make California at least the third state – following Virginia and North Carolina – to compensate victims of the so-called eugenics movement that peaked in the 1930s. Supporters of the movement believed sterilizing people with mental illnesses, physical disabilities, and other traits they deemed undesirable would improve the human race.
While California sterilized more than 20,000 people before its law was repealed in 1979, only a few hundred are still alive. The state has set aside $7.5 million for the reparations program, part of its $262.6 billion operating budget that is awaiting Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature.
California’s proposal is unique because it also would pay women the state coerced to get sterilized while they were in prison, some as recently as 2010. First exposed by the Center for Investigative Reporting in 2013, a subsequent audit found California sterilized 144 women between 2005 and 2013 with little or no evidence that officials counseled them or offered alternative treatment.
While all of the women signed consent forms, officials in 39 cases did not do everything that was legally required to obtain their permission.
“We must address and face our horrific history,” said Lorena Garcia Zermeño, policy and communications coordinator for the advocacy group California Latinas for Reproductive Justice. “This isn’t something that just happened in the past.”
California’s forced sterilization program started in 1909, following similar laws in Indiana and Washington. It was by far the largest program, accounting for about a third of everyone sterilized in the United States under those laws.
California’s law was so prominent that it inspired similar practices in Nazi Germany, according to Paul Lombardo, a law professor at Georgia State University, Atlanta, and an expert on the eugenics movement.
“The promise of eugenics at the very earliest is: ‘We could do away with all the state institutions – prisons, hospitals, asylums, orphanages,’” Mr. Lombardo said. “People who were in them just wouldn’t be born after awhile if you sterilized all of their parents.”
In California, victims include Mary Franco, who was sterilized in 1934 when she was just 13. Paperwork described her as “feeble minded” because of “sexual deviance,” according to her niece, Stacy Cordova, who has researched her case.
Ms. Cordova said Franco actually was molested by a neighbor. She said her family put Ms. Franco in an institution to protect the family’s reputation.
Ms. Cordova said her late aunt loved children and wanted to have a family. She married briefly when she was about 17, but Ms. Cordova said the marriage was annulled when the man discovered Ms. Franco couldn’t have children. She lived a lonely life in a Mexican culture that revered big families, Ms. Cordova said.
“I don’t know if it is justice. Money doesn’t pay for what happened to them. But it’s great to know that this is being recognized,” said Ms. Cordova, who has advocated for the state to pay survivors. “For me, this is not about the money. This is about the memory.”
Relatives like Ms. Cordova aren’t eligible for the payments, only direct victims are.
Sterilizations in California prisons appear to date to 1999, when the state changed its policy for unknown reasons to include a sterilization procedure known as “tubal ligation” as part of inmates’ medical care. Over the next decade, women reported they were coerced into this procedure, with some not fully understanding the ramifications.
A state law passed in 2014 bans sterilizations for the purpose of birth control at state prisons and local jails. The law permits sterilizations that are “medically necessary,” such as removing cancer, and requires facilities to report each year how many people were sterilized and for what reason.
Questionable sterilizations also occurred in facilities run by local governments. In 2018, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors apologized after more than 200 women were sterilized at the Los Angeles–University of Southern California Medical Center between 1968 and 1974.
Those people are not eligible for reparations under California’s program. But advocates say they hope to include them in the future.
“It’s only the beginning,” said state Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles who has been advocating for reparations. “I can’t imagine the trauma, the depression, the stress of being incarcerated, being rehabilitated and trying to start your life again in society, wanting to start a family, only to find out that that choice was taken away from you.”
Of the people California sterilized under its old eugenics law, just a few hundred are still alive, according to research conducted by the Sterilization and Social Justice Lab. Including the inmates who were sterilized most recently, advocates estimate more than 600 people would be eligible for reparations.
But finding them will be difficult, with advocates predicting only about 25% of eligible people will ultimately apply for reparations and be paid.
California’s Victim Compensation Board will run the program, with $2 million used to find victims by advertising and poring through state records. The state also set aside $1 million for plaques to honor the victims, leaving $4.5 million for reparations.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Associated Press © 2021
SACRAMENTO (AP) – California is poised to approve reparations of up to $25,000 to some of the thousands of people – some as young as 13 – who were sterilized decades ago because the government deemed them unfit to have children.
The payments will make California at least the third state – following Virginia and North Carolina – to compensate victims of the so-called eugenics movement that peaked in the 1930s. Supporters of the movement believed sterilizing people with mental illnesses, physical disabilities, and other traits they deemed undesirable would improve the human race.
While California sterilized more than 20,000 people before its law was repealed in 1979, only a few hundred are still alive. The state has set aside $7.5 million for the reparations program, part of its $262.6 billion operating budget that is awaiting Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature.
California’s proposal is unique because it also would pay women the state coerced to get sterilized while they were in prison, some as recently as 2010. First exposed by the Center for Investigative Reporting in 2013, a subsequent audit found California sterilized 144 women between 2005 and 2013 with little or no evidence that officials counseled them or offered alternative treatment.
While all of the women signed consent forms, officials in 39 cases did not do everything that was legally required to obtain their permission.
“We must address and face our horrific history,” said Lorena Garcia Zermeño, policy and communications coordinator for the advocacy group California Latinas for Reproductive Justice. “This isn’t something that just happened in the past.”
California’s forced sterilization program started in 1909, following similar laws in Indiana and Washington. It was by far the largest program, accounting for about a third of everyone sterilized in the United States under those laws.
California’s law was so prominent that it inspired similar practices in Nazi Germany, according to Paul Lombardo, a law professor at Georgia State University, Atlanta, and an expert on the eugenics movement.
“The promise of eugenics at the very earliest is: ‘We could do away with all the state institutions – prisons, hospitals, asylums, orphanages,’” Mr. Lombardo said. “People who were in them just wouldn’t be born after awhile if you sterilized all of their parents.”
In California, victims include Mary Franco, who was sterilized in 1934 when she was just 13. Paperwork described her as “feeble minded” because of “sexual deviance,” according to her niece, Stacy Cordova, who has researched her case.
Ms. Cordova said Franco actually was molested by a neighbor. She said her family put Ms. Franco in an institution to protect the family’s reputation.
Ms. Cordova said her late aunt loved children and wanted to have a family. She married briefly when she was about 17, but Ms. Cordova said the marriage was annulled when the man discovered Ms. Franco couldn’t have children. She lived a lonely life in a Mexican culture that revered big families, Ms. Cordova said.
“I don’t know if it is justice. Money doesn’t pay for what happened to them. But it’s great to know that this is being recognized,” said Ms. Cordova, who has advocated for the state to pay survivors. “For me, this is not about the money. This is about the memory.”
Relatives like Ms. Cordova aren’t eligible for the payments, only direct victims are.
Sterilizations in California prisons appear to date to 1999, when the state changed its policy for unknown reasons to include a sterilization procedure known as “tubal ligation” as part of inmates’ medical care. Over the next decade, women reported they were coerced into this procedure, with some not fully understanding the ramifications.
A state law passed in 2014 bans sterilizations for the purpose of birth control at state prisons and local jails. The law permits sterilizations that are “medically necessary,” such as removing cancer, and requires facilities to report each year how many people were sterilized and for what reason.
Questionable sterilizations also occurred in facilities run by local governments. In 2018, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors apologized after more than 200 women were sterilized at the Los Angeles–University of Southern California Medical Center between 1968 and 1974.
Those people are not eligible for reparations under California’s program. But advocates say they hope to include them in the future.
“It’s only the beginning,” said state Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles who has been advocating for reparations. “I can’t imagine the trauma, the depression, the stress of being incarcerated, being rehabilitated and trying to start your life again in society, wanting to start a family, only to find out that that choice was taken away from you.”
Of the people California sterilized under its old eugenics law, just a few hundred are still alive, according to research conducted by the Sterilization and Social Justice Lab. Including the inmates who were sterilized most recently, advocates estimate more than 600 people would be eligible for reparations.
But finding them will be difficult, with advocates predicting only about 25% of eligible people will ultimately apply for reparations and be paid.
California’s Victim Compensation Board will run the program, with $2 million used to find victims by advertising and poring through state records. The state also set aside $1 million for plaques to honor the victims, leaving $4.5 million for reparations.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Associated Press © 2021
SACRAMENTO (AP) – California is poised to approve reparations of up to $25,000 to some of the thousands of people – some as young as 13 – who were sterilized decades ago because the government deemed them unfit to have children.
The payments will make California at least the third state – following Virginia and North Carolina – to compensate victims of the so-called eugenics movement that peaked in the 1930s. Supporters of the movement believed sterilizing people with mental illnesses, physical disabilities, and other traits they deemed undesirable would improve the human race.
While California sterilized more than 20,000 people before its law was repealed in 1979, only a few hundred are still alive. The state has set aside $7.5 million for the reparations program, part of its $262.6 billion operating budget that is awaiting Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature.
California’s proposal is unique because it also would pay women the state coerced to get sterilized while they were in prison, some as recently as 2010. First exposed by the Center for Investigative Reporting in 2013, a subsequent audit found California sterilized 144 women between 2005 and 2013 with little or no evidence that officials counseled them or offered alternative treatment.
While all of the women signed consent forms, officials in 39 cases did not do everything that was legally required to obtain their permission.
“We must address and face our horrific history,” said Lorena Garcia Zermeño, policy and communications coordinator for the advocacy group California Latinas for Reproductive Justice. “This isn’t something that just happened in the past.”
California’s forced sterilization program started in 1909, following similar laws in Indiana and Washington. It was by far the largest program, accounting for about a third of everyone sterilized in the United States under those laws.
California’s law was so prominent that it inspired similar practices in Nazi Germany, according to Paul Lombardo, a law professor at Georgia State University, Atlanta, and an expert on the eugenics movement.
“The promise of eugenics at the very earliest is: ‘We could do away with all the state institutions – prisons, hospitals, asylums, orphanages,’” Mr. Lombardo said. “People who were in them just wouldn’t be born after awhile if you sterilized all of their parents.”
In California, victims include Mary Franco, who was sterilized in 1934 when she was just 13. Paperwork described her as “feeble minded” because of “sexual deviance,” according to her niece, Stacy Cordova, who has researched her case.
Ms. Cordova said Franco actually was molested by a neighbor. She said her family put Ms. Franco in an institution to protect the family’s reputation.
Ms. Cordova said her late aunt loved children and wanted to have a family. She married briefly when she was about 17, but Ms. Cordova said the marriage was annulled when the man discovered Ms. Franco couldn’t have children. She lived a lonely life in a Mexican culture that revered big families, Ms. Cordova said.
“I don’t know if it is justice. Money doesn’t pay for what happened to them. But it’s great to know that this is being recognized,” said Ms. Cordova, who has advocated for the state to pay survivors. “For me, this is not about the money. This is about the memory.”
Relatives like Ms. Cordova aren’t eligible for the payments, only direct victims are.
Sterilizations in California prisons appear to date to 1999, when the state changed its policy for unknown reasons to include a sterilization procedure known as “tubal ligation” as part of inmates’ medical care. Over the next decade, women reported they were coerced into this procedure, with some not fully understanding the ramifications.
A state law passed in 2014 bans sterilizations for the purpose of birth control at state prisons and local jails. The law permits sterilizations that are “medically necessary,” such as removing cancer, and requires facilities to report each year how many people were sterilized and for what reason.
Questionable sterilizations also occurred in facilities run by local governments. In 2018, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors apologized after more than 200 women were sterilized at the Los Angeles–University of Southern California Medical Center between 1968 and 1974.
Those people are not eligible for reparations under California’s program. But advocates say they hope to include them in the future.
“It’s only the beginning,” said state Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles who has been advocating for reparations. “I can’t imagine the trauma, the depression, the stress of being incarcerated, being rehabilitated and trying to start your life again in society, wanting to start a family, only to find out that that choice was taken away from you.”
Of the people California sterilized under its old eugenics law, just a few hundred are still alive, according to research conducted by the Sterilization and Social Justice Lab. Including the inmates who were sterilized most recently, advocates estimate more than 600 people would be eligible for reparations.
But finding them will be difficult, with advocates predicting only about 25% of eligible people will ultimately apply for reparations and be paid.
California’s Victim Compensation Board will run the program, with $2 million used to find victims by advertising and poring through state records. The state also set aside $1 million for plaques to honor the victims, leaving $4.5 million for reparations.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Associated Press © 2021
Delta variant key to breakthrough infections in vaccinated Israelis
Israeli officials are reporting a 30% decrease in the effectiveness of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine to prevent SARS-CoV-2 infection and mild to moderate cases of COVID-19. At the same time, protection against hospitalization and severe illness remains robust.
The country’s Ministry of Health data cited high levels of circulating Delta variant and a relaxation of public health measures in early June for the drop in the vaccine’s prevention of “breakthrough” cases from 94% to 64% in recent weeks.
However, it is important to consider the findings in context, experts cautioned.
“My overall take on this that the vaccine is highly protective against the endpoints that matter – hospitalization and severe disease,” Anna Durbin, MD, told this news organization.
“I was very pleasantly surprised with the very high efficacy against hospitalization and severe disease – even against the Delta variant,” added Dr. Durbin, professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
Ali Mokdad, PhD, of the Institute for Health Metrics at the University of Washington, Seattle, agreed that the high degree of protection against severe outcomes should be the focus.
“That’s the whole idea. You want to defend against COVID-19. So even if someone is infected, they don’t end up in the hospital or in the morgue,” he said in an interview.
Compared with an earlier report, the efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine against hospitalization fell slightly from 98% to 93%.
“For me, the fact that there is increased infection from the Delta variant after the vaccines such as Pfizer is of course a concern. But the positive news is that there is 93% prevention against severe disease or mortality,” added Dr. Mokdad, who is also professor of global health at University of Washington.
In addition, the absolute numbers remain relatively small. The Ministry of Health data show that, of the 63 Israelis hospitalized with COVID-19 nationwide on July 3, 34 were in critical condition.
Unrealistic expectations?
People may have unrealistic expectations regarding breakthrough infections, Dr. Durbin said. “It seems that people are almost expecting ‘sterilizing immunity’ from these vaccines,” she said, explaining that would mean complete protection from infection.
Expectations may be high “because these vaccines have been so effective,” added Dr. Durbin, who is also affiliated with the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health.
The higher the number of vaccinated residents, the more breakthrough cases will be reported, epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of epidemiology, human genetics, and environmental sciences at the University of Texas Science Center at Houston, wrote in her “Your Local Epidemiologist” blog.
This could apply to Israel, with an estimated 60% of adults in Israel fully vaccinated and 65% receiving at least one dose as of July 5, Our World in Data figures show.
How the updated figures were reported could be confusing, Dr. Jetelina said. Israel’s Health Minister Chezy Levy noted that “55% of the newly infected had been vaccinated” in a radio interview announcing the results.
“This language is important because it’s very different than ‘half of vaccinated people were infected,’ ” Dr. Jetelina noted.
Israel had a 7-day rolling average of 324 new confirmed COVID-19 cases as of July 5. Assuming 55% of these cases were among vaccinated people, that would mean 178 people experienced breakthrough infections.
In contrast, almost 6 million people in Israel are fully vaccinated. If 55% of them experienced breakthrough infections, the number would be much higher – more than 3 million.
Dr. Jetelina added that more details about the new Israel figures would be helpful, including the severity of COVID-19 among the vaccinated cases and breakdown of infections between adults and children.
Next steps
Israeli health officials are weighing the necessity of a third or booster dose of the vaccine. Whether they will reinstate public health measures to prevent spread of COVID-19 also remains unknown.
Going forward, Israel intends to study whether factors such as age, comorbidities, or time since immunization affect risk for breakthrough infections among people vaccinated against COVID-19.
“We want to prevent people from getting hospitalized, seriously ill, and of course, dying. It’s encouraging these vaccines will be able to have a high impact on those outcomes,” Dr. Durbin said. “We just need to get people vaccinated.”
A call for better global surveillance
A global surveillance system is a potential solution to track and respond to the growing threat of the Delta variant and other variants of concern, Scott P. Layne, MD, and Jeffery K. Taubenberger, MD, PhD, wrote in a July 7, 2021, editorial in Science Translational Medicine.
One goal, Dr. Layne said in an interview, is to highlight “the compelling need for a new global COVID-19 program of surveillance and offer a blueprint for building it.” A second aim is to promote global cooperation among key advisers and leaders in the G7, G20, and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation nations.
“It’s an uphill struggle with superpower discords, global warming, cybersecurity, and pandemics all competing for finite attention,” Dr. Layne said. “However, what other options do we have for taming the so-called forever virus?”
Dr. Mokdad and Dr. Jetelina had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Durban disclosed she was the site primary investigator for the phase 3 AstraZeneca vaccine trial and an investigator on the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine trial.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Israeli officials are reporting a 30% decrease in the effectiveness of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine to prevent SARS-CoV-2 infection and mild to moderate cases of COVID-19. At the same time, protection against hospitalization and severe illness remains robust.
The country’s Ministry of Health data cited high levels of circulating Delta variant and a relaxation of public health measures in early June for the drop in the vaccine’s prevention of “breakthrough” cases from 94% to 64% in recent weeks.
However, it is important to consider the findings in context, experts cautioned.
“My overall take on this that the vaccine is highly protective against the endpoints that matter – hospitalization and severe disease,” Anna Durbin, MD, told this news organization.
“I was very pleasantly surprised with the very high efficacy against hospitalization and severe disease – even against the Delta variant,” added Dr. Durbin, professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
Ali Mokdad, PhD, of the Institute for Health Metrics at the University of Washington, Seattle, agreed that the high degree of protection against severe outcomes should be the focus.
“That’s the whole idea. You want to defend against COVID-19. So even if someone is infected, they don’t end up in the hospital or in the morgue,” he said in an interview.
Compared with an earlier report, the efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine against hospitalization fell slightly from 98% to 93%.
“For me, the fact that there is increased infection from the Delta variant after the vaccines such as Pfizer is of course a concern. But the positive news is that there is 93% prevention against severe disease or mortality,” added Dr. Mokdad, who is also professor of global health at University of Washington.
In addition, the absolute numbers remain relatively small. The Ministry of Health data show that, of the 63 Israelis hospitalized with COVID-19 nationwide on July 3, 34 were in critical condition.
Unrealistic expectations?
People may have unrealistic expectations regarding breakthrough infections, Dr. Durbin said. “It seems that people are almost expecting ‘sterilizing immunity’ from these vaccines,” she said, explaining that would mean complete protection from infection.
Expectations may be high “because these vaccines have been so effective,” added Dr. Durbin, who is also affiliated with the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health.
The higher the number of vaccinated residents, the more breakthrough cases will be reported, epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of epidemiology, human genetics, and environmental sciences at the University of Texas Science Center at Houston, wrote in her “Your Local Epidemiologist” blog.
This could apply to Israel, with an estimated 60% of adults in Israel fully vaccinated and 65% receiving at least one dose as of July 5, Our World in Data figures show.
How the updated figures were reported could be confusing, Dr. Jetelina said. Israel’s Health Minister Chezy Levy noted that “55% of the newly infected had been vaccinated” in a radio interview announcing the results.
“This language is important because it’s very different than ‘half of vaccinated people were infected,’ ” Dr. Jetelina noted.
Israel had a 7-day rolling average of 324 new confirmed COVID-19 cases as of July 5. Assuming 55% of these cases were among vaccinated people, that would mean 178 people experienced breakthrough infections.
In contrast, almost 6 million people in Israel are fully vaccinated. If 55% of them experienced breakthrough infections, the number would be much higher – more than 3 million.
Dr. Jetelina added that more details about the new Israel figures would be helpful, including the severity of COVID-19 among the vaccinated cases and breakdown of infections between adults and children.
Next steps
Israeli health officials are weighing the necessity of a third or booster dose of the vaccine. Whether they will reinstate public health measures to prevent spread of COVID-19 also remains unknown.
Going forward, Israel intends to study whether factors such as age, comorbidities, or time since immunization affect risk for breakthrough infections among people vaccinated against COVID-19.
“We want to prevent people from getting hospitalized, seriously ill, and of course, dying. It’s encouraging these vaccines will be able to have a high impact on those outcomes,” Dr. Durbin said. “We just need to get people vaccinated.”
A call for better global surveillance
A global surveillance system is a potential solution to track and respond to the growing threat of the Delta variant and other variants of concern, Scott P. Layne, MD, and Jeffery K. Taubenberger, MD, PhD, wrote in a July 7, 2021, editorial in Science Translational Medicine.
One goal, Dr. Layne said in an interview, is to highlight “the compelling need for a new global COVID-19 program of surveillance and offer a blueprint for building it.” A second aim is to promote global cooperation among key advisers and leaders in the G7, G20, and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation nations.
“It’s an uphill struggle with superpower discords, global warming, cybersecurity, and pandemics all competing for finite attention,” Dr. Layne said. “However, what other options do we have for taming the so-called forever virus?”
Dr. Mokdad and Dr. Jetelina had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Durban disclosed she was the site primary investigator for the phase 3 AstraZeneca vaccine trial and an investigator on the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine trial.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Israeli officials are reporting a 30% decrease in the effectiveness of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine to prevent SARS-CoV-2 infection and mild to moderate cases of COVID-19. At the same time, protection against hospitalization and severe illness remains robust.
The country’s Ministry of Health data cited high levels of circulating Delta variant and a relaxation of public health measures in early June for the drop in the vaccine’s prevention of “breakthrough” cases from 94% to 64% in recent weeks.
However, it is important to consider the findings in context, experts cautioned.
“My overall take on this that the vaccine is highly protective against the endpoints that matter – hospitalization and severe disease,” Anna Durbin, MD, told this news organization.
“I was very pleasantly surprised with the very high efficacy against hospitalization and severe disease – even against the Delta variant,” added Dr. Durbin, professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
Ali Mokdad, PhD, of the Institute for Health Metrics at the University of Washington, Seattle, agreed that the high degree of protection against severe outcomes should be the focus.
“That’s the whole idea. You want to defend against COVID-19. So even if someone is infected, they don’t end up in the hospital or in the morgue,” he said in an interview.
Compared with an earlier report, the efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine against hospitalization fell slightly from 98% to 93%.
“For me, the fact that there is increased infection from the Delta variant after the vaccines such as Pfizer is of course a concern. But the positive news is that there is 93% prevention against severe disease or mortality,” added Dr. Mokdad, who is also professor of global health at University of Washington.
In addition, the absolute numbers remain relatively small. The Ministry of Health data show that, of the 63 Israelis hospitalized with COVID-19 nationwide on July 3, 34 were in critical condition.
Unrealistic expectations?
People may have unrealistic expectations regarding breakthrough infections, Dr. Durbin said. “It seems that people are almost expecting ‘sterilizing immunity’ from these vaccines,” she said, explaining that would mean complete protection from infection.
Expectations may be high “because these vaccines have been so effective,” added Dr. Durbin, who is also affiliated with the Johns Hopkins Center for Global Health.
The higher the number of vaccinated residents, the more breakthrough cases will be reported, epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of epidemiology, human genetics, and environmental sciences at the University of Texas Science Center at Houston, wrote in her “Your Local Epidemiologist” blog.
This could apply to Israel, with an estimated 60% of adults in Israel fully vaccinated and 65% receiving at least one dose as of July 5, Our World in Data figures show.
How the updated figures were reported could be confusing, Dr. Jetelina said. Israel’s Health Minister Chezy Levy noted that “55% of the newly infected had been vaccinated” in a radio interview announcing the results.
“This language is important because it’s very different than ‘half of vaccinated people were infected,’ ” Dr. Jetelina noted.
Israel had a 7-day rolling average of 324 new confirmed COVID-19 cases as of July 5. Assuming 55% of these cases were among vaccinated people, that would mean 178 people experienced breakthrough infections.
In contrast, almost 6 million people in Israel are fully vaccinated. If 55% of them experienced breakthrough infections, the number would be much higher – more than 3 million.
Dr. Jetelina added that more details about the new Israel figures would be helpful, including the severity of COVID-19 among the vaccinated cases and breakdown of infections between adults and children.
Next steps
Israeli health officials are weighing the necessity of a third or booster dose of the vaccine. Whether they will reinstate public health measures to prevent spread of COVID-19 also remains unknown.
Going forward, Israel intends to study whether factors such as age, comorbidities, or time since immunization affect risk for breakthrough infections among people vaccinated against COVID-19.
“We want to prevent people from getting hospitalized, seriously ill, and of course, dying. It’s encouraging these vaccines will be able to have a high impact on those outcomes,” Dr. Durbin said. “We just need to get people vaccinated.”
A call for better global surveillance
A global surveillance system is a potential solution to track and respond to the growing threat of the Delta variant and other variants of concern, Scott P. Layne, MD, and Jeffery K. Taubenberger, MD, PhD, wrote in a July 7, 2021, editorial in Science Translational Medicine.
One goal, Dr. Layne said in an interview, is to highlight “the compelling need for a new global COVID-19 program of surveillance and offer a blueprint for building it.” A second aim is to promote global cooperation among key advisers and leaders in the G7, G20, and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation nations.
“It’s an uphill struggle with superpower discords, global warming, cybersecurity, and pandemics all competing for finite attention,” Dr. Layne said. “However, what other options do we have for taming the so-called forever virus?”
Dr. Mokdad and Dr. Jetelina had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Durban disclosed she was the site primary investigator for the phase 3 AstraZeneca vaccine trial and an investigator on the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine trial.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Garlic cloves in the nose and beer dreams and pareidolia faces
Insert clove A into nostril B
Just when you start wondering what crazy and potentially dangerous thing people can do to themselves next, comes a crazy and potentially dangerous new trend. The good folks at TikTok have provided patients a new treatment for stuffed up sinuses.
Dangerous? Well, that’s what doctors say, anyway.
“We typically do not recommend putting anything into the nostril for the obvious fact that it could get dislodged or lodged up into the nasal cavity,” Anthony Del Signore, MD, of Mount Sinai Union Square, New York, told TODAY.
“Not only does it have the potential to rot or cause a nasal obstruction, it can induce an episode of sinusitis,” Omid Mehdizadeh, MD, of Providence Saint John’s Health Center, Santa Monica, Calif., explained to Shape.
But who doesn't want to breathe easier and keep blood-sucking vampires at bay?
TikTokers are posting videos of themselves sticking garlic cloves in their nostrils for several minutes. They, “then, pull the garlic out, followed, typically, by long strands of mucus,” according to The Hill.
That can’t be real, you’re probably saying. Or maybe you think that no one is actually watching this stuff. Well, wake up! This isn’t network television we’re talking about. It’s freakin’ TikTok! One video has been favorited over half a million times. Another is up to 2.2 million.
It’s all true. Really. We couldn’t make this stuff up if we tried.
Seeing faces in random places?
Ever look up at the clouds, at a fast-moving train, or into your morning bowl of cereal and see two eyes, a nose, and a mouth looking back at you? You may shake it off and think you’re imagining something, but it's actually your brain doing what it’s built to do and researchers know why.
The phenomenon is called face pareidolia, and it’s technically an error function of the human brain. Evolution has molded our brains to rapidly identify faces, according to David Alais, PhD, of the University of Sydney, Australia, lead author of the study.
“But the system plays ‘fast and loose’ by applying a crude template of two eyes over a nose and mouth. Lots of things can satisfy that template and thus trigger a face detection response,” he said in a separate statement. But not only are we seeing faces, our brains go one step further and seemingly give those faces feelings.
In the study, Dr. Alais and his team looked for two things about each pareidolia face: Was it analyzed for facial expression or just rejected as a face altogether? The participants were shown a series of faces and then asked to rate the expression on a scale from angry to happy. What the researchers found was that once a face was detected, the brain analyzed the pareidolia face in the same way as a human face. Have you ever seen an angry trash can? Or a smile on an over-easy egg?
The other question faced: Was there a bias on emotion? Yup, and excuse the dad joke.
The researchers showed a mixed series of human faces and pareidolia faces to participants and found that responses were influenced by the previous face seen, no matter if the face was human or not.
So if someone smiled at you on the way to the grocery store and you see a grinning tomato in the produce section, your mind is playing tricks on you, and it’s totally normal.
Corporate dream manipulation
Advertisements are quite literally everywhere. On billboards, in commercials, in videos, in movies; the list goes on and on. Still, at least you can shut your eyes and be mercifully free of corporate interference inside your own head, right? Right?
Early in 2021, Coors launched an ad campaign that seemed to be a b bit of a gimmick, if not a joke. Coors claimed that if people watched an ad before bed, and played an 8-hour soundscape while sleeping, their dreams would be filled with crisp mountains and cold, thirst-quenching beverages. While, the Coors campaign didn’t go viral, someone was paying attention. A group of 35 leading researchers published an open letter on the subject of corporate dream manipulation, in the journal Dream Engineering.
"Multiple marketing studies are openly testing new ways to alter and motivate purchasing behavior through dream and sleep hacking. The commercial, for-profit use of dream incubation is rapidly becoming a reality," wrote the investigators. "As sleep and dream researchers, we are deeply concerned about marketing plans aimed at generating profits at the cost of interfering with our natural nocturnal memory processing."
People have tried to manipulate their dreams for countless years, but only in recent years have scientists attempted to target or manipulate behavior through dreams. In a 2014 study, smokers exposed to tobacco smoke and rotten egg smell while sleeping reduced their cigarette consumption by 30%.
Most research into dream manipulation has been aimed at positive results, but the experts warn that there’s no reason corporations couldn’t use it for their own purposes, especially given the widespread usage of devices such as Alexa. A company could play a certain sound during a commercial, they suggested, and then replay that sound through a device while people are sleeping to trigger a dream about that product.
And just when our COVID-19–driven anxiety dreams were starting to subside.
The experts said that the Federal Trade Commission could intervene to prevent companies from attempting dream manipulation, and have done so in the past to stop subliminal advertising, but as of right now, there’s nothing stopping big business from messing with your dreams. But hey, at least they’re not directly beaming commercials into our heads with gamma radiation. Yet.
Got breast milk?
As we know, breast milk has endless benefits for newbords and babies, but many things can stand in the way of a mother’s ability to breastfeed. Baby formula has served as a good enough substitute. But now, there might be something that’s even better.
A start-up company called BIOMILQ created a product that could be groundbreaking. Using “breakthrough mammary biotechnology,” BIOMILQ created cell-cultured breast milk.
Leila Strickland, a biologist who is the company’s cofounder and chief science officer, said she’s had her own personal experience with breastfeeding and believes the product could benefit many if just given a chance. "Some of the cells we’ve looked at can produce milk for months and months," according to a company statement
Baby formula has done its job feeding and nourishing babies since 1865, but could BIOMILQ do better?
Time – and babies – will tell.
Insert clove A into nostril B
Just when you start wondering what crazy and potentially dangerous thing people can do to themselves next, comes a crazy and potentially dangerous new trend. The good folks at TikTok have provided patients a new treatment for stuffed up sinuses.
Dangerous? Well, that’s what doctors say, anyway.
“We typically do not recommend putting anything into the nostril for the obvious fact that it could get dislodged or lodged up into the nasal cavity,” Anthony Del Signore, MD, of Mount Sinai Union Square, New York, told TODAY.
“Not only does it have the potential to rot or cause a nasal obstruction, it can induce an episode of sinusitis,” Omid Mehdizadeh, MD, of Providence Saint John’s Health Center, Santa Monica, Calif., explained to Shape.
But who doesn't want to breathe easier and keep blood-sucking vampires at bay?
TikTokers are posting videos of themselves sticking garlic cloves in their nostrils for several minutes. They, “then, pull the garlic out, followed, typically, by long strands of mucus,” according to The Hill.
That can’t be real, you’re probably saying. Or maybe you think that no one is actually watching this stuff. Well, wake up! This isn’t network television we’re talking about. It’s freakin’ TikTok! One video has been favorited over half a million times. Another is up to 2.2 million.
It’s all true. Really. We couldn’t make this stuff up if we tried.
Seeing faces in random places?
Ever look up at the clouds, at a fast-moving train, or into your morning bowl of cereal and see two eyes, a nose, and a mouth looking back at you? You may shake it off and think you’re imagining something, but it's actually your brain doing what it’s built to do and researchers know why.
The phenomenon is called face pareidolia, and it’s technically an error function of the human brain. Evolution has molded our brains to rapidly identify faces, according to David Alais, PhD, of the University of Sydney, Australia, lead author of the study.
“But the system plays ‘fast and loose’ by applying a crude template of two eyes over a nose and mouth. Lots of things can satisfy that template and thus trigger a face detection response,” he said in a separate statement. But not only are we seeing faces, our brains go one step further and seemingly give those faces feelings.
In the study, Dr. Alais and his team looked for two things about each pareidolia face: Was it analyzed for facial expression or just rejected as a face altogether? The participants were shown a series of faces and then asked to rate the expression on a scale from angry to happy. What the researchers found was that once a face was detected, the brain analyzed the pareidolia face in the same way as a human face. Have you ever seen an angry trash can? Or a smile on an over-easy egg?
The other question faced: Was there a bias on emotion? Yup, and excuse the dad joke.
The researchers showed a mixed series of human faces and pareidolia faces to participants and found that responses were influenced by the previous face seen, no matter if the face was human or not.
So if someone smiled at you on the way to the grocery store and you see a grinning tomato in the produce section, your mind is playing tricks on you, and it’s totally normal.
Corporate dream manipulation
Advertisements are quite literally everywhere. On billboards, in commercials, in videos, in movies; the list goes on and on. Still, at least you can shut your eyes and be mercifully free of corporate interference inside your own head, right? Right?
Early in 2021, Coors launched an ad campaign that seemed to be a b bit of a gimmick, if not a joke. Coors claimed that if people watched an ad before bed, and played an 8-hour soundscape while sleeping, their dreams would be filled with crisp mountains and cold, thirst-quenching beverages. While, the Coors campaign didn’t go viral, someone was paying attention. A group of 35 leading researchers published an open letter on the subject of corporate dream manipulation, in the journal Dream Engineering.
"Multiple marketing studies are openly testing new ways to alter and motivate purchasing behavior through dream and sleep hacking. The commercial, for-profit use of dream incubation is rapidly becoming a reality," wrote the investigators. "As sleep and dream researchers, we are deeply concerned about marketing plans aimed at generating profits at the cost of interfering with our natural nocturnal memory processing."
People have tried to manipulate their dreams for countless years, but only in recent years have scientists attempted to target or manipulate behavior through dreams. In a 2014 study, smokers exposed to tobacco smoke and rotten egg smell while sleeping reduced their cigarette consumption by 30%.
Most research into dream manipulation has been aimed at positive results, but the experts warn that there’s no reason corporations couldn’t use it for their own purposes, especially given the widespread usage of devices such as Alexa. A company could play a certain sound during a commercial, they suggested, and then replay that sound through a device while people are sleeping to trigger a dream about that product.
And just when our COVID-19–driven anxiety dreams were starting to subside.
The experts said that the Federal Trade Commission could intervene to prevent companies from attempting dream manipulation, and have done so in the past to stop subliminal advertising, but as of right now, there’s nothing stopping big business from messing with your dreams. But hey, at least they’re not directly beaming commercials into our heads with gamma radiation. Yet.
Got breast milk?
As we know, breast milk has endless benefits for newbords and babies, but many things can stand in the way of a mother’s ability to breastfeed. Baby formula has served as a good enough substitute. But now, there might be something that’s even better.
A start-up company called BIOMILQ created a product that could be groundbreaking. Using “breakthrough mammary biotechnology,” BIOMILQ created cell-cultured breast milk.
Leila Strickland, a biologist who is the company’s cofounder and chief science officer, said she’s had her own personal experience with breastfeeding and believes the product could benefit many if just given a chance. "Some of the cells we’ve looked at can produce milk for months and months," according to a company statement
Baby formula has done its job feeding and nourishing babies since 1865, but could BIOMILQ do better?
Time – and babies – will tell.
Insert clove A into nostril B
Just when you start wondering what crazy and potentially dangerous thing people can do to themselves next, comes a crazy and potentially dangerous new trend. The good folks at TikTok have provided patients a new treatment for stuffed up sinuses.
Dangerous? Well, that’s what doctors say, anyway.
“We typically do not recommend putting anything into the nostril for the obvious fact that it could get dislodged or lodged up into the nasal cavity,” Anthony Del Signore, MD, of Mount Sinai Union Square, New York, told TODAY.
“Not only does it have the potential to rot or cause a nasal obstruction, it can induce an episode of sinusitis,” Omid Mehdizadeh, MD, of Providence Saint John’s Health Center, Santa Monica, Calif., explained to Shape.
But who doesn't want to breathe easier and keep blood-sucking vampires at bay?
TikTokers are posting videos of themselves sticking garlic cloves in their nostrils for several minutes. They, “then, pull the garlic out, followed, typically, by long strands of mucus,” according to The Hill.
That can’t be real, you’re probably saying. Or maybe you think that no one is actually watching this stuff. Well, wake up! This isn’t network television we’re talking about. It’s freakin’ TikTok! One video has been favorited over half a million times. Another is up to 2.2 million.
It’s all true. Really. We couldn’t make this stuff up if we tried.
Seeing faces in random places?
Ever look up at the clouds, at a fast-moving train, or into your morning bowl of cereal and see two eyes, a nose, and a mouth looking back at you? You may shake it off and think you’re imagining something, but it's actually your brain doing what it’s built to do and researchers know why.
The phenomenon is called face pareidolia, and it’s technically an error function of the human brain. Evolution has molded our brains to rapidly identify faces, according to David Alais, PhD, of the University of Sydney, Australia, lead author of the study.
“But the system plays ‘fast and loose’ by applying a crude template of two eyes over a nose and mouth. Lots of things can satisfy that template and thus trigger a face detection response,” he said in a separate statement. But not only are we seeing faces, our brains go one step further and seemingly give those faces feelings.
In the study, Dr. Alais and his team looked for two things about each pareidolia face: Was it analyzed for facial expression or just rejected as a face altogether? The participants were shown a series of faces and then asked to rate the expression on a scale from angry to happy. What the researchers found was that once a face was detected, the brain analyzed the pareidolia face in the same way as a human face. Have you ever seen an angry trash can? Or a smile on an over-easy egg?
The other question faced: Was there a bias on emotion? Yup, and excuse the dad joke.
The researchers showed a mixed series of human faces and pareidolia faces to participants and found that responses were influenced by the previous face seen, no matter if the face was human or not.
So if someone smiled at you on the way to the grocery store and you see a grinning tomato in the produce section, your mind is playing tricks on you, and it’s totally normal.
Corporate dream manipulation
Advertisements are quite literally everywhere. On billboards, in commercials, in videos, in movies; the list goes on and on. Still, at least you can shut your eyes and be mercifully free of corporate interference inside your own head, right? Right?
Early in 2021, Coors launched an ad campaign that seemed to be a b bit of a gimmick, if not a joke. Coors claimed that if people watched an ad before bed, and played an 8-hour soundscape while sleeping, their dreams would be filled with crisp mountains and cold, thirst-quenching beverages. While, the Coors campaign didn’t go viral, someone was paying attention. A group of 35 leading researchers published an open letter on the subject of corporate dream manipulation, in the journal Dream Engineering.
"Multiple marketing studies are openly testing new ways to alter and motivate purchasing behavior through dream and sleep hacking. The commercial, for-profit use of dream incubation is rapidly becoming a reality," wrote the investigators. "As sleep and dream researchers, we are deeply concerned about marketing plans aimed at generating profits at the cost of interfering with our natural nocturnal memory processing."
People have tried to manipulate their dreams for countless years, but only in recent years have scientists attempted to target or manipulate behavior through dreams. In a 2014 study, smokers exposed to tobacco smoke and rotten egg smell while sleeping reduced their cigarette consumption by 30%.
Most research into dream manipulation has been aimed at positive results, but the experts warn that there’s no reason corporations couldn’t use it for their own purposes, especially given the widespread usage of devices such as Alexa. A company could play a certain sound during a commercial, they suggested, and then replay that sound through a device while people are sleeping to trigger a dream about that product.
And just when our COVID-19–driven anxiety dreams were starting to subside.
The experts said that the Federal Trade Commission could intervene to prevent companies from attempting dream manipulation, and have done so in the past to stop subliminal advertising, but as of right now, there’s nothing stopping big business from messing with your dreams. But hey, at least they’re not directly beaming commercials into our heads with gamma radiation. Yet.
Got breast milk?
As we know, breast milk has endless benefits for newbords and babies, but many things can stand in the way of a mother’s ability to breastfeed. Baby formula has served as a good enough substitute. But now, there might be something that’s even better.
A start-up company called BIOMILQ created a product that could be groundbreaking. Using “breakthrough mammary biotechnology,” BIOMILQ created cell-cultured breast milk.
Leila Strickland, a biologist who is the company’s cofounder and chief science officer, said she’s had her own personal experience with breastfeeding and believes the product could benefit many if just given a chance. "Some of the cells we’ve looked at can produce milk for months and months," according to a company statement
Baby formula has done its job feeding and nourishing babies since 1865, but could BIOMILQ do better?
Time – and babies – will tell.
Reassuring rates of ADHD after assisted reproductive techniques
published in Pediatrics.
according to a studyThe findings, based on an analysis of data from more than 1.5 million children in Sweden, provide “additional reassurance concerning offspring neurodevelopment after use of ART,” study author Chen Wang, MPH, and colleagues said. The results show the importance of accounting for underlying infertility when studying ART safety, they added. Mr. Wang is a researcher in the department of medical epidemiology and biostatistics at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm.
Prior research has not shown major differences during early childhood between children conceived with ART and those conceived spontaneously. To examine long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes, including ADHD and school performance, the investigators analyzed data in Swedish population registers from children born between 1986 and 2012.
Infertility and the use of ART became increasingly common during the study period, the researchers noted. Between 1986 and 2001, 7% of births were to couples with known infertility, and 13% of these births were achieved with ART. Between 1996 and 2012, 11% of births were to couples with infertility, and 26% of these births were achieved with ART.
“Couples with infertility were more likely older and married or cohabiting, compared with couples with no known infertility,” Mr. Wang and colleagues reported. “Among infertile couples, those that conceived with ART had, on average, higher age and education, and the women were less likely to smoke.”
The investigators estimated that the cumulative incidence of ADHD by age 15 years was 6.2% in children conceived with ART, 7.3% among children of couples with infertility who did not use ART, and 7.1% in children born to couples with no known infertility.
Overall, children conceived with ART were at lower risk of ADHD (hazard ratio, 0.83). But after adjusting for parental characteristics and health factors, the researchers found a “slightly elevated risk of ADHD with ART,” with adjusted HRs of 1.05-1.07.
When the researchers focused on children born to couples with infertility, ART was associated with a lower risk of ADHD (adjusted HR, 0.80), compared with spontaneous conception. Accounting for parental characteristics and health history, however, “attenuated the association toward the null,” the researchers reported.
The researchers also compared ART methods, including intracytoplasmic sperm injection versus standard in vitro fertilization (IVF), and fresh embryo transfer versus frozen embryo transfer. The various procedures were not associated with substantially different risks.
Patterns for school performance were generally similar to those for ADHD.
“In this large follow-up of nationwide birth cohorts, we observed lower risk of ADHD and slightly better overall school performance in children conceived with ART, compared with all other children. Differences in parental characteristics appeared to completely explain and even slightly reverse the associations,” the study authors said. “When the comparison was restricted to children of couples with known infertility, no differences were seen.”
The study was well designed and “spans more than 25 years of ART during which treatments have changed dramatically,” commented Barbara Luke, ScD, MPH, professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology at Michigan State University, East Lansing.
Dr. Luke and colleagues have studied academic achievement in children conceived with IVF in Texas. The results of the Swedish study “are in line with U.S. studies, and are generally reassuring,” Dr. Luke said.
The U.S. studies also showed that parental factors may play a role in understanding academic performance.
“In our studies of third-grade and sixth-grade academic outcomes, we found differences by racial/Hispanic origin groups, gender, and maternal age,” she said.
The study by Mr. Wang and coauthors was funded by grants from a Swedish government agency and the National Institutes of Health. The researchers and Dr. Luke had no relevant financial disclosures.
published in Pediatrics.
according to a studyThe findings, based on an analysis of data from more than 1.5 million children in Sweden, provide “additional reassurance concerning offspring neurodevelopment after use of ART,” study author Chen Wang, MPH, and colleagues said. The results show the importance of accounting for underlying infertility when studying ART safety, they added. Mr. Wang is a researcher in the department of medical epidemiology and biostatistics at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm.
Prior research has not shown major differences during early childhood between children conceived with ART and those conceived spontaneously. To examine long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes, including ADHD and school performance, the investigators analyzed data in Swedish population registers from children born between 1986 and 2012.
Infertility and the use of ART became increasingly common during the study period, the researchers noted. Between 1986 and 2001, 7% of births were to couples with known infertility, and 13% of these births were achieved with ART. Between 1996 and 2012, 11% of births were to couples with infertility, and 26% of these births were achieved with ART.
“Couples with infertility were more likely older and married or cohabiting, compared with couples with no known infertility,” Mr. Wang and colleagues reported. “Among infertile couples, those that conceived with ART had, on average, higher age and education, and the women were less likely to smoke.”
The investigators estimated that the cumulative incidence of ADHD by age 15 years was 6.2% in children conceived with ART, 7.3% among children of couples with infertility who did not use ART, and 7.1% in children born to couples with no known infertility.
Overall, children conceived with ART were at lower risk of ADHD (hazard ratio, 0.83). But after adjusting for parental characteristics and health factors, the researchers found a “slightly elevated risk of ADHD with ART,” with adjusted HRs of 1.05-1.07.
When the researchers focused on children born to couples with infertility, ART was associated with a lower risk of ADHD (adjusted HR, 0.80), compared with spontaneous conception. Accounting for parental characteristics and health history, however, “attenuated the association toward the null,” the researchers reported.
The researchers also compared ART methods, including intracytoplasmic sperm injection versus standard in vitro fertilization (IVF), and fresh embryo transfer versus frozen embryo transfer. The various procedures were not associated with substantially different risks.
Patterns for school performance were generally similar to those for ADHD.
“In this large follow-up of nationwide birth cohorts, we observed lower risk of ADHD and slightly better overall school performance in children conceived with ART, compared with all other children. Differences in parental characteristics appeared to completely explain and even slightly reverse the associations,” the study authors said. “When the comparison was restricted to children of couples with known infertility, no differences were seen.”
The study was well designed and “spans more than 25 years of ART during which treatments have changed dramatically,” commented Barbara Luke, ScD, MPH, professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology at Michigan State University, East Lansing.
Dr. Luke and colleagues have studied academic achievement in children conceived with IVF in Texas. The results of the Swedish study “are in line with U.S. studies, and are generally reassuring,” Dr. Luke said.
The U.S. studies also showed that parental factors may play a role in understanding academic performance.
“In our studies of third-grade and sixth-grade academic outcomes, we found differences by racial/Hispanic origin groups, gender, and maternal age,” she said.
The study by Mr. Wang and coauthors was funded by grants from a Swedish government agency and the National Institutes of Health. The researchers and Dr. Luke had no relevant financial disclosures.
published in Pediatrics.
according to a studyThe findings, based on an analysis of data from more than 1.5 million children in Sweden, provide “additional reassurance concerning offspring neurodevelopment after use of ART,” study author Chen Wang, MPH, and colleagues said. The results show the importance of accounting for underlying infertility when studying ART safety, they added. Mr. Wang is a researcher in the department of medical epidemiology and biostatistics at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm.
Prior research has not shown major differences during early childhood between children conceived with ART and those conceived spontaneously. To examine long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes, including ADHD and school performance, the investigators analyzed data in Swedish population registers from children born between 1986 and 2012.
Infertility and the use of ART became increasingly common during the study period, the researchers noted. Between 1986 and 2001, 7% of births were to couples with known infertility, and 13% of these births were achieved with ART. Between 1996 and 2012, 11% of births were to couples with infertility, and 26% of these births were achieved with ART.
“Couples with infertility were more likely older and married or cohabiting, compared with couples with no known infertility,” Mr. Wang and colleagues reported. “Among infertile couples, those that conceived with ART had, on average, higher age and education, and the women were less likely to smoke.”
The investigators estimated that the cumulative incidence of ADHD by age 15 years was 6.2% in children conceived with ART, 7.3% among children of couples with infertility who did not use ART, and 7.1% in children born to couples with no known infertility.
Overall, children conceived with ART were at lower risk of ADHD (hazard ratio, 0.83). But after adjusting for parental characteristics and health factors, the researchers found a “slightly elevated risk of ADHD with ART,” with adjusted HRs of 1.05-1.07.
When the researchers focused on children born to couples with infertility, ART was associated with a lower risk of ADHD (adjusted HR, 0.80), compared with spontaneous conception. Accounting for parental characteristics and health history, however, “attenuated the association toward the null,” the researchers reported.
The researchers also compared ART methods, including intracytoplasmic sperm injection versus standard in vitro fertilization (IVF), and fresh embryo transfer versus frozen embryo transfer. The various procedures were not associated with substantially different risks.
Patterns for school performance were generally similar to those for ADHD.
“In this large follow-up of nationwide birth cohorts, we observed lower risk of ADHD and slightly better overall school performance in children conceived with ART, compared with all other children. Differences in parental characteristics appeared to completely explain and even slightly reverse the associations,” the study authors said. “When the comparison was restricted to children of couples with known infertility, no differences were seen.”
The study was well designed and “spans more than 25 years of ART during which treatments have changed dramatically,” commented Barbara Luke, ScD, MPH, professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology at Michigan State University, East Lansing.
Dr. Luke and colleagues have studied academic achievement in children conceived with IVF in Texas. The results of the Swedish study “are in line with U.S. studies, and are generally reassuring,” Dr. Luke said.
The U.S. studies also showed that parental factors may play a role in understanding academic performance.
“In our studies of third-grade and sixth-grade academic outcomes, we found differences by racial/Hispanic origin groups, gender, and maternal age,” she said.
The study by Mr. Wang and coauthors was funded by grants from a Swedish government agency and the National Institutes of Health. The researchers and Dr. Luke had no relevant financial disclosures.
FROM PEDIATRICS
Delta becomes dominant coronavirus variant in U.S.
The contagious Delta variant has become the dominant form of the coronavirus in the United States, now accounting for more than 51% of COVID-19 cases in the country, according to new CDC data to updated on July 6.
The variant, also known as B.1.617.2 and first detected in India, makes up more than 80% of new cases in some Midwestern states, including Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri. Delta also accounts for 74% of cases in Western states such as Colorado and Utah and 59% of cases in Southern states such as Louisiana and Texas.
Communities with low vaccination rates are bearing the brunt of new Delta cases. Public health experts are urging those who are unvaccinated to get a shot to protect themselves and their communities against future surges.
“Right now we have two Americas: the vaccinated and the unvaccinated,” Paul Offit, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, told NPR.
“We’re feeling pretty good right now because it’s the summer,” he said. “But come winter, if we still have a significant percentage of the population that is unvaccinated, we’re going to see this virus surge again.”
So far, COVID-19 vaccines appear to protect people against the Delta variant. But health officials are watching other variants that could evade vaccine protection and lead to major outbreaks this year.
For instance, certain mutations in the Epsilon variant may allow it to evade the immunity from past infections and current COVID-19 vaccines, according to a new study published July 1 in the Science. The variant, also known as B.1.427/B.1.429 and first identified in California, has now been reported in 34 countries and could become widespread in the United States.
Researchers from the University of Washington and clinics in Switzerland tested the variant in blood samples from vaccinated people, as well as those who were previously infected with COVID-19. They found that the neutralizing power was reduced by about 2 to 3½ times.
The research team also visualized the variant and found that three mutations on Epsilon’s spike protein allow the virus to escape certain antibodies and lower the strength of vaccines.
Epsilon “relies on an indirect and unusual neutralization-escape strategy,” they wrote, saying that understanding these escape routes could help scientists track new variants, curb the pandemic, and create booster shots.
In Australia, for instance, public health officials have detected the Lambda variant, which could be more infectious than the Delta variant and resistant to vaccines, according to Sky News.
A hotel quarantine program in New South Wales identified the variant in someone who had returned from travel, the news outlet reported. Also known as C.37, Lambda was named a “variant of interest” by the World Health Organization in June.
Lambda was first identified in Peru in December and now accounts for more than 80% of the country’s cases, according to the Financial Times. It has since been found in 27 countries, including the U.S., U.K., and Germany.
The variant has seven mutations on the spike protein that allow the virus to infect human cells, the news outlet reported. One mutation is like another mutation on the Delta variant, which could make it more contagious.
In a preprint study published July 1, researchers at the University of Chile at Santiago found that Lambda is better able to escape antibodies created by the CoronaVac vaccine made by Sinovac in China. In the paper, which hasn’t yet been peer-reviewed, researchers tested blood samples from local health care workers in Santiago who had received two doses of the vaccine.
“Our data revealed that the spike protein ... carries mutations conferring increased infectivity and the ability to escape from neutralizing antibodies,” they wrote.
The research team urged countries to continue testing for contagious variants, even in areas with high vaccination rates, so scientists can identify mutations quickly and analyze whether new variants can escape vaccines.
“The world has to get its act together,” Saad Omer, PhD, director of the Yale Institute for Global Health, told NPR. “Otherwise yet another, potentially more dangerous, variant could emerge.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
The contagious Delta variant has become the dominant form of the coronavirus in the United States, now accounting for more than 51% of COVID-19 cases in the country, according to new CDC data to updated on July 6.
The variant, also known as B.1.617.2 and first detected in India, makes up more than 80% of new cases in some Midwestern states, including Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri. Delta also accounts for 74% of cases in Western states such as Colorado and Utah and 59% of cases in Southern states such as Louisiana and Texas.
Communities with low vaccination rates are bearing the brunt of new Delta cases. Public health experts are urging those who are unvaccinated to get a shot to protect themselves and their communities against future surges.
“Right now we have two Americas: the vaccinated and the unvaccinated,” Paul Offit, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, told NPR.
“We’re feeling pretty good right now because it’s the summer,” he said. “But come winter, if we still have a significant percentage of the population that is unvaccinated, we’re going to see this virus surge again.”
So far, COVID-19 vaccines appear to protect people against the Delta variant. But health officials are watching other variants that could evade vaccine protection and lead to major outbreaks this year.
For instance, certain mutations in the Epsilon variant may allow it to evade the immunity from past infections and current COVID-19 vaccines, according to a new study published July 1 in the Science. The variant, also known as B.1.427/B.1.429 and first identified in California, has now been reported in 34 countries and could become widespread in the United States.
Researchers from the University of Washington and clinics in Switzerland tested the variant in blood samples from vaccinated people, as well as those who were previously infected with COVID-19. They found that the neutralizing power was reduced by about 2 to 3½ times.
The research team also visualized the variant and found that three mutations on Epsilon’s spike protein allow the virus to escape certain antibodies and lower the strength of vaccines.
Epsilon “relies on an indirect and unusual neutralization-escape strategy,” they wrote, saying that understanding these escape routes could help scientists track new variants, curb the pandemic, and create booster shots.
In Australia, for instance, public health officials have detected the Lambda variant, which could be more infectious than the Delta variant and resistant to vaccines, according to Sky News.
A hotel quarantine program in New South Wales identified the variant in someone who had returned from travel, the news outlet reported. Also known as C.37, Lambda was named a “variant of interest” by the World Health Organization in June.
Lambda was first identified in Peru in December and now accounts for more than 80% of the country’s cases, according to the Financial Times. It has since been found in 27 countries, including the U.S., U.K., and Germany.
The variant has seven mutations on the spike protein that allow the virus to infect human cells, the news outlet reported. One mutation is like another mutation on the Delta variant, which could make it more contagious.
In a preprint study published July 1, researchers at the University of Chile at Santiago found that Lambda is better able to escape antibodies created by the CoronaVac vaccine made by Sinovac in China. In the paper, which hasn’t yet been peer-reviewed, researchers tested blood samples from local health care workers in Santiago who had received two doses of the vaccine.
“Our data revealed that the spike protein ... carries mutations conferring increased infectivity and the ability to escape from neutralizing antibodies,” they wrote.
The research team urged countries to continue testing for contagious variants, even in areas with high vaccination rates, so scientists can identify mutations quickly and analyze whether new variants can escape vaccines.
“The world has to get its act together,” Saad Omer, PhD, director of the Yale Institute for Global Health, told NPR. “Otherwise yet another, potentially more dangerous, variant could emerge.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
The contagious Delta variant has become the dominant form of the coronavirus in the United States, now accounting for more than 51% of COVID-19 cases in the country, according to new CDC data to updated on July 6.
The variant, also known as B.1.617.2 and first detected in India, makes up more than 80% of new cases in some Midwestern states, including Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri. Delta also accounts for 74% of cases in Western states such as Colorado and Utah and 59% of cases in Southern states such as Louisiana and Texas.
Communities with low vaccination rates are bearing the brunt of new Delta cases. Public health experts are urging those who are unvaccinated to get a shot to protect themselves and their communities against future surges.
“Right now we have two Americas: the vaccinated and the unvaccinated,” Paul Offit, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, told NPR.
“We’re feeling pretty good right now because it’s the summer,” he said. “But come winter, if we still have a significant percentage of the population that is unvaccinated, we’re going to see this virus surge again.”
So far, COVID-19 vaccines appear to protect people against the Delta variant. But health officials are watching other variants that could evade vaccine protection and lead to major outbreaks this year.
For instance, certain mutations in the Epsilon variant may allow it to evade the immunity from past infections and current COVID-19 vaccines, according to a new study published July 1 in the Science. The variant, also known as B.1.427/B.1.429 and first identified in California, has now been reported in 34 countries and could become widespread in the United States.
Researchers from the University of Washington and clinics in Switzerland tested the variant in blood samples from vaccinated people, as well as those who were previously infected with COVID-19. They found that the neutralizing power was reduced by about 2 to 3½ times.
The research team also visualized the variant and found that three mutations on Epsilon’s spike protein allow the virus to escape certain antibodies and lower the strength of vaccines.
Epsilon “relies on an indirect and unusual neutralization-escape strategy,” they wrote, saying that understanding these escape routes could help scientists track new variants, curb the pandemic, and create booster shots.
In Australia, for instance, public health officials have detected the Lambda variant, which could be more infectious than the Delta variant and resistant to vaccines, according to Sky News.
A hotel quarantine program in New South Wales identified the variant in someone who had returned from travel, the news outlet reported. Also known as C.37, Lambda was named a “variant of interest” by the World Health Organization in June.
Lambda was first identified in Peru in December and now accounts for more than 80% of the country’s cases, according to the Financial Times. It has since been found in 27 countries, including the U.S., U.K., and Germany.
The variant has seven mutations on the spike protein that allow the virus to infect human cells, the news outlet reported. One mutation is like another mutation on the Delta variant, which could make it more contagious.
In a preprint study published July 1, researchers at the University of Chile at Santiago found that Lambda is better able to escape antibodies created by the CoronaVac vaccine made by Sinovac in China. In the paper, which hasn’t yet been peer-reviewed, researchers tested blood samples from local health care workers in Santiago who had received two doses of the vaccine.
“Our data revealed that the spike protein ... carries mutations conferring increased infectivity and the ability to escape from neutralizing antibodies,” they wrote.
The research team urged countries to continue testing for contagious variants, even in areas with high vaccination rates, so scientists can identify mutations quickly and analyze whether new variants can escape vaccines.
“The world has to get its act together,” Saad Omer, PhD, director of the Yale Institute for Global Health, told NPR. “Otherwise yet another, potentially more dangerous, variant could emerge.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Postpartum depression affects dads, too
Michael W., a 38-year-old New Jersey–based attorney, and his wife had been excitedly planning for the birth of their baby and were overjoyed when she was born.
But after that, “I found that parenting a newborn was shockingly exhausting. I felt unprepared for the task, overwhelmed by the burden of the 24-hour-schedule and lack of sleep, and I struggled with feelings of inadequacy,” he said in an interview.
Michael never thought he had postpartum depression (PPD), perhaps because the condition is more commonly associated with women. But a study published in the American Journal of Men’s Health suggests that PPD also affects men.
A team of Danish investigators led by researcher Sarah Pedersen, of the department of public health, Aarhus University, extensively interviewed eight fathers with PPD and found their primary experiences involved feelings of being overwhelmed and powerless or inadequate, which sometimes turned into anger and frustration.
“I think one of the most important take-home messages is that practicing clinicians working with new parents should invite fathers to your consultations and engage the fathers as much as possible,” Ms. Pedersen said in an interview.
The findings also contained a message for parents, she says.
“I hope you will support each other and talk about your feelings and how you experience the transition to parenthood – know that it will take time to adjust to your new role,” she said.
Not enough attention
There’s been too little focus on fathers when it comes to PPD, according to Ms. Pedersen.
“During the last decade, several studies have examined the prevalence of PPD in men, and there is rising evidence that paternal PPD is associated with increased risk of long-term adverse behavioral and emotional outcomes in children,” she said.
Nevertheless, only three studies have been based on interviews with fathers who had personal experience with PPD.
“The purpose of our study was, first of all, to explore the lived experience of fathers who had PPD and, secondly, to gain deeper understanding of their help-seeking behavior – barriers to seeking help and facilitators of help-seeking,” Ms. Pedersen said.
The study was based on “semistructured” interviews with eight Danish fathers (ages 29-38 years) who had had PPD, none of whom had a previous history of depression.
All of them had received a formal diagnosis of PPD by a general practitioner or psychologist, and all had sought or received mental health care and considered themselves recovered from depression at the time of the interview.
The researchers used a technique called interpretative phenomenological analysis to analyze the interviews.
This method “aims to produce in-depth examinations of certain phenomena by examining how individuals make meaning of their own life experiences,” the authors wrote.
A ‘radical change’
Of the fathers, five described the period of pregnancy as a “time of happiness, full of positive expectations about fatherhood.”
But “the fathers’ great expectations were later replaced by a very different reality of fatherhood,” the authors wrote, noting that the transition to fatherhood was, in the words of one participant, a “radical change that you just can’t imagine.”
Most fathers expressed a feeling of being overwhelmed, and three felt unready for the task, which added to their depression.
“The participants wanted to be emotionally and physically present in their child’s life, but during the time of their depression, these kind-hearted intentions changed into feelings of guilt and inadequacy, as the participants did not feel they had enough energy and mental strength to become the kind of fathers they wanted to be,” the authors wrote.
The fathers mentioned stressors they believed contributed to their PPD, including complications during their partners’ pregnancies, unplanned cesarean birth (three fathers), the partners’ difficulties with breastfeeding (five fathers), and employment-related concerns. Five reported that their partners had postpartum emotional distress.
‘Masculine norms’
A second focus of the research was to examine fathers’ help-seeking behaviors, Ms. Pedersen said.
Ultimately, all the men sought formal help, either from their general practitioners or from a health visitor, with two seeking help right after birth.
Although the men were able to recognize changes in mood and behavior in retrospect, many did not regard them as signs of depression before their diagnosis.
Most had heard of PPD, but primarily as it affects women. Three sought information online about paternal PPD but couldn’t find any.
Four participants described experiencing PPD as “taboo,” based on a “combination of false beliefs, stigma, and masculine norms,” the authors stated, since men “are supposed to be big and strong and take care of everything, and suddenly you can’t.”
The authors reported that seven participants were screened for PPD or depression by a health care professional.
“The screening was an important part of the help-seeking process, as this was the first time two of the fathers were introduced to PPD,” the authors noted.
Although the screening “had the potential to spark conversation” about PPD, it was geared toward women, and some participants did not feel it was relevant to them.
“Future research should focus on identification of educational needs about paternal PPD among both parents, health care professionals, and other professionals taking care of new families,” Ms. Pedersen said.
Michael W. says it would have been helpful if someone had prepared him and his wife for what to expect, or if there had been some type of screening. Also, he advises expectant parents to “get some real-life experience by spending time around a newborn to see what’s involved.”
Different symptoms
“We often talk about mothers suffering from PPD, so it is more normalized for mothers to bring it up or for loved ones to ask mothers about how they are doing physically and psychologically after the birth,” Craig Garfield, MD, an attending physician and founder/director of Family and Child Health innovations at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital, Chicago, said in an interview.
For fathers, “it is not discussed as commonly, so friends and families don’t often ask dads, and dads don’t know where to turn,” said Dr. Garfield, professor of pediatrics and medical social sciences at Northwestern University, Chicago. He was not involved with the study.
He noted that symptoms in fathers might differ from those of mothers.
“I have seen fathers who are anxious or more moody than they had been prior, or more angry, and I have seen fathers who throw themselves into work or begin drinking more – all related to changes in mood and depressive symptoms in the postnatal period,” he said.
Symptoms in men may last longer than in women. Dr. Garfield’s group published a study in which they surveyed 400 mothers and fathers of premature infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) about depressive symptoms around the time of NICU admission, at discharge home, and then after 30 days at home.
Roughly one-third of mothers screened positive for depressive symptoms around NICU admission, as did 17% of fathers. But the mothers’ depression scores improved by discharge and 30 days after being home, while the fathers’ remained “essentially unchanged,” he said.
“Further, we found that if doctors were to screen mothers and fathers during the NICU stay – at admission or even at discharge – that would greatly improve their ability to predict who would still have depressive symptoms 1 month after going home.”
Ms. Pedersen agrees that clinicians should incorporate screening for PPD into their practices and be proactive in encouraging fathers to get help.
“Keep pushing,” she advised, as “men rarely seek help, compared to women, in matters of mental health.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Michael W., a 38-year-old New Jersey–based attorney, and his wife had been excitedly planning for the birth of their baby and were overjoyed when she was born.
But after that, “I found that parenting a newborn was shockingly exhausting. I felt unprepared for the task, overwhelmed by the burden of the 24-hour-schedule and lack of sleep, and I struggled with feelings of inadequacy,” he said in an interview.
Michael never thought he had postpartum depression (PPD), perhaps because the condition is more commonly associated with women. But a study published in the American Journal of Men’s Health suggests that PPD also affects men.
A team of Danish investigators led by researcher Sarah Pedersen, of the department of public health, Aarhus University, extensively interviewed eight fathers with PPD and found their primary experiences involved feelings of being overwhelmed and powerless or inadequate, which sometimes turned into anger and frustration.
“I think one of the most important take-home messages is that practicing clinicians working with new parents should invite fathers to your consultations and engage the fathers as much as possible,” Ms. Pedersen said in an interview.
The findings also contained a message for parents, she says.
“I hope you will support each other and talk about your feelings and how you experience the transition to parenthood – know that it will take time to adjust to your new role,” she said.
Not enough attention
There’s been too little focus on fathers when it comes to PPD, according to Ms. Pedersen.
“During the last decade, several studies have examined the prevalence of PPD in men, and there is rising evidence that paternal PPD is associated with increased risk of long-term adverse behavioral and emotional outcomes in children,” she said.
Nevertheless, only three studies have been based on interviews with fathers who had personal experience with PPD.
“The purpose of our study was, first of all, to explore the lived experience of fathers who had PPD and, secondly, to gain deeper understanding of their help-seeking behavior – barriers to seeking help and facilitators of help-seeking,” Ms. Pedersen said.
The study was based on “semistructured” interviews with eight Danish fathers (ages 29-38 years) who had had PPD, none of whom had a previous history of depression.
All of them had received a formal diagnosis of PPD by a general practitioner or psychologist, and all had sought or received mental health care and considered themselves recovered from depression at the time of the interview.
The researchers used a technique called interpretative phenomenological analysis to analyze the interviews.
This method “aims to produce in-depth examinations of certain phenomena by examining how individuals make meaning of their own life experiences,” the authors wrote.
A ‘radical change’
Of the fathers, five described the period of pregnancy as a “time of happiness, full of positive expectations about fatherhood.”
But “the fathers’ great expectations were later replaced by a very different reality of fatherhood,” the authors wrote, noting that the transition to fatherhood was, in the words of one participant, a “radical change that you just can’t imagine.”
Most fathers expressed a feeling of being overwhelmed, and three felt unready for the task, which added to their depression.
“The participants wanted to be emotionally and physically present in their child’s life, but during the time of their depression, these kind-hearted intentions changed into feelings of guilt and inadequacy, as the participants did not feel they had enough energy and mental strength to become the kind of fathers they wanted to be,” the authors wrote.
The fathers mentioned stressors they believed contributed to their PPD, including complications during their partners’ pregnancies, unplanned cesarean birth (three fathers), the partners’ difficulties with breastfeeding (five fathers), and employment-related concerns. Five reported that their partners had postpartum emotional distress.
‘Masculine norms’
A second focus of the research was to examine fathers’ help-seeking behaviors, Ms. Pedersen said.
Ultimately, all the men sought formal help, either from their general practitioners or from a health visitor, with two seeking help right after birth.
Although the men were able to recognize changes in mood and behavior in retrospect, many did not regard them as signs of depression before their diagnosis.
Most had heard of PPD, but primarily as it affects women. Three sought information online about paternal PPD but couldn’t find any.
Four participants described experiencing PPD as “taboo,” based on a “combination of false beliefs, stigma, and masculine norms,” the authors stated, since men “are supposed to be big and strong and take care of everything, and suddenly you can’t.”
The authors reported that seven participants were screened for PPD or depression by a health care professional.
“The screening was an important part of the help-seeking process, as this was the first time two of the fathers were introduced to PPD,” the authors noted.
Although the screening “had the potential to spark conversation” about PPD, it was geared toward women, and some participants did not feel it was relevant to them.
“Future research should focus on identification of educational needs about paternal PPD among both parents, health care professionals, and other professionals taking care of new families,” Ms. Pedersen said.
Michael W. says it would have been helpful if someone had prepared him and his wife for what to expect, or if there had been some type of screening. Also, he advises expectant parents to “get some real-life experience by spending time around a newborn to see what’s involved.”
Different symptoms
“We often talk about mothers suffering from PPD, so it is more normalized for mothers to bring it up or for loved ones to ask mothers about how they are doing physically and psychologically after the birth,” Craig Garfield, MD, an attending physician and founder/director of Family and Child Health innovations at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital, Chicago, said in an interview.
For fathers, “it is not discussed as commonly, so friends and families don’t often ask dads, and dads don’t know where to turn,” said Dr. Garfield, professor of pediatrics and medical social sciences at Northwestern University, Chicago. He was not involved with the study.
He noted that symptoms in fathers might differ from those of mothers.
“I have seen fathers who are anxious or more moody than they had been prior, or more angry, and I have seen fathers who throw themselves into work or begin drinking more – all related to changes in mood and depressive symptoms in the postnatal period,” he said.
Symptoms in men may last longer than in women. Dr. Garfield’s group published a study in which they surveyed 400 mothers and fathers of premature infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) about depressive symptoms around the time of NICU admission, at discharge home, and then after 30 days at home.
Roughly one-third of mothers screened positive for depressive symptoms around NICU admission, as did 17% of fathers. But the mothers’ depression scores improved by discharge and 30 days after being home, while the fathers’ remained “essentially unchanged,” he said.
“Further, we found that if doctors were to screen mothers and fathers during the NICU stay – at admission or even at discharge – that would greatly improve their ability to predict who would still have depressive symptoms 1 month after going home.”
Ms. Pedersen agrees that clinicians should incorporate screening for PPD into their practices and be proactive in encouraging fathers to get help.
“Keep pushing,” she advised, as “men rarely seek help, compared to women, in matters of mental health.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Michael W., a 38-year-old New Jersey–based attorney, and his wife had been excitedly planning for the birth of their baby and were overjoyed when she was born.
But after that, “I found that parenting a newborn was shockingly exhausting. I felt unprepared for the task, overwhelmed by the burden of the 24-hour-schedule and lack of sleep, and I struggled with feelings of inadequacy,” he said in an interview.
Michael never thought he had postpartum depression (PPD), perhaps because the condition is more commonly associated with women. But a study published in the American Journal of Men’s Health suggests that PPD also affects men.
A team of Danish investigators led by researcher Sarah Pedersen, of the department of public health, Aarhus University, extensively interviewed eight fathers with PPD and found their primary experiences involved feelings of being overwhelmed and powerless or inadequate, which sometimes turned into anger and frustration.
“I think one of the most important take-home messages is that practicing clinicians working with new parents should invite fathers to your consultations and engage the fathers as much as possible,” Ms. Pedersen said in an interview.
The findings also contained a message for parents, she says.
“I hope you will support each other and talk about your feelings and how you experience the transition to parenthood – know that it will take time to adjust to your new role,” she said.
Not enough attention
There’s been too little focus on fathers when it comes to PPD, according to Ms. Pedersen.
“During the last decade, several studies have examined the prevalence of PPD in men, and there is rising evidence that paternal PPD is associated with increased risk of long-term adverse behavioral and emotional outcomes in children,” she said.
Nevertheless, only three studies have been based on interviews with fathers who had personal experience with PPD.
“The purpose of our study was, first of all, to explore the lived experience of fathers who had PPD and, secondly, to gain deeper understanding of their help-seeking behavior – barriers to seeking help and facilitators of help-seeking,” Ms. Pedersen said.
The study was based on “semistructured” interviews with eight Danish fathers (ages 29-38 years) who had had PPD, none of whom had a previous history of depression.
All of them had received a formal diagnosis of PPD by a general practitioner or psychologist, and all had sought or received mental health care and considered themselves recovered from depression at the time of the interview.
The researchers used a technique called interpretative phenomenological analysis to analyze the interviews.
This method “aims to produce in-depth examinations of certain phenomena by examining how individuals make meaning of their own life experiences,” the authors wrote.
A ‘radical change’
Of the fathers, five described the period of pregnancy as a “time of happiness, full of positive expectations about fatherhood.”
But “the fathers’ great expectations were later replaced by a very different reality of fatherhood,” the authors wrote, noting that the transition to fatherhood was, in the words of one participant, a “radical change that you just can’t imagine.”
Most fathers expressed a feeling of being overwhelmed, and three felt unready for the task, which added to their depression.
“The participants wanted to be emotionally and physically present in their child’s life, but during the time of their depression, these kind-hearted intentions changed into feelings of guilt and inadequacy, as the participants did not feel they had enough energy and mental strength to become the kind of fathers they wanted to be,” the authors wrote.
The fathers mentioned stressors they believed contributed to their PPD, including complications during their partners’ pregnancies, unplanned cesarean birth (three fathers), the partners’ difficulties with breastfeeding (five fathers), and employment-related concerns. Five reported that their partners had postpartum emotional distress.
‘Masculine norms’
A second focus of the research was to examine fathers’ help-seeking behaviors, Ms. Pedersen said.
Ultimately, all the men sought formal help, either from their general practitioners or from a health visitor, with two seeking help right after birth.
Although the men were able to recognize changes in mood and behavior in retrospect, many did not regard them as signs of depression before their diagnosis.
Most had heard of PPD, but primarily as it affects women. Three sought information online about paternal PPD but couldn’t find any.
Four participants described experiencing PPD as “taboo,” based on a “combination of false beliefs, stigma, and masculine norms,” the authors stated, since men “are supposed to be big and strong and take care of everything, and suddenly you can’t.”
The authors reported that seven participants were screened for PPD or depression by a health care professional.
“The screening was an important part of the help-seeking process, as this was the first time two of the fathers were introduced to PPD,” the authors noted.
Although the screening “had the potential to spark conversation” about PPD, it was geared toward women, and some participants did not feel it was relevant to them.
“Future research should focus on identification of educational needs about paternal PPD among both parents, health care professionals, and other professionals taking care of new families,” Ms. Pedersen said.
Michael W. says it would have been helpful if someone had prepared him and his wife for what to expect, or if there had been some type of screening. Also, he advises expectant parents to “get some real-life experience by spending time around a newborn to see what’s involved.”
Different symptoms
“We often talk about mothers suffering from PPD, so it is more normalized for mothers to bring it up or for loved ones to ask mothers about how they are doing physically and psychologically after the birth,” Craig Garfield, MD, an attending physician and founder/director of Family and Child Health innovations at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital, Chicago, said in an interview.
For fathers, “it is not discussed as commonly, so friends and families don’t often ask dads, and dads don’t know where to turn,” said Dr. Garfield, professor of pediatrics and medical social sciences at Northwestern University, Chicago. He was not involved with the study.
He noted that symptoms in fathers might differ from those of mothers.
“I have seen fathers who are anxious or more moody than they had been prior, or more angry, and I have seen fathers who throw themselves into work or begin drinking more – all related to changes in mood and depressive symptoms in the postnatal period,” he said.
Symptoms in men may last longer than in women. Dr. Garfield’s group published a study in which they surveyed 400 mothers and fathers of premature infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) about depressive symptoms around the time of NICU admission, at discharge home, and then after 30 days at home.
Roughly one-third of mothers screened positive for depressive symptoms around NICU admission, as did 17% of fathers. But the mothers’ depression scores improved by discharge and 30 days after being home, while the fathers’ remained “essentially unchanged,” he said.
“Further, we found that if doctors were to screen mothers and fathers during the NICU stay – at admission or even at discharge – that would greatly improve their ability to predict who would still have depressive symptoms 1 month after going home.”
Ms. Pedersen agrees that clinicians should incorporate screening for PPD into their practices and be proactive in encouraging fathers to get help.
“Keep pushing,” she advised, as “men rarely seek help, compared to women, in matters of mental health.”
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
2021 Update on abnormal uterine bleeding
Abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) continues to be a top-10 reason why women present for gynecologic care, which makes keeping up with clinical therapies important. Over the past year, we have learned a tremendous amount about elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy for the treatment of bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. In this Update, we provide an overview from 3 randomized clinical trials on the recent US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug, elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy (approved May 29, 2020). In addition, we review the data on the Cerene cryotherapy device (Channel Medsystems), as one might rightly ask, do we need another endometrial ablation device? We will address that question, as this device has some unique features that gynecologists should be aware of. Last, we review a study on the importance of considering quality of life in patients with uterine fibroids, which provides sobering information on the psychosocial aspects of uterine fibroids that all clinicians who care for such patients should be aware of.
Endometrial ablation with a new cryotherapy device: Is less more?
Curlin HL, Cintron LC, Anderson TL. A prospective, multicenter, clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the Cerene device to treat heavy menstrual bleeding. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2021;28:899-908.
The phrase “less is more,” in the world of architecture and design, is often associated with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969). One could argue that this principle is one key advantage with the addition of yet another non-resectoscopic endometrial ablation device. The Cerene cryotherapy device, FDA approved in 2019, is presented as a simple, disposable device for in-office use that takes advantage of natural cryoanesthesia and results in less tissue destruction than many other ablation methods.
Device reduces bleeding and permits greater ability for future evaluation
Recently, Curlin and colleagues conducted a prospective, multicenter clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the Cerene device in reducing menstrual blood loss.1 They followed 230 patients over 12 months and found that 81% (77% with intention-to-treat analysis) met the primary end point of a pictorial blood loss assessment chart (PBLAC) score of 75 or lower. Clinically, this translated to 44% of patients experiencing light bleeding; 27%, eumenorrhea; and 10%, amenorrhea. This is clearly “less” in terms of the rate of amenorrhea in most endometrial ablation studies. However, this also may translate into “more” ability to evaluate the endometrial cavity in the future, as 97% of the patients were able to undergo hysteroscopy at the 12-month mark and, of those, 93% were able to have the entire endometrial cavity assessed.
Further, of 97 patients who had a tubal sterilization, none had symptoms or evidence of postablation tubal sterilization syndrome. Three patients were unable to undergo hysteroscopy due to pain intolerance (2) or cervical stenosis (1). This is important because some gynecologists have expressed concern over intrauterine synechiae, which may result in scarring and associated future difficulty in assessing the endometrium for possible cancer.
Details about the device
The Cerene device is a single use, disposable device that uses cryothermal energy from nitrous oxide that results in a liquid-to-gas phase change within a polyurethane balloon (resulting in a temperature of -86°C) and delivered through a 6-mm sheath. It may be used in uterine cavities that measure between 2.5 and 6.5 cm in length, corresponding to approximately 10 cm in a uterine sound measurement. Treatment time is 2.5 minutes of nitrous oxide flow.
As mentioned, another benefit claimed is that the Cerene device’s cryoanalgesia properties enable the procedure to be more tolerated in the office setting. Of the 230 patients studied in the Curlin trial, no procedures were performed under general anesthesia.1 Medications used included paracervical block (PCB) only (8%), PCB plus nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (19.8%), PCB plus oral narcotics/anxiolytics (69%), and PCB plus intravenous sedation (2.9%), showing that this device is ideally suited for in-office use.
The rate of serious adverse events was 2.5% (7 total events in 6 patients within 12 months). All serious adverse events were reviewed by a Clinical Events Committee and none were deemed to be device-related events.
Long-term outcomes remain to be seen
For physicians and patients who worry about the ability to access the endometrial cavity in the future, less may be more. It will be interesting to see what the long-term outcomes show with use of the Cerene cryotherapy device, and whether a lower amenorrhea rate will translate into a higher repeat intervention rate or not. Of course, not all are minimalists. As the architect Robert Venturi (1925–2018) was quoted as saying, “Less is a bore.”
The new Cerene cryotherapy endometrial ablation method meets the FDA’s target for reduction of menstrual blood loss, but it has a slightly lower amenorrhea rate than other devices. Its most significant features are the potential for improved analgesia for in-office use and the possibility that there may be less scarring of the endometrial cavity for future assessment if needed.
Continue to: QoL assessment in women with fibroids is useful in evaluating treatment success...
QoL assessment in women with fibroids is useful in evaluating treatment success
Go VAA, Thomas MC, Singh B, et al. A systematic review of the psychosocial impact of fibroids before and after treatment. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020;223:674- 708.e8.
In many studies that assess AUB, the primary emphasis generally is placed on quantitation of menstrual bleeding by using PBLAC and alkaline hematin scores. In a systematic review, Go and colleagues argue the case for the importance of measuring the psychosocial impact of abnormal bleeding, emphasizing the concerning finding that many women with fibroids report lower vitality and lower social function scores than women with breast cancer.2
Fibroids associated with inconvenience—and anxiety
The authors analyzed and reviewed 18 randomized trials and 39 observational studies after screening 3,625 records from electronic database searches, with the goal to include only studies with validated quality of life (QoL) questionnaires that were administered both before and after treatment. A highlighted aspect of the reviewed studies was that “control” and “concern” subscales were most affected by fibroids, noting the inconvenience and anxiety that are related to the unpredictable onset and intensity of menses and the feeling of loss of control over one’s health and future.
This systematic review is important because although previous research has shown that fibroids significantly affect QoL, the psychosocial burden of fibroid symptoms had not been compared across different QoL instruments for both disease-specific and general validated health subscales.
Disability levels with fibroids are similar to those with other chronic diseases
Go and colleagues further reported that uterine fibroids have considerable psychosocial impact and lead to poor overall QoL physically and emotionally, with diminished sexual function and increased urinary or defecatory issues. Women with fibroids experienced a level of disability that was similar to that seen in other chronic diseases, and their vitality scores were lower than those associated with heart disease, diabetes, and as mentioned, breast cancer.
The authors concluded that “although objective clinical measures are important to establish a comprehensive understanding of health status, patient reported QoL outcomes play a critical role in evaluating success of a therapy.” They suggested that a larger emphasis on patient-centered care may help to mitigate the psychosocial effects of fibroids.
The study by Go and colleagues highlights the significant psychosocial aspects of the heavy menstrual bleeding associated with fibroids, and the authors found that many women with fibroids score in the range of those with other significant diseases, such as breast cancer and diabetes.
We have noted the trend of including QoL in research, and Go and colleagues make an excellent and compelling argument for this trend using quantitative analysis. It is important to consider this not only in our design of future research but also, and perhaps more importantly, in our clinical care of women as we try to better understand what they are experiencing.
Continue to: What have we learned over the past year about elagolix for uterine fibroids?...
What have we learned over the past year about elagolix for uterine fibroids?
Schlaff WD, Ackerman RT, Al-Hendy A, et al. Elagolix for heavy menstrual bleeding in women with uterine fibroids. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:328-340.
Simon JA, Al-Hendy A, Archer DF, et al. Elagolix treatment for up to 12 months in women with heavy menstrual bleeding and uterine leiomyomas. Obstet Gynecol. 2020;135:1313-1326.
Al-Hendy A, Bradley L, Owens CD, et al. Predictors of response for elagolix with add-back therapy in women with heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021:224-72.e1-72.e50.
Data from the Elaris UF-1 and UF-2 6-month, phase 3 trials3 and the results of the Elaris UF-EXTEND trial with a 6-month extension (totaling 12 months of use)4 were published in 2020, and the 12-month results were discussed in OBG Management (2020;32[7]:35, 39-40). An additional data analysis from the same researchers assessed the effect of elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy in a number of patient subgroups.5 These 3 publications have added to our knowledge of this therapy, and it is worth reviewing them in this context
Design of the elagolix plus hormonal add-back therapy trials
The initial UF-1 and UF-2 trials were 2 identical, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, 6-month, phase 3 trials designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of elagolix and hormonal add-back therapy.3 UF-1 was conducted at 76 sites in the United States from December 2015 through December 2018, whereas UF-2 was conducted at 77 sites in the United States and Canada from February 2016 through January 2019; the trials were registered separately. Both trials had a 2:1:1 randomization of elagolix (300 mg twice daily) with hormonal add-back therapy (estradiol 1 mg and norethindrone acetate 0.5 mg daily), elagolix alone (300 mg twice daily), or placebo.
In the 6-month studies, the primary end point was both menstrual blood loss of less than 80 mL and at least a 50% reduction of menstrual blood loss as measured by the alkaline hematin method.3 Among several secondary end points was the assessment of QoL using the Uterine Fibroid Symptom QoL questionnaire (UFS-QoL).
Trial results. In UF-1, 68.5% of 206 women, and in UF-2, 76.5% of 189 women, respectively, taking elagolix with add-back therapy met the primary objective. Among women taking elagolix alone, in UF-1, 84.1% of 104 women, and in UF-2, 77% of 95 women, respectively, met criteria. There was improvement in UFS-QoL scores in women receiving elagolix plus add-back therapy with a reduction of symptom severity of -33.2 in UF-1 and -41.4 in UF-2, as compared with the placebo-treated groups (-10.3 and -7.7, respectively).
Adverse effects. Elagolix was associated with a low incidence of serious adverse effects, and the addition of hormonal add-back therapy attenuated the decreases in bone mineral density observed with elagolix alone. In both UF-1 and UF-2 trials, bone mineral density did not differ significantly in the groups of women who received elagolix with hormonal addback therapy versus placebo.
The extension trial results
Of note, in the 12-month study (6-month extension), the authors reported that 87.9% of the women taking elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy met the primary objective.4 Among the women taking elagolix alone, 89.4% met the primary objective.
In a review of the AbbVie-funded extension study, the editorial comments in the Obstetrical and Gynecological Survey expressed concern over the high proportion of data loss, comparing the number of patients joining the extended trial, patients who completed an additional 6 months of treatment, and patients who completed the posttreatment follow-up period of “up to 12 months.”6 Approximately one-third of patients were lost between initial enrollment to the subset who completed follow-up. There was concern that “losses of that magnitude pose a serious threat to validity.”6
Effectiveness in subgroups
Al-Hendy and colleagues analyzed data from the Elaris UF-1 and UF-2 trials to see if the outcomes for elagolix with hormonal addback therapy demonstrated safety and efficacy in subgroups of patients of varying ages, races and ethnicities, baseline menstrual blood loss, body mass indices, fibroid location, and uterine and fibroid volume.5
Results. In all subgroups, they found a statistically significant reduction in blood loss in mean menstrual blood loss volume for those treated with elagolix plus hormonal addback therapy compared with those treated with placebo. As well, in terms of QoL, among all subgroups, the mean change in symptom severity score as well as health-related QoL total score from baseline to month 6 was statistically significantly greater than the mean change in the placebo group.
The bottom line
Elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy appears to be a safe and effective method to reduce menstrual blood loss associated with uterine fibroids. It also has a favorable effect on QoL and appears to have benefits in subgroups of women of varying ages, races and ethnicities, baseline menstrual blood loss, body mass indices, fibroid location, and uterine and fibroid volume. ●
Elagolix plus hormonal add-back therapy provides several advantages to fibroid care, including a pill form that, as a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, provides much quicker action than GnRH agonists. The hormonal add-back feature seems to improve QoL measures and has a favorable reported bleeding reduction rate. It also appears to be reasonably safe. Although the studies reviewed here may have some weaknesses, it helps to have another therapy to offer to women who have blood loss associated with fibroids. Deciding on the drug’s optimal clinical use has not been fully explored, as it may be a short-term solution to a long-term problem and may not be ideal for all patients with fibroids. Elagolix and hormonal add-back therapy may be advantageous for patients who need to stop bleeding quickly and are trying to decide about their reproductive plans, for patients close to menopause who need a therapy to bridge this gap, and for patients trying to obtain relief between pregnancies.
- Curlin HL, Cintron LC, Anderson TL. A prospective, multicenter, clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the Cerene device to treat heavy menstrual bleeding. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2021;28:899-908.
- Go VAA, Thomas MC, Singh B, et al. A systematic review of the psychosocial impact of fibroids before and after treatment. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020;223:674-708.e8.
- Schlaff WD, Ackerman RT, Al-Hendy A, et al. Elagolix for heavy menstrual bleeding in women with uterine fibroids. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:328-340.
- Simon JA, Al-Hendy A, Archer DF, et al. Elagolix treatment for up to 12 months in women with heavy menstrual bleeding and uterine leiomyomas. Obstet Gynecol. 2020;135:1313-1326.
- Al-Hendy A, Bradley L, Owens CD, et al. Predictors of response for elagolix with add-back therapy in women with heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021:224-72.e1-72.e50.
- Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey. 2020;75:545-547.
Abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) continues to be a top-10 reason why women present for gynecologic care, which makes keeping up with clinical therapies important. Over the past year, we have learned a tremendous amount about elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy for the treatment of bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. In this Update, we provide an overview from 3 randomized clinical trials on the recent US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug, elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy (approved May 29, 2020). In addition, we review the data on the Cerene cryotherapy device (Channel Medsystems), as one might rightly ask, do we need another endometrial ablation device? We will address that question, as this device has some unique features that gynecologists should be aware of. Last, we review a study on the importance of considering quality of life in patients with uterine fibroids, which provides sobering information on the psychosocial aspects of uterine fibroids that all clinicians who care for such patients should be aware of.
Endometrial ablation with a new cryotherapy device: Is less more?
Curlin HL, Cintron LC, Anderson TL. A prospective, multicenter, clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the Cerene device to treat heavy menstrual bleeding. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2021;28:899-908.
The phrase “less is more,” in the world of architecture and design, is often associated with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969). One could argue that this principle is one key advantage with the addition of yet another non-resectoscopic endometrial ablation device. The Cerene cryotherapy device, FDA approved in 2019, is presented as a simple, disposable device for in-office use that takes advantage of natural cryoanesthesia and results in less tissue destruction than many other ablation methods.
Device reduces bleeding and permits greater ability for future evaluation
Recently, Curlin and colleagues conducted a prospective, multicenter clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the Cerene device in reducing menstrual blood loss.1 They followed 230 patients over 12 months and found that 81% (77% with intention-to-treat analysis) met the primary end point of a pictorial blood loss assessment chart (PBLAC) score of 75 or lower. Clinically, this translated to 44% of patients experiencing light bleeding; 27%, eumenorrhea; and 10%, amenorrhea. This is clearly “less” in terms of the rate of amenorrhea in most endometrial ablation studies. However, this also may translate into “more” ability to evaluate the endometrial cavity in the future, as 97% of the patients were able to undergo hysteroscopy at the 12-month mark and, of those, 93% were able to have the entire endometrial cavity assessed.
Further, of 97 patients who had a tubal sterilization, none had symptoms or evidence of postablation tubal sterilization syndrome. Three patients were unable to undergo hysteroscopy due to pain intolerance (2) or cervical stenosis (1). This is important because some gynecologists have expressed concern over intrauterine synechiae, which may result in scarring and associated future difficulty in assessing the endometrium for possible cancer.
Details about the device
The Cerene device is a single use, disposable device that uses cryothermal energy from nitrous oxide that results in a liquid-to-gas phase change within a polyurethane balloon (resulting in a temperature of -86°C) and delivered through a 6-mm sheath. It may be used in uterine cavities that measure between 2.5 and 6.5 cm in length, corresponding to approximately 10 cm in a uterine sound measurement. Treatment time is 2.5 minutes of nitrous oxide flow.
As mentioned, another benefit claimed is that the Cerene device’s cryoanalgesia properties enable the procedure to be more tolerated in the office setting. Of the 230 patients studied in the Curlin trial, no procedures were performed under general anesthesia.1 Medications used included paracervical block (PCB) only (8%), PCB plus nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (19.8%), PCB plus oral narcotics/anxiolytics (69%), and PCB plus intravenous sedation (2.9%), showing that this device is ideally suited for in-office use.
The rate of serious adverse events was 2.5% (7 total events in 6 patients within 12 months). All serious adverse events were reviewed by a Clinical Events Committee and none were deemed to be device-related events.
Long-term outcomes remain to be seen
For physicians and patients who worry about the ability to access the endometrial cavity in the future, less may be more. It will be interesting to see what the long-term outcomes show with use of the Cerene cryotherapy device, and whether a lower amenorrhea rate will translate into a higher repeat intervention rate or not. Of course, not all are minimalists. As the architect Robert Venturi (1925–2018) was quoted as saying, “Less is a bore.”
The new Cerene cryotherapy endometrial ablation method meets the FDA’s target for reduction of menstrual blood loss, but it has a slightly lower amenorrhea rate than other devices. Its most significant features are the potential for improved analgesia for in-office use and the possibility that there may be less scarring of the endometrial cavity for future assessment if needed.
Continue to: QoL assessment in women with fibroids is useful in evaluating treatment success...
QoL assessment in women with fibroids is useful in evaluating treatment success
Go VAA, Thomas MC, Singh B, et al. A systematic review of the psychosocial impact of fibroids before and after treatment. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020;223:674- 708.e8.
In many studies that assess AUB, the primary emphasis generally is placed on quantitation of menstrual bleeding by using PBLAC and alkaline hematin scores. In a systematic review, Go and colleagues argue the case for the importance of measuring the psychosocial impact of abnormal bleeding, emphasizing the concerning finding that many women with fibroids report lower vitality and lower social function scores than women with breast cancer.2
Fibroids associated with inconvenience—and anxiety
The authors analyzed and reviewed 18 randomized trials and 39 observational studies after screening 3,625 records from electronic database searches, with the goal to include only studies with validated quality of life (QoL) questionnaires that were administered both before and after treatment. A highlighted aspect of the reviewed studies was that “control” and “concern” subscales were most affected by fibroids, noting the inconvenience and anxiety that are related to the unpredictable onset and intensity of menses and the feeling of loss of control over one’s health and future.
This systematic review is important because although previous research has shown that fibroids significantly affect QoL, the psychosocial burden of fibroid symptoms had not been compared across different QoL instruments for both disease-specific and general validated health subscales.
Disability levels with fibroids are similar to those with other chronic diseases
Go and colleagues further reported that uterine fibroids have considerable psychosocial impact and lead to poor overall QoL physically and emotionally, with diminished sexual function and increased urinary or defecatory issues. Women with fibroids experienced a level of disability that was similar to that seen in other chronic diseases, and their vitality scores were lower than those associated with heart disease, diabetes, and as mentioned, breast cancer.
The authors concluded that “although objective clinical measures are important to establish a comprehensive understanding of health status, patient reported QoL outcomes play a critical role in evaluating success of a therapy.” They suggested that a larger emphasis on patient-centered care may help to mitigate the psychosocial effects of fibroids.
The study by Go and colleagues highlights the significant psychosocial aspects of the heavy menstrual bleeding associated with fibroids, and the authors found that many women with fibroids score in the range of those with other significant diseases, such as breast cancer and diabetes.
We have noted the trend of including QoL in research, and Go and colleagues make an excellent and compelling argument for this trend using quantitative analysis. It is important to consider this not only in our design of future research but also, and perhaps more importantly, in our clinical care of women as we try to better understand what they are experiencing.
Continue to: What have we learned over the past year about elagolix for uterine fibroids?...
What have we learned over the past year about elagolix for uterine fibroids?
Schlaff WD, Ackerman RT, Al-Hendy A, et al. Elagolix for heavy menstrual bleeding in women with uterine fibroids. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:328-340.
Simon JA, Al-Hendy A, Archer DF, et al. Elagolix treatment for up to 12 months in women with heavy menstrual bleeding and uterine leiomyomas. Obstet Gynecol. 2020;135:1313-1326.
Al-Hendy A, Bradley L, Owens CD, et al. Predictors of response for elagolix with add-back therapy in women with heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021:224-72.e1-72.e50.
Data from the Elaris UF-1 and UF-2 6-month, phase 3 trials3 and the results of the Elaris UF-EXTEND trial with a 6-month extension (totaling 12 months of use)4 were published in 2020, and the 12-month results were discussed in OBG Management (2020;32[7]:35, 39-40). An additional data analysis from the same researchers assessed the effect of elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy in a number of patient subgroups.5 These 3 publications have added to our knowledge of this therapy, and it is worth reviewing them in this context
Design of the elagolix plus hormonal add-back therapy trials
The initial UF-1 and UF-2 trials were 2 identical, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, 6-month, phase 3 trials designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of elagolix and hormonal add-back therapy.3 UF-1 was conducted at 76 sites in the United States from December 2015 through December 2018, whereas UF-2 was conducted at 77 sites in the United States and Canada from February 2016 through January 2019; the trials were registered separately. Both trials had a 2:1:1 randomization of elagolix (300 mg twice daily) with hormonal add-back therapy (estradiol 1 mg and norethindrone acetate 0.5 mg daily), elagolix alone (300 mg twice daily), or placebo.
In the 6-month studies, the primary end point was both menstrual blood loss of less than 80 mL and at least a 50% reduction of menstrual blood loss as measured by the alkaline hematin method.3 Among several secondary end points was the assessment of QoL using the Uterine Fibroid Symptom QoL questionnaire (UFS-QoL).
Trial results. In UF-1, 68.5% of 206 women, and in UF-2, 76.5% of 189 women, respectively, taking elagolix with add-back therapy met the primary objective. Among women taking elagolix alone, in UF-1, 84.1% of 104 women, and in UF-2, 77% of 95 women, respectively, met criteria. There was improvement in UFS-QoL scores in women receiving elagolix plus add-back therapy with a reduction of symptom severity of -33.2 in UF-1 and -41.4 in UF-2, as compared with the placebo-treated groups (-10.3 and -7.7, respectively).
Adverse effects. Elagolix was associated with a low incidence of serious adverse effects, and the addition of hormonal add-back therapy attenuated the decreases in bone mineral density observed with elagolix alone. In both UF-1 and UF-2 trials, bone mineral density did not differ significantly in the groups of women who received elagolix with hormonal addback therapy versus placebo.
The extension trial results
Of note, in the 12-month study (6-month extension), the authors reported that 87.9% of the women taking elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy met the primary objective.4 Among the women taking elagolix alone, 89.4% met the primary objective.
In a review of the AbbVie-funded extension study, the editorial comments in the Obstetrical and Gynecological Survey expressed concern over the high proportion of data loss, comparing the number of patients joining the extended trial, patients who completed an additional 6 months of treatment, and patients who completed the posttreatment follow-up period of “up to 12 months.”6 Approximately one-third of patients were lost between initial enrollment to the subset who completed follow-up. There was concern that “losses of that magnitude pose a serious threat to validity.”6
Effectiveness in subgroups
Al-Hendy and colleagues analyzed data from the Elaris UF-1 and UF-2 trials to see if the outcomes for elagolix with hormonal addback therapy demonstrated safety and efficacy in subgroups of patients of varying ages, races and ethnicities, baseline menstrual blood loss, body mass indices, fibroid location, and uterine and fibroid volume.5
Results. In all subgroups, they found a statistically significant reduction in blood loss in mean menstrual blood loss volume for those treated with elagolix plus hormonal addback therapy compared with those treated with placebo. As well, in terms of QoL, among all subgroups, the mean change in symptom severity score as well as health-related QoL total score from baseline to month 6 was statistically significantly greater than the mean change in the placebo group.
The bottom line
Elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy appears to be a safe and effective method to reduce menstrual blood loss associated with uterine fibroids. It also has a favorable effect on QoL and appears to have benefits in subgroups of women of varying ages, races and ethnicities, baseline menstrual blood loss, body mass indices, fibroid location, and uterine and fibroid volume. ●
Elagolix plus hormonal add-back therapy provides several advantages to fibroid care, including a pill form that, as a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, provides much quicker action than GnRH agonists. The hormonal add-back feature seems to improve QoL measures and has a favorable reported bleeding reduction rate. It also appears to be reasonably safe. Although the studies reviewed here may have some weaknesses, it helps to have another therapy to offer to women who have blood loss associated with fibroids. Deciding on the drug’s optimal clinical use has not been fully explored, as it may be a short-term solution to a long-term problem and may not be ideal for all patients with fibroids. Elagolix and hormonal add-back therapy may be advantageous for patients who need to stop bleeding quickly and are trying to decide about their reproductive plans, for patients close to menopause who need a therapy to bridge this gap, and for patients trying to obtain relief between pregnancies.
Abnormal uterine bleeding (AUB) continues to be a top-10 reason why women present for gynecologic care, which makes keeping up with clinical therapies important. Over the past year, we have learned a tremendous amount about elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy for the treatment of bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. In this Update, we provide an overview from 3 randomized clinical trials on the recent US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug, elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy (approved May 29, 2020). In addition, we review the data on the Cerene cryotherapy device (Channel Medsystems), as one might rightly ask, do we need another endometrial ablation device? We will address that question, as this device has some unique features that gynecologists should be aware of. Last, we review a study on the importance of considering quality of life in patients with uterine fibroids, which provides sobering information on the psychosocial aspects of uterine fibroids that all clinicians who care for such patients should be aware of.
Endometrial ablation with a new cryotherapy device: Is less more?
Curlin HL, Cintron LC, Anderson TL. A prospective, multicenter, clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the Cerene device to treat heavy menstrual bleeding. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2021;28:899-908.
The phrase “less is more,” in the world of architecture and design, is often associated with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969). One could argue that this principle is one key advantage with the addition of yet another non-resectoscopic endometrial ablation device. The Cerene cryotherapy device, FDA approved in 2019, is presented as a simple, disposable device for in-office use that takes advantage of natural cryoanesthesia and results in less tissue destruction than many other ablation methods.
Device reduces bleeding and permits greater ability for future evaluation
Recently, Curlin and colleagues conducted a prospective, multicenter clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the Cerene device in reducing menstrual blood loss.1 They followed 230 patients over 12 months and found that 81% (77% with intention-to-treat analysis) met the primary end point of a pictorial blood loss assessment chart (PBLAC) score of 75 or lower. Clinically, this translated to 44% of patients experiencing light bleeding; 27%, eumenorrhea; and 10%, amenorrhea. This is clearly “less” in terms of the rate of amenorrhea in most endometrial ablation studies. However, this also may translate into “more” ability to evaluate the endometrial cavity in the future, as 97% of the patients were able to undergo hysteroscopy at the 12-month mark and, of those, 93% were able to have the entire endometrial cavity assessed.
Further, of 97 patients who had a tubal sterilization, none had symptoms or evidence of postablation tubal sterilization syndrome. Three patients were unable to undergo hysteroscopy due to pain intolerance (2) or cervical stenosis (1). This is important because some gynecologists have expressed concern over intrauterine synechiae, which may result in scarring and associated future difficulty in assessing the endometrium for possible cancer.
Details about the device
The Cerene device is a single use, disposable device that uses cryothermal energy from nitrous oxide that results in a liquid-to-gas phase change within a polyurethane balloon (resulting in a temperature of -86°C) and delivered through a 6-mm sheath. It may be used in uterine cavities that measure between 2.5 and 6.5 cm in length, corresponding to approximately 10 cm in a uterine sound measurement. Treatment time is 2.5 minutes of nitrous oxide flow.
As mentioned, another benefit claimed is that the Cerene device’s cryoanalgesia properties enable the procedure to be more tolerated in the office setting. Of the 230 patients studied in the Curlin trial, no procedures were performed under general anesthesia.1 Medications used included paracervical block (PCB) only (8%), PCB plus nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (19.8%), PCB plus oral narcotics/anxiolytics (69%), and PCB plus intravenous sedation (2.9%), showing that this device is ideally suited for in-office use.
The rate of serious adverse events was 2.5% (7 total events in 6 patients within 12 months). All serious adverse events were reviewed by a Clinical Events Committee and none were deemed to be device-related events.
Long-term outcomes remain to be seen
For physicians and patients who worry about the ability to access the endometrial cavity in the future, less may be more. It will be interesting to see what the long-term outcomes show with use of the Cerene cryotherapy device, and whether a lower amenorrhea rate will translate into a higher repeat intervention rate or not. Of course, not all are minimalists. As the architect Robert Venturi (1925–2018) was quoted as saying, “Less is a bore.”
The new Cerene cryotherapy endometrial ablation method meets the FDA’s target for reduction of menstrual blood loss, but it has a slightly lower amenorrhea rate than other devices. Its most significant features are the potential for improved analgesia for in-office use and the possibility that there may be less scarring of the endometrial cavity for future assessment if needed.
Continue to: QoL assessment in women with fibroids is useful in evaluating treatment success...
QoL assessment in women with fibroids is useful in evaluating treatment success
Go VAA, Thomas MC, Singh B, et al. A systematic review of the psychosocial impact of fibroids before and after treatment. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020;223:674- 708.e8.
In many studies that assess AUB, the primary emphasis generally is placed on quantitation of menstrual bleeding by using PBLAC and alkaline hematin scores. In a systematic review, Go and colleagues argue the case for the importance of measuring the psychosocial impact of abnormal bleeding, emphasizing the concerning finding that many women with fibroids report lower vitality and lower social function scores than women with breast cancer.2
Fibroids associated with inconvenience—and anxiety
The authors analyzed and reviewed 18 randomized trials and 39 observational studies after screening 3,625 records from electronic database searches, with the goal to include only studies with validated quality of life (QoL) questionnaires that were administered both before and after treatment. A highlighted aspect of the reviewed studies was that “control” and “concern” subscales were most affected by fibroids, noting the inconvenience and anxiety that are related to the unpredictable onset and intensity of menses and the feeling of loss of control over one’s health and future.
This systematic review is important because although previous research has shown that fibroids significantly affect QoL, the psychosocial burden of fibroid symptoms had not been compared across different QoL instruments for both disease-specific and general validated health subscales.
Disability levels with fibroids are similar to those with other chronic diseases
Go and colleagues further reported that uterine fibroids have considerable psychosocial impact and lead to poor overall QoL physically and emotionally, with diminished sexual function and increased urinary or defecatory issues. Women with fibroids experienced a level of disability that was similar to that seen in other chronic diseases, and their vitality scores were lower than those associated with heart disease, diabetes, and as mentioned, breast cancer.
The authors concluded that “although objective clinical measures are important to establish a comprehensive understanding of health status, patient reported QoL outcomes play a critical role in evaluating success of a therapy.” They suggested that a larger emphasis on patient-centered care may help to mitigate the psychosocial effects of fibroids.
The study by Go and colleagues highlights the significant psychosocial aspects of the heavy menstrual bleeding associated with fibroids, and the authors found that many women with fibroids score in the range of those with other significant diseases, such as breast cancer and diabetes.
We have noted the trend of including QoL in research, and Go and colleagues make an excellent and compelling argument for this trend using quantitative analysis. It is important to consider this not only in our design of future research but also, and perhaps more importantly, in our clinical care of women as we try to better understand what they are experiencing.
Continue to: What have we learned over the past year about elagolix for uterine fibroids?...
What have we learned over the past year about elagolix for uterine fibroids?
Schlaff WD, Ackerman RT, Al-Hendy A, et al. Elagolix for heavy menstrual bleeding in women with uterine fibroids. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:328-340.
Simon JA, Al-Hendy A, Archer DF, et al. Elagolix treatment for up to 12 months in women with heavy menstrual bleeding and uterine leiomyomas. Obstet Gynecol. 2020;135:1313-1326.
Al-Hendy A, Bradley L, Owens CD, et al. Predictors of response for elagolix with add-back therapy in women with heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021:224-72.e1-72.e50.
Data from the Elaris UF-1 and UF-2 6-month, phase 3 trials3 and the results of the Elaris UF-EXTEND trial with a 6-month extension (totaling 12 months of use)4 were published in 2020, and the 12-month results were discussed in OBG Management (2020;32[7]:35, 39-40). An additional data analysis from the same researchers assessed the effect of elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy in a number of patient subgroups.5 These 3 publications have added to our knowledge of this therapy, and it is worth reviewing them in this context
Design of the elagolix plus hormonal add-back therapy trials
The initial UF-1 and UF-2 trials were 2 identical, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, 6-month, phase 3 trials designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of elagolix and hormonal add-back therapy.3 UF-1 was conducted at 76 sites in the United States from December 2015 through December 2018, whereas UF-2 was conducted at 77 sites in the United States and Canada from February 2016 through January 2019; the trials were registered separately. Both trials had a 2:1:1 randomization of elagolix (300 mg twice daily) with hormonal add-back therapy (estradiol 1 mg and norethindrone acetate 0.5 mg daily), elagolix alone (300 mg twice daily), or placebo.
In the 6-month studies, the primary end point was both menstrual blood loss of less than 80 mL and at least a 50% reduction of menstrual blood loss as measured by the alkaline hematin method.3 Among several secondary end points was the assessment of QoL using the Uterine Fibroid Symptom QoL questionnaire (UFS-QoL).
Trial results. In UF-1, 68.5% of 206 women, and in UF-2, 76.5% of 189 women, respectively, taking elagolix with add-back therapy met the primary objective. Among women taking elagolix alone, in UF-1, 84.1% of 104 women, and in UF-2, 77% of 95 women, respectively, met criteria. There was improvement in UFS-QoL scores in women receiving elagolix plus add-back therapy with a reduction of symptom severity of -33.2 in UF-1 and -41.4 in UF-2, as compared with the placebo-treated groups (-10.3 and -7.7, respectively).
Adverse effects. Elagolix was associated with a low incidence of serious adverse effects, and the addition of hormonal add-back therapy attenuated the decreases in bone mineral density observed with elagolix alone. In both UF-1 and UF-2 trials, bone mineral density did not differ significantly in the groups of women who received elagolix with hormonal addback therapy versus placebo.
The extension trial results
Of note, in the 12-month study (6-month extension), the authors reported that 87.9% of the women taking elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy met the primary objective.4 Among the women taking elagolix alone, 89.4% met the primary objective.
In a review of the AbbVie-funded extension study, the editorial comments in the Obstetrical and Gynecological Survey expressed concern over the high proportion of data loss, comparing the number of patients joining the extended trial, patients who completed an additional 6 months of treatment, and patients who completed the posttreatment follow-up period of “up to 12 months.”6 Approximately one-third of patients were lost between initial enrollment to the subset who completed follow-up. There was concern that “losses of that magnitude pose a serious threat to validity.”6
Effectiveness in subgroups
Al-Hendy and colleagues analyzed data from the Elaris UF-1 and UF-2 trials to see if the outcomes for elagolix with hormonal addback therapy demonstrated safety and efficacy in subgroups of patients of varying ages, races and ethnicities, baseline menstrual blood loss, body mass indices, fibroid location, and uterine and fibroid volume.5
Results. In all subgroups, they found a statistically significant reduction in blood loss in mean menstrual blood loss volume for those treated with elagolix plus hormonal addback therapy compared with those treated with placebo. As well, in terms of QoL, among all subgroups, the mean change in symptom severity score as well as health-related QoL total score from baseline to month 6 was statistically significantly greater than the mean change in the placebo group.
The bottom line
Elagolix with hormonal add-back therapy appears to be a safe and effective method to reduce menstrual blood loss associated with uterine fibroids. It also has a favorable effect on QoL and appears to have benefits in subgroups of women of varying ages, races and ethnicities, baseline menstrual blood loss, body mass indices, fibroid location, and uterine and fibroid volume. ●
Elagolix plus hormonal add-back therapy provides several advantages to fibroid care, including a pill form that, as a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, provides much quicker action than GnRH agonists. The hormonal add-back feature seems to improve QoL measures and has a favorable reported bleeding reduction rate. It also appears to be reasonably safe. Although the studies reviewed here may have some weaknesses, it helps to have another therapy to offer to women who have blood loss associated with fibroids. Deciding on the drug’s optimal clinical use has not been fully explored, as it may be a short-term solution to a long-term problem and may not be ideal for all patients with fibroids. Elagolix and hormonal add-back therapy may be advantageous for patients who need to stop bleeding quickly and are trying to decide about their reproductive plans, for patients close to menopause who need a therapy to bridge this gap, and for patients trying to obtain relief between pregnancies.
- Curlin HL, Cintron LC, Anderson TL. A prospective, multicenter, clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the Cerene device to treat heavy menstrual bleeding. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2021;28:899-908.
- Go VAA, Thomas MC, Singh B, et al. A systematic review of the psychosocial impact of fibroids before and after treatment. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020;223:674-708.e8.
- Schlaff WD, Ackerman RT, Al-Hendy A, et al. Elagolix for heavy menstrual bleeding in women with uterine fibroids. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:328-340.
- Simon JA, Al-Hendy A, Archer DF, et al. Elagolix treatment for up to 12 months in women with heavy menstrual bleeding and uterine leiomyomas. Obstet Gynecol. 2020;135:1313-1326.
- Al-Hendy A, Bradley L, Owens CD, et al. Predictors of response for elagolix with add-back therapy in women with heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021:224-72.e1-72.e50.
- Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey. 2020;75:545-547.
- Curlin HL, Cintron LC, Anderson TL. A prospective, multicenter, clinical trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the Cerene device to treat heavy menstrual bleeding. J Minim Invasive Gynecol. 2021;28:899-908.
- Go VAA, Thomas MC, Singh B, et al. A systematic review of the psychosocial impact of fibroids before and after treatment. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2020;223:674-708.e8.
- Schlaff WD, Ackerman RT, Al-Hendy A, et al. Elagolix for heavy menstrual bleeding in women with uterine fibroids. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:328-340.
- Simon JA, Al-Hendy A, Archer DF, et al. Elagolix treatment for up to 12 months in women with heavy menstrual bleeding and uterine leiomyomas. Obstet Gynecol. 2020;135:1313-1326.
- Al-Hendy A, Bradley L, Owens CD, et al. Predictors of response for elagolix with add-back therapy in women with heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine fibroids. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021:224-72.e1-72.e50.
- Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey. 2020;75:545-547.