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Even with mild COVID-19, athletes need cardiac testing before returning to play

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Potential risks of cardiac injury posed by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection warrant a cautious return-to-play for highly active people and competitive athletes who test positive, according to leading sports cardiologists.

Dr. Dermot Phelan

To prevent cardiac injury, athletes should rest for at least 2 weeks after symptoms resolve, then undergo cardiac testing before returning high-level competitive sports, reported lead author Dermot Phelan, MD, PhD, of Atrium Health in Charlotte, N.C., and colleagues.

These recommendations, which were published in JAMA Cardiology, are part of a clinical algorithm that sorts athletes based on coronavirus test status and symptom severity. The algorithm offers a clear timeline for resumption of activity, with management decisions for symptomatic individuals based on additional diagnostics, such as high-sensitivity troponin testing and electrocardiogram.

Despite a scarcity of relevant clinical data, Dr. Phelan said that he and his colleagues wanted to offer their best recommendations to the athletic community, who had been reaching out for help.

“We were getting calls and messages from amateur and professional sporting organizations from around the country asking for guidance about what to do,” Dr. Phelan said. “So a number of us from the American College of Cardiology Sports and Exercise Council decided that we really should provide some guidance even in the absence of good, strong data, for what we feel is a reasonable approach.”

The recommendations were based on what is known of other viral infections, as well as risks posed by COVID-19 that may be worsened by athletic activity.

“We know that, when people have an active infection, vigorous exercise can lower immunity, and that can make the infection worse,” Dr. Phelan said. “That really applies very strongly in people who have had myocarditis. If you exercise when you have myocarditis, it actually increases viral replication and results in increased necrosis of the heart muscle. We really want to avoid exercising during that active infection phase.”

Myocarditis is one of the top causes of sudden cardiac death among young athletes, Dr. Phelan said, “so that’s a major concern for us.”

According to Dr. Phelan, existing data suggest a wide range of incidence of 7%-33% for cardiac injury among patients hospitalized for COVID-19. Even the low end of this range, at 7%, is significantly higher than the incidence rate of 1% found in patients with non–COVID-19 acute viral infections.



“This particular virus appears to cause more cardiac insults than other viruses,” Dr. Phelan said.

The incidence of cardiac injury among nonhospitalized patients remains unknown, leaving a wide knowledge gap that shaped the conservative nature of the present recommendations.

With more information, however, the guidance may “change dramatically,” Dr. Phelan said.

“If the data come back and show that no nonhospitalized patients got cardiac injury, then we would be much more comfortable allowing return to play without the need for cardiac testing,” he said.

Conversely, if cardiac injury is more common than anticipated, then more extensive testing may be needed, he added.

As the algorithm stands, high-sensitivity troponin testing and/or cardiac studies are recommended for all symptomatic athletes; if troponin levels are greater than the 99th percentile or a cardiac study is abnormal, then clinicians should follow return-to-play guidelines for myocarditis. For athletes with normal tests, slow resumption of activity is recommended, including close monitoring for clinical deterioration.

As Dr. Phelan discussed these recommendations in a broader context, he emphasized the need for caution, both preventively, and for cardiologists working with recovering athletes.

“For the early stage of this reentry into normal life while this is still an active pandemic, we need to be cautious,” Dr. Phelan said. “We need to follow the regular CDC guidelines, in terms of social distancing and handwashing, but we also need to consider that those people who have suffered from COVID-19 may have had cardiac injury. We don’t know that yet. But we need to be cautious with these individuals and test them before they return to high-level competitive sports.”

One author disclosed a relationship with the Atlanta Falcons.

SOURCE: Phelan D et al. JAMA Cardiology. 2020 Apr 13. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2020.2136.

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Potential risks of cardiac injury posed by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection warrant a cautious return-to-play for highly active people and competitive athletes who test positive, according to leading sports cardiologists.

Dr. Dermot Phelan

To prevent cardiac injury, athletes should rest for at least 2 weeks after symptoms resolve, then undergo cardiac testing before returning high-level competitive sports, reported lead author Dermot Phelan, MD, PhD, of Atrium Health in Charlotte, N.C., and colleagues.

These recommendations, which were published in JAMA Cardiology, are part of a clinical algorithm that sorts athletes based on coronavirus test status and symptom severity. The algorithm offers a clear timeline for resumption of activity, with management decisions for symptomatic individuals based on additional diagnostics, such as high-sensitivity troponin testing and electrocardiogram.

Despite a scarcity of relevant clinical data, Dr. Phelan said that he and his colleagues wanted to offer their best recommendations to the athletic community, who had been reaching out for help.

“We were getting calls and messages from amateur and professional sporting organizations from around the country asking for guidance about what to do,” Dr. Phelan said. “So a number of us from the American College of Cardiology Sports and Exercise Council decided that we really should provide some guidance even in the absence of good, strong data, for what we feel is a reasonable approach.”

The recommendations were based on what is known of other viral infections, as well as risks posed by COVID-19 that may be worsened by athletic activity.

“We know that, when people have an active infection, vigorous exercise can lower immunity, and that can make the infection worse,” Dr. Phelan said. “That really applies very strongly in people who have had myocarditis. If you exercise when you have myocarditis, it actually increases viral replication and results in increased necrosis of the heart muscle. We really want to avoid exercising during that active infection phase.”

Myocarditis is one of the top causes of sudden cardiac death among young athletes, Dr. Phelan said, “so that’s a major concern for us.”

According to Dr. Phelan, existing data suggest a wide range of incidence of 7%-33% for cardiac injury among patients hospitalized for COVID-19. Even the low end of this range, at 7%, is significantly higher than the incidence rate of 1% found in patients with non–COVID-19 acute viral infections.



“This particular virus appears to cause more cardiac insults than other viruses,” Dr. Phelan said.

The incidence of cardiac injury among nonhospitalized patients remains unknown, leaving a wide knowledge gap that shaped the conservative nature of the present recommendations.

With more information, however, the guidance may “change dramatically,” Dr. Phelan said.

“If the data come back and show that no nonhospitalized patients got cardiac injury, then we would be much more comfortable allowing return to play without the need for cardiac testing,” he said.

Conversely, if cardiac injury is more common than anticipated, then more extensive testing may be needed, he added.

As the algorithm stands, high-sensitivity troponin testing and/or cardiac studies are recommended for all symptomatic athletes; if troponin levels are greater than the 99th percentile or a cardiac study is abnormal, then clinicians should follow return-to-play guidelines for myocarditis. For athletes with normal tests, slow resumption of activity is recommended, including close monitoring for clinical deterioration.

As Dr. Phelan discussed these recommendations in a broader context, he emphasized the need for caution, both preventively, and for cardiologists working with recovering athletes.

“For the early stage of this reentry into normal life while this is still an active pandemic, we need to be cautious,” Dr. Phelan said. “We need to follow the regular CDC guidelines, in terms of social distancing and handwashing, but we also need to consider that those people who have suffered from COVID-19 may have had cardiac injury. We don’t know that yet. But we need to be cautious with these individuals and test them before they return to high-level competitive sports.”

One author disclosed a relationship with the Atlanta Falcons.

SOURCE: Phelan D et al. JAMA Cardiology. 2020 Apr 13. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2020.2136.

Potential risks of cardiac injury posed by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection warrant a cautious return-to-play for highly active people and competitive athletes who test positive, according to leading sports cardiologists.

Dr. Dermot Phelan

To prevent cardiac injury, athletes should rest for at least 2 weeks after symptoms resolve, then undergo cardiac testing before returning high-level competitive sports, reported lead author Dermot Phelan, MD, PhD, of Atrium Health in Charlotte, N.C., and colleagues.

These recommendations, which were published in JAMA Cardiology, are part of a clinical algorithm that sorts athletes based on coronavirus test status and symptom severity. The algorithm offers a clear timeline for resumption of activity, with management decisions for symptomatic individuals based on additional diagnostics, such as high-sensitivity troponin testing and electrocardiogram.

Despite a scarcity of relevant clinical data, Dr. Phelan said that he and his colleagues wanted to offer their best recommendations to the athletic community, who had been reaching out for help.

“We were getting calls and messages from amateur and professional sporting organizations from around the country asking for guidance about what to do,” Dr. Phelan said. “So a number of us from the American College of Cardiology Sports and Exercise Council decided that we really should provide some guidance even in the absence of good, strong data, for what we feel is a reasonable approach.”

The recommendations were based on what is known of other viral infections, as well as risks posed by COVID-19 that may be worsened by athletic activity.

“We know that, when people have an active infection, vigorous exercise can lower immunity, and that can make the infection worse,” Dr. Phelan said. “That really applies very strongly in people who have had myocarditis. If you exercise when you have myocarditis, it actually increases viral replication and results in increased necrosis of the heart muscle. We really want to avoid exercising during that active infection phase.”

Myocarditis is one of the top causes of sudden cardiac death among young athletes, Dr. Phelan said, “so that’s a major concern for us.”

According to Dr. Phelan, existing data suggest a wide range of incidence of 7%-33% for cardiac injury among patients hospitalized for COVID-19. Even the low end of this range, at 7%, is significantly higher than the incidence rate of 1% found in patients with non–COVID-19 acute viral infections.



“This particular virus appears to cause more cardiac insults than other viruses,” Dr. Phelan said.

The incidence of cardiac injury among nonhospitalized patients remains unknown, leaving a wide knowledge gap that shaped the conservative nature of the present recommendations.

With more information, however, the guidance may “change dramatically,” Dr. Phelan said.

“If the data come back and show that no nonhospitalized patients got cardiac injury, then we would be much more comfortable allowing return to play without the need for cardiac testing,” he said.

Conversely, if cardiac injury is more common than anticipated, then more extensive testing may be needed, he added.

As the algorithm stands, high-sensitivity troponin testing and/or cardiac studies are recommended for all symptomatic athletes; if troponin levels are greater than the 99th percentile or a cardiac study is abnormal, then clinicians should follow return-to-play guidelines for myocarditis. For athletes with normal tests, slow resumption of activity is recommended, including close monitoring for clinical deterioration.

As Dr. Phelan discussed these recommendations in a broader context, he emphasized the need for caution, both preventively, and for cardiologists working with recovering athletes.

“For the early stage of this reentry into normal life while this is still an active pandemic, we need to be cautious,” Dr. Phelan said. “We need to follow the regular CDC guidelines, in terms of social distancing and handwashing, but we also need to consider that those people who have suffered from COVID-19 may have had cardiac injury. We don’t know that yet. But we need to be cautious with these individuals and test them before they return to high-level competitive sports.”

One author disclosed a relationship with the Atlanta Falcons.

SOURCE: Phelan D et al. JAMA Cardiology. 2020 Apr 13. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2020.2136.

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Comparing COVID-19, flu death tolls ‘extremely dangerous’

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The number of COVID-19 deaths cannot be directly compared to the number of seasonal influenza deaths because they are calculated differently, researchers say in a report released today.

Whereas COVID-19 death rates are determined from actual counts of people who have died, seasonal influenza death rates are estimated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) using population modeling algorithms, explains Jeremy Samuel Faust, MD, with Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Division of Health Policy and Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts.

The CDC estimates that between 24,000 and 62,000 people died from influenza during the 2019-2020 season (through April 4). At the time of the analysis (as of April 28), COVID-19 deaths had reached 65,000 in the United States.

Some government officials and others have said the numbers seem similar and have used the comparison as an argument for reopening certain areas.

But making that comparison “is extremely dangerous,” Faust told Medscape Medical News.

“COVID-19 is far more dangerous and is wreaking far more havoc than seasonal influenza ever has,” he said.

Faust coauthored the perspective article, published online in JAMA Internal Medicine, with Carlos del Rio, MD, Division of Infectious Diseases at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia.

The message and methodology of Faust’s and del Rio’s article are on target, according to Jonathan L. Temte, MD, PhD, who has been working in influenza surveillance for almost 25 years.

Current flu data draw on limited information from primary care practices and hospitals, said Dr. Temte, associate dean for public health and community engagement at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison. The estimates help bridge the gaps, he said, but the system is inherently vulnerable to error.

“Comparing them – as so many people in this country have done – to try to diminish the impact of SARS-CoV2 is not fair,” he said.
 

Estimated versus actual influenza deaths

The authors illustrate the difference in the way rates of death from influenza are calculated: “Between 2013-2014 and 2018-2019, the reported yearly estimated influenza deaths ranged from 23,000 to 61,000. Over that same time period, however, the number of counted influenza deaths was between 3,448 and 15,620 yearly.”

“It’s apparent [the CDC has] been overestimating,” Faust said. “If you publish a number on the higher end of the estimate, people might take your public health messages more seriously, such as, it’s important to get your yearly flu shot.”

He added that until influenza death rates started to be compared with COVID-19 rates, “there was never really a downside” to reporting estimates.

Dr. Temte said he doesn’t regard overestimating flu deaths as intentional but rather the result of a longstanding “bias against the elderly in this country” that the estimates are meant to account for.

For example, he says, reporting influenza deaths is mandatory when such deaths involve persons younger than 18 years but not when they involve adults.

Also, traditionally, influenza has been seen “as a cause of death in people with multiple comorbidities that was just part and parcel of wintertime,” Dr. Temte said.

“The likelihood of being tested for influenza goes down greatly when you’re older,” he said. “This is slowly changing.”

The CDC acknowledges on its website that it “does not know the exact number of people who have been sick and affected by influenza because influenza is not a reportable disease in most areas of the US.”

It adds that the burden is estimated through the US Influenza Surveillance System, which covers approximately 8.5% of the US population.
 

 

 

Comparing recorded deaths

It’s more accurate and meaningful to compare actual numbers of deaths for the diseases, Dr. Faust and Dr. del Rio say in their article.

When the authors made that comparison, they drew a stark contrast.

There were 15,455 recorded COVID-19 deaths in the week that ended April 21. The week before, the number of recorded deaths was 14,478, they found. (Those were the two most recent weeks before they submitted their article for publication.)

In comparison, counted deaths ranged from 351 to 1,626 during the peak week of the seven influenza seasons between 2013-2014 and 2019-2020. The average counted deaths for the peak week of the seven seasons was 752.4 (95% confidence interval, 558.8-946.1).

“These statistics on counted deaths suggest that the number of COVID-19 deaths for the week ending April 21 was 9.5-fold to 44.1-fold greater than the peak week of counted influenza deaths during the past seven influenza seasons in the US, with a 20.5-fold mean increase (95% CI, 16.3-27.7),” the authors write.

However, Natasha Chida, MD, MSPH, an infectious disease physician and assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, said in an interview that the actual number of deaths doesn’t tell the complete flu story either. That count would miss people who later died from secondary complications associated with influenza, she said.

“There’s just no way to reliably count influenza deaths,” she said. “I think if we required it as a reported illness, that would be the ideal situation, but there’s so much flu every year that that probably would not be practical.”

She said she agrees that rates of influenza deaths and rates of COVID-19 deaths cannot be fairly compared.

What the authors don’t touch on, she said, is that flu season lasts 4 to 6 months a year, and just 3 months into the coronavirus pandemic, US deaths due to COVID-19 are already higher than those for seasonal influenza.

“Even if we look at it in the way that people who think we can compare flu and coronavirus do, it’s still not going to work out in their favor from a numbers standpoint,” she said.

The article clarifies the differences for “people who don’t live in the flu world,” she said.

“It is not accurate to compare the two for the reasons the authors described and also because they are very different diseases,” she added.
 

Real-life validation

Dr. Faust said in an interview that real-life experiences add external validity to their analysis.

Differences in the way deaths are calculated does not reflect frontline clinical conditions during the COVID-19 crisis, with hospitals stretched past their limits, ventilator shortages, and bodies stacking up in some overwhelmed facilities, the authors say.

Dr. Temte said the external validation of the numbers also rings true in light of his own experience.

He said that, in the past 2 months, he has known two people who have had family members who died of COVID-19.

Conversely, “I would have to search long and hard to come up with people I have known or have been one degree of separation from” who have died from influenza, Dr. Temte said.

The authors, Dr. Temte, and Dr. Chida report no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The number of COVID-19 deaths cannot be directly compared to the number of seasonal influenza deaths because they are calculated differently, researchers say in a report released today.

Whereas COVID-19 death rates are determined from actual counts of people who have died, seasonal influenza death rates are estimated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) using population modeling algorithms, explains Jeremy Samuel Faust, MD, with Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Division of Health Policy and Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts.

The CDC estimates that between 24,000 and 62,000 people died from influenza during the 2019-2020 season (through April 4). At the time of the analysis (as of April 28), COVID-19 deaths had reached 65,000 in the United States.

Some government officials and others have said the numbers seem similar and have used the comparison as an argument for reopening certain areas.

But making that comparison “is extremely dangerous,” Faust told Medscape Medical News.

“COVID-19 is far more dangerous and is wreaking far more havoc than seasonal influenza ever has,” he said.

Faust coauthored the perspective article, published online in JAMA Internal Medicine, with Carlos del Rio, MD, Division of Infectious Diseases at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia.

The message and methodology of Faust’s and del Rio’s article are on target, according to Jonathan L. Temte, MD, PhD, who has been working in influenza surveillance for almost 25 years.

Current flu data draw on limited information from primary care practices and hospitals, said Dr. Temte, associate dean for public health and community engagement at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison. The estimates help bridge the gaps, he said, but the system is inherently vulnerable to error.

“Comparing them – as so many people in this country have done – to try to diminish the impact of SARS-CoV2 is not fair,” he said.
 

Estimated versus actual influenza deaths

The authors illustrate the difference in the way rates of death from influenza are calculated: “Between 2013-2014 and 2018-2019, the reported yearly estimated influenza deaths ranged from 23,000 to 61,000. Over that same time period, however, the number of counted influenza deaths was between 3,448 and 15,620 yearly.”

“It’s apparent [the CDC has] been overestimating,” Faust said. “If you publish a number on the higher end of the estimate, people might take your public health messages more seriously, such as, it’s important to get your yearly flu shot.”

He added that until influenza death rates started to be compared with COVID-19 rates, “there was never really a downside” to reporting estimates.

Dr. Temte said he doesn’t regard overestimating flu deaths as intentional but rather the result of a longstanding “bias against the elderly in this country” that the estimates are meant to account for.

For example, he says, reporting influenza deaths is mandatory when such deaths involve persons younger than 18 years but not when they involve adults.

Also, traditionally, influenza has been seen “as a cause of death in people with multiple comorbidities that was just part and parcel of wintertime,” Dr. Temte said.

“The likelihood of being tested for influenza goes down greatly when you’re older,” he said. “This is slowly changing.”

The CDC acknowledges on its website that it “does not know the exact number of people who have been sick and affected by influenza because influenza is not a reportable disease in most areas of the US.”

It adds that the burden is estimated through the US Influenza Surveillance System, which covers approximately 8.5% of the US population.
 

 

 

Comparing recorded deaths

It’s more accurate and meaningful to compare actual numbers of deaths for the diseases, Dr. Faust and Dr. del Rio say in their article.

When the authors made that comparison, they drew a stark contrast.

There were 15,455 recorded COVID-19 deaths in the week that ended April 21. The week before, the number of recorded deaths was 14,478, they found. (Those were the two most recent weeks before they submitted their article for publication.)

In comparison, counted deaths ranged from 351 to 1,626 during the peak week of the seven influenza seasons between 2013-2014 and 2019-2020. The average counted deaths for the peak week of the seven seasons was 752.4 (95% confidence interval, 558.8-946.1).

“These statistics on counted deaths suggest that the number of COVID-19 deaths for the week ending April 21 was 9.5-fold to 44.1-fold greater than the peak week of counted influenza deaths during the past seven influenza seasons in the US, with a 20.5-fold mean increase (95% CI, 16.3-27.7),” the authors write.

However, Natasha Chida, MD, MSPH, an infectious disease physician and assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, said in an interview that the actual number of deaths doesn’t tell the complete flu story either. That count would miss people who later died from secondary complications associated with influenza, she said.

“There’s just no way to reliably count influenza deaths,” she said. “I think if we required it as a reported illness, that would be the ideal situation, but there’s so much flu every year that that probably would not be practical.”

She said she agrees that rates of influenza deaths and rates of COVID-19 deaths cannot be fairly compared.

What the authors don’t touch on, she said, is that flu season lasts 4 to 6 months a year, and just 3 months into the coronavirus pandemic, US deaths due to COVID-19 are already higher than those for seasonal influenza.

“Even if we look at it in the way that people who think we can compare flu and coronavirus do, it’s still not going to work out in their favor from a numbers standpoint,” she said.

The article clarifies the differences for “people who don’t live in the flu world,” she said.

“It is not accurate to compare the two for the reasons the authors described and also because they are very different diseases,” she added.
 

Real-life validation

Dr. Faust said in an interview that real-life experiences add external validity to their analysis.

Differences in the way deaths are calculated does not reflect frontline clinical conditions during the COVID-19 crisis, with hospitals stretched past their limits, ventilator shortages, and bodies stacking up in some overwhelmed facilities, the authors say.

Dr. Temte said the external validation of the numbers also rings true in light of his own experience.

He said that, in the past 2 months, he has known two people who have had family members who died of COVID-19.

Conversely, “I would have to search long and hard to come up with people I have known or have been one degree of separation from” who have died from influenza, Dr. Temte said.

The authors, Dr. Temte, and Dr. Chida report no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The number of COVID-19 deaths cannot be directly compared to the number of seasonal influenza deaths because they are calculated differently, researchers say in a report released today.

Whereas COVID-19 death rates are determined from actual counts of people who have died, seasonal influenza death rates are estimated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) using population modeling algorithms, explains Jeremy Samuel Faust, MD, with Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Division of Health Policy and Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts.

The CDC estimates that between 24,000 and 62,000 people died from influenza during the 2019-2020 season (through April 4). At the time of the analysis (as of April 28), COVID-19 deaths had reached 65,000 in the United States.

Some government officials and others have said the numbers seem similar and have used the comparison as an argument for reopening certain areas.

But making that comparison “is extremely dangerous,” Faust told Medscape Medical News.

“COVID-19 is far more dangerous and is wreaking far more havoc than seasonal influenza ever has,” he said.

Faust coauthored the perspective article, published online in JAMA Internal Medicine, with Carlos del Rio, MD, Division of Infectious Diseases at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia.

The message and methodology of Faust’s and del Rio’s article are on target, according to Jonathan L. Temte, MD, PhD, who has been working in influenza surveillance for almost 25 years.

Current flu data draw on limited information from primary care practices and hospitals, said Dr. Temte, associate dean for public health and community engagement at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison. The estimates help bridge the gaps, he said, but the system is inherently vulnerable to error.

“Comparing them – as so many people in this country have done – to try to diminish the impact of SARS-CoV2 is not fair,” he said.
 

Estimated versus actual influenza deaths

The authors illustrate the difference in the way rates of death from influenza are calculated: “Between 2013-2014 and 2018-2019, the reported yearly estimated influenza deaths ranged from 23,000 to 61,000. Over that same time period, however, the number of counted influenza deaths was between 3,448 and 15,620 yearly.”

“It’s apparent [the CDC has] been overestimating,” Faust said. “If you publish a number on the higher end of the estimate, people might take your public health messages more seriously, such as, it’s important to get your yearly flu shot.”

He added that until influenza death rates started to be compared with COVID-19 rates, “there was never really a downside” to reporting estimates.

Dr. Temte said he doesn’t regard overestimating flu deaths as intentional but rather the result of a longstanding “bias against the elderly in this country” that the estimates are meant to account for.

For example, he says, reporting influenza deaths is mandatory when such deaths involve persons younger than 18 years but not when they involve adults.

Also, traditionally, influenza has been seen “as a cause of death in people with multiple comorbidities that was just part and parcel of wintertime,” Dr. Temte said.

“The likelihood of being tested for influenza goes down greatly when you’re older,” he said. “This is slowly changing.”

The CDC acknowledges on its website that it “does not know the exact number of people who have been sick and affected by influenza because influenza is not a reportable disease in most areas of the US.”

It adds that the burden is estimated through the US Influenza Surveillance System, which covers approximately 8.5% of the US population.
 

 

 

Comparing recorded deaths

It’s more accurate and meaningful to compare actual numbers of deaths for the diseases, Dr. Faust and Dr. del Rio say in their article.

When the authors made that comparison, they drew a stark contrast.

There were 15,455 recorded COVID-19 deaths in the week that ended April 21. The week before, the number of recorded deaths was 14,478, they found. (Those were the two most recent weeks before they submitted their article for publication.)

In comparison, counted deaths ranged from 351 to 1,626 during the peak week of the seven influenza seasons between 2013-2014 and 2019-2020. The average counted deaths for the peak week of the seven seasons was 752.4 (95% confidence interval, 558.8-946.1).

“These statistics on counted deaths suggest that the number of COVID-19 deaths for the week ending April 21 was 9.5-fold to 44.1-fold greater than the peak week of counted influenza deaths during the past seven influenza seasons in the US, with a 20.5-fold mean increase (95% CI, 16.3-27.7),” the authors write.

However, Natasha Chida, MD, MSPH, an infectious disease physician and assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, said in an interview that the actual number of deaths doesn’t tell the complete flu story either. That count would miss people who later died from secondary complications associated with influenza, she said.

“There’s just no way to reliably count influenza deaths,” she said. “I think if we required it as a reported illness, that would be the ideal situation, but there’s so much flu every year that that probably would not be practical.”

She said she agrees that rates of influenza deaths and rates of COVID-19 deaths cannot be fairly compared.

What the authors don’t touch on, she said, is that flu season lasts 4 to 6 months a year, and just 3 months into the coronavirus pandemic, US deaths due to COVID-19 are already higher than those for seasonal influenza.

“Even if we look at it in the way that people who think we can compare flu and coronavirus do, it’s still not going to work out in their favor from a numbers standpoint,” she said.

The article clarifies the differences for “people who don’t live in the flu world,” she said.

“It is not accurate to compare the two for the reasons the authors described and also because they are very different diseases,” she added.
 

Real-life validation

Dr. Faust said in an interview that real-life experiences add external validity to their analysis.

Differences in the way deaths are calculated does not reflect frontline clinical conditions during the COVID-19 crisis, with hospitals stretched past their limits, ventilator shortages, and bodies stacking up in some overwhelmed facilities, the authors say.

Dr. Temte said the external validation of the numbers also rings true in light of his own experience.

He said that, in the past 2 months, he has known two people who have had family members who died of COVID-19.

Conversely, “I would have to search long and hard to come up with people I have known or have been one degree of separation from” who have died from influenza, Dr. Temte said.

The authors, Dr. Temte, and Dr. Chida report no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Masks, fear, and loss of connection in the era of COVID-19

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Over the din of the negative pressure machine, I shouted goodbye to my patient and zipped my way out of one of the little plastic enclosures in our ED and carefully shed my gloves, gown, and face shield, leaving on my precious mask. I discarded the rest with disgust and a bit of fear. I thought, “This is a whole new world, and I hate it.”

Dr. Leif Hass

I feel as if I am constantly battling the fear of dying from COVID-19 but am doing the best I can, given the circumstances at hand. I have the proper equipment and use it well. My work still brings meaning: I serve those in need without hesitation. The problem is that deep feeling of connection with patients, which is such an important part of this work, feels like fraying threads moving further apart because of the havoc this virus has wrought. A few weeks ago, the intricate fabric of what it is to be human connected me to patients through the basics: touch, facial expressions, a physical proximity, and openhearted, honest dialogue. Much of that’s gone, and while I can carry on, I will surely burn out if I can’t figure out how to get at least some of that connection back.

Overwhelmed by the amount of information I need to process daily, I had not been thinking about the interpersonal side of the pandemic for the first weeks. I felt it leaving the ED that morning and later that day, and I felt it again with Ms. Z, who was not even suspected of having COVID. She is a 62-year-old I interviewed with the help of a translator phone. At the end of our encounter, she said “But doctor, will you make my tumor go away?” From across the room, I said, “I will try.” I saw her eyes dampen as I made a hasty exit, following protocol to limit time in the room of all patients.

Typically, leaving a patient’s room, I would feel a fullness associated with a sense of meaning. How did I feel after that? In that moment, mostly ashamed at my lack of compassion during my time with Ms. Z. Then, with further reflection, tense from all things COVID-19! Having an amped-up sympathetic nervous system is understandable, but it’s not where we want to be for our compassion to flow.

We connect best when our parasympathetic nervous system is predominant. So much of the stimuli we need to activate that part of the nervous system is gone. There is a virtuous cycle, much of it unconscious, where something positive leads to more positivity, which is crucial to meaningful patient encounters. We read each other’s facial expressions, hear the tone of voice, and as we pick up subtle cues from our patient, our nervous system is further engaged and our hearts opened.

The specter of COVID-19 has us battling a negative spiral of stress and fear. For the most part, I try to keep that from consuming me, but it clearly saps my energy during encounters. In the same way we need to marshal our resources to battle both the stress and the disease itself, we need to actively engage pro-social elements of providing care to maintain our compassion. Clearly, I needed a more concerted effort to kick start this virtuous cycle of compassion.

My next patient was Ms. J., a 55-year-old with advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who came in the night before with shortness of breath. Her slight frame shook from coughing as I entered the room. I did not think she had COVID-19, but we were ruling it out.

We reviewed how she felt since admission, and I performed a hasty exam and stepped back across the room. She coughed again and said, “I feel so weak, and the world feels so crazy; tell it to me straight.” Then looking in my eyes, “I am going to make it, doc?”

I took my cue from her; I walked back to the bedside, placed a gloved hand on her shoulder and with the other, I took her hand. I bent forward just a little. Making eye contact and attempting a comforting tone of voice, I said, “Everyone is a little scared, including me. We need each other more than ever these days. We will do our best for you. That means thoughtful medical care and a whole lot of love! And, truly, I don’t think you are dying; this is just one of your COPD flares.”

“God bless you!” she said, squeezing my hand as a tear rolled down her cheek.

“Bless you, too. We all need blessing with this madness going on,” I replied. Despite the mask, I am sure she saw the smile in my eyes. “Thanks for being the beautiful person you are and opening up to me. That’s the way we will make it through this. I will see you tomorrow.” Backing away, hands together in prayer, I gave a little bow and left the room.

With Ms. J.’s help, I began to figure it out. To tackle the stress of COVID, we need to be very direct – almost to the point of exaggeration – to make sure our words and actions convey what we need to express. William James, the father of psychology, believed that if you force a smile, your emotions would follow. The neural pathways could work backward in that way. He said, “If you want a quality, act as if you have it.” The modern translation would be, “Fake it ’til you make it.’ ” You may be feeling stressed, but with a deep breath and a moment’s reflection on the suffering of that patient you are about to see, you can turn the tide on anxiety and give those under your care what they need.

These are unprecedented times; anxiety abounds. While we can aspire to positivity, there are times when we simply can’t muster showing it. Alternatively, as I experienced with Ms. J., honesty and vulnerability can open the door to meaningful connection. This can be quite powerful when we, as physicians, open up to our patients.

People are yearning for deep connection, and we should attempt to deliver it with:

  • Touch (as we can) to convey connection.
  • Body language that adds emphasis to our message and our emotions that may go above and beyond what we are used to.
  • Tone of voice that enhances our words.
  • Talk that emphasizes the big stuff, such as love, fear, connection and community

With gloves, masks, distance, and fear between and us and our patients, we need to actively engage our pro-social tools to turn the negative spiral of fear into the virtuous cycle of positive emotions that promotes healing of our patients and emotional engagement for those providing their care.
 

Dr. Hass was trained in family medicine at University of California, San Francisco, after receiving his medical degree from the McGill University faculty of medicine, Montreal. He works as a hospitalist with Sutter Health in Oakland, Calif. He is an adviser on health and health care for the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley and clinical faculty at UCSF School of Medicine. This article appeared initially at The Hospital Leader, the official blog of SHM.

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Over the din of the negative pressure machine, I shouted goodbye to my patient and zipped my way out of one of the little plastic enclosures in our ED and carefully shed my gloves, gown, and face shield, leaving on my precious mask. I discarded the rest with disgust and a bit of fear. I thought, “This is a whole new world, and I hate it.”

Dr. Leif Hass

I feel as if I am constantly battling the fear of dying from COVID-19 but am doing the best I can, given the circumstances at hand. I have the proper equipment and use it well. My work still brings meaning: I serve those in need without hesitation. The problem is that deep feeling of connection with patients, which is such an important part of this work, feels like fraying threads moving further apart because of the havoc this virus has wrought. A few weeks ago, the intricate fabric of what it is to be human connected me to patients through the basics: touch, facial expressions, a physical proximity, and openhearted, honest dialogue. Much of that’s gone, and while I can carry on, I will surely burn out if I can’t figure out how to get at least some of that connection back.

Overwhelmed by the amount of information I need to process daily, I had not been thinking about the interpersonal side of the pandemic for the first weeks. I felt it leaving the ED that morning and later that day, and I felt it again with Ms. Z, who was not even suspected of having COVID. She is a 62-year-old I interviewed with the help of a translator phone. At the end of our encounter, she said “But doctor, will you make my tumor go away?” From across the room, I said, “I will try.” I saw her eyes dampen as I made a hasty exit, following protocol to limit time in the room of all patients.

Typically, leaving a patient’s room, I would feel a fullness associated with a sense of meaning. How did I feel after that? In that moment, mostly ashamed at my lack of compassion during my time with Ms. Z. Then, with further reflection, tense from all things COVID-19! Having an amped-up sympathetic nervous system is understandable, but it’s not where we want to be for our compassion to flow.

We connect best when our parasympathetic nervous system is predominant. So much of the stimuli we need to activate that part of the nervous system is gone. There is a virtuous cycle, much of it unconscious, where something positive leads to more positivity, which is crucial to meaningful patient encounters. We read each other’s facial expressions, hear the tone of voice, and as we pick up subtle cues from our patient, our nervous system is further engaged and our hearts opened.

The specter of COVID-19 has us battling a negative spiral of stress and fear. For the most part, I try to keep that from consuming me, but it clearly saps my energy during encounters. In the same way we need to marshal our resources to battle both the stress and the disease itself, we need to actively engage pro-social elements of providing care to maintain our compassion. Clearly, I needed a more concerted effort to kick start this virtuous cycle of compassion.

My next patient was Ms. J., a 55-year-old with advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who came in the night before with shortness of breath. Her slight frame shook from coughing as I entered the room. I did not think she had COVID-19, but we were ruling it out.

We reviewed how she felt since admission, and I performed a hasty exam and stepped back across the room. She coughed again and said, “I feel so weak, and the world feels so crazy; tell it to me straight.” Then looking in my eyes, “I am going to make it, doc?”

I took my cue from her; I walked back to the bedside, placed a gloved hand on her shoulder and with the other, I took her hand. I bent forward just a little. Making eye contact and attempting a comforting tone of voice, I said, “Everyone is a little scared, including me. We need each other more than ever these days. We will do our best for you. That means thoughtful medical care and a whole lot of love! And, truly, I don’t think you are dying; this is just one of your COPD flares.”

“God bless you!” she said, squeezing my hand as a tear rolled down her cheek.

“Bless you, too. We all need blessing with this madness going on,” I replied. Despite the mask, I am sure she saw the smile in my eyes. “Thanks for being the beautiful person you are and opening up to me. That’s the way we will make it through this. I will see you tomorrow.” Backing away, hands together in prayer, I gave a little bow and left the room.

With Ms. J.’s help, I began to figure it out. To tackle the stress of COVID, we need to be very direct – almost to the point of exaggeration – to make sure our words and actions convey what we need to express. William James, the father of psychology, believed that if you force a smile, your emotions would follow. The neural pathways could work backward in that way. He said, “If you want a quality, act as if you have it.” The modern translation would be, “Fake it ’til you make it.’ ” You may be feeling stressed, but with a deep breath and a moment’s reflection on the suffering of that patient you are about to see, you can turn the tide on anxiety and give those under your care what they need.

These are unprecedented times; anxiety abounds. While we can aspire to positivity, there are times when we simply can’t muster showing it. Alternatively, as I experienced with Ms. J., honesty and vulnerability can open the door to meaningful connection. This can be quite powerful when we, as physicians, open up to our patients.

People are yearning for deep connection, and we should attempt to deliver it with:

  • Touch (as we can) to convey connection.
  • Body language that adds emphasis to our message and our emotions that may go above and beyond what we are used to.
  • Tone of voice that enhances our words.
  • Talk that emphasizes the big stuff, such as love, fear, connection and community

With gloves, masks, distance, and fear between and us and our patients, we need to actively engage our pro-social tools to turn the negative spiral of fear into the virtuous cycle of positive emotions that promotes healing of our patients and emotional engagement for those providing their care.
 

Dr. Hass was trained in family medicine at University of California, San Francisco, after receiving his medical degree from the McGill University faculty of medicine, Montreal. He works as a hospitalist with Sutter Health in Oakland, Calif. He is an adviser on health and health care for the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley and clinical faculty at UCSF School of Medicine. This article appeared initially at The Hospital Leader, the official blog of SHM.

Over the din of the negative pressure machine, I shouted goodbye to my patient and zipped my way out of one of the little plastic enclosures in our ED and carefully shed my gloves, gown, and face shield, leaving on my precious mask. I discarded the rest with disgust and a bit of fear. I thought, “This is a whole new world, and I hate it.”

Dr. Leif Hass

I feel as if I am constantly battling the fear of dying from COVID-19 but am doing the best I can, given the circumstances at hand. I have the proper equipment and use it well. My work still brings meaning: I serve those in need without hesitation. The problem is that deep feeling of connection with patients, which is such an important part of this work, feels like fraying threads moving further apart because of the havoc this virus has wrought. A few weeks ago, the intricate fabric of what it is to be human connected me to patients through the basics: touch, facial expressions, a physical proximity, and openhearted, honest dialogue. Much of that’s gone, and while I can carry on, I will surely burn out if I can’t figure out how to get at least some of that connection back.

Overwhelmed by the amount of information I need to process daily, I had not been thinking about the interpersonal side of the pandemic for the first weeks. I felt it leaving the ED that morning and later that day, and I felt it again with Ms. Z, who was not even suspected of having COVID. She is a 62-year-old I interviewed with the help of a translator phone. At the end of our encounter, she said “But doctor, will you make my tumor go away?” From across the room, I said, “I will try.” I saw her eyes dampen as I made a hasty exit, following protocol to limit time in the room of all patients.

Typically, leaving a patient’s room, I would feel a fullness associated with a sense of meaning. How did I feel after that? In that moment, mostly ashamed at my lack of compassion during my time with Ms. Z. Then, with further reflection, tense from all things COVID-19! Having an amped-up sympathetic nervous system is understandable, but it’s not where we want to be for our compassion to flow.

We connect best when our parasympathetic nervous system is predominant. So much of the stimuli we need to activate that part of the nervous system is gone. There is a virtuous cycle, much of it unconscious, where something positive leads to more positivity, which is crucial to meaningful patient encounters. We read each other’s facial expressions, hear the tone of voice, and as we pick up subtle cues from our patient, our nervous system is further engaged and our hearts opened.

The specter of COVID-19 has us battling a negative spiral of stress and fear. For the most part, I try to keep that from consuming me, but it clearly saps my energy during encounters. In the same way we need to marshal our resources to battle both the stress and the disease itself, we need to actively engage pro-social elements of providing care to maintain our compassion. Clearly, I needed a more concerted effort to kick start this virtuous cycle of compassion.

My next patient was Ms. J., a 55-year-old with advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who came in the night before with shortness of breath. Her slight frame shook from coughing as I entered the room. I did not think she had COVID-19, but we were ruling it out.

We reviewed how she felt since admission, and I performed a hasty exam and stepped back across the room. She coughed again and said, “I feel so weak, and the world feels so crazy; tell it to me straight.” Then looking in my eyes, “I am going to make it, doc?”

I took my cue from her; I walked back to the bedside, placed a gloved hand on her shoulder and with the other, I took her hand. I bent forward just a little. Making eye contact and attempting a comforting tone of voice, I said, “Everyone is a little scared, including me. We need each other more than ever these days. We will do our best for you. That means thoughtful medical care and a whole lot of love! And, truly, I don’t think you are dying; this is just one of your COPD flares.”

“God bless you!” she said, squeezing my hand as a tear rolled down her cheek.

“Bless you, too. We all need blessing with this madness going on,” I replied. Despite the mask, I am sure she saw the smile in my eyes. “Thanks for being the beautiful person you are and opening up to me. That’s the way we will make it through this. I will see you tomorrow.” Backing away, hands together in prayer, I gave a little bow and left the room.

With Ms. J.’s help, I began to figure it out. To tackle the stress of COVID, we need to be very direct – almost to the point of exaggeration – to make sure our words and actions convey what we need to express. William James, the father of psychology, believed that if you force a smile, your emotions would follow. The neural pathways could work backward in that way. He said, “If you want a quality, act as if you have it.” The modern translation would be, “Fake it ’til you make it.’ ” You may be feeling stressed, but with a deep breath and a moment’s reflection on the suffering of that patient you are about to see, you can turn the tide on anxiety and give those under your care what they need.

These are unprecedented times; anxiety abounds. While we can aspire to positivity, there are times when we simply can’t muster showing it. Alternatively, as I experienced with Ms. J., honesty and vulnerability can open the door to meaningful connection. This can be quite powerful when we, as physicians, open up to our patients.

People are yearning for deep connection, and we should attempt to deliver it with:

  • Touch (as we can) to convey connection.
  • Body language that adds emphasis to our message and our emotions that may go above and beyond what we are used to.
  • Tone of voice that enhances our words.
  • Talk that emphasizes the big stuff, such as love, fear, connection and community

With gloves, masks, distance, and fear between and us and our patients, we need to actively engage our pro-social tools to turn the negative spiral of fear into the virtuous cycle of positive emotions that promotes healing of our patients and emotional engagement for those providing their care.
 

Dr. Hass was trained in family medicine at University of California, San Francisco, after receiving his medical degree from the McGill University faculty of medicine, Montreal. He works as a hospitalist with Sutter Health in Oakland, Calif. He is an adviser on health and health care for the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley and clinical faculty at UCSF School of Medicine. This article appeared initially at The Hospital Leader, the official blog of SHM.

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Doctors advise asthmatics to continue therapy during pandemic

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An allergist and a pediatric pulmonologist cautioned colleagues that COVID-19 could be spawning hazardous behavior as patients question whether they should continue using immune-suppressing drugs during the pandemic.

“In fact, there’s no data to support this at this time. Maintaining adequate asthma control is the current CDC recommendation,” said pediatric pulmonologist John Carl, MD, of Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital. Patients, he said, should be advised to “follow your asthma action plan as outlined by your primary care or specialty clinician and communicate about evolving symptoms, such as fever rather than just congestion, wheezing, and coughing, etc.”

Dr. Carl spoke in a May 7 webinar about asthma and COVID-19 with Lakiea Wright, M.D., a physician specializing in internal medicine and allergy and immunology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and medical director of clinical affairs for Thermo Fisher Scientific’s ImmunoDiagnostics division. The webinar, sponsored by Thermo Fisher Scientific, included discussion of COVID-19 risks, disease management, and distinguishing between the virus and asthma.

In a follow-up interview, Dr. Wright said she’s hearing from patients and parents who are concerned about whether people with asthma face a higher risk of COVID-19 infection. There’s no evidence that they do, she said, but “the CDC states that individuals with moderate to severe asthma may be higher risk for moderate to severe disease from COVID-19 if they were to become infected.”

Indeed, she said, “it is well established that viruses can trigger asthma.” But, as she also noted, early research about the risk in patients with asthma is conflicting.

“Some studies suggest asthma may be a risk factor for hospitalization while other data suggests asthma is not a common risk factor for those hospitalized,” Dr. Wright said.

She highlighted a recent study that suggests people with allergic asthma have “a reduced ACE2 gene expression in airway cells and thus decreased susceptibility to infection” by the novel coronavirus (J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2020 Apr 22. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.04.009).

Dr. Wright cautioned, however, that “this is a hypothesis and will need to be studied more.”

For now, she said, patients “should follow their asthma action plan and take their inhalers, including inhaled corticosteroids, as prescribed by their health care providers.”

Most patients are reasonable and do comply when their physicians explain why they should take a medication,” she noted.

Dr. Carl agreed, and added that a short course of oral corticosteroids are also recommended to manage minor exacerbations and “prevent patients from having to arrive as inpatients in more acute settings and risk health system–related exposures to the current pandemic.”

He cautioned, however, that metered-dose inhalers are preferable to nebulizers, and side vent ports should be avoided since they can aerosolize infectious agents and put health care providers and family members at risk.

Unfortunately, he said, there’s been a shortage of short-acting beta agonist albuterol inhalers. This has been linked to hospitals trying to avoid the use of nebulizers.

Dr. Wright advised colleagues to focus on unique symptoms first, then address overlapping symptoms and other symptoms to differentiate between COVID-19 and asthma/allergy.

She noted that environmental allergy symptoms alone do not cause fever, a hallmark of COVID-19. Shortness of breath can be a distinguishing symptom for the virus, because this is not a common symptom of environmental allergies unless the patient has asthma, Dr. Wright said.

Cough can be an overlapping symptom because in environmental allergies, postnasal drip from allergic rhinitis can trigger cough, she explained. Nasal congestion and/or runny nose can develop with viral illnesses in general, but these are symptoms not included in the CDC’s list of the most common COVID-19 symptoms. Severe fatigue and body aches aren’t symptoms consistent with environmental allergies, Dr. Wright said.

Both Dr. Carl and Dr. Wright emphasized the importance of continuing routine asthma therapy during the pandemic.

“When discussing the importance of taking their inhaled steroids with patients, I also remind patients that asthma management is comprehensive,” Dr. Wright said. “I want them to take their medications, but I also want them avoid or minimize exposure to triggers. Allergic and nonallergic triggers such as environmental tobacco smoke can exacerbate asthma.”

In addition, she said, “it’s important to take a detailed medical history to identify triggers. And it’s important to conduct allergy testing to common environmental allergens to help identify allergic triggers and tailor environmental allergen control strategies based on the results. All of these strategies help patients keep their asthma well-controlled.”

Dr. Carl and Dr. Wright report having no relevant disclosures.

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An allergist and a pediatric pulmonologist cautioned colleagues that COVID-19 could be spawning hazardous behavior as patients question whether they should continue using immune-suppressing drugs during the pandemic.

“In fact, there’s no data to support this at this time. Maintaining adequate asthma control is the current CDC recommendation,” said pediatric pulmonologist John Carl, MD, of Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital. Patients, he said, should be advised to “follow your asthma action plan as outlined by your primary care or specialty clinician and communicate about evolving symptoms, such as fever rather than just congestion, wheezing, and coughing, etc.”

Dr. Carl spoke in a May 7 webinar about asthma and COVID-19 with Lakiea Wright, M.D., a physician specializing in internal medicine and allergy and immunology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and medical director of clinical affairs for Thermo Fisher Scientific’s ImmunoDiagnostics division. The webinar, sponsored by Thermo Fisher Scientific, included discussion of COVID-19 risks, disease management, and distinguishing between the virus and asthma.

In a follow-up interview, Dr. Wright said she’s hearing from patients and parents who are concerned about whether people with asthma face a higher risk of COVID-19 infection. There’s no evidence that they do, she said, but “the CDC states that individuals with moderate to severe asthma may be higher risk for moderate to severe disease from COVID-19 if they were to become infected.”

Indeed, she said, “it is well established that viruses can trigger asthma.” But, as she also noted, early research about the risk in patients with asthma is conflicting.

“Some studies suggest asthma may be a risk factor for hospitalization while other data suggests asthma is not a common risk factor for those hospitalized,” Dr. Wright said.

She highlighted a recent study that suggests people with allergic asthma have “a reduced ACE2 gene expression in airway cells and thus decreased susceptibility to infection” by the novel coronavirus (J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2020 Apr 22. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.04.009).

Dr. Wright cautioned, however, that “this is a hypothesis and will need to be studied more.”

For now, she said, patients “should follow their asthma action plan and take their inhalers, including inhaled corticosteroids, as prescribed by their health care providers.”

Most patients are reasonable and do comply when their physicians explain why they should take a medication,” she noted.

Dr. Carl agreed, and added that a short course of oral corticosteroids are also recommended to manage minor exacerbations and “prevent patients from having to arrive as inpatients in more acute settings and risk health system–related exposures to the current pandemic.”

He cautioned, however, that metered-dose inhalers are preferable to nebulizers, and side vent ports should be avoided since they can aerosolize infectious agents and put health care providers and family members at risk.

Unfortunately, he said, there’s been a shortage of short-acting beta agonist albuterol inhalers. This has been linked to hospitals trying to avoid the use of nebulizers.

Dr. Wright advised colleagues to focus on unique symptoms first, then address overlapping symptoms and other symptoms to differentiate between COVID-19 and asthma/allergy.

She noted that environmental allergy symptoms alone do not cause fever, a hallmark of COVID-19. Shortness of breath can be a distinguishing symptom for the virus, because this is not a common symptom of environmental allergies unless the patient has asthma, Dr. Wright said.

Cough can be an overlapping symptom because in environmental allergies, postnasal drip from allergic rhinitis can trigger cough, she explained. Nasal congestion and/or runny nose can develop with viral illnesses in general, but these are symptoms not included in the CDC’s list of the most common COVID-19 symptoms. Severe fatigue and body aches aren’t symptoms consistent with environmental allergies, Dr. Wright said.

Both Dr. Carl and Dr. Wright emphasized the importance of continuing routine asthma therapy during the pandemic.

“When discussing the importance of taking their inhaled steroids with patients, I also remind patients that asthma management is comprehensive,” Dr. Wright said. “I want them to take their medications, but I also want them avoid or minimize exposure to triggers. Allergic and nonallergic triggers such as environmental tobacco smoke can exacerbate asthma.”

In addition, she said, “it’s important to take a detailed medical history to identify triggers. And it’s important to conduct allergy testing to common environmental allergens to help identify allergic triggers and tailor environmental allergen control strategies based on the results. All of these strategies help patients keep their asthma well-controlled.”

Dr. Carl and Dr. Wright report having no relevant disclosures.

An allergist and a pediatric pulmonologist cautioned colleagues that COVID-19 could be spawning hazardous behavior as patients question whether they should continue using immune-suppressing drugs during the pandemic.

“In fact, there’s no data to support this at this time. Maintaining adequate asthma control is the current CDC recommendation,” said pediatric pulmonologist John Carl, MD, of Cleveland Clinic Children’s Hospital. Patients, he said, should be advised to “follow your asthma action plan as outlined by your primary care or specialty clinician and communicate about evolving symptoms, such as fever rather than just congestion, wheezing, and coughing, etc.”

Dr. Carl spoke in a May 7 webinar about asthma and COVID-19 with Lakiea Wright, M.D., a physician specializing in internal medicine and allergy and immunology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and medical director of clinical affairs for Thermo Fisher Scientific’s ImmunoDiagnostics division. The webinar, sponsored by Thermo Fisher Scientific, included discussion of COVID-19 risks, disease management, and distinguishing between the virus and asthma.

In a follow-up interview, Dr. Wright said she’s hearing from patients and parents who are concerned about whether people with asthma face a higher risk of COVID-19 infection. There’s no evidence that they do, she said, but “the CDC states that individuals with moderate to severe asthma may be higher risk for moderate to severe disease from COVID-19 if they were to become infected.”

Indeed, she said, “it is well established that viruses can trigger asthma.” But, as she also noted, early research about the risk in patients with asthma is conflicting.

“Some studies suggest asthma may be a risk factor for hospitalization while other data suggests asthma is not a common risk factor for those hospitalized,” Dr. Wright said.

She highlighted a recent study that suggests people with allergic asthma have “a reduced ACE2 gene expression in airway cells and thus decreased susceptibility to infection” by the novel coronavirus (J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2020 Apr 22. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.04.009).

Dr. Wright cautioned, however, that “this is a hypothesis and will need to be studied more.”

For now, she said, patients “should follow their asthma action plan and take their inhalers, including inhaled corticosteroids, as prescribed by their health care providers.”

Most patients are reasonable and do comply when their physicians explain why they should take a medication,” she noted.

Dr. Carl agreed, and added that a short course of oral corticosteroids are also recommended to manage minor exacerbations and “prevent patients from having to arrive as inpatients in more acute settings and risk health system–related exposures to the current pandemic.”

He cautioned, however, that metered-dose inhalers are preferable to nebulizers, and side vent ports should be avoided since they can aerosolize infectious agents and put health care providers and family members at risk.

Unfortunately, he said, there’s been a shortage of short-acting beta agonist albuterol inhalers. This has been linked to hospitals trying to avoid the use of nebulizers.

Dr. Wright advised colleagues to focus on unique symptoms first, then address overlapping symptoms and other symptoms to differentiate between COVID-19 and asthma/allergy.

She noted that environmental allergy symptoms alone do not cause fever, a hallmark of COVID-19. Shortness of breath can be a distinguishing symptom for the virus, because this is not a common symptom of environmental allergies unless the patient has asthma, Dr. Wright said.

Cough can be an overlapping symptom because in environmental allergies, postnasal drip from allergic rhinitis can trigger cough, she explained. Nasal congestion and/or runny nose can develop with viral illnesses in general, but these are symptoms not included in the CDC’s list of the most common COVID-19 symptoms. Severe fatigue and body aches aren’t symptoms consistent with environmental allergies, Dr. Wright said.

Both Dr. Carl and Dr. Wright emphasized the importance of continuing routine asthma therapy during the pandemic.

“When discussing the importance of taking their inhaled steroids with patients, I also remind patients that asthma management is comprehensive,” Dr. Wright said. “I want them to take their medications, but I also want them avoid or minimize exposure to triggers. Allergic and nonallergic triggers such as environmental tobacco smoke can exacerbate asthma.”

In addition, she said, “it’s important to take a detailed medical history to identify triggers. And it’s important to conduct allergy testing to common environmental allergens to help identify allergic triggers and tailor environmental allergen control strategies based on the results. All of these strategies help patients keep their asthma well-controlled.”

Dr. Carl and Dr. Wright report having no relevant disclosures.

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Consider COVID-19–associated multisystem hyperinflammatory syndrome

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A 21-year-old young adult presented to the ED with a 1-week history of high fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. His mother was SARS-CoV-2 positive by polymerase chain reaction approximately 3 weeks prior; his PCR was negative for SARS-CoV-2.

EyeMark/thinkstockphotos.com

Following admission, he became hypotensive and tachycardic with evidence of myocarditis. His chest x-ray was normal and his O2 saturation was 100% on room air. His clinical presentation was initially suggestive of toxic shock syndrome without a rash, but despite aggressive fluid resuscitation and broad-spectrum antibiotics, he continued to clinically deteriorate with persistent high fever and increasing cardiac stress. Echocardiography revealed biventricular dysfunction. His laboratory abnormalities included rising inflammatory markers and troponin I and B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP). A repeat PCR for SARS-CoV-2 was negative on day 2 of illness. He was diagnosed as likely having macrophage-activation syndrome (MAS) despite the atypical features (myocarditis), and he received Anakinra with no apparent response. He also was given intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) for his myocarditis and subsequently high-dose steroids. He became afebrile, his blood pressure stabilized, his inflammatory markers declined, and over several days he returned to normal. His COVID-19 antibody test IgG was positive on day 4 of illness.

This case challenged us for several reasons. First, the PCR from his nasopharynx was negative on two occasions, which raises the issue of how sensitive and accurate these PCR tests are for SARS-CoV-2 or are patients with COVID-19–associated hyperinflammatory syndrome still PCR positive? Second, although we have seen many adult cases with a cytokine storm picture similar to this patient, nearly all of the prior cases had chest x-ray abnormalities and hypoxia. Third, the severity of the myocardial dysfunction and rising troponin and BNP also was unusual in our experience with COVID-19 infection. Lastly, the use of antibody detection to SARS-CoV-2 enabled us to confirm recent COIVD-19 disease and see his illness as part of the likely spectrum of clinical syndromes seen with this virus.

Dr. Stephen I. Pelton

The Lancet reported eight children, aged 4-14 years, with a hyperinflammatory shock-like syndrome in early May.1 The cases had features similar to atypical Kawasaki disease, KD shock syndrome, and toxic shock syndrome. Each case had high fever for multiple days; diarrhea and abdominal pain was present in even children; elevated ferritin, C-reactive protein, d-dimer, increased troponins, and ventricular dysfunction also was present in seven. Most patients had no pulmonary involvement, and most tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 despite four of the eight having direct contact with a COVID-positive family member. All received IVIg and antibiotics; six received aspirin. Seven of the eight made a full recovery; one child died from a large cerebrovascular infarct.

Also in early May, the New York Times described a “mysterious” hyperinflammatory syndrome in children thought to be linked to COVID-19. A total of 76 suspected cases in children had been reported in New York state, three of whom died. The syndrome has been given the name pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome. The syndrome can resemble KD shock syndrome with rash; fever; conjunctivitis; hypotension; and redness in the lips, tongue and mucous membranes . It also can resemble toxic shock syndrome with abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea. However, the degree of cardiac inflammation and dysfunction is substantial in many cases and usually beyond that seen in KD or toxic shock.

The syndrome is not limited to the United States. The Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health has created a case definition:2

  • A child presenting with persistent fever, inflammation (elevated C-reactive protein, neutrophilia, and lymphopenia) and evidence of single or multiorgan dysfunction (shock, cardiac, respiratory, renal, gastrointestinal, or neurologic) with additional features.
  • Exclusion of any other microbial causes such as bacterial sepsis or staphylococcal or streptococcal shock syndromes, infections known to be associated with myocarditis (such as enterovirus).
  • SARS-CoV-2 testing may or may not be positive.

Dr. Ingrid Camelo

As with our young adult, treatment is supportive, nonspecific, and aimed at quieting the inflammatory response. The current thinking is the syndrome is seen as antibody to SARS-CoV-2 appears and frequently the nasopharyngeal PCR is negative. It is hypothesized that the syndrome occurs in genetically predisposed hosts and potentially is a late-onset inflammatory process or potentially an antibody-triggered inflammatory process. The negative PCR from nasopharyngeal specimens reflects that the onset is later in the course of disease; whether fecal samples would be COVID positive is unknown. As with our case, antibody testing for IgG against SARS-CoV-2 is appropriate to confirm COVID-19 disease and may be positive as early as day 7.

The approach needs to be team oriented and include cardiology, rheumatology, infectious diseases, and intensive care specialists working collaboratively. Such cases should be considered COVID positive despite negative PCR tests, and full personal protective equipment should be used as we do not as yet know if live virus could be found in stool. We initiated treatment with Anakinra (an interleukin-1 type-1 receptor inhibitor) as part of our treatment protocol for MAS; we did not appreciate a response. He then received IVIg and high-dose steroids, and he recovered over several days with improved cardiac function and stable blood pressure.

Clearly, we have a steep learning curve about the multisystem hyperinflammatory syndrome emerging in association with SARS-CoV-2 infection. What is the pathogenesis? Is SARS-CoV-2 causative or just an associated finding? Who are the at-risk children, adolescents, and adults? Is there a genetic predisposition? What therapies work best? The eight cases described in London all received IVIg, as did our case, and all but one improved and survived. In adults we have seen substantial inflammation with elevated C-reactive protein (often as high as 300), ferritin, lactate dehydrogenase, triglycerides, fibrinogen, and d-dimers, but nearly all have extensive pulmonary disease, hypoxia, and are SARS-CoV-2 positive by PCR. Influenza is also associated with a cytokine storm syndrome in adolescents and young adults.3 The mechanisms influenza virus uses to initiate a cytokine storm and strategies for immunomodulatory treatment may provide insights into COVID-19–associated multisystem hyperinflammatory syndrome.

Dr. Pelton is professor of pediatrics and epidemiology at Boston University and public health and senior attending physician in pediatric infectious diseases at Boston Medical Center. Dr. Camelo is a senior fellow in pediatric infectious diseases at Boston Medical Center. They have no relevant financial disclosures. Email them at [email protected].

References

1. Riphagen S et al. Lancet. 2020 May 6. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31094-1.

2. Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Guidance: Paediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome temporally associated with COVID-19.

3. Liu Q et al.Cell Mol Immunol. 2016 Jan;13(1):3-10.

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A 21-year-old young adult presented to the ED with a 1-week history of high fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. His mother was SARS-CoV-2 positive by polymerase chain reaction approximately 3 weeks prior; his PCR was negative for SARS-CoV-2.

EyeMark/thinkstockphotos.com

Following admission, he became hypotensive and tachycardic with evidence of myocarditis. His chest x-ray was normal and his O2 saturation was 100% on room air. His clinical presentation was initially suggestive of toxic shock syndrome without a rash, but despite aggressive fluid resuscitation and broad-spectrum antibiotics, he continued to clinically deteriorate with persistent high fever and increasing cardiac stress. Echocardiography revealed biventricular dysfunction. His laboratory abnormalities included rising inflammatory markers and troponin I and B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP). A repeat PCR for SARS-CoV-2 was negative on day 2 of illness. He was diagnosed as likely having macrophage-activation syndrome (MAS) despite the atypical features (myocarditis), and he received Anakinra with no apparent response. He also was given intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) for his myocarditis and subsequently high-dose steroids. He became afebrile, his blood pressure stabilized, his inflammatory markers declined, and over several days he returned to normal. His COVID-19 antibody test IgG was positive on day 4 of illness.

This case challenged us for several reasons. First, the PCR from his nasopharynx was negative on two occasions, which raises the issue of how sensitive and accurate these PCR tests are for SARS-CoV-2 or are patients with COVID-19–associated hyperinflammatory syndrome still PCR positive? Second, although we have seen many adult cases with a cytokine storm picture similar to this patient, nearly all of the prior cases had chest x-ray abnormalities and hypoxia. Third, the severity of the myocardial dysfunction and rising troponin and BNP also was unusual in our experience with COVID-19 infection. Lastly, the use of antibody detection to SARS-CoV-2 enabled us to confirm recent COIVD-19 disease and see his illness as part of the likely spectrum of clinical syndromes seen with this virus.

Dr. Stephen I. Pelton

The Lancet reported eight children, aged 4-14 years, with a hyperinflammatory shock-like syndrome in early May.1 The cases had features similar to atypical Kawasaki disease, KD shock syndrome, and toxic shock syndrome. Each case had high fever for multiple days; diarrhea and abdominal pain was present in even children; elevated ferritin, C-reactive protein, d-dimer, increased troponins, and ventricular dysfunction also was present in seven. Most patients had no pulmonary involvement, and most tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 despite four of the eight having direct contact with a COVID-positive family member. All received IVIg and antibiotics; six received aspirin. Seven of the eight made a full recovery; one child died from a large cerebrovascular infarct.

Also in early May, the New York Times described a “mysterious” hyperinflammatory syndrome in children thought to be linked to COVID-19. A total of 76 suspected cases in children had been reported in New York state, three of whom died. The syndrome has been given the name pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome. The syndrome can resemble KD shock syndrome with rash; fever; conjunctivitis; hypotension; and redness in the lips, tongue and mucous membranes . It also can resemble toxic shock syndrome with abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea. However, the degree of cardiac inflammation and dysfunction is substantial in many cases and usually beyond that seen in KD or toxic shock.

The syndrome is not limited to the United States. The Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health has created a case definition:2

  • A child presenting with persistent fever, inflammation (elevated C-reactive protein, neutrophilia, and lymphopenia) and evidence of single or multiorgan dysfunction (shock, cardiac, respiratory, renal, gastrointestinal, or neurologic) with additional features.
  • Exclusion of any other microbial causes such as bacterial sepsis or staphylococcal or streptococcal shock syndromes, infections known to be associated with myocarditis (such as enterovirus).
  • SARS-CoV-2 testing may or may not be positive.

Dr. Ingrid Camelo

As with our young adult, treatment is supportive, nonspecific, and aimed at quieting the inflammatory response. The current thinking is the syndrome is seen as antibody to SARS-CoV-2 appears and frequently the nasopharyngeal PCR is negative. It is hypothesized that the syndrome occurs in genetically predisposed hosts and potentially is a late-onset inflammatory process or potentially an antibody-triggered inflammatory process. The negative PCR from nasopharyngeal specimens reflects that the onset is later in the course of disease; whether fecal samples would be COVID positive is unknown. As with our case, antibody testing for IgG against SARS-CoV-2 is appropriate to confirm COVID-19 disease and may be positive as early as day 7.

The approach needs to be team oriented and include cardiology, rheumatology, infectious diseases, and intensive care specialists working collaboratively. Such cases should be considered COVID positive despite negative PCR tests, and full personal protective equipment should be used as we do not as yet know if live virus could be found in stool. We initiated treatment with Anakinra (an interleukin-1 type-1 receptor inhibitor) as part of our treatment protocol for MAS; we did not appreciate a response. He then received IVIg and high-dose steroids, and he recovered over several days with improved cardiac function and stable blood pressure.

Clearly, we have a steep learning curve about the multisystem hyperinflammatory syndrome emerging in association with SARS-CoV-2 infection. What is the pathogenesis? Is SARS-CoV-2 causative or just an associated finding? Who are the at-risk children, adolescents, and adults? Is there a genetic predisposition? What therapies work best? The eight cases described in London all received IVIg, as did our case, and all but one improved and survived. In adults we have seen substantial inflammation with elevated C-reactive protein (often as high as 300), ferritin, lactate dehydrogenase, triglycerides, fibrinogen, and d-dimers, but nearly all have extensive pulmonary disease, hypoxia, and are SARS-CoV-2 positive by PCR. Influenza is also associated with a cytokine storm syndrome in adolescents and young adults.3 The mechanisms influenza virus uses to initiate a cytokine storm and strategies for immunomodulatory treatment may provide insights into COVID-19–associated multisystem hyperinflammatory syndrome.

Dr. Pelton is professor of pediatrics and epidemiology at Boston University and public health and senior attending physician in pediatric infectious diseases at Boston Medical Center. Dr. Camelo is a senior fellow in pediatric infectious diseases at Boston Medical Center. They have no relevant financial disclosures. Email them at [email protected].

References

1. Riphagen S et al. Lancet. 2020 May 6. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31094-1.

2. Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Guidance: Paediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome temporally associated with COVID-19.

3. Liu Q et al.Cell Mol Immunol. 2016 Jan;13(1):3-10.

A 21-year-old young adult presented to the ED with a 1-week history of high fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal pain. His mother was SARS-CoV-2 positive by polymerase chain reaction approximately 3 weeks prior; his PCR was negative for SARS-CoV-2.

EyeMark/thinkstockphotos.com

Following admission, he became hypotensive and tachycardic with evidence of myocarditis. His chest x-ray was normal and his O2 saturation was 100% on room air. His clinical presentation was initially suggestive of toxic shock syndrome without a rash, but despite aggressive fluid resuscitation and broad-spectrum antibiotics, he continued to clinically deteriorate with persistent high fever and increasing cardiac stress. Echocardiography revealed biventricular dysfunction. His laboratory abnormalities included rising inflammatory markers and troponin I and B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP). A repeat PCR for SARS-CoV-2 was negative on day 2 of illness. He was diagnosed as likely having macrophage-activation syndrome (MAS) despite the atypical features (myocarditis), and he received Anakinra with no apparent response. He also was given intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) for his myocarditis and subsequently high-dose steroids. He became afebrile, his blood pressure stabilized, his inflammatory markers declined, and over several days he returned to normal. His COVID-19 antibody test IgG was positive on day 4 of illness.

This case challenged us for several reasons. First, the PCR from his nasopharynx was negative on two occasions, which raises the issue of how sensitive and accurate these PCR tests are for SARS-CoV-2 or are patients with COVID-19–associated hyperinflammatory syndrome still PCR positive? Second, although we have seen many adult cases with a cytokine storm picture similar to this patient, nearly all of the prior cases had chest x-ray abnormalities and hypoxia. Third, the severity of the myocardial dysfunction and rising troponin and BNP also was unusual in our experience with COVID-19 infection. Lastly, the use of antibody detection to SARS-CoV-2 enabled us to confirm recent COIVD-19 disease and see his illness as part of the likely spectrum of clinical syndromes seen with this virus.

Dr. Stephen I. Pelton

The Lancet reported eight children, aged 4-14 years, with a hyperinflammatory shock-like syndrome in early May.1 The cases had features similar to atypical Kawasaki disease, KD shock syndrome, and toxic shock syndrome. Each case had high fever for multiple days; diarrhea and abdominal pain was present in even children; elevated ferritin, C-reactive protein, d-dimer, increased troponins, and ventricular dysfunction also was present in seven. Most patients had no pulmonary involvement, and most tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 despite four of the eight having direct contact with a COVID-positive family member. All received IVIg and antibiotics; six received aspirin. Seven of the eight made a full recovery; one child died from a large cerebrovascular infarct.

Also in early May, the New York Times described a “mysterious” hyperinflammatory syndrome in children thought to be linked to COVID-19. A total of 76 suspected cases in children had been reported in New York state, three of whom died. The syndrome has been given the name pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome. The syndrome can resemble KD shock syndrome with rash; fever; conjunctivitis; hypotension; and redness in the lips, tongue and mucous membranes . It also can resemble toxic shock syndrome with abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea. However, the degree of cardiac inflammation and dysfunction is substantial in many cases and usually beyond that seen in KD or toxic shock.

The syndrome is not limited to the United States. The Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health has created a case definition:2

  • A child presenting with persistent fever, inflammation (elevated C-reactive protein, neutrophilia, and lymphopenia) and evidence of single or multiorgan dysfunction (shock, cardiac, respiratory, renal, gastrointestinal, or neurologic) with additional features.
  • Exclusion of any other microbial causes such as bacterial sepsis or staphylococcal or streptococcal shock syndromes, infections known to be associated with myocarditis (such as enterovirus).
  • SARS-CoV-2 testing may or may not be positive.

Dr. Ingrid Camelo

As with our young adult, treatment is supportive, nonspecific, and aimed at quieting the inflammatory response. The current thinking is the syndrome is seen as antibody to SARS-CoV-2 appears and frequently the nasopharyngeal PCR is negative. It is hypothesized that the syndrome occurs in genetically predisposed hosts and potentially is a late-onset inflammatory process or potentially an antibody-triggered inflammatory process. The negative PCR from nasopharyngeal specimens reflects that the onset is later in the course of disease; whether fecal samples would be COVID positive is unknown. As with our case, antibody testing for IgG against SARS-CoV-2 is appropriate to confirm COVID-19 disease and may be positive as early as day 7.

The approach needs to be team oriented and include cardiology, rheumatology, infectious diseases, and intensive care specialists working collaboratively. Such cases should be considered COVID positive despite negative PCR tests, and full personal protective equipment should be used as we do not as yet know if live virus could be found in stool. We initiated treatment with Anakinra (an interleukin-1 type-1 receptor inhibitor) as part of our treatment protocol for MAS; we did not appreciate a response. He then received IVIg and high-dose steroids, and he recovered over several days with improved cardiac function and stable blood pressure.

Clearly, we have a steep learning curve about the multisystem hyperinflammatory syndrome emerging in association with SARS-CoV-2 infection. What is the pathogenesis? Is SARS-CoV-2 causative or just an associated finding? Who are the at-risk children, adolescents, and adults? Is there a genetic predisposition? What therapies work best? The eight cases described in London all received IVIg, as did our case, and all but one improved and survived. In adults we have seen substantial inflammation with elevated C-reactive protein (often as high as 300), ferritin, lactate dehydrogenase, triglycerides, fibrinogen, and d-dimers, but nearly all have extensive pulmonary disease, hypoxia, and are SARS-CoV-2 positive by PCR. Influenza is also associated with a cytokine storm syndrome in adolescents and young adults.3 The mechanisms influenza virus uses to initiate a cytokine storm and strategies for immunomodulatory treatment may provide insights into COVID-19–associated multisystem hyperinflammatory syndrome.

Dr. Pelton is professor of pediatrics and epidemiology at Boston University and public health and senior attending physician in pediatric infectious diseases at Boston Medical Center. Dr. Camelo is a senior fellow in pediatric infectious diseases at Boston Medical Center. They have no relevant financial disclosures. Email them at [email protected].

References

1. Riphagen S et al. Lancet. 2020 May 6. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31094-1.

2. Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Guidance: Paediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome temporally associated with COVID-19.

3. Liu Q et al.Cell Mol Immunol. 2016 Jan;13(1):3-10.

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COVID-19 fears tied to dangerous drop in child vaccinations

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The social distancing and sheltering in place mandated because of the COVID-19 pandemic are keeping parents and kids out of their doctors’ offices, and that has prompted a steep decline in recommended routine vaccinations for U.S. children, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention researchers.

Pediatric vaccinations dropped sharply after the national emergency was declared on March 13, suggesting that some children may be at increased risk for other serious infectious diseases, such as measles.

The researchers compared weekly orders for federally funded vaccines from Jan. 6 to April 19, 2020, with those during the same period in 2019.

They noted that, by the end of the study period, there was a cumulative COVID-19–related decline of 2.5 million doses in orders for routine noninfluenza pediatric childhood vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, as well as a cumulative decline in orders of 250,000 doses of measles vaccines.

Although the overall decrease in vaccinations during the study period was larger, according to CDC spokesperson Richard Quartarone, the above figures represent declines clearly associated with the pandemic.

The weekly number of measles vaccines ordered for children aged 24 months or older fell dramatically to about 500 during the week beginning March 16, 2020, and fell further to approximately 250 during the week beginning March 23. It stayed at that level until the week beginning April 13. By comparison, more than 2,500 were ordered during the week starting March 2, before the emergency was declared.

The decline was notably less for children younger than 2 years. For those children, orders dropped to about 750 during the week starting March 23 and climbed slightly for 3 weeks. By comparison, during the week of March 2, about 2,000 vaccines were ordered.

The findings, which were published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, stem from an analysis of ordering data from the federal Vaccines for Children (VFC) Program, as well as from vaccine administration data from the CDC’s Vaccine Tracking System and the collaborative Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD).

The VFC provides federally purchased vaccines at no cost to about half of persons aged 18 years or younger. The VSD collaborates on vaccine coverage with the CDC’s Immunization Safety Office and eight large health care organizations across the country. Vaccination coverage is the usual metric for assessing vaccine usage; providers’ orders and the number of doses administered are two proxy measures, the authors explained.

“The substantial reduction in VFC-funded pediatric vaccine ordering after the COVID-19 emergency declaration is consistent with changes in vaccine administration among children in the VSD population receiving care through eight large U.S. health care organizations,” wrote Jeanne M. Santoli, MD, and colleagues, of the immunization services division at the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. “The smaller decline in measles-containing vaccine administration among children aged ≤24 months suggests that system-level strategies to prioritize well child care and immunization for this age group are being implemented.”

Dr. Santoli, who is an Atlanta-based pediatrician, and associates stressed the importance of maintaining regular vaccinations during the pandemic. “The identified declines in routine pediatric vaccine ordering and doses administered might indicate that U.S. children and their communities face increased risks for outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases,” they wrote. “Parental concerns about potentially exposing their children to COVID-19 during well child visits might contribute to the declines observed.” Parents should therefore be reminded of the necessity of protecting their children against vaccine-preventable diseases.

In 2019, a Gallup survey reported that overall support for vaccination continued to decline in the United States.

The researchers predicted that, as social distancing relaxes, unvaccinated children will be more susceptible to other serious diseases. “In response, continued coordinated efforts between health care providers and public health officials at the local, state, and federal levels will be necessary to achieve rapid catch-up vaccination,” they concluded.

The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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The social distancing and sheltering in place mandated because of the COVID-19 pandemic are keeping parents and kids out of their doctors’ offices, and that has prompted a steep decline in recommended routine vaccinations for U.S. children, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention researchers.

Pediatric vaccinations dropped sharply after the national emergency was declared on March 13, suggesting that some children may be at increased risk for other serious infectious diseases, such as measles.

The researchers compared weekly orders for federally funded vaccines from Jan. 6 to April 19, 2020, with those during the same period in 2019.

They noted that, by the end of the study period, there was a cumulative COVID-19–related decline of 2.5 million doses in orders for routine noninfluenza pediatric childhood vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, as well as a cumulative decline in orders of 250,000 doses of measles vaccines.

Although the overall decrease in vaccinations during the study period was larger, according to CDC spokesperson Richard Quartarone, the above figures represent declines clearly associated with the pandemic.

The weekly number of measles vaccines ordered for children aged 24 months or older fell dramatically to about 500 during the week beginning March 16, 2020, and fell further to approximately 250 during the week beginning March 23. It stayed at that level until the week beginning April 13. By comparison, more than 2,500 were ordered during the week starting March 2, before the emergency was declared.

The decline was notably less for children younger than 2 years. For those children, orders dropped to about 750 during the week starting March 23 and climbed slightly for 3 weeks. By comparison, during the week of March 2, about 2,000 vaccines were ordered.

The findings, which were published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, stem from an analysis of ordering data from the federal Vaccines for Children (VFC) Program, as well as from vaccine administration data from the CDC’s Vaccine Tracking System and the collaborative Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD).

The VFC provides federally purchased vaccines at no cost to about half of persons aged 18 years or younger. The VSD collaborates on vaccine coverage with the CDC’s Immunization Safety Office and eight large health care organizations across the country. Vaccination coverage is the usual metric for assessing vaccine usage; providers’ orders and the number of doses administered are two proxy measures, the authors explained.

“The substantial reduction in VFC-funded pediatric vaccine ordering after the COVID-19 emergency declaration is consistent with changes in vaccine administration among children in the VSD population receiving care through eight large U.S. health care organizations,” wrote Jeanne M. Santoli, MD, and colleagues, of the immunization services division at the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. “The smaller decline in measles-containing vaccine administration among children aged ≤24 months suggests that system-level strategies to prioritize well child care and immunization for this age group are being implemented.”

Dr. Santoli, who is an Atlanta-based pediatrician, and associates stressed the importance of maintaining regular vaccinations during the pandemic. “The identified declines in routine pediatric vaccine ordering and doses administered might indicate that U.S. children and their communities face increased risks for outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases,” they wrote. “Parental concerns about potentially exposing their children to COVID-19 during well child visits might contribute to the declines observed.” Parents should therefore be reminded of the necessity of protecting their children against vaccine-preventable diseases.

In 2019, a Gallup survey reported that overall support for vaccination continued to decline in the United States.

The researchers predicted that, as social distancing relaxes, unvaccinated children will be more susceptible to other serious diseases. “In response, continued coordinated efforts between health care providers and public health officials at the local, state, and federal levels will be necessary to achieve rapid catch-up vaccination,” they concluded.

The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

The social distancing and sheltering in place mandated because of the COVID-19 pandemic are keeping parents and kids out of their doctors’ offices, and that has prompted a steep decline in recommended routine vaccinations for U.S. children, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention researchers.

Pediatric vaccinations dropped sharply after the national emergency was declared on March 13, suggesting that some children may be at increased risk for other serious infectious diseases, such as measles.

The researchers compared weekly orders for federally funded vaccines from Jan. 6 to April 19, 2020, with those during the same period in 2019.

They noted that, by the end of the study period, there was a cumulative COVID-19–related decline of 2.5 million doses in orders for routine noninfluenza pediatric childhood vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, as well as a cumulative decline in orders of 250,000 doses of measles vaccines.

Although the overall decrease in vaccinations during the study period was larger, according to CDC spokesperson Richard Quartarone, the above figures represent declines clearly associated with the pandemic.

The weekly number of measles vaccines ordered for children aged 24 months or older fell dramatically to about 500 during the week beginning March 16, 2020, and fell further to approximately 250 during the week beginning March 23. It stayed at that level until the week beginning April 13. By comparison, more than 2,500 were ordered during the week starting March 2, before the emergency was declared.

The decline was notably less for children younger than 2 years. For those children, orders dropped to about 750 during the week starting March 23 and climbed slightly for 3 weeks. By comparison, during the week of March 2, about 2,000 vaccines were ordered.

The findings, which were published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, stem from an analysis of ordering data from the federal Vaccines for Children (VFC) Program, as well as from vaccine administration data from the CDC’s Vaccine Tracking System and the collaborative Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD).

The VFC provides federally purchased vaccines at no cost to about half of persons aged 18 years or younger. The VSD collaborates on vaccine coverage with the CDC’s Immunization Safety Office and eight large health care organizations across the country. Vaccination coverage is the usual metric for assessing vaccine usage; providers’ orders and the number of doses administered are two proxy measures, the authors explained.

“The substantial reduction in VFC-funded pediatric vaccine ordering after the COVID-19 emergency declaration is consistent with changes in vaccine administration among children in the VSD population receiving care through eight large U.S. health care organizations,” wrote Jeanne M. Santoli, MD, and colleagues, of the immunization services division at the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. “The smaller decline in measles-containing vaccine administration among children aged ≤24 months suggests that system-level strategies to prioritize well child care and immunization for this age group are being implemented.”

Dr. Santoli, who is an Atlanta-based pediatrician, and associates stressed the importance of maintaining regular vaccinations during the pandemic. “The identified declines in routine pediatric vaccine ordering and doses administered might indicate that U.S. children and their communities face increased risks for outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases,” they wrote. “Parental concerns about potentially exposing their children to COVID-19 during well child visits might contribute to the declines observed.” Parents should therefore be reminded of the necessity of protecting their children against vaccine-preventable diseases.

In 2019, a Gallup survey reported that overall support for vaccination continued to decline in the United States.

The researchers predicted that, as social distancing relaxes, unvaccinated children will be more susceptible to other serious diseases. “In response, continued coordinated efforts between health care providers and public health officials at the local, state, and federal levels will be necessary to achieve rapid catch-up vaccination,” they concluded.

The authors disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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COVID-19: What will happen to physician income this year?

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In recent weeks, physicians have gotten the first hints of how much income they could lose in the COVID-19 crisis.

“At a combined system and hospital board meeting yesterday, there was a financial presentation,” said a cardiologist in Minnesota, who declined to be named. “We have ‘salary support’ through May 16, which means we will be receiving base pay at our 2019 level. After May 16, I think it’s fairly certain salaries will be decreased.”

A general internist in the same area added: “The system has decided to pay physicians and other employees for 8 weeks, until May 15, and they are borrowing about $150 million to do this. We don’t know what will happen after May 15, but we are supposed to have an update in early May.”

Physician income is of huge interest, and many aspects of it are discussed in Medscape’s Physician Compensation Report 2020, just released.

The worst may be yet to come

Of all the categories of physicians, “I am worried about private practices the most,” said Travis Singleton, senior vice president at Merritt Hawkins, a physician search firm. “They don’t have a financial cushion, and will start seeing big drops in revenue at the end of May.”

“A lot of the A/R [accounts receivables] for practices come within 30 days, and very little comes in after 90 days,” said Terrence R. McWilliams, MD, chief clinical consultant at HSG Advisors, a consultancy for not-for-profit hospitals and their employed physician networks around the country. “So private practices are reaching the point where prior A/R will start to dwindle and they will start feeling the decline in new claims submissions.”

Large practices may have a bigger financial cushion, but in many cases, they also have more liabilities. “We don’t know the financial loss yet, but I think it’s been devastating,” said Paul M. Yonover, MD, a urologist at UroPartners, a large single-specialty practice in Chicago with 62 urologists. “In fact, the financial loss may well be larger than our loss in volume, because we have to support our own surgery center, pathology lab, radiation center, and other in-house services.”

Employed physicians in limbo

In contrast to physicians in private practices, many employed physicians at hospitals and health systems have been shielded from the impact of COVID-19 – at least for now.

“The experiences of employed physicians are very mixed,” said Mr. Singleton at Merritt Hawkins. “Some health systems have reduced physicians’ pay by 20%, but other systems have been putting off any reductions.”

Hospitals and health systems are struggling. “Stopping elective surgeries deeply affected hospitals,” said Ryan Inman, founder of Physician Wealth Services in San Diego. “With fewer elective surgeries, they have much less income coming in. Some big hospitals that are pillars of their community are under great financial stress.”

“Hospitals’ patient volumes have fallen by 50%-90%,” Mr. McWilliams reported. “Lower volume means lower pay for employed physicians, who are paid by straight productivity or other models that require high volumes. However, some health systems have intervened to make sure these physicians get some money.” 

Base pay is often safe for now, but quarterly bonuses are on the chopping block. “Employed physicians are often getting a guaranteed salary for a month or two, but no bonuses or extra distributions,” said Joel Greenwald, MD, a financial adviser for physicians in St. Louis Park, Minn., a state mecca for physician employment. “They’ve been told that they will continue to get their base salary but forget about the quarterly bonuses. This amounts to salary reductions of 10%-30%.”

Ensuring payment for these doctors means lowering their productivity benchmarks, but the benchmarks might still be too high for these times. An internist at a large health system in Minneapolis–St. Paul reports that, at a lunch meeting, employed doctors learned that payment benchmarks will be reduced to 70% of their 2019 monthly average.

“I am seeing nowhere near 70% of what I was seeing last year,” he said in an interview, asking that his name not be used. “Given how slow things have been, I am probably closer to 30%, but have not been given any data on this, so I am guessing at this point.”

 

 

Adapting to a brave new world

Even as they face a dark financial future, physicians have had to completely revamp the way they practice medicine – a cumbersome process that, in itself, incurred some financial losses. They had to obtain masks and other PPE, reposition or even close down their waiting rooms, cut back on unneeded staff, and adapt to telemedicine.

“It’s been an incredibly challenging time,” said Dr. Yonover, the Chicago urologist. “As a doctor. I cannot avoid contact, and it’s not totally clear yet how the virus spreads. But I don’t have the option of closing the door. As a practice owner, you’re responsible for the health and well-being of employees, patients, and the business.”

“A practice’s daily routine is somewhat slower and costlier,” said David N. Gans, MSHA, senior fellow at the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), which represents group practices. “Between each patient, you have to clean a lot more than previously, and you have to stock up on PPE such as masks and gowns. PPE used to be limited to infectious patients, but now it’s universal.”

At PA Clinical Network, a clinically integrated network in Pennsylvania, volume fell 40%-50% and income fell 30%-50% from late March to late April, according to Jaan Sidorov, MD, an internist who is CEO of the network, which has 158 physicians in a variety of specialties working in 54 practices around the state.

“Revenue went down but it didn’t crash,” he said. “And our physicians pivoted very quickly. They adapted to telehealth and applied for the federal loan programs. They didn’t use waiting rooms. In some cases, staff was out in the parking lot, putting stethoscopes through patients’ windows.”

“None of the practices closed, not even temporarily,” Dr. Sidorov said. “But clearly this cannot go forever without having serious consequences.”

How much can telemedicine help?

Telemedicine has been a lifeline for many struggling practices. “As much as 20%-40% of a practice’s losses can be recouped through telemedicine, depending on variables like patients’ attitudes,” said Mr. Singleton at Merritt Hawkins.

The rise in telemedicine was made possible by a temporary relaxation of the limits on telemedicine payments by Medicare and many private payers. Medicare is currently paying the same rates for telemedicine as it does for in-office visits.

In a recent MGMA Stat survey, 97% of practices reported that they had taken up telemedicine, according to Mr. Gans. He estimates that 80% of primary care could be converted to telemedicine, including medication refills, ongoing care of chronic patients, and recording patients’ vital signs from home.

Some primary care physicians are now using telemedicine for 100% of their visits. “I voluntarily closed my practice weeks ago except for virtual visits due to the risk of exposure for my patients,” a doctor in South Carolina told the Primary Care Collaborative in mid-April. “I continue to pay my staff out of pocket but have reduced hours and am not receiving any income myself.”

However, Mr. Inman of Physician Wealth Services said family medicine clients using telemedicine for all of their patients are earning less per visit, even though the Medicare reimbursement is the same as for an office visit. “They earn less because they cannot charge for any ancillaries, such as labs or imaging,” he said.

“Telemedicine has its limits,” Mr. Singleton said. It cannot replace elective surgeries, and even in primary care practices, “there is a lot of work for which patients have to come in, such as physicals or providing vaccines,” he said. “I know of one doctor who has refrigerator full of vaccines to give out. That pays his bills.”

In many cases, “telemedicine” simply means using the phone, with no video. Many patients can only use the phone, and Medicare now reimburses for some kinds of phone visits. In a mid-April survey of primary care providers, 44% were using the telephone for the majority of their visits, and 14% were not using video at all. Medicare recently decided to pay physicians the same amount for telephone visits as in-person visits.

 

 

Financial boosts will run out soon

Many private practices are surviving only because they have managed to tap into new federal programs that can finance them for the short-term. Here are the main examples:

Receiving advance Medicare payments. Through the Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payment Program, physicians can be paid up to 3 months of their average Medicare reimbursement in advance. However, repayment starts 120 days after receiving the money and must be completed within 210 days.

Obtaining a federal loan. Under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which is available to all kinds of small businesses, practices can apply for up to 2.5 times their average monthly payroll costs.

PPP money can be used for payroll, rent, mortgage interest, or utility payments for up to 8 weeks. The loan will be entirely forgiven as long as the rules are followed. For example, three quarters of the money must go to payroll, and laid-off employees must be rehired by June 30.

There was such a rush for the first round of PPP loans that many physicians failed to get the loan. “Many of my physician clients applied for the loan as soon as they could, but none of them got it,” said Mr. Inman, the San Diego financial adviser. “We are hoping that the next round of funding will provide them some relief.” The second round started on April 27.

Physicians who have already obtained the PPP loan are very relieved. “This loan made it possible for us to pay our employees,” said George W. Monks, MD, a dermatologist in Tulsa, Okla., and president of the Oklahoma Medical Association.

Staff benefiting from higher unemployment payments. Many practices and hospitals are laying off their staff so that they can collect unemployment benefits. This is a good time to do that because the federal government has boosted unemployment payments by $600 a week, creating a total benefit that is greater than many people earned at their regular jobs.

This extra boost ends in July, but practices with PPP loans will have to rehire their laid-off workers a month before that. Getting laid-off staffers to come back in is going to be critical, and some practices are already having a hard time convincing them to come back, said Michael La Penna, a physician practice manager in Grand Rapids, Mich.

“They are finding that those people don’t want to come back in yet,” he said. “In many cases they have to care for children at home or have been getting generous unemployment checks.”

The problem with all these temporary financial boosts is that they will disappear within weeks or months from now. Mr. La Penna is concerned that the sudden loss of this support could send some practices spinning into bankruptcy. “Unless volume gets better very soon, time is running out for a lot of practices,” he said.

Hospitals, which also have been depending on federal assistance, may run out of money, too. Daniel Wrenne, a financial planner for physicians in Lexington, Ky., said smaller hospitals are particularly vulnerable because they lack the capital. He said a friend who is an attorney for hospitals predicted that 25% of small regional hospitals “won’t make it through this.”

Such financial turmoil might prompt many physicians to retire or find a new job, said Gary Price, MD, a plastic surgeon in New Haven, Conn., and president of the Physicians Foundation, an advocacy group for the profession. In a survey of doctors by the Physicians Foundation and Merritt Hawkins, released on April 21, 18% planned to retire, temporarily close their practices, or opt out of patient care, and another 14%, presumably employed physicians, planned to change jobs.

 

 

Is recovery around the corner?

In early May, practices in many parts of the country were seeing the possibility of a return to normal business – or at least what could pass for normal in these unusual times.

“From mid-March to mid-April, hospitals and practices were in panic mode,” said MGMA’s Mr. Gans. “They were focusing on the here and now. But from mid-April to mid-May, they could begin looking at the big picture and decide how they will get back into business.”

Surgeons devastated by bans on elective surgeries might see a bounce in cases, as the backlog of patients comes back in. By late April, 10 states reinstituted elective surgeries, including California, Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Colorado, and Oklahoma, and New York has reinstituted elective surgeries for some counties.

Dr. Price said he hopes to reopen his plastic surgery practice by the end of June. “If it takes longer than that, I’m not sure that the practice will survive.” His PPP loan would have run out and he would have to lay off his staff. “At that point, ongoing viability of practice would become a real question.”

Dr. Monks said he hopes a lot more patients will come to his dermatology practice. As of the end of April, “we’re starting to see an uptick in the number of patients wanting to come in,” he said. “They seem to be more comfortable with the new world we’re living in.

“Viewing the backlog of cases that haven’t been attended to,” Dr. Monks added, “I think we’ll be really busy for a while.”

But Mr. La Penna said he thinks the expected backlog of elective patients will be more like a trickle than a flood. “Many patients aren’t going to want to return that fast,” he said. “They may have a condition that makes exposure to COVID-19 more risky, like diabetes or high blood pressure, or they’re elderly, or they live in a household with one of these risk groups.”

Andrew Musbach, cofounder of MD Wealth Management in Chelsea, Mich., said he expects a slow recovery for primary care physicians as well. “Even when the lockdowns are over, not everyone is going to feel comfortable coming to a hospital or visiting a doctor’s office unless it’s absolutely necessary,” he said.

Getting back to normal patient volumes will involve finding better ways to protect patients and staff from COVID-19, Dr. Yonover said. At his urology practice, “we take all the usual precautions, but nothing yet has made it dramatically easier to protect patients and staff,” he said. “Rapid, accurate testing for COVID-19 would change the landscape, but I have no idea when that will come.”

Mr. Wrenne advises his physician clients that a financial recovery will take months. “I tell them to plan for 6 months, until October, before income returns to pre–COVID-19 levels. Reimbursement lags appointments by as much as 3 months, plus it will probably take the economy 2-3 months more to get back to normal.”

“We are facing a recession, and how long it will last is anyone’s guess,” said Alex Kilian, a physician wealth manager at Aldrich Wealth in San Diego. “The federal government’s efforts to stimulate the economy is keeping it from crashing, but there are no real signs that it will actually pick up. It may take years for the travel and entertainment industries to come back.”

A recession means patients will have less spending power, and health care sectors like laser eye surgery may be damaged for years to come, said John B. Pinto, an ophthalmology practice management consultant in San Diego. “[That kind of surgery] is purely elective and relatively costly,” he said. “When people get back to work, they are going to be building up their savings and avoiding new debt. They won’t be having [laser eye surgery].”

“There won’t be any quick return to normal for me,” said Dr. Price, the Connecticut plastic surgeon. “The damage this time will probably be worse than in the Great Recession. Back then, plastic surgery was off by 20%, but this time you have the extra problem of patients reluctant to come into medical offices.”

“To get patients to come in, facilities are going to have to convince patients that they are safe,” Mr. Singleton said. “That may mean undertaking some marketing and promotion, and hospitals tend to be much better at that than practices.”

 

 

What a new wave of COVID-19 would mean

Some states have begun reopening public places, which could signal patients to return to doctors’ offices even though doctors’ offices were never officially closed. Oklahoma, for example, reopened restaurants, movie theaters, and sports venues on May 1.

Dr. Monks, president of the Oklahoma Medical Association, said his group opposes states reopening. “The governor’s order is too hasty and overly ambitious,” he said. “Oklahoma has seen an ongoing growth in the number of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in the past week alone [in late April].”  

The concern is that opening up public places too soon would create a new wave of COVID-19, which would not only be a public health disaster, but also a financial disaster for physicians. Doctors would be back where they were in March, but unlike in March, they would not benefit from revenues from previously busy times.

Mr. Pinto said the number of COVID-19 cases will rise and fall in the next 2 years, forcing states to reenact new bans on public gatherings and on elective surgeries until the numbers subside again.

Mr. Pinto said authorities in Singapore have successfully handled such waves of the disease through short bans that are tantamount to tapping the brakes of a car. “As the car gathers speed down the hill, you tap the brake,” he said. “I suspect we’ll be seeing a lot of brake-tapping until a vaccine can be developed and distributed.” 

Gary LeRoy, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, recalled the worldwide Spanish Flu pandemic a century ago. “People were allowed out of their houses after 2 months, and the flu spiked up again,” he said. “I hope we don’t make that mistake this time.”

Dr. LeRoy said it’s not possible to predict how the COVID-19 crisis will play out. “What will the future be like? I don’t know the answer,” he said. “The information we learn in next hours, days, or months will probably change everything.”

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

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In recent weeks, physicians have gotten the first hints of how much income they could lose in the COVID-19 crisis.

“At a combined system and hospital board meeting yesterday, there was a financial presentation,” said a cardiologist in Minnesota, who declined to be named. “We have ‘salary support’ through May 16, which means we will be receiving base pay at our 2019 level. After May 16, I think it’s fairly certain salaries will be decreased.”

A general internist in the same area added: “The system has decided to pay physicians and other employees for 8 weeks, until May 15, and they are borrowing about $150 million to do this. We don’t know what will happen after May 15, but we are supposed to have an update in early May.”

Physician income is of huge interest, and many aspects of it are discussed in Medscape’s Physician Compensation Report 2020, just released.

The worst may be yet to come

Of all the categories of physicians, “I am worried about private practices the most,” said Travis Singleton, senior vice president at Merritt Hawkins, a physician search firm. “They don’t have a financial cushion, and will start seeing big drops in revenue at the end of May.”

“A lot of the A/R [accounts receivables] for practices come within 30 days, and very little comes in after 90 days,” said Terrence R. McWilliams, MD, chief clinical consultant at HSG Advisors, a consultancy for not-for-profit hospitals and their employed physician networks around the country. “So private practices are reaching the point where prior A/R will start to dwindle and they will start feeling the decline in new claims submissions.”

Large practices may have a bigger financial cushion, but in many cases, they also have more liabilities. “We don’t know the financial loss yet, but I think it’s been devastating,” said Paul M. Yonover, MD, a urologist at UroPartners, a large single-specialty practice in Chicago with 62 urologists. “In fact, the financial loss may well be larger than our loss in volume, because we have to support our own surgery center, pathology lab, radiation center, and other in-house services.”

Employed physicians in limbo

In contrast to physicians in private practices, many employed physicians at hospitals and health systems have been shielded from the impact of COVID-19 – at least for now.

“The experiences of employed physicians are very mixed,” said Mr. Singleton at Merritt Hawkins. “Some health systems have reduced physicians’ pay by 20%, but other systems have been putting off any reductions.”

Hospitals and health systems are struggling. “Stopping elective surgeries deeply affected hospitals,” said Ryan Inman, founder of Physician Wealth Services in San Diego. “With fewer elective surgeries, they have much less income coming in. Some big hospitals that are pillars of their community are under great financial stress.”

“Hospitals’ patient volumes have fallen by 50%-90%,” Mr. McWilliams reported. “Lower volume means lower pay for employed physicians, who are paid by straight productivity or other models that require high volumes. However, some health systems have intervened to make sure these physicians get some money.” 

Base pay is often safe for now, but quarterly bonuses are on the chopping block. “Employed physicians are often getting a guaranteed salary for a month or two, but no bonuses or extra distributions,” said Joel Greenwald, MD, a financial adviser for physicians in St. Louis Park, Minn., a state mecca for physician employment. “They’ve been told that they will continue to get their base salary but forget about the quarterly bonuses. This amounts to salary reductions of 10%-30%.”

Ensuring payment for these doctors means lowering their productivity benchmarks, but the benchmarks might still be too high for these times. An internist at a large health system in Minneapolis–St. Paul reports that, at a lunch meeting, employed doctors learned that payment benchmarks will be reduced to 70% of their 2019 monthly average.

“I am seeing nowhere near 70% of what I was seeing last year,” he said in an interview, asking that his name not be used. “Given how slow things have been, I am probably closer to 30%, but have not been given any data on this, so I am guessing at this point.”

 

 

Adapting to a brave new world

Even as they face a dark financial future, physicians have had to completely revamp the way they practice medicine – a cumbersome process that, in itself, incurred some financial losses. They had to obtain masks and other PPE, reposition or even close down their waiting rooms, cut back on unneeded staff, and adapt to telemedicine.

“It’s been an incredibly challenging time,” said Dr. Yonover, the Chicago urologist. “As a doctor. I cannot avoid contact, and it’s not totally clear yet how the virus spreads. But I don’t have the option of closing the door. As a practice owner, you’re responsible for the health and well-being of employees, patients, and the business.”

“A practice’s daily routine is somewhat slower and costlier,” said David N. Gans, MSHA, senior fellow at the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), which represents group practices. “Between each patient, you have to clean a lot more than previously, and you have to stock up on PPE such as masks and gowns. PPE used to be limited to infectious patients, but now it’s universal.”

At PA Clinical Network, a clinically integrated network in Pennsylvania, volume fell 40%-50% and income fell 30%-50% from late March to late April, according to Jaan Sidorov, MD, an internist who is CEO of the network, which has 158 physicians in a variety of specialties working in 54 practices around the state.

“Revenue went down but it didn’t crash,” he said. “And our physicians pivoted very quickly. They adapted to telehealth and applied for the federal loan programs. They didn’t use waiting rooms. In some cases, staff was out in the parking lot, putting stethoscopes through patients’ windows.”

“None of the practices closed, not even temporarily,” Dr. Sidorov said. “But clearly this cannot go forever without having serious consequences.”

How much can telemedicine help?

Telemedicine has been a lifeline for many struggling practices. “As much as 20%-40% of a practice’s losses can be recouped through telemedicine, depending on variables like patients’ attitudes,” said Mr. Singleton at Merritt Hawkins.

The rise in telemedicine was made possible by a temporary relaxation of the limits on telemedicine payments by Medicare and many private payers. Medicare is currently paying the same rates for telemedicine as it does for in-office visits.

In a recent MGMA Stat survey, 97% of practices reported that they had taken up telemedicine, according to Mr. Gans. He estimates that 80% of primary care could be converted to telemedicine, including medication refills, ongoing care of chronic patients, and recording patients’ vital signs from home.

Some primary care physicians are now using telemedicine for 100% of their visits. “I voluntarily closed my practice weeks ago except for virtual visits due to the risk of exposure for my patients,” a doctor in South Carolina told the Primary Care Collaborative in mid-April. “I continue to pay my staff out of pocket but have reduced hours and am not receiving any income myself.”

However, Mr. Inman of Physician Wealth Services said family medicine clients using telemedicine for all of their patients are earning less per visit, even though the Medicare reimbursement is the same as for an office visit. “They earn less because they cannot charge for any ancillaries, such as labs or imaging,” he said.

“Telemedicine has its limits,” Mr. Singleton said. It cannot replace elective surgeries, and even in primary care practices, “there is a lot of work for which patients have to come in, such as physicals or providing vaccines,” he said. “I know of one doctor who has refrigerator full of vaccines to give out. That pays his bills.”

In many cases, “telemedicine” simply means using the phone, with no video. Many patients can only use the phone, and Medicare now reimburses for some kinds of phone visits. In a mid-April survey of primary care providers, 44% were using the telephone for the majority of their visits, and 14% were not using video at all. Medicare recently decided to pay physicians the same amount for telephone visits as in-person visits.

 

 

Financial boosts will run out soon

Many private practices are surviving only because they have managed to tap into new federal programs that can finance them for the short-term. Here are the main examples:

Receiving advance Medicare payments. Through the Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payment Program, physicians can be paid up to 3 months of their average Medicare reimbursement in advance. However, repayment starts 120 days after receiving the money and must be completed within 210 days.

Obtaining a federal loan. Under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which is available to all kinds of small businesses, practices can apply for up to 2.5 times their average monthly payroll costs.

PPP money can be used for payroll, rent, mortgage interest, or utility payments for up to 8 weeks. The loan will be entirely forgiven as long as the rules are followed. For example, three quarters of the money must go to payroll, and laid-off employees must be rehired by June 30.

There was such a rush for the first round of PPP loans that many physicians failed to get the loan. “Many of my physician clients applied for the loan as soon as they could, but none of them got it,” said Mr. Inman, the San Diego financial adviser. “We are hoping that the next round of funding will provide them some relief.” The second round started on April 27.

Physicians who have already obtained the PPP loan are very relieved. “This loan made it possible for us to pay our employees,” said George W. Monks, MD, a dermatologist in Tulsa, Okla., and president of the Oklahoma Medical Association.

Staff benefiting from higher unemployment payments. Many practices and hospitals are laying off their staff so that they can collect unemployment benefits. This is a good time to do that because the federal government has boosted unemployment payments by $600 a week, creating a total benefit that is greater than many people earned at their regular jobs.

This extra boost ends in July, but practices with PPP loans will have to rehire their laid-off workers a month before that. Getting laid-off staffers to come back in is going to be critical, and some practices are already having a hard time convincing them to come back, said Michael La Penna, a physician practice manager in Grand Rapids, Mich.

“They are finding that those people don’t want to come back in yet,” he said. “In many cases they have to care for children at home or have been getting generous unemployment checks.”

The problem with all these temporary financial boosts is that they will disappear within weeks or months from now. Mr. La Penna is concerned that the sudden loss of this support could send some practices spinning into bankruptcy. “Unless volume gets better very soon, time is running out for a lot of practices,” he said.

Hospitals, which also have been depending on federal assistance, may run out of money, too. Daniel Wrenne, a financial planner for physicians in Lexington, Ky., said smaller hospitals are particularly vulnerable because they lack the capital. He said a friend who is an attorney for hospitals predicted that 25% of small regional hospitals “won’t make it through this.”

Such financial turmoil might prompt many physicians to retire or find a new job, said Gary Price, MD, a plastic surgeon in New Haven, Conn., and president of the Physicians Foundation, an advocacy group for the profession. In a survey of doctors by the Physicians Foundation and Merritt Hawkins, released on April 21, 18% planned to retire, temporarily close their practices, or opt out of patient care, and another 14%, presumably employed physicians, planned to change jobs.

 

 

Is recovery around the corner?

In early May, practices in many parts of the country were seeing the possibility of a return to normal business – or at least what could pass for normal in these unusual times.

“From mid-March to mid-April, hospitals and practices were in panic mode,” said MGMA’s Mr. Gans. “They were focusing on the here and now. But from mid-April to mid-May, they could begin looking at the big picture and decide how they will get back into business.”

Surgeons devastated by bans on elective surgeries might see a bounce in cases, as the backlog of patients comes back in. By late April, 10 states reinstituted elective surgeries, including California, Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Colorado, and Oklahoma, and New York has reinstituted elective surgeries for some counties.

Dr. Price said he hopes to reopen his plastic surgery practice by the end of June. “If it takes longer than that, I’m not sure that the practice will survive.” His PPP loan would have run out and he would have to lay off his staff. “At that point, ongoing viability of practice would become a real question.”

Dr. Monks said he hopes a lot more patients will come to his dermatology practice. As of the end of April, “we’re starting to see an uptick in the number of patients wanting to come in,” he said. “They seem to be more comfortable with the new world we’re living in.

“Viewing the backlog of cases that haven’t been attended to,” Dr. Monks added, “I think we’ll be really busy for a while.”

But Mr. La Penna said he thinks the expected backlog of elective patients will be more like a trickle than a flood. “Many patients aren’t going to want to return that fast,” he said. “They may have a condition that makes exposure to COVID-19 more risky, like diabetes or high blood pressure, or they’re elderly, or they live in a household with one of these risk groups.”

Andrew Musbach, cofounder of MD Wealth Management in Chelsea, Mich., said he expects a slow recovery for primary care physicians as well. “Even when the lockdowns are over, not everyone is going to feel comfortable coming to a hospital or visiting a doctor’s office unless it’s absolutely necessary,” he said.

Getting back to normal patient volumes will involve finding better ways to protect patients and staff from COVID-19, Dr. Yonover said. At his urology practice, “we take all the usual precautions, but nothing yet has made it dramatically easier to protect patients and staff,” he said. “Rapid, accurate testing for COVID-19 would change the landscape, but I have no idea when that will come.”

Mr. Wrenne advises his physician clients that a financial recovery will take months. “I tell them to plan for 6 months, until October, before income returns to pre–COVID-19 levels. Reimbursement lags appointments by as much as 3 months, plus it will probably take the economy 2-3 months more to get back to normal.”

“We are facing a recession, and how long it will last is anyone’s guess,” said Alex Kilian, a physician wealth manager at Aldrich Wealth in San Diego. “The federal government’s efforts to stimulate the economy is keeping it from crashing, but there are no real signs that it will actually pick up. It may take years for the travel and entertainment industries to come back.”

A recession means patients will have less spending power, and health care sectors like laser eye surgery may be damaged for years to come, said John B. Pinto, an ophthalmology practice management consultant in San Diego. “[That kind of surgery] is purely elective and relatively costly,” he said. “When people get back to work, they are going to be building up their savings and avoiding new debt. They won’t be having [laser eye surgery].”

“There won’t be any quick return to normal for me,” said Dr. Price, the Connecticut plastic surgeon. “The damage this time will probably be worse than in the Great Recession. Back then, plastic surgery was off by 20%, but this time you have the extra problem of patients reluctant to come into medical offices.”

“To get patients to come in, facilities are going to have to convince patients that they are safe,” Mr. Singleton said. “That may mean undertaking some marketing and promotion, and hospitals tend to be much better at that than practices.”

 

 

What a new wave of COVID-19 would mean

Some states have begun reopening public places, which could signal patients to return to doctors’ offices even though doctors’ offices were never officially closed. Oklahoma, for example, reopened restaurants, movie theaters, and sports venues on May 1.

Dr. Monks, president of the Oklahoma Medical Association, said his group opposes states reopening. “The governor’s order is too hasty and overly ambitious,” he said. “Oklahoma has seen an ongoing growth in the number of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in the past week alone [in late April].”  

The concern is that opening up public places too soon would create a new wave of COVID-19, which would not only be a public health disaster, but also a financial disaster for physicians. Doctors would be back where they were in March, but unlike in March, they would not benefit from revenues from previously busy times.

Mr. Pinto said the number of COVID-19 cases will rise and fall in the next 2 years, forcing states to reenact new bans on public gatherings and on elective surgeries until the numbers subside again.

Mr. Pinto said authorities in Singapore have successfully handled such waves of the disease through short bans that are tantamount to tapping the brakes of a car. “As the car gathers speed down the hill, you tap the brake,” he said. “I suspect we’ll be seeing a lot of brake-tapping until a vaccine can be developed and distributed.” 

Gary LeRoy, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, recalled the worldwide Spanish Flu pandemic a century ago. “People were allowed out of their houses after 2 months, and the flu spiked up again,” he said. “I hope we don’t make that mistake this time.”

Dr. LeRoy said it’s not possible to predict how the COVID-19 crisis will play out. “What will the future be like? I don’t know the answer,” he said. “The information we learn in next hours, days, or months will probably change everything.”

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

 

In recent weeks, physicians have gotten the first hints of how much income they could lose in the COVID-19 crisis.

“At a combined system and hospital board meeting yesterday, there was a financial presentation,” said a cardiologist in Minnesota, who declined to be named. “We have ‘salary support’ through May 16, which means we will be receiving base pay at our 2019 level. After May 16, I think it’s fairly certain salaries will be decreased.”

A general internist in the same area added: “The system has decided to pay physicians and other employees for 8 weeks, until May 15, and they are borrowing about $150 million to do this. We don’t know what will happen after May 15, but we are supposed to have an update in early May.”

Physician income is of huge interest, and many aspects of it are discussed in Medscape’s Physician Compensation Report 2020, just released.

The worst may be yet to come

Of all the categories of physicians, “I am worried about private practices the most,” said Travis Singleton, senior vice president at Merritt Hawkins, a physician search firm. “They don’t have a financial cushion, and will start seeing big drops in revenue at the end of May.”

“A lot of the A/R [accounts receivables] for practices come within 30 days, and very little comes in after 90 days,” said Terrence R. McWilliams, MD, chief clinical consultant at HSG Advisors, a consultancy for not-for-profit hospitals and their employed physician networks around the country. “So private practices are reaching the point where prior A/R will start to dwindle and they will start feeling the decline in new claims submissions.”

Large practices may have a bigger financial cushion, but in many cases, they also have more liabilities. “We don’t know the financial loss yet, but I think it’s been devastating,” said Paul M. Yonover, MD, a urologist at UroPartners, a large single-specialty practice in Chicago with 62 urologists. “In fact, the financial loss may well be larger than our loss in volume, because we have to support our own surgery center, pathology lab, radiation center, and other in-house services.”

Employed physicians in limbo

In contrast to physicians in private practices, many employed physicians at hospitals and health systems have been shielded from the impact of COVID-19 – at least for now.

“The experiences of employed physicians are very mixed,” said Mr. Singleton at Merritt Hawkins. “Some health systems have reduced physicians’ pay by 20%, but other systems have been putting off any reductions.”

Hospitals and health systems are struggling. “Stopping elective surgeries deeply affected hospitals,” said Ryan Inman, founder of Physician Wealth Services in San Diego. “With fewer elective surgeries, they have much less income coming in. Some big hospitals that are pillars of their community are under great financial stress.”

“Hospitals’ patient volumes have fallen by 50%-90%,” Mr. McWilliams reported. “Lower volume means lower pay for employed physicians, who are paid by straight productivity or other models that require high volumes. However, some health systems have intervened to make sure these physicians get some money.” 

Base pay is often safe for now, but quarterly bonuses are on the chopping block. “Employed physicians are often getting a guaranteed salary for a month or two, but no bonuses or extra distributions,” said Joel Greenwald, MD, a financial adviser for physicians in St. Louis Park, Minn., a state mecca for physician employment. “They’ve been told that they will continue to get their base salary but forget about the quarterly bonuses. This amounts to salary reductions of 10%-30%.”

Ensuring payment for these doctors means lowering their productivity benchmarks, but the benchmarks might still be too high for these times. An internist at a large health system in Minneapolis–St. Paul reports that, at a lunch meeting, employed doctors learned that payment benchmarks will be reduced to 70% of their 2019 monthly average.

“I am seeing nowhere near 70% of what I was seeing last year,” he said in an interview, asking that his name not be used. “Given how slow things have been, I am probably closer to 30%, but have not been given any data on this, so I am guessing at this point.”

 

 

Adapting to a brave new world

Even as they face a dark financial future, physicians have had to completely revamp the way they practice medicine – a cumbersome process that, in itself, incurred some financial losses. They had to obtain masks and other PPE, reposition or even close down their waiting rooms, cut back on unneeded staff, and adapt to telemedicine.

“It’s been an incredibly challenging time,” said Dr. Yonover, the Chicago urologist. “As a doctor. I cannot avoid contact, and it’s not totally clear yet how the virus spreads. But I don’t have the option of closing the door. As a practice owner, you’re responsible for the health and well-being of employees, patients, and the business.”

“A practice’s daily routine is somewhat slower and costlier,” said David N. Gans, MSHA, senior fellow at the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), which represents group practices. “Between each patient, you have to clean a lot more than previously, and you have to stock up on PPE such as masks and gowns. PPE used to be limited to infectious patients, but now it’s universal.”

At PA Clinical Network, a clinically integrated network in Pennsylvania, volume fell 40%-50% and income fell 30%-50% from late March to late April, according to Jaan Sidorov, MD, an internist who is CEO of the network, which has 158 physicians in a variety of specialties working in 54 practices around the state.

“Revenue went down but it didn’t crash,” he said. “And our physicians pivoted very quickly. They adapted to telehealth and applied for the federal loan programs. They didn’t use waiting rooms. In some cases, staff was out in the parking lot, putting stethoscopes through patients’ windows.”

“None of the practices closed, not even temporarily,” Dr. Sidorov said. “But clearly this cannot go forever without having serious consequences.”

How much can telemedicine help?

Telemedicine has been a lifeline for many struggling practices. “As much as 20%-40% of a practice’s losses can be recouped through telemedicine, depending on variables like patients’ attitudes,” said Mr. Singleton at Merritt Hawkins.

The rise in telemedicine was made possible by a temporary relaxation of the limits on telemedicine payments by Medicare and many private payers. Medicare is currently paying the same rates for telemedicine as it does for in-office visits.

In a recent MGMA Stat survey, 97% of practices reported that they had taken up telemedicine, according to Mr. Gans. He estimates that 80% of primary care could be converted to telemedicine, including medication refills, ongoing care of chronic patients, and recording patients’ vital signs from home.

Some primary care physicians are now using telemedicine for 100% of their visits. “I voluntarily closed my practice weeks ago except for virtual visits due to the risk of exposure for my patients,” a doctor in South Carolina told the Primary Care Collaborative in mid-April. “I continue to pay my staff out of pocket but have reduced hours and am not receiving any income myself.”

However, Mr. Inman of Physician Wealth Services said family medicine clients using telemedicine for all of their patients are earning less per visit, even though the Medicare reimbursement is the same as for an office visit. “They earn less because they cannot charge for any ancillaries, such as labs or imaging,” he said.

“Telemedicine has its limits,” Mr. Singleton said. It cannot replace elective surgeries, and even in primary care practices, “there is a lot of work for which patients have to come in, such as physicals or providing vaccines,” he said. “I know of one doctor who has refrigerator full of vaccines to give out. That pays his bills.”

In many cases, “telemedicine” simply means using the phone, with no video. Many patients can only use the phone, and Medicare now reimburses for some kinds of phone visits. In a mid-April survey of primary care providers, 44% were using the telephone for the majority of their visits, and 14% were not using video at all. Medicare recently decided to pay physicians the same amount for telephone visits as in-person visits.

 

 

Financial boosts will run out soon

Many private practices are surviving only because they have managed to tap into new federal programs that can finance them for the short-term. Here are the main examples:

Receiving advance Medicare payments. Through the Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payment Program, physicians can be paid up to 3 months of their average Medicare reimbursement in advance. However, repayment starts 120 days after receiving the money and must be completed within 210 days.

Obtaining a federal loan. Under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which is available to all kinds of small businesses, practices can apply for up to 2.5 times their average monthly payroll costs.

PPP money can be used for payroll, rent, mortgage interest, or utility payments for up to 8 weeks. The loan will be entirely forgiven as long as the rules are followed. For example, three quarters of the money must go to payroll, and laid-off employees must be rehired by June 30.

There was such a rush for the first round of PPP loans that many physicians failed to get the loan. “Many of my physician clients applied for the loan as soon as they could, but none of them got it,” said Mr. Inman, the San Diego financial adviser. “We are hoping that the next round of funding will provide them some relief.” The second round started on April 27.

Physicians who have already obtained the PPP loan are very relieved. “This loan made it possible for us to pay our employees,” said George W. Monks, MD, a dermatologist in Tulsa, Okla., and president of the Oklahoma Medical Association.

Staff benefiting from higher unemployment payments. Many practices and hospitals are laying off their staff so that they can collect unemployment benefits. This is a good time to do that because the federal government has boosted unemployment payments by $600 a week, creating a total benefit that is greater than many people earned at their regular jobs.

This extra boost ends in July, but practices with PPP loans will have to rehire their laid-off workers a month before that. Getting laid-off staffers to come back in is going to be critical, and some practices are already having a hard time convincing them to come back, said Michael La Penna, a physician practice manager in Grand Rapids, Mich.

“They are finding that those people don’t want to come back in yet,” he said. “In many cases they have to care for children at home or have been getting generous unemployment checks.”

The problem with all these temporary financial boosts is that they will disappear within weeks or months from now. Mr. La Penna is concerned that the sudden loss of this support could send some practices spinning into bankruptcy. “Unless volume gets better very soon, time is running out for a lot of practices,” he said.

Hospitals, which also have been depending on federal assistance, may run out of money, too. Daniel Wrenne, a financial planner for physicians in Lexington, Ky., said smaller hospitals are particularly vulnerable because they lack the capital. He said a friend who is an attorney for hospitals predicted that 25% of small regional hospitals “won’t make it through this.”

Such financial turmoil might prompt many physicians to retire or find a new job, said Gary Price, MD, a plastic surgeon in New Haven, Conn., and president of the Physicians Foundation, an advocacy group for the profession. In a survey of doctors by the Physicians Foundation and Merritt Hawkins, released on April 21, 18% planned to retire, temporarily close their practices, or opt out of patient care, and another 14%, presumably employed physicians, planned to change jobs.

 

 

Is recovery around the corner?

In early May, practices in many parts of the country were seeing the possibility of a return to normal business – or at least what could pass for normal in these unusual times.

“From mid-March to mid-April, hospitals and practices were in panic mode,” said MGMA’s Mr. Gans. “They were focusing on the here and now. But from mid-April to mid-May, they could begin looking at the big picture and decide how they will get back into business.”

Surgeons devastated by bans on elective surgeries might see a bounce in cases, as the backlog of patients comes back in. By late April, 10 states reinstituted elective surgeries, including California, Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Colorado, and Oklahoma, and New York has reinstituted elective surgeries for some counties.

Dr. Price said he hopes to reopen his plastic surgery practice by the end of June. “If it takes longer than that, I’m not sure that the practice will survive.” His PPP loan would have run out and he would have to lay off his staff. “At that point, ongoing viability of practice would become a real question.”

Dr. Monks said he hopes a lot more patients will come to his dermatology practice. As of the end of April, “we’re starting to see an uptick in the number of patients wanting to come in,” he said. “They seem to be more comfortable with the new world we’re living in.

“Viewing the backlog of cases that haven’t been attended to,” Dr. Monks added, “I think we’ll be really busy for a while.”

But Mr. La Penna said he thinks the expected backlog of elective patients will be more like a trickle than a flood. “Many patients aren’t going to want to return that fast,” he said. “They may have a condition that makes exposure to COVID-19 more risky, like diabetes or high blood pressure, or they’re elderly, or they live in a household with one of these risk groups.”

Andrew Musbach, cofounder of MD Wealth Management in Chelsea, Mich., said he expects a slow recovery for primary care physicians as well. “Even when the lockdowns are over, not everyone is going to feel comfortable coming to a hospital or visiting a doctor’s office unless it’s absolutely necessary,” he said.

Getting back to normal patient volumes will involve finding better ways to protect patients and staff from COVID-19, Dr. Yonover said. At his urology practice, “we take all the usual precautions, but nothing yet has made it dramatically easier to protect patients and staff,” he said. “Rapid, accurate testing for COVID-19 would change the landscape, but I have no idea when that will come.”

Mr. Wrenne advises his physician clients that a financial recovery will take months. “I tell them to plan for 6 months, until October, before income returns to pre–COVID-19 levels. Reimbursement lags appointments by as much as 3 months, plus it will probably take the economy 2-3 months more to get back to normal.”

“We are facing a recession, and how long it will last is anyone’s guess,” said Alex Kilian, a physician wealth manager at Aldrich Wealth in San Diego. “The federal government’s efforts to stimulate the economy is keeping it from crashing, but there are no real signs that it will actually pick up. It may take years for the travel and entertainment industries to come back.”

A recession means patients will have less spending power, and health care sectors like laser eye surgery may be damaged for years to come, said John B. Pinto, an ophthalmology practice management consultant in San Diego. “[That kind of surgery] is purely elective and relatively costly,” he said. “When people get back to work, they are going to be building up their savings and avoiding new debt. They won’t be having [laser eye surgery].”

“There won’t be any quick return to normal for me,” said Dr. Price, the Connecticut plastic surgeon. “The damage this time will probably be worse than in the Great Recession. Back then, plastic surgery was off by 20%, but this time you have the extra problem of patients reluctant to come into medical offices.”

“To get patients to come in, facilities are going to have to convince patients that they are safe,” Mr. Singleton said. “That may mean undertaking some marketing and promotion, and hospitals tend to be much better at that than practices.”

 

 

What a new wave of COVID-19 would mean

Some states have begun reopening public places, which could signal patients to return to doctors’ offices even though doctors’ offices were never officially closed. Oklahoma, for example, reopened restaurants, movie theaters, and sports venues on May 1.

Dr. Monks, president of the Oklahoma Medical Association, said his group opposes states reopening. “The governor’s order is too hasty and overly ambitious,” he said. “Oklahoma has seen an ongoing growth in the number of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in the past week alone [in late April].”  

The concern is that opening up public places too soon would create a new wave of COVID-19, which would not only be a public health disaster, but also a financial disaster for physicians. Doctors would be back where they were in March, but unlike in March, they would not benefit from revenues from previously busy times.

Mr. Pinto said the number of COVID-19 cases will rise and fall in the next 2 years, forcing states to reenact new bans on public gatherings and on elective surgeries until the numbers subside again.

Mr. Pinto said authorities in Singapore have successfully handled such waves of the disease through short bans that are tantamount to tapping the brakes of a car. “As the car gathers speed down the hill, you tap the brake,” he said. “I suspect we’ll be seeing a lot of brake-tapping until a vaccine can be developed and distributed.” 

Gary LeRoy, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, recalled the worldwide Spanish Flu pandemic a century ago. “People were allowed out of their houses after 2 months, and the flu spiked up again,” he said. “I hope we don’t make that mistake this time.”

Dr. LeRoy said it’s not possible to predict how the COVID-19 crisis will play out. “What will the future be like? I don’t know the answer,” he said. “The information we learn in next hours, days, or months will probably change everything.”

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

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The third surge: Are we prepared for the non-COVID crisis?

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Over the last several weeks, hospitals and health systems have focused on the COVID-19 epidemic, preparing and expanding bed capacities for the surge of admissions both in intensive care and medical units. An indirect impact of this has been the reduction in outpatient staffing and resources, with the shifting of staff for inpatient care. Many areas seem to have passed the peak in the number of cases and are now seeing a plateau or downward trend in the admissions to acute care facilities.

Dr. Rupesh Prasad

During this period, there has been a noticeable downtrend in patients being evaluated in the ED, or admitted for decompensation of chronic conditions like heart failure, COPD and diabetes mellitus, or such acute conditions as stroke and MI. Studies from Italy and Spain, and closer to home from Atlanta and Boston, point to a significant decrease in numbers of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) admissions.1 Duke Health saw a decrease in stroke admissions in their hospitals by 34%.2

One could argue that these patients are in fact presenting with COVID-19 or similar symptoms as is evidenced by the studies linking the severity of SARS-Co-V2 infection to chronic conditions like diabetes mellitus and obesity.2 On the other hand, the message of social isolation and avoidance of nonurgent visits could lead to delays in care resulting in patients presenting sicker and in advanced stages.3 Also, this has not been limited to the adult population. For example, reports indicate that visits to WakeMed’s pediatric emergency rooms in Wake County, N.C., were down by 60%.2

We could well be seeing a calm before the storm. While it is anticipated that there may be a second surge of COVID-19 cases, health systems would do well to be prepared for the “third surge,” consisting of patients coming in with chronic medical conditions for which they have been, so far, avoiding follow-up and managing at home, and acute medical conditions with delayed diagnoses. The impact could likely be more in the subset of patients with limited access to health care, including medications and follow-up, resulting in a disproportionate burden on safety-net hospitals.

Dr. Venkataraman Palabindala

Compounding this issue would be the economic impact of the current crisis on health systems, their staffing, and resources. Several major organizations have already proposed budget cuts and reduction of the workforce, raising significant concerns about the future of health care workers who put their lives at risk during this pandemic.4 There is no guarantee that the federal funding provided by the stimulus packages will save jobs in the health care industry. This problem needs new leadership thinking, and every organization that puts employees over profits margins will have a long-term impact on communities.

Another area of concern is a shift in resources and workflow from ambulatory to inpatient settings for the COVID-19 pandemic, and the need for revamping the ambulatory services with reshifting the workforce. As COVID-19 cases plateau, the resurgence of non-COVID–related admissions will require additional help in inpatient settings. Prioritizing the ambulatory services based on financial benefits versus patient outcomes is also a major challenge to leadership.5

Lastly, the current health care crisis has led to significant stress, both emotional and physical, among frontline caregivers, increasing the risk of burnout.6 How leadership helps health care workers to cope with these stressors, and the resources they provide, is going to play a key role in long term retention of their talent, and will reflect on the organizational culture. Though it might seem trivial, posttraumatic stress disorder related to this is already obvious, and health care leadership needs to put every effort in providing the resources to help prevent burnout, in partnership with national organizations like the Society of Hospital Medicine and the American College of Physicians.

The expansion of telemedicine has provided a unique opportunity to address several of these issues while maintaining the nonpharmacologic interventions to fight the epidemic, and keeping the cost curve as low as possible.7 Extension of these services to all ambulatory service lines, including home health and therapy, is the next big step in the new health care era. Virtual check-ins by physicians, advance practice clinicians, and home care nurses could help alleviate the concerns regarding delays in care of patients with chronic conditions, and help identify those at risk. This would also be of help with staffing shortages, and possibly provide much needed support to frontline providers.

Dr. Prasad is currently medical director of care management and a hospitalist at Advocate Aurora Health in Milwaukee. He was previously quality and utilization officer and chief of the medical staff at Aurora Sinai Medical Center. Dr. Prasad is cochair of SHM’s IT Special Interest Group, sits on the HQPS Committee, and is president of SHM’s Wisconsin Chapter. Dr. Palabindala is the medical director, utilization management and physician advisory services, at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson. He is an associate professor of medicine and academic hospitalist in the UMMC School of Medicine.

References

1. Wood S. TCTMD. 2020 Apr 2. The mystery of the missing STEMIs during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

2. Stradling R. The News & Observer. 2020 Apr 21. “Fewer people are going to Triangle [N.C.] emergency rooms, and that could be a bad thing.”

3. Kasanagottu K. USA Today. 2020 Apr 15. “Don’t delay care for chronic illness over coronavirus. It’s bad for you and for hospitals.”

4. Snowbeck C. The Star Tribune. 2020 Apr 11. “Mayo Clinic cutting pay for more than 20,000 workers.”

5. LaPointe J. RevCycle Intelligence. 2020 Mar 31. “How much will the COVID-19 pandemic cost hospitals?

6. Gavidia M. AJMC. 2020 Mar 31. “Sleep, physician burnout linked amid COVID-19 pandemic.”

7. Hollander JE and Carr BG. N Engl J Med. 2020 Apr 30;382(18):1679-81. “Virtually perfect? Telemedicine for COVID-19.”

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Over the last several weeks, hospitals and health systems have focused on the COVID-19 epidemic, preparing and expanding bed capacities for the surge of admissions both in intensive care and medical units. An indirect impact of this has been the reduction in outpatient staffing and resources, with the shifting of staff for inpatient care. Many areas seem to have passed the peak in the number of cases and are now seeing a plateau or downward trend in the admissions to acute care facilities.

Dr. Rupesh Prasad

During this period, there has been a noticeable downtrend in patients being evaluated in the ED, or admitted for decompensation of chronic conditions like heart failure, COPD and diabetes mellitus, or such acute conditions as stroke and MI. Studies from Italy and Spain, and closer to home from Atlanta and Boston, point to a significant decrease in numbers of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) admissions.1 Duke Health saw a decrease in stroke admissions in their hospitals by 34%.2

One could argue that these patients are in fact presenting with COVID-19 or similar symptoms as is evidenced by the studies linking the severity of SARS-Co-V2 infection to chronic conditions like diabetes mellitus and obesity.2 On the other hand, the message of social isolation and avoidance of nonurgent visits could lead to delays in care resulting in patients presenting sicker and in advanced stages.3 Also, this has not been limited to the adult population. For example, reports indicate that visits to WakeMed’s pediatric emergency rooms in Wake County, N.C., were down by 60%.2

We could well be seeing a calm before the storm. While it is anticipated that there may be a second surge of COVID-19 cases, health systems would do well to be prepared for the “third surge,” consisting of patients coming in with chronic medical conditions for which they have been, so far, avoiding follow-up and managing at home, and acute medical conditions with delayed diagnoses. The impact could likely be more in the subset of patients with limited access to health care, including medications and follow-up, resulting in a disproportionate burden on safety-net hospitals.

Dr. Venkataraman Palabindala

Compounding this issue would be the economic impact of the current crisis on health systems, their staffing, and resources. Several major organizations have already proposed budget cuts and reduction of the workforce, raising significant concerns about the future of health care workers who put their lives at risk during this pandemic.4 There is no guarantee that the federal funding provided by the stimulus packages will save jobs in the health care industry. This problem needs new leadership thinking, and every organization that puts employees over profits margins will have a long-term impact on communities.

Another area of concern is a shift in resources and workflow from ambulatory to inpatient settings for the COVID-19 pandemic, and the need for revamping the ambulatory services with reshifting the workforce. As COVID-19 cases plateau, the resurgence of non-COVID–related admissions will require additional help in inpatient settings. Prioritizing the ambulatory services based on financial benefits versus patient outcomes is also a major challenge to leadership.5

Lastly, the current health care crisis has led to significant stress, both emotional and physical, among frontline caregivers, increasing the risk of burnout.6 How leadership helps health care workers to cope with these stressors, and the resources they provide, is going to play a key role in long term retention of their talent, and will reflect on the organizational culture. Though it might seem trivial, posttraumatic stress disorder related to this is already obvious, and health care leadership needs to put every effort in providing the resources to help prevent burnout, in partnership with national organizations like the Society of Hospital Medicine and the American College of Physicians.

The expansion of telemedicine has provided a unique opportunity to address several of these issues while maintaining the nonpharmacologic interventions to fight the epidemic, and keeping the cost curve as low as possible.7 Extension of these services to all ambulatory service lines, including home health and therapy, is the next big step in the new health care era. Virtual check-ins by physicians, advance practice clinicians, and home care nurses could help alleviate the concerns regarding delays in care of patients with chronic conditions, and help identify those at risk. This would also be of help with staffing shortages, and possibly provide much needed support to frontline providers.

Dr. Prasad is currently medical director of care management and a hospitalist at Advocate Aurora Health in Milwaukee. He was previously quality and utilization officer and chief of the medical staff at Aurora Sinai Medical Center. Dr. Prasad is cochair of SHM’s IT Special Interest Group, sits on the HQPS Committee, and is president of SHM’s Wisconsin Chapter. Dr. Palabindala is the medical director, utilization management and physician advisory services, at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson. He is an associate professor of medicine and academic hospitalist in the UMMC School of Medicine.

References

1. Wood S. TCTMD. 2020 Apr 2. The mystery of the missing STEMIs during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

2. Stradling R. The News & Observer. 2020 Apr 21. “Fewer people are going to Triangle [N.C.] emergency rooms, and that could be a bad thing.”

3. Kasanagottu K. USA Today. 2020 Apr 15. “Don’t delay care for chronic illness over coronavirus. It’s bad for you and for hospitals.”

4. Snowbeck C. The Star Tribune. 2020 Apr 11. “Mayo Clinic cutting pay for more than 20,000 workers.”

5. LaPointe J. RevCycle Intelligence. 2020 Mar 31. “How much will the COVID-19 pandemic cost hospitals?

6. Gavidia M. AJMC. 2020 Mar 31. “Sleep, physician burnout linked amid COVID-19 pandemic.”

7. Hollander JE and Carr BG. N Engl J Med. 2020 Apr 30;382(18):1679-81. “Virtually perfect? Telemedicine for COVID-19.”

Over the last several weeks, hospitals and health systems have focused on the COVID-19 epidemic, preparing and expanding bed capacities for the surge of admissions both in intensive care and medical units. An indirect impact of this has been the reduction in outpatient staffing and resources, with the shifting of staff for inpatient care. Many areas seem to have passed the peak in the number of cases and are now seeing a plateau or downward trend in the admissions to acute care facilities.

Dr. Rupesh Prasad

During this period, there has been a noticeable downtrend in patients being evaluated in the ED, or admitted for decompensation of chronic conditions like heart failure, COPD and diabetes mellitus, or such acute conditions as stroke and MI. Studies from Italy and Spain, and closer to home from Atlanta and Boston, point to a significant decrease in numbers of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) admissions.1 Duke Health saw a decrease in stroke admissions in their hospitals by 34%.2

One could argue that these patients are in fact presenting with COVID-19 or similar symptoms as is evidenced by the studies linking the severity of SARS-Co-V2 infection to chronic conditions like diabetes mellitus and obesity.2 On the other hand, the message of social isolation and avoidance of nonurgent visits could lead to delays in care resulting in patients presenting sicker and in advanced stages.3 Also, this has not been limited to the adult population. For example, reports indicate that visits to WakeMed’s pediatric emergency rooms in Wake County, N.C., were down by 60%.2

We could well be seeing a calm before the storm. While it is anticipated that there may be a second surge of COVID-19 cases, health systems would do well to be prepared for the “third surge,” consisting of patients coming in with chronic medical conditions for which they have been, so far, avoiding follow-up and managing at home, and acute medical conditions with delayed diagnoses. The impact could likely be more in the subset of patients with limited access to health care, including medications and follow-up, resulting in a disproportionate burden on safety-net hospitals.

Dr. Venkataraman Palabindala

Compounding this issue would be the economic impact of the current crisis on health systems, their staffing, and resources. Several major organizations have already proposed budget cuts and reduction of the workforce, raising significant concerns about the future of health care workers who put their lives at risk during this pandemic.4 There is no guarantee that the federal funding provided by the stimulus packages will save jobs in the health care industry. This problem needs new leadership thinking, and every organization that puts employees over profits margins will have a long-term impact on communities.

Another area of concern is a shift in resources and workflow from ambulatory to inpatient settings for the COVID-19 pandemic, and the need for revamping the ambulatory services with reshifting the workforce. As COVID-19 cases plateau, the resurgence of non-COVID–related admissions will require additional help in inpatient settings. Prioritizing the ambulatory services based on financial benefits versus patient outcomes is also a major challenge to leadership.5

Lastly, the current health care crisis has led to significant stress, both emotional and physical, among frontline caregivers, increasing the risk of burnout.6 How leadership helps health care workers to cope with these stressors, and the resources they provide, is going to play a key role in long term retention of their talent, and will reflect on the organizational culture. Though it might seem trivial, posttraumatic stress disorder related to this is already obvious, and health care leadership needs to put every effort in providing the resources to help prevent burnout, in partnership with national organizations like the Society of Hospital Medicine and the American College of Physicians.

The expansion of telemedicine has provided a unique opportunity to address several of these issues while maintaining the nonpharmacologic interventions to fight the epidemic, and keeping the cost curve as low as possible.7 Extension of these services to all ambulatory service lines, including home health and therapy, is the next big step in the new health care era. Virtual check-ins by physicians, advance practice clinicians, and home care nurses could help alleviate the concerns regarding delays in care of patients with chronic conditions, and help identify those at risk. This would also be of help with staffing shortages, and possibly provide much needed support to frontline providers.

Dr. Prasad is currently medical director of care management and a hospitalist at Advocate Aurora Health in Milwaukee. He was previously quality and utilization officer and chief of the medical staff at Aurora Sinai Medical Center. Dr. Prasad is cochair of SHM’s IT Special Interest Group, sits on the HQPS Committee, and is president of SHM’s Wisconsin Chapter. Dr. Palabindala is the medical director, utilization management and physician advisory services, at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson. He is an associate professor of medicine and academic hospitalist in the UMMC School of Medicine.

References

1. Wood S. TCTMD. 2020 Apr 2. The mystery of the missing STEMIs during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

2. Stradling R. The News & Observer. 2020 Apr 21. “Fewer people are going to Triangle [N.C.] emergency rooms, and that could be a bad thing.”

3. Kasanagottu K. USA Today. 2020 Apr 15. “Don’t delay care for chronic illness over coronavirus. It’s bad for you and for hospitals.”

4. Snowbeck C. The Star Tribune. 2020 Apr 11. “Mayo Clinic cutting pay for more than 20,000 workers.”

5. LaPointe J. RevCycle Intelligence. 2020 Mar 31. “How much will the COVID-19 pandemic cost hospitals?

6. Gavidia M. AJMC. 2020 Mar 31. “Sleep, physician burnout linked amid COVID-19 pandemic.”

7. Hollander JE and Carr BG. N Engl J Med. 2020 Apr 30;382(18):1679-81. “Virtually perfect? Telemedicine for COVID-19.”

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COVID-19 experiences from the pediatrician front line

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As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread across the United States, several members of the Pediatric News Editorial Advisory Board shared how practices have been adapting to the pandemic, especially in terms of immunization.

Dr. Karalyn Kinsella

Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a member of a four-pediatrician private practice in Cheshire, Conn., said in an interview that “we have been seeing only children under age 2 years for their well visits to keep them up to date on their vaccinations” as recommended by infectious disease departments at nearby hospitals such as Connecticut Children’s Medical Center. “We also are seeing the 4- and 5-year-old children for vaccinations.”

Dr. Kinsella explained that, in case parents don’t want to bring their children into the office, her staff is offering to give the vaccinations in the parking lot. But most families are coming into the office.

“We are only seeing well babies and take the parent and child back to a room as soon as they come in the office to avoid having patients sit in the waiting room. At this point, both parents and office staff are wearing masks; we are cleaning the rooms between patients,” Dr. Kinsella said.

“Most of our patients are coming in for their vaccines, so I don’t anticipate a lot of kids being behind. However, we will have a surge of all the physicals that need to be done prior to school in the fall. We have thought about opening up for the weekends for physicals to accommodate this. We also may need to start the day earlier and end later. I have heard some schools may be postponing the date the physicals are due.”

Because of a lack of full personal protective equipment, the practice has not been seeing sick visits in the office, but they have been doing a lot of telehealth visits. “We have been using doxy.me for that, which is free, incredibly easy to use, and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)–compliant,” she said. “I am finding some visits, such as ADHD follow-ups and mental health follow-ups, very amenable to telehealth.”

“The hardest part – as I am sure is for most pediatricians – is the financial strain to a small business,” Dr. Kinsella noted. “We are down about 70% in revenue from this time last year. We have had to lay-off half our staff, and those who are working have much-reduced hours. We did not get the first round of funding for the paycheck protection program loan from the government and are waiting on the second round. We are trying to recoup some business by doing telehealth, but [the insurance companies] are only paying about 75%-80%. We also are charging for phone calls over 5 minutes. It will take a long time once we are up and running to recoup the losses.

“When this is all over, I’m hoping that we will be able to continue to incorporate telehealth into our schedules as I think it is convenient for families. I also am hoping that pediatricians continue to bill for phone calls as we have been giving out a lot of free care prior to this. I hope the American Academy of Pediatrics and all pediatricians work together to advocate for payment of these modalities,” she said.

 

 

Dr. Howard Smart

J. Howard Smart, MD, who is chairman of the department of pediatrics at Sharp Rees-Stealy Medical Group in San Diego, said in an interview, “We have been bringing all of the infants and toddlers in for checkups and vaccines up to age 18 months.” These visits are scheduled in the morning, and sick patients are scheduled in the afternoon. “Well-child visits for older ages are being done by video, and the kindergarten and adolescent vaccines can be done by quick nurse visits. We will have some catching up to do once restrictions are lifted.”

“A fair amount of discussion went into these decisions. Is a video checkup better than no checkup? There is no clear-cut answer. Important things can be addressed by video: lifestyle, diet, exercise, family coping with stay-at-home orders, maintaining healthy childhood relationships, Internet use, ongoing education, among others. We know that we may miss things that can only be picked up by physical examination: hypertension, heart murmurs, abnormal growth, sexual development, abdominal masses, subtle strabismus. This is why we need to bring these children back for the physical exam later,” Dr. Smart emphasized.

“One possible negative result of doing the ‘well-child check’ by video would be if the parent assumed that the ‘checkup’ was done, never brought the child back for the exam, and something was missed that needed intervention. It will be important to get the message across that the return visit is needed. The American Academy of Pediatrics made this a part of their recommendations. It is going to be important for payers to realize that we need to do both visits – and to pay accordingly,” he concluded.



Dr. Francis E. Rushton Jr.

Francis E. Rushton Jr., MD, of Birmingham, Ala., described in an interview how the pediatricians in his former practice are looking for new ways to encourage shot administration in a timely manner during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as exploring ways to partner with home visitors in encouraging timely infant and toddler vaccinations.

At South Carolina’s Beaufort Pediatrics, Joseph Floyd, MD, described a multipronged initiative. The practice’s well-child visit reminder system is being reprogrammed to check for lapses in vaccinations rather than just well-child visit attendance. For the most part, Dr. Floyd stated parents appreciate the reminders and accept the need for vaccination: “In the absence of immunizations for coronavirus, families seem to be more cognizant of the value of the vaccines we do have.” Beaufort Pediatrics is also partnering with their local hospital on a publicity campaign stressing the importance of staying up to date with currently available and recommended vaccines.

Other child-service organizations are concerned as well. Dr. Francis E. Rushton Jr., as faculty with the Education Development Center’s Health Resources and Services Administration–funded home-visiting quality improvement collaborative (HV CoIIN 2.0), described efforts with home visitors in Alabama and other states. “Home visitors understand the importance of immunizations to the health and welfare of the infants they care for. They’re looking for opportunities to improve compliance with vaccination regimens.” Some of these home-visiting agencies are employing quality improvement technique to improve compliance. One idea they are working on is documenting annual training on updated vaccines for the home visitors. They are working on protocols for linking their clients with primary health care providers, referral relations, and relationship development with local pediatric offices. Motivational interviewing techniques for home visitors focused on immunizations are being considered. For families who are hesitant, home visitors are considering accompanying the family when they come to the doctor’s office while paying attention to COVID-19 social distancing policies at medical facilities.

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As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread across the United States, several members of the Pediatric News Editorial Advisory Board shared how practices have been adapting to the pandemic, especially in terms of immunization.

Dr. Karalyn Kinsella

Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a member of a four-pediatrician private practice in Cheshire, Conn., said in an interview that “we have been seeing only children under age 2 years for their well visits to keep them up to date on their vaccinations” as recommended by infectious disease departments at nearby hospitals such as Connecticut Children’s Medical Center. “We also are seeing the 4- and 5-year-old children for vaccinations.”

Dr. Kinsella explained that, in case parents don’t want to bring their children into the office, her staff is offering to give the vaccinations in the parking lot. But most families are coming into the office.

“We are only seeing well babies and take the parent and child back to a room as soon as they come in the office to avoid having patients sit in the waiting room. At this point, both parents and office staff are wearing masks; we are cleaning the rooms between patients,” Dr. Kinsella said.

“Most of our patients are coming in for their vaccines, so I don’t anticipate a lot of kids being behind. However, we will have a surge of all the physicals that need to be done prior to school in the fall. We have thought about opening up for the weekends for physicals to accommodate this. We also may need to start the day earlier and end later. I have heard some schools may be postponing the date the physicals are due.”

Because of a lack of full personal protective equipment, the practice has not been seeing sick visits in the office, but they have been doing a lot of telehealth visits. “We have been using doxy.me for that, which is free, incredibly easy to use, and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)–compliant,” she said. “I am finding some visits, such as ADHD follow-ups and mental health follow-ups, very amenable to telehealth.”

“The hardest part – as I am sure is for most pediatricians – is the financial strain to a small business,” Dr. Kinsella noted. “We are down about 70% in revenue from this time last year. We have had to lay-off half our staff, and those who are working have much-reduced hours. We did not get the first round of funding for the paycheck protection program loan from the government and are waiting on the second round. We are trying to recoup some business by doing telehealth, but [the insurance companies] are only paying about 75%-80%. We also are charging for phone calls over 5 minutes. It will take a long time once we are up and running to recoup the losses.

“When this is all over, I’m hoping that we will be able to continue to incorporate telehealth into our schedules as I think it is convenient for families. I also am hoping that pediatricians continue to bill for phone calls as we have been giving out a lot of free care prior to this. I hope the American Academy of Pediatrics and all pediatricians work together to advocate for payment of these modalities,” she said.

 

 

Dr. Howard Smart

J. Howard Smart, MD, who is chairman of the department of pediatrics at Sharp Rees-Stealy Medical Group in San Diego, said in an interview, “We have been bringing all of the infants and toddlers in for checkups and vaccines up to age 18 months.” These visits are scheduled in the morning, and sick patients are scheduled in the afternoon. “Well-child visits for older ages are being done by video, and the kindergarten and adolescent vaccines can be done by quick nurse visits. We will have some catching up to do once restrictions are lifted.”

“A fair amount of discussion went into these decisions. Is a video checkup better than no checkup? There is no clear-cut answer. Important things can be addressed by video: lifestyle, diet, exercise, family coping with stay-at-home orders, maintaining healthy childhood relationships, Internet use, ongoing education, among others. We know that we may miss things that can only be picked up by physical examination: hypertension, heart murmurs, abnormal growth, sexual development, abdominal masses, subtle strabismus. This is why we need to bring these children back for the physical exam later,” Dr. Smart emphasized.

“One possible negative result of doing the ‘well-child check’ by video would be if the parent assumed that the ‘checkup’ was done, never brought the child back for the exam, and something was missed that needed intervention. It will be important to get the message across that the return visit is needed. The American Academy of Pediatrics made this a part of their recommendations. It is going to be important for payers to realize that we need to do both visits – and to pay accordingly,” he concluded.



Dr. Francis E. Rushton Jr.

Francis E. Rushton Jr., MD, of Birmingham, Ala., described in an interview how the pediatricians in his former practice are looking for new ways to encourage shot administration in a timely manner during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as exploring ways to partner with home visitors in encouraging timely infant and toddler vaccinations.

At South Carolina’s Beaufort Pediatrics, Joseph Floyd, MD, described a multipronged initiative. The practice’s well-child visit reminder system is being reprogrammed to check for lapses in vaccinations rather than just well-child visit attendance. For the most part, Dr. Floyd stated parents appreciate the reminders and accept the need for vaccination: “In the absence of immunizations for coronavirus, families seem to be more cognizant of the value of the vaccines we do have.” Beaufort Pediatrics is also partnering with their local hospital on a publicity campaign stressing the importance of staying up to date with currently available and recommended vaccines.

Other child-service organizations are concerned as well. Dr. Francis E. Rushton Jr., as faculty with the Education Development Center’s Health Resources and Services Administration–funded home-visiting quality improvement collaborative (HV CoIIN 2.0), described efforts with home visitors in Alabama and other states. “Home visitors understand the importance of immunizations to the health and welfare of the infants they care for. They’re looking for opportunities to improve compliance with vaccination regimens.” Some of these home-visiting agencies are employing quality improvement technique to improve compliance. One idea they are working on is documenting annual training on updated vaccines for the home visitors. They are working on protocols for linking their clients with primary health care providers, referral relations, and relationship development with local pediatric offices. Motivational interviewing techniques for home visitors focused on immunizations are being considered. For families who are hesitant, home visitors are considering accompanying the family when they come to the doctor’s office while paying attention to COVID-19 social distancing policies at medical facilities.

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread across the United States, several members of the Pediatric News Editorial Advisory Board shared how practices have been adapting to the pandemic, especially in terms of immunization.

Dr. Karalyn Kinsella

Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a member of a four-pediatrician private practice in Cheshire, Conn., said in an interview that “we have been seeing only children under age 2 years for their well visits to keep them up to date on their vaccinations” as recommended by infectious disease departments at nearby hospitals such as Connecticut Children’s Medical Center. “We also are seeing the 4- and 5-year-old children for vaccinations.”

Dr. Kinsella explained that, in case parents don’t want to bring their children into the office, her staff is offering to give the vaccinations in the parking lot. But most families are coming into the office.

“We are only seeing well babies and take the parent and child back to a room as soon as they come in the office to avoid having patients sit in the waiting room. At this point, both parents and office staff are wearing masks; we are cleaning the rooms between patients,” Dr. Kinsella said.

“Most of our patients are coming in for their vaccines, so I don’t anticipate a lot of kids being behind. However, we will have a surge of all the physicals that need to be done prior to school in the fall. We have thought about opening up for the weekends for physicals to accommodate this. We also may need to start the day earlier and end later. I have heard some schools may be postponing the date the physicals are due.”

Because of a lack of full personal protective equipment, the practice has not been seeing sick visits in the office, but they have been doing a lot of telehealth visits. “We have been using doxy.me for that, which is free, incredibly easy to use, and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)–compliant,” she said. “I am finding some visits, such as ADHD follow-ups and mental health follow-ups, very amenable to telehealth.”

“The hardest part – as I am sure is for most pediatricians – is the financial strain to a small business,” Dr. Kinsella noted. “We are down about 70% in revenue from this time last year. We have had to lay-off half our staff, and those who are working have much-reduced hours. We did not get the first round of funding for the paycheck protection program loan from the government and are waiting on the second round. We are trying to recoup some business by doing telehealth, but [the insurance companies] are only paying about 75%-80%. We also are charging for phone calls over 5 minutes. It will take a long time once we are up and running to recoup the losses.

“When this is all over, I’m hoping that we will be able to continue to incorporate telehealth into our schedules as I think it is convenient for families. I also am hoping that pediatricians continue to bill for phone calls as we have been giving out a lot of free care prior to this. I hope the American Academy of Pediatrics and all pediatricians work together to advocate for payment of these modalities,” she said.

 

 

Dr. Howard Smart

J. Howard Smart, MD, who is chairman of the department of pediatrics at Sharp Rees-Stealy Medical Group in San Diego, said in an interview, “We have been bringing all of the infants and toddlers in for checkups and vaccines up to age 18 months.” These visits are scheduled in the morning, and sick patients are scheduled in the afternoon. “Well-child visits for older ages are being done by video, and the kindergarten and adolescent vaccines can be done by quick nurse visits. We will have some catching up to do once restrictions are lifted.”

“A fair amount of discussion went into these decisions. Is a video checkup better than no checkup? There is no clear-cut answer. Important things can be addressed by video: lifestyle, diet, exercise, family coping with stay-at-home orders, maintaining healthy childhood relationships, Internet use, ongoing education, among others. We know that we may miss things that can only be picked up by physical examination: hypertension, heart murmurs, abnormal growth, sexual development, abdominal masses, subtle strabismus. This is why we need to bring these children back for the physical exam later,” Dr. Smart emphasized.

“One possible negative result of doing the ‘well-child check’ by video would be if the parent assumed that the ‘checkup’ was done, never brought the child back for the exam, and something was missed that needed intervention. It will be important to get the message across that the return visit is needed. The American Academy of Pediatrics made this a part of their recommendations. It is going to be important for payers to realize that we need to do both visits – and to pay accordingly,” he concluded.



Dr. Francis E. Rushton Jr.

Francis E. Rushton Jr., MD, of Birmingham, Ala., described in an interview how the pediatricians in his former practice are looking for new ways to encourage shot administration in a timely manner during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as exploring ways to partner with home visitors in encouraging timely infant and toddler vaccinations.

At South Carolina’s Beaufort Pediatrics, Joseph Floyd, MD, described a multipronged initiative. The practice’s well-child visit reminder system is being reprogrammed to check for lapses in vaccinations rather than just well-child visit attendance. For the most part, Dr. Floyd stated parents appreciate the reminders and accept the need for vaccination: “In the absence of immunizations for coronavirus, families seem to be more cognizant of the value of the vaccines we do have.” Beaufort Pediatrics is also partnering with their local hospital on a publicity campaign stressing the importance of staying up to date with currently available and recommended vaccines.

Other child-service organizations are concerned as well. Dr. Francis E. Rushton Jr., as faculty with the Education Development Center’s Health Resources and Services Administration–funded home-visiting quality improvement collaborative (HV CoIIN 2.0), described efforts with home visitors in Alabama and other states. “Home visitors understand the importance of immunizations to the health and welfare of the infants they care for. They’re looking for opportunities to improve compliance with vaccination regimens.” Some of these home-visiting agencies are employing quality improvement technique to improve compliance. One idea they are working on is documenting annual training on updated vaccines for the home visitors. They are working on protocols for linking their clients with primary health care providers, referral relations, and relationship development with local pediatric offices. Motivational interviewing techniques for home visitors focused on immunizations are being considered. For families who are hesitant, home visitors are considering accompanying the family when they come to the doctor’s office while paying attention to COVID-19 social distancing policies at medical facilities.

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Inhaled nitric oxide explored for COVID-19 oxygenation

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The successful treatment of a patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension who contracted COVID-19 with self-administered inhaled nitrous oxide from a tankless device at home has caught the imagination of researchers investigating treatments for other patients.

It is not clear whether the team was treating the COVID or “some manifestation of her pulmonary hypertension exacerbation,” said Roham Zamanian, MD, a pulmonologist at Stanford Health in Palo Alto, California.

This is why a clinical trial is needed, he told Medscape Medical News.

“In this case, the COVID-19 respiratory infection led to a pulmonary hypertension exacerbation,” he explained. And the 34-year-old woman, who is also a physician, had demonstrated a response to nitric oxide before contracting the COVID-19 virus.

Zamanian and his colleagues describe the case in a letter published online in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care. It will be discussed at the upcoming American Thoracic Society 2020 International Conference.

COVID-19 was confirmed in the patient, who had stable vasoreactive idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension, after she returned from a trip to Egypt. She did not want to travel the 350 miles from her home to the hospital for treatment, potentially infecting others, unless it was absolutely necessary.

“We had to make sure we were doing the right thing treating her at home, and we had to do it quickly,” Zamanian said. The patient was put on a remote routine – with vital monitoring in place – that included 6-minute walk tests twice daily and video conferencing. She also completed the EmPHasis-10 questionnaire, which is used to assess the status of patients with pulmonary hypertension.

The care team filed an Emergency Investigational New Drug application for the off-label at-home use of the tankless inhaled nitric oxide system (GENOSYL DS, VERO Biotech), which was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. The system has so far been approved only for the treatment of newborns with persistent pulmonary hypertension.

Off-label inhaled nitric oxide has never been used in an outpatient setting. “That’s where this case is unique,” Zamanian explained.

“This case was very specific. We knew she was vasoreactive, and she knew how to use the device,” he said. “And we know nitric oxide is a quick-acting medication when it works, showing results in minutes, if not seconds.”

Within 24 hours of approval, the tankless system arrived at her home.

The patient’s therapy consisted of nitric oxide at a dose of 20 ppm plus supplemental oxygen delivered by nasal cannula at a dose of 2 L/min for 12 to 14 hours a day. After symptomatic improvement, a stepwise reduction in nitric oxide was implemented from day 13 to 17, with the dose dropping to 10 ppm, 5 ppm, and then 0 ppm.

“We quickly knew she was responding and feeling better. Without the medication, she would very likely have needed to be hospitalized,” Zamanian said.

“The real novelty of this case is demonstrating use in an outpatient system,” he pointed out. “My perspective is that this particular case was very specific, in a person who had been formally evaluated and known to be responsive to this treatment.”

The team is now preparing to launch a clinical trial of inhaled nitric oxide in COVID-19 patients without pulmonary hypertension, Zamanian reported.
 

 

 

Treating other patients

Nitric oxide could be useful for patients who come in with pulmonary hypertension, but “we have to test and figure that out. It could also be that patients with other underlying lung diseases could be helped with nitric oxide as well,” Zamanian said.

To treat on an outpatient basis, “we would need to make sure patients have established and reliable communications with an investigator or physician.” In addition, a protocol will have to be established that outlines how to administer the nitric oxide treatment and how to connect the nasal cannula.

“We envision patients being prescribed a certain dose and then working with either their healthcare provider or respiratory therapist to follow the standards we set,” he explained.

Although it is not a cure, nitric oxide could improve oxygenation for COIVD-19 patients in respiratory distress who have a component of abnormal pulmonary vascular function “largely driven” by ventilation perfusion – or V/Q – mismatch, he explained.

It is widely known that the gas, because it is a selective pulmonary vasodilator, can be used as rescue therapy in patients with refractory hypoxemia due to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).

“There is justification for studying it in both pulmonary hypertension and nonpulmonary hypertension patients,” Zamanian added. “The idea is that there is a component of pulmonary function and constriction with COVID-19 that may be at play here, which is not typical of regular ARDS.”
 

Several trials underway

In early April, an investigation into the use of high-dose nitric oxide therapy for the treatment of patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 who suffer lung complications was approved by the Therapeutic Products Directorate of Health Canada.

The NONTM – Inhaled Gaseous Nitric Oxide Antimicrobial Treatment of Difficult Bacterial and Viral Lung (COVID-19) Infections – trial will test the use of Thiolanox, a high-concentration, 5000 ppm nitric oxide canister (Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals) administered with the INODD delivery device (Novoteris), at Vancouver Coastal Health Authority facilities. The open-label safety study will look at whether nitric oxide can reduce the bacterial load in the lungs of adults and adolescents.

Last week, two randomized multicenter clinical trials — also focused on the potential therapeutic benefits of nitric oxide in patients with COVID-19 in a hospital setting — were launched by teams at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

The NoCovid trial will look at nitric oxide for mild to moderate COVID-19 in 240 patients treated with a noninvasive CPAP system or a nonrebreathing mask system.

The NOSARSCOVID trial will look at the use of the INOmax (Mallinckrodt) nitric oxide inhalation system in 200 COVID-19 patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome.

“Data suggest that inhaled nitric oxide may have an important role in helping patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) to achieve normal oxygen levels in the blood,” Lorenzo Berra, MD, from Massachusetts General Hospital, said in a news release from Mallinckrodt announcing NOSARSCOVID.

“The trial we are conducting will help us gain critical insights into the potential effectiveness of INOmax in treating ARDS in critically ill COVID-19 patients,” Berra explains.

INOmax has already been used to treat COVID-19 patients in more than 170 hospitals in the United States, according to the news release.

Still, for COVID-19 treatment, “it’s still all hypothetical, as it hasn’t been proven,” said Alex Stenzler, founder and president of Novoteris.

We’ve demonstrated that we are able to get more oxygen to the blood and that there are some pro- and anti-inflammatory properties, “but there’s no randomized evidence, and the numbers are small,” he told Medscape Medical News.

And if there is a response or benefit, “we won’t know the reason for that benefit – if it’s anti-inflammatory, antiviral, or a vascular effect,” he pointed out.

“Nitric oxide is one of the most important signaling molecules in the human body. Our own body uses it to kill organisms and cells, heal wounds,” he explained, but “we’re a long way off from knowing” whether it can help ARDS patients.

COVID-19 Ventilation Clinical Practice Guidelines, issued by the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Society of Critical Care, warn that “in patients with ARDS who are on mechanical ventilation, routine use of inhaled nitric oxide is not recommended,” as reported by Medscape.
 

Antimicrobial, antiviral properties

Previous studies of nitric oxide have shown that it has antiviral and antimicrobial properties.

Nitric oxide was shown to reduce H1N1 in vitro in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells in a 2013 study conducted by Chris Miller, PhD, from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, and colleagues. Miller is currently involved in the NONTM trial.

This could be an added benefit of treatment. “Nitric oxide has been shown to have antiviral properties,” Zamanian said. “We need to investigate it further to see how it can help us avoid negative outcomes.”

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The successful treatment of a patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension who contracted COVID-19 with self-administered inhaled nitrous oxide from a tankless device at home has caught the imagination of researchers investigating treatments for other patients.

It is not clear whether the team was treating the COVID or “some manifestation of her pulmonary hypertension exacerbation,” said Roham Zamanian, MD, a pulmonologist at Stanford Health in Palo Alto, California.

This is why a clinical trial is needed, he told Medscape Medical News.

“In this case, the COVID-19 respiratory infection led to a pulmonary hypertension exacerbation,” he explained. And the 34-year-old woman, who is also a physician, had demonstrated a response to nitric oxide before contracting the COVID-19 virus.

Zamanian and his colleagues describe the case in a letter published online in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care. It will be discussed at the upcoming American Thoracic Society 2020 International Conference.

COVID-19 was confirmed in the patient, who had stable vasoreactive idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension, after she returned from a trip to Egypt. She did not want to travel the 350 miles from her home to the hospital for treatment, potentially infecting others, unless it was absolutely necessary.

“We had to make sure we were doing the right thing treating her at home, and we had to do it quickly,” Zamanian said. The patient was put on a remote routine – with vital monitoring in place – that included 6-minute walk tests twice daily and video conferencing. She also completed the EmPHasis-10 questionnaire, which is used to assess the status of patients with pulmonary hypertension.

The care team filed an Emergency Investigational New Drug application for the off-label at-home use of the tankless inhaled nitric oxide system (GENOSYL DS, VERO Biotech), which was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. The system has so far been approved only for the treatment of newborns with persistent pulmonary hypertension.

Off-label inhaled nitric oxide has never been used in an outpatient setting. “That’s where this case is unique,” Zamanian explained.

“This case was very specific. We knew she was vasoreactive, and she knew how to use the device,” he said. “And we know nitric oxide is a quick-acting medication when it works, showing results in minutes, if not seconds.”

Within 24 hours of approval, the tankless system arrived at her home.

The patient’s therapy consisted of nitric oxide at a dose of 20 ppm plus supplemental oxygen delivered by nasal cannula at a dose of 2 L/min for 12 to 14 hours a day. After symptomatic improvement, a stepwise reduction in nitric oxide was implemented from day 13 to 17, with the dose dropping to 10 ppm, 5 ppm, and then 0 ppm.

“We quickly knew she was responding and feeling better. Without the medication, she would very likely have needed to be hospitalized,” Zamanian said.

“The real novelty of this case is demonstrating use in an outpatient system,” he pointed out. “My perspective is that this particular case was very specific, in a person who had been formally evaluated and known to be responsive to this treatment.”

The team is now preparing to launch a clinical trial of inhaled nitric oxide in COVID-19 patients without pulmonary hypertension, Zamanian reported.
 

 

 

Treating other patients

Nitric oxide could be useful for patients who come in with pulmonary hypertension, but “we have to test and figure that out. It could also be that patients with other underlying lung diseases could be helped with nitric oxide as well,” Zamanian said.

To treat on an outpatient basis, “we would need to make sure patients have established and reliable communications with an investigator or physician.” In addition, a protocol will have to be established that outlines how to administer the nitric oxide treatment and how to connect the nasal cannula.

“We envision patients being prescribed a certain dose and then working with either their healthcare provider or respiratory therapist to follow the standards we set,” he explained.

Although it is not a cure, nitric oxide could improve oxygenation for COIVD-19 patients in respiratory distress who have a component of abnormal pulmonary vascular function “largely driven” by ventilation perfusion – or V/Q – mismatch, he explained.

It is widely known that the gas, because it is a selective pulmonary vasodilator, can be used as rescue therapy in patients with refractory hypoxemia due to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).

“There is justification for studying it in both pulmonary hypertension and nonpulmonary hypertension patients,” Zamanian added. “The idea is that there is a component of pulmonary function and constriction with COVID-19 that may be at play here, which is not typical of regular ARDS.”
 

Several trials underway

In early April, an investigation into the use of high-dose nitric oxide therapy for the treatment of patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 who suffer lung complications was approved by the Therapeutic Products Directorate of Health Canada.

The NONTM – Inhaled Gaseous Nitric Oxide Antimicrobial Treatment of Difficult Bacterial and Viral Lung (COVID-19) Infections – trial will test the use of Thiolanox, a high-concentration, 5000 ppm nitric oxide canister (Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals) administered with the INODD delivery device (Novoteris), at Vancouver Coastal Health Authority facilities. The open-label safety study will look at whether nitric oxide can reduce the bacterial load in the lungs of adults and adolescents.

Last week, two randomized multicenter clinical trials — also focused on the potential therapeutic benefits of nitric oxide in patients with COVID-19 in a hospital setting — were launched by teams at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

The NoCovid trial will look at nitric oxide for mild to moderate COVID-19 in 240 patients treated with a noninvasive CPAP system or a nonrebreathing mask system.

The NOSARSCOVID trial will look at the use of the INOmax (Mallinckrodt) nitric oxide inhalation system in 200 COVID-19 patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome.

“Data suggest that inhaled nitric oxide may have an important role in helping patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) to achieve normal oxygen levels in the blood,” Lorenzo Berra, MD, from Massachusetts General Hospital, said in a news release from Mallinckrodt announcing NOSARSCOVID.

“The trial we are conducting will help us gain critical insights into the potential effectiveness of INOmax in treating ARDS in critically ill COVID-19 patients,” Berra explains.

INOmax has already been used to treat COVID-19 patients in more than 170 hospitals in the United States, according to the news release.

Still, for COVID-19 treatment, “it’s still all hypothetical, as it hasn’t been proven,” said Alex Stenzler, founder and president of Novoteris.

We’ve demonstrated that we are able to get more oxygen to the blood and that there are some pro- and anti-inflammatory properties, “but there’s no randomized evidence, and the numbers are small,” he told Medscape Medical News.

And if there is a response or benefit, “we won’t know the reason for that benefit – if it’s anti-inflammatory, antiviral, or a vascular effect,” he pointed out.

“Nitric oxide is one of the most important signaling molecules in the human body. Our own body uses it to kill organisms and cells, heal wounds,” he explained, but “we’re a long way off from knowing” whether it can help ARDS patients.

COVID-19 Ventilation Clinical Practice Guidelines, issued by the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Society of Critical Care, warn that “in patients with ARDS who are on mechanical ventilation, routine use of inhaled nitric oxide is not recommended,” as reported by Medscape.
 

Antimicrobial, antiviral properties

Previous studies of nitric oxide have shown that it has antiviral and antimicrobial properties.

Nitric oxide was shown to reduce H1N1 in vitro in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells in a 2013 study conducted by Chris Miller, PhD, from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, and colleagues. Miller is currently involved in the NONTM trial.

This could be an added benefit of treatment. “Nitric oxide has been shown to have antiviral properties,” Zamanian said. “We need to investigate it further to see how it can help us avoid negative outcomes.”

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The successful treatment of a patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension who contracted COVID-19 with self-administered inhaled nitrous oxide from a tankless device at home has caught the imagination of researchers investigating treatments for other patients.

It is not clear whether the team was treating the COVID or “some manifestation of her pulmonary hypertension exacerbation,” said Roham Zamanian, MD, a pulmonologist at Stanford Health in Palo Alto, California.

This is why a clinical trial is needed, he told Medscape Medical News.

“In this case, the COVID-19 respiratory infection led to a pulmonary hypertension exacerbation,” he explained. And the 34-year-old woman, who is also a physician, had demonstrated a response to nitric oxide before contracting the COVID-19 virus.

Zamanian and his colleagues describe the case in a letter published online in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care. It will be discussed at the upcoming American Thoracic Society 2020 International Conference.

COVID-19 was confirmed in the patient, who had stable vasoreactive idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension, after she returned from a trip to Egypt. She did not want to travel the 350 miles from her home to the hospital for treatment, potentially infecting others, unless it was absolutely necessary.

“We had to make sure we were doing the right thing treating her at home, and we had to do it quickly,” Zamanian said. The patient was put on a remote routine – with vital monitoring in place – that included 6-minute walk tests twice daily and video conferencing. She also completed the EmPHasis-10 questionnaire, which is used to assess the status of patients with pulmonary hypertension.

The care team filed an Emergency Investigational New Drug application for the off-label at-home use of the tankless inhaled nitric oxide system (GENOSYL DS, VERO Biotech), which was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. The system has so far been approved only for the treatment of newborns with persistent pulmonary hypertension.

Off-label inhaled nitric oxide has never been used in an outpatient setting. “That’s where this case is unique,” Zamanian explained.

“This case was very specific. We knew she was vasoreactive, and she knew how to use the device,” he said. “And we know nitric oxide is a quick-acting medication when it works, showing results in minutes, if not seconds.”

Within 24 hours of approval, the tankless system arrived at her home.

The patient’s therapy consisted of nitric oxide at a dose of 20 ppm plus supplemental oxygen delivered by nasal cannula at a dose of 2 L/min for 12 to 14 hours a day. After symptomatic improvement, a stepwise reduction in nitric oxide was implemented from day 13 to 17, with the dose dropping to 10 ppm, 5 ppm, and then 0 ppm.

“We quickly knew she was responding and feeling better. Without the medication, she would very likely have needed to be hospitalized,” Zamanian said.

“The real novelty of this case is demonstrating use in an outpatient system,” he pointed out. “My perspective is that this particular case was very specific, in a person who had been formally evaluated and known to be responsive to this treatment.”

The team is now preparing to launch a clinical trial of inhaled nitric oxide in COVID-19 patients without pulmonary hypertension, Zamanian reported.
 

 

 

Treating other patients

Nitric oxide could be useful for patients who come in with pulmonary hypertension, but “we have to test and figure that out. It could also be that patients with other underlying lung diseases could be helped with nitric oxide as well,” Zamanian said.

To treat on an outpatient basis, “we would need to make sure patients have established and reliable communications with an investigator or physician.” In addition, a protocol will have to be established that outlines how to administer the nitric oxide treatment and how to connect the nasal cannula.

“We envision patients being prescribed a certain dose and then working with either their healthcare provider or respiratory therapist to follow the standards we set,” he explained.

Although it is not a cure, nitric oxide could improve oxygenation for COIVD-19 patients in respiratory distress who have a component of abnormal pulmonary vascular function “largely driven” by ventilation perfusion – or V/Q – mismatch, he explained.

It is widely known that the gas, because it is a selective pulmonary vasodilator, can be used as rescue therapy in patients with refractory hypoxemia due to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).

“There is justification for studying it in both pulmonary hypertension and nonpulmonary hypertension patients,” Zamanian added. “The idea is that there is a component of pulmonary function and constriction with COVID-19 that may be at play here, which is not typical of regular ARDS.”
 

Several trials underway

In early April, an investigation into the use of high-dose nitric oxide therapy for the treatment of patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 who suffer lung complications was approved by the Therapeutic Products Directorate of Health Canada.

The NONTM – Inhaled Gaseous Nitric Oxide Antimicrobial Treatment of Difficult Bacterial and Viral Lung (COVID-19) Infections – trial will test the use of Thiolanox, a high-concentration, 5000 ppm nitric oxide canister (Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals) administered with the INODD delivery device (Novoteris), at Vancouver Coastal Health Authority facilities. The open-label safety study will look at whether nitric oxide can reduce the bacterial load in the lungs of adults and adolescents.

Last week, two randomized multicenter clinical trials — also focused on the potential therapeutic benefits of nitric oxide in patients with COVID-19 in a hospital setting — were launched by teams at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

The NoCovid trial will look at nitric oxide for mild to moderate COVID-19 in 240 patients treated with a noninvasive CPAP system or a nonrebreathing mask system.

The NOSARSCOVID trial will look at the use of the INOmax (Mallinckrodt) nitric oxide inhalation system in 200 COVID-19 patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome.

“Data suggest that inhaled nitric oxide may have an important role in helping patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) to achieve normal oxygen levels in the blood,” Lorenzo Berra, MD, from Massachusetts General Hospital, said in a news release from Mallinckrodt announcing NOSARSCOVID.

“The trial we are conducting will help us gain critical insights into the potential effectiveness of INOmax in treating ARDS in critically ill COVID-19 patients,” Berra explains.

INOmax has already been used to treat COVID-19 patients in more than 170 hospitals in the United States, according to the news release.

Still, for COVID-19 treatment, “it’s still all hypothetical, as it hasn’t been proven,” said Alex Stenzler, founder and president of Novoteris.

We’ve demonstrated that we are able to get more oxygen to the blood and that there are some pro- and anti-inflammatory properties, “but there’s no randomized evidence, and the numbers are small,” he told Medscape Medical News.

And if there is a response or benefit, “we won’t know the reason for that benefit – if it’s anti-inflammatory, antiviral, or a vascular effect,” he pointed out.

“Nitric oxide is one of the most important signaling molecules in the human body. Our own body uses it to kill organisms and cells, heal wounds,” he explained, but “we’re a long way off from knowing” whether it can help ARDS patients.

COVID-19 Ventilation Clinical Practice Guidelines, issued by the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Society of Critical Care, warn that “in patients with ARDS who are on mechanical ventilation, routine use of inhaled nitric oxide is not recommended,” as reported by Medscape.
 

Antimicrobial, antiviral properties

Previous studies of nitric oxide have shown that it has antiviral and antimicrobial properties.

Nitric oxide was shown to reduce H1N1 in vitro in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells in a 2013 study conducted by Chris Miller, PhD, from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, and colleagues. Miller is currently involved in the NONTM trial.

This could be an added benefit of treatment. “Nitric oxide has been shown to have antiviral properties,” Zamanian said. “We need to investigate it further to see how it can help us avoid negative outcomes.”

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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