Tension, Other Headache Types Robustly Linked to Attempted, Completed Suicide

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DENVER – Headaches, including tension-type, migraine, and posttraumatic, are robustly associated with both attempted and completed suicide, results of a large study suggest. 

The risk for suicide attempt was four times higher in people with trigeminal and autonomic cephalalgias (TAC), and the risk for completed suicide was double among those with posttraumatic headache compared with individuals with no headache.

The retrospective analysis included data on more than 100,000 headache patients from a Danish registry. 

“The results suggest there’s a unique risk among headache patients for attempted and completed suicide,” lead investigator Holly Elser, MD, MPH, PhD, resident, Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, where the findings were presented. “This really underscores the potential importance of complementary psychiatric evaluation and treatment for individuals diagnosed with headache.”
 

Underestimated Problem

Headache disorders affect about half of working-age adults and are among the leading causes of productivity loss, absence from work, and disability. 

Prior research suggests headache disorders often co-occur with psychiatric illness including depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, and even attempted suicide.

However, previous studies that showed an increased risk for attempted suicide in patients with headache relied heavily on survey data and mostly focused on patients with migraine. There was little information on other headache types and on the risk for completed suicide.

Researchers used Danish registries to identify 64,057 patients with migraine, 40,160 with tension-type headache (TTH), 5743 with TAC, and 4253 with posttraumatic headache, all diagnosed from 1995 to 2019.

Some 5.8% of those with migraine, 6.3% with TAC, 7.2% with TTH, and 7.2% with posttraumatic headache, had a mood disorder (depression and anxiety combined) at baseline.

Those without a headache diagnosis were matched 5:1 to those with a headache diagnosis by sex and birth year.

Across all headache disorders, baseline prevalence of mood disorder was higher among those with headache versus population-matched controls. Dr. Elser emphasized that these are people diagnosed with a mood disorder in the inpatient, emergency department, or outpatient specialist clinic setting, “which means we are almost certainly underestimating the true burden of mood symptoms in our cohort,” she said.

Researchers identified attempted suicides using diagnostic codes. For completed suicide, they determined whether those who attempted suicide died within 30 days of the attempt.

For each headache type, investigators examined both the absolute and relative risk for attempted and completed suicides and estimated the risk at intervals of 5, 10, and 20 years after initial headache diagnosis.
 

Robust Link

The “power of this study is that we asked a simple, but important question, and answered it with simple, but appropriate, methodologic techniques,” Dr. Elser said.

The estimated risk differences (RDs) for attempted suicide were strongest for TAC and posttraumatic headache and for longer follow-ups. The RDs for completed suicide were largely the same but of a smaller magnitude and were “relatively less precise,” reflecting the “rarity of this outcome,” said Dr. Elser.

After adjusting for sex, age, education, income, comorbidities, and baseline medical and psychiatric diagnoses, researchers found the strongest association or attempted suicide was among those with TAC (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 4.25; 95% CI, 2.85-6.33).

“A hazard ratio of 4 is enormous” for this type of comparison, Dr. Elser noted.

For completed suicide, the strongest association was with posttraumatic headache (aHR, 2.19; 95% CI, 0.78-6.16).

The study revealed a robust association with attempted and completed suicide across all headache types, including TTH, noted Dr. Elser. The link between tension headaches and suicide “was the most striking finding to me because I think of that as sort of a benign and common headache disorder,” she said.

The was an observational study, so “it’s not clear whether headache is playing an etiological role in the relationship with suicide,” she said. “It’s possible there are common shared risk factors or confounders that explain the relationship in full or in part that aren’t accounted for in this study.”
 

 

 

Ask About Mood

The results underscore the need for psychiatric evaluations in patients with a headache disorder. “For me, this is just going to make me that much more likely to ask my patients about their mood when I see them in clinic,” Dr. Elser said.

After asking patients with headache about their mood and stress at home and at work, physicians should have a “low threshold to refer to a behavioral health provider,” she added.

Future research should aim to better understand the link between headache and suicide risk, with a focus on the mechanisms behind low- and high-risk subgroups, said Dr. Elser.

A limitation of the study was that headache diagnoses were based on inpatient, emergency department, and outpatient specialist visits but not on visits to primary care practitioners. The study didn’t include information on headache severity or frequency and included only people who sought treatment for their headaches.

Though it’s unlikely the results “are perfectly generalizable” with respect to other geographical or cultural contexts, “I don’t think this relationship is unique to Denmark based on the literature to date,” Dr. Elser said.

Commenting on the study, session co-chair Todd J. Schwedt, MD, professor of neurology, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Phoenix, and president-elect of the American Headache Society, noted that the study offers important findings “that demonstrate the enormous negative impact that headaches can exert.”

It’s “a strong reminder” that clinicians should assess the mental health of their patients with headaches and offer treatment when appropriate, he said.

The study received support from Aarhus University. No relevant conflicts of interest were reported.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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DENVER – Headaches, including tension-type, migraine, and posttraumatic, are robustly associated with both attempted and completed suicide, results of a large study suggest. 

The risk for suicide attempt was four times higher in people with trigeminal and autonomic cephalalgias (TAC), and the risk for completed suicide was double among those with posttraumatic headache compared with individuals with no headache.

The retrospective analysis included data on more than 100,000 headache patients from a Danish registry. 

“The results suggest there’s a unique risk among headache patients for attempted and completed suicide,” lead investigator Holly Elser, MD, MPH, PhD, resident, Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, where the findings were presented. “This really underscores the potential importance of complementary psychiatric evaluation and treatment for individuals diagnosed with headache.”
 

Underestimated Problem

Headache disorders affect about half of working-age adults and are among the leading causes of productivity loss, absence from work, and disability. 

Prior research suggests headache disorders often co-occur with psychiatric illness including depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, and even attempted suicide.

However, previous studies that showed an increased risk for attempted suicide in patients with headache relied heavily on survey data and mostly focused on patients with migraine. There was little information on other headache types and on the risk for completed suicide.

Researchers used Danish registries to identify 64,057 patients with migraine, 40,160 with tension-type headache (TTH), 5743 with TAC, and 4253 with posttraumatic headache, all diagnosed from 1995 to 2019.

Some 5.8% of those with migraine, 6.3% with TAC, 7.2% with TTH, and 7.2% with posttraumatic headache, had a mood disorder (depression and anxiety combined) at baseline.

Those without a headache diagnosis were matched 5:1 to those with a headache diagnosis by sex and birth year.

Across all headache disorders, baseline prevalence of mood disorder was higher among those with headache versus population-matched controls. Dr. Elser emphasized that these are people diagnosed with a mood disorder in the inpatient, emergency department, or outpatient specialist clinic setting, “which means we are almost certainly underestimating the true burden of mood symptoms in our cohort,” she said.

Researchers identified attempted suicides using diagnostic codes. For completed suicide, they determined whether those who attempted suicide died within 30 days of the attempt.

For each headache type, investigators examined both the absolute and relative risk for attempted and completed suicides and estimated the risk at intervals of 5, 10, and 20 years after initial headache diagnosis.
 

Robust Link

The “power of this study is that we asked a simple, but important question, and answered it with simple, but appropriate, methodologic techniques,” Dr. Elser said.

The estimated risk differences (RDs) for attempted suicide were strongest for TAC and posttraumatic headache and for longer follow-ups. The RDs for completed suicide were largely the same but of a smaller magnitude and were “relatively less precise,” reflecting the “rarity of this outcome,” said Dr. Elser.

After adjusting for sex, age, education, income, comorbidities, and baseline medical and psychiatric diagnoses, researchers found the strongest association or attempted suicide was among those with TAC (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 4.25; 95% CI, 2.85-6.33).

“A hazard ratio of 4 is enormous” for this type of comparison, Dr. Elser noted.

For completed suicide, the strongest association was with posttraumatic headache (aHR, 2.19; 95% CI, 0.78-6.16).

The study revealed a robust association with attempted and completed suicide across all headache types, including TTH, noted Dr. Elser. The link between tension headaches and suicide “was the most striking finding to me because I think of that as sort of a benign and common headache disorder,” she said.

The was an observational study, so “it’s not clear whether headache is playing an etiological role in the relationship with suicide,” she said. “It’s possible there are common shared risk factors or confounders that explain the relationship in full or in part that aren’t accounted for in this study.”
 

 

 

Ask About Mood

The results underscore the need for psychiatric evaluations in patients with a headache disorder. “For me, this is just going to make me that much more likely to ask my patients about their mood when I see them in clinic,” Dr. Elser said.

After asking patients with headache about their mood and stress at home and at work, physicians should have a “low threshold to refer to a behavioral health provider,” she added.

Future research should aim to better understand the link between headache and suicide risk, with a focus on the mechanisms behind low- and high-risk subgroups, said Dr. Elser.

A limitation of the study was that headache diagnoses were based on inpatient, emergency department, and outpatient specialist visits but not on visits to primary care practitioners. The study didn’t include information on headache severity or frequency and included only people who sought treatment for their headaches.

Though it’s unlikely the results “are perfectly generalizable” with respect to other geographical or cultural contexts, “I don’t think this relationship is unique to Denmark based on the literature to date,” Dr. Elser said.

Commenting on the study, session co-chair Todd J. Schwedt, MD, professor of neurology, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Phoenix, and president-elect of the American Headache Society, noted that the study offers important findings “that demonstrate the enormous negative impact that headaches can exert.”

It’s “a strong reminder” that clinicians should assess the mental health of their patients with headaches and offer treatment when appropriate, he said.

The study received support from Aarhus University. No relevant conflicts of interest were reported.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

DENVER – Headaches, including tension-type, migraine, and posttraumatic, are robustly associated with both attempted and completed suicide, results of a large study suggest. 

The risk for suicide attempt was four times higher in people with trigeminal and autonomic cephalalgias (TAC), and the risk for completed suicide was double among those with posttraumatic headache compared with individuals with no headache.

The retrospective analysis included data on more than 100,000 headache patients from a Danish registry. 

“The results suggest there’s a unique risk among headache patients for attempted and completed suicide,” lead investigator Holly Elser, MD, MPH, PhD, resident, Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, where the findings were presented. “This really underscores the potential importance of complementary psychiatric evaluation and treatment for individuals diagnosed with headache.”
 

Underestimated Problem

Headache disorders affect about half of working-age adults and are among the leading causes of productivity loss, absence from work, and disability. 

Prior research suggests headache disorders often co-occur with psychiatric illness including depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, and even attempted suicide.

However, previous studies that showed an increased risk for attempted suicide in patients with headache relied heavily on survey data and mostly focused on patients with migraine. There was little information on other headache types and on the risk for completed suicide.

Researchers used Danish registries to identify 64,057 patients with migraine, 40,160 with tension-type headache (TTH), 5743 with TAC, and 4253 with posttraumatic headache, all diagnosed from 1995 to 2019.

Some 5.8% of those with migraine, 6.3% with TAC, 7.2% with TTH, and 7.2% with posttraumatic headache, had a mood disorder (depression and anxiety combined) at baseline.

Those without a headache diagnosis were matched 5:1 to those with a headache diagnosis by sex and birth year.

Across all headache disorders, baseline prevalence of mood disorder was higher among those with headache versus population-matched controls. Dr. Elser emphasized that these are people diagnosed with a mood disorder in the inpatient, emergency department, or outpatient specialist clinic setting, “which means we are almost certainly underestimating the true burden of mood symptoms in our cohort,” she said.

Researchers identified attempted suicides using diagnostic codes. For completed suicide, they determined whether those who attempted suicide died within 30 days of the attempt.

For each headache type, investigators examined both the absolute and relative risk for attempted and completed suicides and estimated the risk at intervals of 5, 10, and 20 years after initial headache diagnosis.
 

Robust Link

The “power of this study is that we asked a simple, but important question, and answered it with simple, but appropriate, methodologic techniques,” Dr. Elser said.

The estimated risk differences (RDs) for attempted suicide were strongest for TAC and posttraumatic headache and for longer follow-ups. The RDs for completed suicide were largely the same but of a smaller magnitude and were “relatively less precise,” reflecting the “rarity of this outcome,” said Dr. Elser.

After adjusting for sex, age, education, income, comorbidities, and baseline medical and psychiatric diagnoses, researchers found the strongest association or attempted suicide was among those with TAC (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 4.25; 95% CI, 2.85-6.33).

“A hazard ratio of 4 is enormous” for this type of comparison, Dr. Elser noted.

For completed suicide, the strongest association was with posttraumatic headache (aHR, 2.19; 95% CI, 0.78-6.16).

The study revealed a robust association with attempted and completed suicide across all headache types, including TTH, noted Dr. Elser. The link between tension headaches and suicide “was the most striking finding to me because I think of that as sort of a benign and common headache disorder,” she said.

The was an observational study, so “it’s not clear whether headache is playing an etiological role in the relationship with suicide,” she said. “It’s possible there are common shared risk factors or confounders that explain the relationship in full or in part that aren’t accounted for in this study.”
 

 

 

Ask About Mood

The results underscore the need for psychiatric evaluations in patients with a headache disorder. “For me, this is just going to make me that much more likely to ask my patients about their mood when I see them in clinic,” Dr. Elser said.

After asking patients with headache about their mood and stress at home and at work, physicians should have a “low threshold to refer to a behavioral health provider,” she added.

Future research should aim to better understand the link between headache and suicide risk, with a focus on the mechanisms behind low- and high-risk subgroups, said Dr. Elser.

A limitation of the study was that headache diagnoses were based on inpatient, emergency department, and outpatient specialist visits but not on visits to primary care practitioners. The study didn’t include information on headache severity or frequency and included only people who sought treatment for their headaches.

Though it’s unlikely the results “are perfectly generalizable” with respect to other geographical or cultural contexts, “I don’t think this relationship is unique to Denmark based on the literature to date,” Dr. Elser said.

Commenting on the study, session co-chair Todd J. Schwedt, MD, professor of neurology, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Phoenix, and president-elect of the American Headache Society, noted that the study offers important findings “that demonstrate the enormous negative impact that headaches can exert.”

It’s “a strong reminder” that clinicians should assess the mental health of their patients with headaches and offer treatment when appropriate, he said.

The study received support from Aarhus University. No relevant conflicts of interest were reported.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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In Lecanemab Alzheimer Extension Study, Placebo Roll-Over Group Does Not Catch Up

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Wed, 04/17/2024 - 11:44

Upon entry into the open-label extension (OLE) of the pivotal trial that led to approval of lecanemab for Alzheimer’s disease, placebo patients failed to show any appreciable catch up to the benefit achieved in the experimental arm, according to a first report of 6-month OLE data.

Due to the steady disease progression observed after the switch of placebo to active therapy, the message of these data is that “early initiation of lecanemab is important,” according to Michael Irizarry, MD, the senior vice president of clinical research at Eisai Ltd, which markets lecanemab.

The 6-month OLE data along with data from a tau PET substudy were presented by Dr. Irizarry at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology.

From the start of the OLE through the 6-month follow-up, the downward trajectory of cognitive function, as measured with the Clinical Dementia Rating – Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB), has been parallel for the lecanemab-start and switch arms. As a result, the degree of separation between active and placebo groups over the course of the OLE has remained unchanged from the end of the randomized trial.

This does not rule out any benefit in the switch arm, according to Dr. Irizarry. Although there was no discernible change in the trajectory of decline among placebo patients after they were switched to lecanemab, Dr. Irizarry postulated that this might overlook the greater likely decline over time with no treatment.

“There was no placebo group in the OLE to compare with those on active treatment,” he pointed out. He then juxtaposed data from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). Over the same 6-month timeframe, these data show a hypothetical separation of the curves if no treatment had been received.

The 6-month OLE data provide a preliminary look at outcomes in a planned 4-year follow-up. At the end of the randomized CLARITY trial, the mean decline from the baseline CDR-SB score of 3.2, was 1.21 in the lecanemab group, translating into a 38% decline, and 1.66 in the placebo group, translating into about a 50% decline. Over the 6 months of OLE, there has been a further mean CDR-SB reduction of approximately 0.6 in both arms, suggesting a further 18% decline from baseline.
 

Additional Data

In the pivotal CLARITY trial, which was published a few months prior to regulatory approval early last year, 1785 patients were randomized to 10 mg/kg lecanemab or placebo infused every 2 weeks. At the end of 18 months, the superiority of lecanemab for the primary endpoint of adverse change in CDR-SB was highly significant (P < .001) as were the differences in key secondary endpoints, such as Alzheimer’s Disease Composite Score (P < .001).

Of those who participated in CLARITY, 1385 patients entered the OLE. Placebo patients were switched to lecanemab which is being maintained in all patients on the trial schedule of 10 mg/kg administered by intravenous infusion every 2 weeks.

In addition to the overall OLE 6-month data, which has not raised any new safety signals, Dr. Irizarry provided a new look at the PET TAU substudy with a focus on patients who entered the study with a low relative tau burden. Of the three classifications, which also included medium and high tau, as measured with positron-emission tomography (PET), the low tau group represented 41.2% of the 342 tau PET substudy participants. With only 2.9% entering the study with a high tau burden, almost all the others fell in the medium stratification.

Due to the potential for a lower therapeutic response, “patients with low Tau are often excluded from trials,” Dr. Irizarry said. But the sizable proportion of low tau patients has permitted an assessment of relative response with lecanemab, which turned out to be substantial.

“Consistent rates of clinical stability or improvements were observed regardless of baseline tau levels with the highest rates of improvements observed for the low tau group after 24 months of follow-up,” Dr. Irizarry reported.

In previously reported results from the tau PET substudy, lecanemab was shown to slow tau spread at least numerically in every section of the brain evaluated, including the frontal, cingulate, parietal, and whole cortical gray matter areas. The reductions reached significance for the medial temporal (P = .0024), meta temporal (P = .012), and temporal (P = .16) portions.

When most recently evaluated in the OLE, the CDR-SB score declined 38% less among those treated with lecanemab than those treated with placebo in the subgroup enrolled in the tau PET substudy.

Relative to those with intermediate or high tau, patients in the low tau had an even greater reduction in cognitive decline than those with higher tau burdens. Although Dr. Irizarry cautioned that greater baseline CDR-SB scores exaggerated the treatment effect in the low tau group, the message is that “a lecanemab treatment effect is seen even when baseline tau levels are low.”

Now, with the recent market withdrawal of aducanumab, another anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody that was previously approved for Alzheimer’s disease, lecanemab is the only therapy currently available for the goal of changing disease progression, not just modifying symptoms.
 

 

 

Looking Long Term

Both sets of data provide important messages for clinicians, according to Marcelo Matiello, MD, a physician investigator at Mass General Hospital and associate professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

“Clinicians are really looking for more data because this remains a relatively new drug,” he said. Both sets of findings presented by Dr. Irizarry “look good but the follow-up is still short, so I think everyone is still looking closely at long-term safety and efficacy.”

The need for continuous indefinite therapy is one concern that Dr. Matiello expressed. As moderator of the session in which these data were presented, Dr. Matiello specifically asked Dr. Irizarry if there are plans to explore whether periods without treatment might be a means to reduce the cost and burden of frequent infusions while preserving cognitive gains.

In response, Dr. Irizarry said that earlier studies showed rapid progression when lecanemab was stopped. On this basis, he thinks therapy must be maintained, but he did say that there are plans to look at less frequent dosing, such as once per month. He also said that a subcutaneous formulation in development might also reduce the burden of prolonged treatment.

Dr. Irizarry is an employee of Eisai Ltd., which manufacturers lecanemab. Dr. Matiello reports no potential conflicts of interest.

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Upon entry into the open-label extension (OLE) of the pivotal trial that led to approval of lecanemab for Alzheimer’s disease, placebo patients failed to show any appreciable catch up to the benefit achieved in the experimental arm, according to a first report of 6-month OLE data.

Due to the steady disease progression observed after the switch of placebo to active therapy, the message of these data is that “early initiation of lecanemab is important,” according to Michael Irizarry, MD, the senior vice president of clinical research at Eisai Ltd, which markets lecanemab.

The 6-month OLE data along with data from a tau PET substudy were presented by Dr. Irizarry at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology.

From the start of the OLE through the 6-month follow-up, the downward trajectory of cognitive function, as measured with the Clinical Dementia Rating – Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB), has been parallel for the lecanemab-start and switch arms. As a result, the degree of separation between active and placebo groups over the course of the OLE has remained unchanged from the end of the randomized trial.

This does not rule out any benefit in the switch arm, according to Dr. Irizarry. Although there was no discernible change in the trajectory of decline among placebo patients after they were switched to lecanemab, Dr. Irizarry postulated that this might overlook the greater likely decline over time with no treatment.

“There was no placebo group in the OLE to compare with those on active treatment,” he pointed out. He then juxtaposed data from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). Over the same 6-month timeframe, these data show a hypothetical separation of the curves if no treatment had been received.

The 6-month OLE data provide a preliminary look at outcomes in a planned 4-year follow-up. At the end of the randomized CLARITY trial, the mean decline from the baseline CDR-SB score of 3.2, was 1.21 in the lecanemab group, translating into a 38% decline, and 1.66 in the placebo group, translating into about a 50% decline. Over the 6 months of OLE, there has been a further mean CDR-SB reduction of approximately 0.6 in both arms, suggesting a further 18% decline from baseline.
 

Additional Data

In the pivotal CLARITY trial, which was published a few months prior to regulatory approval early last year, 1785 patients were randomized to 10 mg/kg lecanemab or placebo infused every 2 weeks. At the end of 18 months, the superiority of lecanemab for the primary endpoint of adverse change in CDR-SB was highly significant (P < .001) as were the differences in key secondary endpoints, such as Alzheimer’s Disease Composite Score (P < .001).

Of those who participated in CLARITY, 1385 patients entered the OLE. Placebo patients were switched to lecanemab which is being maintained in all patients on the trial schedule of 10 mg/kg administered by intravenous infusion every 2 weeks.

In addition to the overall OLE 6-month data, which has not raised any new safety signals, Dr. Irizarry provided a new look at the PET TAU substudy with a focus on patients who entered the study with a low relative tau burden. Of the three classifications, which also included medium and high tau, as measured with positron-emission tomography (PET), the low tau group represented 41.2% of the 342 tau PET substudy participants. With only 2.9% entering the study with a high tau burden, almost all the others fell in the medium stratification.

Due to the potential for a lower therapeutic response, “patients with low Tau are often excluded from trials,” Dr. Irizarry said. But the sizable proportion of low tau patients has permitted an assessment of relative response with lecanemab, which turned out to be substantial.

“Consistent rates of clinical stability or improvements were observed regardless of baseline tau levels with the highest rates of improvements observed for the low tau group after 24 months of follow-up,” Dr. Irizarry reported.

In previously reported results from the tau PET substudy, lecanemab was shown to slow tau spread at least numerically in every section of the brain evaluated, including the frontal, cingulate, parietal, and whole cortical gray matter areas. The reductions reached significance for the medial temporal (P = .0024), meta temporal (P = .012), and temporal (P = .16) portions.

When most recently evaluated in the OLE, the CDR-SB score declined 38% less among those treated with lecanemab than those treated with placebo in the subgroup enrolled in the tau PET substudy.

Relative to those with intermediate or high tau, patients in the low tau had an even greater reduction in cognitive decline than those with higher tau burdens. Although Dr. Irizarry cautioned that greater baseline CDR-SB scores exaggerated the treatment effect in the low tau group, the message is that “a lecanemab treatment effect is seen even when baseline tau levels are low.”

Now, with the recent market withdrawal of aducanumab, another anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody that was previously approved for Alzheimer’s disease, lecanemab is the only therapy currently available for the goal of changing disease progression, not just modifying symptoms.
 

 

 

Looking Long Term

Both sets of data provide important messages for clinicians, according to Marcelo Matiello, MD, a physician investigator at Mass General Hospital and associate professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

“Clinicians are really looking for more data because this remains a relatively new drug,” he said. Both sets of findings presented by Dr. Irizarry “look good but the follow-up is still short, so I think everyone is still looking closely at long-term safety and efficacy.”

The need for continuous indefinite therapy is one concern that Dr. Matiello expressed. As moderator of the session in which these data were presented, Dr. Matiello specifically asked Dr. Irizarry if there are plans to explore whether periods without treatment might be a means to reduce the cost and burden of frequent infusions while preserving cognitive gains.

In response, Dr. Irizarry said that earlier studies showed rapid progression when lecanemab was stopped. On this basis, he thinks therapy must be maintained, but he did say that there are plans to look at less frequent dosing, such as once per month. He also said that a subcutaneous formulation in development might also reduce the burden of prolonged treatment.

Dr. Irizarry is an employee of Eisai Ltd., which manufacturers lecanemab. Dr. Matiello reports no potential conflicts of interest.

Upon entry into the open-label extension (OLE) of the pivotal trial that led to approval of lecanemab for Alzheimer’s disease, placebo patients failed to show any appreciable catch up to the benefit achieved in the experimental arm, according to a first report of 6-month OLE data.

Due to the steady disease progression observed after the switch of placebo to active therapy, the message of these data is that “early initiation of lecanemab is important,” according to Michael Irizarry, MD, the senior vice president of clinical research at Eisai Ltd, which markets lecanemab.

The 6-month OLE data along with data from a tau PET substudy were presented by Dr. Irizarry at the 2024 annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology.

From the start of the OLE through the 6-month follow-up, the downward trajectory of cognitive function, as measured with the Clinical Dementia Rating – Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB), has been parallel for the lecanemab-start and switch arms. As a result, the degree of separation between active and placebo groups over the course of the OLE has remained unchanged from the end of the randomized trial.

This does not rule out any benefit in the switch arm, according to Dr. Irizarry. Although there was no discernible change in the trajectory of decline among placebo patients after they were switched to lecanemab, Dr. Irizarry postulated that this might overlook the greater likely decline over time with no treatment.

“There was no placebo group in the OLE to compare with those on active treatment,” he pointed out. He then juxtaposed data from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). Over the same 6-month timeframe, these data show a hypothetical separation of the curves if no treatment had been received.

The 6-month OLE data provide a preliminary look at outcomes in a planned 4-year follow-up. At the end of the randomized CLARITY trial, the mean decline from the baseline CDR-SB score of 3.2, was 1.21 in the lecanemab group, translating into a 38% decline, and 1.66 in the placebo group, translating into about a 50% decline. Over the 6 months of OLE, there has been a further mean CDR-SB reduction of approximately 0.6 in both arms, suggesting a further 18% decline from baseline.
 

Additional Data

In the pivotal CLARITY trial, which was published a few months prior to regulatory approval early last year, 1785 patients were randomized to 10 mg/kg lecanemab or placebo infused every 2 weeks. At the end of 18 months, the superiority of lecanemab for the primary endpoint of adverse change in CDR-SB was highly significant (P < .001) as were the differences in key secondary endpoints, such as Alzheimer’s Disease Composite Score (P < .001).

Of those who participated in CLARITY, 1385 patients entered the OLE. Placebo patients were switched to lecanemab which is being maintained in all patients on the trial schedule of 10 mg/kg administered by intravenous infusion every 2 weeks.

In addition to the overall OLE 6-month data, which has not raised any new safety signals, Dr. Irizarry provided a new look at the PET TAU substudy with a focus on patients who entered the study with a low relative tau burden. Of the three classifications, which also included medium and high tau, as measured with positron-emission tomography (PET), the low tau group represented 41.2% of the 342 tau PET substudy participants. With only 2.9% entering the study with a high tau burden, almost all the others fell in the medium stratification.

Due to the potential for a lower therapeutic response, “patients with low Tau are often excluded from trials,” Dr. Irizarry said. But the sizable proportion of low tau patients has permitted an assessment of relative response with lecanemab, which turned out to be substantial.

“Consistent rates of clinical stability or improvements were observed regardless of baseline tau levels with the highest rates of improvements observed for the low tau group after 24 months of follow-up,” Dr. Irizarry reported.

In previously reported results from the tau PET substudy, lecanemab was shown to slow tau spread at least numerically in every section of the brain evaluated, including the frontal, cingulate, parietal, and whole cortical gray matter areas. The reductions reached significance for the medial temporal (P = .0024), meta temporal (P = .012), and temporal (P = .16) portions.

When most recently evaluated in the OLE, the CDR-SB score declined 38% less among those treated with lecanemab than those treated with placebo in the subgroup enrolled in the tau PET substudy.

Relative to those with intermediate or high tau, patients in the low tau had an even greater reduction in cognitive decline than those with higher tau burdens. Although Dr. Irizarry cautioned that greater baseline CDR-SB scores exaggerated the treatment effect in the low tau group, the message is that “a lecanemab treatment effect is seen even when baseline tau levels are low.”

Now, with the recent market withdrawal of aducanumab, another anti-amyloid monoclonal antibody that was previously approved for Alzheimer’s disease, lecanemab is the only therapy currently available for the goal of changing disease progression, not just modifying symptoms.
 

 

 

Looking Long Term

Both sets of data provide important messages for clinicians, according to Marcelo Matiello, MD, a physician investigator at Mass General Hospital and associate professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

“Clinicians are really looking for more data because this remains a relatively new drug,” he said. Both sets of findings presented by Dr. Irizarry “look good but the follow-up is still short, so I think everyone is still looking closely at long-term safety and efficacy.”

The need for continuous indefinite therapy is one concern that Dr. Matiello expressed. As moderator of the session in which these data were presented, Dr. Matiello specifically asked Dr. Irizarry if there are plans to explore whether periods without treatment might be a means to reduce the cost and burden of frequent infusions while preserving cognitive gains.

In response, Dr. Irizarry said that earlier studies showed rapid progression when lecanemab was stopped. On this basis, he thinks therapy must be maintained, but he did say that there are plans to look at less frequent dosing, such as once per month. He also said that a subcutaneous formulation in development might also reduce the burden of prolonged treatment.

Dr. Irizarry is an employee of Eisai Ltd., which manufacturers lecanemab. Dr. Matiello reports no potential conflicts of interest.

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Association Calls For Increased Oversight in Response to Reports of Possibly Counterfeit Botulinum Toxin

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 04/26/2024 - 13:49

Recent cases of botulism-like illness following neurotoxin injections in nonmedical settings have prompted the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Association (ASDSA) to call on states to increase oversight of medical care in all settings, including medical spas.

In a press release issued on April 12, the ASDSA referenced investigations in Illinois and Tennessee in which suspected counterfeit neurotoxins were associated with individuals’ symptoms resembling botulism, including several that required hospitalization. These cases “emphasize the patient safety risks associated with receiving medical procedures in unlicensed, unapproved settings without proper oversight of medical care,” the release adds.



The cases also “highlight the need for increased public protection measures, like the recommendations in the ASDSA’s “Medical Spa Safety Act” to ensure patients’ safety,” according to the press release, which notes the increasing demand for facial fillers and neuromodulators in the United States.

Enforcement is needed to ensure that all patients receive US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved products “and not counterfeit products or unsafe treatments,” ASDSA president Seth L. Matarasso, MD, who practices dermatology in San Francisco, said in the press release. “Lack of regulation and enforcement has enabled many to offer medical procedures for cosmetic purposes outside of their training and expertise,” he said.

Key Takeaways

All clinicians need to understand that aesthetic procedures are medical procedures and require a level of due diligence in patient evaluation and care before, during, and after the procedure, Pooja Sodha, MD, director of the Center for Laser and Cosmetic Dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, said in an interview.

Dr. Sodha
Dr. Pooja Sodha

“FDA-approved medications should only be offered, and these should be obtained through well-defined sources to ensure their safety and purity,” she said.

However, some challenges to the enforcement of safety in medical spa settings persist, Dr. Sodha told this news organization. “To my knowledge, state and federal policies providing clear and up-to-date safety and legal guidelines for aesthetic procedures performed at medical spas by registered nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and physicians are limited, and in our current medical care structure, national oversight is challenging,” she said.

A pretreatment checklist assessment, she suggested, could be helpful “to ensure patient safety and help to standardize clinical practice in nonmedical settings.”

Other challenges include a lack of clear guidelines for aesthetic providers regarding initial assessment examinations, postprocedure follow-up, and evaluation for any future medical treatment, as well as “continued ambiguity on the exact meaning of physician oversight for those sites that delegate aesthetic services and appropriate and clear guidelines on what procedures require a licensed provider to perform versus oversee the treatment,” she said.
 

Additional Guidance, Actions Needed

As for additional guidance or actions, “we may be migrating towards a system that designates and assigns clearer licenses and authorizations to perform these services and care for patients,” said Dr. Sodha. A licensing process would entail academic understanding of anatomy, pharmacology, and tissue interactions, as well as practical hands-on training that emphasizes the importance of the preprocedure consultation and postprocedure follow-up and care, she said. “Experience in caring for the unintended outcomes is vital to delivering the best care we can,” she added.

D. Sodha had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Recent cases of botulism-like illness following neurotoxin injections in nonmedical settings have prompted the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Association (ASDSA) to call on states to increase oversight of medical care in all settings, including medical spas.

In a press release issued on April 12, the ASDSA referenced investigations in Illinois and Tennessee in which suspected counterfeit neurotoxins were associated with individuals’ symptoms resembling botulism, including several that required hospitalization. These cases “emphasize the patient safety risks associated with receiving medical procedures in unlicensed, unapproved settings without proper oversight of medical care,” the release adds.



The cases also “highlight the need for increased public protection measures, like the recommendations in the ASDSA’s “Medical Spa Safety Act” to ensure patients’ safety,” according to the press release, which notes the increasing demand for facial fillers and neuromodulators in the United States.

Enforcement is needed to ensure that all patients receive US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved products “and not counterfeit products or unsafe treatments,” ASDSA president Seth L. Matarasso, MD, who practices dermatology in San Francisco, said in the press release. “Lack of regulation and enforcement has enabled many to offer medical procedures for cosmetic purposes outside of their training and expertise,” he said.

Key Takeaways

All clinicians need to understand that aesthetic procedures are medical procedures and require a level of due diligence in patient evaluation and care before, during, and after the procedure, Pooja Sodha, MD, director of the Center for Laser and Cosmetic Dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, said in an interview.

Dr. Sodha
Dr. Pooja Sodha

“FDA-approved medications should only be offered, and these should be obtained through well-defined sources to ensure their safety and purity,” she said.

However, some challenges to the enforcement of safety in medical spa settings persist, Dr. Sodha told this news organization. “To my knowledge, state and federal policies providing clear and up-to-date safety and legal guidelines for aesthetic procedures performed at medical spas by registered nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and physicians are limited, and in our current medical care structure, national oversight is challenging,” she said.

A pretreatment checklist assessment, she suggested, could be helpful “to ensure patient safety and help to standardize clinical practice in nonmedical settings.”

Other challenges include a lack of clear guidelines for aesthetic providers regarding initial assessment examinations, postprocedure follow-up, and evaluation for any future medical treatment, as well as “continued ambiguity on the exact meaning of physician oversight for those sites that delegate aesthetic services and appropriate and clear guidelines on what procedures require a licensed provider to perform versus oversee the treatment,” she said.
 

Additional Guidance, Actions Needed

As for additional guidance or actions, “we may be migrating towards a system that designates and assigns clearer licenses and authorizations to perform these services and care for patients,” said Dr. Sodha. A licensing process would entail academic understanding of anatomy, pharmacology, and tissue interactions, as well as practical hands-on training that emphasizes the importance of the preprocedure consultation and postprocedure follow-up and care, she said. “Experience in caring for the unintended outcomes is vital to delivering the best care we can,” she added.

D. Sodha had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Recent cases of botulism-like illness following neurotoxin injections in nonmedical settings have prompted the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Association (ASDSA) to call on states to increase oversight of medical care in all settings, including medical spas.

In a press release issued on April 12, the ASDSA referenced investigations in Illinois and Tennessee in which suspected counterfeit neurotoxins were associated with individuals’ symptoms resembling botulism, including several that required hospitalization. These cases “emphasize the patient safety risks associated with receiving medical procedures in unlicensed, unapproved settings without proper oversight of medical care,” the release adds.



The cases also “highlight the need for increased public protection measures, like the recommendations in the ASDSA’s “Medical Spa Safety Act” to ensure patients’ safety,” according to the press release, which notes the increasing demand for facial fillers and neuromodulators in the United States.

Enforcement is needed to ensure that all patients receive US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved products “and not counterfeit products or unsafe treatments,” ASDSA president Seth L. Matarasso, MD, who practices dermatology in San Francisco, said in the press release. “Lack of regulation and enforcement has enabled many to offer medical procedures for cosmetic purposes outside of their training and expertise,” he said.

Key Takeaways

All clinicians need to understand that aesthetic procedures are medical procedures and require a level of due diligence in patient evaluation and care before, during, and after the procedure, Pooja Sodha, MD, director of the Center for Laser and Cosmetic Dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, said in an interview.

Dr. Sodha
Dr. Pooja Sodha

“FDA-approved medications should only be offered, and these should be obtained through well-defined sources to ensure their safety and purity,” she said.

However, some challenges to the enforcement of safety in medical spa settings persist, Dr. Sodha told this news organization. “To my knowledge, state and federal policies providing clear and up-to-date safety and legal guidelines for aesthetic procedures performed at medical spas by registered nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and physicians are limited, and in our current medical care structure, national oversight is challenging,” she said.

A pretreatment checklist assessment, she suggested, could be helpful “to ensure patient safety and help to standardize clinical practice in nonmedical settings.”

Other challenges include a lack of clear guidelines for aesthetic providers regarding initial assessment examinations, postprocedure follow-up, and evaluation for any future medical treatment, as well as “continued ambiguity on the exact meaning of physician oversight for those sites that delegate aesthetic services and appropriate and clear guidelines on what procedures require a licensed provider to perform versus oversee the treatment,” she said.
 

Additional Guidance, Actions Needed

As for additional guidance or actions, “we may be migrating towards a system that designates and assigns clearer licenses and authorizations to perform these services and care for patients,” said Dr. Sodha. A licensing process would entail academic understanding of anatomy, pharmacology, and tissue interactions, as well as practical hands-on training that emphasizes the importance of the preprocedure consultation and postprocedure follow-up and care, she said. “Experience in caring for the unintended outcomes is vital to delivering the best care we can,” she added.

D. Sodha had no financial conflicts to disclose.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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CDC Investigating Adverse Events Related to Counterfeit, Mishandled Botulinum Toxin

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Changed
Tue, 04/16/2024 - 13:23

At least 19 people from nine states have reported serious reactions after receiving botulinum toxin injections from unlicensed or untrained individuals or in non-healthcare settings, such as homes and spas, according to an announcement of an investigation into these reports from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted online April 15.

Reactions have included blurry vision, double vision, drooping eyelids, difficult swallowing or breathing, and other symptoms of botulism.

Of the 19 individuals — all of whom identified as female and had a mean age of 39 years — 9 (60%) were hospitalized and 4 (21%) were treated with botulism antitoxin because of concerns that the botulinum toxin could have spread beyond the injection site. Also, five were tested for botulism and their results were negative.

The CDC, several state and local health departments, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are investigating these reports, according to the announcement.

States reporting these cases include Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Tennessee, and Washington. According to the CDC summary, some of the individuals “received injections with counterfeit products or products with unverified sources. Investigation into the sources of these products is ongoing.” All but one report involved receiving botulinum toxin injections for cosmetic purposes.

Recent cases of botulism-like illnesses possibly related to counterfeit botulinum toxin reported in Illinois and Tennessee, prompted the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Association (ASDSA) to call on states to increase oversight of medical care in all settings, including medical spas, the ASDSA announced on April 12.



The CDC summary advises clinicians to consider the possibility of adverse effects from botulinum toxin injection, including for cosmetic reasons, when patients present with signs and symptoms consistent with botulism near the injection site. Symptoms of botulism include blurry or double vision, drooping eyelids, difficulty swallowing, difficulty breathing, and muscle weakness.

For people who are considering botulinum toxin for cosmetic or medical reasons, recommendations from the CDC include asking the provider and setting, such as a clinic or spa, if they are licensed and trained to provide these injections, and to ask if the product is approved by the FDA and from a reliable source, and, “if in doubt, don’t get the injection.”

This ‘Should Never Happen’

“The report of people getting botulism from botulinum toxin injections is frightening, and should never happen,” Lawrence J. Green, MD, clinical professor of dermatology, George Washington University, Washington, told this news organization.

Dr. Green
Dr. Lawrence J. Green

These reports show “how important it is to receive botulinum toxin injections only in a medical office, and from or under the direction of a qualified, trained, and licensed individual, like a board certified dermatologist,” added Dr. Green, who practices in Rockville, Maryland. “Other types of practitioners may not adhere to the same standards of professionalism, especially not always putting patient safety first.”

Dr. Green disclosed that he is a speaker, consultant, or investigator for numerous pharmaceutical companies.
 

For cases of suspected systemic botulism, the CDC recommends calling the local or state health department for consultation and antitoxin release (as well as information on reporting adverse events). Alternatively, the 24/7 phone number for the CDC clinical botulism service is 770-488-7100.

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At least 19 people from nine states have reported serious reactions after receiving botulinum toxin injections from unlicensed or untrained individuals or in non-healthcare settings, such as homes and spas, according to an announcement of an investigation into these reports from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted online April 15.

Reactions have included blurry vision, double vision, drooping eyelids, difficult swallowing or breathing, and other symptoms of botulism.

Of the 19 individuals — all of whom identified as female and had a mean age of 39 years — 9 (60%) were hospitalized and 4 (21%) were treated with botulism antitoxin because of concerns that the botulinum toxin could have spread beyond the injection site. Also, five were tested for botulism and their results were negative.

The CDC, several state and local health departments, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are investigating these reports, according to the announcement.

States reporting these cases include Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Tennessee, and Washington. According to the CDC summary, some of the individuals “received injections with counterfeit products or products with unverified sources. Investigation into the sources of these products is ongoing.” All but one report involved receiving botulinum toxin injections for cosmetic purposes.

Recent cases of botulism-like illnesses possibly related to counterfeit botulinum toxin reported in Illinois and Tennessee, prompted the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Association (ASDSA) to call on states to increase oversight of medical care in all settings, including medical spas, the ASDSA announced on April 12.



The CDC summary advises clinicians to consider the possibility of adverse effects from botulinum toxin injection, including for cosmetic reasons, when patients present with signs and symptoms consistent with botulism near the injection site. Symptoms of botulism include blurry or double vision, drooping eyelids, difficulty swallowing, difficulty breathing, and muscle weakness.

For people who are considering botulinum toxin for cosmetic or medical reasons, recommendations from the CDC include asking the provider and setting, such as a clinic or spa, if they are licensed and trained to provide these injections, and to ask if the product is approved by the FDA and from a reliable source, and, “if in doubt, don’t get the injection.”

This ‘Should Never Happen’

“The report of people getting botulism from botulinum toxin injections is frightening, and should never happen,” Lawrence J. Green, MD, clinical professor of dermatology, George Washington University, Washington, told this news organization.

Dr. Green
Dr. Lawrence J. Green

These reports show “how important it is to receive botulinum toxin injections only in a medical office, and from or under the direction of a qualified, trained, and licensed individual, like a board certified dermatologist,” added Dr. Green, who practices in Rockville, Maryland. “Other types of practitioners may not adhere to the same standards of professionalism, especially not always putting patient safety first.”

Dr. Green disclosed that he is a speaker, consultant, or investigator for numerous pharmaceutical companies.
 

For cases of suspected systemic botulism, the CDC recommends calling the local or state health department for consultation and antitoxin release (as well as information on reporting adverse events). Alternatively, the 24/7 phone number for the CDC clinical botulism service is 770-488-7100.

At least 19 people from nine states have reported serious reactions after receiving botulinum toxin injections from unlicensed or untrained individuals or in non-healthcare settings, such as homes and spas, according to an announcement of an investigation into these reports from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted online April 15.

Reactions have included blurry vision, double vision, drooping eyelids, difficult swallowing or breathing, and other symptoms of botulism.

Of the 19 individuals — all of whom identified as female and had a mean age of 39 years — 9 (60%) were hospitalized and 4 (21%) were treated with botulism antitoxin because of concerns that the botulinum toxin could have spread beyond the injection site. Also, five were tested for botulism and their results were negative.

The CDC, several state and local health departments, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are investigating these reports, according to the announcement.

States reporting these cases include Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Tennessee, and Washington. According to the CDC summary, some of the individuals “received injections with counterfeit products or products with unverified sources. Investigation into the sources of these products is ongoing.” All but one report involved receiving botulinum toxin injections for cosmetic purposes.

Recent cases of botulism-like illnesses possibly related to counterfeit botulinum toxin reported in Illinois and Tennessee, prompted the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery Association (ASDSA) to call on states to increase oversight of medical care in all settings, including medical spas, the ASDSA announced on April 12.



The CDC summary advises clinicians to consider the possibility of adverse effects from botulinum toxin injection, including for cosmetic reasons, when patients present with signs and symptoms consistent with botulism near the injection site. Symptoms of botulism include blurry or double vision, drooping eyelids, difficulty swallowing, difficulty breathing, and muscle weakness.

For people who are considering botulinum toxin for cosmetic or medical reasons, recommendations from the CDC include asking the provider and setting, such as a clinic or spa, if they are licensed and trained to provide these injections, and to ask if the product is approved by the FDA and from a reliable source, and, “if in doubt, don’t get the injection.”

This ‘Should Never Happen’

“The report of people getting botulism from botulinum toxin injections is frightening, and should never happen,” Lawrence J. Green, MD, clinical professor of dermatology, George Washington University, Washington, told this news organization.

Dr. Green
Dr. Lawrence J. Green

These reports show “how important it is to receive botulinum toxin injections only in a medical office, and from or under the direction of a qualified, trained, and licensed individual, like a board certified dermatologist,” added Dr. Green, who practices in Rockville, Maryland. “Other types of practitioners may not adhere to the same standards of professionalism, especially not always putting patient safety first.”

Dr. Green disclosed that he is a speaker, consultant, or investigator for numerous pharmaceutical companies.
 

For cases of suspected systemic botulism, the CDC recommends calling the local or state health department for consultation and antitoxin release (as well as information on reporting adverse events). Alternatively, the 24/7 phone number for the CDC clinical botulism service is 770-488-7100.

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Positive Results for Intranasal Oxytocin in Adults With Autism

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Changed
Tue, 04/16/2024 - 12:08

— Twice daily intranasal oxytocin has been associated with improved social functioning, quality of life, and overall symptoms in adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), results of a small randomized control trial showed.

“One of the challenges for adults with autism is experiencing poor social interactions and difficulties in making friends. Insufficient social support from peers, friends, and family members can contribute to loneliness in adolescents with ASD, which in turn leads to anxiety, sadness, and social isolation,” said study investigator Saba Faraji Niri, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry, Tehran University of Medical Sciences in Iran. 

Recent US data show it is relatively common. In addition, previous research suggests intranasal oxytocin significantly increases activity in brain regions that play a role in establishing social interactions.

To evaluate the therapeutic effects and safety of intranasal oxytocin the researchers randomly assigned 39 adult patients with ASD to receive intranasal oxytocin or placebo with 24 units administered every 12 hours for 8 weeks. 

Dr. Faraji Niri said study participants were required to stop all psychotropic medications for at least 8 weeks prior to study entry. 

Participants were assessed at baseline and weeks 4 and 8 using the Autism Quotient, Ritvo Autism Asperger Diagnostic Scale — Revised (RAADS-R), Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), Clinical Global Impression (CGI) scale, and the World Health Organization Quality of Life-BREF (WHOQL-BREF) questionnaire. Adverse events were also evaluated.

Dr. Faraji Niri said that those receiving intranasal oxytocin showed clinical improvement on RAADS-R scores (P = .010), as well as on the social communication subscale of the SRS (P = .002), the CGI scale (P = .000), and the physical (P = .004), psychological (P = .006), and social relationships (P = .046) domains of the WHOQL-BREF. 

However, although the findings were positive, she said at this point it’s not possible to draw any definitive conclusions. She noted the study had several potential confounders. These included differences in baseline levels of endogenous oxytocin among study participants individuals, as well as difference in required treatment doses, which were adjusted by age and sex. The presence of comorbidities and interactions with other treatments could also affect the results.

Commenting on the findings for this news organization, session chair Szabolcs Kéri, PhD, Professor, Sztárai Institute, University of Tokaj, Sárospatak, Hungary, said the use of oxytocin for ASD is controversial. He said that, while the research contributes to the scientific debate, the clinical significance of the findings is unclear. 

The investigators and Dr Keri reported no relevant financial disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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— Twice daily intranasal oxytocin has been associated with improved social functioning, quality of life, and overall symptoms in adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), results of a small randomized control trial showed.

“One of the challenges for adults with autism is experiencing poor social interactions and difficulties in making friends. Insufficient social support from peers, friends, and family members can contribute to loneliness in adolescents with ASD, which in turn leads to anxiety, sadness, and social isolation,” said study investigator Saba Faraji Niri, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry, Tehran University of Medical Sciences in Iran. 

Recent US data show it is relatively common. In addition, previous research suggests intranasal oxytocin significantly increases activity in brain regions that play a role in establishing social interactions.

To evaluate the therapeutic effects and safety of intranasal oxytocin the researchers randomly assigned 39 adult patients with ASD to receive intranasal oxytocin or placebo with 24 units administered every 12 hours for 8 weeks. 

Dr. Faraji Niri said study participants were required to stop all psychotropic medications for at least 8 weeks prior to study entry. 

Participants were assessed at baseline and weeks 4 and 8 using the Autism Quotient, Ritvo Autism Asperger Diagnostic Scale — Revised (RAADS-R), Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), Clinical Global Impression (CGI) scale, and the World Health Organization Quality of Life-BREF (WHOQL-BREF) questionnaire. Adverse events were also evaluated.

Dr. Faraji Niri said that those receiving intranasal oxytocin showed clinical improvement on RAADS-R scores (P = .010), as well as on the social communication subscale of the SRS (P = .002), the CGI scale (P = .000), and the physical (P = .004), psychological (P = .006), and social relationships (P = .046) domains of the WHOQL-BREF. 

However, although the findings were positive, she said at this point it’s not possible to draw any definitive conclusions. She noted the study had several potential confounders. These included differences in baseline levels of endogenous oxytocin among study participants individuals, as well as difference in required treatment doses, which were adjusted by age and sex. The presence of comorbidities and interactions with other treatments could also affect the results.

Commenting on the findings for this news organization, session chair Szabolcs Kéri, PhD, Professor, Sztárai Institute, University of Tokaj, Sárospatak, Hungary, said the use of oxytocin for ASD is controversial. He said that, while the research contributes to the scientific debate, the clinical significance of the findings is unclear. 

The investigators and Dr Keri reported no relevant financial disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

— Twice daily intranasal oxytocin has been associated with improved social functioning, quality of life, and overall symptoms in adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), results of a small randomized control trial showed.

“One of the challenges for adults with autism is experiencing poor social interactions and difficulties in making friends. Insufficient social support from peers, friends, and family members can contribute to loneliness in adolescents with ASD, which in turn leads to anxiety, sadness, and social isolation,” said study investigator Saba Faraji Niri, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry, Tehran University of Medical Sciences in Iran. 

Recent US data show it is relatively common. In addition, previous research suggests intranasal oxytocin significantly increases activity in brain regions that play a role in establishing social interactions.

To evaluate the therapeutic effects and safety of intranasal oxytocin the researchers randomly assigned 39 adult patients with ASD to receive intranasal oxytocin or placebo with 24 units administered every 12 hours for 8 weeks. 

Dr. Faraji Niri said study participants were required to stop all psychotropic medications for at least 8 weeks prior to study entry. 

Participants were assessed at baseline and weeks 4 and 8 using the Autism Quotient, Ritvo Autism Asperger Diagnostic Scale — Revised (RAADS-R), Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), Clinical Global Impression (CGI) scale, and the World Health Organization Quality of Life-BREF (WHOQL-BREF) questionnaire. Adverse events were also evaluated.

Dr. Faraji Niri said that those receiving intranasal oxytocin showed clinical improvement on RAADS-R scores (P = .010), as well as on the social communication subscale of the SRS (P = .002), the CGI scale (P = .000), and the physical (P = .004), psychological (P = .006), and social relationships (P = .046) domains of the WHOQL-BREF. 

However, although the findings were positive, she said at this point it’s not possible to draw any definitive conclusions. She noted the study had several potential confounders. These included differences in baseline levels of endogenous oxytocin among study participants individuals, as well as difference in required treatment doses, which were adjusted by age and sex. The presence of comorbidities and interactions with other treatments could also affect the results.

Commenting on the findings for this news organization, session chair Szabolcs Kéri, PhD, Professor, Sztárai Institute, University of Tokaj, Sárospatak, Hungary, said the use of oxytocin for ASD is controversial. He said that, while the research contributes to the scientific debate, the clinical significance of the findings is unclear. 

The investigators and Dr Keri reported no relevant financial disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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Antidiabetic Drugs That Lower Stroke Risk Do So By Unclear Mechanisms

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Mon, 04/15/2024 - 16:42

Unlike traditional antidiabetic therapies, which have never been associated with a significant reduction in stroke in a major trial, some of the newer drugs are showing that benefit, but the protection is not linked to tighter glycemic control.

In patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), the evidence is strong that “they are not working through glycemic control per se,” according to Larry B. Goldstein, MD, chair of neurology, University of Kentucky School of Medicine, Louisville. “But it is not yet clear what the mechanism of benefit is.”

Ted Bosworth/MDedge News
Dr. Larry B. Goldstein


In the past, several large randomized studies, such as the ACCORD trial, provided compelling evidence that tighter glycemic control does not translate into meaningful protection across stroke. Performed before many of the modern therapies were available, this lack of protection was observed with essentially “no heterogeneity across specific drugs,” according to Dr. Goldstein.

In long-term results from ACCORD, published in 2011, the odds ratio for a fatal or nonfatal stroke was a nonsignificant 0.97 in favor of tight glycemic control relative to standard control. The wide confidence intervals ruled out any hint of statistical significance (95% CI, 0.77-1.33; P = .85). Dr. Goldstein provided data from numerous other studies and meta-analyses that drew the same conclusion.
 

Stroke Prevention With Antidiabetic Drugs

“What has changed is that we have new ways of glycemic control, and some of these do show protection against stroke,” Dr. Goldstein said. Yet, the newer drugs do not do a better job at sustained reductions of HbA1c or other measures of reaching lower blood glucose reductions when adherence is similar.

“The level of glucose control with the newer agents is really about the same,” Dr. Goldstein said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, where he led a symposium called Controversies in Stroke Treatment and Prevention.

The newer agents, such as sodium glucose co-transport-2 inhibitors (SGLT-2i) and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA), have been associated with significant and clinically meaningful reductions in cardiovascular events. However, it is not clear that even these two medications perform similarly for stroke prevention specifically.

Of these two drug classes, Dr. Goldstein said the evidence most strongly supports GLP-1 receptor agonists. He cited one meta-analysis of eight randomized studies that calculated a risk reduction of about 15% whether calculated for fatal or nonfatal strokes. For each the protection was highly statistically significant (P = .0002 and P < .001, respectively).

In contrast, the effect of SGLT-2 inhibitors is weaker. In a study that distilled data from large cardiovascular trials with GLP-1RA, SGLT2i, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP4i), and pioglitazone, a thiazolidinedione, only GLP-1RA drugs were associated with a highly significant (P < .001) reduction in risk of stroke. The risk reduction for pioglitazone reached significance (P = .025), but there was no signal of risk reduction for SGLT2i (P = .88) or for DPP4i (P = .5).
 

Weight Loss Is Potential Mechanism

Looking to explain the protection from stroke associated with some of the newer antidiabetic therapies, Gordon Kelley, MD, who leads the stroke program for AdventHealth Medical Group, Shawnee Mission, Kansas, suggested that weight loss is probably important.

“In our group, we work as a team to manage stroke risk in patients with diabetes, so I am not much involved in the choice of antidiabetic therapies, but it does seem that SGLT2 inhibitors and the GLP-1 receptor agonists share weight loss as an effect beyond glucose control,” he said.

Dr. Goldstein agreed that weight loss is a potential contributor to the cardiovascular benefits of GLP-1RA and SGLT2i, but he indicated that it might not help explain the reduction in stroke, an effect demonstrated repeatedly with GLP-1RA but inconsistently with SGLT2i.

The argument against weight loss as the critical mechanism of stroke prevention from newer antidiabetic drugs is strengthened by studies that suggest weight loss with SGLT2i appears to be even better than on GLP-1RA. In a study published in a pharmacy journal, weight loss was about twice as great among T2DM patients after 6 months of treatment managed with SGLT2i relative to those on a GLP-1RA (-2.8 vs 1.15 kg; P = .014).
 

Newer Antidiabetic Agents Guideline Recommended

In the 2019 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines on the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, stroke reduction is not discussed as an isolated risk, but these guidelines do recommend GLP-1RA or SGLT2i after metformin for glycemic control in T2DM patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk factors. This is based on evidence that drugs of both classes reduce risk for ASCVD events. The risk reduction has been particularly strong for heart failure.

For the risk of stroke specifically in patients with T2DM, Dr. Goldstein recommended calculating the ASCVD risk with the simple but well validated ACC risk calculator that is available online and is quickly completed when values for patient risk factors are readily available. For those with greater than 10% risk of an event in the next 10 years, he thinks GLP-1RA are a reasonable choice for prevention of stroke and other ASCVD events.

“GLP-1RA is mentioned in the guidelines, so this is supported,” said Dr. Goldstein, although adding that his choice of this class over SGLT2i is a personal if informed recommendation. He believes that the data favor GLP-1RA even if the exact mechanism of this protection is yet to be identified.

Dr. Goldstein and Dr. Kelley report no potential conflicts of interest.

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Unlike traditional antidiabetic therapies, which have never been associated with a significant reduction in stroke in a major trial, some of the newer drugs are showing that benefit, but the protection is not linked to tighter glycemic control.

In patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), the evidence is strong that “they are not working through glycemic control per se,” according to Larry B. Goldstein, MD, chair of neurology, University of Kentucky School of Medicine, Louisville. “But it is not yet clear what the mechanism of benefit is.”

Ted Bosworth/MDedge News
Dr. Larry B. Goldstein


In the past, several large randomized studies, such as the ACCORD trial, provided compelling evidence that tighter glycemic control does not translate into meaningful protection across stroke. Performed before many of the modern therapies were available, this lack of protection was observed with essentially “no heterogeneity across specific drugs,” according to Dr. Goldstein.

In long-term results from ACCORD, published in 2011, the odds ratio for a fatal or nonfatal stroke was a nonsignificant 0.97 in favor of tight glycemic control relative to standard control. The wide confidence intervals ruled out any hint of statistical significance (95% CI, 0.77-1.33; P = .85). Dr. Goldstein provided data from numerous other studies and meta-analyses that drew the same conclusion.
 

Stroke Prevention With Antidiabetic Drugs

“What has changed is that we have new ways of glycemic control, and some of these do show protection against stroke,” Dr. Goldstein said. Yet, the newer drugs do not do a better job at sustained reductions of HbA1c or other measures of reaching lower blood glucose reductions when adherence is similar.

“The level of glucose control with the newer agents is really about the same,” Dr. Goldstein said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, where he led a symposium called Controversies in Stroke Treatment and Prevention.

The newer agents, such as sodium glucose co-transport-2 inhibitors (SGLT-2i) and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA), have been associated with significant and clinically meaningful reductions in cardiovascular events. However, it is not clear that even these two medications perform similarly for stroke prevention specifically.

Of these two drug classes, Dr. Goldstein said the evidence most strongly supports GLP-1 receptor agonists. He cited one meta-analysis of eight randomized studies that calculated a risk reduction of about 15% whether calculated for fatal or nonfatal strokes. For each the protection was highly statistically significant (P = .0002 and P < .001, respectively).

In contrast, the effect of SGLT-2 inhibitors is weaker. In a study that distilled data from large cardiovascular trials with GLP-1RA, SGLT2i, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP4i), and pioglitazone, a thiazolidinedione, only GLP-1RA drugs were associated with a highly significant (P < .001) reduction in risk of stroke. The risk reduction for pioglitazone reached significance (P = .025), but there was no signal of risk reduction for SGLT2i (P = .88) or for DPP4i (P = .5).
 

Weight Loss Is Potential Mechanism

Looking to explain the protection from stroke associated with some of the newer antidiabetic therapies, Gordon Kelley, MD, who leads the stroke program for AdventHealth Medical Group, Shawnee Mission, Kansas, suggested that weight loss is probably important.

“In our group, we work as a team to manage stroke risk in patients with diabetes, so I am not much involved in the choice of antidiabetic therapies, but it does seem that SGLT2 inhibitors and the GLP-1 receptor agonists share weight loss as an effect beyond glucose control,” he said.

Dr. Goldstein agreed that weight loss is a potential contributor to the cardiovascular benefits of GLP-1RA and SGLT2i, but he indicated that it might not help explain the reduction in stroke, an effect demonstrated repeatedly with GLP-1RA but inconsistently with SGLT2i.

The argument against weight loss as the critical mechanism of stroke prevention from newer antidiabetic drugs is strengthened by studies that suggest weight loss with SGLT2i appears to be even better than on GLP-1RA. In a study published in a pharmacy journal, weight loss was about twice as great among T2DM patients after 6 months of treatment managed with SGLT2i relative to those on a GLP-1RA (-2.8 vs 1.15 kg; P = .014).
 

Newer Antidiabetic Agents Guideline Recommended

In the 2019 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines on the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, stroke reduction is not discussed as an isolated risk, but these guidelines do recommend GLP-1RA or SGLT2i after metformin for glycemic control in T2DM patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk factors. This is based on evidence that drugs of both classes reduce risk for ASCVD events. The risk reduction has been particularly strong for heart failure.

For the risk of stroke specifically in patients with T2DM, Dr. Goldstein recommended calculating the ASCVD risk with the simple but well validated ACC risk calculator that is available online and is quickly completed when values for patient risk factors are readily available. For those with greater than 10% risk of an event in the next 10 years, he thinks GLP-1RA are a reasonable choice for prevention of stroke and other ASCVD events.

“GLP-1RA is mentioned in the guidelines, so this is supported,” said Dr. Goldstein, although adding that his choice of this class over SGLT2i is a personal if informed recommendation. He believes that the data favor GLP-1RA even if the exact mechanism of this protection is yet to be identified.

Dr. Goldstein and Dr. Kelley report no potential conflicts of interest.

Unlike traditional antidiabetic therapies, which have never been associated with a significant reduction in stroke in a major trial, some of the newer drugs are showing that benefit, but the protection is not linked to tighter glycemic control.

In patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), the evidence is strong that “they are not working through glycemic control per se,” according to Larry B. Goldstein, MD, chair of neurology, University of Kentucky School of Medicine, Louisville. “But it is not yet clear what the mechanism of benefit is.”

Ted Bosworth/MDedge News
Dr. Larry B. Goldstein


In the past, several large randomized studies, such as the ACCORD trial, provided compelling evidence that tighter glycemic control does not translate into meaningful protection across stroke. Performed before many of the modern therapies were available, this lack of protection was observed with essentially “no heterogeneity across specific drugs,” according to Dr. Goldstein.

In long-term results from ACCORD, published in 2011, the odds ratio for a fatal or nonfatal stroke was a nonsignificant 0.97 in favor of tight glycemic control relative to standard control. The wide confidence intervals ruled out any hint of statistical significance (95% CI, 0.77-1.33; P = .85). Dr. Goldstein provided data from numerous other studies and meta-analyses that drew the same conclusion.
 

Stroke Prevention With Antidiabetic Drugs

“What has changed is that we have new ways of glycemic control, and some of these do show protection against stroke,” Dr. Goldstein said. Yet, the newer drugs do not do a better job at sustained reductions of HbA1c or other measures of reaching lower blood glucose reductions when adherence is similar.

“The level of glucose control with the newer agents is really about the same,” Dr. Goldstein said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, where he led a symposium called Controversies in Stroke Treatment and Prevention.

The newer agents, such as sodium glucose co-transport-2 inhibitors (SGLT-2i) and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA), have been associated with significant and clinically meaningful reductions in cardiovascular events. However, it is not clear that even these two medications perform similarly for stroke prevention specifically.

Of these two drug classes, Dr. Goldstein said the evidence most strongly supports GLP-1 receptor agonists. He cited one meta-analysis of eight randomized studies that calculated a risk reduction of about 15% whether calculated for fatal or nonfatal strokes. For each the protection was highly statistically significant (P = .0002 and P < .001, respectively).

In contrast, the effect of SGLT-2 inhibitors is weaker. In a study that distilled data from large cardiovascular trials with GLP-1RA, SGLT2i, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP4i), and pioglitazone, a thiazolidinedione, only GLP-1RA drugs were associated with a highly significant (P < .001) reduction in risk of stroke. The risk reduction for pioglitazone reached significance (P = .025), but there was no signal of risk reduction for SGLT2i (P = .88) or for DPP4i (P = .5).
 

Weight Loss Is Potential Mechanism

Looking to explain the protection from stroke associated with some of the newer antidiabetic therapies, Gordon Kelley, MD, who leads the stroke program for AdventHealth Medical Group, Shawnee Mission, Kansas, suggested that weight loss is probably important.

“In our group, we work as a team to manage stroke risk in patients with diabetes, so I am not much involved in the choice of antidiabetic therapies, but it does seem that SGLT2 inhibitors and the GLP-1 receptor agonists share weight loss as an effect beyond glucose control,” he said.

Dr. Goldstein agreed that weight loss is a potential contributor to the cardiovascular benefits of GLP-1RA and SGLT2i, but he indicated that it might not help explain the reduction in stroke, an effect demonstrated repeatedly with GLP-1RA but inconsistently with SGLT2i.

The argument against weight loss as the critical mechanism of stroke prevention from newer antidiabetic drugs is strengthened by studies that suggest weight loss with SGLT2i appears to be even better than on GLP-1RA. In a study published in a pharmacy journal, weight loss was about twice as great among T2DM patients after 6 months of treatment managed with SGLT2i relative to those on a GLP-1RA (-2.8 vs 1.15 kg; P = .014).
 

Newer Antidiabetic Agents Guideline Recommended

In the 2019 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines on the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease, stroke reduction is not discussed as an isolated risk, but these guidelines do recommend GLP-1RA or SGLT2i after metformin for glycemic control in T2DM patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk factors. This is based on evidence that drugs of both classes reduce risk for ASCVD events. The risk reduction has been particularly strong for heart failure.

For the risk of stroke specifically in patients with T2DM, Dr. Goldstein recommended calculating the ASCVD risk with the simple but well validated ACC risk calculator that is available online and is quickly completed when values for patient risk factors are readily available. For those with greater than 10% risk of an event in the next 10 years, he thinks GLP-1RA are a reasonable choice for prevention of stroke and other ASCVD events.

“GLP-1RA is mentioned in the guidelines, so this is supported,” said Dr. Goldstein, although adding that his choice of this class over SGLT2i is a personal if informed recommendation. He believes that the data favor GLP-1RA even if the exact mechanism of this protection is yet to be identified.

Dr. Goldstein and Dr. Kelley report no potential conflicts of interest.

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First US Adult ADHD Guidelines Finally on the Way?

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Fri, 04/12/2024 - 13:46

The first US clinical guidelines to diagnose and treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults are expected to be released this fall, providing patients, clinicians, insurers, and policymakers with a long overdue and much-needed standardized framework.

The initiative comes under the auspices of the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders (APSARD). David Goodman, MD, a member of the APSARD guidelines executive committee and assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, noted that the US lags behind several other nations, including Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand who already have guidelines in place.

Dr. Goodman would not go into any detail as to why the country has been so slow off the mark but told this news organization that in part it has been due to a lack of specific funding. In addition, he said, “adult psychiatry abdicated responsibility for ADHD in adults.”

The American Psychiatric Association (APA) would not comment, although a spokesperson said two of its members are working with APSARD on the guidelines.

Estimates show that there are 10-11 million American adults (4.4%) with ADHD, making it the second most common psychiatric disorder in adults.

Surveys show that mental health professionals, including psychiatrists, report a lack of familiarity with ADHD in adults, said Margaret Sibley, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle and chair of the APSARD guidelines diagnostic and screening committee.

Many don’t consider an ADHD diagnosis in adults “because they were always trained to conceptualize it as something that’s relevant only in childhood,” Dr. Sibley told this new organization. However, research shows that people with ADHD do not outgrow the disorder.

“ADHD itself is still present and has unique problems associated with it in adults,” Dr. Sibley said.
 

Filling the Leadership Gap

Laurie Kulikosky, CEO of the advocacy group CHADD, said that the organization views the development of guidelines “as a huge step forward in the ability for more people to understand ADHD, particularly on the adult side.”

Oren Mason, MD, a primary care physician who specializes in ADHD at his Grand Rapids, Michigan-based practice, said “there hasn’t been a single specialty that has taken lead responsibility in adult ADHD,” which has contributed to the lag in guideline development.

In addition, Dr. Mason said, “trying to come up with adult guidelines even 5 or 10 years ago wouldn’t have yielded nearly as robust a set of guidelines because it’s taken awhile to have the evidence base to be able to make a few pronouncements really confidently.”

Not only has the evidence base grown but so has telehealth, especially during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. That led to concerns that ADHD was not rigorously evaluated and that stimulants were prescribed too easily, said Dr. Goodman.

Several telehealth providers came under federal scrutiny, with the DEA accusing Cerebral’s pharmacy of dispensing stimulants for nonmedical reasons. The agency said that some 72,000 prescriptions for controlled substances, mostly stimulants, were written between 2020 and 2022.

APSARD felt it was time to act, said Dr. Goodman.

“We could not allow entrepreneurs who felt there was a business opportunity here to, under the auspices of advocating for mental health, increase the distribution of potentially addictive medications in the community,” he said
 

 

 

Ensuring Psychiatrist Buy-In

Development of the APSARD guidelines is led by Thomas Spencer, MD, a retired associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, and Frances Rudnick Levin, MD, the Kennedy-Leavy Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University, both of whom have decades of experience and clinical work in adults with ADHD.

Dr. Goodman is joined on the executive committee by Lenard Adler, MD (NYU Grossman School of Medicine), and Stephen Faraone, PhD (SUNY Upstate Medical University), along with 30 others who have expertise in psychiatry, psychology, primary care, and other health professions.

To participate in the development of the guidelines, experts had to agree to disengage from any potential conflicts and devote themselves — unpaid — to the process, said Dr. Goodman. The goal is to head off any charges of conflicts or biases, he said.

Three subcommittees — diagnosis and assessment, medical treatment, and nonmedical treatment — will review the literature, grade the evidence base, and use the Delphi consensus method to write the draft guidelines.

The draft will go out to the public and to medical specialties for comment, which will be considered for inclusion in the final publication, said Dr. Goodman.

The guidelines panel has been working closely with the APA and following the APA guideline development process in an effort to get buy-in from psychiatrists, he said.
 

Critical Educational Tool

“Doctors are often surprised to hear that there are no guidelines for adult ADHD in the US,” said Ann Childress, MD, APSARD president, when the group announced its effort in 2023. “Whether diagnosis and treatment are provided in office or online, the standard of care should be the same throughout the country,” she said.

Guidelines will “reduce mythology and error or at least when we run into mythology and error we can say no, there’s a giant consensus with hundreds of experts that disagree with that and so if you want to counter that you better bring some heavy machinery, you can’t just throw out an opinion and leave it unsupported,” said Dr. Mason.

Dr. Sibley said that, although there are no good data, anecdotally it appears many clinicians rely on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) when treating adults with ADHD.

The DSM “tells people what they should do but it doesn’t exactly tell them what’s the best way to do it,” she said, adding that often physicians follow what they learned from whoever they were trained by.

“Some people have been trained by people who are well versed in best practices and so they might be doing things that we would say have a research support to them, and other people might be doing things based on people who developed their own opinions about the best way to diagnose ADHD based on lived experience which may or may not be best practices,” Dr. Sibley said.

Her subcommittee aims to offer guidance on screening “that will be helpful in primary care, in terms of what are the most efficient ways to do it” and to help with accuracy, she said. Currently, there are likely some clinicians who are making too liberal a diagnosis and others who are making too conservative a diagnosis, she said.

With so many clinicians — especially in primary care — having a lack of experience, the guidelines could increase “the ability for more different kinds of providers to help,” said Dr. Kulikosky.

Guidelines should also provide a template for ongoing education, especially for clinicians who have never received any training in ADHD.

Dr. Goodman said it is increasingly likely that primary care physicians will be writing more prescriptions for ADHD medications than psychiatrists. “If that is the trajectory, the education of those providers seeing these patients is critical,” he said.
 

 

 

Offering Standards, Dispelling Myths

Guidelines can also help “shorten the learning curve,” said Dr. Mason, who said that he’s had to piece together evidence over the last few decades. Once published, the standards can be used in residency, for board exams, and continuing medical education, he said.

Not only do they offer a “kind of a shortcut to what we all know and agree on,” they also specify where the edges of knowledge are, he said.

Guidelines can also dissuade clinicians from practices that have no evidence to support them, such as “medication holidays,” said Dr. Mason. That has been employed to give children, especially, a break from side effects, but studies have shown that it actually increases side effects, he said.

Dr. Goodman and Dr. Sibley expect the guidelines to help with the challenge of diagnosis. Approximately 38% of adults with ADHD have a mood disorder and 48% have anxiety, said Dr. Goodman. Many others have coexisting posttraumatic stress disorder, substance use disorders, or medical illnesses that compound cognitive problems.

If an individual has several psychiatric conditions, “the question is how do you diagnostically prioritize which you treat first, second, and third, with the goal of treating one without making the others worse,” said Dr. Goodman.

“ADHD takes more detective work than other disorders,” said Dr. Sibley, adding that without an objective diagnostic and with overlaps with other comorbid disorders, “there are very complex issues that all of us wrestle with.”

While the guidelines will not provide algorithms, they will provide information that “will help guide them in the tougher diagnostic context,” she said.

Dr. Mason agreed. “It’s a complicated disorder to diagnose and treat. It’s hard for somebody to jump into it. [The guidelines] are going to give us — here’s what you really have to know, here’s what you have to do,” he said.

And it won’t just be clinicians who look to the guidelines. Calls to National Resource Center on ADHD — which CHADD runs for the federal government — from adults wanting to know more about their own condition “have increased exponentially” in the last few years, said Dr. Kulikosky. “We know adults are seeking out information, they are seeking out diagnosis and treatment,” she said.

Dr. Goodman and Dr. Sibley reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Mason reported that he consults for Otsuka and is a speaker for Iron Shore.

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

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The first US clinical guidelines to diagnose and treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults are expected to be released this fall, providing patients, clinicians, insurers, and policymakers with a long overdue and much-needed standardized framework.

The initiative comes under the auspices of the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders (APSARD). David Goodman, MD, a member of the APSARD guidelines executive committee and assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, noted that the US lags behind several other nations, including Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand who already have guidelines in place.

Dr. Goodman would not go into any detail as to why the country has been so slow off the mark but told this news organization that in part it has been due to a lack of specific funding. In addition, he said, “adult psychiatry abdicated responsibility for ADHD in adults.”

The American Psychiatric Association (APA) would not comment, although a spokesperson said two of its members are working with APSARD on the guidelines.

Estimates show that there are 10-11 million American adults (4.4%) with ADHD, making it the second most common psychiatric disorder in adults.

Surveys show that mental health professionals, including psychiatrists, report a lack of familiarity with ADHD in adults, said Margaret Sibley, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle and chair of the APSARD guidelines diagnostic and screening committee.

Many don’t consider an ADHD diagnosis in adults “because they were always trained to conceptualize it as something that’s relevant only in childhood,” Dr. Sibley told this new organization. However, research shows that people with ADHD do not outgrow the disorder.

“ADHD itself is still present and has unique problems associated with it in adults,” Dr. Sibley said.
 

Filling the Leadership Gap

Laurie Kulikosky, CEO of the advocacy group CHADD, said that the organization views the development of guidelines “as a huge step forward in the ability for more people to understand ADHD, particularly on the adult side.”

Oren Mason, MD, a primary care physician who specializes in ADHD at his Grand Rapids, Michigan-based practice, said “there hasn’t been a single specialty that has taken lead responsibility in adult ADHD,” which has contributed to the lag in guideline development.

In addition, Dr. Mason said, “trying to come up with adult guidelines even 5 or 10 years ago wouldn’t have yielded nearly as robust a set of guidelines because it’s taken awhile to have the evidence base to be able to make a few pronouncements really confidently.”

Not only has the evidence base grown but so has telehealth, especially during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. That led to concerns that ADHD was not rigorously evaluated and that stimulants were prescribed too easily, said Dr. Goodman.

Several telehealth providers came under federal scrutiny, with the DEA accusing Cerebral’s pharmacy of dispensing stimulants for nonmedical reasons. The agency said that some 72,000 prescriptions for controlled substances, mostly stimulants, were written between 2020 and 2022.

APSARD felt it was time to act, said Dr. Goodman.

“We could not allow entrepreneurs who felt there was a business opportunity here to, under the auspices of advocating for mental health, increase the distribution of potentially addictive medications in the community,” he said
 

 

 

Ensuring Psychiatrist Buy-In

Development of the APSARD guidelines is led by Thomas Spencer, MD, a retired associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, and Frances Rudnick Levin, MD, the Kennedy-Leavy Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University, both of whom have decades of experience and clinical work in adults with ADHD.

Dr. Goodman is joined on the executive committee by Lenard Adler, MD (NYU Grossman School of Medicine), and Stephen Faraone, PhD (SUNY Upstate Medical University), along with 30 others who have expertise in psychiatry, psychology, primary care, and other health professions.

To participate in the development of the guidelines, experts had to agree to disengage from any potential conflicts and devote themselves — unpaid — to the process, said Dr. Goodman. The goal is to head off any charges of conflicts or biases, he said.

Three subcommittees — diagnosis and assessment, medical treatment, and nonmedical treatment — will review the literature, grade the evidence base, and use the Delphi consensus method to write the draft guidelines.

The draft will go out to the public and to medical specialties for comment, which will be considered for inclusion in the final publication, said Dr. Goodman.

The guidelines panel has been working closely with the APA and following the APA guideline development process in an effort to get buy-in from psychiatrists, he said.
 

Critical Educational Tool

“Doctors are often surprised to hear that there are no guidelines for adult ADHD in the US,” said Ann Childress, MD, APSARD president, when the group announced its effort in 2023. “Whether diagnosis and treatment are provided in office or online, the standard of care should be the same throughout the country,” she said.

Guidelines will “reduce mythology and error or at least when we run into mythology and error we can say no, there’s a giant consensus with hundreds of experts that disagree with that and so if you want to counter that you better bring some heavy machinery, you can’t just throw out an opinion and leave it unsupported,” said Dr. Mason.

Dr. Sibley said that, although there are no good data, anecdotally it appears many clinicians rely on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) when treating adults with ADHD.

The DSM “tells people what they should do but it doesn’t exactly tell them what’s the best way to do it,” she said, adding that often physicians follow what they learned from whoever they were trained by.

“Some people have been trained by people who are well versed in best practices and so they might be doing things that we would say have a research support to them, and other people might be doing things based on people who developed their own opinions about the best way to diagnose ADHD based on lived experience which may or may not be best practices,” Dr. Sibley said.

Her subcommittee aims to offer guidance on screening “that will be helpful in primary care, in terms of what are the most efficient ways to do it” and to help with accuracy, she said. Currently, there are likely some clinicians who are making too liberal a diagnosis and others who are making too conservative a diagnosis, she said.

With so many clinicians — especially in primary care — having a lack of experience, the guidelines could increase “the ability for more different kinds of providers to help,” said Dr. Kulikosky.

Guidelines should also provide a template for ongoing education, especially for clinicians who have never received any training in ADHD.

Dr. Goodman said it is increasingly likely that primary care physicians will be writing more prescriptions for ADHD medications than psychiatrists. “If that is the trajectory, the education of those providers seeing these patients is critical,” he said.
 

 

 

Offering Standards, Dispelling Myths

Guidelines can also help “shorten the learning curve,” said Dr. Mason, who said that he’s had to piece together evidence over the last few decades. Once published, the standards can be used in residency, for board exams, and continuing medical education, he said.

Not only do they offer a “kind of a shortcut to what we all know and agree on,” they also specify where the edges of knowledge are, he said.

Guidelines can also dissuade clinicians from practices that have no evidence to support them, such as “medication holidays,” said Dr. Mason. That has been employed to give children, especially, a break from side effects, but studies have shown that it actually increases side effects, he said.

Dr. Goodman and Dr. Sibley expect the guidelines to help with the challenge of diagnosis. Approximately 38% of adults with ADHD have a mood disorder and 48% have anxiety, said Dr. Goodman. Many others have coexisting posttraumatic stress disorder, substance use disorders, or medical illnesses that compound cognitive problems.

If an individual has several psychiatric conditions, “the question is how do you diagnostically prioritize which you treat first, second, and third, with the goal of treating one without making the others worse,” said Dr. Goodman.

“ADHD takes more detective work than other disorders,” said Dr. Sibley, adding that without an objective diagnostic and with overlaps with other comorbid disorders, “there are very complex issues that all of us wrestle with.”

While the guidelines will not provide algorithms, they will provide information that “will help guide them in the tougher diagnostic context,” she said.

Dr. Mason agreed. “It’s a complicated disorder to diagnose and treat. It’s hard for somebody to jump into it. [The guidelines] are going to give us — here’s what you really have to know, here’s what you have to do,” he said.

And it won’t just be clinicians who look to the guidelines. Calls to National Resource Center on ADHD — which CHADD runs for the federal government — from adults wanting to know more about their own condition “have increased exponentially” in the last few years, said Dr. Kulikosky. “We know adults are seeking out information, they are seeking out diagnosis and treatment,” she said.

Dr. Goodman and Dr. Sibley reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Mason reported that he consults for Otsuka and is a speaker for Iron Shore.

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

The first US clinical guidelines to diagnose and treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults are expected to be released this fall, providing patients, clinicians, insurers, and policymakers with a long overdue and much-needed standardized framework.

The initiative comes under the auspices of the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders (APSARD). David Goodman, MD, a member of the APSARD guidelines executive committee and assistant professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, noted that the US lags behind several other nations, including Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand who already have guidelines in place.

Dr. Goodman would not go into any detail as to why the country has been so slow off the mark but told this news organization that in part it has been due to a lack of specific funding. In addition, he said, “adult psychiatry abdicated responsibility for ADHD in adults.”

The American Psychiatric Association (APA) would not comment, although a spokesperson said two of its members are working with APSARD on the guidelines.

Estimates show that there are 10-11 million American adults (4.4%) with ADHD, making it the second most common psychiatric disorder in adults.

Surveys show that mental health professionals, including psychiatrists, report a lack of familiarity with ADHD in adults, said Margaret Sibley, PhD, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle and chair of the APSARD guidelines diagnostic and screening committee.

Many don’t consider an ADHD diagnosis in adults “because they were always trained to conceptualize it as something that’s relevant only in childhood,” Dr. Sibley told this new organization. However, research shows that people with ADHD do not outgrow the disorder.

“ADHD itself is still present and has unique problems associated with it in adults,” Dr. Sibley said.
 

Filling the Leadership Gap

Laurie Kulikosky, CEO of the advocacy group CHADD, said that the organization views the development of guidelines “as a huge step forward in the ability for more people to understand ADHD, particularly on the adult side.”

Oren Mason, MD, a primary care physician who specializes in ADHD at his Grand Rapids, Michigan-based practice, said “there hasn’t been a single specialty that has taken lead responsibility in adult ADHD,” which has contributed to the lag in guideline development.

In addition, Dr. Mason said, “trying to come up with adult guidelines even 5 or 10 years ago wouldn’t have yielded nearly as robust a set of guidelines because it’s taken awhile to have the evidence base to be able to make a few pronouncements really confidently.”

Not only has the evidence base grown but so has telehealth, especially during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. That led to concerns that ADHD was not rigorously evaluated and that stimulants were prescribed too easily, said Dr. Goodman.

Several telehealth providers came under federal scrutiny, with the DEA accusing Cerebral’s pharmacy of dispensing stimulants for nonmedical reasons. The agency said that some 72,000 prescriptions for controlled substances, mostly stimulants, were written between 2020 and 2022.

APSARD felt it was time to act, said Dr. Goodman.

“We could not allow entrepreneurs who felt there was a business opportunity here to, under the auspices of advocating for mental health, increase the distribution of potentially addictive medications in the community,” he said
 

 

 

Ensuring Psychiatrist Buy-In

Development of the APSARD guidelines is led by Thomas Spencer, MD, a retired associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, and Frances Rudnick Levin, MD, the Kennedy-Leavy Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University, both of whom have decades of experience and clinical work in adults with ADHD.

Dr. Goodman is joined on the executive committee by Lenard Adler, MD (NYU Grossman School of Medicine), and Stephen Faraone, PhD (SUNY Upstate Medical University), along with 30 others who have expertise in psychiatry, psychology, primary care, and other health professions.

To participate in the development of the guidelines, experts had to agree to disengage from any potential conflicts and devote themselves — unpaid — to the process, said Dr. Goodman. The goal is to head off any charges of conflicts or biases, he said.

Three subcommittees — diagnosis and assessment, medical treatment, and nonmedical treatment — will review the literature, grade the evidence base, and use the Delphi consensus method to write the draft guidelines.

The draft will go out to the public and to medical specialties for comment, which will be considered for inclusion in the final publication, said Dr. Goodman.

The guidelines panel has been working closely with the APA and following the APA guideline development process in an effort to get buy-in from psychiatrists, he said.
 

Critical Educational Tool

“Doctors are often surprised to hear that there are no guidelines for adult ADHD in the US,” said Ann Childress, MD, APSARD president, when the group announced its effort in 2023. “Whether diagnosis and treatment are provided in office or online, the standard of care should be the same throughout the country,” she said.

Guidelines will “reduce mythology and error or at least when we run into mythology and error we can say no, there’s a giant consensus with hundreds of experts that disagree with that and so if you want to counter that you better bring some heavy machinery, you can’t just throw out an opinion and leave it unsupported,” said Dr. Mason.

Dr. Sibley said that, although there are no good data, anecdotally it appears many clinicians rely on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) when treating adults with ADHD.

The DSM “tells people what they should do but it doesn’t exactly tell them what’s the best way to do it,” she said, adding that often physicians follow what they learned from whoever they were trained by.

“Some people have been trained by people who are well versed in best practices and so they might be doing things that we would say have a research support to them, and other people might be doing things based on people who developed their own opinions about the best way to diagnose ADHD based on lived experience which may or may not be best practices,” Dr. Sibley said.

Her subcommittee aims to offer guidance on screening “that will be helpful in primary care, in terms of what are the most efficient ways to do it” and to help with accuracy, she said. Currently, there are likely some clinicians who are making too liberal a diagnosis and others who are making too conservative a diagnosis, she said.

With so many clinicians — especially in primary care — having a lack of experience, the guidelines could increase “the ability for more different kinds of providers to help,” said Dr. Kulikosky.

Guidelines should also provide a template for ongoing education, especially for clinicians who have never received any training in ADHD.

Dr. Goodman said it is increasingly likely that primary care physicians will be writing more prescriptions for ADHD medications than psychiatrists. “If that is the trajectory, the education of those providers seeing these patients is critical,” he said.
 

 

 

Offering Standards, Dispelling Myths

Guidelines can also help “shorten the learning curve,” said Dr. Mason, who said that he’s had to piece together evidence over the last few decades. Once published, the standards can be used in residency, for board exams, and continuing medical education, he said.

Not only do they offer a “kind of a shortcut to what we all know and agree on,” they also specify where the edges of knowledge are, he said.

Guidelines can also dissuade clinicians from practices that have no evidence to support them, such as “medication holidays,” said Dr. Mason. That has been employed to give children, especially, a break from side effects, but studies have shown that it actually increases side effects, he said.

Dr. Goodman and Dr. Sibley expect the guidelines to help with the challenge of diagnosis. Approximately 38% of adults with ADHD have a mood disorder and 48% have anxiety, said Dr. Goodman. Many others have coexisting posttraumatic stress disorder, substance use disorders, or medical illnesses that compound cognitive problems.

If an individual has several psychiatric conditions, “the question is how do you diagnostically prioritize which you treat first, second, and third, with the goal of treating one without making the others worse,” said Dr. Goodman.

“ADHD takes more detective work than other disorders,” said Dr. Sibley, adding that without an objective diagnostic and with overlaps with other comorbid disorders, “there are very complex issues that all of us wrestle with.”

While the guidelines will not provide algorithms, they will provide information that “will help guide them in the tougher diagnostic context,” she said.

Dr. Mason agreed. “It’s a complicated disorder to diagnose and treat. It’s hard for somebody to jump into it. [The guidelines] are going to give us — here’s what you really have to know, here’s what you have to do,” he said.

And it won’t just be clinicians who look to the guidelines. Calls to National Resource Center on ADHD — which CHADD runs for the federal government — from adults wanting to know more about their own condition “have increased exponentially” in the last few years, said Dr. Kulikosky. “We know adults are seeking out information, they are seeking out diagnosis and treatment,” she said.

Dr. Goodman and Dr. Sibley reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Mason reported that he consults for Otsuka and is a speaker for Iron Shore.

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

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Delirium Linked to a Threefold Increased Risk for Dementia

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Changed
Thu, 04/11/2024 - 13:47

Delirium is tied to a significantly increased risk for dementia and death in older adults, with men at particular risk, new research showed.

Incident dementia risk was more than three times higher in those who experienced just one episode of delirium, with each additional episode linked to a further 20% increase in dementia risk. The association was strongest in men.

Patients with delirium also had a 39% higher mortality risk than those with no history of delirium.

“We have known for a long time that delirium is dangerous, and this provides evidence that it’s even more dangerous than perhaps we had appreciated,” said study investigator Emily H. Gordon, PhD, MBBS, a geriatrician and senior lecturer at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.

“But we also know delirium is preventable. There are no excuses anymore; we really need to work together to improve the hospital system, to implement what are known to be effective interventions,” she added.

The findings were published online in The BMJ.
 

Close Matching

Prior studies that suggested an association between delirium and dementia were relatively small with short follow-up and varied in their adjustment for confounders. They also didn’t account for the competing risk for death, researchers noted.

Investigators used a linked New South Wales (NSW) statewide dataset that includes records of care episodes from all NSW hospitals as well as personal, administrative, clinical, and death information.

The study included an eligible sample of 626,467 older adults without dementia at baseline with at least one hospital admission between 2009 and 2014. For these patients, researchers calculated a hospital frailty risk score and collected other information including primary diagnosis and mean length of hospital stay and stay in the intensive care unit. From diagnostic codes, they categorized patients into no delirium and delirium groups and determined the number of delirium episodes.

Investigators matched patients in the delirium group to patients with no delirium according to characteristics with potential to confound the association between delirium and risk for dementia, including age, gender, frailty, reason for hospitalization, and length of stay in hospital and intensive care.

The matched study sample included 55,211 (mean age, 83 years) each in the delirium and the no delirium groups. Despite matching, the length of hospital stay for the index episode was longer for the delirium group than the no delirium group (mean, 9 days vs 6 days).

The primary outcomes were death and incident dementia, determined via diagnostic codes. During a follow-up of 5.25 years, 58% of patients died, and 17% had a new dementia diagnosis.

Among patients with at least one episode of delirium, the rate of incident dementia was 3.4 times higher than in those without delirium. After accounting for the competing risk for death, incident dementia risk remained three times higher among the delirium group (hazard ratio [HR], 3.00; 95% CI, 2.91-3.10).

This association was stronger for men than women (HR, 3.17 and 2.88, respectively; P = .004).
 

Sex Differences

The study is thought to be the first to identify a difference between sexes in dementia risk and delirium, Dr. Gordon said. It’s possible delirium in men is more severe in intensity or lasts longer than in women, or the male brain is, for whatever reason, more vulnerable to the effects of delirium, said Dr. Gordon. But she stressed these are only theories.

Investigators also found a mortality rate 1.4 times higher in the delirium group versus those without delirium, equating to a 39% increased risk for death (HR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.37-1.41). The risk was similar for men and women (interaction P = .62).

When researchers categorized delirium by number of episodes, they found each additional episode was associated with a 10% increased risk for death (HR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.09-1.12).

In addition to its large size, long follow-up, and close matching, what sets this new study apart from previous research is it accounted for the competing risk for death, said Dr. Gordon.

“This is really important because you’re not going to get dementia if you die, and in this population, the rate of death is incredibly high,” she said. “If we just assume people who died didn’t get dementia, then that screws the results.”
 

Causal Link?

For those who experienced at least one episode of delirium within the first 12 months, each additional episode of delirium was associated with a 20% increased risk for dementia (HR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.18-1.23).

That dose-response association suggests a causal link between the two, Dr. Gordon said.

“The number one way to prove causality is to do a randomized controlled trial,” which isn’t feasible with delirium, she said. “By demonstrating a dose-response relationship suggests that it could be a causal pathway.”

Exact mechanisms linking delirium with dementia are unclear. Delirium might uncover preexisting or preclinical dementia, or it might cause dementia by accelerating underlying neuropathologic processes or de novo mechanisms, the authors noted.

Study limitations included the potential for residual confounding from unmeasured variables in the matching criteria. Delirium and dementia diagnoses depended on clinical coding of medical information recorded in the administrative dataset, and under-coding of dementia during hospitalization is well-recognized.

Although the study controlled for length of stay in hospital and in intensive care, this may not have fully captured differences in severity of medical conditions. Data about the duration and severity of delirium episodes were also unavailable, which limited the dose-response analysis.

Commenting on the findings, Christopher Weber, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association as director of Global Science Initiatives, said the results are consistent with other research on the association between delirium and incidents of dementia.

The increased risk for dementia following delirium in males is “an interesting finding,” said Dr. Weber. “This suggests a need for more research to understand the impact of sex differences in delirium, as well as research to see if preventing incidents of delirium could ultimately reduce rates of dementia.”

The study received support from the National Health and Medical Research Council: Partnership Centre for Health System Sustainability. Dr. Gordon and Dr. Weber reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Delirium is tied to a significantly increased risk for dementia and death in older adults, with men at particular risk, new research showed.

Incident dementia risk was more than three times higher in those who experienced just one episode of delirium, with each additional episode linked to a further 20% increase in dementia risk. The association was strongest in men.

Patients with delirium also had a 39% higher mortality risk than those with no history of delirium.

“We have known for a long time that delirium is dangerous, and this provides evidence that it’s even more dangerous than perhaps we had appreciated,” said study investigator Emily H. Gordon, PhD, MBBS, a geriatrician and senior lecturer at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.

“But we also know delirium is preventable. There are no excuses anymore; we really need to work together to improve the hospital system, to implement what are known to be effective interventions,” she added.

The findings were published online in The BMJ.
 

Close Matching

Prior studies that suggested an association between delirium and dementia were relatively small with short follow-up and varied in their adjustment for confounders. They also didn’t account for the competing risk for death, researchers noted.

Investigators used a linked New South Wales (NSW) statewide dataset that includes records of care episodes from all NSW hospitals as well as personal, administrative, clinical, and death information.

The study included an eligible sample of 626,467 older adults without dementia at baseline with at least one hospital admission between 2009 and 2014. For these patients, researchers calculated a hospital frailty risk score and collected other information including primary diagnosis and mean length of hospital stay and stay in the intensive care unit. From diagnostic codes, they categorized patients into no delirium and delirium groups and determined the number of delirium episodes.

Investigators matched patients in the delirium group to patients with no delirium according to characteristics with potential to confound the association between delirium and risk for dementia, including age, gender, frailty, reason for hospitalization, and length of stay in hospital and intensive care.

The matched study sample included 55,211 (mean age, 83 years) each in the delirium and the no delirium groups. Despite matching, the length of hospital stay for the index episode was longer for the delirium group than the no delirium group (mean, 9 days vs 6 days).

The primary outcomes were death and incident dementia, determined via diagnostic codes. During a follow-up of 5.25 years, 58% of patients died, and 17% had a new dementia diagnosis.

Among patients with at least one episode of delirium, the rate of incident dementia was 3.4 times higher than in those without delirium. After accounting for the competing risk for death, incident dementia risk remained three times higher among the delirium group (hazard ratio [HR], 3.00; 95% CI, 2.91-3.10).

This association was stronger for men than women (HR, 3.17 and 2.88, respectively; P = .004).
 

Sex Differences

The study is thought to be the first to identify a difference between sexes in dementia risk and delirium, Dr. Gordon said. It’s possible delirium in men is more severe in intensity or lasts longer than in women, or the male brain is, for whatever reason, more vulnerable to the effects of delirium, said Dr. Gordon. But she stressed these are only theories.

Investigators also found a mortality rate 1.4 times higher in the delirium group versus those without delirium, equating to a 39% increased risk for death (HR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.37-1.41). The risk was similar for men and women (interaction P = .62).

When researchers categorized delirium by number of episodes, they found each additional episode was associated with a 10% increased risk for death (HR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.09-1.12).

In addition to its large size, long follow-up, and close matching, what sets this new study apart from previous research is it accounted for the competing risk for death, said Dr. Gordon.

“This is really important because you’re not going to get dementia if you die, and in this population, the rate of death is incredibly high,” she said. “If we just assume people who died didn’t get dementia, then that screws the results.”
 

Causal Link?

For those who experienced at least one episode of delirium within the first 12 months, each additional episode of delirium was associated with a 20% increased risk for dementia (HR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.18-1.23).

That dose-response association suggests a causal link between the two, Dr. Gordon said.

“The number one way to prove causality is to do a randomized controlled trial,” which isn’t feasible with delirium, she said. “By demonstrating a dose-response relationship suggests that it could be a causal pathway.”

Exact mechanisms linking delirium with dementia are unclear. Delirium might uncover preexisting or preclinical dementia, or it might cause dementia by accelerating underlying neuropathologic processes or de novo mechanisms, the authors noted.

Study limitations included the potential for residual confounding from unmeasured variables in the matching criteria. Delirium and dementia diagnoses depended on clinical coding of medical information recorded in the administrative dataset, and under-coding of dementia during hospitalization is well-recognized.

Although the study controlled for length of stay in hospital and in intensive care, this may not have fully captured differences in severity of medical conditions. Data about the duration and severity of delirium episodes were also unavailable, which limited the dose-response analysis.

Commenting on the findings, Christopher Weber, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association as director of Global Science Initiatives, said the results are consistent with other research on the association between delirium and incidents of dementia.

The increased risk for dementia following delirium in males is “an interesting finding,” said Dr. Weber. “This suggests a need for more research to understand the impact of sex differences in delirium, as well as research to see if preventing incidents of delirium could ultimately reduce rates of dementia.”

The study received support from the National Health and Medical Research Council: Partnership Centre for Health System Sustainability. Dr. Gordon and Dr. Weber reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Delirium is tied to a significantly increased risk for dementia and death in older adults, with men at particular risk, new research showed.

Incident dementia risk was more than three times higher in those who experienced just one episode of delirium, with each additional episode linked to a further 20% increase in dementia risk. The association was strongest in men.

Patients with delirium also had a 39% higher mortality risk than those with no history of delirium.

“We have known for a long time that delirium is dangerous, and this provides evidence that it’s even more dangerous than perhaps we had appreciated,” said study investigator Emily H. Gordon, PhD, MBBS, a geriatrician and senior lecturer at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.

“But we also know delirium is preventable. There are no excuses anymore; we really need to work together to improve the hospital system, to implement what are known to be effective interventions,” she added.

The findings were published online in The BMJ.
 

Close Matching

Prior studies that suggested an association between delirium and dementia were relatively small with short follow-up and varied in their adjustment for confounders. They also didn’t account for the competing risk for death, researchers noted.

Investigators used a linked New South Wales (NSW) statewide dataset that includes records of care episodes from all NSW hospitals as well as personal, administrative, clinical, and death information.

The study included an eligible sample of 626,467 older adults without dementia at baseline with at least one hospital admission between 2009 and 2014. For these patients, researchers calculated a hospital frailty risk score and collected other information including primary diagnosis and mean length of hospital stay and stay in the intensive care unit. From diagnostic codes, they categorized patients into no delirium and delirium groups and determined the number of delirium episodes.

Investigators matched patients in the delirium group to patients with no delirium according to characteristics with potential to confound the association between delirium and risk for dementia, including age, gender, frailty, reason for hospitalization, and length of stay in hospital and intensive care.

The matched study sample included 55,211 (mean age, 83 years) each in the delirium and the no delirium groups. Despite matching, the length of hospital stay for the index episode was longer for the delirium group than the no delirium group (mean, 9 days vs 6 days).

The primary outcomes were death and incident dementia, determined via diagnostic codes. During a follow-up of 5.25 years, 58% of patients died, and 17% had a new dementia diagnosis.

Among patients with at least one episode of delirium, the rate of incident dementia was 3.4 times higher than in those without delirium. After accounting for the competing risk for death, incident dementia risk remained three times higher among the delirium group (hazard ratio [HR], 3.00; 95% CI, 2.91-3.10).

This association was stronger for men than women (HR, 3.17 and 2.88, respectively; P = .004).
 

Sex Differences

The study is thought to be the first to identify a difference between sexes in dementia risk and delirium, Dr. Gordon said. It’s possible delirium in men is more severe in intensity or lasts longer than in women, or the male brain is, for whatever reason, more vulnerable to the effects of delirium, said Dr. Gordon. But she stressed these are only theories.

Investigators also found a mortality rate 1.4 times higher in the delirium group versus those without delirium, equating to a 39% increased risk for death (HR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.37-1.41). The risk was similar for men and women (interaction P = .62).

When researchers categorized delirium by number of episodes, they found each additional episode was associated with a 10% increased risk for death (HR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.09-1.12).

In addition to its large size, long follow-up, and close matching, what sets this new study apart from previous research is it accounted for the competing risk for death, said Dr. Gordon.

“This is really important because you’re not going to get dementia if you die, and in this population, the rate of death is incredibly high,” she said. “If we just assume people who died didn’t get dementia, then that screws the results.”
 

Causal Link?

For those who experienced at least one episode of delirium within the first 12 months, each additional episode of delirium was associated with a 20% increased risk for dementia (HR, 1.20; 95% CI, 1.18-1.23).

That dose-response association suggests a causal link between the two, Dr. Gordon said.

“The number one way to prove causality is to do a randomized controlled trial,” which isn’t feasible with delirium, she said. “By demonstrating a dose-response relationship suggests that it could be a causal pathway.”

Exact mechanisms linking delirium with dementia are unclear. Delirium might uncover preexisting or preclinical dementia, or it might cause dementia by accelerating underlying neuropathologic processes or de novo mechanisms, the authors noted.

Study limitations included the potential for residual confounding from unmeasured variables in the matching criteria. Delirium and dementia diagnoses depended on clinical coding of medical information recorded in the administrative dataset, and under-coding of dementia during hospitalization is well-recognized.

Although the study controlled for length of stay in hospital and in intensive care, this may not have fully captured differences in severity of medical conditions. Data about the duration and severity of delirium episodes were also unavailable, which limited the dose-response analysis.

Commenting on the findings, Christopher Weber, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association as director of Global Science Initiatives, said the results are consistent with other research on the association between delirium and incidents of dementia.

The increased risk for dementia following delirium in males is “an interesting finding,” said Dr. Weber. “This suggests a need for more research to understand the impact of sex differences in delirium, as well as research to see if preventing incidents of delirium could ultimately reduce rates of dementia.”

The study received support from the National Health and Medical Research Council: Partnership Centre for Health System Sustainability. Dr. Gordon and Dr. Weber reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Chronic Pain Linked to Accelerated Brain Aging

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Changed
Wed, 04/17/2024 - 11:43

The consequences of chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) may extend well beyond physical discomfort, potentially leading to faster aging of the brain, new research showed.

Using structural MRI data from more than 9000 adults with knee osteoarthritis (KOA) from the UK Biobank, investigators developed a brain age model to compare an individual’s brain age with their chronological age. Those with KOA showed a much faster rate of brain aging than healthy individuals.

The acceleration in brain aging was largely driven by the hippocampus and predicted memory decline and incident dementia during follow-up. Researchers identified a gene highly expressed in glial cells as a possible genetic factor for accelerated brain aging.

“We demonstrate the accelerated brain aging and cognitive decline in chronic musculoskeletal pain, in particular knee osteoarthritis, and provide a neural marker for early detection and intervention,” said co-first author Jiao Liu, PhD candidate, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing.

“We are interested to know how to slow down the aging brain in chronic musculoskeletal pain patients. Proper exercise and lifestyle may reduce the risk,” Dr. Liu said.

The study was published online in Nature Mental Health.
 

Common Condition

CMP affects more than 40% of the world’s population and has been shown to have a harmful impact on cognitive function, although the exact mechanisms remain unclear. Prior research suggests that inflammatory markers associated with brain aging are higher in patients with CMP, suggesting a link between brain aging and CMP.

To investigate further, researchers explored patterns of brain aging in healthy cohorts and cohorts with four common types of CMP — chronic knee pain, chronic back pain, chronic neck pain, and chronic hip pain.

Using their brain age model, investigators observed significantly increased brain aging, or “predicted age difference,” only in individuals with KOA (P < .001). The observation was validated in an independent dataset (P = .020), suggesting a pattern of brain aging acceleration specific to KOA.

This acceleration was primarily driven by key brain regions involved in cognitive processing, including hippocampus and orbitofrontal cortex, and was correlated with longitudinal memory decline and dementia risk.

These data also suggest that the SLC39A8 gene, which is highly expressed in glial cells, might be a key genetic factor underpinning this acceleration.

“We not only revealed the specificity of accelerated brain aging in knee osteoarthritis patients, but importantly, we also provided longitudinal evidence suggesting the ability of our brain aging marker to predict future memory decline and increased dementia risk,” corresponding author Yiheng Tu, PhD, also with Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, said in a news release.
 

A Future Treatment Target?

Commenting on this research, Shaheen Lakhan, MD, PhD, a neurologist and researcher based in Miami, noted that in this study, people with KOA showed signs of “faster brain aging on scans. Think of it as your brain wearing a disguise, appearing older than its actual years,” Dr. Lakhan said.

“Inflammation, a key player in osteoarthritis, might be playing a double agent, wreaking havoc not just on your joints but potentially on your memory too. Researchers even identified a specific gene linked to both knee pain and faster brain aging, hinting at a potential target for future treatments,” he added.

“Importantly, the increased risk of cognitive decline and dementia associated with chronic pain is likely one of many factors, and probably not a very high one on its own,” Dr. Lakhan noted.

The “good news,” he said, is that there are many “well-established ways to keep your brain sharp. Regular exercise, a healthy diet, and staying mentally stimulated are all proven strategies to reduce dementia risk. Think of chronic pain management as another tool you can add to your brain health toolbox.”

Support for the study was provided by the STI-2030 Major Project, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Scientific Foundation of the Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the Young Elite Scientist Sponsorship Program by the China Association for Science and Technology. Dr. Liu and Dr. Lakhan had no relevant disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The consequences of chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) may extend well beyond physical discomfort, potentially leading to faster aging of the brain, new research showed.

Using structural MRI data from more than 9000 adults with knee osteoarthritis (KOA) from the UK Biobank, investigators developed a brain age model to compare an individual’s brain age with their chronological age. Those with KOA showed a much faster rate of brain aging than healthy individuals.

The acceleration in brain aging was largely driven by the hippocampus and predicted memory decline and incident dementia during follow-up. Researchers identified a gene highly expressed in glial cells as a possible genetic factor for accelerated brain aging.

“We demonstrate the accelerated brain aging and cognitive decline in chronic musculoskeletal pain, in particular knee osteoarthritis, and provide a neural marker for early detection and intervention,” said co-first author Jiao Liu, PhD candidate, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing.

“We are interested to know how to slow down the aging brain in chronic musculoskeletal pain patients. Proper exercise and lifestyle may reduce the risk,” Dr. Liu said.

The study was published online in Nature Mental Health.
 

Common Condition

CMP affects more than 40% of the world’s population and has been shown to have a harmful impact on cognitive function, although the exact mechanisms remain unclear. Prior research suggests that inflammatory markers associated with brain aging are higher in patients with CMP, suggesting a link between brain aging and CMP.

To investigate further, researchers explored patterns of brain aging in healthy cohorts and cohorts with four common types of CMP — chronic knee pain, chronic back pain, chronic neck pain, and chronic hip pain.

Using their brain age model, investigators observed significantly increased brain aging, or “predicted age difference,” only in individuals with KOA (P < .001). The observation was validated in an independent dataset (P = .020), suggesting a pattern of brain aging acceleration specific to KOA.

This acceleration was primarily driven by key brain regions involved in cognitive processing, including hippocampus and orbitofrontal cortex, and was correlated with longitudinal memory decline and dementia risk.

These data also suggest that the SLC39A8 gene, which is highly expressed in glial cells, might be a key genetic factor underpinning this acceleration.

“We not only revealed the specificity of accelerated brain aging in knee osteoarthritis patients, but importantly, we also provided longitudinal evidence suggesting the ability of our brain aging marker to predict future memory decline and increased dementia risk,” corresponding author Yiheng Tu, PhD, also with Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, said in a news release.
 

A Future Treatment Target?

Commenting on this research, Shaheen Lakhan, MD, PhD, a neurologist and researcher based in Miami, noted that in this study, people with KOA showed signs of “faster brain aging on scans. Think of it as your brain wearing a disguise, appearing older than its actual years,” Dr. Lakhan said.

“Inflammation, a key player in osteoarthritis, might be playing a double agent, wreaking havoc not just on your joints but potentially on your memory too. Researchers even identified a specific gene linked to both knee pain and faster brain aging, hinting at a potential target for future treatments,” he added.

“Importantly, the increased risk of cognitive decline and dementia associated with chronic pain is likely one of many factors, and probably not a very high one on its own,” Dr. Lakhan noted.

The “good news,” he said, is that there are many “well-established ways to keep your brain sharp. Regular exercise, a healthy diet, and staying mentally stimulated are all proven strategies to reduce dementia risk. Think of chronic pain management as another tool you can add to your brain health toolbox.”

Support for the study was provided by the STI-2030 Major Project, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Scientific Foundation of the Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the Young Elite Scientist Sponsorship Program by the China Association for Science and Technology. Dr. Liu and Dr. Lakhan had no relevant disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The consequences of chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) may extend well beyond physical discomfort, potentially leading to faster aging of the brain, new research showed.

Using structural MRI data from more than 9000 adults with knee osteoarthritis (KOA) from the UK Biobank, investigators developed a brain age model to compare an individual’s brain age with their chronological age. Those with KOA showed a much faster rate of brain aging than healthy individuals.

The acceleration in brain aging was largely driven by the hippocampus and predicted memory decline and incident dementia during follow-up. Researchers identified a gene highly expressed in glial cells as a possible genetic factor for accelerated brain aging.

“We demonstrate the accelerated brain aging and cognitive decline in chronic musculoskeletal pain, in particular knee osteoarthritis, and provide a neural marker for early detection and intervention,” said co-first author Jiao Liu, PhD candidate, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing.

“We are interested to know how to slow down the aging brain in chronic musculoskeletal pain patients. Proper exercise and lifestyle may reduce the risk,” Dr. Liu said.

The study was published online in Nature Mental Health.
 

Common Condition

CMP affects more than 40% of the world’s population and has been shown to have a harmful impact on cognitive function, although the exact mechanisms remain unclear. Prior research suggests that inflammatory markers associated with brain aging are higher in patients with CMP, suggesting a link between brain aging and CMP.

To investigate further, researchers explored patterns of brain aging in healthy cohorts and cohorts with four common types of CMP — chronic knee pain, chronic back pain, chronic neck pain, and chronic hip pain.

Using their brain age model, investigators observed significantly increased brain aging, or “predicted age difference,” only in individuals with KOA (P < .001). The observation was validated in an independent dataset (P = .020), suggesting a pattern of brain aging acceleration specific to KOA.

This acceleration was primarily driven by key brain regions involved in cognitive processing, including hippocampus and orbitofrontal cortex, and was correlated with longitudinal memory decline and dementia risk.

These data also suggest that the SLC39A8 gene, which is highly expressed in glial cells, might be a key genetic factor underpinning this acceleration.

“We not only revealed the specificity of accelerated brain aging in knee osteoarthritis patients, but importantly, we also provided longitudinal evidence suggesting the ability of our brain aging marker to predict future memory decline and increased dementia risk,” corresponding author Yiheng Tu, PhD, also with Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, said in a news release.
 

A Future Treatment Target?

Commenting on this research, Shaheen Lakhan, MD, PhD, a neurologist and researcher based in Miami, noted that in this study, people with KOA showed signs of “faster brain aging on scans. Think of it as your brain wearing a disguise, appearing older than its actual years,” Dr. Lakhan said.

“Inflammation, a key player in osteoarthritis, might be playing a double agent, wreaking havoc not just on your joints but potentially on your memory too. Researchers even identified a specific gene linked to both knee pain and faster brain aging, hinting at a potential target for future treatments,” he added.

“Importantly, the increased risk of cognitive decline and dementia associated with chronic pain is likely one of many factors, and probably not a very high one on its own,” Dr. Lakhan noted.

The “good news,” he said, is that there are many “well-established ways to keep your brain sharp. Regular exercise, a healthy diet, and staying mentally stimulated are all proven strategies to reduce dementia risk. Think of chronic pain management as another tool you can add to your brain health toolbox.”

Support for the study was provided by the STI-2030 Major Project, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Scientific Foundation of the Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the Young Elite Scientist Sponsorship Program by the China Association for Science and Technology. Dr. Liu and Dr. Lakhan had no relevant disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Prevalence of Dementia in Homeless Twice That in Housed

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Tue, 04/09/2024 - 16:39

The prevalence of dementia among homeless people is almost twice as high as that in housed populations in Ontario, Canada, according to the results of a new study.

The findings suggested that dementia occurs earlier in homeless individuals, and that these patients could benefit from proactive screening and housing interventions.

“Whether dementia caused the homelessness or homelessness caused the dementia, it’s a bidirectional relationship,” said lead author Richard G. Booth, PhD, RN, adjunct scientist at ICES (formerly Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences) and associate professor of nursing at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada.

The study was published in the April issue of The Lancet Public Health.

 

Dementia at Early Ages

The investigators used health administrative data from Ontario to compare the prevalence of dementia among homeless people with that among housed individuals in the general population and those living in low-income neighborhoods.

They included individuals aged 45 years or older on January 1, 2019, who visited hospital-based ambulatory care (such as emergency departments), were hospitalized, or visited a community health center in 2019. The researchers identified people as experiencing homelessness if they had one or more healthcare records with an indication of homelessness or unstable housing. The prevalence of dementia was ascertained as of December 31, 2019.

Included in the population-based, cross-sectional comparative analysis were 12,863 homeless people, 475,544 people in the low-income group, and 2,273,068 people in the general population group.

Dementia prevalence was 68.7 per 1000 individuals among the homeless population, 62.6 per 1000 in the low-income group, and 51.0 per 1000 in the general population group.

After adjustments for age, sex, geographical location of residence (urban vs rural), and health conditions associated with dementia, the prevalence ratio of dementia among homeless people was 1.71, compared with the low-income group, and 1.90, compared with the general population group.

Dementia also was detected in the 45- to 55-year age group among homeless people. This age is much earlier than the age at which doctors start screening their patients for cognitive decline (65 years).

“The study was not designed to define the causality but consider: If you have early-stage dementia and you are not intact enough to do basic functions of life, the likelihood of you becoming homeless is definitely increased, and vice versa. If you are homeless and suffer significant environmental and physical traumas just living on the street, you age much quicker, and you will experience geriatric symptoms such as dementia earlier in your life trajectory,” said Dr. Booth.

“The main takeaway here is that if you don’t have housing, bad things are going to happen in life.”
 

Public Health Problem

In an accompanying editorial, William J. Panenka, MD, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and colleagues cited modifiable risk factors for dementia, including lower education, traumatic brain injury, substance use, smoking, mood disorders, and social isolation, many of which are disproportionately prevalent among homeless individuals.

“Ultimately, dementia could contribute to the cycle of homelessness, whereby housing instability increases the risk for brain impairment, and brain impairment makes breaking the cycle of homelessness progressively more challenging,” they wrote.

Dr. Panenka and colleagues also pointed out that the average age of homeless people is increasing. In the United States, it is now approximately 50 years. This fact underscores “the immediacy and gravity of the public health problem. A multifaceted approach that integrates healthcare, housing, and social services is needed to better understand and alleviate the health consequences of homelessness. A concerted effort at all levels is vital to inform future public health efforts and stem the tide of increasing morbidity, compromised function, and early mortality in homelessness,” they concluded.

Stephen Hwang, MD, director of the MAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions at St. Michael’s Hospital and Unity Health in Toronto, said that the study may underestimate the magnitude of the problem of dementia among homeless people.

“The methods used in this research study are very strong because they draw upon data for everyone living in the entire province of Ontario, and this is a very powerful way of looking at this challenging problem. The study probably underestimates the magnitude of the problem because to be diagnosed with dementia, patients have to have contact with healthcare providers that make that diagnosis. Often, people experiencing homelessness don’t have extensive contact with the healthcare system, and so their condition may go undiagnosed,” said Dr. Hwang.

A specialist in internal medicine, Dr. Hwang has provided healthcare for homeless people, and his research focuses on homelessness, housing, and health. He said that the findings from the Canadian study are applicable to the United States.

Forced clearances of homeless people and placing them in encampments, something that has been discussed in Florida, is unlikely to solve the problem, he said.

“The approach that has been shown to be beneficial is to engage with people and offer them housing and services that will allow them to exit homelessness without criminalizing the fact that they’re homeless. There really is no reason to think that this approach of forced clearances is going to help anyone.”

This study was supported by ICES (formerly the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences), which is funded by the Ontario Ministry of Health and Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Booth and Dr. Hwang reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Panenka reported receiving a research grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The prevalence of dementia among homeless people is almost twice as high as that in housed populations in Ontario, Canada, according to the results of a new study.

The findings suggested that dementia occurs earlier in homeless individuals, and that these patients could benefit from proactive screening and housing interventions.

“Whether dementia caused the homelessness or homelessness caused the dementia, it’s a bidirectional relationship,” said lead author Richard G. Booth, PhD, RN, adjunct scientist at ICES (formerly Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences) and associate professor of nursing at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada.

The study was published in the April issue of The Lancet Public Health.

 

Dementia at Early Ages

The investigators used health administrative data from Ontario to compare the prevalence of dementia among homeless people with that among housed individuals in the general population and those living in low-income neighborhoods.

They included individuals aged 45 years or older on January 1, 2019, who visited hospital-based ambulatory care (such as emergency departments), were hospitalized, or visited a community health center in 2019. The researchers identified people as experiencing homelessness if they had one or more healthcare records with an indication of homelessness or unstable housing. The prevalence of dementia was ascertained as of December 31, 2019.

Included in the population-based, cross-sectional comparative analysis were 12,863 homeless people, 475,544 people in the low-income group, and 2,273,068 people in the general population group.

Dementia prevalence was 68.7 per 1000 individuals among the homeless population, 62.6 per 1000 in the low-income group, and 51.0 per 1000 in the general population group.

After adjustments for age, sex, geographical location of residence (urban vs rural), and health conditions associated with dementia, the prevalence ratio of dementia among homeless people was 1.71, compared with the low-income group, and 1.90, compared with the general population group.

Dementia also was detected in the 45- to 55-year age group among homeless people. This age is much earlier than the age at which doctors start screening their patients for cognitive decline (65 years).

“The study was not designed to define the causality but consider: If you have early-stage dementia and you are not intact enough to do basic functions of life, the likelihood of you becoming homeless is definitely increased, and vice versa. If you are homeless and suffer significant environmental and physical traumas just living on the street, you age much quicker, and you will experience geriatric symptoms such as dementia earlier in your life trajectory,” said Dr. Booth.

“The main takeaway here is that if you don’t have housing, bad things are going to happen in life.”
 

Public Health Problem

In an accompanying editorial, William J. Panenka, MD, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and colleagues cited modifiable risk factors for dementia, including lower education, traumatic brain injury, substance use, smoking, mood disorders, and social isolation, many of which are disproportionately prevalent among homeless individuals.

“Ultimately, dementia could contribute to the cycle of homelessness, whereby housing instability increases the risk for brain impairment, and brain impairment makes breaking the cycle of homelessness progressively more challenging,” they wrote.

Dr. Panenka and colleagues also pointed out that the average age of homeless people is increasing. In the United States, it is now approximately 50 years. This fact underscores “the immediacy and gravity of the public health problem. A multifaceted approach that integrates healthcare, housing, and social services is needed to better understand and alleviate the health consequences of homelessness. A concerted effort at all levels is vital to inform future public health efforts and stem the tide of increasing morbidity, compromised function, and early mortality in homelessness,” they concluded.

Stephen Hwang, MD, director of the MAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions at St. Michael’s Hospital and Unity Health in Toronto, said that the study may underestimate the magnitude of the problem of dementia among homeless people.

“The methods used in this research study are very strong because they draw upon data for everyone living in the entire province of Ontario, and this is a very powerful way of looking at this challenging problem. The study probably underestimates the magnitude of the problem because to be diagnosed with dementia, patients have to have contact with healthcare providers that make that diagnosis. Often, people experiencing homelessness don’t have extensive contact with the healthcare system, and so their condition may go undiagnosed,” said Dr. Hwang.

A specialist in internal medicine, Dr. Hwang has provided healthcare for homeless people, and his research focuses on homelessness, housing, and health. He said that the findings from the Canadian study are applicable to the United States.

Forced clearances of homeless people and placing them in encampments, something that has been discussed in Florida, is unlikely to solve the problem, he said.

“The approach that has been shown to be beneficial is to engage with people and offer them housing and services that will allow them to exit homelessness without criminalizing the fact that they’re homeless. There really is no reason to think that this approach of forced clearances is going to help anyone.”

This study was supported by ICES (formerly the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences), which is funded by the Ontario Ministry of Health and Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Booth and Dr. Hwang reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Panenka reported receiving a research grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The prevalence of dementia among homeless people is almost twice as high as that in housed populations in Ontario, Canada, according to the results of a new study.

The findings suggested that dementia occurs earlier in homeless individuals, and that these patients could benefit from proactive screening and housing interventions.

“Whether dementia caused the homelessness or homelessness caused the dementia, it’s a bidirectional relationship,” said lead author Richard G. Booth, PhD, RN, adjunct scientist at ICES (formerly Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences) and associate professor of nursing at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada.

The study was published in the April issue of The Lancet Public Health.

 

Dementia at Early Ages

The investigators used health administrative data from Ontario to compare the prevalence of dementia among homeless people with that among housed individuals in the general population and those living in low-income neighborhoods.

They included individuals aged 45 years or older on January 1, 2019, who visited hospital-based ambulatory care (such as emergency departments), were hospitalized, or visited a community health center in 2019. The researchers identified people as experiencing homelessness if they had one or more healthcare records with an indication of homelessness or unstable housing. The prevalence of dementia was ascertained as of December 31, 2019.

Included in the population-based, cross-sectional comparative analysis were 12,863 homeless people, 475,544 people in the low-income group, and 2,273,068 people in the general population group.

Dementia prevalence was 68.7 per 1000 individuals among the homeless population, 62.6 per 1000 in the low-income group, and 51.0 per 1000 in the general population group.

After adjustments for age, sex, geographical location of residence (urban vs rural), and health conditions associated with dementia, the prevalence ratio of dementia among homeless people was 1.71, compared with the low-income group, and 1.90, compared with the general population group.

Dementia also was detected in the 45- to 55-year age group among homeless people. This age is much earlier than the age at which doctors start screening their patients for cognitive decline (65 years).

“The study was not designed to define the causality but consider: If you have early-stage dementia and you are not intact enough to do basic functions of life, the likelihood of you becoming homeless is definitely increased, and vice versa. If you are homeless and suffer significant environmental and physical traumas just living on the street, you age much quicker, and you will experience geriatric symptoms such as dementia earlier in your life trajectory,” said Dr. Booth.

“The main takeaway here is that if you don’t have housing, bad things are going to happen in life.”
 

Public Health Problem

In an accompanying editorial, William J. Panenka, MD, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and colleagues cited modifiable risk factors for dementia, including lower education, traumatic brain injury, substance use, smoking, mood disorders, and social isolation, many of which are disproportionately prevalent among homeless individuals.

“Ultimately, dementia could contribute to the cycle of homelessness, whereby housing instability increases the risk for brain impairment, and brain impairment makes breaking the cycle of homelessness progressively more challenging,” they wrote.

Dr. Panenka and colleagues also pointed out that the average age of homeless people is increasing. In the United States, it is now approximately 50 years. This fact underscores “the immediacy and gravity of the public health problem. A multifaceted approach that integrates healthcare, housing, and social services is needed to better understand and alleviate the health consequences of homelessness. A concerted effort at all levels is vital to inform future public health efforts and stem the tide of increasing morbidity, compromised function, and early mortality in homelessness,” they concluded.

Stephen Hwang, MD, director of the MAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions at St. Michael’s Hospital and Unity Health in Toronto, said that the study may underestimate the magnitude of the problem of dementia among homeless people.

“The methods used in this research study are very strong because they draw upon data for everyone living in the entire province of Ontario, and this is a very powerful way of looking at this challenging problem. The study probably underestimates the magnitude of the problem because to be diagnosed with dementia, patients have to have contact with healthcare providers that make that diagnosis. Often, people experiencing homelessness don’t have extensive contact with the healthcare system, and so their condition may go undiagnosed,” said Dr. Hwang.

A specialist in internal medicine, Dr. Hwang has provided healthcare for homeless people, and his research focuses on homelessness, housing, and health. He said that the findings from the Canadian study are applicable to the United States.

Forced clearances of homeless people and placing them in encampments, something that has been discussed in Florida, is unlikely to solve the problem, he said.

“The approach that has been shown to be beneficial is to engage with people and offer them housing and services that will allow them to exit homelessness without criminalizing the fact that they’re homeless. There really is no reason to think that this approach of forced clearances is going to help anyone.”

This study was supported by ICES (formerly the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences), which is funded by the Ontario Ministry of Health and Ontario Ministry of Long-Term Care. Dr. Booth and Dr. Hwang reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Panenka reported receiving a research grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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