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What's the diagnosis?

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Given the characteristic clinical presentation, the most likely diagnosis is pilomatrixoma.

Pilomatrixomas are benign adnexal tumors that arise from immature matrix cells of the hair follicles located on dermal or subcutaneous tissue.

The cause of pilomatrixoma remains unclear. Recent studies have suggested that the development of pilomatrixoma are related to mutations in the Wnt signaling pathway, where beta-catenin gene (CTNNB1) mutation is the most frequently reported.1-4

Pilomatrixomas are more common in children and often present before 10 years of age.1,2,5 They commonly appear in head and neck, as well as upper extremities, trunk, and lower extremities.2,6

The clinical manifestations of pilomatrixomas are diverse and according to their appearance five classic clinical types are described: mass, pigmented, mixed, ulcerated, and keloid-like.2,3 The mass type is the predominant form, where it generally presents as a hard and freely mobile nodule covered by skin that may present a firm calcified protruding nodule. Other less common types include: lymphangiectasic, anetodermic, perforating, and bullous.2,6,7

University of California, San Diego
Dr. Lawrence F. Eichenfield

Pilomatrixomas are mostly solitary, whereas multiple forms are reported to be associated with familial inheritance or syndromic conditions, such as myotonic dystrophy, Gardner syndrome, Turner’s syndrome, and Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome.2-4 However, children and adolescents occasionally present with multiple pilomatricomas with no associated syndrome.

On physical exam a helpful features for the diagnosis is the “teeter-totter sign,” which can be illustrated by pressing on one edge of the lesion that will cause the opposite edge to protrude from the skin. Another helpful tool is to use a light to transilluminate and the calcification produces a bluish opaque hue,8 as light cannot transmit through the calcification, often differentiating it from epidermal inclusion cysts or other noncalcified lesions.
 

What is the differential diagnosis?

Because of the diverse clinical presentations, pilomatrixomas are frequently misdiagnosed. The percentage of correct preoperative diagnosis reported is low, varying from 16% to 43% in different series.1,9-11 They most frequently are misdiagnosed as other types of cysts such as epidermal, dermoid, or sebaceous.2,3,5,12,13 Rapidly growing pilomatrixomas can be also be misdiagnosed as malignant soft-tissue tumors, cutaneous lymphoma, or sarcomas.5,13

Dr. Alreem Al-Nabti

When presenting with a classic history and physical features, diagnosis is clinical, and no further studies are recommended.14 To improve diagnostic accuracy when encountering unusual subtypes, imaging is recommended, including ultrasound. Ultrasound adds a high positive predictive value (95.56%).2 Generally, on ultrasound a pilomatrixoma is described as an oval, well-defined, heterogeneous, hyperechoic subcutaneous mass with or without posterior shadowing.2 The definitive diagnosis is, however, made by histopathologic examination.

Pilomatrixomas do not spontaneously regress, therefore complete surgical resection is the standard treatment. During the follow-up period, very low recurrence rates have been reported, varying from 1.5% to 2% which generally occurs because of incomplete resection.2,3

Dr. Sofía Guelfand

Plexiform neurofibromas are usually congenital tumors of peripheral nerve sheath associated with neurofibromatosis type 1, often with a “bag of worms” feel on palpation. Epidermoid cysts generally present as dermal nodules often with a visible puncture, mobile on soft and mobile on palpation. Dermatofibromas present as firm, usually hyperpigmented papule or nodules that are fixed to subcutaneous tissue, thus often “dimpling” when pitched. Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans is a rare soft-tissue sarcoma which presents as a firm, slow growing indurated plaques growing over months to years.
 

 

 

Conclusion

Pilomatrixomas are a benign adnexal tumor that sometimes can present as atypical forms such as this case. Diagnosis is usually based on clinical diagnosis, and transillumination can be a bedside clue. When the clinical diagnosis remains obscure an ultrasound can be helpful. The main aim of this case is to improve awareness of the variable presentations of pilomatrixomas and the importance of high level of suspicion supported by careful clinical evaluation.

Dr. Eichenfield is vice chair of the department of dermatology and professor of dermatology and pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego, and Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego. Dr. Al-Nabti is a clinical fellow in the division of pediatric and adolescent dermatology, University of California, San Diego. Dr. Guelfand is a visiting dermatology resident in the division of pediaric and adolescent dermatology, University of Califonia, San Diego.

References

1. Jones CD et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 2018;40:631-41.

2. Hu JL et al. Arch Craniofac Surg. 2020;21(5):288-93.

3. Adhikari G and Jadhav GS. Cureus. 2022;14(2):22228.

4. Cóbar JP et al. J Surg Case Rep. 2023;2023(4):rjad182.

5. Schwarz Y et al. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2016;85:148-53.

6. Kose D et al. J Cancer Res Ther. 2014;10(3):549-51.

7. Sabater-Abad J et al. Dermatol Online J. 2020;26(8):13030/qt4h16s45w.

8. Alkatan HM et al. Int J Surg Case Rep. 2021;84:106068.

9. Pant I et al. Indian J Dermatol. 2010;55:390-2.

10. Kaddu S et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 1996;18(4):333-8

11. Schwarz Y et al. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2016;85:148-53.

12. Wang YN et al. Chin Med J (Engl). 2021;134(16):2011-2.

13. Yannoutsos A et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 2018;40(9):690-3.

14. Zhao A et al. Ear Nose Throat J. 2021;1455613211044778.

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Given the characteristic clinical presentation, the most likely diagnosis is pilomatrixoma.

Pilomatrixomas are benign adnexal tumors that arise from immature matrix cells of the hair follicles located on dermal or subcutaneous tissue.

The cause of pilomatrixoma remains unclear. Recent studies have suggested that the development of pilomatrixoma are related to mutations in the Wnt signaling pathway, where beta-catenin gene (CTNNB1) mutation is the most frequently reported.1-4

Pilomatrixomas are more common in children and often present before 10 years of age.1,2,5 They commonly appear in head and neck, as well as upper extremities, trunk, and lower extremities.2,6

The clinical manifestations of pilomatrixomas are diverse and according to their appearance five classic clinical types are described: mass, pigmented, mixed, ulcerated, and keloid-like.2,3 The mass type is the predominant form, where it generally presents as a hard and freely mobile nodule covered by skin that may present a firm calcified protruding nodule. Other less common types include: lymphangiectasic, anetodermic, perforating, and bullous.2,6,7

University of California, San Diego
Dr. Lawrence F. Eichenfield

Pilomatrixomas are mostly solitary, whereas multiple forms are reported to be associated with familial inheritance or syndromic conditions, such as myotonic dystrophy, Gardner syndrome, Turner’s syndrome, and Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome.2-4 However, children and adolescents occasionally present with multiple pilomatricomas with no associated syndrome.

On physical exam a helpful features for the diagnosis is the “teeter-totter sign,” which can be illustrated by pressing on one edge of the lesion that will cause the opposite edge to protrude from the skin. Another helpful tool is to use a light to transilluminate and the calcification produces a bluish opaque hue,8 as light cannot transmit through the calcification, often differentiating it from epidermal inclusion cysts or other noncalcified lesions.
 

What is the differential diagnosis?

Because of the diverse clinical presentations, pilomatrixomas are frequently misdiagnosed. The percentage of correct preoperative diagnosis reported is low, varying from 16% to 43% in different series.1,9-11 They most frequently are misdiagnosed as other types of cysts such as epidermal, dermoid, or sebaceous.2,3,5,12,13 Rapidly growing pilomatrixomas can be also be misdiagnosed as malignant soft-tissue tumors, cutaneous lymphoma, or sarcomas.5,13

Dr. Alreem Al-Nabti

When presenting with a classic history and physical features, diagnosis is clinical, and no further studies are recommended.14 To improve diagnostic accuracy when encountering unusual subtypes, imaging is recommended, including ultrasound. Ultrasound adds a high positive predictive value (95.56%).2 Generally, on ultrasound a pilomatrixoma is described as an oval, well-defined, heterogeneous, hyperechoic subcutaneous mass with or without posterior shadowing.2 The definitive diagnosis is, however, made by histopathologic examination.

Pilomatrixomas do not spontaneously regress, therefore complete surgical resection is the standard treatment. During the follow-up period, very low recurrence rates have been reported, varying from 1.5% to 2% which generally occurs because of incomplete resection.2,3

Dr. Sofía Guelfand

Plexiform neurofibromas are usually congenital tumors of peripheral nerve sheath associated with neurofibromatosis type 1, often with a “bag of worms” feel on palpation. Epidermoid cysts generally present as dermal nodules often with a visible puncture, mobile on soft and mobile on palpation. Dermatofibromas present as firm, usually hyperpigmented papule or nodules that are fixed to subcutaneous tissue, thus often “dimpling” when pitched. Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans is a rare soft-tissue sarcoma which presents as a firm, slow growing indurated plaques growing over months to years.
 

 

 

Conclusion

Pilomatrixomas are a benign adnexal tumor that sometimes can present as atypical forms such as this case. Diagnosis is usually based on clinical diagnosis, and transillumination can be a bedside clue. When the clinical diagnosis remains obscure an ultrasound can be helpful. The main aim of this case is to improve awareness of the variable presentations of pilomatrixomas and the importance of high level of suspicion supported by careful clinical evaluation.

Dr. Eichenfield is vice chair of the department of dermatology and professor of dermatology and pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego, and Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego. Dr. Al-Nabti is a clinical fellow in the division of pediatric and adolescent dermatology, University of California, San Diego. Dr. Guelfand is a visiting dermatology resident in the division of pediaric and adolescent dermatology, University of Califonia, San Diego.

References

1. Jones CD et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 2018;40:631-41.

2. Hu JL et al. Arch Craniofac Surg. 2020;21(5):288-93.

3. Adhikari G and Jadhav GS. Cureus. 2022;14(2):22228.

4. Cóbar JP et al. J Surg Case Rep. 2023;2023(4):rjad182.

5. Schwarz Y et al. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2016;85:148-53.

6. Kose D et al. J Cancer Res Ther. 2014;10(3):549-51.

7. Sabater-Abad J et al. Dermatol Online J. 2020;26(8):13030/qt4h16s45w.

8. Alkatan HM et al. Int J Surg Case Rep. 2021;84:106068.

9. Pant I et al. Indian J Dermatol. 2010;55:390-2.

10. Kaddu S et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 1996;18(4):333-8

11. Schwarz Y et al. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2016;85:148-53.

12. Wang YN et al. Chin Med J (Engl). 2021;134(16):2011-2.

13. Yannoutsos A et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 2018;40(9):690-3.

14. Zhao A et al. Ear Nose Throat J. 2021;1455613211044778.

Given the characteristic clinical presentation, the most likely diagnosis is pilomatrixoma.

Pilomatrixomas are benign adnexal tumors that arise from immature matrix cells of the hair follicles located on dermal or subcutaneous tissue.

The cause of pilomatrixoma remains unclear. Recent studies have suggested that the development of pilomatrixoma are related to mutations in the Wnt signaling pathway, where beta-catenin gene (CTNNB1) mutation is the most frequently reported.1-4

Pilomatrixomas are more common in children and often present before 10 years of age.1,2,5 They commonly appear in head and neck, as well as upper extremities, trunk, and lower extremities.2,6

The clinical manifestations of pilomatrixomas are diverse and according to their appearance five classic clinical types are described: mass, pigmented, mixed, ulcerated, and keloid-like.2,3 The mass type is the predominant form, where it generally presents as a hard and freely mobile nodule covered by skin that may present a firm calcified protruding nodule. Other less common types include: lymphangiectasic, anetodermic, perforating, and bullous.2,6,7

University of California, San Diego
Dr. Lawrence F. Eichenfield

Pilomatrixomas are mostly solitary, whereas multiple forms are reported to be associated with familial inheritance or syndromic conditions, such as myotonic dystrophy, Gardner syndrome, Turner’s syndrome, and Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome.2-4 However, children and adolescents occasionally present with multiple pilomatricomas with no associated syndrome.

On physical exam a helpful features for the diagnosis is the “teeter-totter sign,” which can be illustrated by pressing on one edge of the lesion that will cause the opposite edge to protrude from the skin. Another helpful tool is to use a light to transilluminate and the calcification produces a bluish opaque hue,8 as light cannot transmit through the calcification, often differentiating it from epidermal inclusion cysts or other noncalcified lesions.
 

What is the differential diagnosis?

Because of the diverse clinical presentations, pilomatrixomas are frequently misdiagnosed. The percentage of correct preoperative diagnosis reported is low, varying from 16% to 43% in different series.1,9-11 They most frequently are misdiagnosed as other types of cysts such as epidermal, dermoid, or sebaceous.2,3,5,12,13 Rapidly growing pilomatrixomas can be also be misdiagnosed as malignant soft-tissue tumors, cutaneous lymphoma, or sarcomas.5,13

Dr. Alreem Al-Nabti

When presenting with a classic history and physical features, diagnosis is clinical, and no further studies are recommended.14 To improve diagnostic accuracy when encountering unusual subtypes, imaging is recommended, including ultrasound. Ultrasound adds a high positive predictive value (95.56%).2 Generally, on ultrasound a pilomatrixoma is described as an oval, well-defined, heterogeneous, hyperechoic subcutaneous mass with or without posterior shadowing.2 The definitive diagnosis is, however, made by histopathologic examination.

Pilomatrixomas do not spontaneously regress, therefore complete surgical resection is the standard treatment. During the follow-up period, very low recurrence rates have been reported, varying from 1.5% to 2% which generally occurs because of incomplete resection.2,3

Dr. Sofía Guelfand

Plexiform neurofibromas are usually congenital tumors of peripheral nerve sheath associated with neurofibromatosis type 1, often with a “bag of worms” feel on palpation. Epidermoid cysts generally present as dermal nodules often with a visible puncture, mobile on soft and mobile on palpation. Dermatofibromas present as firm, usually hyperpigmented papule or nodules that are fixed to subcutaneous tissue, thus often “dimpling” when pitched. Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans is a rare soft-tissue sarcoma which presents as a firm, slow growing indurated plaques growing over months to years.
 

 

 

Conclusion

Pilomatrixomas are a benign adnexal tumor that sometimes can present as atypical forms such as this case. Diagnosis is usually based on clinical diagnosis, and transillumination can be a bedside clue. When the clinical diagnosis remains obscure an ultrasound can be helpful. The main aim of this case is to improve awareness of the variable presentations of pilomatrixomas and the importance of high level of suspicion supported by careful clinical evaluation.

Dr. Eichenfield is vice chair of the department of dermatology and professor of dermatology and pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego, and Rady Children’s Hospital, San Diego. Dr. Al-Nabti is a clinical fellow in the division of pediatric and adolescent dermatology, University of California, San Diego. Dr. Guelfand is a visiting dermatology resident in the division of pediaric and adolescent dermatology, University of Califonia, San Diego.

References

1. Jones CD et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 2018;40:631-41.

2. Hu JL et al. Arch Craniofac Surg. 2020;21(5):288-93.

3. Adhikari G and Jadhav GS. Cureus. 2022;14(2):22228.

4. Cóbar JP et al. J Surg Case Rep. 2023;2023(4):rjad182.

5. Schwarz Y et al. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2016;85:148-53.

6. Kose D et al. J Cancer Res Ther. 2014;10(3):549-51.

7. Sabater-Abad J et al. Dermatol Online J. 2020;26(8):13030/qt4h16s45w.

8. Alkatan HM et al. Int J Surg Case Rep. 2021;84:106068.

9. Pant I et al. Indian J Dermatol. 2010;55:390-2.

10. Kaddu S et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 1996;18(4):333-8

11. Schwarz Y et al. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2016;85:148-53.

12. Wang YN et al. Chin Med J (Engl). 2021;134(16):2011-2.

13. Yannoutsos A et al. Am J Dermatopathol. 2018;40(9):690-3.

14. Zhao A et al. Ear Nose Throat J. 2021;1455613211044778.

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A 12-year-old otherwise healthy male was referred for a 3-month history of a mass on his left shoulder. It appeared 4 months ago and continued to grow rapidly. The lesion was asymptomatic, and the review of systems was otherwise negative. No personal or family history of similar tumors or genetic conditions were noted.  
On physical exam there was a well-circumscribed skin-colored nodule measuring 3.1 x 3 cm that was tender on palpation. The nodule was mobile, with a firm, stony feel, and no punctum was visualized. Transillumination revealed a subtle bluish hue within the nodule.

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We asked doctors using AI scribes: Just how good are they?

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 08/09/2023 - 13:07

Andrea Partida, DO, an obstetrician and gynecologist in Enid, Okla., loves her new assistant.

The 15 or 20 minutes she used to spend on documentation for each patient visit is now 3. The 2-3 hours she’d spend charting outside clinic hours is maybe 1.

All that time saved allows her to see two to five more patients a day, provide better care to each patient, and get more involved in hospital leadership at Integris Health, where she works.

“I have a better work-life balance with my family,” Dr. Partida said. “I leave work at work and get home earlier.”

You’ve probably figured out the plot twist: Dr. Partida’s assistant is not a person – it’s artificial intelligence (AI).

Dr. Partida uses IRIS, a tool from OnPoint Healthcare Partners, part of a fast-growing niche of AI medical scribes designed to automate onerous data entry. The evolution of generative AI – specifically, large language models, such as ChatGPT – has led to a rapid explosion of these tools. Other companies in the space include AbridgeAmbience HealthcareAugmedixDeepScribeNuance (part of Microsoft), and Suki. The newest kid on the block, Amazon Web Services, announced the launch of HealthScribe in July.

These tools – some of which are already on the market, with more on the way – record patient visits and generate notes for treatment and billing. Earlier iterations combine AI with offsite human scribes who provide quality control. But more and more are fully automated, no human required. Some also offer video recording and foreign language translation.

The promise is alluring: Ease your workload and reclaim hours in your day so you can spend more time with patients or try that “work-life balance” thing you’ve heard so much about.

But do these tools fulfill that promise?

According to Dr. Partida and other doctors who spoke with this news organization, the answer is a resounding yes.
 

A tech solution for a tech problem

“I believe a lot of doctors see patients for free. They get paid to do paperwork,” said Anthony J. Mazzarelli, MD, JD, MBE, co-president and CEO of Cooper University Health Care, in Camden, N.J.

Indeed, for every hour U.S. clinicians spend with their patients, they may spend 2 more hours documenting in electronic health records (EHRs), estimates show. About half of doctors, especially those in primary care, report feeling burned out, and some 42% say they want to quit clinical practice.

Enter AI scribes.

“The holy grail in medicine right now is improving burnout while also maintaining or improving productivity and quality,” said Patricia Garcia, MD, associate clinical information officer for ambulatory care at Stanford (Calif.) Health Care. “These ambient digital scribes have the potential to do just that.”

While anyone can buy these products, their use has been mostly limited to pilot programs and early adopters so far, said Dr. Garcia, who has been helping to pilot Nuance’s digital scribe, DAX, at Stanford.

But that’s expected to change quickly. “I don’t think the time horizon is a decade,” Dr. Garcia said. “I think within a matter of 2 or 3 years, these tools will be pervasive throughout health care.”

Since introducing these tools at Cooper, “our doctors’ paperwork burden is significantly lighter,” said Dr. Mazzarelli, who decides which technologies Cooper should invest in and who monitors their results. In Cooper studies, physicians who used DAX more than half the time spent 43% less time working on notes.

“They spend more time connecting with their patients, talking with them, and looking them in the eye,” Dr. Mazzarelli said. That, in turn, seems to improve patient outcomes, reduce doctor burnout and turnover, and lower costs.

The AI scribes, by virtue of eliminating the distraction of note taking, also allow doctors to give their full attention to the patient. “The patient relationship is the most important aspect of medicine,” said Raul Ayala, MD, MHCM, a family medicine physician at Adventist Health, in Hanford, Calif., who uses Augmedix. The digital scribe “helps us strengthen that relationship.”
 

 

 

What’s it like to use an AI medical scribe?

The scribes feature hardware (typically a smartphone or tablet) and software built on automatic speech recognition, natural language processing, and machine learning. Download an app to your device, and you’re ready to go. Use it to record in-person or telehealth visits.

In the first week, a company may help train you to use the hardware and software. You’ll likely start by using it for a few patient visits per day, ramping up gradually. Dr. Partida said she was comfortable using the system for all her patients in 6 weeks.

Each day, Dr. Partida logs in to a dedicated smartphone or tablet, opens the app, and reviews her schedule, including details she needs to prepare for each patient.

At the start of each patient visit, Dr. Partida taps the app icon to begin recording and lays the device nearby. She can pause as needed. At the end of the visit, she taps the icon again to stop recording.

The AI listens, creates the note, and updates relevant data in the EHR. The note includes patient problems, assessment, treatment plan, patient history, orders, and tasks for staff, along with medications, referrals, and preauthorizations. A human scribe, who is also a physician, reviews the information for accuracy and edits it as needed. By the next morning, the data are ready for Dr. Partida to review.

Fully automated versions can generate notes much faster. Jack Shilling, MD, MBA, an orthopedic surgeon at Cooper University Health Care, in Voorhees, N.J., uses DAX. A new feature called DAX Express – which uses OpenAI’s GPT-4 but no humans – provides him with a draft of his clinical notes in just seconds.
 

How accurate are AI notes?

The accuracy of those notes remains an open question, Dr. Garcia said – mostly because accuracy can be hard to define.

“If you asked five docs to write a note based on the same patient encounter, you’d get five different notes,” Dr. Garcia said. “That makes it hard to assess these technologies in a scientifically rigorous way.”

Still, the onus is on the physician to review the notes and edit them as needed, Dr. Garcia said. How light or heavy those edits are can depend on your unique preferences.

Dr. Shilling said he may need to lightly edit transcripts of his conversations with patients. “When someone tells me how long their knee hurts, slight variability in their transcribed words is tolerable,” he said. But for some things – such as physical exam notes and x-ray readings – he dictates directly into the device, speaking at a closer range and being less conversational, more exact in his speech.
 

Should you let patients know they’re being recorded?

The federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) does not require providers to inform patients that their face-to-face conversations are being recorded, said Daniel Lebovic, JD, corporate legal counsel at Compliancy Group, in Greenlawn, N.Y., a company that helps providers adhere to HIPAA rules.

But make sure you know the laws in your state and the policies at your health care practice. State laws may require providers to inform patients and to get patients’ consent in advance of being recorded.

All the doctors who spoke to this news organization said their patients are informed that they’ll be recorded and that they can opt out if they wish.
 

 

 

How much do AI scribes cost?

As the marketplace for these tools expands, companies are offering more products and services at different price points that target a range of organizations, from large health care systems to small private practices.

Price models vary, said Dr. Garcia. Some are based on the number of users, others on the number of notes, and still others on minutes.

Amazon’s HealthScribe is priced at 10 cents per minute. For 1,000 consultation transcripts per month, with each call averaging 15 minutes, it would take 15,000 minutes at a total cost of $1,500 for the month.

In general, the rapidly growing competition in this space could mean prices become more affordable, Dr. Garcia said. “It’s good that so many are getting into this game, because that means the price will come down and it will be a lot more accessible to everybody.”

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Andrea Partida, DO, an obstetrician and gynecologist in Enid, Okla., loves her new assistant.

The 15 or 20 minutes she used to spend on documentation for each patient visit is now 3. The 2-3 hours she’d spend charting outside clinic hours is maybe 1.

All that time saved allows her to see two to five more patients a day, provide better care to each patient, and get more involved in hospital leadership at Integris Health, where she works.

“I have a better work-life balance with my family,” Dr. Partida said. “I leave work at work and get home earlier.”

You’ve probably figured out the plot twist: Dr. Partida’s assistant is not a person – it’s artificial intelligence (AI).

Dr. Partida uses IRIS, a tool from OnPoint Healthcare Partners, part of a fast-growing niche of AI medical scribes designed to automate onerous data entry. The evolution of generative AI – specifically, large language models, such as ChatGPT – has led to a rapid explosion of these tools. Other companies in the space include AbridgeAmbience HealthcareAugmedixDeepScribeNuance (part of Microsoft), and Suki. The newest kid on the block, Amazon Web Services, announced the launch of HealthScribe in July.

These tools – some of which are already on the market, with more on the way – record patient visits and generate notes for treatment and billing. Earlier iterations combine AI with offsite human scribes who provide quality control. But more and more are fully automated, no human required. Some also offer video recording and foreign language translation.

The promise is alluring: Ease your workload and reclaim hours in your day so you can spend more time with patients or try that “work-life balance” thing you’ve heard so much about.

But do these tools fulfill that promise?

According to Dr. Partida and other doctors who spoke with this news organization, the answer is a resounding yes.
 

A tech solution for a tech problem

“I believe a lot of doctors see patients for free. They get paid to do paperwork,” said Anthony J. Mazzarelli, MD, JD, MBE, co-president and CEO of Cooper University Health Care, in Camden, N.J.

Indeed, for every hour U.S. clinicians spend with their patients, they may spend 2 more hours documenting in electronic health records (EHRs), estimates show. About half of doctors, especially those in primary care, report feeling burned out, and some 42% say they want to quit clinical practice.

Enter AI scribes.

“The holy grail in medicine right now is improving burnout while also maintaining or improving productivity and quality,” said Patricia Garcia, MD, associate clinical information officer for ambulatory care at Stanford (Calif.) Health Care. “These ambient digital scribes have the potential to do just that.”

While anyone can buy these products, their use has been mostly limited to pilot programs and early adopters so far, said Dr. Garcia, who has been helping to pilot Nuance’s digital scribe, DAX, at Stanford.

But that’s expected to change quickly. “I don’t think the time horizon is a decade,” Dr. Garcia said. “I think within a matter of 2 or 3 years, these tools will be pervasive throughout health care.”

Since introducing these tools at Cooper, “our doctors’ paperwork burden is significantly lighter,” said Dr. Mazzarelli, who decides which technologies Cooper should invest in and who monitors their results. In Cooper studies, physicians who used DAX more than half the time spent 43% less time working on notes.

“They spend more time connecting with their patients, talking with them, and looking them in the eye,” Dr. Mazzarelli said. That, in turn, seems to improve patient outcomes, reduce doctor burnout and turnover, and lower costs.

The AI scribes, by virtue of eliminating the distraction of note taking, also allow doctors to give their full attention to the patient. “The patient relationship is the most important aspect of medicine,” said Raul Ayala, MD, MHCM, a family medicine physician at Adventist Health, in Hanford, Calif., who uses Augmedix. The digital scribe “helps us strengthen that relationship.”
 

 

 

What’s it like to use an AI medical scribe?

The scribes feature hardware (typically a smartphone or tablet) and software built on automatic speech recognition, natural language processing, and machine learning. Download an app to your device, and you’re ready to go. Use it to record in-person or telehealth visits.

In the first week, a company may help train you to use the hardware and software. You’ll likely start by using it for a few patient visits per day, ramping up gradually. Dr. Partida said she was comfortable using the system for all her patients in 6 weeks.

Each day, Dr. Partida logs in to a dedicated smartphone or tablet, opens the app, and reviews her schedule, including details she needs to prepare for each patient.

At the start of each patient visit, Dr. Partida taps the app icon to begin recording and lays the device nearby. She can pause as needed. At the end of the visit, she taps the icon again to stop recording.

The AI listens, creates the note, and updates relevant data in the EHR. The note includes patient problems, assessment, treatment plan, patient history, orders, and tasks for staff, along with medications, referrals, and preauthorizations. A human scribe, who is also a physician, reviews the information for accuracy and edits it as needed. By the next morning, the data are ready for Dr. Partida to review.

Fully automated versions can generate notes much faster. Jack Shilling, MD, MBA, an orthopedic surgeon at Cooper University Health Care, in Voorhees, N.J., uses DAX. A new feature called DAX Express – which uses OpenAI’s GPT-4 but no humans – provides him with a draft of his clinical notes in just seconds.
 

How accurate are AI notes?

The accuracy of those notes remains an open question, Dr. Garcia said – mostly because accuracy can be hard to define.

“If you asked five docs to write a note based on the same patient encounter, you’d get five different notes,” Dr. Garcia said. “That makes it hard to assess these technologies in a scientifically rigorous way.”

Still, the onus is on the physician to review the notes and edit them as needed, Dr. Garcia said. How light or heavy those edits are can depend on your unique preferences.

Dr. Shilling said he may need to lightly edit transcripts of his conversations with patients. “When someone tells me how long their knee hurts, slight variability in their transcribed words is tolerable,” he said. But for some things – such as physical exam notes and x-ray readings – he dictates directly into the device, speaking at a closer range and being less conversational, more exact in his speech.
 

Should you let patients know they’re being recorded?

The federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) does not require providers to inform patients that their face-to-face conversations are being recorded, said Daniel Lebovic, JD, corporate legal counsel at Compliancy Group, in Greenlawn, N.Y., a company that helps providers adhere to HIPAA rules.

But make sure you know the laws in your state and the policies at your health care practice. State laws may require providers to inform patients and to get patients’ consent in advance of being recorded.

All the doctors who spoke to this news organization said their patients are informed that they’ll be recorded and that they can opt out if they wish.
 

 

 

How much do AI scribes cost?

As the marketplace for these tools expands, companies are offering more products and services at different price points that target a range of organizations, from large health care systems to small private practices.

Price models vary, said Dr. Garcia. Some are based on the number of users, others on the number of notes, and still others on minutes.

Amazon’s HealthScribe is priced at 10 cents per minute. For 1,000 consultation transcripts per month, with each call averaging 15 minutes, it would take 15,000 minutes at a total cost of $1,500 for the month.

In general, the rapidly growing competition in this space could mean prices become more affordable, Dr. Garcia said. “It’s good that so many are getting into this game, because that means the price will come down and it will be a lot more accessible to everybody.”

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Andrea Partida, DO, an obstetrician and gynecologist in Enid, Okla., loves her new assistant.

The 15 or 20 minutes she used to spend on documentation for each patient visit is now 3. The 2-3 hours she’d spend charting outside clinic hours is maybe 1.

All that time saved allows her to see two to five more patients a day, provide better care to each patient, and get more involved in hospital leadership at Integris Health, where she works.

“I have a better work-life balance with my family,” Dr. Partida said. “I leave work at work and get home earlier.”

You’ve probably figured out the plot twist: Dr. Partida’s assistant is not a person – it’s artificial intelligence (AI).

Dr. Partida uses IRIS, a tool from OnPoint Healthcare Partners, part of a fast-growing niche of AI medical scribes designed to automate onerous data entry. The evolution of generative AI – specifically, large language models, such as ChatGPT – has led to a rapid explosion of these tools. Other companies in the space include AbridgeAmbience HealthcareAugmedixDeepScribeNuance (part of Microsoft), and Suki. The newest kid on the block, Amazon Web Services, announced the launch of HealthScribe in July.

These tools – some of which are already on the market, with more on the way – record patient visits and generate notes for treatment and billing. Earlier iterations combine AI with offsite human scribes who provide quality control. But more and more are fully automated, no human required. Some also offer video recording and foreign language translation.

The promise is alluring: Ease your workload and reclaim hours in your day so you can spend more time with patients or try that “work-life balance” thing you’ve heard so much about.

But do these tools fulfill that promise?

According to Dr. Partida and other doctors who spoke with this news organization, the answer is a resounding yes.
 

A tech solution for a tech problem

“I believe a lot of doctors see patients for free. They get paid to do paperwork,” said Anthony J. Mazzarelli, MD, JD, MBE, co-president and CEO of Cooper University Health Care, in Camden, N.J.

Indeed, for every hour U.S. clinicians spend with their patients, they may spend 2 more hours documenting in electronic health records (EHRs), estimates show. About half of doctors, especially those in primary care, report feeling burned out, and some 42% say they want to quit clinical practice.

Enter AI scribes.

“The holy grail in medicine right now is improving burnout while also maintaining or improving productivity and quality,” said Patricia Garcia, MD, associate clinical information officer for ambulatory care at Stanford (Calif.) Health Care. “These ambient digital scribes have the potential to do just that.”

While anyone can buy these products, their use has been mostly limited to pilot programs and early adopters so far, said Dr. Garcia, who has been helping to pilot Nuance’s digital scribe, DAX, at Stanford.

But that’s expected to change quickly. “I don’t think the time horizon is a decade,” Dr. Garcia said. “I think within a matter of 2 or 3 years, these tools will be pervasive throughout health care.”

Since introducing these tools at Cooper, “our doctors’ paperwork burden is significantly lighter,” said Dr. Mazzarelli, who decides which technologies Cooper should invest in and who monitors their results. In Cooper studies, physicians who used DAX more than half the time spent 43% less time working on notes.

“They spend more time connecting with their patients, talking with them, and looking them in the eye,” Dr. Mazzarelli said. That, in turn, seems to improve patient outcomes, reduce doctor burnout and turnover, and lower costs.

The AI scribes, by virtue of eliminating the distraction of note taking, also allow doctors to give their full attention to the patient. “The patient relationship is the most important aspect of medicine,” said Raul Ayala, MD, MHCM, a family medicine physician at Adventist Health, in Hanford, Calif., who uses Augmedix. The digital scribe “helps us strengthen that relationship.”
 

 

 

What’s it like to use an AI medical scribe?

The scribes feature hardware (typically a smartphone or tablet) and software built on automatic speech recognition, natural language processing, and machine learning. Download an app to your device, and you’re ready to go. Use it to record in-person or telehealth visits.

In the first week, a company may help train you to use the hardware and software. You’ll likely start by using it for a few patient visits per day, ramping up gradually. Dr. Partida said she was comfortable using the system for all her patients in 6 weeks.

Each day, Dr. Partida logs in to a dedicated smartphone or tablet, opens the app, and reviews her schedule, including details she needs to prepare for each patient.

At the start of each patient visit, Dr. Partida taps the app icon to begin recording and lays the device nearby. She can pause as needed. At the end of the visit, she taps the icon again to stop recording.

The AI listens, creates the note, and updates relevant data in the EHR. The note includes patient problems, assessment, treatment plan, patient history, orders, and tasks for staff, along with medications, referrals, and preauthorizations. A human scribe, who is also a physician, reviews the information for accuracy and edits it as needed. By the next morning, the data are ready for Dr. Partida to review.

Fully automated versions can generate notes much faster. Jack Shilling, MD, MBA, an orthopedic surgeon at Cooper University Health Care, in Voorhees, N.J., uses DAX. A new feature called DAX Express – which uses OpenAI’s GPT-4 but no humans – provides him with a draft of his clinical notes in just seconds.
 

How accurate are AI notes?

The accuracy of those notes remains an open question, Dr. Garcia said – mostly because accuracy can be hard to define.

“If you asked five docs to write a note based on the same patient encounter, you’d get five different notes,” Dr. Garcia said. “That makes it hard to assess these technologies in a scientifically rigorous way.”

Still, the onus is on the physician to review the notes and edit them as needed, Dr. Garcia said. How light or heavy those edits are can depend on your unique preferences.

Dr. Shilling said he may need to lightly edit transcripts of his conversations with patients. “When someone tells me how long their knee hurts, slight variability in their transcribed words is tolerable,” he said. But for some things – such as physical exam notes and x-ray readings – he dictates directly into the device, speaking at a closer range and being less conversational, more exact in his speech.
 

Should you let patients know they’re being recorded?

The federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) does not require providers to inform patients that their face-to-face conversations are being recorded, said Daniel Lebovic, JD, corporate legal counsel at Compliancy Group, in Greenlawn, N.Y., a company that helps providers adhere to HIPAA rules.

But make sure you know the laws in your state and the policies at your health care practice. State laws may require providers to inform patients and to get patients’ consent in advance of being recorded.

All the doctors who spoke to this news organization said their patients are informed that they’ll be recorded and that they can opt out if they wish.
 

 

 

How much do AI scribes cost?

As the marketplace for these tools expands, companies are offering more products and services at different price points that target a range of organizations, from large health care systems to small private practices.

Price models vary, said Dr. Garcia. Some are based on the number of users, others on the number of notes, and still others on minutes.

Amazon’s HealthScribe is priced at 10 cents per minute. For 1,000 consultation transcripts per month, with each call averaging 15 minutes, it would take 15,000 minutes at a total cost of $1,500 for the month.

In general, the rapidly growing competition in this space could mean prices become more affordable, Dr. Garcia said. “It’s good that so many are getting into this game, because that means the price will come down and it will be a lot more accessible to everybody.”

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Study highlights diagnostic challenges of differentiating lichen sclerosus from vitiligo

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Thu, 11/02/2023 - 10:46

In a specialty dermatology clinic, pediatric lichen sclerosus (LS) was difficult to differentiate from vitiligo, especially in patients with medium to dark skin tones, according to a retrospective review of cases.

Researchers who tallied symptoms and physical exam findings observed fewer statistically significant differences between LS and vitiligo patients than expected, and LS and vitiligo were sometimes misdiagnosed as each other.

“LS must be treated aggressively to prevent long-term sequelae such as permanent scarring and vulvar squamous cell carcinoma, making an accurate diagnosis crucial,” the authors write in a poster they presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Dr. Kaiane Habeshian


LS is symptomatic and has multiple exam findings, but once treated or quiescent, the discoloration can persist and create diagnostic uncertainty, lead study author Kaiane Habeshian, MD, a pediatric dermatologist at Children’s National Hospital, Washington, told this news organization following the SPD meeting.

The diagnostic uncertainty is especially true in patients with darker skin tones, who may have vitiligoid LS, an LS variant that has overlapping features of both LS and vitiligo.

Vitiligoid LS “presents clinically as a depigmented symmetric white vulvar and perianal white patch, often with minimal signs of inflammation, but is symptomatic and appears consistent with LS on histopathology,” Dr. Habeshian said.

“In our experience, in patients with medium to dark skin tones, there is a variable amount of repigmentation after treating LS,” she added. “After use of high potency topical corticosteroids, some patients almost completely repigment, while others have minimal repigmentation, and this can fluctuate over time, sometimes independent of other signs or symptoms of a flare up. This can lead to diagnostic confusion. For example, if an LS patient is examined after treatment, and their symptoms have resolved, they may subsequently be given a diagnosis of vitiligo.”

In the study, Dr. Habeshian and her coauthors aimed to characterize differences in LS and vitiligo based on history, physical exam, and demographic findings at the time of the initial clinic visit. She and her colleagues extracted and reviewed the medical records of 98 patients with a diagnosis of LS or vitiligo who were seen at a joint pediatric dermatology-gynecology vulvar clinic over 6.8 years. The median and mean age of the study population at diagnosis was about 6 years, with ages ranging from 2 to 20. The team used descriptive statistics and Z tests for data analysis.



The researchers found that pruritus, constipation, and dysuria were the most common symptoms experienced by both LS and vitiligo patients. All were experienced more frequently by LS patients, but only pruritus reached statistical significance (P = .040). Other symptoms experienced only by LS patients included vulvar pain, bleeding, and pain with defecation.

Meanwhile, apart from hypopigmentation and erythema, all physical exam findings were more frequent in LS patients, compared with vitiligo patients, including fissures and purpura/petechiae, but only epidermal atrophy and figure-of-8 distribution of hypopigmentation reached statistical significance (P values of .047 and .036, respectively).

In other findings, LS and vitiligo were misdiagnosed as each other 15 times. Nearly half of the misdiagnoses (46.7%) were made in Black patients, who composed 38.8% of all patients in the study.

“I suspect that some vitiligo cases that were previously ‘misdiagnosed’ as LS were actually LS that just didn’t repigment and then were labeled as vitiligo in the chart,” Dr. Habeshian said.

“And some of those LS cases that previously were misdiagnosed as vitiligo likely had other more subtle LS findings that were missed (shininess and wrinkling of the skin, small fissures, constipation) or that were attributed to comorbid irritant contact dermatitis or another condition,” she said. “It was interesting to see that even in a vulvar dermatology clinic there can be confusion between these diagnoses because the literature on pediatric LS in darker skin tones is so sparse.”

She emphasized that a close exam and detailed history are needed to properly diagnose patients with anogenital skin conditions.

“Don’t forget to ask about constipation and urinary symptoms as well as psychosocial and, in the appropriate patient, sexual and reproductive function,” Dr. Habeshian said. “Based on my experience, pediatric LS is much more common in our community than the literature would suggest. Its psychosocial impact is tremendous but not well documented, particularly in pediatric patients. In my experience, the longer LS is misdiagnosed or mistreated, the more challenging it becomes to manage. You don’t want to miss LS.”

She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that photographs were not available for review for many of the earlier years of the clinic. “Therefore, we had to depend on the diagnosis given at the time of the visit,” she said. “This likely accounts in part for the smaller number than expected of significant exam and history findings between LS and vitiligo. We need further studies utilizing a standardized approach to accurate diagnosis.”

Her coauthors were Nikita Menta, Aneka Khilnani, MS, and Tazim Dowlut-McElroy, MD. The researchers reported having no financial disclosures.

 

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In a specialty dermatology clinic, pediatric lichen sclerosus (LS) was difficult to differentiate from vitiligo, especially in patients with medium to dark skin tones, according to a retrospective review of cases.

Researchers who tallied symptoms and physical exam findings observed fewer statistically significant differences between LS and vitiligo patients than expected, and LS and vitiligo were sometimes misdiagnosed as each other.

“LS must be treated aggressively to prevent long-term sequelae such as permanent scarring and vulvar squamous cell carcinoma, making an accurate diagnosis crucial,” the authors write in a poster they presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Dr. Kaiane Habeshian


LS is symptomatic and has multiple exam findings, but once treated or quiescent, the discoloration can persist and create diagnostic uncertainty, lead study author Kaiane Habeshian, MD, a pediatric dermatologist at Children’s National Hospital, Washington, told this news organization following the SPD meeting.

The diagnostic uncertainty is especially true in patients with darker skin tones, who may have vitiligoid LS, an LS variant that has overlapping features of both LS and vitiligo.

Vitiligoid LS “presents clinically as a depigmented symmetric white vulvar and perianal white patch, often with minimal signs of inflammation, but is symptomatic and appears consistent with LS on histopathology,” Dr. Habeshian said.

“In our experience, in patients with medium to dark skin tones, there is a variable amount of repigmentation after treating LS,” she added. “After use of high potency topical corticosteroids, some patients almost completely repigment, while others have minimal repigmentation, and this can fluctuate over time, sometimes independent of other signs or symptoms of a flare up. This can lead to diagnostic confusion. For example, if an LS patient is examined after treatment, and their symptoms have resolved, they may subsequently be given a diagnosis of vitiligo.”

In the study, Dr. Habeshian and her coauthors aimed to characterize differences in LS and vitiligo based on history, physical exam, and demographic findings at the time of the initial clinic visit. She and her colleagues extracted and reviewed the medical records of 98 patients with a diagnosis of LS or vitiligo who were seen at a joint pediatric dermatology-gynecology vulvar clinic over 6.8 years. The median and mean age of the study population at diagnosis was about 6 years, with ages ranging from 2 to 20. The team used descriptive statistics and Z tests for data analysis.



The researchers found that pruritus, constipation, and dysuria were the most common symptoms experienced by both LS and vitiligo patients. All were experienced more frequently by LS patients, but only pruritus reached statistical significance (P = .040). Other symptoms experienced only by LS patients included vulvar pain, bleeding, and pain with defecation.

Meanwhile, apart from hypopigmentation and erythema, all physical exam findings were more frequent in LS patients, compared with vitiligo patients, including fissures and purpura/petechiae, but only epidermal atrophy and figure-of-8 distribution of hypopigmentation reached statistical significance (P values of .047 and .036, respectively).

In other findings, LS and vitiligo were misdiagnosed as each other 15 times. Nearly half of the misdiagnoses (46.7%) were made in Black patients, who composed 38.8% of all patients in the study.

“I suspect that some vitiligo cases that were previously ‘misdiagnosed’ as LS were actually LS that just didn’t repigment and then were labeled as vitiligo in the chart,” Dr. Habeshian said.

“And some of those LS cases that previously were misdiagnosed as vitiligo likely had other more subtle LS findings that were missed (shininess and wrinkling of the skin, small fissures, constipation) or that were attributed to comorbid irritant contact dermatitis or another condition,” she said. “It was interesting to see that even in a vulvar dermatology clinic there can be confusion between these diagnoses because the literature on pediatric LS in darker skin tones is so sparse.”

She emphasized that a close exam and detailed history are needed to properly diagnose patients with anogenital skin conditions.

“Don’t forget to ask about constipation and urinary symptoms as well as psychosocial and, in the appropriate patient, sexual and reproductive function,” Dr. Habeshian said. “Based on my experience, pediatric LS is much more common in our community than the literature would suggest. Its psychosocial impact is tremendous but not well documented, particularly in pediatric patients. In my experience, the longer LS is misdiagnosed or mistreated, the more challenging it becomes to manage. You don’t want to miss LS.”

She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that photographs were not available for review for many of the earlier years of the clinic. “Therefore, we had to depend on the diagnosis given at the time of the visit,” she said. “This likely accounts in part for the smaller number than expected of significant exam and history findings between LS and vitiligo. We need further studies utilizing a standardized approach to accurate diagnosis.”

Her coauthors were Nikita Menta, Aneka Khilnani, MS, and Tazim Dowlut-McElroy, MD. The researchers reported having no financial disclosures.

 

In a specialty dermatology clinic, pediatric lichen sclerosus (LS) was difficult to differentiate from vitiligo, especially in patients with medium to dark skin tones, according to a retrospective review of cases.

Researchers who tallied symptoms and physical exam findings observed fewer statistically significant differences between LS and vitiligo patients than expected, and LS and vitiligo were sometimes misdiagnosed as each other.

“LS must be treated aggressively to prevent long-term sequelae such as permanent scarring and vulvar squamous cell carcinoma, making an accurate diagnosis crucial,” the authors write in a poster they presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Dr. Kaiane Habeshian


LS is symptomatic and has multiple exam findings, but once treated or quiescent, the discoloration can persist and create diagnostic uncertainty, lead study author Kaiane Habeshian, MD, a pediatric dermatologist at Children’s National Hospital, Washington, told this news organization following the SPD meeting.

The diagnostic uncertainty is especially true in patients with darker skin tones, who may have vitiligoid LS, an LS variant that has overlapping features of both LS and vitiligo.

Vitiligoid LS “presents clinically as a depigmented symmetric white vulvar and perianal white patch, often with minimal signs of inflammation, but is symptomatic and appears consistent with LS on histopathology,” Dr. Habeshian said.

“In our experience, in patients with medium to dark skin tones, there is a variable amount of repigmentation after treating LS,” she added. “After use of high potency topical corticosteroids, some patients almost completely repigment, while others have minimal repigmentation, and this can fluctuate over time, sometimes independent of other signs or symptoms of a flare up. This can lead to diagnostic confusion. For example, if an LS patient is examined after treatment, and their symptoms have resolved, they may subsequently be given a diagnosis of vitiligo.”

In the study, Dr. Habeshian and her coauthors aimed to characterize differences in LS and vitiligo based on history, physical exam, and demographic findings at the time of the initial clinic visit. She and her colleagues extracted and reviewed the medical records of 98 patients with a diagnosis of LS or vitiligo who were seen at a joint pediatric dermatology-gynecology vulvar clinic over 6.8 years. The median and mean age of the study population at diagnosis was about 6 years, with ages ranging from 2 to 20. The team used descriptive statistics and Z tests for data analysis.



The researchers found that pruritus, constipation, and dysuria were the most common symptoms experienced by both LS and vitiligo patients. All were experienced more frequently by LS patients, but only pruritus reached statistical significance (P = .040). Other symptoms experienced only by LS patients included vulvar pain, bleeding, and pain with defecation.

Meanwhile, apart from hypopigmentation and erythema, all physical exam findings were more frequent in LS patients, compared with vitiligo patients, including fissures and purpura/petechiae, but only epidermal atrophy and figure-of-8 distribution of hypopigmentation reached statistical significance (P values of .047 and .036, respectively).

In other findings, LS and vitiligo were misdiagnosed as each other 15 times. Nearly half of the misdiagnoses (46.7%) were made in Black patients, who composed 38.8% of all patients in the study.

“I suspect that some vitiligo cases that were previously ‘misdiagnosed’ as LS were actually LS that just didn’t repigment and then were labeled as vitiligo in the chart,” Dr. Habeshian said.

“And some of those LS cases that previously were misdiagnosed as vitiligo likely had other more subtle LS findings that were missed (shininess and wrinkling of the skin, small fissures, constipation) or that were attributed to comorbid irritant contact dermatitis or another condition,” she said. “It was interesting to see that even in a vulvar dermatology clinic there can be confusion between these diagnoses because the literature on pediatric LS in darker skin tones is so sparse.”

She emphasized that a close exam and detailed history are needed to properly diagnose patients with anogenital skin conditions.

“Don’t forget to ask about constipation and urinary symptoms as well as psychosocial and, in the appropriate patient, sexual and reproductive function,” Dr. Habeshian said. “Based on my experience, pediatric LS is much more common in our community than the literature would suggest. Its psychosocial impact is tremendous but not well documented, particularly in pediatric patients. In my experience, the longer LS is misdiagnosed or mistreated, the more challenging it becomes to manage. You don’t want to miss LS.”

She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that photographs were not available for review for many of the earlier years of the clinic. “Therefore, we had to depend on the diagnosis given at the time of the visit,” she said. “This likely accounts in part for the smaller number than expected of significant exam and history findings between LS and vitiligo. We need further studies utilizing a standardized approach to accurate diagnosis.”

Her coauthors were Nikita Menta, Aneka Khilnani, MS, and Tazim Dowlut-McElroy, MD. The researchers reported having no financial disclosures.

 

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The bloated medical record

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Thu, 08/17/2023 - 07:27

Until the 19th century there was nothing even resembling our current conception of the medical record. A few physicians may have kept personal notes, observations, and some sketches of their patients primarily to be used in teaching medical students or as part of their own curiosity-driven research. However, around 1800 the Governor Council of the State of New York adopted a proposition that all home doctors should register their medical cases again to be used as an educational tool. By 1830 these registries became annual reporting requirements that included admissions and discharges, treatment results, and expenditures. It shouldn’t surprise you learn that a review of these entries could be linked to a doctor’s prospects for promotion.

In 1919 the American College of Surgeons attempted to standardize its members’ “treatment diaries” to look something more like our current medical records with a history, lab tests, diagnosis, treatment plan, and something akin to daily progress notes. However, as late as the 1970s, when I began primary care practice, there were very few dictates on what our office notes should contain. A few (not including myself) had been trained to use a S.O.A.P. format (Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan) to organize their observations. Back then I viewed my office records as primarily a mnemonic device and only because I had a partner did I make any passing attempt at legibility.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

With AI staring us in the face and threatening to expand what has become an already bloated medical record, it may be time to reconsider the purpose of the medical record.

Although there was a time when a doctor’s notes simply functioned as a mnemonic, few physicians today practice in isolation and their records must now serve as a vehicle to communicate with covering physicians and consultants.

How detailed do those notes need to be? Do we need more than the hard data – the numbers, the prescriptions, the biometrics, the chronology of the patient’s procedures? As a covering physician or consultant, I’m not really that interested in your subjective observations. It’s not that I don’t trust you, but like any good physician I’m going to take my own history directly from the patient and do my own physical exam. You may have missed something and I owe the patient a fresh look and listen before I render an opinion or prescribe a management plan.

The medical record has become a detailed invoice to be attached to your bill to third-party payers. You need to prove to them that your service has some value. It’s not that the third-party payers don’t trust you ... well maybe that’s the issue. They don’t. So you have to prove to them that you really did something. Since they weren’t in the exam room, you must document that you asked the patient questions, did a thorough exam, and spent a specified amount of time at it. Of course that assumes that there is a direct correlation between the amount of time you spent with the patient and the quality of care. Which isn’t always the case. One sentence merely stating that you are a well-trained professional and did a thorough job doesn’t seem to be good enough. It works for the plumber and the electrician. But again, it’s that trust thing.

Of course there are the licensing and certification organizations that have a legitimate interest in the quality of your work. Because having an observer following you around for a day or two is impractical (which I still think is a good idea), you need to include evidence in your chart that you practice the standard of care by following accepted screening measures and treating according to standard guidelines.

And finally, while we are talking about trust, there is the whole risk management thing – maybe the most potent inflater of medical records. The lawyer-promoted myth “if you didn’t document it, it didn’t happen” encourages doctors to use voluminous verbiage merely to give your lawyer ammunition when you find yourself in a he-said/she-said situation.

Of course all of this needs to be carefully worded because the patient now has and deserves the right to review his or her medical records. And this might be the only good news. AI can be taught to create a medical record that is complete and more easily read and digested by the patient. This could make the records even more voluminous and as more patients become familiar with their own health records they may begin to demand that they become more concise and actually reflect what went on in the visit.
 

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

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Until the 19th century there was nothing even resembling our current conception of the medical record. A few physicians may have kept personal notes, observations, and some sketches of their patients primarily to be used in teaching medical students or as part of their own curiosity-driven research. However, around 1800 the Governor Council of the State of New York adopted a proposition that all home doctors should register their medical cases again to be used as an educational tool. By 1830 these registries became annual reporting requirements that included admissions and discharges, treatment results, and expenditures. It shouldn’t surprise you learn that a review of these entries could be linked to a doctor’s prospects for promotion.

In 1919 the American College of Surgeons attempted to standardize its members’ “treatment diaries” to look something more like our current medical records with a history, lab tests, diagnosis, treatment plan, and something akin to daily progress notes. However, as late as the 1970s, when I began primary care practice, there were very few dictates on what our office notes should contain. A few (not including myself) had been trained to use a S.O.A.P. format (Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan) to organize their observations. Back then I viewed my office records as primarily a mnemonic device and only because I had a partner did I make any passing attempt at legibility.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

With AI staring us in the face and threatening to expand what has become an already bloated medical record, it may be time to reconsider the purpose of the medical record.

Although there was a time when a doctor’s notes simply functioned as a mnemonic, few physicians today practice in isolation and their records must now serve as a vehicle to communicate with covering physicians and consultants.

How detailed do those notes need to be? Do we need more than the hard data – the numbers, the prescriptions, the biometrics, the chronology of the patient’s procedures? As a covering physician or consultant, I’m not really that interested in your subjective observations. It’s not that I don’t trust you, but like any good physician I’m going to take my own history directly from the patient and do my own physical exam. You may have missed something and I owe the patient a fresh look and listen before I render an opinion or prescribe a management plan.

The medical record has become a detailed invoice to be attached to your bill to third-party payers. You need to prove to them that your service has some value. It’s not that the third-party payers don’t trust you ... well maybe that’s the issue. They don’t. So you have to prove to them that you really did something. Since they weren’t in the exam room, you must document that you asked the patient questions, did a thorough exam, and spent a specified amount of time at it. Of course that assumes that there is a direct correlation between the amount of time you spent with the patient and the quality of care. Which isn’t always the case. One sentence merely stating that you are a well-trained professional and did a thorough job doesn’t seem to be good enough. It works for the plumber and the electrician. But again, it’s that trust thing.

Of course there are the licensing and certification organizations that have a legitimate interest in the quality of your work. Because having an observer following you around for a day or two is impractical (which I still think is a good idea), you need to include evidence in your chart that you practice the standard of care by following accepted screening measures and treating according to standard guidelines.

And finally, while we are talking about trust, there is the whole risk management thing – maybe the most potent inflater of medical records. The lawyer-promoted myth “if you didn’t document it, it didn’t happen” encourages doctors to use voluminous verbiage merely to give your lawyer ammunition when you find yourself in a he-said/she-said situation.

Of course all of this needs to be carefully worded because the patient now has and deserves the right to review his or her medical records. And this might be the only good news. AI can be taught to create a medical record that is complete and more easily read and digested by the patient. This could make the records even more voluminous and as more patients become familiar with their own health records they may begin to demand that they become more concise and actually reflect what went on in the visit.
 

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

Until the 19th century there was nothing even resembling our current conception of the medical record. A few physicians may have kept personal notes, observations, and some sketches of their patients primarily to be used in teaching medical students or as part of their own curiosity-driven research. However, around 1800 the Governor Council of the State of New York adopted a proposition that all home doctors should register their medical cases again to be used as an educational tool. By 1830 these registries became annual reporting requirements that included admissions and discharges, treatment results, and expenditures. It shouldn’t surprise you learn that a review of these entries could be linked to a doctor’s prospects for promotion.

In 1919 the American College of Surgeons attempted to standardize its members’ “treatment diaries” to look something more like our current medical records with a history, lab tests, diagnosis, treatment plan, and something akin to daily progress notes. However, as late as the 1970s, when I began primary care practice, there were very few dictates on what our office notes should contain. A few (not including myself) had been trained to use a S.O.A.P. format (Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan) to organize their observations. Back then I viewed my office records as primarily a mnemonic device and only because I had a partner did I make any passing attempt at legibility.

Dr. William G. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years.
Dr. William G. Wilkoff

With AI staring us in the face and threatening to expand what has become an already bloated medical record, it may be time to reconsider the purpose of the medical record.

Although there was a time when a doctor’s notes simply functioned as a mnemonic, few physicians today practice in isolation and their records must now serve as a vehicle to communicate with covering physicians and consultants.

How detailed do those notes need to be? Do we need more than the hard data – the numbers, the prescriptions, the biometrics, the chronology of the patient’s procedures? As a covering physician or consultant, I’m not really that interested in your subjective observations. It’s not that I don’t trust you, but like any good physician I’m going to take my own history directly from the patient and do my own physical exam. You may have missed something and I owe the patient a fresh look and listen before I render an opinion or prescribe a management plan.

The medical record has become a detailed invoice to be attached to your bill to third-party payers. You need to prove to them that your service has some value. It’s not that the third-party payers don’t trust you ... well maybe that’s the issue. They don’t. So you have to prove to them that you really did something. Since they weren’t in the exam room, you must document that you asked the patient questions, did a thorough exam, and spent a specified amount of time at it. Of course that assumes that there is a direct correlation between the amount of time you spent with the patient and the quality of care. Which isn’t always the case. One sentence merely stating that you are a well-trained professional and did a thorough job doesn’t seem to be good enough. It works for the plumber and the electrician. But again, it’s that trust thing.

Of course there are the licensing and certification organizations that have a legitimate interest in the quality of your work. Because having an observer following you around for a day or two is impractical (which I still think is a good idea), you need to include evidence in your chart that you practice the standard of care by following accepted screening measures and treating according to standard guidelines.

And finally, while we are talking about trust, there is the whole risk management thing – maybe the most potent inflater of medical records. The lawyer-promoted myth “if you didn’t document it, it didn’t happen” encourages doctors to use voluminous verbiage merely to give your lawyer ammunition when you find yourself in a he-said/she-said situation.

Of course all of this needs to be carefully worded because the patient now has and deserves the right to review his or her medical records. And this might be the only good news. AI can be taught to create a medical record that is complete and more easily read and digested by the patient. This could make the records even more voluminous and as more patients become familiar with their own health records they may begin to demand that they become more concise and actually reflect what went on in the visit.
 

Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at [email protected].

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Drug name confusion: More than 80 new drug pairs added to the list

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 08/11/2023 - 10:15

Zolpidem (Ambien) is a well-known sedative for sleep. Letairis (Ambrisentan) is a vasodilator for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Citalopram (Celexa) is an antidepressant; escitalopram (Lexapro) is prescribed for anxiety and depression.
 

Those are just 4 of the more than 80 pairs of drug names that the Institute for Safe Medication Practices recently added to its list of confusing drug names. The aim is to increase awareness about the potential for a serious medication mistake when the wrong drug is given because of drug names that look and sound similar.

Awareness of these drug names, however, is just the first step in preventing medication mistakes. Health care providers should take a number of other steps as well, experts said.

ISMP launched its confusing drug names list, previously called look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) drugs, in 2008. The new list is an update of the 2019 version, said Michael J. Gaunt, PharmD, senior manager of error reporting programs for the ISMP, which focuses on the prevention of medication mistakes. The new entries were chosen on the basis of a number of factors, including ISMP’s analysis of recent medication mishap reports that were submitted to it.

The ISMP list now includes about 528 drug pairs, Dr. Gaunt said. The list is long, he said, partly because each pair is listed twice, so readers can cross reference. For instance, hydralazine and hydroxyzine are listed in one entry in the list, and hydroxyzine and hydralazine are listed in another.

Brand Institute in Miami has named, among other drugs, Entresto, Rybelsus, and Lunesta. The regulatory arm of the company, the Drug Safety Institute, “considers drug names that have been confused as an important part of our comprehensive drug name assessments,” Todd Bridges, global president of the institute, said in an emailed statement. Information on the confusing drug names are incorporated into the company’s proprietary algorithm and is used when developing brand names for drugs. “We continually update this algorithm as new drug names that are often confused are identified,” Mr. Bridges said.
 

Confusing drug names: Ongoing issue

The length of the list, as well as the latest additions, are not surprising, said Mary Ann Kliethermes, PharmD, director of medication safety and quality for the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, a membership organization of about 60,000 pharmacists who practice in inpatient and outpatient settings.

“I’ve been in practice over 45 years,” she said, “and this has been a problem ever since I have been in practice.” The sheer volume of new drugs is one reason, she said. From 2013 through 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved an average of 43 novel drugs per year, according to a report from its Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Since the 90s, this [confusion about similar drug names] has happened,” Dr. Kliethermes said.

According to a 2023 report, about 7,000-9,000 people die each year in the United States as the result of a medication error. However, it’s impossible to say for sure what percentage of those errors involve name confusion, Dr. Gaunt said.

Not all the mistakes are reported. Some that are reported are dramatic and deadly. In 2022, a Tennessee nurse was convicted of gross neglect and negligent homicide. She was sentenced to 3 years’ probation after she mistakenly gave vercuronium, an anesthetic agent, instead of the sedative Versed to a patient, and the woman died.
 

 

 

Updated list: A closer look

Many of the new drug pairs that are listed in the update are cephalosporins, said Dr. Kliethermes, who reviewed the new list for this news organization. In all, 20 of the latest 82 additions are cephalosporins. These include drugs such as cefazolin, which can be confused with cefotetan, and vice versa. These drugs have been around since the 1980s, she said, but “they needed to be on there.” Even in the 1980s, it was becoming difficult to differentiate them, and there were fewer drugs in that class then, she said.

Influenza vaccines made the new list, too. Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent can be confused with fluzone quadrivalent. Other new additions: hydrochlorothiazide and hydroxychloroquine, Lasik and Wakix, Pitressin and Pitocin, Remeron and Rozerem.
 

Beyond the list

While it’s not possible to pinpoint how big a problem name confusion is in causing medication mistakes, “it is certainly still an issue,” Dr. Gaunt said. A variety of practices can reduce that risk substantially, Dr. Gaunt and Dr. Kliethermes agreed.

Tall-man lettering. Both the FDA and the ISMP recommend the use of so-called tall-man lettering (TML), which involves the use of uppercase letters, sometimes in boldface, to distinguish similar names on product labels and elsewhere. Examples include vinBLAStine and vinCRIStine.

Electronic prescribing. “It eliminates the risk of handwriting confusion,” Dr. Gaunt said. However, electronic prescribing can have a downside, Dr. Kliethermes said. When ordering medication, a person may type in a few letters and may then be presented with a prompt that lists several drug names, and it can be easy to click the wrong one. For that reason, ISMP and other experts recommend typing at least five letters when searching for a medication in an electronic system.

Use both brand and generic names on labels and prescriptions.

Write the indication. That can serve as a double check. If a prescription for Ambien says “For sleep,” there’s probably less risk of filling a prescription for ambrisentan, the vasodilator.

Smart formulary additions. When hospitals add medications to their formularies, “part of that formulary assessment should include looking at the potential risk for errors,” Dr. Gaunt said. This involves keeping an eye out for confusing names and similar packaging. “Do that analysis up front and put in strategies to minimize that. Maybe you look for a different drug [for the same use] that has a different name.” Or choose a different manufacturer, so the medication would at least have a different container.

Use bar code scanning. Suppose a pharmacist goes to the shelf and pulls the wrong drug. “Bar code scanning provides the opportunity to catch the error,” Dr. Gaunt said. Many community pharmacies now have bar code scanning. ISMP just issued best practices for community pharmacies, Dr. Gaunt said, and these include the use of bar code scanning and other measures.

Educate consumers. Health care providers can educate consumers on how to minimize the risk of getting the wrong drug, Dr. Gaunt said. When patients are picking up a prescription, suggest they look at the container label; if it looks different from previous prescriptions of the same medicine, ask the pharmacist for an explanation. Some patients just pass it off, Dr. Gaunt said, figuring the pharmacist or health plan switched manufacturers of their medication.

Access the list. The entire list is on the ISMP site and is accessible after free registration.
 

 

 

Goal: Preventing confusion

The FDA has provided guidance for industry on naming drugs not yet approved so that the proposed names are not too similar in sound or appearance to those already on the market. Included in the lengthy document are checklists, such as, “Across a range of dialects, are the names consistently pronounced differently?” and “Are the lengths of the names dissimilar when scripted?” (Lengths are considered different if they differ by two or more letters.)

The FDA also offers the phonetic and orthographic computer analysis (POCA) program, a software tool that employs an advanced algorithm to evaluate similarities between two drug names. The data sources are updated regularly as new drugs are approved.
 

Liability update

The problem may be decreasing. In a 2020 report, researchers used pharmacists’ professional liability claim data from the Healthcare Providers Service Organization. They compared 2018 data on claims with 2013 data. The percentage of claims associated with wrong drug dispensing errors declined from 43.8% in 2013 to 36.8% in 2018. Wrong dose claims also declined, from 31.5% to 15.3%.

These researchers concluded that technology and automation have contributed to the prevention of medication errors caused by the use of the wrong drug and the wrong dose, but mistakes continue, owing to system and human errors.

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

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Zolpidem (Ambien) is a well-known sedative for sleep. Letairis (Ambrisentan) is a vasodilator for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Citalopram (Celexa) is an antidepressant; escitalopram (Lexapro) is prescribed for anxiety and depression.
 

Those are just 4 of the more than 80 pairs of drug names that the Institute for Safe Medication Practices recently added to its list of confusing drug names. The aim is to increase awareness about the potential for a serious medication mistake when the wrong drug is given because of drug names that look and sound similar.

Awareness of these drug names, however, is just the first step in preventing medication mistakes. Health care providers should take a number of other steps as well, experts said.

ISMP launched its confusing drug names list, previously called look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) drugs, in 2008. The new list is an update of the 2019 version, said Michael J. Gaunt, PharmD, senior manager of error reporting programs for the ISMP, which focuses on the prevention of medication mistakes. The new entries were chosen on the basis of a number of factors, including ISMP’s analysis of recent medication mishap reports that were submitted to it.

The ISMP list now includes about 528 drug pairs, Dr. Gaunt said. The list is long, he said, partly because each pair is listed twice, so readers can cross reference. For instance, hydralazine and hydroxyzine are listed in one entry in the list, and hydroxyzine and hydralazine are listed in another.

Brand Institute in Miami has named, among other drugs, Entresto, Rybelsus, and Lunesta. The regulatory arm of the company, the Drug Safety Institute, “considers drug names that have been confused as an important part of our comprehensive drug name assessments,” Todd Bridges, global president of the institute, said in an emailed statement. Information on the confusing drug names are incorporated into the company’s proprietary algorithm and is used when developing brand names for drugs. “We continually update this algorithm as new drug names that are often confused are identified,” Mr. Bridges said.
 

Confusing drug names: Ongoing issue

The length of the list, as well as the latest additions, are not surprising, said Mary Ann Kliethermes, PharmD, director of medication safety and quality for the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, a membership organization of about 60,000 pharmacists who practice in inpatient and outpatient settings.

“I’ve been in practice over 45 years,” she said, “and this has been a problem ever since I have been in practice.” The sheer volume of new drugs is one reason, she said. From 2013 through 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved an average of 43 novel drugs per year, according to a report from its Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Since the 90s, this [confusion about similar drug names] has happened,” Dr. Kliethermes said.

According to a 2023 report, about 7,000-9,000 people die each year in the United States as the result of a medication error. However, it’s impossible to say for sure what percentage of those errors involve name confusion, Dr. Gaunt said.

Not all the mistakes are reported. Some that are reported are dramatic and deadly. In 2022, a Tennessee nurse was convicted of gross neglect and negligent homicide. She was sentenced to 3 years’ probation after she mistakenly gave vercuronium, an anesthetic agent, instead of the sedative Versed to a patient, and the woman died.
 

 

 

Updated list: A closer look

Many of the new drug pairs that are listed in the update are cephalosporins, said Dr. Kliethermes, who reviewed the new list for this news organization. In all, 20 of the latest 82 additions are cephalosporins. These include drugs such as cefazolin, which can be confused with cefotetan, and vice versa. These drugs have been around since the 1980s, she said, but “they needed to be on there.” Even in the 1980s, it was becoming difficult to differentiate them, and there were fewer drugs in that class then, she said.

Influenza vaccines made the new list, too. Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent can be confused with fluzone quadrivalent. Other new additions: hydrochlorothiazide and hydroxychloroquine, Lasik and Wakix, Pitressin and Pitocin, Remeron and Rozerem.
 

Beyond the list

While it’s not possible to pinpoint how big a problem name confusion is in causing medication mistakes, “it is certainly still an issue,” Dr. Gaunt said. A variety of practices can reduce that risk substantially, Dr. Gaunt and Dr. Kliethermes agreed.

Tall-man lettering. Both the FDA and the ISMP recommend the use of so-called tall-man lettering (TML), which involves the use of uppercase letters, sometimes in boldface, to distinguish similar names on product labels and elsewhere. Examples include vinBLAStine and vinCRIStine.

Electronic prescribing. “It eliminates the risk of handwriting confusion,” Dr. Gaunt said. However, electronic prescribing can have a downside, Dr. Kliethermes said. When ordering medication, a person may type in a few letters and may then be presented with a prompt that lists several drug names, and it can be easy to click the wrong one. For that reason, ISMP and other experts recommend typing at least five letters when searching for a medication in an electronic system.

Use both brand and generic names on labels and prescriptions.

Write the indication. That can serve as a double check. If a prescription for Ambien says “For sleep,” there’s probably less risk of filling a prescription for ambrisentan, the vasodilator.

Smart formulary additions. When hospitals add medications to their formularies, “part of that formulary assessment should include looking at the potential risk for errors,” Dr. Gaunt said. This involves keeping an eye out for confusing names and similar packaging. “Do that analysis up front and put in strategies to minimize that. Maybe you look for a different drug [for the same use] that has a different name.” Or choose a different manufacturer, so the medication would at least have a different container.

Use bar code scanning. Suppose a pharmacist goes to the shelf and pulls the wrong drug. “Bar code scanning provides the opportunity to catch the error,” Dr. Gaunt said. Many community pharmacies now have bar code scanning. ISMP just issued best practices for community pharmacies, Dr. Gaunt said, and these include the use of bar code scanning and other measures.

Educate consumers. Health care providers can educate consumers on how to minimize the risk of getting the wrong drug, Dr. Gaunt said. When patients are picking up a prescription, suggest they look at the container label; if it looks different from previous prescriptions of the same medicine, ask the pharmacist for an explanation. Some patients just pass it off, Dr. Gaunt said, figuring the pharmacist or health plan switched manufacturers of their medication.

Access the list. The entire list is on the ISMP site and is accessible after free registration.
 

 

 

Goal: Preventing confusion

The FDA has provided guidance for industry on naming drugs not yet approved so that the proposed names are not too similar in sound or appearance to those already on the market. Included in the lengthy document are checklists, such as, “Across a range of dialects, are the names consistently pronounced differently?” and “Are the lengths of the names dissimilar when scripted?” (Lengths are considered different if they differ by two or more letters.)

The FDA also offers the phonetic and orthographic computer analysis (POCA) program, a software tool that employs an advanced algorithm to evaluate similarities between two drug names. The data sources are updated regularly as new drugs are approved.
 

Liability update

The problem may be decreasing. In a 2020 report, researchers used pharmacists’ professional liability claim data from the Healthcare Providers Service Organization. They compared 2018 data on claims with 2013 data. The percentage of claims associated with wrong drug dispensing errors declined from 43.8% in 2013 to 36.8% in 2018. Wrong dose claims also declined, from 31.5% to 15.3%.

These researchers concluded that technology and automation have contributed to the prevention of medication errors caused by the use of the wrong drug and the wrong dose, but mistakes continue, owing to system and human errors.

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

Zolpidem (Ambien) is a well-known sedative for sleep. Letairis (Ambrisentan) is a vasodilator for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Citalopram (Celexa) is an antidepressant; escitalopram (Lexapro) is prescribed for anxiety and depression.
 

Those are just 4 of the more than 80 pairs of drug names that the Institute for Safe Medication Practices recently added to its list of confusing drug names. The aim is to increase awareness about the potential for a serious medication mistake when the wrong drug is given because of drug names that look and sound similar.

Awareness of these drug names, however, is just the first step in preventing medication mistakes. Health care providers should take a number of other steps as well, experts said.

ISMP launched its confusing drug names list, previously called look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) drugs, in 2008. The new list is an update of the 2019 version, said Michael J. Gaunt, PharmD, senior manager of error reporting programs for the ISMP, which focuses on the prevention of medication mistakes. The new entries were chosen on the basis of a number of factors, including ISMP’s analysis of recent medication mishap reports that were submitted to it.

The ISMP list now includes about 528 drug pairs, Dr. Gaunt said. The list is long, he said, partly because each pair is listed twice, so readers can cross reference. For instance, hydralazine and hydroxyzine are listed in one entry in the list, and hydroxyzine and hydralazine are listed in another.

Brand Institute in Miami has named, among other drugs, Entresto, Rybelsus, and Lunesta. The regulatory arm of the company, the Drug Safety Institute, “considers drug names that have been confused as an important part of our comprehensive drug name assessments,” Todd Bridges, global president of the institute, said in an emailed statement. Information on the confusing drug names are incorporated into the company’s proprietary algorithm and is used when developing brand names for drugs. “We continually update this algorithm as new drug names that are often confused are identified,” Mr. Bridges said.
 

Confusing drug names: Ongoing issue

The length of the list, as well as the latest additions, are not surprising, said Mary Ann Kliethermes, PharmD, director of medication safety and quality for the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, a membership organization of about 60,000 pharmacists who practice in inpatient and outpatient settings.

“I’ve been in practice over 45 years,” she said, “and this has been a problem ever since I have been in practice.” The sheer volume of new drugs is one reason, she said. From 2013 through 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved an average of 43 novel drugs per year, according to a report from its Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. “Since the 90s, this [confusion about similar drug names] has happened,” Dr. Kliethermes said.

According to a 2023 report, about 7,000-9,000 people die each year in the United States as the result of a medication error. However, it’s impossible to say for sure what percentage of those errors involve name confusion, Dr. Gaunt said.

Not all the mistakes are reported. Some that are reported are dramatic and deadly. In 2022, a Tennessee nurse was convicted of gross neglect and negligent homicide. She was sentenced to 3 years’ probation after she mistakenly gave vercuronium, an anesthetic agent, instead of the sedative Versed to a patient, and the woman died.
 

 

 

Updated list: A closer look

Many of the new drug pairs that are listed in the update are cephalosporins, said Dr. Kliethermes, who reviewed the new list for this news organization. In all, 20 of the latest 82 additions are cephalosporins. These include drugs such as cefazolin, which can be confused with cefotetan, and vice versa. These drugs have been around since the 1980s, she said, but “they needed to be on there.” Even in the 1980s, it was becoming difficult to differentiate them, and there were fewer drugs in that class then, she said.

Influenza vaccines made the new list, too. Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent can be confused with fluzone quadrivalent. Other new additions: hydrochlorothiazide and hydroxychloroquine, Lasik and Wakix, Pitressin and Pitocin, Remeron and Rozerem.
 

Beyond the list

While it’s not possible to pinpoint how big a problem name confusion is in causing medication mistakes, “it is certainly still an issue,” Dr. Gaunt said. A variety of practices can reduce that risk substantially, Dr. Gaunt and Dr. Kliethermes agreed.

Tall-man lettering. Both the FDA and the ISMP recommend the use of so-called tall-man lettering (TML), which involves the use of uppercase letters, sometimes in boldface, to distinguish similar names on product labels and elsewhere. Examples include vinBLAStine and vinCRIStine.

Electronic prescribing. “It eliminates the risk of handwriting confusion,” Dr. Gaunt said. However, electronic prescribing can have a downside, Dr. Kliethermes said. When ordering medication, a person may type in a few letters and may then be presented with a prompt that lists several drug names, and it can be easy to click the wrong one. For that reason, ISMP and other experts recommend typing at least five letters when searching for a medication in an electronic system.

Use both brand and generic names on labels and prescriptions.

Write the indication. That can serve as a double check. If a prescription for Ambien says “For sleep,” there’s probably less risk of filling a prescription for ambrisentan, the vasodilator.

Smart formulary additions. When hospitals add medications to their formularies, “part of that formulary assessment should include looking at the potential risk for errors,” Dr. Gaunt said. This involves keeping an eye out for confusing names and similar packaging. “Do that analysis up front and put in strategies to minimize that. Maybe you look for a different drug [for the same use] that has a different name.” Or choose a different manufacturer, so the medication would at least have a different container.

Use bar code scanning. Suppose a pharmacist goes to the shelf and pulls the wrong drug. “Bar code scanning provides the opportunity to catch the error,” Dr. Gaunt said. Many community pharmacies now have bar code scanning. ISMP just issued best practices for community pharmacies, Dr. Gaunt said, and these include the use of bar code scanning and other measures.

Educate consumers. Health care providers can educate consumers on how to minimize the risk of getting the wrong drug, Dr. Gaunt said. When patients are picking up a prescription, suggest they look at the container label; if it looks different from previous prescriptions of the same medicine, ask the pharmacist for an explanation. Some patients just pass it off, Dr. Gaunt said, figuring the pharmacist or health plan switched manufacturers of their medication.

Access the list. The entire list is on the ISMP site and is accessible after free registration.
 

 

 

Goal: Preventing confusion

The FDA has provided guidance for industry on naming drugs not yet approved so that the proposed names are not too similar in sound or appearance to those already on the market. Included in the lengthy document are checklists, such as, “Across a range of dialects, are the names consistently pronounced differently?” and “Are the lengths of the names dissimilar when scripted?” (Lengths are considered different if they differ by two or more letters.)

The FDA also offers the phonetic and orthographic computer analysis (POCA) program, a software tool that employs an advanced algorithm to evaluate similarities between two drug names. The data sources are updated regularly as new drugs are approved.
 

Liability update

The problem may be decreasing. In a 2020 report, researchers used pharmacists’ professional liability claim data from the Healthcare Providers Service Organization. They compared 2018 data on claims with 2013 data. The percentage of claims associated with wrong drug dispensing errors declined from 43.8% in 2013 to 36.8% in 2018. Wrong dose claims also declined, from 31.5% to 15.3%.

These researchers concluded that technology and automation have contributed to the prevention of medication errors caused by the use of the wrong drug and the wrong dose, but mistakes continue, owing to system and human errors.

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

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U.S. has new dominant COVID variant called EG.5

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Tue, 08/08/2023 - 12:10

COVID-19 hospitalizations continue their steady summer march upward, and now a new variant has perched atop the list of the most prevalent forms of the virus.

Called “Eris” among avid COVID trackers, the strain EG.5 now accounts for 17% of all U.S. COVID infections, according to the latest Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates. That’s up from 12% the week prior. 

EG.5 has been rising worldwide, just weeks after the World Health Organization added the strain to its official monitoring list. In the United Kingdom, it now accounts for 1 in 10 COVID cases, The Independent reported.

EG.5 is a descendant of the XBB strains that have dominated tracking lists in recent months. It has the same makeup as XBB.1.9.2 but carries an extra spike mutation, according to a summary published by the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. The spike protein is the part of the virus that allows it to enter human cells. But there’s no indication so far that EG.5 is more contagious or severe than other recent variants, according to the CIDRAP summary and a recent podcast from the American Medical Association. The CDC said that current vaccines protect against the variant.

U.S. hospitals saw a 12% increase in COVID admissions during the week ending on July 22, with 8,047 people being admitted because of the virus, up from an all-time low of 6,306 the week of June 24. In 17 states, the past-week increase in hospitalizations was 20% or greater. In Minnesota, the rate jumped by 50%, and in West Virginia, it jumped by 63%. Meanwhile, deaths reached their lowest weekly rate ever for the week of data ending July 29, with just 176 deaths reported by the CDC.

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

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COVID-19 hospitalizations continue their steady summer march upward, and now a new variant has perched atop the list of the most prevalent forms of the virus.

Called “Eris” among avid COVID trackers, the strain EG.5 now accounts for 17% of all U.S. COVID infections, according to the latest Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates. That’s up from 12% the week prior. 

EG.5 has been rising worldwide, just weeks after the World Health Organization added the strain to its official monitoring list. In the United Kingdom, it now accounts for 1 in 10 COVID cases, The Independent reported.

EG.5 is a descendant of the XBB strains that have dominated tracking lists in recent months. It has the same makeup as XBB.1.9.2 but carries an extra spike mutation, according to a summary published by the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. The spike protein is the part of the virus that allows it to enter human cells. But there’s no indication so far that EG.5 is more contagious or severe than other recent variants, according to the CIDRAP summary and a recent podcast from the American Medical Association. The CDC said that current vaccines protect against the variant.

U.S. hospitals saw a 12% increase in COVID admissions during the week ending on July 22, with 8,047 people being admitted because of the virus, up from an all-time low of 6,306 the week of June 24. In 17 states, the past-week increase in hospitalizations was 20% or greater. In Minnesota, the rate jumped by 50%, and in West Virginia, it jumped by 63%. Meanwhile, deaths reached their lowest weekly rate ever for the week of data ending July 29, with just 176 deaths reported by the CDC.

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

COVID-19 hospitalizations continue their steady summer march upward, and now a new variant has perched atop the list of the most prevalent forms of the virus.

Called “Eris” among avid COVID trackers, the strain EG.5 now accounts for 17% of all U.S. COVID infections, according to the latest Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates. That’s up from 12% the week prior. 

EG.5 has been rising worldwide, just weeks after the World Health Organization added the strain to its official monitoring list. In the United Kingdom, it now accounts for 1 in 10 COVID cases, The Independent reported.

EG.5 is a descendant of the XBB strains that have dominated tracking lists in recent months. It has the same makeup as XBB.1.9.2 but carries an extra spike mutation, according to a summary published by the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. The spike protein is the part of the virus that allows it to enter human cells. But there’s no indication so far that EG.5 is more contagious or severe than other recent variants, according to the CIDRAP summary and a recent podcast from the American Medical Association. The CDC said that current vaccines protect against the variant.

U.S. hospitals saw a 12% increase in COVID admissions during the week ending on July 22, with 8,047 people being admitted because of the virus, up from an all-time low of 6,306 the week of June 24. In 17 states, the past-week increase in hospitalizations was 20% or greater. In Minnesota, the rate jumped by 50%, and in West Virginia, it jumped by 63%. Meanwhile, deaths reached their lowest weekly rate ever for the week of data ending July 29, with just 176 deaths reported by the CDC.

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

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Social needs case management cuts acute care usage

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Mon, 08/07/2023 - 17:15

Hospitalizations fell by 11% in patients assigned to integrated social needs case management, a randomized controlled study conducted in California found.

The reduction in acute care use was likely because of the 3% increase in primary care visits with this approach, according to lead study author Mark D. Fleming, PhD, MS, assistant professor of health and social behavior at the University of California, Berkeley. The study was published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Dr. Mark D. Fleming


The findings provide evidence for the theory that social needs case management can decrease acute care use by facilitating access to primary care, Dr. Fleming said in an interview. “While an increasing number of studies have measured the effects of social needs case management on hospital use, the findings have been inconsistent, with some studies showing a decrease in hospital use and others showing no change.” There was no strong evidence of an effect on acute care.

A 2018 study, however, found that liaising with community care workers substantially reduced hospital days in disadvantaged patients.

Case management, a complex approach linking medical and social needs, can overcome barriers to care by facilitating access to transportation and helping patients navigate the health care system, the authors noted. It can also streamline patient access to insurance coverage and social benefits.  

The study

The current data came from a secondary analysis of a randomized encouragement study in Costa County, Calif., during 2017 and 2018. That study allocated adult California Medicaid beneficiaries of diverse race and ethnicity, relatively high social needs, and high risk for acute care use to two arms: social needs case management (n = 21,422) or administrative observation (22,389 weighted). Chronic health issues ranged from arthritis, diabetes, and back conditions to heart or lung disease, and psychological disorders. About 50% in both groups were younger than age 40 and 60% were women.

Case managers assessed patient needs, created a patient-centered care plan, and facilitated community resource referrals, primary care visits, and applications for public benefits.

The professionally diverse managers included public health nurses, social workers, substance misuse counselors, and mental health clinicians, as well as homeless service specialists and community health workers. Case management was offered as in-person or remote telephonic services for 1 year.

While rates of primary care visits were significantly higher in the case management group – incidence rate 1.03 (95% confidence interval [CI],1.00-1.07) – no intergroup differences emerged in visits for specialty care, behavioral health, psychiatric emergency visits, or jail intakes.

Although the analysis could not measure a direct effect of primary care use on hospitalizations, the results suggested it would take 6.6 primary care visits to avert one hospitalization. As a limitation, the outcomes were studied for only 1 year, but further effects of case management on health and service use could take longer to appear.

Commenting on the analysis but not involved in it, Laura Gottlieb, MD, MPH, professor in the department of family and community medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, said a few studies have suggested several pathways through which case management might influence health and health care utilization – and not solely through access to social services.

Dr. Gottlieb
Dr. Laura Gottlieb

“The current findings underscore that one of those pathways is likely via connection to health care services,” she said.

As to the cost effectiveness of social needs case management given the necessary increase in personnel costs, she added, that it is a matter of society’s priorities. “If we want to achieve equity, we need to invest dollars differently. That is not a hospital-level issue. It is a society-level issue. Hospitals need to be able to stay afloat, so health care policies need to enable them to make different decisions,” she added. Broadly implementing such an approach will obviously take investment, Dr. Gottlieb continued.

“California Medicaid is trying to enable this shift in investments, but it is hard to move existing structures.” She added that more data are needed on the interaction between social services, patient experiences of care, and self-efficacy to understand a wider array of mechanisms through which case management might affect outcomes.

This analysis was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and Contra Costa Health Services. The authors disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.

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Hospitalizations fell by 11% in patients assigned to integrated social needs case management, a randomized controlled study conducted in California found.

The reduction in acute care use was likely because of the 3% increase in primary care visits with this approach, according to lead study author Mark D. Fleming, PhD, MS, assistant professor of health and social behavior at the University of California, Berkeley. The study was published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Dr. Mark D. Fleming


The findings provide evidence for the theory that social needs case management can decrease acute care use by facilitating access to primary care, Dr. Fleming said in an interview. “While an increasing number of studies have measured the effects of social needs case management on hospital use, the findings have been inconsistent, with some studies showing a decrease in hospital use and others showing no change.” There was no strong evidence of an effect on acute care.

A 2018 study, however, found that liaising with community care workers substantially reduced hospital days in disadvantaged patients.

Case management, a complex approach linking medical and social needs, can overcome barriers to care by facilitating access to transportation and helping patients navigate the health care system, the authors noted. It can also streamline patient access to insurance coverage and social benefits.  

The study

The current data came from a secondary analysis of a randomized encouragement study in Costa County, Calif., during 2017 and 2018. That study allocated adult California Medicaid beneficiaries of diverse race and ethnicity, relatively high social needs, and high risk for acute care use to two arms: social needs case management (n = 21,422) or administrative observation (22,389 weighted). Chronic health issues ranged from arthritis, diabetes, and back conditions to heart or lung disease, and psychological disorders. About 50% in both groups were younger than age 40 and 60% were women.

Case managers assessed patient needs, created a patient-centered care plan, and facilitated community resource referrals, primary care visits, and applications for public benefits.

The professionally diverse managers included public health nurses, social workers, substance misuse counselors, and mental health clinicians, as well as homeless service specialists and community health workers. Case management was offered as in-person or remote telephonic services for 1 year.

While rates of primary care visits were significantly higher in the case management group – incidence rate 1.03 (95% confidence interval [CI],1.00-1.07) – no intergroup differences emerged in visits for specialty care, behavioral health, psychiatric emergency visits, or jail intakes.

Although the analysis could not measure a direct effect of primary care use on hospitalizations, the results suggested it would take 6.6 primary care visits to avert one hospitalization. As a limitation, the outcomes were studied for only 1 year, but further effects of case management on health and service use could take longer to appear.

Commenting on the analysis but not involved in it, Laura Gottlieb, MD, MPH, professor in the department of family and community medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, said a few studies have suggested several pathways through which case management might influence health and health care utilization – and not solely through access to social services.

Dr. Gottlieb
Dr. Laura Gottlieb

“The current findings underscore that one of those pathways is likely via connection to health care services,” she said.

As to the cost effectiveness of social needs case management given the necessary increase in personnel costs, she added, that it is a matter of society’s priorities. “If we want to achieve equity, we need to invest dollars differently. That is not a hospital-level issue. It is a society-level issue. Hospitals need to be able to stay afloat, so health care policies need to enable them to make different decisions,” she added. Broadly implementing such an approach will obviously take investment, Dr. Gottlieb continued.

“California Medicaid is trying to enable this shift in investments, but it is hard to move existing structures.” She added that more data are needed on the interaction between social services, patient experiences of care, and self-efficacy to understand a wider array of mechanisms through which case management might affect outcomes.

This analysis was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and Contra Costa Health Services. The authors disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.

Hospitalizations fell by 11% in patients assigned to integrated social needs case management, a randomized controlled study conducted in California found.

The reduction in acute care use was likely because of the 3% increase in primary care visits with this approach, according to lead study author Mark D. Fleming, PhD, MS, assistant professor of health and social behavior at the University of California, Berkeley. The study was published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Dr. Mark D. Fleming


The findings provide evidence for the theory that social needs case management can decrease acute care use by facilitating access to primary care, Dr. Fleming said in an interview. “While an increasing number of studies have measured the effects of social needs case management on hospital use, the findings have been inconsistent, with some studies showing a decrease in hospital use and others showing no change.” There was no strong evidence of an effect on acute care.

A 2018 study, however, found that liaising with community care workers substantially reduced hospital days in disadvantaged patients.

Case management, a complex approach linking medical and social needs, can overcome barriers to care by facilitating access to transportation and helping patients navigate the health care system, the authors noted. It can also streamline patient access to insurance coverage and social benefits.  

The study

The current data came from a secondary analysis of a randomized encouragement study in Costa County, Calif., during 2017 and 2018. That study allocated adult California Medicaid beneficiaries of diverse race and ethnicity, relatively high social needs, and high risk for acute care use to two arms: social needs case management (n = 21,422) or administrative observation (22,389 weighted). Chronic health issues ranged from arthritis, diabetes, and back conditions to heart or lung disease, and psychological disorders. About 50% in both groups were younger than age 40 and 60% were women.

Case managers assessed patient needs, created a patient-centered care plan, and facilitated community resource referrals, primary care visits, and applications for public benefits.

The professionally diverse managers included public health nurses, social workers, substance misuse counselors, and mental health clinicians, as well as homeless service specialists and community health workers. Case management was offered as in-person or remote telephonic services for 1 year.

While rates of primary care visits were significantly higher in the case management group – incidence rate 1.03 (95% confidence interval [CI],1.00-1.07) – no intergroup differences emerged in visits for specialty care, behavioral health, psychiatric emergency visits, or jail intakes.

Although the analysis could not measure a direct effect of primary care use on hospitalizations, the results suggested it would take 6.6 primary care visits to avert one hospitalization. As a limitation, the outcomes were studied for only 1 year, but further effects of case management on health and service use could take longer to appear.

Commenting on the analysis but not involved in it, Laura Gottlieb, MD, MPH, professor in the department of family and community medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, said a few studies have suggested several pathways through which case management might influence health and health care utilization – and not solely through access to social services.

Dr. Gottlieb
Dr. Laura Gottlieb

“The current findings underscore that one of those pathways is likely via connection to health care services,” she said.

As to the cost effectiveness of social needs case management given the necessary increase in personnel costs, she added, that it is a matter of society’s priorities. “If we want to achieve equity, we need to invest dollars differently. That is not a hospital-level issue. It is a society-level issue. Hospitals need to be able to stay afloat, so health care policies need to enable them to make different decisions,” she added. Broadly implementing such an approach will obviously take investment, Dr. Gottlieb continued.

“California Medicaid is trying to enable this shift in investments, but it is hard to move existing structures.” She added that more data are needed on the interaction between social services, patient experiences of care, and self-efficacy to understand a wider array of mechanisms through which case management might affect outcomes.

This analysis was supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and Contra Costa Health Services. The authors disclosed no relevant conflicts of interest.

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Should we rename obesity?

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 08/11/2023 - 10:56

Public perception of disease is everything. “Diabetics” are now referred to as “people living with diabetes,” and an “obese person” is now an “individual living with obesity.”

But what is the definition of obesity? Does it refer to a disease or a risk factor? And is the term so tainted in negativity, blame, and bias that the only solution is to scrap it and completely rename it? Society (and medicine) have changed significantly since the Latin word obesitas was adopted back in the 1600s.

Despite so much hinging on the word “obesity,” it’s remarkable that the label persists while the concepts underpinning it have evolved significantly. So perhaps it is more about finding the least-worst option rather than pursuing the impossibility of a solution that suits all?

This is precisely the challenge faced by a Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology Commission on the Definition and Diagnosis of Clinical Obesity, which is due to publish its initial findings this coming fall. The global task force has 60 leaders in the clinical management of obesity, including representatives with lived experiences of obesity. Leading the project is Francesco Rubino, MD, chair of metabolic and bariatric surgery at King’s College London.

“Renaming ‘obesity’ is very important,” states Dr. Rubino. “The word is so stigmatized, with so much misunderstanding and misperception, some might say the only solution is to change the name.”

One possibility for a new name, introduced by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (now –Endocrinology) and the American College of Endocrinology back in 2016, was based on framing the disease on the central characteristic of adiposity and was termed ABCD, for adiposity-based chronic disease.

Dr. Rubino welcomes “ABCD” but has some reservations. “It is good from a physiological point of view, but the problem is it speaks to scientists and medical professionals. I don’t know how much it would appeal to the general public. ‘ABCD’ still falls short of telling us what the illness is.”

He adds that the Lancet Commission’s approach is rather to call it “clinical obesity.” “ ‘Obesity’ itself doesn’t necessarily convey the message that you have a disease or an illness,” he observes. “It is similar to the difference in meaning between depression and clinical depression, which communicate two different things.”

But underpinning any renaming is greater clarification of the definition and diagnosis of obesity. In 1997, the World Health Organization recognized obesity as a chronic disease; in 2013, the American Medical Association did likewise, adding that it warranted medical attention; while it took until 2021 for the European Commission to define obesity as a “chronic relapsing disease, which in turn acts as a gateway to a range of other non-communicable diseases.”

Yet, 25 years after the initial recognition of obesity as a disease, the concept is still riddled with negativity, whether openly or unconsciously. Such stigma denigrates overweight people and those with obesity as “lazy, sloppy, unintelligent, and unattractive.”

Dr. Rubino explains that first, it’s important to establish and define the essential components and characteristics of the disease of obesity. This is key to improving access to clinical care, reducing personal blame, and nurturing a more supportive research environment to help inform both clinical and policy decision-making.

“This is the question that is at the core of our commission. We have a problem with the current definition of obesity, and the way we measure it does not allow us to accurately define a state of illness with obesity,” he explains.
 

 

 

Labels shape public perceptions of disease; ‘obesity’ epitomizes this

Another expert championing the need for a name that better reflects the definition – whatever that turns out to be – is Margaret Steele, PhD, School of Public Health, University College Cork (Ireland), who, according to her university webpage, has a special interest in “ ‘fatness’ as a cultural, social and political phenomenon.”

She believes that labels, including “obesity,” have a pivotal role in shaping public perceptions. In our digital, information-rich age, the boundaries of medicine and society overlap, with public perception shaping decisions of a medical nature as never before. But with this comes controversy and division – obesity management being a case in point.

Specifically, the word “obesity” is too widely associated with negative connotations, she says, and therefore she welcomes the dialogue around redefining and renaming it. Despite wide general support for a name and definition that reflects adiposity, due to its central physiologic role in the complications of obesity, Dr. Steele believes that the “effects on adipose tissue are downstream of brain issues and the food environment,” and she wants to see more attention brought to this.

Referring to most Westernized societies, she describes how people who grew up in times of food scarcity, before processed foods became widely available, have a different taste profile from those who grew up afterwards. “Growing up in 1940s and ‘50s Ireland, people recall how they remember getting an orange as a treat at Christmas, because the idea that you could have food all year-round – any fruit and veg that you want, when you want it – just wasn’t there.”

By comparison, societal changes leading to more financial and time pressure in later decades meant that fast, high-fat, high-sugar, and processed foods became more desirable, she points out. “Most young children now recognize the company name, and even the specific fast-food brand [they like], before they know their alphabet.”

The current environment has cultivated “a very different physical reaction to foods, maybe a different kind of emotional response,” she believes, highlighting the tightly woven relationship between obesity, society, mental health, and food options.

Dr. Steele wants to stimulate a conversation about the term used to describe individuals, conventionally described as ‘”obese” or using the word “obesity.” “We’re thinking in terms of maybe chronic appetite, chronic food intake, or dietary intake dysregulation.”

Changing medical terminology when it has become useless or harmful is not new, she argues, with co-author, Francis Finucane, MD, consultant endocrinologist at Galway University Hospitals, Ireland, in a recent paper on the subject.

“In the 20th century, the terms ‘feeble-minded’ and ‘moron’ had become used in a pejorative way in the wider culture and were dropped from medical usage,” Dr. Steele points out. She adds that changing the term “obesity” can facilitate pursuit of the strategic goals of clinical medicine “without causing needless controversy with those who, given their own goals and contexts, understand body mass index or body weight in a radically different way.”
 

Obesity: Disease, risk factor, or both?

Dr. Rubino stresses that prior to any renaming, there is a need to establish and define the essential components and characteristics of the disease of obesity. “This question is at the core of our Commission, and it is not an easy conversation to have.” He further explains that the struggle with the current definition of obesity, and the way it is conceived, is largely centered on it still being considered a risk factor for something else.

Disease is characterized by three things, says Dr. Rubino. These comprise the phenomenon of having a pathogenic cause, leading to pathophysiologic alterations (of the organs), causing clinical manifestations.

He adds that obesity is currently described by what it can cause – for example, type 2 diabetes, cancer, or hypertension. “Each of these things have their own clinical manifestations but obesity doesn’t. [As a disease], we don’t have a definition of the clinical manifestations of obesity other than excess adiposity.”

“If we use BMI, this does not predict excess adiposity, nor does it determine a disease here and now. There is no disease without an illness, which is the clinical manifestation, and the perception by the patient of it being an illness,” explains Dr. Rubino, pointing out that the Lancet Commission is filling this gap in knowledge by asking, “If obesity is an illness, then what does it look like?”

He adds that waist circumference probably provides a better measure than BMI in directly indicating the abnormal distribution of adiposity, known to be associated with poor cardiometabolic outcomes, “but it doesn’t tell you if you have an illness here and now – only that someone is at risk of developing cardiovascular disease in the future. Most people with some excess fat around the waist are perfectly functional and don’t feel ill.”

He also explains that confusion persists around whether obesity – or excess adiposity – is a risk factor for or a symptom of another disease. “The picture is blurred, and we do not know how to discriminate between these. We only have one name, and it applies to all those things, and we have one criterion – BMI – to diagnose it!”

Dr. Rubino adds, “So, what defines it? Is it diabetes? No, because that is another disease. You don’t define a disease by another. It has to stand on its own.”

Recently, the American Medical Association advised that BMI now be used in conjunction with other valid measures of risk such as, but not limited to, measurements of visceral fat, body adiposity index, body composition, relative fat mass, waist circumference, and genetic/metabolic factors.

Aayush Visaria, MD, an internal medicine resident at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, agrees that a new name might help change public perception of obesity for the better. A study he presented at the 2023 Endocrine Society Meeting found that BMI “vastly underestimates” obesity.

He agrees with Dr. Rubino that the challenge lies in the lack of precise understanding of the mechanisms driving obesity: “It’s multifactorial, so not just appetite or food intake. Putting this into one phrase is difficult.”

However, if a new term can incorporate the many facets of the disease, “overall, it’ll reduce stigma because we’ll start to think about obesity as a disease process, not a personal thing with blame attached,” says Dr. Visaria.

But simultaneously, he expresses caution around possible negative connotations associated with the classification of obesity as a disease. Dr. Steele also reflects on this risk, highlighting that medicalizing body size can be counterproductive in feeding into weight stigma and fatphobia.

“Medicalizing obesity can be discouraging rather than empowering, but by specifying more clearly that we’re talking about a specific set of interrelated metabolic conditions, it would make it much clearer, and that ... this isn’t about making people skinny, it isn’t about an aesthetic thing,” Dr. Steele observes.
 

 

 

The word ‘obesity’ hinders disease explanations

Dr. Steele explains that her goal is to overcome the ambiguity around the word “obesity” that hinders explanations of the disease of obesity to the wider public.

“Much confusion and controversy might be avoided if we were to clarify that when doctors say that obesity is a disease, they do not mean that being ‘fat’ is a disease.”

Nevertheless, adipose tissue is an active endocrine organ, producing hormones that function less well in people with obesity, she notes. “This new knowledge has led to better treatments, including drugs like semaglutide and tirzepatide. These drugs, like bariatric surgery, typically lead to significant weight loss and to improvements in overall metabolic health.”

Dr. Rubino also expresses concerns around medicalization, as determined by definition and diagnosis and the availability of drug treatment that could potentially lead to overtreatment. “Currently, when everyone with a BMI of greater than 30 gets access to every obesity treatment out there, we see drugs are running out of stock. We should prioritize that treatment.”

Ultimately, the diagnosis of obesity as a disease needs an anthropometric biomarker that provides, on an individual level, the confidence that a person has a disease today, or at least close to a 100% likelihood of developing this disease and illness, asserts Dr. Rubino.

“If we use BMI, or even waist circumference, these might diagnose the disease; but if the person lives to 90 years, what’s the point of labeling somebody as having an illness?” he points out.

“As doctors, we have to be cautious. We say this is a disease, but you must think about the implications for the person on the receiving end of that diagnosis of a chronic disease that is substantially incurable. When we say it, we need to be certain.”

Dr. Steele and Dr. Visaria have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Rubino disclosed that he has received research grants from Novo Nordisk, Medtronic, and Johnson & Johnson. He has undertaken paid consultancy work for GI Dynamics and received honoraria for lectures from Medtronic, Novo Nordisk, and Johnson & Johnson. He is a member of the data safety monitoring board for GT Metabolic Solutions and has provided scientific advice to Keyron, Metadeq, GHP Scientific, and ViBo Health for no remuneration.

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

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Public perception of disease is everything. “Diabetics” are now referred to as “people living with diabetes,” and an “obese person” is now an “individual living with obesity.”

But what is the definition of obesity? Does it refer to a disease or a risk factor? And is the term so tainted in negativity, blame, and bias that the only solution is to scrap it and completely rename it? Society (and medicine) have changed significantly since the Latin word obesitas was adopted back in the 1600s.

Despite so much hinging on the word “obesity,” it’s remarkable that the label persists while the concepts underpinning it have evolved significantly. So perhaps it is more about finding the least-worst option rather than pursuing the impossibility of a solution that suits all?

This is precisely the challenge faced by a Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology Commission on the Definition and Diagnosis of Clinical Obesity, which is due to publish its initial findings this coming fall. The global task force has 60 leaders in the clinical management of obesity, including representatives with lived experiences of obesity. Leading the project is Francesco Rubino, MD, chair of metabolic and bariatric surgery at King’s College London.

“Renaming ‘obesity’ is very important,” states Dr. Rubino. “The word is so stigmatized, with so much misunderstanding and misperception, some might say the only solution is to change the name.”

One possibility for a new name, introduced by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (now –Endocrinology) and the American College of Endocrinology back in 2016, was based on framing the disease on the central characteristic of adiposity and was termed ABCD, for adiposity-based chronic disease.

Dr. Rubino welcomes “ABCD” but has some reservations. “It is good from a physiological point of view, but the problem is it speaks to scientists and medical professionals. I don’t know how much it would appeal to the general public. ‘ABCD’ still falls short of telling us what the illness is.”

He adds that the Lancet Commission’s approach is rather to call it “clinical obesity.” “ ‘Obesity’ itself doesn’t necessarily convey the message that you have a disease or an illness,” he observes. “It is similar to the difference in meaning between depression and clinical depression, which communicate two different things.”

But underpinning any renaming is greater clarification of the definition and diagnosis of obesity. In 1997, the World Health Organization recognized obesity as a chronic disease; in 2013, the American Medical Association did likewise, adding that it warranted medical attention; while it took until 2021 for the European Commission to define obesity as a “chronic relapsing disease, which in turn acts as a gateway to a range of other non-communicable diseases.”

Yet, 25 years after the initial recognition of obesity as a disease, the concept is still riddled with negativity, whether openly or unconsciously. Such stigma denigrates overweight people and those with obesity as “lazy, sloppy, unintelligent, and unattractive.”

Dr. Rubino explains that first, it’s important to establish and define the essential components and characteristics of the disease of obesity. This is key to improving access to clinical care, reducing personal blame, and nurturing a more supportive research environment to help inform both clinical and policy decision-making.

“This is the question that is at the core of our commission. We have a problem with the current definition of obesity, and the way we measure it does not allow us to accurately define a state of illness with obesity,” he explains.
 

 

 

Labels shape public perceptions of disease; ‘obesity’ epitomizes this

Another expert championing the need for a name that better reflects the definition – whatever that turns out to be – is Margaret Steele, PhD, School of Public Health, University College Cork (Ireland), who, according to her university webpage, has a special interest in “ ‘fatness’ as a cultural, social and political phenomenon.”

She believes that labels, including “obesity,” have a pivotal role in shaping public perceptions. In our digital, information-rich age, the boundaries of medicine and society overlap, with public perception shaping decisions of a medical nature as never before. But with this comes controversy and division – obesity management being a case in point.

Specifically, the word “obesity” is too widely associated with negative connotations, she says, and therefore she welcomes the dialogue around redefining and renaming it. Despite wide general support for a name and definition that reflects adiposity, due to its central physiologic role in the complications of obesity, Dr. Steele believes that the “effects on adipose tissue are downstream of brain issues and the food environment,” and she wants to see more attention brought to this.

Referring to most Westernized societies, she describes how people who grew up in times of food scarcity, before processed foods became widely available, have a different taste profile from those who grew up afterwards. “Growing up in 1940s and ‘50s Ireland, people recall how they remember getting an orange as a treat at Christmas, because the idea that you could have food all year-round – any fruit and veg that you want, when you want it – just wasn’t there.”

By comparison, societal changes leading to more financial and time pressure in later decades meant that fast, high-fat, high-sugar, and processed foods became more desirable, she points out. “Most young children now recognize the company name, and even the specific fast-food brand [they like], before they know their alphabet.”

The current environment has cultivated “a very different physical reaction to foods, maybe a different kind of emotional response,” she believes, highlighting the tightly woven relationship between obesity, society, mental health, and food options.

Dr. Steele wants to stimulate a conversation about the term used to describe individuals, conventionally described as ‘”obese” or using the word “obesity.” “We’re thinking in terms of maybe chronic appetite, chronic food intake, or dietary intake dysregulation.”

Changing medical terminology when it has become useless or harmful is not new, she argues, with co-author, Francis Finucane, MD, consultant endocrinologist at Galway University Hospitals, Ireland, in a recent paper on the subject.

“In the 20th century, the terms ‘feeble-minded’ and ‘moron’ had become used in a pejorative way in the wider culture and were dropped from medical usage,” Dr. Steele points out. She adds that changing the term “obesity” can facilitate pursuit of the strategic goals of clinical medicine “without causing needless controversy with those who, given their own goals and contexts, understand body mass index or body weight in a radically different way.”
 

Obesity: Disease, risk factor, or both?

Dr. Rubino stresses that prior to any renaming, there is a need to establish and define the essential components and characteristics of the disease of obesity. “This question is at the core of our Commission, and it is not an easy conversation to have.” He further explains that the struggle with the current definition of obesity, and the way it is conceived, is largely centered on it still being considered a risk factor for something else.

Disease is characterized by three things, says Dr. Rubino. These comprise the phenomenon of having a pathogenic cause, leading to pathophysiologic alterations (of the organs), causing clinical manifestations.

He adds that obesity is currently described by what it can cause – for example, type 2 diabetes, cancer, or hypertension. “Each of these things have their own clinical manifestations but obesity doesn’t. [As a disease], we don’t have a definition of the clinical manifestations of obesity other than excess adiposity.”

“If we use BMI, this does not predict excess adiposity, nor does it determine a disease here and now. There is no disease without an illness, which is the clinical manifestation, and the perception by the patient of it being an illness,” explains Dr. Rubino, pointing out that the Lancet Commission is filling this gap in knowledge by asking, “If obesity is an illness, then what does it look like?”

He adds that waist circumference probably provides a better measure than BMI in directly indicating the abnormal distribution of adiposity, known to be associated with poor cardiometabolic outcomes, “but it doesn’t tell you if you have an illness here and now – only that someone is at risk of developing cardiovascular disease in the future. Most people with some excess fat around the waist are perfectly functional and don’t feel ill.”

He also explains that confusion persists around whether obesity – or excess adiposity – is a risk factor for or a symptom of another disease. “The picture is blurred, and we do not know how to discriminate between these. We only have one name, and it applies to all those things, and we have one criterion – BMI – to diagnose it!”

Dr. Rubino adds, “So, what defines it? Is it diabetes? No, because that is another disease. You don’t define a disease by another. It has to stand on its own.”

Recently, the American Medical Association advised that BMI now be used in conjunction with other valid measures of risk such as, but not limited to, measurements of visceral fat, body adiposity index, body composition, relative fat mass, waist circumference, and genetic/metabolic factors.

Aayush Visaria, MD, an internal medicine resident at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, agrees that a new name might help change public perception of obesity for the better. A study he presented at the 2023 Endocrine Society Meeting found that BMI “vastly underestimates” obesity.

He agrees with Dr. Rubino that the challenge lies in the lack of precise understanding of the mechanisms driving obesity: “It’s multifactorial, so not just appetite or food intake. Putting this into one phrase is difficult.”

However, if a new term can incorporate the many facets of the disease, “overall, it’ll reduce stigma because we’ll start to think about obesity as a disease process, not a personal thing with blame attached,” says Dr. Visaria.

But simultaneously, he expresses caution around possible negative connotations associated with the classification of obesity as a disease. Dr. Steele also reflects on this risk, highlighting that medicalizing body size can be counterproductive in feeding into weight stigma and fatphobia.

“Medicalizing obesity can be discouraging rather than empowering, but by specifying more clearly that we’re talking about a specific set of interrelated metabolic conditions, it would make it much clearer, and that ... this isn’t about making people skinny, it isn’t about an aesthetic thing,” Dr. Steele observes.
 

 

 

The word ‘obesity’ hinders disease explanations

Dr. Steele explains that her goal is to overcome the ambiguity around the word “obesity” that hinders explanations of the disease of obesity to the wider public.

“Much confusion and controversy might be avoided if we were to clarify that when doctors say that obesity is a disease, they do not mean that being ‘fat’ is a disease.”

Nevertheless, adipose tissue is an active endocrine organ, producing hormones that function less well in people with obesity, she notes. “This new knowledge has led to better treatments, including drugs like semaglutide and tirzepatide. These drugs, like bariatric surgery, typically lead to significant weight loss and to improvements in overall metabolic health.”

Dr. Rubino also expresses concerns around medicalization, as determined by definition and diagnosis and the availability of drug treatment that could potentially lead to overtreatment. “Currently, when everyone with a BMI of greater than 30 gets access to every obesity treatment out there, we see drugs are running out of stock. We should prioritize that treatment.”

Ultimately, the diagnosis of obesity as a disease needs an anthropometric biomarker that provides, on an individual level, the confidence that a person has a disease today, or at least close to a 100% likelihood of developing this disease and illness, asserts Dr. Rubino.

“If we use BMI, or even waist circumference, these might diagnose the disease; but if the person lives to 90 years, what’s the point of labeling somebody as having an illness?” he points out.

“As doctors, we have to be cautious. We say this is a disease, but you must think about the implications for the person on the receiving end of that diagnosis of a chronic disease that is substantially incurable. When we say it, we need to be certain.”

Dr. Steele and Dr. Visaria have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Rubino disclosed that he has received research grants from Novo Nordisk, Medtronic, and Johnson & Johnson. He has undertaken paid consultancy work for GI Dynamics and received honoraria for lectures from Medtronic, Novo Nordisk, and Johnson & Johnson. He is a member of the data safety monitoring board for GT Metabolic Solutions and has provided scientific advice to Keyron, Metadeq, GHP Scientific, and ViBo Health for no remuneration.

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

Public perception of disease is everything. “Diabetics” are now referred to as “people living with diabetes,” and an “obese person” is now an “individual living with obesity.”

But what is the definition of obesity? Does it refer to a disease or a risk factor? And is the term so tainted in negativity, blame, and bias that the only solution is to scrap it and completely rename it? Society (and medicine) have changed significantly since the Latin word obesitas was adopted back in the 1600s.

Despite so much hinging on the word “obesity,” it’s remarkable that the label persists while the concepts underpinning it have evolved significantly. So perhaps it is more about finding the least-worst option rather than pursuing the impossibility of a solution that suits all?

This is precisely the challenge faced by a Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology Commission on the Definition and Diagnosis of Clinical Obesity, which is due to publish its initial findings this coming fall. The global task force has 60 leaders in the clinical management of obesity, including representatives with lived experiences of obesity. Leading the project is Francesco Rubino, MD, chair of metabolic and bariatric surgery at King’s College London.

“Renaming ‘obesity’ is very important,” states Dr. Rubino. “The word is so stigmatized, with so much misunderstanding and misperception, some might say the only solution is to change the name.”

One possibility for a new name, introduced by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (now –Endocrinology) and the American College of Endocrinology back in 2016, was based on framing the disease on the central characteristic of adiposity and was termed ABCD, for adiposity-based chronic disease.

Dr. Rubino welcomes “ABCD” but has some reservations. “It is good from a physiological point of view, but the problem is it speaks to scientists and medical professionals. I don’t know how much it would appeal to the general public. ‘ABCD’ still falls short of telling us what the illness is.”

He adds that the Lancet Commission’s approach is rather to call it “clinical obesity.” “ ‘Obesity’ itself doesn’t necessarily convey the message that you have a disease or an illness,” he observes. “It is similar to the difference in meaning between depression and clinical depression, which communicate two different things.”

But underpinning any renaming is greater clarification of the definition and diagnosis of obesity. In 1997, the World Health Organization recognized obesity as a chronic disease; in 2013, the American Medical Association did likewise, adding that it warranted medical attention; while it took until 2021 for the European Commission to define obesity as a “chronic relapsing disease, which in turn acts as a gateway to a range of other non-communicable diseases.”

Yet, 25 years after the initial recognition of obesity as a disease, the concept is still riddled with negativity, whether openly or unconsciously. Such stigma denigrates overweight people and those with obesity as “lazy, sloppy, unintelligent, and unattractive.”

Dr. Rubino explains that first, it’s important to establish and define the essential components and characteristics of the disease of obesity. This is key to improving access to clinical care, reducing personal blame, and nurturing a more supportive research environment to help inform both clinical and policy decision-making.

“This is the question that is at the core of our commission. We have a problem with the current definition of obesity, and the way we measure it does not allow us to accurately define a state of illness with obesity,” he explains.
 

 

 

Labels shape public perceptions of disease; ‘obesity’ epitomizes this

Another expert championing the need for a name that better reflects the definition – whatever that turns out to be – is Margaret Steele, PhD, School of Public Health, University College Cork (Ireland), who, according to her university webpage, has a special interest in “ ‘fatness’ as a cultural, social and political phenomenon.”

She believes that labels, including “obesity,” have a pivotal role in shaping public perceptions. In our digital, information-rich age, the boundaries of medicine and society overlap, with public perception shaping decisions of a medical nature as never before. But with this comes controversy and division – obesity management being a case in point.

Specifically, the word “obesity” is too widely associated with negative connotations, she says, and therefore she welcomes the dialogue around redefining and renaming it. Despite wide general support for a name and definition that reflects adiposity, due to its central physiologic role in the complications of obesity, Dr. Steele believes that the “effects on adipose tissue are downstream of brain issues and the food environment,” and she wants to see more attention brought to this.

Referring to most Westernized societies, she describes how people who grew up in times of food scarcity, before processed foods became widely available, have a different taste profile from those who grew up afterwards. “Growing up in 1940s and ‘50s Ireland, people recall how they remember getting an orange as a treat at Christmas, because the idea that you could have food all year-round – any fruit and veg that you want, when you want it – just wasn’t there.”

By comparison, societal changes leading to more financial and time pressure in later decades meant that fast, high-fat, high-sugar, and processed foods became more desirable, she points out. “Most young children now recognize the company name, and even the specific fast-food brand [they like], before they know their alphabet.”

The current environment has cultivated “a very different physical reaction to foods, maybe a different kind of emotional response,” she believes, highlighting the tightly woven relationship between obesity, society, mental health, and food options.

Dr. Steele wants to stimulate a conversation about the term used to describe individuals, conventionally described as ‘”obese” or using the word “obesity.” “We’re thinking in terms of maybe chronic appetite, chronic food intake, or dietary intake dysregulation.”

Changing medical terminology when it has become useless or harmful is not new, she argues, with co-author, Francis Finucane, MD, consultant endocrinologist at Galway University Hospitals, Ireland, in a recent paper on the subject.

“In the 20th century, the terms ‘feeble-minded’ and ‘moron’ had become used in a pejorative way in the wider culture and were dropped from medical usage,” Dr. Steele points out. She adds that changing the term “obesity” can facilitate pursuit of the strategic goals of clinical medicine “without causing needless controversy with those who, given their own goals and contexts, understand body mass index or body weight in a radically different way.”
 

Obesity: Disease, risk factor, or both?

Dr. Rubino stresses that prior to any renaming, there is a need to establish and define the essential components and characteristics of the disease of obesity. “This question is at the core of our Commission, and it is not an easy conversation to have.” He further explains that the struggle with the current definition of obesity, and the way it is conceived, is largely centered on it still being considered a risk factor for something else.

Disease is characterized by three things, says Dr. Rubino. These comprise the phenomenon of having a pathogenic cause, leading to pathophysiologic alterations (of the organs), causing clinical manifestations.

He adds that obesity is currently described by what it can cause – for example, type 2 diabetes, cancer, or hypertension. “Each of these things have their own clinical manifestations but obesity doesn’t. [As a disease], we don’t have a definition of the clinical manifestations of obesity other than excess adiposity.”

“If we use BMI, this does not predict excess adiposity, nor does it determine a disease here and now. There is no disease without an illness, which is the clinical manifestation, and the perception by the patient of it being an illness,” explains Dr. Rubino, pointing out that the Lancet Commission is filling this gap in knowledge by asking, “If obesity is an illness, then what does it look like?”

He adds that waist circumference probably provides a better measure than BMI in directly indicating the abnormal distribution of adiposity, known to be associated with poor cardiometabolic outcomes, “but it doesn’t tell you if you have an illness here and now – only that someone is at risk of developing cardiovascular disease in the future. Most people with some excess fat around the waist are perfectly functional and don’t feel ill.”

He also explains that confusion persists around whether obesity – or excess adiposity – is a risk factor for or a symptom of another disease. “The picture is blurred, and we do not know how to discriminate between these. We only have one name, and it applies to all those things, and we have one criterion – BMI – to diagnose it!”

Dr. Rubino adds, “So, what defines it? Is it diabetes? No, because that is another disease. You don’t define a disease by another. It has to stand on its own.”

Recently, the American Medical Association advised that BMI now be used in conjunction with other valid measures of risk such as, but not limited to, measurements of visceral fat, body adiposity index, body composition, relative fat mass, waist circumference, and genetic/metabolic factors.

Aayush Visaria, MD, an internal medicine resident at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, agrees that a new name might help change public perception of obesity for the better. A study he presented at the 2023 Endocrine Society Meeting found that BMI “vastly underestimates” obesity.

He agrees with Dr. Rubino that the challenge lies in the lack of precise understanding of the mechanisms driving obesity: “It’s multifactorial, so not just appetite or food intake. Putting this into one phrase is difficult.”

However, if a new term can incorporate the many facets of the disease, “overall, it’ll reduce stigma because we’ll start to think about obesity as a disease process, not a personal thing with blame attached,” says Dr. Visaria.

But simultaneously, he expresses caution around possible negative connotations associated with the classification of obesity as a disease. Dr. Steele also reflects on this risk, highlighting that medicalizing body size can be counterproductive in feeding into weight stigma and fatphobia.

“Medicalizing obesity can be discouraging rather than empowering, but by specifying more clearly that we’re talking about a specific set of interrelated metabolic conditions, it would make it much clearer, and that ... this isn’t about making people skinny, it isn’t about an aesthetic thing,” Dr. Steele observes.
 

 

 

The word ‘obesity’ hinders disease explanations

Dr. Steele explains that her goal is to overcome the ambiguity around the word “obesity” that hinders explanations of the disease of obesity to the wider public.

“Much confusion and controversy might be avoided if we were to clarify that when doctors say that obesity is a disease, they do not mean that being ‘fat’ is a disease.”

Nevertheless, adipose tissue is an active endocrine organ, producing hormones that function less well in people with obesity, she notes. “This new knowledge has led to better treatments, including drugs like semaglutide and tirzepatide. These drugs, like bariatric surgery, typically lead to significant weight loss and to improvements in overall metabolic health.”

Dr. Rubino also expresses concerns around medicalization, as determined by definition and diagnosis and the availability of drug treatment that could potentially lead to overtreatment. “Currently, when everyone with a BMI of greater than 30 gets access to every obesity treatment out there, we see drugs are running out of stock. We should prioritize that treatment.”

Ultimately, the diagnosis of obesity as a disease needs an anthropometric biomarker that provides, on an individual level, the confidence that a person has a disease today, or at least close to a 100% likelihood of developing this disease and illness, asserts Dr. Rubino.

“If we use BMI, or even waist circumference, these might diagnose the disease; but if the person lives to 90 years, what’s the point of labeling somebody as having an illness?” he points out.

“As doctors, we have to be cautious. We say this is a disease, but you must think about the implications for the person on the receiving end of that diagnosis of a chronic disease that is substantially incurable. When we say it, we need to be certain.”

Dr. Steele and Dr. Visaria have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Rubino disclosed that he has received research grants from Novo Nordisk, Medtronic, and Johnson & Johnson. He has undertaken paid consultancy work for GI Dynamics and received honoraria for lectures from Medtronic, Novo Nordisk, and Johnson & Johnson. He is a member of the data safety monitoring board for GT Metabolic Solutions and has provided scientific advice to Keyron, Metadeq, GHP Scientific, and ViBo Health for no remuneration.

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

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Early-life antibiotic use may raise risk of early-onset CRC

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 08/08/2023 - 12:43

 

TOPLINE:

Long-term and recurrent use of antibiotics early in life may raise the risk of early-onset colorectal cancer (CRC) and adenomas, particularly in people with a variant in a specific gut microbiota regulatory gene, a new analysis found.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed data from UK Biobank participants who were recruited between 2006 and 2010 and were followed up to February 2022.
  • They evaluated associations between early-life factors and early-onset CRC risk overall, focusing on long-term and recurrent antibiotic use.
  • The team also estimated associations between long-term and recurrent antibiotic use in early life and CRC risk by polygenic risk score using 127 CRC-related genetic variants, as well as a particular gut microbiota regulatory gene FUT2.
  • Associations for early-onset colorectal adenomas, as precursor to CRC, were also evaluated.
  • The study included 113,256 participants. There were 165 early-onset CRC cases and 719 early-onset adenoma cases.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Early-life, long-term, and recurrent antibiotic use was “nominally” associated with an increased risk of early-onset CRC (odds ratio, 1.48; P = .046) and adenomas (OR, 1.40; P < .001).
  • Regarding variants of FUT2, the risk of early-onset CRC appeared to be greater for individuals with the rs281377 TT genotype (OR, 2.74) in comparison with those with the CT and TT genotypes, but none of the estimates reached statistical significance.
  • The researchers found a strong positive association between long-term and recurrent antibiotic use and adenomas, largely in patients with rs281377 TT (OR, 1.75) and CT genotypes (OR, 1.51).
  • Individuals with a high polygenic risk score were at higher risk of early-onset CRC (OR, 1.72; P = .019), while those with low polygenic risk scores were not at higher risk (OR, 1.05; P = .889). The association between antibiotic use and early-onset CRC risk by family history was also higher (OR, 2.34).

IN PRACTICE:

“Our findings suggested that individuals with genetic risk factors (i.e., family history of CRC) who have experienced early-life antibiotics use on a long-term basis are probably at increased early-onset CRC risk,” the authors concluded. “Given that antibiotics remain valuable in the management of bacterial infections during early life, investigating the pros and cons of early-life antibiotic use is of great significance.”

SOURCE:

The study, led by Fangyuan Jiang, with Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, was published online in the International Journal of Cancer.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on participants’ recall of early-life antibiotics use, which could introduce recall bias and misclassification of this exposure.

DISCLOSURES:

No conflicts of interest were reported.

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

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TOPLINE:

Long-term and recurrent use of antibiotics early in life may raise the risk of early-onset colorectal cancer (CRC) and adenomas, particularly in people with a variant in a specific gut microbiota regulatory gene, a new analysis found.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed data from UK Biobank participants who were recruited between 2006 and 2010 and were followed up to February 2022.
  • They evaluated associations between early-life factors and early-onset CRC risk overall, focusing on long-term and recurrent antibiotic use.
  • The team also estimated associations between long-term and recurrent antibiotic use in early life and CRC risk by polygenic risk score using 127 CRC-related genetic variants, as well as a particular gut microbiota regulatory gene FUT2.
  • Associations for early-onset colorectal adenomas, as precursor to CRC, were also evaluated.
  • The study included 113,256 participants. There were 165 early-onset CRC cases and 719 early-onset adenoma cases.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Early-life, long-term, and recurrent antibiotic use was “nominally” associated with an increased risk of early-onset CRC (odds ratio, 1.48; P = .046) and adenomas (OR, 1.40; P < .001).
  • Regarding variants of FUT2, the risk of early-onset CRC appeared to be greater for individuals with the rs281377 TT genotype (OR, 2.74) in comparison with those with the CT and TT genotypes, but none of the estimates reached statistical significance.
  • The researchers found a strong positive association between long-term and recurrent antibiotic use and adenomas, largely in patients with rs281377 TT (OR, 1.75) and CT genotypes (OR, 1.51).
  • Individuals with a high polygenic risk score were at higher risk of early-onset CRC (OR, 1.72; P = .019), while those with low polygenic risk scores were not at higher risk (OR, 1.05; P = .889). The association between antibiotic use and early-onset CRC risk by family history was also higher (OR, 2.34).

IN PRACTICE:

“Our findings suggested that individuals with genetic risk factors (i.e., family history of CRC) who have experienced early-life antibiotics use on a long-term basis are probably at increased early-onset CRC risk,” the authors concluded. “Given that antibiotics remain valuable in the management of bacterial infections during early life, investigating the pros and cons of early-life antibiotic use is of great significance.”

SOURCE:

The study, led by Fangyuan Jiang, with Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, was published online in the International Journal of Cancer.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on participants’ recall of early-life antibiotics use, which could introduce recall bias and misclassification of this exposure.

DISCLOSURES:

No conflicts of interest were reported.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Long-term and recurrent use of antibiotics early in life may raise the risk of early-onset colorectal cancer (CRC) and adenomas, particularly in people with a variant in a specific gut microbiota regulatory gene, a new analysis found.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed data from UK Biobank participants who were recruited between 2006 and 2010 and were followed up to February 2022.
  • They evaluated associations between early-life factors and early-onset CRC risk overall, focusing on long-term and recurrent antibiotic use.
  • The team also estimated associations between long-term and recurrent antibiotic use in early life and CRC risk by polygenic risk score using 127 CRC-related genetic variants, as well as a particular gut microbiota regulatory gene FUT2.
  • Associations for early-onset colorectal adenomas, as precursor to CRC, were also evaluated.
  • The study included 113,256 participants. There were 165 early-onset CRC cases and 719 early-onset adenoma cases.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Early-life, long-term, and recurrent antibiotic use was “nominally” associated with an increased risk of early-onset CRC (odds ratio, 1.48; P = .046) and adenomas (OR, 1.40; P < .001).
  • Regarding variants of FUT2, the risk of early-onset CRC appeared to be greater for individuals with the rs281377 TT genotype (OR, 2.74) in comparison with those with the CT and TT genotypes, but none of the estimates reached statistical significance.
  • The researchers found a strong positive association between long-term and recurrent antibiotic use and adenomas, largely in patients with rs281377 TT (OR, 1.75) and CT genotypes (OR, 1.51).
  • Individuals with a high polygenic risk score were at higher risk of early-onset CRC (OR, 1.72; P = .019), while those with low polygenic risk scores were not at higher risk (OR, 1.05; P = .889). The association between antibiotic use and early-onset CRC risk by family history was also higher (OR, 2.34).

IN PRACTICE:

“Our findings suggested that individuals with genetic risk factors (i.e., family history of CRC) who have experienced early-life antibiotics use on a long-term basis are probably at increased early-onset CRC risk,” the authors concluded. “Given that antibiotics remain valuable in the management of bacterial infections during early life, investigating the pros and cons of early-life antibiotic use is of great significance.”

SOURCE:

The study, led by Fangyuan Jiang, with Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, was published online in the International Journal of Cancer.

LIMITATIONS:

The study relied on participants’ recall of early-life antibiotics use, which could introduce recall bias and misclassification of this exposure.

DISCLOSURES:

No conflicts of interest were reported.

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

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Increasing number of children being poisoned by liquid nicotine

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 08/07/2023 - 11:40

Thousands of children are being exposed to the dangers of liquid nicotine in e-cigarettes each year, and the number of exposures reported reached an all-time high last year.

Doctors say a 2016 law aimed at lowering the risk contained a big flaw, NBC News reported. The Child Nicotine Poisoning Prevention Act required child-resistant packaging on vaping liquid – but not on the vaping devices themselves.

Contact with the vaping liquid, or liquid nicotine, can cause children to get dizzy, pass out, and suffer drops in blood pressure. A few drops of the liquid can be fatal for a toddler.

Last year, 6,731 cases of vaping-related nicotine exposure were reported, according to Poison Help. “As of June 30, 2023, poison centers have managed 3,863 exposure cases about e-cigarette devices and liquid nicotine,” the organization said.

“Poison centers began receiving calls about e-cigarettes and liquid nicotine products in 2011, which coincides with the initial period where these products reached the U.S. market,” according to Poison Help.

“These products often contain a greater concentration of nicotine, a stimulant, than other nicotine/tobacco products on the market. Some children and toddlers who come in contact with e-cigarette devices or liquid nicotine have become very ill; some even requiring emergency department visits with nausea and vomiting being the most significant symptoms.”

Toxicologist Ryan Marino, MD, told NBC that refillable vapes are designed to hold liquid nicotine in a central reservoir, making them dangerous to children.

“Even vapes that appear more child-resistant – because their nicotine is sealed inside a removable cartridge – present a risk, because the cartridges can be pried open,” NBC said. “And some disposable e-cigarettes, now the top-selling type on the market, allow users to take thousands of ‘puffs’ and contain as much nicotine as multiple packs of cigarettes.”

A spokesperson for the vaping industry said all e-liquid bottles made in this country conform to U.S. law.

“Not only are the caps child-resistant, but the flow of liquid is restricted so that only small amounts can be dispensed,” said April Meyers of the Smoke-Free Alternatives Trade Association, which represents the vaping industry.
 

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

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Thousands of children are being exposed to the dangers of liquid nicotine in e-cigarettes each year, and the number of exposures reported reached an all-time high last year.

Doctors say a 2016 law aimed at lowering the risk contained a big flaw, NBC News reported. The Child Nicotine Poisoning Prevention Act required child-resistant packaging on vaping liquid – but not on the vaping devices themselves.

Contact with the vaping liquid, or liquid nicotine, can cause children to get dizzy, pass out, and suffer drops in blood pressure. A few drops of the liquid can be fatal for a toddler.

Last year, 6,731 cases of vaping-related nicotine exposure were reported, according to Poison Help. “As of June 30, 2023, poison centers have managed 3,863 exposure cases about e-cigarette devices and liquid nicotine,” the organization said.

“Poison centers began receiving calls about e-cigarettes and liquid nicotine products in 2011, which coincides with the initial period where these products reached the U.S. market,” according to Poison Help.

“These products often contain a greater concentration of nicotine, a stimulant, than other nicotine/tobacco products on the market. Some children and toddlers who come in contact with e-cigarette devices or liquid nicotine have become very ill; some even requiring emergency department visits with nausea and vomiting being the most significant symptoms.”

Toxicologist Ryan Marino, MD, told NBC that refillable vapes are designed to hold liquid nicotine in a central reservoir, making them dangerous to children.

“Even vapes that appear more child-resistant – because their nicotine is sealed inside a removable cartridge – present a risk, because the cartridges can be pried open,” NBC said. “And some disposable e-cigarettes, now the top-selling type on the market, allow users to take thousands of ‘puffs’ and contain as much nicotine as multiple packs of cigarettes.”

A spokesperson for the vaping industry said all e-liquid bottles made in this country conform to U.S. law.

“Not only are the caps child-resistant, but the flow of liquid is restricted so that only small amounts can be dispensed,” said April Meyers of the Smoke-Free Alternatives Trade Association, which represents the vaping industry.
 

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

Thousands of children are being exposed to the dangers of liquid nicotine in e-cigarettes each year, and the number of exposures reported reached an all-time high last year.

Doctors say a 2016 law aimed at lowering the risk contained a big flaw, NBC News reported. The Child Nicotine Poisoning Prevention Act required child-resistant packaging on vaping liquid – but not on the vaping devices themselves.

Contact with the vaping liquid, or liquid nicotine, can cause children to get dizzy, pass out, and suffer drops in blood pressure. A few drops of the liquid can be fatal for a toddler.

Last year, 6,731 cases of vaping-related nicotine exposure were reported, according to Poison Help. “As of June 30, 2023, poison centers have managed 3,863 exposure cases about e-cigarette devices and liquid nicotine,” the organization said.

“Poison centers began receiving calls about e-cigarettes and liquid nicotine products in 2011, which coincides with the initial period where these products reached the U.S. market,” according to Poison Help.

“These products often contain a greater concentration of nicotine, a stimulant, than other nicotine/tobacco products on the market. Some children and toddlers who come in contact with e-cigarette devices or liquid nicotine have become very ill; some even requiring emergency department visits with nausea and vomiting being the most significant symptoms.”

Toxicologist Ryan Marino, MD, told NBC that refillable vapes are designed to hold liquid nicotine in a central reservoir, making them dangerous to children.

“Even vapes that appear more child-resistant – because their nicotine is sealed inside a removable cartridge – present a risk, because the cartridges can be pried open,” NBC said. “And some disposable e-cigarettes, now the top-selling type on the market, allow users to take thousands of ‘puffs’ and contain as much nicotine as multiple packs of cigarettes.”

A spokesperson for the vaping industry said all e-liquid bottles made in this country conform to U.S. law.

“Not only are the caps child-resistant, but the flow of liquid is restricted so that only small amounts can be dispensed,” said April Meyers of the Smoke-Free Alternatives Trade Association, which represents the vaping industry.
 

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

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