Second FDA-Approved Tocilizumab Biosimilar Has Intravenous, Subcutaneous Formulations

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Fri, 03/08/2024 - 13:08

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the biosimilar tocilizumab-aazg (Tyenne), Fresenius Kabi, the drug’s manufacturer, announced on March 7.

This is the second tocilizumab biosimilar approved by the regulatory agency and the first to be approved in both intravenous (IV) and subcutaneous formulations that are available with the reference product, Actemra, the company said in a press release. 

Wikimedia Commons/FitzColinGerald/Creative Commons License

Tocilizumab-aazg is an interleukin-6 (IL-6) receptor antagonist indicated for:

  • Adults with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis who have had an inadequate response to one or more disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs
  • Adults with giant cell arteritis
  • Patients aged 2 years or older with active polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis
  • Patients aged 2 years or older with active systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

“Fresenius Kabi is leading the way as the first company to receive FDA approval for both IV and subcutaneous formulations of its tocilizumab biosimilar and is available in prefilled syringe, pen injector, and vial presentations,” Fabrice Romanet, senior vice president of innovation and development at Fresenius Kabi Biopharma, said in a statement.

The FDA approved the first tocilizumab biosimilar, manufactured by Biogen, in late September 2023. It is administered by IV infusion.

Tocilizumab-aazg’s approval was based on outcome and safety data from a dozen clinical studies. The drug can be administered via intravenous formulation (20 mg/mL) or subcutaneously via a single-dose 162-mg/0.9-mL prefilled syringe or single-dose prefilled autoinjector. 

The most common side effects for tocilizumab-aazg include upper respiratory tract infections, headachehypertension, and injection site reactions. The most serious side effects include serious infections, perforation of the stomach or intestines, hepatotoxicity, and changes in certain lab results.

Tocilizumab-aazg has already launched in 10 countries, Fresenius Kabi shared in the press release, and plans to launch in additional countries in 2024 and 2025. It is not clear when tocilizumab-aazg will be made available in the United States.

“In accordance with its patent settlement agreement with Genentech, Fresenius Kabi has a license to market its tocilizumab products in the United States commencing on the license dates, which are confidential,” the company noted.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the biosimilar tocilizumab-aazg (Tyenne), Fresenius Kabi, the drug’s manufacturer, announced on March 7.

This is the second tocilizumab biosimilar approved by the regulatory agency and the first to be approved in both intravenous (IV) and subcutaneous formulations that are available with the reference product, Actemra, the company said in a press release. 

Wikimedia Commons/FitzColinGerald/Creative Commons License

Tocilizumab-aazg is an interleukin-6 (IL-6) receptor antagonist indicated for:

  • Adults with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis who have had an inadequate response to one or more disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs
  • Adults with giant cell arteritis
  • Patients aged 2 years or older with active polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis
  • Patients aged 2 years or older with active systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

“Fresenius Kabi is leading the way as the first company to receive FDA approval for both IV and subcutaneous formulations of its tocilizumab biosimilar and is available in prefilled syringe, pen injector, and vial presentations,” Fabrice Romanet, senior vice president of innovation and development at Fresenius Kabi Biopharma, said in a statement.

The FDA approved the first tocilizumab biosimilar, manufactured by Biogen, in late September 2023. It is administered by IV infusion.

Tocilizumab-aazg’s approval was based on outcome and safety data from a dozen clinical studies. The drug can be administered via intravenous formulation (20 mg/mL) or subcutaneously via a single-dose 162-mg/0.9-mL prefilled syringe or single-dose prefilled autoinjector. 

The most common side effects for tocilizumab-aazg include upper respiratory tract infections, headachehypertension, and injection site reactions. The most serious side effects include serious infections, perforation of the stomach or intestines, hepatotoxicity, and changes in certain lab results.

Tocilizumab-aazg has already launched in 10 countries, Fresenius Kabi shared in the press release, and plans to launch in additional countries in 2024 and 2025. It is not clear when tocilizumab-aazg will be made available in the United States.

“In accordance with its patent settlement agreement with Genentech, Fresenius Kabi has a license to market its tocilizumab products in the United States commencing on the license dates, which are confidential,” the company noted.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the biosimilar tocilizumab-aazg (Tyenne), Fresenius Kabi, the drug’s manufacturer, announced on March 7.

This is the second tocilizumab biosimilar approved by the regulatory agency and the first to be approved in both intravenous (IV) and subcutaneous formulations that are available with the reference product, Actemra, the company said in a press release. 

Wikimedia Commons/FitzColinGerald/Creative Commons License

Tocilizumab-aazg is an interleukin-6 (IL-6) receptor antagonist indicated for:

  • Adults with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis who have had an inadequate response to one or more disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs
  • Adults with giant cell arteritis
  • Patients aged 2 years or older with active polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis
  • Patients aged 2 years or older with active systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

“Fresenius Kabi is leading the way as the first company to receive FDA approval for both IV and subcutaneous formulations of its tocilizumab biosimilar and is available in prefilled syringe, pen injector, and vial presentations,” Fabrice Romanet, senior vice president of innovation and development at Fresenius Kabi Biopharma, said in a statement.

The FDA approved the first tocilizumab biosimilar, manufactured by Biogen, in late September 2023. It is administered by IV infusion.

Tocilizumab-aazg’s approval was based on outcome and safety data from a dozen clinical studies. The drug can be administered via intravenous formulation (20 mg/mL) or subcutaneously via a single-dose 162-mg/0.9-mL prefilled syringe or single-dose prefilled autoinjector. 

The most common side effects for tocilizumab-aazg include upper respiratory tract infections, headachehypertension, and injection site reactions. The most serious side effects include serious infections, perforation of the stomach or intestines, hepatotoxicity, and changes in certain lab results.

Tocilizumab-aazg has already launched in 10 countries, Fresenius Kabi shared in the press release, and plans to launch in additional countries in 2024 and 2025. It is not clear when tocilizumab-aazg will be made available in the United States.

“In accordance with its patent settlement agreement with Genentech, Fresenius Kabi has a license to market its tocilizumab products in the United States commencing on the license dates, which are confidential,” the company noted.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Oral Transmission of Chagas Disease Has Severe Effects

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 03/04/2024 - 15:04

Thanks to decades of successful vector control strategies, vector-borne transmission of Chagas disease has significantly decreased in many regions. Oral ingestion of Trypanosoma cruzi through contaminated food and beverages, however, is increasing. Unlike vector transmission, oral transmission of Chagas disease entails high lethality in pediatric and adult populations.

“The oral transmission of Chagas disease is becoming a much more recognized route, and it is crucial to understand that people can die from this type of transmission,” Norman L. Beatty, MD, assistant professor of infectious diseases and global medicine at the University of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville, Florida, told this news organization. Dr. Beatty is the lead author of a recent article on the subject.

In regions where the parasite circulates in the environment, people are consuming foods, fruit juices, and possibly wild animal meat that may be contaminated. “As we experience changes in our environment and in the way we consume food, it is crucial to consider how food preparation is carried out in areas where T cruzi transmission occurs in the environment,” said Dr. Beatty. “And as organic farming methods without insecticides become increasingly common, more research is needed in these areas, both in Latin America and in the United States, to understand if oral transmission of T cruzi is occurring.”

In the Amazon basin, foodborne transmission is already the leading cause of acute Chagas disease. It has been described in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, and Venezuela.

Dr. Beatty’s colleagues recently treated a Brazilian patient at the hospital in Florida. “He came to our hospital very ill, with acute myocarditis after consuming contaminated açaí.” Clarifying that there is widespread awareness about oral transmission in Brazil, he stated, “We are concerned that it may not be recognized in other areas of Latin America.”

Mexico and regions of Central America have little to no information on oral transmission, but it is likely occurring, and cases may be going undetected in the region, said Dr. Beatty.

He investigated the issue in Colombia as part of an international collaboration involving the University of Antioquia, aiming to find ways to mitigate oral transmission and create a model that can be used throughout Latin America and the United States. For the Colombia study, they reviewed all cases reported to the Ministry of Health and Social Protection, and oral transmission turned out to be more common than the research group expected. “Still, I imagine that in certain areas with limited resources…there are many more cases that are not being reported.

“A myth I would like to dispel is that Chagas disease is not being transmitted in the United States,” Dr. Beatty added. He mentioned that at least 30 American states have vectors, and in Florida, it was documented that triatomines invaded homes and bit residents. In addition, 30% of these insects are infected with T cruzi. Research is underway to determine whether Floridians are becoming infected and if they are also at risk of contracting Chagas disease orally, said Dr. Beatty. “In the United States, we know very little about how many people are infected and what the infection routes are. Much more research is needed.”

Roberto Chuit, MD, PhD, a doctor in public health and an external consultant for the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), agreed that this route of food contamination, which occurs because of vector-borne parasites, was until recently masked or hidden by the predominance of vector presence. Just as it began to gain importance as other transmission routes were controlled, “it now has extremely high importance in the Americas, as does vertical transmission,” he said.

In 2023, more than 50 years after the first description of oral transmission, the PAHO expert meeting proposed to alert health services and the broader community about the severity and potential lethality of oral Chagas disease outbreaks to elicit immediate responses and mitigation measures. The body also proposed conducting studies to provide detailed information on the contamination source and the wild vectors present in oral transmission foci.
 

 

 

Unique Clinical Manifestations

The exacerbated signs and symptoms of oral infection (see sidebar) are attributed to the high parasite loads in contaminated food and beverages. A single crushed triatomine along with a food or beverage harboring T cruzi can contain an estimated 600,000 metacyclic trypomastigotes, compared with 3000-4000 per µL when infection occurs by triatomine fecal matter. The robust systemic immune response observed in patients with acute oral Chagas disease is thought to result from more efficient transmission after penetration through the oral, pharyngeal, and gastric mucosae.
 

Seven Things to Know About Orally Transmitted Chagas Disease

1. It presents with exacerbated symptoms and rapid disease progression in immunocompetent individuals. This presentation is not common in vector-borne, congenital, or transfusion-related transmission. It can cause fulminant myocarditis and heart failure, meningoencephalitis, or potentially fatal shock due to parasitemia.

2. Most patients (71%-100%) with acute oral Chagas present with fever.

3. Electrocardiographic abnormalities, specifically ventricular depolarization alterations and pericardial involvement, are observed in most patients.

4. Facial edema, which typically affects the entire face and parts of the lips, is present in 57%-100% of patients with acute oral Chagas disease. In those with acute symptoms from vector transmission, unilateral periorbital swelling (Romaña’s sign) is more common.

5. Other notable systemic symptoms include edema of the lower extremities, myalgia, generalized lymphadenopathy, abdominal discomfort, dyspnea, vomiting, diarrhea, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, headache, chest pain, cutaneous erythematous rash, jaundice, arthralgia, epistaxis, hematemesis, melena, and palpitations.

6. The incubation period after oral ingestion of products contaminated with Trypanosoma cruzi is approximately 3-22 days, in contrast to 4-15 days for vector-borne transmission and 8-160 days for transfusion and transplant-related transmission.

7. Patients need antiparasitic drugs immediately.
 

Thinking Epidemiologically

Dr. Chuit recalled that suspicion of food contamination should be based on epidemiology, especially in outbreaks affecting several people and in regions where Chagas vectors have been described. Sometimes, however, a single careless tourist consumes contaminated products.

“The difficulty is that many times it is not considered, and if it is not considered, the search for the parasite is not requested,” said Dr. Chuit. He added that it is common for the professional to consider Chagas disease only if viral and bacterial isolation tests are negative. Clinicians sometimes consider Chagas disease because the patient has not responded to regular treatments for other causes, such as antibiotics and hydration.

Epidemiology is important, especially when Chagas disease is diagnosed in groups or a family, because they are usually not isolated cases but outbreaks of 3-40 cases, according to Dr. Chuit. “Under these conditions, it must be quickly considered…that this parasite may be involved.”

One of the difficulties is that the source of these oral transmissions is not recognized most of the time. In general, the sources are usually foods that are more likely to be contaminated by insects or insect feces, such as orange juice or sugarcane. But in fact, any food or beverage left unattended could be contaminated by vectors or possible secretions from infected marsupial odoriferous glands.

An analysis of 32 outbreaks from 1965 to 2022 showed that the main foods involved in oral transmission were homemade fruit juices. But different vector species were identified, and the reservoirs were mainly dogs, rodents, and large American opossums (Didelphis).

The largest oral Chagas outbreak was linked to the consumption of contaminated guava juice in a primary school in Caracas, Venezuela. Nonindustrially produced açaí is a common source of orally acquired Chagas disease in Brazil. In Colombia, Chagas disease has been associated with the consumption of palm wine, sugar cane, and tangerine juice. Other oral transmission routes include consuming meat from wild animals and ingesting blood from infected armadillos, which is related to a traditional medicine practice.
 

 

 

Deadly Yet Easily Treatable

In the outbreak of 119 confirmed and suspected cases in Venezuela, 20.3% required hospitalization, and a 5-year-old child died of acute myocarditis. These percentages differ from those reported in vector transmission, which is asymptomatic in the acute phase for 95%-99% of cases or will only develop a mild febrile illness that resolves on its own.

“Not all cases will present as severe, because depending on the inoculum, there may be individuals with subclinical situations. But any food poisoning that occurs in endemic areas, where food is not properly controlled, and these street foods are associated with processes in jungle areas, raises the possibility that T cruzi is involved and should be considered as a differential diagnosis,» noted Dr. Chuit. “The treatment is highly effective, and people recover quickly.”

“The most important thing about oral transmission of Chagas is that someone infected in this way needs antiparasitic drugs immediately. We can cure them if we treat them immediately,” said Dr. Beatty, adding that treatment is sometimes delayed due to lack of access to appropriate antiparasitic drugs. “Here in the United States and in Latin America, it is quite common for healthcare professionals not to understand the differences between vector, vertical, and oral transmission. By not treating these patients, they become ill quickly.”

Dr. Beatty and Dr. Chuit declared no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

This story was translated from the Medscape Spanish edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Thanks to decades of successful vector control strategies, vector-borne transmission of Chagas disease has significantly decreased in many regions. Oral ingestion of Trypanosoma cruzi through contaminated food and beverages, however, is increasing. Unlike vector transmission, oral transmission of Chagas disease entails high lethality in pediatric and adult populations.

“The oral transmission of Chagas disease is becoming a much more recognized route, and it is crucial to understand that people can die from this type of transmission,” Norman L. Beatty, MD, assistant professor of infectious diseases and global medicine at the University of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville, Florida, told this news organization. Dr. Beatty is the lead author of a recent article on the subject.

In regions where the parasite circulates in the environment, people are consuming foods, fruit juices, and possibly wild animal meat that may be contaminated. “As we experience changes in our environment and in the way we consume food, it is crucial to consider how food preparation is carried out in areas where T cruzi transmission occurs in the environment,” said Dr. Beatty. “And as organic farming methods without insecticides become increasingly common, more research is needed in these areas, both in Latin America and in the United States, to understand if oral transmission of T cruzi is occurring.”

In the Amazon basin, foodborne transmission is already the leading cause of acute Chagas disease. It has been described in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, and Venezuela.

Dr. Beatty’s colleagues recently treated a Brazilian patient at the hospital in Florida. “He came to our hospital very ill, with acute myocarditis after consuming contaminated açaí.” Clarifying that there is widespread awareness about oral transmission in Brazil, he stated, “We are concerned that it may not be recognized in other areas of Latin America.”

Mexico and regions of Central America have little to no information on oral transmission, but it is likely occurring, and cases may be going undetected in the region, said Dr. Beatty.

He investigated the issue in Colombia as part of an international collaboration involving the University of Antioquia, aiming to find ways to mitigate oral transmission and create a model that can be used throughout Latin America and the United States. For the Colombia study, they reviewed all cases reported to the Ministry of Health and Social Protection, and oral transmission turned out to be more common than the research group expected. “Still, I imagine that in certain areas with limited resources…there are many more cases that are not being reported.

“A myth I would like to dispel is that Chagas disease is not being transmitted in the United States,” Dr. Beatty added. He mentioned that at least 30 American states have vectors, and in Florida, it was documented that triatomines invaded homes and bit residents. In addition, 30% of these insects are infected with T cruzi. Research is underway to determine whether Floridians are becoming infected and if they are also at risk of contracting Chagas disease orally, said Dr. Beatty. “In the United States, we know very little about how many people are infected and what the infection routes are. Much more research is needed.”

Roberto Chuit, MD, PhD, a doctor in public health and an external consultant for the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), agreed that this route of food contamination, which occurs because of vector-borne parasites, was until recently masked or hidden by the predominance of vector presence. Just as it began to gain importance as other transmission routes were controlled, “it now has extremely high importance in the Americas, as does vertical transmission,” he said.

In 2023, more than 50 years after the first description of oral transmission, the PAHO expert meeting proposed to alert health services and the broader community about the severity and potential lethality of oral Chagas disease outbreaks to elicit immediate responses and mitigation measures. The body also proposed conducting studies to provide detailed information on the contamination source and the wild vectors present in oral transmission foci.
 

 

 

Unique Clinical Manifestations

The exacerbated signs and symptoms of oral infection (see sidebar) are attributed to the high parasite loads in contaminated food and beverages. A single crushed triatomine along with a food or beverage harboring T cruzi can contain an estimated 600,000 metacyclic trypomastigotes, compared with 3000-4000 per µL when infection occurs by triatomine fecal matter. The robust systemic immune response observed in patients with acute oral Chagas disease is thought to result from more efficient transmission after penetration through the oral, pharyngeal, and gastric mucosae.
 

Seven Things to Know About Orally Transmitted Chagas Disease

1. It presents with exacerbated symptoms and rapid disease progression in immunocompetent individuals. This presentation is not common in vector-borne, congenital, or transfusion-related transmission. It can cause fulminant myocarditis and heart failure, meningoencephalitis, or potentially fatal shock due to parasitemia.

2. Most patients (71%-100%) with acute oral Chagas present with fever.

3. Electrocardiographic abnormalities, specifically ventricular depolarization alterations and pericardial involvement, are observed in most patients.

4. Facial edema, which typically affects the entire face and parts of the lips, is present in 57%-100% of patients with acute oral Chagas disease. In those with acute symptoms from vector transmission, unilateral periorbital swelling (Romaña’s sign) is more common.

5. Other notable systemic symptoms include edema of the lower extremities, myalgia, generalized lymphadenopathy, abdominal discomfort, dyspnea, vomiting, diarrhea, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, headache, chest pain, cutaneous erythematous rash, jaundice, arthralgia, epistaxis, hematemesis, melena, and palpitations.

6. The incubation period after oral ingestion of products contaminated with Trypanosoma cruzi is approximately 3-22 days, in contrast to 4-15 days for vector-borne transmission and 8-160 days for transfusion and transplant-related transmission.

7. Patients need antiparasitic drugs immediately.
 

Thinking Epidemiologically

Dr. Chuit recalled that suspicion of food contamination should be based on epidemiology, especially in outbreaks affecting several people and in regions where Chagas vectors have been described. Sometimes, however, a single careless tourist consumes contaminated products.

“The difficulty is that many times it is not considered, and if it is not considered, the search for the parasite is not requested,” said Dr. Chuit. He added that it is common for the professional to consider Chagas disease only if viral and bacterial isolation tests are negative. Clinicians sometimes consider Chagas disease because the patient has not responded to regular treatments for other causes, such as antibiotics and hydration.

Epidemiology is important, especially when Chagas disease is diagnosed in groups or a family, because they are usually not isolated cases but outbreaks of 3-40 cases, according to Dr. Chuit. “Under these conditions, it must be quickly considered…that this parasite may be involved.”

One of the difficulties is that the source of these oral transmissions is not recognized most of the time. In general, the sources are usually foods that are more likely to be contaminated by insects or insect feces, such as orange juice or sugarcane. But in fact, any food or beverage left unattended could be contaminated by vectors or possible secretions from infected marsupial odoriferous glands.

An analysis of 32 outbreaks from 1965 to 2022 showed that the main foods involved in oral transmission were homemade fruit juices. But different vector species were identified, and the reservoirs were mainly dogs, rodents, and large American opossums (Didelphis).

The largest oral Chagas outbreak was linked to the consumption of contaminated guava juice in a primary school in Caracas, Venezuela. Nonindustrially produced açaí is a common source of orally acquired Chagas disease in Brazil. In Colombia, Chagas disease has been associated with the consumption of palm wine, sugar cane, and tangerine juice. Other oral transmission routes include consuming meat from wild animals and ingesting blood from infected armadillos, which is related to a traditional medicine practice.
 

 

 

Deadly Yet Easily Treatable

In the outbreak of 119 confirmed and suspected cases in Venezuela, 20.3% required hospitalization, and a 5-year-old child died of acute myocarditis. These percentages differ from those reported in vector transmission, which is asymptomatic in the acute phase for 95%-99% of cases or will only develop a mild febrile illness that resolves on its own.

“Not all cases will present as severe, because depending on the inoculum, there may be individuals with subclinical situations. But any food poisoning that occurs in endemic areas, where food is not properly controlled, and these street foods are associated with processes in jungle areas, raises the possibility that T cruzi is involved and should be considered as a differential diagnosis,» noted Dr. Chuit. “The treatment is highly effective, and people recover quickly.”

“The most important thing about oral transmission of Chagas is that someone infected in this way needs antiparasitic drugs immediately. We can cure them if we treat them immediately,” said Dr. Beatty, adding that treatment is sometimes delayed due to lack of access to appropriate antiparasitic drugs. “Here in the United States and in Latin America, it is quite common for healthcare professionals not to understand the differences between vector, vertical, and oral transmission. By not treating these patients, they become ill quickly.”

Dr. Beatty and Dr. Chuit declared no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

This story was translated from the Medscape Spanish edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Thanks to decades of successful vector control strategies, vector-borne transmission of Chagas disease has significantly decreased in many regions. Oral ingestion of Trypanosoma cruzi through contaminated food and beverages, however, is increasing. Unlike vector transmission, oral transmission of Chagas disease entails high lethality in pediatric and adult populations.

“The oral transmission of Chagas disease is becoming a much more recognized route, and it is crucial to understand that people can die from this type of transmission,” Norman L. Beatty, MD, assistant professor of infectious diseases and global medicine at the University of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville, Florida, told this news organization. Dr. Beatty is the lead author of a recent article on the subject.

In regions where the parasite circulates in the environment, people are consuming foods, fruit juices, and possibly wild animal meat that may be contaminated. “As we experience changes in our environment and in the way we consume food, it is crucial to consider how food preparation is carried out in areas where T cruzi transmission occurs in the environment,” said Dr. Beatty. “And as organic farming methods without insecticides become increasingly common, more research is needed in these areas, both in Latin America and in the United States, to understand if oral transmission of T cruzi is occurring.”

In the Amazon basin, foodborne transmission is already the leading cause of acute Chagas disease. It has been described in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, and Venezuela.

Dr. Beatty’s colleagues recently treated a Brazilian patient at the hospital in Florida. “He came to our hospital very ill, with acute myocarditis after consuming contaminated açaí.” Clarifying that there is widespread awareness about oral transmission in Brazil, he stated, “We are concerned that it may not be recognized in other areas of Latin America.”

Mexico and regions of Central America have little to no information on oral transmission, but it is likely occurring, and cases may be going undetected in the region, said Dr. Beatty.

He investigated the issue in Colombia as part of an international collaboration involving the University of Antioquia, aiming to find ways to mitigate oral transmission and create a model that can be used throughout Latin America and the United States. For the Colombia study, they reviewed all cases reported to the Ministry of Health and Social Protection, and oral transmission turned out to be more common than the research group expected. “Still, I imagine that in certain areas with limited resources…there are many more cases that are not being reported.

“A myth I would like to dispel is that Chagas disease is not being transmitted in the United States,” Dr. Beatty added. He mentioned that at least 30 American states have vectors, and in Florida, it was documented that triatomines invaded homes and bit residents. In addition, 30% of these insects are infected with T cruzi. Research is underway to determine whether Floridians are becoming infected and if they are also at risk of contracting Chagas disease orally, said Dr. Beatty. “In the United States, we know very little about how many people are infected and what the infection routes are. Much more research is needed.”

Roberto Chuit, MD, PhD, a doctor in public health and an external consultant for the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), agreed that this route of food contamination, which occurs because of vector-borne parasites, was until recently masked or hidden by the predominance of vector presence. Just as it began to gain importance as other transmission routes were controlled, “it now has extremely high importance in the Americas, as does vertical transmission,” he said.

In 2023, more than 50 years after the first description of oral transmission, the PAHO expert meeting proposed to alert health services and the broader community about the severity and potential lethality of oral Chagas disease outbreaks to elicit immediate responses and mitigation measures. The body also proposed conducting studies to provide detailed information on the contamination source and the wild vectors present in oral transmission foci.
 

 

 

Unique Clinical Manifestations

The exacerbated signs and symptoms of oral infection (see sidebar) are attributed to the high parasite loads in contaminated food and beverages. A single crushed triatomine along with a food or beverage harboring T cruzi can contain an estimated 600,000 metacyclic trypomastigotes, compared with 3000-4000 per µL when infection occurs by triatomine fecal matter. The robust systemic immune response observed in patients with acute oral Chagas disease is thought to result from more efficient transmission after penetration through the oral, pharyngeal, and gastric mucosae.
 

Seven Things to Know About Orally Transmitted Chagas Disease

1. It presents with exacerbated symptoms and rapid disease progression in immunocompetent individuals. This presentation is not common in vector-borne, congenital, or transfusion-related transmission. It can cause fulminant myocarditis and heart failure, meningoencephalitis, or potentially fatal shock due to parasitemia.

2. Most patients (71%-100%) with acute oral Chagas present with fever.

3. Electrocardiographic abnormalities, specifically ventricular depolarization alterations and pericardial involvement, are observed in most patients.

4. Facial edema, which typically affects the entire face and parts of the lips, is present in 57%-100% of patients with acute oral Chagas disease. In those with acute symptoms from vector transmission, unilateral periorbital swelling (Romaña’s sign) is more common.

5. Other notable systemic symptoms include edema of the lower extremities, myalgia, generalized lymphadenopathy, abdominal discomfort, dyspnea, vomiting, diarrhea, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, headache, chest pain, cutaneous erythematous rash, jaundice, arthralgia, epistaxis, hematemesis, melena, and palpitations.

6. The incubation period after oral ingestion of products contaminated with Trypanosoma cruzi is approximately 3-22 days, in contrast to 4-15 days for vector-borne transmission and 8-160 days for transfusion and transplant-related transmission.

7. Patients need antiparasitic drugs immediately.
 

Thinking Epidemiologically

Dr. Chuit recalled that suspicion of food contamination should be based on epidemiology, especially in outbreaks affecting several people and in regions where Chagas vectors have been described. Sometimes, however, a single careless tourist consumes contaminated products.

“The difficulty is that many times it is not considered, and if it is not considered, the search for the parasite is not requested,” said Dr. Chuit. He added that it is common for the professional to consider Chagas disease only if viral and bacterial isolation tests are negative. Clinicians sometimes consider Chagas disease because the patient has not responded to regular treatments for other causes, such as antibiotics and hydration.

Epidemiology is important, especially when Chagas disease is diagnosed in groups or a family, because they are usually not isolated cases but outbreaks of 3-40 cases, according to Dr. Chuit. “Under these conditions, it must be quickly considered…that this parasite may be involved.”

One of the difficulties is that the source of these oral transmissions is not recognized most of the time. In general, the sources are usually foods that are more likely to be contaminated by insects or insect feces, such as orange juice or sugarcane. But in fact, any food or beverage left unattended could be contaminated by vectors or possible secretions from infected marsupial odoriferous glands.

An analysis of 32 outbreaks from 1965 to 2022 showed that the main foods involved in oral transmission were homemade fruit juices. But different vector species were identified, and the reservoirs were mainly dogs, rodents, and large American opossums (Didelphis).

The largest oral Chagas outbreak was linked to the consumption of contaminated guava juice in a primary school in Caracas, Venezuela. Nonindustrially produced açaí is a common source of orally acquired Chagas disease in Brazil. In Colombia, Chagas disease has been associated with the consumption of palm wine, sugar cane, and tangerine juice. Other oral transmission routes include consuming meat from wild animals and ingesting blood from infected armadillos, which is related to a traditional medicine practice.
 

 

 

Deadly Yet Easily Treatable

In the outbreak of 119 confirmed and suspected cases in Venezuela, 20.3% required hospitalization, and a 5-year-old child died of acute myocarditis. These percentages differ from those reported in vector transmission, which is asymptomatic in the acute phase for 95%-99% of cases or will only develop a mild febrile illness that resolves on its own.

“Not all cases will present as severe, because depending on the inoculum, there may be individuals with subclinical situations. But any food poisoning that occurs in endemic areas, where food is not properly controlled, and these street foods are associated with processes in jungle areas, raises the possibility that T cruzi is involved and should be considered as a differential diagnosis,» noted Dr. Chuit. “The treatment is highly effective, and people recover quickly.”

“The most important thing about oral transmission of Chagas is that someone infected in this way needs antiparasitic drugs immediately. We can cure them if we treat them immediately,” said Dr. Beatty, adding that treatment is sometimes delayed due to lack of access to appropriate antiparasitic drugs. “Here in the United States and in Latin America, it is quite common for healthcare professionals not to understand the differences between vector, vertical, and oral transmission. By not treating these patients, they become ill quickly.”

Dr. Beatty and Dr. Chuit declared no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

This story was translated from the Medscape Spanish edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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5 Interesting Neurology Studies

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 03/01/2024 - 16:25

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Dear colleagues, I’m Christoph Diener from the medical faculty of University Duisburg-Essen in Germany. Today I would like to tell you about five interesting studies that were published in January 2024.
 

Long COVID

I would like to start with long COVID. There is an ongoing discussion about whether this condition — which means symptoms like dizziness, vertigo, fatigue, headache, and cognitive impairment that persist for more than 6 months — is either a consequence of the infection, functional symptoms, psychosomatic disease, or a depression.

There is an important paper that came out in Science. The group investigated 39 controls and 113 patients who had COVID-19. At 6 months, 40 of them had long COVID. The researchers repeatedly measured more than 6500 proteins in serum. The patients with long COVID had a significant increase in complement activation, which persisted even beyond 6 months. These patients also showed increased tissue lesion markers in the blood and activation of the endothelium.

Also, they had increased platelet activation and autoantibodies with increased anti-cytomegalovirus and anti-Epstein-Barr virus immunoglobulins. These are very strong indicators that COVID-19 leads to long-term changes in our immune system, and different activations of complement factors could explain the variety of symptoms that these patients display. Whether this has consequences for treatment is unclear at the moment.
 

Parkinson’s Classification

Let me come to another issue, which is the future treatment of Parkinson’s disease, covered in a paper in The Lancet Neurology. I think you are all aware that once patients display symptoms like rigidity, bradykinesia, or tremor, it’s most probably too late for neuroprotective therapy because 70% of the dopaminergic neurons are already dead.

The authors propose a new biological diagnosis of the disease in the preclinical state. This early preclinical diagnosis has three components. One is to show the presence of synuclein either in skin biopsy or in serum. The second is proof of neurodegeneration either by MRI or by PET imaging. The third involves genetic markers.

On top of this, we know that we have preclinical manifestations of Parkinson’s disease, like REM sleep disorders, autonomic disturbances, and cognitive impairment. With this new classification, we should be able to identify the preclinical phase of Parkinson’s disease and include these patients in future trials for neuroprotection.
 

Niemann-Pick Disease

My third study, in The New England Journal of Medicine, deals with Niemann-Pick disease type C (Trial of N-Acetyl-l-Leucine in Niemann–Pick Disease Type C. This is a rare autosomal recessive disorder that involves impaired lysosomal storage. This disease, which manifests usually in childhood, goes along with systemic, psychiatric, and neurologic abnormalities, and in particular, ataxia. Until now, there has been only one therapy, with miglustat. which has many side effects.

The group of authors found a new therapeutic approach with N-acetyl-L-leucine, which primarily increases mitochondrial energy production. This was a small, placebo-controlled, crossover trial with 2 x 12 weeks of treatment. This new compound showed efficacy and was very well tolerated. This shows that we definitely need long-term studies with this new, well-tolerated drug in this rare disease.
 

 

 

Anticoagulation in Subclinical AF

My fourth study comes from the stroke-prevention field, published in The New England Journal of Medicine. I think you are aware of subclinical atrail fibrillation. These are high-frequency episodes in ECG, usually identified by pacemakers or ECG monitoring systems. The international ARTESIA study included more than 4000 patients randomized either to apixaban 5 mg twice daily or aspirin 81 mg.

After 3.5 years, the investigators showed a small but significant decrease in the rate of stroke, with a relative risk reduction of 37%, but also, unfortunately, a significantly increased risk for major bleeding with apixaban. This means that we need a careful discussion with the patient, the family, and the GP to decide whether these patients should be anticoagulated or not.
 

Migraine and Depression

My final study, published in the European Journal of Neurology, deals with the comorbidity of depression and migraine. This study in the Netherlands included 108 patients treated with erenumab and 90 with fremanezumab; 68 were controls.

They used two depression scales. They showed that treatment with the monoclonal antibodies improved at least one of the two depression scales. I think this is an important study because it indicates that you can improve comorbid depression in people with severe migraine, even if this study did not show a correlation between the reduction in monthly migraine days and the improvement of depression.

What we learned for clinical practice is that we have to identify depression in people with migraine and we have to deal with it. Whether it’s with the treatment of monoclonal antibodies or antidepressant therapy doesn’t really matter.

Dear colleagues, we had interesting studies this month. I think the most spectacular one was published in Science on long COVID. Thank you very much for listening and watching. I’m Christoph Diener from University Duisburg-Essen.
 

Dr. Diener is Professor, Department of Neurology, Stroke Center-Headache Center, University Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany. He disclosed ties with Abbott; Addex Pharma; Alder; Allergan; Almirall; Amgen; Autonomic Technology; AstraZeneca; Bayer Vital; Berlin Chemie; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Boehringer Ingelheim; Chordate; CoAxia; Corimmun; Covidien; Coherex; CoLucid; Daiichi-Sankyo; D-Pharml Electrocore; Fresenius; GlaxoSmithKline; Grunenthal; Janssen-Cilag; Labrys Biologics Lilly; La Roche; 3M Medica; MSD; Medtronic; Menarini; MindFrame; Minster; Neuroscore; Neurobiological Technologies; Novartis; Novo-Nordisk; Johnson & Johnson; Knoll; Paion; Parke-Davis; Pierre Fabre; Pfizer Inc; Schaper and Brummer; sanofi-aventis; Schering-Plough; Servier; Solvay; Syngis; St. Jude; Talecris; Thrombogenics; WebMD Global; Weber and Weber; Wyeth; and Yamanouchi.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Dear colleagues, I’m Christoph Diener from the medical faculty of University Duisburg-Essen in Germany. Today I would like to tell you about five interesting studies that were published in January 2024.
 

Long COVID

I would like to start with long COVID. There is an ongoing discussion about whether this condition — which means symptoms like dizziness, vertigo, fatigue, headache, and cognitive impairment that persist for more than 6 months — is either a consequence of the infection, functional symptoms, psychosomatic disease, or a depression.

There is an important paper that came out in Science. The group investigated 39 controls and 113 patients who had COVID-19. At 6 months, 40 of them had long COVID. The researchers repeatedly measured more than 6500 proteins in serum. The patients with long COVID had a significant increase in complement activation, which persisted even beyond 6 months. These patients also showed increased tissue lesion markers in the blood and activation of the endothelium.

Also, they had increased platelet activation and autoantibodies with increased anti-cytomegalovirus and anti-Epstein-Barr virus immunoglobulins. These are very strong indicators that COVID-19 leads to long-term changes in our immune system, and different activations of complement factors could explain the variety of symptoms that these patients display. Whether this has consequences for treatment is unclear at the moment.
 

Parkinson’s Classification

Let me come to another issue, which is the future treatment of Parkinson’s disease, covered in a paper in The Lancet Neurology. I think you are all aware that once patients display symptoms like rigidity, bradykinesia, or tremor, it’s most probably too late for neuroprotective therapy because 70% of the dopaminergic neurons are already dead.

The authors propose a new biological diagnosis of the disease in the preclinical state. This early preclinical diagnosis has three components. One is to show the presence of synuclein either in skin biopsy or in serum. The second is proof of neurodegeneration either by MRI or by PET imaging. The third involves genetic markers.

On top of this, we know that we have preclinical manifestations of Parkinson’s disease, like REM sleep disorders, autonomic disturbances, and cognitive impairment. With this new classification, we should be able to identify the preclinical phase of Parkinson’s disease and include these patients in future trials for neuroprotection.
 

Niemann-Pick Disease

My third study, in The New England Journal of Medicine, deals with Niemann-Pick disease type C (Trial of N-Acetyl-l-Leucine in Niemann–Pick Disease Type C. This is a rare autosomal recessive disorder that involves impaired lysosomal storage. This disease, which manifests usually in childhood, goes along with systemic, psychiatric, and neurologic abnormalities, and in particular, ataxia. Until now, there has been only one therapy, with miglustat. which has many side effects.

The group of authors found a new therapeutic approach with N-acetyl-L-leucine, which primarily increases mitochondrial energy production. This was a small, placebo-controlled, crossover trial with 2 x 12 weeks of treatment. This new compound showed efficacy and was very well tolerated. This shows that we definitely need long-term studies with this new, well-tolerated drug in this rare disease.
 

 

 

Anticoagulation in Subclinical AF

My fourth study comes from the stroke-prevention field, published in The New England Journal of Medicine. I think you are aware of subclinical atrail fibrillation. These are high-frequency episodes in ECG, usually identified by pacemakers or ECG monitoring systems. The international ARTESIA study included more than 4000 patients randomized either to apixaban 5 mg twice daily or aspirin 81 mg.

After 3.5 years, the investigators showed a small but significant decrease in the rate of stroke, with a relative risk reduction of 37%, but also, unfortunately, a significantly increased risk for major bleeding with apixaban. This means that we need a careful discussion with the patient, the family, and the GP to decide whether these patients should be anticoagulated or not.
 

Migraine and Depression

My final study, published in the European Journal of Neurology, deals with the comorbidity of depression and migraine. This study in the Netherlands included 108 patients treated with erenumab and 90 with fremanezumab; 68 were controls.

They used two depression scales. They showed that treatment with the monoclonal antibodies improved at least one of the two depression scales. I think this is an important study because it indicates that you can improve comorbid depression in people with severe migraine, even if this study did not show a correlation between the reduction in monthly migraine days and the improvement of depression.

What we learned for clinical practice is that we have to identify depression in people with migraine and we have to deal with it. Whether it’s with the treatment of monoclonal antibodies or antidepressant therapy doesn’t really matter.

Dear colleagues, we had interesting studies this month. I think the most spectacular one was published in Science on long COVID. Thank you very much for listening and watching. I’m Christoph Diener from University Duisburg-Essen.
 

Dr. Diener is Professor, Department of Neurology, Stroke Center-Headache Center, University Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany. He disclosed ties with Abbott; Addex Pharma; Alder; Allergan; Almirall; Amgen; Autonomic Technology; AstraZeneca; Bayer Vital; Berlin Chemie; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Boehringer Ingelheim; Chordate; CoAxia; Corimmun; Covidien; Coherex; CoLucid; Daiichi-Sankyo; D-Pharml Electrocore; Fresenius; GlaxoSmithKline; Grunenthal; Janssen-Cilag; Labrys Biologics Lilly; La Roche; 3M Medica; MSD; Medtronic; Menarini; MindFrame; Minster; Neuroscore; Neurobiological Technologies; Novartis; Novo-Nordisk; Johnson & Johnson; Knoll; Paion; Parke-Davis; Pierre Fabre; Pfizer Inc; Schaper and Brummer; sanofi-aventis; Schering-Plough; Servier; Solvay; Syngis; St. Jude; Talecris; Thrombogenics; WebMD Global; Weber and Weber; Wyeth; and Yamanouchi.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Dear colleagues, I’m Christoph Diener from the medical faculty of University Duisburg-Essen in Germany. Today I would like to tell you about five interesting studies that were published in January 2024.
 

Long COVID

I would like to start with long COVID. There is an ongoing discussion about whether this condition — which means symptoms like dizziness, vertigo, fatigue, headache, and cognitive impairment that persist for more than 6 months — is either a consequence of the infection, functional symptoms, psychosomatic disease, or a depression.

There is an important paper that came out in Science. The group investigated 39 controls and 113 patients who had COVID-19. At 6 months, 40 of them had long COVID. The researchers repeatedly measured more than 6500 proteins in serum. The patients with long COVID had a significant increase in complement activation, which persisted even beyond 6 months. These patients also showed increased tissue lesion markers in the blood and activation of the endothelium.

Also, they had increased platelet activation and autoantibodies with increased anti-cytomegalovirus and anti-Epstein-Barr virus immunoglobulins. These are very strong indicators that COVID-19 leads to long-term changes in our immune system, and different activations of complement factors could explain the variety of symptoms that these patients display. Whether this has consequences for treatment is unclear at the moment.
 

Parkinson’s Classification

Let me come to another issue, which is the future treatment of Parkinson’s disease, covered in a paper in The Lancet Neurology. I think you are all aware that once patients display symptoms like rigidity, bradykinesia, or tremor, it’s most probably too late for neuroprotective therapy because 70% of the dopaminergic neurons are already dead.

The authors propose a new biological diagnosis of the disease in the preclinical state. This early preclinical diagnosis has three components. One is to show the presence of synuclein either in skin biopsy or in serum. The second is proof of neurodegeneration either by MRI or by PET imaging. The third involves genetic markers.

On top of this, we know that we have preclinical manifestations of Parkinson’s disease, like REM sleep disorders, autonomic disturbances, and cognitive impairment. With this new classification, we should be able to identify the preclinical phase of Parkinson’s disease and include these patients in future trials for neuroprotection.
 

Niemann-Pick Disease

My third study, in The New England Journal of Medicine, deals with Niemann-Pick disease type C (Trial of N-Acetyl-l-Leucine in Niemann–Pick Disease Type C. This is a rare autosomal recessive disorder that involves impaired lysosomal storage. This disease, which manifests usually in childhood, goes along with systemic, psychiatric, and neurologic abnormalities, and in particular, ataxia. Until now, there has been only one therapy, with miglustat. which has many side effects.

The group of authors found a new therapeutic approach with N-acetyl-L-leucine, which primarily increases mitochondrial energy production. This was a small, placebo-controlled, crossover trial with 2 x 12 weeks of treatment. This new compound showed efficacy and was very well tolerated. This shows that we definitely need long-term studies with this new, well-tolerated drug in this rare disease.
 

 

 

Anticoagulation in Subclinical AF

My fourth study comes from the stroke-prevention field, published in The New England Journal of Medicine. I think you are aware of subclinical atrail fibrillation. These are high-frequency episodes in ECG, usually identified by pacemakers or ECG monitoring systems. The international ARTESIA study included more than 4000 patients randomized either to apixaban 5 mg twice daily or aspirin 81 mg.

After 3.5 years, the investigators showed a small but significant decrease in the rate of stroke, with a relative risk reduction of 37%, but also, unfortunately, a significantly increased risk for major bleeding with apixaban. This means that we need a careful discussion with the patient, the family, and the GP to decide whether these patients should be anticoagulated or not.
 

Migraine and Depression

My final study, published in the European Journal of Neurology, deals with the comorbidity of depression and migraine. This study in the Netherlands included 108 patients treated with erenumab and 90 with fremanezumab; 68 were controls.

They used two depression scales. They showed that treatment with the monoclonal antibodies improved at least one of the two depression scales. I think this is an important study because it indicates that you can improve comorbid depression in people with severe migraine, even if this study did not show a correlation between the reduction in monthly migraine days and the improvement of depression.

What we learned for clinical practice is that we have to identify depression in people with migraine and we have to deal with it. Whether it’s with the treatment of monoclonal antibodies or antidepressant therapy doesn’t really matter.

Dear colleagues, we had interesting studies this month. I think the most spectacular one was published in Science on long COVID. Thank you very much for listening and watching. I’m Christoph Diener from University Duisburg-Essen.
 

Dr. Diener is Professor, Department of Neurology, Stroke Center-Headache Center, University Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany. He disclosed ties with Abbott; Addex Pharma; Alder; Allergan; Almirall; Amgen; Autonomic Technology; AstraZeneca; Bayer Vital; Berlin Chemie; Bristol-Myers Squibb; Boehringer Ingelheim; Chordate; CoAxia; Corimmun; Covidien; Coherex; CoLucid; Daiichi-Sankyo; D-Pharml Electrocore; Fresenius; GlaxoSmithKline; Grunenthal; Janssen-Cilag; Labrys Biologics Lilly; La Roche; 3M Medica; MSD; Medtronic; Menarini; MindFrame; Minster; Neuroscore; Neurobiological Technologies; Novartis; Novo-Nordisk; Johnson & Johnson; Knoll; Paion; Parke-Davis; Pierre Fabre; Pfizer Inc; Schaper and Brummer; sanofi-aventis; Schering-Plough; Servier; Solvay; Syngis; St. Jude; Talecris; Thrombogenics; WebMD Global; Weber and Weber; Wyeth; and Yamanouchi.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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National Rapid Genome Testing Program Benefits NICU Care

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 02/29/2024 - 06:34

 

TOPLINE:

A national study in Israel demonstrates the feasibility and diagnostic benefits of rapid trio genome sequencing in critically ill neonates.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a prospective, multicenter cohort study from October 2021 to December 2022, involving all Israeli medical genetics institutes and neonatal intensive care units.
  • A total of 130 critically ill neonates suspected of having a genetic disorder were enrolled, with rapid genome sequencing results expected within 10 days.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Rapid trio genome sequencing diagnosed 50% of the neonates with disease-causing variants, including 12 chromosomal and 52 monogenic conditions.
  • Another 11% had variants of unknown significance that were suspected to be disease-causing, and 1% had a novel gene suspected of causing disease.
  • The mean turnaround time for the rapid reports was 7 days, demonstrating the feasibility of implementing rapid genome sequencing in a national healthcare setting, the researchers said.
  • Genomic testing led to a change in clinical management for 22% of the neonates, which shows the clinical utility of this approach to diagnosis, they said.

IN PRACTICE:

Genetic testing may identify patients who are candidates for precision medical treatment and inform family planning, which is “critical for families with a severely affected or deceased child,” the study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The corresponding author for the study was Daphna Marom, MD, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel. It was published online on February 22, 2024, in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s reliance on voluntary participation may have introduced referral bias, potentially affecting the diagnostic rates. The long-term impact of diagnosis on survival, growth, and development remains to be evaluated. Bioinformatics tools have limitations, as shown by the missed detection of maternal uniparental disomy in one case of a hypotonic infant with Prader-Willi syndrome, the researchers noted. Clinical judgment is still essential, they said.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was sponsored by a collaboration between the Israeli Ministry of Health, Illumina, and the Genomics Center at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. Illumina provided reagents, bioinformatics tools, and editorial assistance. Study authors disclosed financial ties to Illumina.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

A national study in Israel demonstrates the feasibility and diagnostic benefits of rapid trio genome sequencing in critically ill neonates.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a prospective, multicenter cohort study from October 2021 to December 2022, involving all Israeli medical genetics institutes and neonatal intensive care units.
  • A total of 130 critically ill neonates suspected of having a genetic disorder were enrolled, with rapid genome sequencing results expected within 10 days.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Rapid trio genome sequencing diagnosed 50% of the neonates with disease-causing variants, including 12 chromosomal and 52 monogenic conditions.
  • Another 11% had variants of unknown significance that were suspected to be disease-causing, and 1% had a novel gene suspected of causing disease.
  • The mean turnaround time for the rapid reports was 7 days, demonstrating the feasibility of implementing rapid genome sequencing in a national healthcare setting, the researchers said.
  • Genomic testing led to a change in clinical management for 22% of the neonates, which shows the clinical utility of this approach to diagnosis, they said.

IN PRACTICE:

Genetic testing may identify patients who are candidates for precision medical treatment and inform family planning, which is “critical for families with a severely affected or deceased child,” the study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The corresponding author for the study was Daphna Marom, MD, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel. It was published online on February 22, 2024, in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s reliance on voluntary participation may have introduced referral bias, potentially affecting the diagnostic rates. The long-term impact of diagnosis on survival, growth, and development remains to be evaluated. Bioinformatics tools have limitations, as shown by the missed detection of maternal uniparental disomy in one case of a hypotonic infant with Prader-Willi syndrome, the researchers noted. Clinical judgment is still essential, they said.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was sponsored by a collaboration between the Israeli Ministry of Health, Illumina, and the Genomics Center at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. Illumina provided reagents, bioinformatics tools, and editorial assistance. Study authors disclosed financial ties to Illumina.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

A national study in Israel demonstrates the feasibility and diagnostic benefits of rapid trio genome sequencing in critically ill neonates.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a prospective, multicenter cohort study from October 2021 to December 2022, involving all Israeli medical genetics institutes and neonatal intensive care units.
  • A total of 130 critically ill neonates suspected of having a genetic disorder were enrolled, with rapid genome sequencing results expected within 10 days.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Rapid trio genome sequencing diagnosed 50% of the neonates with disease-causing variants, including 12 chromosomal and 52 monogenic conditions.
  • Another 11% had variants of unknown significance that were suspected to be disease-causing, and 1% had a novel gene suspected of causing disease.
  • The mean turnaround time for the rapid reports was 7 days, demonstrating the feasibility of implementing rapid genome sequencing in a national healthcare setting, the researchers said.
  • Genomic testing led to a change in clinical management for 22% of the neonates, which shows the clinical utility of this approach to diagnosis, they said.

IN PRACTICE:

Genetic testing may identify patients who are candidates for precision medical treatment and inform family planning, which is “critical for families with a severely affected or deceased child,” the study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The corresponding author for the study was Daphna Marom, MD, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel. It was published online on February 22, 2024, in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s reliance on voluntary participation may have introduced referral bias, potentially affecting the diagnostic rates. The long-term impact of diagnosis on survival, growth, and development remains to be evaluated. Bioinformatics tools have limitations, as shown by the missed detection of maternal uniparental disomy in one case of a hypotonic infant with Prader-Willi syndrome, the researchers noted. Clinical judgment is still essential, they said.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was sponsored by a collaboration between the Israeli Ministry of Health, Illumina, and the Genomics Center at the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center. Illumina provided reagents, bioinformatics tools, and editorial assistance. Study authors disclosed financial ties to Illumina.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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FDA Approves 10th Humira Biosimilar, With Interchangeability

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Changed
Tue, 02/27/2024 - 12:32

The US Food and Drug Administration has approved the first interchangeable, high-concentration, citrate-free adalimumab biosimilar, adalimumab-ryvk (Simlandi).

This is the 10th adalimumab biosimilar approved by the regulatory agency and the first biosimilar approval in the US market for the Icelandic pharmaceutical company Alvotech in partnership with Teva Pharmaceuticals.

“An interchangeable citrate-free, high-concentration biosimilar adalimumab has the potential to change the market dynamics in a rapidly evolving environment for biosimilars in the U.S.,” said Robert Wessman, chairman and CEO of Alvotech, in a company press release on February 23.

Adalimumab-ryvk was approved in the European Union in 2021 and in Australia and Canada in 2022. 

Adalimumab-ryvk is indicated for adults with rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, ulcerative colitisCrohn’s diseaseplaque psoriasishidradenitis suppurativa, and noninfectious intermediate and posterior uveitis and panuveitis. In pediatric patients, it is indicated for polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis in children 2 years of age and older and Crohn’s disease in children 6 years of age and older.

Adalimumab-ryvk is the third Humira biosimilar overall granted interchangeability status, which allows pharmacists (depending on state law) to substitute the biosimilar for the reference product without involving the prescribing clinician. Adalimumab-adbm (Cyltezo), manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim, and adalimumab-afzb (Abrilada), manufactured by Pfizer, were previously granted interchangeability status; however, they both are interchangeable with the low-concentration formulation of Humira, which make up only an estimated 15% of Humira prescriptions, according to a report by Goodroot. 

Adalimumab-ryvk will be launched “imminently” in the United States, according to the press release, but no specific dates were provided. It is also not yet known how the biosimilar will be priced compared with Humira. Other adalimumab biosimilars have launched with discounts from 5% to 85% of Humira’s list price.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The US Food and Drug Administration has approved the first interchangeable, high-concentration, citrate-free adalimumab biosimilar, adalimumab-ryvk (Simlandi).

This is the 10th adalimumab biosimilar approved by the regulatory agency and the first biosimilar approval in the US market for the Icelandic pharmaceutical company Alvotech in partnership with Teva Pharmaceuticals.

“An interchangeable citrate-free, high-concentration biosimilar adalimumab has the potential to change the market dynamics in a rapidly evolving environment for biosimilars in the U.S.,” said Robert Wessman, chairman and CEO of Alvotech, in a company press release on February 23.

Adalimumab-ryvk was approved in the European Union in 2021 and in Australia and Canada in 2022. 

Adalimumab-ryvk is indicated for adults with rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, ulcerative colitisCrohn’s diseaseplaque psoriasishidradenitis suppurativa, and noninfectious intermediate and posterior uveitis and panuveitis. In pediatric patients, it is indicated for polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis in children 2 years of age and older and Crohn’s disease in children 6 years of age and older.

Adalimumab-ryvk is the third Humira biosimilar overall granted interchangeability status, which allows pharmacists (depending on state law) to substitute the biosimilar for the reference product without involving the prescribing clinician. Adalimumab-adbm (Cyltezo), manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim, and adalimumab-afzb (Abrilada), manufactured by Pfizer, were previously granted interchangeability status; however, they both are interchangeable with the low-concentration formulation of Humira, which make up only an estimated 15% of Humira prescriptions, according to a report by Goodroot. 

Adalimumab-ryvk will be launched “imminently” in the United States, according to the press release, but no specific dates were provided. It is also not yet known how the biosimilar will be priced compared with Humira. Other adalimumab biosimilars have launched with discounts from 5% to 85% of Humira’s list price.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The US Food and Drug Administration has approved the first interchangeable, high-concentration, citrate-free adalimumab biosimilar, adalimumab-ryvk (Simlandi).

This is the 10th adalimumab biosimilar approved by the regulatory agency and the first biosimilar approval in the US market for the Icelandic pharmaceutical company Alvotech in partnership with Teva Pharmaceuticals.

“An interchangeable citrate-free, high-concentration biosimilar adalimumab has the potential to change the market dynamics in a rapidly evolving environment for biosimilars in the U.S.,” said Robert Wessman, chairman and CEO of Alvotech, in a company press release on February 23.

Adalimumab-ryvk was approved in the European Union in 2021 and in Australia and Canada in 2022. 

Adalimumab-ryvk is indicated for adults with rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, ulcerative colitisCrohn’s diseaseplaque psoriasishidradenitis suppurativa, and noninfectious intermediate and posterior uveitis and panuveitis. In pediatric patients, it is indicated for polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis in children 2 years of age and older and Crohn’s disease in children 6 years of age and older.

Adalimumab-ryvk is the third Humira biosimilar overall granted interchangeability status, which allows pharmacists (depending on state law) to substitute the biosimilar for the reference product without involving the prescribing clinician. Adalimumab-adbm (Cyltezo), manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim, and adalimumab-afzb (Abrilada), manufactured by Pfizer, were previously granted interchangeability status; however, they both are interchangeable with the low-concentration formulation of Humira, which make up only an estimated 15% of Humira prescriptions, according to a report by Goodroot. 

Adalimumab-ryvk will be launched “imminently” in the United States, according to the press release, but no specific dates were provided. It is also not yet known how the biosimilar will be priced compared with Humira. Other adalimumab biosimilars have launched with discounts from 5% to 85% of Humira’s list price.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Reduced-Dose Vaccines Protect Patients With HIV Against Mpox

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Changed
Mon, 02/26/2024 - 16:39

The smallpox vaccine effectively induces immunity against mpox virus infection (formerly simian smallpox) in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, although patients with lymphocyte counts below 500 cells/mm3 require booster doses, according to data from a study published in the Journal of Medical Virology.

The data come from the prospective observational study conducted by researchers at the Infection Biology Laboratory of the Department of Medicine and Life Sciences at Pompeu Fabra University and the HIV Unit of the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute in Barcelona, Spain. The investigators analyzed T-cell responses induced by vaccination with JYNNEOS.

Despite the substantial decrease in the reporting frequency of mpox cases from the global peak in August 2022 (30,894 cases) to 804 monthly cases in the last six months of 2023, mpox continues to circulate, and there is no specific vaccine. The JYNNEOS vaccine, with protective cross-reactivity against orthopoxviruses, is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency for the prevention of smallpox and mpox in adults at high risk for infection.

During the 2022 outbreak in the United States and Europe, vaccine shortages led to the emergency use authorization of a lower intradermal dose. This strategy was aimed at increasing vaccine supply up to fivefold.

Further clinical trials are needed to evaluate responses to JYNNEOS vaccination and compare different administration routes in patients with HIV infection. Protecting this population against mpox is a priority because people with high viral loads or loCD4+ T-lymphocyte counts are especially susceptible to severe disease.
 

Vaccination Responses 

The study assessed the immune response to the JYNNEOS vaccine in patients with HIV who were receiving antiretroviral therapy as outpatients at the Infectious Diseases Unit of Hospital del Mar in Barcelona, Spain. Participants had viral loads controlled by antiretroviral therapy and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts ≤ 500/mm3 (loCD4 group) or ≥ 500/mm3 (hiCD4 group) in blood. Vaccine responses were compared with those of vaccinated controls without the disease. The study included cases that received the standard subcutaneous vaccine (before August 2022) or the emergency dose-saving intradermal vaccine after its approval in August 2022.

The results demonstrated that the intradermal dose-saving vaccination route is preferable to the subcutaneous route and that patients in the loCD4 group may require at least one booster to generate an efficient response of specific T cells for mpox, wrote the authors.

“This study has two relevant points,” study author Robert Güerri-Fernandez, MD, PhD, head of infectious diseases at the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute, told this news organization. “In the subgroup of patients with HIV with effective treatment but without an immune response (ie, loCD4), the vaccine response is worse than in people who have recovered immunity or do not have HIV. Therefore, they need a booster dose.

“The second point is that the intradermal route with one-fifth of the standard subcutaneous dose has a better immune response than the standard subcutaneous route.” He added that it was a good strategy to save doses and be able to vaccinate many more people when vaccine shortages occurred.

“A general conclusion cannot be drawn,” he said. “It needs to be validated with many more subjects, of course, but in some way, it reinforced our confidence in the strategy of health authorities to promote intradermal vaccination. There we had evidence that the patients we were vaccinating intradermally were responding well.”

In Spain, although there is no shortage of vaccines today, they continue to be administered intradermally with a fractionated dose equivalent to one fifth of a standard dose, said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez.

However, in his opinion, observations regarding the two administration routes signal a need for further research. The main message should be that for patients with HIV infection who do not have an immune response, the vaccine response is incomplete, and they need booster doses as well as monitoring of the vaccine immune response, said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez.
 

 

 

More Studies Required

The research, which prospectively collected data and blood samples from patients with HIV who received the JYNNEOS vaccine, is small and included only 24 patients with HIV infection, with seven hospital workers who also received the vaccine and seven unvaccinated individuals as controls. “I am one of the control subjects of the study, and intradermal vaccination is not especially pleasant,” said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez. “It is a very innervated area, and the moment of introducing the liquid is uncomfortable. But it is perfectly bearable.”

Outpatient HIV-infected patients from the Infectious Diseases Unit of Hospital del Mar on antiretroviral therapy and with undetectable viral loads were grouped according to their CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts. Those with CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts ≤ 500/mm3 required at least one booster vaccine to exhibit efficient virus-specific T-lymphocyte responses. The magnitude of the T-cell response after this booster correlated directly with the CD4+ T-lymphocyte count of those vaccinated.

For Argentine infectious disease specialist Julián García, MD, clinical researcher at the Huésped Foundation in Buenos Aires, Argentina, who did not participate in the study, it is always productive to know that T-cell responses develop in patients with HIV infection, with CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts > and < 500/mm3, through an intradermal administration route.

Dr. García emphasized that the most novel aspect is that the JYNNEOS vaccine induces a specific T-cell response in patients with HIV infection that increases with higher CD4+ T-lymphocyte levels. However, he noted that the number of patients was less than 10 in most study groups, and the control group had only intradermal administration, which limits the interpretation of the results. “It will be necessary to verify this in studies with larger groups with control groups from all routes and with a correlate of protection.”

Dr. García referred to this latter point as a significant source of uncertainty. “The study is fundamentally based on the cellular response, but nowadays, there is no immune correlate of real-life protection.” He concluded that the study builds knowledge, which is essential for a vaccine that began to be used for mpox and the effectiveness of which is based on estimates. 

Dr. Güerri-Fernandez and Dr. Garcia declared no relevant financial conflicts of interest. 

This story was translated from the Medscape Spanish edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The smallpox vaccine effectively induces immunity against mpox virus infection (formerly simian smallpox) in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, although patients with lymphocyte counts below 500 cells/mm3 require booster doses, according to data from a study published in the Journal of Medical Virology.

The data come from the prospective observational study conducted by researchers at the Infection Biology Laboratory of the Department of Medicine and Life Sciences at Pompeu Fabra University and the HIV Unit of the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute in Barcelona, Spain. The investigators analyzed T-cell responses induced by vaccination with JYNNEOS.

Despite the substantial decrease in the reporting frequency of mpox cases from the global peak in August 2022 (30,894 cases) to 804 monthly cases in the last six months of 2023, mpox continues to circulate, and there is no specific vaccine. The JYNNEOS vaccine, with protective cross-reactivity against orthopoxviruses, is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency for the prevention of smallpox and mpox in adults at high risk for infection.

During the 2022 outbreak in the United States and Europe, vaccine shortages led to the emergency use authorization of a lower intradermal dose. This strategy was aimed at increasing vaccine supply up to fivefold.

Further clinical trials are needed to evaluate responses to JYNNEOS vaccination and compare different administration routes in patients with HIV infection. Protecting this population against mpox is a priority because people with high viral loads or loCD4+ T-lymphocyte counts are especially susceptible to severe disease.
 

Vaccination Responses 

The study assessed the immune response to the JYNNEOS vaccine in patients with HIV who were receiving antiretroviral therapy as outpatients at the Infectious Diseases Unit of Hospital del Mar in Barcelona, Spain. Participants had viral loads controlled by antiretroviral therapy and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts ≤ 500/mm3 (loCD4 group) or ≥ 500/mm3 (hiCD4 group) in blood. Vaccine responses were compared with those of vaccinated controls without the disease. The study included cases that received the standard subcutaneous vaccine (before August 2022) or the emergency dose-saving intradermal vaccine after its approval in August 2022.

The results demonstrated that the intradermal dose-saving vaccination route is preferable to the subcutaneous route and that patients in the loCD4 group may require at least one booster to generate an efficient response of specific T cells for mpox, wrote the authors.

“This study has two relevant points,” study author Robert Güerri-Fernandez, MD, PhD, head of infectious diseases at the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute, told this news organization. “In the subgroup of patients with HIV with effective treatment but without an immune response (ie, loCD4), the vaccine response is worse than in people who have recovered immunity or do not have HIV. Therefore, they need a booster dose.

“The second point is that the intradermal route with one-fifth of the standard subcutaneous dose has a better immune response than the standard subcutaneous route.” He added that it was a good strategy to save doses and be able to vaccinate many more people when vaccine shortages occurred.

“A general conclusion cannot be drawn,” he said. “It needs to be validated with many more subjects, of course, but in some way, it reinforced our confidence in the strategy of health authorities to promote intradermal vaccination. There we had evidence that the patients we were vaccinating intradermally were responding well.”

In Spain, although there is no shortage of vaccines today, they continue to be administered intradermally with a fractionated dose equivalent to one fifth of a standard dose, said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez.

However, in his opinion, observations regarding the two administration routes signal a need for further research. The main message should be that for patients with HIV infection who do not have an immune response, the vaccine response is incomplete, and they need booster doses as well as monitoring of the vaccine immune response, said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez.
 

 

 

More Studies Required

The research, which prospectively collected data and blood samples from patients with HIV who received the JYNNEOS vaccine, is small and included only 24 patients with HIV infection, with seven hospital workers who also received the vaccine and seven unvaccinated individuals as controls. “I am one of the control subjects of the study, and intradermal vaccination is not especially pleasant,” said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez. “It is a very innervated area, and the moment of introducing the liquid is uncomfortable. But it is perfectly bearable.”

Outpatient HIV-infected patients from the Infectious Diseases Unit of Hospital del Mar on antiretroviral therapy and with undetectable viral loads were grouped according to their CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts. Those with CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts ≤ 500/mm3 required at least one booster vaccine to exhibit efficient virus-specific T-lymphocyte responses. The magnitude of the T-cell response after this booster correlated directly with the CD4+ T-lymphocyte count of those vaccinated.

For Argentine infectious disease specialist Julián García, MD, clinical researcher at the Huésped Foundation in Buenos Aires, Argentina, who did not participate in the study, it is always productive to know that T-cell responses develop in patients with HIV infection, with CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts > and < 500/mm3, through an intradermal administration route.

Dr. García emphasized that the most novel aspect is that the JYNNEOS vaccine induces a specific T-cell response in patients with HIV infection that increases with higher CD4+ T-lymphocyte levels. However, he noted that the number of patients was less than 10 in most study groups, and the control group had only intradermal administration, which limits the interpretation of the results. “It will be necessary to verify this in studies with larger groups with control groups from all routes and with a correlate of protection.”

Dr. García referred to this latter point as a significant source of uncertainty. “The study is fundamentally based on the cellular response, but nowadays, there is no immune correlate of real-life protection.” He concluded that the study builds knowledge, which is essential for a vaccine that began to be used for mpox and the effectiveness of which is based on estimates. 

Dr. Güerri-Fernandez and Dr. Garcia declared no relevant financial conflicts of interest. 

This story was translated from the Medscape Spanish edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The smallpox vaccine effectively induces immunity against mpox virus infection (formerly simian smallpox) in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, although patients with lymphocyte counts below 500 cells/mm3 require booster doses, according to data from a study published in the Journal of Medical Virology.

The data come from the prospective observational study conducted by researchers at the Infection Biology Laboratory of the Department of Medicine and Life Sciences at Pompeu Fabra University and the HIV Unit of the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute in Barcelona, Spain. The investigators analyzed T-cell responses induced by vaccination with JYNNEOS.

Despite the substantial decrease in the reporting frequency of mpox cases from the global peak in August 2022 (30,894 cases) to 804 monthly cases in the last six months of 2023, mpox continues to circulate, and there is no specific vaccine. The JYNNEOS vaccine, with protective cross-reactivity against orthopoxviruses, is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency for the prevention of smallpox and mpox in adults at high risk for infection.

During the 2022 outbreak in the United States and Europe, vaccine shortages led to the emergency use authorization of a lower intradermal dose. This strategy was aimed at increasing vaccine supply up to fivefold.

Further clinical trials are needed to evaluate responses to JYNNEOS vaccination and compare different administration routes in patients with HIV infection. Protecting this population against mpox is a priority because people with high viral loads or loCD4+ T-lymphocyte counts are especially susceptible to severe disease.
 

Vaccination Responses 

The study assessed the immune response to the JYNNEOS vaccine in patients with HIV who were receiving antiretroviral therapy as outpatients at the Infectious Diseases Unit of Hospital del Mar in Barcelona, Spain. Participants had viral loads controlled by antiretroviral therapy and CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts ≤ 500/mm3 (loCD4 group) or ≥ 500/mm3 (hiCD4 group) in blood. Vaccine responses were compared with those of vaccinated controls without the disease. The study included cases that received the standard subcutaneous vaccine (before August 2022) or the emergency dose-saving intradermal vaccine after its approval in August 2022.

The results demonstrated that the intradermal dose-saving vaccination route is preferable to the subcutaneous route and that patients in the loCD4 group may require at least one booster to generate an efficient response of specific T cells for mpox, wrote the authors.

“This study has two relevant points,” study author Robert Güerri-Fernandez, MD, PhD, head of infectious diseases at the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute, told this news organization. “In the subgroup of patients with HIV with effective treatment but without an immune response (ie, loCD4), the vaccine response is worse than in people who have recovered immunity or do not have HIV. Therefore, they need a booster dose.

“The second point is that the intradermal route with one-fifth of the standard subcutaneous dose has a better immune response than the standard subcutaneous route.” He added that it was a good strategy to save doses and be able to vaccinate many more people when vaccine shortages occurred.

“A general conclusion cannot be drawn,” he said. “It needs to be validated with many more subjects, of course, but in some way, it reinforced our confidence in the strategy of health authorities to promote intradermal vaccination. There we had evidence that the patients we were vaccinating intradermally were responding well.”

In Spain, although there is no shortage of vaccines today, they continue to be administered intradermally with a fractionated dose equivalent to one fifth of a standard dose, said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez.

However, in his opinion, observations regarding the two administration routes signal a need for further research. The main message should be that for patients with HIV infection who do not have an immune response, the vaccine response is incomplete, and they need booster doses as well as monitoring of the vaccine immune response, said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez.
 

 

 

More Studies Required

The research, which prospectively collected data and blood samples from patients with HIV who received the JYNNEOS vaccine, is small and included only 24 patients with HIV infection, with seven hospital workers who also received the vaccine and seven unvaccinated individuals as controls. “I am one of the control subjects of the study, and intradermal vaccination is not especially pleasant,” said Dr. Güerri-Fernandez. “It is a very innervated area, and the moment of introducing the liquid is uncomfortable. But it is perfectly bearable.”

Outpatient HIV-infected patients from the Infectious Diseases Unit of Hospital del Mar on antiretroviral therapy and with undetectable viral loads were grouped according to their CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts. Those with CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts ≤ 500/mm3 required at least one booster vaccine to exhibit efficient virus-specific T-lymphocyte responses. The magnitude of the T-cell response after this booster correlated directly with the CD4+ T-lymphocyte count of those vaccinated.

For Argentine infectious disease specialist Julián García, MD, clinical researcher at the Huésped Foundation in Buenos Aires, Argentina, who did not participate in the study, it is always productive to know that T-cell responses develop in patients with HIV infection, with CD4+ T-lymphocyte counts > and < 500/mm3, through an intradermal administration route.

Dr. García emphasized that the most novel aspect is that the JYNNEOS vaccine induces a specific T-cell response in patients with HIV infection that increases with higher CD4+ T-lymphocyte levels. However, he noted that the number of patients was less than 10 in most study groups, and the control group had only intradermal administration, which limits the interpretation of the results. “It will be necessary to verify this in studies with larger groups with control groups from all routes and with a correlate of protection.”

Dr. García referred to this latter point as a significant source of uncertainty. “The study is fundamentally based on the cellular response, but nowadays, there is no immune correlate of real-life protection.” He concluded that the study builds knowledge, which is essential for a vaccine that began to be used for mpox and the effectiveness of which is based on estimates. 

Dr. Güerri-Fernandez and Dr. Garcia declared no relevant financial conflicts of interest. 

This story was translated from the Medscape Spanish edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Prognosis of Polyarteritis Nodosa: What Are the Predictors?

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Changed
Wed, 03/06/2024 - 10:01

 

TOPLINE:

Age older than 65 years and serum creatinine greater than 140 micromol/L at the time of systemic polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) diagnosis were significant predictors of mortality.

METHODOLOGY:

  • A total of 358 patients diagnosed with PAN between 1990 and 2020 were identified from retrospective chart reviews and prospective cohorts from nine countries as a part of GLOBAL-PAN, a collaboration of the European Vasculitis Society, the Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium, and other networks.
  • The goal of the retrospective chart review was to characterize the nature, presentation, and survival rates of patients with PAN.
  • The study population included 174 female and 184 male patients; 282 had systemic PAN (sPAN) and 76 had cutaneous PAN (cPAN); the mean age at diagnosis was 44.3 years.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall survival rates at 1, 5, and 10 years for patients with sPAN were 97.1%, 94.0%, and 89.0%, respectively.
  • Significant independent predictors of mortality were age ≥ 65 years at the time of sPAN diagnosis (hazard ratio [HR], 3.85), serum creatinine > 140 micromol/L at the time of diagnosis (HR, 4.93), gastrointestinal involvement (HR, 3.51), and central nervous system involvement (HR, 3.56).
  • Constitutional symptoms were significantly more common in patients with sPAN vs cPAN (78.8% vs 44.7%), while patients with cPAN were significantly more likely to be female and have more skin nodules than patients with sPAN.
  • Relapse over a median disease duration of 59.6 months was slightly higher for cPAN vs sPAN (38.8% vs 32.1%).

IN PRACTICE:

“This study helps better define the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with PAN and differentiates sPAN from cPAN,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

The lead author of the study was Omer Karadag, MD, of Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey. The study was published online on February 12 in Arthritis & Rheumatology.

LIMITATIONS:

Study limitations included the combination of prospective and retrospective data, varying approaches to patient assessment, and lack of data on treatment effects.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium, which received funding from the National Center for Advancing Translational Science, the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, and the National Center for Research Resources. Dr. Karadag disclosed research grants from AbbVie, Novartis, Viela-Bio, and TR-Pharma, and consulting fees from AbbVie, Abdi Ibrahim, Celltrion, Novartis, Pfizer, Sandoz, and UCB.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Age older than 65 years and serum creatinine greater than 140 micromol/L at the time of systemic polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) diagnosis were significant predictors of mortality.

METHODOLOGY:

  • A total of 358 patients diagnosed with PAN between 1990 and 2020 were identified from retrospective chart reviews and prospective cohorts from nine countries as a part of GLOBAL-PAN, a collaboration of the European Vasculitis Society, the Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium, and other networks.
  • The goal of the retrospective chart review was to characterize the nature, presentation, and survival rates of patients with PAN.
  • The study population included 174 female and 184 male patients; 282 had systemic PAN (sPAN) and 76 had cutaneous PAN (cPAN); the mean age at diagnosis was 44.3 years.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall survival rates at 1, 5, and 10 years for patients with sPAN were 97.1%, 94.0%, and 89.0%, respectively.
  • Significant independent predictors of mortality were age ≥ 65 years at the time of sPAN diagnosis (hazard ratio [HR], 3.85), serum creatinine > 140 micromol/L at the time of diagnosis (HR, 4.93), gastrointestinal involvement (HR, 3.51), and central nervous system involvement (HR, 3.56).
  • Constitutional symptoms were significantly more common in patients with sPAN vs cPAN (78.8% vs 44.7%), while patients with cPAN were significantly more likely to be female and have more skin nodules than patients with sPAN.
  • Relapse over a median disease duration of 59.6 months was slightly higher for cPAN vs sPAN (38.8% vs 32.1%).

IN PRACTICE:

“This study helps better define the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with PAN and differentiates sPAN from cPAN,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

The lead author of the study was Omer Karadag, MD, of Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey. The study was published online on February 12 in Arthritis & Rheumatology.

LIMITATIONS:

Study limitations included the combination of prospective and retrospective data, varying approaches to patient assessment, and lack of data on treatment effects.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium, which received funding from the National Center for Advancing Translational Science, the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, and the National Center for Research Resources. Dr. Karadag disclosed research grants from AbbVie, Novartis, Viela-Bio, and TR-Pharma, and consulting fees from AbbVie, Abdi Ibrahim, Celltrion, Novartis, Pfizer, Sandoz, and UCB.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Age older than 65 years and serum creatinine greater than 140 micromol/L at the time of systemic polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) diagnosis were significant predictors of mortality.

METHODOLOGY:

  • A total of 358 patients diagnosed with PAN between 1990 and 2020 were identified from retrospective chart reviews and prospective cohorts from nine countries as a part of GLOBAL-PAN, a collaboration of the European Vasculitis Society, the Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium, and other networks.
  • The goal of the retrospective chart review was to characterize the nature, presentation, and survival rates of patients with PAN.
  • The study population included 174 female and 184 male patients; 282 had systemic PAN (sPAN) and 76 had cutaneous PAN (cPAN); the mean age at diagnosis was 44.3 years.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall survival rates at 1, 5, and 10 years for patients with sPAN were 97.1%, 94.0%, and 89.0%, respectively.
  • Significant independent predictors of mortality were age ≥ 65 years at the time of sPAN diagnosis (hazard ratio [HR], 3.85), serum creatinine > 140 micromol/L at the time of diagnosis (HR, 4.93), gastrointestinal involvement (HR, 3.51), and central nervous system involvement (HR, 3.56).
  • Constitutional symptoms were significantly more common in patients with sPAN vs cPAN (78.8% vs 44.7%), while patients with cPAN were significantly more likely to be female and have more skin nodules than patients with sPAN.
  • Relapse over a median disease duration of 59.6 months was slightly higher for cPAN vs sPAN (38.8% vs 32.1%).

IN PRACTICE:

“This study helps better define the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with PAN and differentiates sPAN from cPAN,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

The lead author of the study was Omer Karadag, MD, of Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey. The study was published online on February 12 in Arthritis & Rheumatology.

LIMITATIONS:

Study limitations included the combination of prospective and retrospective data, varying approaches to patient assessment, and lack of data on treatment effects.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium, which received funding from the National Center for Advancing Translational Science, the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, and the National Center for Research Resources. Dr. Karadag disclosed research grants from AbbVie, Novartis, Viela-Bio, and TR-Pharma, and consulting fees from AbbVie, Abdi Ibrahim, Celltrion, Novartis, Pfizer, Sandoz, and UCB.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Unleashing Our Immune Response to Quash Cancer

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Wed, 02/21/2024 - 21:08

This article was originally published on February 10 in Eric Topol’s substack “Ground Truths.”

It’s astounding how devious cancer cells and tumor tissue can be. This week in Science we learned how certain lung cancer cells can function like “Catch Me If You Can” — changing their driver mutation and cell identity to escape targeted therapy. This histologic transformation, as seen in an experimental model, is just one of so many cancer tricks that we are learning about.

Recently, as shown by single-cell sequencing, cancer cells can steal the mitochondria from T cells, a double whammy that turbocharges cancer cells with the hijacked fuel supply and, at the same time, dismantles the immune response.

Last week, we saw how tumor cells can release a virus-like protein that unleashes a vicious autoimmune response.

And then there’s the finding that cancer cell spread predominantly is occurring while we sleep.

As I previously reviewed, the ability for cancer cells to hijack neurons and neural circuits is now well established, no less their ability to reprogram neurons to become adrenergic and stimulate tumor progression, and interfere with the immune response. Stay tuned on that for a new Ground Truths podcast with Prof Michelle Monje, a leader in cancer neuroscience, which will post soon.

Add advancing age’s immunosenescence as yet another challenge to the long and growing list of formidable ways that cancer cells, and the tumor microenvironment, evade our immune response.

An Ever-Expanding Armamentarium

All of this is telling us how we need to ramp up our game if we are going to be able to use our immune system to quash a cancer. Fortunately, we have abundant and ever-growing capabilities for doing just that.

Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors

The field of immunotherapies took off with the immune checkpoint inhibitors, first approved by the FDA in 2011, that take the brakes off of T cells, with the programmed death-1 (PD-1), PD-ligand1, and anti-CTLA-4 monoclonal antibodies.

But we’re clearly learning they are not enough to prevail over cancer with common recurrences, only short term success in most patients, with some notable exceptions. Adding other immune response strategies, such as a vaccine, or antibody-drug conjugates, or engineered T cells, are showing improved chances for success.

Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines

There are many therapeutic cancer vaccines in the works, as reviewed in depth here.

Here’s a list of ongoing clinical trials of cancer vaccines. You’ll note most of these are on top of a checkpoint inhibitor and use personalized neoantigens (cancer cell surface proteins) derived from sequencing (whole-exome or whole genome, RNA-sequencing and HLA-profiling) the patient’s tumor.

An example of positive findings is with the combination of an mRNA-nanoparticle vaccine with up to 34 personalized neoantigens and pembrolizumab (Keytruda) vs pembrolizumab alone in advanced melanoma after resection, with improved outcomes at 3-year follow-up, cutting death or relapse rate in half.

Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADC)

There is considerable excitement about antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) whereby a linker is used to attach a chemotherapy agent to the checkpoint inhibitor antibody, specifically targeting the cancer cell and facilitating entry of the chemotherapy into the cell. Akin to these are bispecific antibodies (BiTEs, binding to a tumor antigen and T cell receptor simultaneously), both of these conjugates acting as “biologic” or “guided” missiles.

A very good example of the potency of an ADC was seen in a “HER2-low” breast cancer randomized trial. The absence or very low expression or amplification of the HER2 receptor is common in breast cancer and successful treatment has been elusive. A randomized trial of an ADC (trastuzumab deruxtecan) compared to physician’s choice therapy demonstrated a marked success for progression-free survival in HER2-low patients, which was characterized as “unheard-of success” by media coverage.

This strategy is being used to target some of the most difficult cancer driver mutations such as TP53 and KRAS.

Oncolytic Viruses

Modifying viruses to infect the tumor and make it more visible to the immune system, potentiating anti-tumor responses, known as oncolytic viruses, have been proposed as a way to rev up the immune response for a long time but without positive Phase 3 clinical trials.

After decades of failure, a recent trial in refractory bladder cancer showed marked success, along with others, summarized here, now providing very encouraging results. It looks like oncolytic viruses are on a comeback path.

Engineering T Cells (Chimeric Antigen Receptor [CAR-T])

As I recently reviewed, there are over 500 ongoing clinical trials to build on the success of the first CAR-T approval for leukemia 7 years ago. I won’t go through that all again here, but to reiterate most of the success to date has been in “liquid” blood (leukemia and lymphoma) cancer tumors. This week in Nature is the discovery of a T cell cancer mutation, a gene fusion CARD11-PIK3R3, from a T cell lymphoma that can potentially be used to augment CAR-T efficacy. It has pronounced and prolonged effects in the experimental model. Instead of 1 million cells needed for treatment, even 20,000 were enough to melt the tumor. This is a noteworthy discovery since CAR-T work to date has largely not exploited such naturally occurring mutations, while instead concentrating on those seen in the patient’s set of key tumor mutations.

As currently conceived, CAR-T, and what is being referred to more broadly as adoptive cell therapies, involves removing T cells from the patient’s body and engineering their activation, then reintroducing them back to the patient. This is laborious, technically difficult, and very expensive. Recently, the idea of achieving all of this via an injection of virus that specifically infects T cells and inserts the genes needed, was advanced by two biotech companies with preclinical results, one in non-human primates.

Gearing up to meet the challenge of solid tumor CAR-T intervention, there’s more work using CRISPR genome editing of T cell receptorsA.I. is increasingly being exploited to process the data from sequencing and identify optimal neoantigens.

Instead of just CAR-T, we’re seeing the emergence of CAR-macrophage and CAR-natural killer (NK) cells strategies, and rapidly expanding potential combinations of all the strategies I’ve mentioned. No less, there’s been maturation of on-off suicide switches programmed in, to limit cytokine release and promote safety of these interventions. Overall, major side effects of immunotherapies are not only cytokine release syndromes, but also include interstitial pneumonitis and neurotoxicity.

Summary

Given the multitude of ways cancer cells and tumor tissue can evade our immune response, durably successful treatment remains a daunting challenge. But the ingenuity of so many different approaches to unleash our immune response, and their combinations, provides considerable hope that we’ll increasingly meet the challenge in the years ahead. We have clearly learned that combining different immunotherapy strategies will be essential for many patients with the most resilient solid tumors.

Of concern, as noted by a recent editorial in The Lancet, entitled “Cancer Research Equity: Innovations For The Many, Not The Few,” is that these individualized, sophisticated strategies are not scalable; they will have limited reach and benefit. The movement towards “off the shelf” CAR-T and inexpensive, orally active checkpoint inhibitors may help mitigate this issue.

Notwithstanding this important concern, we’re seeing an array of diverse and potent immunotherapy strategies that are providing highly encouraging results, engendering more excitement than we’ve seen in this space for some time. These should propel substantial improvements in outcomes for patients in the years ahead. It can’t happen soon enough.

Thanks for reading this edition of Ground Truths. If you found it informative, please share it with your colleagues.

Dr. Topol has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Serve(d) as a director, officer, partner, employee, advisor, consultant, or trustee for Dexcom; Illumina; Molecular Stethoscope; Quest Diagnostics; Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. Received research grant from National Institutes of Health.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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This article was originally published on February 10 in Eric Topol’s substack “Ground Truths.”

It’s astounding how devious cancer cells and tumor tissue can be. This week in Science we learned how certain lung cancer cells can function like “Catch Me If You Can” — changing their driver mutation and cell identity to escape targeted therapy. This histologic transformation, as seen in an experimental model, is just one of so many cancer tricks that we are learning about.

Recently, as shown by single-cell sequencing, cancer cells can steal the mitochondria from T cells, a double whammy that turbocharges cancer cells with the hijacked fuel supply and, at the same time, dismantles the immune response.

Last week, we saw how tumor cells can release a virus-like protein that unleashes a vicious autoimmune response.

And then there’s the finding that cancer cell spread predominantly is occurring while we sleep.

As I previously reviewed, the ability for cancer cells to hijack neurons and neural circuits is now well established, no less their ability to reprogram neurons to become adrenergic and stimulate tumor progression, and interfere with the immune response. Stay tuned on that for a new Ground Truths podcast with Prof Michelle Monje, a leader in cancer neuroscience, which will post soon.

Add advancing age’s immunosenescence as yet another challenge to the long and growing list of formidable ways that cancer cells, and the tumor microenvironment, evade our immune response.

An Ever-Expanding Armamentarium

All of this is telling us how we need to ramp up our game if we are going to be able to use our immune system to quash a cancer. Fortunately, we have abundant and ever-growing capabilities for doing just that.

Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors

The field of immunotherapies took off with the immune checkpoint inhibitors, first approved by the FDA in 2011, that take the brakes off of T cells, with the programmed death-1 (PD-1), PD-ligand1, and anti-CTLA-4 monoclonal antibodies.

But we’re clearly learning they are not enough to prevail over cancer with common recurrences, only short term success in most patients, with some notable exceptions. Adding other immune response strategies, such as a vaccine, or antibody-drug conjugates, or engineered T cells, are showing improved chances for success.

Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines

There are many therapeutic cancer vaccines in the works, as reviewed in depth here.

Here’s a list of ongoing clinical trials of cancer vaccines. You’ll note most of these are on top of a checkpoint inhibitor and use personalized neoantigens (cancer cell surface proteins) derived from sequencing (whole-exome or whole genome, RNA-sequencing and HLA-profiling) the patient’s tumor.

An example of positive findings is with the combination of an mRNA-nanoparticle vaccine with up to 34 personalized neoantigens and pembrolizumab (Keytruda) vs pembrolizumab alone in advanced melanoma after resection, with improved outcomes at 3-year follow-up, cutting death or relapse rate in half.

Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADC)

There is considerable excitement about antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) whereby a linker is used to attach a chemotherapy agent to the checkpoint inhibitor antibody, specifically targeting the cancer cell and facilitating entry of the chemotherapy into the cell. Akin to these are bispecific antibodies (BiTEs, binding to a tumor antigen and T cell receptor simultaneously), both of these conjugates acting as “biologic” or “guided” missiles.

A very good example of the potency of an ADC was seen in a “HER2-low” breast cancer randomized trial. The absence or very low expression or amplification of the HER2 receptor is common in breast cancer and successful treatment has been elusive. A randomized trial of an ADC (trastuzumab deruxtecan) compared to physician’s choice therapy demonstrated a marked success for progression-free survival in HER2-low patients, which was characterized as “unheard-of success” by media coverage.

This strategy is being used to target some of the most difficult cancer driver mutations such as TP53 and KRAS.

Oncolytic Viruses

Modifying viruses to infect the tumor and make it more visible to the immune system, potentiating anti-tumor responses, known as oncolytic viruses, have been proposed as a way to rev up the immune response for a long time but without positive Phase 3 clinical trials.

After decades of failure, a recent trial in refractory bladder cancer showed marked success, along with others, summarized here, now providing very encouraging results. It looks like oncolytic viruses are on a comeback path.

Engineering T Cells (Chimeric Antigen Receptor [CAR-T])

As I recently reviewed, there are over 500 ongoing clinical trials to build on the success of the first CAR-T approval for leukemia 7 years ago. I won’t go through that all again here, but to reiterate most of the success to date has been in “liquid” blood (leukemia and lymphoma) cancer tumors. This week in Nature is the discovery of a T cell cancer mutation, a gene fusion CARD11-PIK3R3, from a T cell lymphoma that can potentially be used to augment CAR-T efficacy. It has pronounced and prolonged effects in the experimental model. Instead of 1 million cells needed for treatment, even 20,000 were enough to melt the tumor. This is a noteworthy discovery since CAR-T work to date has largely not exploited such naturally occurring mutations, while instead concentrating on those seen in the patient’s set of key tumor mutations.

As currently conceived, CAR-T, and what is being referred to more broadly as adoptive cell therapies, involves removing T cells from the patient’s body and engineering their activation, then reintroducing them back to the patient. This is laborious, technically difficult, and very expensive. Recently, the idea of achieving all of this via an injection of virus that specifically infects T cells and inserts the genes needed, was advanced by two biotech companies with preclinical results, one in non-human primates.

Gearing up to meet the challenge of solid tumor CAR-T intervention, there’s more work using CRISPR genome editing of T cell receptorsA.I. is increasingly being exploited to process the data from sequencing and identify optimal neoantigens.

Instead of just CAR-T, we’re seeing the emergence of CAR-macrophage and CAR-natural killer (NK) cells strategies, and rapidly expanding potential combinations of all the strategies I’ve mentioned. No less, there’s been maturation of on-off suicide switches programmed in, to limit cytokine release and promote safety of these interventions. Overall, major side effects of immunotherapies are not only cytokine release syndromes, but also include interstitial pneumonitis and neurotoxicity.

Summary

Given the multitude of ways cancer cells and tumor tissue can evade our immune response, durably successful treatment remains a daunting challenge. But the ingenuity of so many different approaches to unleash our immune response, and their combinations, provides considerable hope that we’ll increasingly meet the challenge in the years ahead. We have clearly learned that combining different immunotherapy strategies will be essential for many patients with the most resilient solid tumors.

Of concern, as noted by a recent editorial in The Lancet, entitled “Cancer Research Equity: Innovations For The Many, Not The Few,” is that these individualized, sophisticated strategies are not scalable; they will have limited reach and benefit. The movement towards “off the shelf” CAR-T and inexpensive, orally active checkpoint inhibitors may help mitigate this issue.

Notwithstanding this important concern, we’re seeing an array of diverse and potent immunotherapy strategies that are providing highly encouraging results, engendering more excitement than we’ve seen in this space for some time. These should propel substantial improvements in outcomes for patients in the years ahead. It can’t happen soon enough.

Thanks for reading this edition of Ground Truths. If you found it informative, please share it with your colleagues.

Dr. Topol has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Serve(d) as a director, officer, partner, employee, advisor, consultant, or trustee for Dexcom; Illumina; Molecular Stethoscope; Quest Diagnostics; Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. Received research grant from National Institutes of Health.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

This article was originally published on February 10 in Eric Topol’s substack “Ground Truths.”

It’s astounding how devious cancer cells and tumor tissue can be. This week in Science we learned how certain lung cancer cells can function like “Catch Me If You Can” — changing their driver mutation and cell identity to escape targeted therapy. This histologic transformation, as seen in an experimental model, is just one of so many cancer tricks that we are learning about.

Recently, as shown by single-cell sequencing, cancer cells can steal the mitochondria from T cells, a double whammy that turbocharges cancer cells with the hijacked fuel supply and, at the same time, dismantles the immune response.

Last week, we saw how tumor cells can release a virus-like protein that unleashes a vicious autoimmune response.

And then there’s the finding that cancer cell spread predominantly is occurring while we sleep.

As I previously reviewed, the ability for cancer cells to hijack neurons and neural circuits is now well established, no less their ability to reprogram neurons to become adrenergic and stimulate tumor progression, and interfere with the immune response. Stay tuned on that for a new Ground Truths podcast with Prof Michelle Monje, a leader in cancer neuroscience, which will post soon.

Add advancing age’s immunosenescence as yet another challenge to the long and growing list of formidable ways that cancer cells, and the tumor microenvironment, evade our immune response.

An Ever-Expanding Armamentarium

All of this is telling us how we need to ramp up our game if we are going to be able to use our immune system to quash a cancer. Fortunately, we have abundant and ever-growing capabilities for doing just that.

Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors

The field of immunotherapies took off with the immune checkpoint inhibitors, first approved by the FDA in 2011, that take the brakes off of T cells, with the programmed death-1 (PD-1), PD-ligand1, and anti-CTLA-4 monoclonal antibodies.

But we’re clearly learning they are not enough to prevail over cancer with common recurrences, only short term success in most patients, with some notable exceptions. Adding other immune response strategies, such as a vaccine, or antibody-drug conjugates, or engineered T cells, are showing improved chances for success.

Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines

There are many therapeutic cancer vaccines in the works, as reviewed in depth here.

Here’s a list of ongoing clinical trials of cancer vaccines. You’ll note most of these are on top of a checkpoint inhibitor and use personalized neoantigens (cancer cell surface proteins) derived from sequencing (whole-exome or whole genome, RNA-sequencing and HLA-profiling) the patient’s tumor.

An example of positive findings is with the combination of an mRNA-nanoparticle vaccine with up to 34 personalized neoantigens and pembrolizumab (Keytruda) vs pembrolizumab alone in advanced melanoma after resection, with improved outcomes at 3-year follow-up, cutting death or relapse rate in half.

Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADC)

There is considerable excitement about antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) whereby a linker is used to attach a chemotherapy agent to the checkpoint inhibitor antibody, specifically targeting the cancer cell and facilitating entry of the chemotherapy into the cell. Akin to these are bispecific antibodies (BiTEs, binding to a tumor antigen and T cell receptor simultaneously), both of these conjugates acting as “biologic” or “guided” missiles.

A very good example of the potency of an ADC was seen in a “HER2-low” breast cancer randomized trial. The absence or very low expression or amplification of the HER2 receptor is common in breast cancer and successful treatment has been elusive. A randomized trial of an ADC (trastuzumab deruxtecan) compared to physician’s choice therapy demonstrated a marked success for progression-free survival in HER2-low patients, which was characterized as “unheard-of success” by media coverage.

This strategy is being used to target some of the most difficult cancer driver mutations such as TP53 and KRAS.

Oncolytic Viruses

Modifying viruses to infect the tumor and make it more visible to the immune system, potentiating anti-tumor responses, known as oncolytic viruses, have been proposed as a way to rev up the immune response for a long time but without positive Phase 3 clinical trials.

After decades of failure, a recent trial in refractory bladder cancer showed marked success, along with others, summarized here, now providing very encouraging results. It looks like oncolytic viruses are on a comeback path.

Engineering T Cells (Chimeric Antigen Receptor [CAR-T])

As I recently reviewed, there are over 500 ongoing clinical trials to build on the success of the first CAR-T approval for leukemia 7 years ago. I won’t go through that all again here, but to reiterate most of the success to date has been in “liquid” blood (leukemia and lymphoma) cancer tumors. This week in Nature is the discovery of a T cell cancer mutation, a gene fusion CARD11-PIK3R3, from a T cell lymphoma that can potentially be used to augment CAR-T efficacy. It has pronounced and prolonged effects in the experimental model. Instead of 1 million cells needed for treatment, even 20,000 were enough to melt the tumor. This is a noteworthy discovery since CAR-T work to date has largely not exploited such naturally occurring mutations, while instead concentrating on those seen in the patient’s set of key tumor mutations.

As currently conceived, CAR-T, and what is being referred to more broadly as adoptive cell therapies, involves removing T cells from the patient’s body and engineering their activation, then reintroducing them back to the patient. This is laborious, technically difficult, and very expensive. Recently, the idea of achieving all of this via an injection of virus that specifically infects T cells and inserts the genes needed, was advanced by two biotech companies with preclinical results, one in non-human primates.

Gearing up to meet the challenge of solid tumor CAR-T intervention, there’s more work using CRISPR genome editing of T cell receptorsA.I. is increasingly being exploited to process the data from sequencing and identify optimal neoantigens.

Instead of just CAR-T, we’re seeing the emergence of CAR-macrophage and CAR-natural killer (NK) cells strategies, and rapidly expanding potential combinations of all the strategies I’ve mentioned. No less, there’s been maturation of on-off suicide switches programmed in, to limit cytokine release and promote safety of these interventions. Overall, major side effects of immunotherapies are not only cytokine release syndromes, but also include interstitial pneumonitis and neurotoxicity.

Summary

Given the multitude of ways cancer cells and tumor tissue can evade our immune response, durably successful treatment remains a daunting challenge. But the ingenuity of so many different approaches to unleash our immune response, and their combinations, provides considerable hope that we’ll increasingly meet the challenge in the years ahead. We have clearly learned that combining different immunotherapy strategies will be essential for many patients with the most resilient solid tumors.

Of concern, as noted by a recent editorial in The Lancet, entitled “Cancer Research Equity: Innovations For The Many, Not The Few,” is that these individualized, sophisticated strategies are not scalable; they will have limited reach and benefit. The movement towards “off the shelf” CAR-T and inexpensive, orally active checkpoint inhibitors may help mitigate this issue.

Notwithstanding this important concern, we’re seeing an array of diverse and potent immunotherapy strategies that are providing highly encouraging results, engendering more excitement than we’ve seen in this space for some time. These should propel substantial improvements in outcomes for patients in the years ahead. It can’t happen soon enough.

Thanks for reading this edition of Ground Truths. If you found it informative, please share it with your colleagues.

Dr. Topol has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships: Serve(d) as a director, officer, partner, employee, advisor, consultant, or trustee for Dexcom; Illumina; Molecular Stethoscope; Quest Diagnostics; Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. Received research grant from National Institutes of Health.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Inflammatory Arthritis Often Occurs with Systemic Sclerosis; Has Big Impact

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Fri, 02/16/2024 - 16:22

 

TOPLINE:

Inflammatory arthritis (IA) occurred in one-third of patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) in a large observational study and was significantly associated with poor quality of life and physical function, as well as diffuse disease, musculoskeletal manifestations, myositis, and sicca.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers reviewed data from 1717 adults with SSc who were enrolled in the Australian  Cohort Study to identify those with IA, defined as the presence of synovitis in one or more joints on clinical examination documented by the treating physician.
  • The primary outcome was health-related quality of life (HRQoL) based on patient reports using the Medical Outcomes Short Form 36 and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System, and physical function measured with the Health Assessment Questionnaire.

TAKEAWAY:

  • IA was identified in 33.3% of the study participants over a median of 4.3 years’ follow-up. IA occurred at a median age of about 60 years and after a median SSc disease duration of 7.9 years. No significant differences in baseline demographics appeared between patients with and without IA.
  • Patients with IA had significantly increased risk for diffuse cutaneous SSc (odds ratio [OR], 1.33), concurrent musculoskeletal manifestations such as tendon friction rubs and joint contractures (OR, 1.70), myositis (OR, 2.11), and sicca symptoms (OR, 1.57), compared with those without.
  • Patients with IA reported significantly lower HRQoL scores and significantly greater physical disability, compared with those who did not have IA (P < .001 for both).
  • IA was significantly less common among patients with , compared with those without pulmonary arterial hypertension (7.2% vs 11.3%; P = .007).

IN PRACTICE:

“Recognizing the presence of IA in SSc is an important first step, as its treatment and monitoring may alleviate some of the associated morbidity,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

The lead author of the study was Eric Schwender, a medical student at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland. The study was published online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The inability to assess distribution and severity of IA limited the results, as did the inability to assess the impact of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs in patients with IA.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Scleroderma Australia, Arthritis Australia, Actelion Australia, Bayer, CSL Biotherapies, GlaxoSmithKline Australia, and Pfizer, as well as grants to several researchers from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Lead author Mr. Schwender had no financial conflicts to disclose.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Inflammatory arthritis (IA) occurred in one-third of patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) in a large observational study and was significantly associated with poor quality of life and physical function, as well as diffuse disease, musculoskeletal manifestations, myositis, and sicca.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers reviewed data from 1717 adults with SSc who were enrolled in the Australian  Cohort Study to identify those with IA, defined as the presence of synovitis in one or more joints on clinical examination documented by the treating physician.
  • The primary outcome was health-related quality of life (HRQoL) based on patient reports using the Medical Outcomes Short Form 36 and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System, and physical function measured with the Health Assessment Questionnaire.

TAKEAWAY:

  • IA was identified in 33.3% of the study participants over a median of 4.3 years’ follow-up. IA occurred at a median age of about 60 years and after a median SSc disease duration of 7.9 years. No significant differences in baseline demographics appeared between patients with and without IA.
  • Patients with IA had significantly increased risk for diffuse cutaneous SSc (odds ratio [OR], 1.33), concurrent musculoskeletal manifestations such as tendon friction rubs and joint contractures (OR, 1.70), myositis (OR, 2.11), and sicca symptoms (OR, 1.57), compared with those without.
  • Patients with IA reported significantly lower HRQoL scores and significantly greater physical disability, compared with those who did not have IA (P < .001 for both).
  • IA was significantly less common among patients with , compared with those without pulmonary arterial hypertension (7.2% vs 11.3%; P = .007).

IN PRACTICE:

“Recognizing the presence of IA in SSc is an important first step, as its treatment and monitoring may alleviate some of the associated morbidity,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

The lead author of the study was Eric Schwender, a medical student at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland. The study was published online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The inability to assess distribution and severity of IA limited the results, as did the inability to assess the impact of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs in patients with IA.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Scleroderma Australia, Arthritis Australia, Actelion Australia, Bayer, CSL Biotherapies, GlaxoSmithKline Australia, and Pfizer, as well as grants to several researchers from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Lead author Mr. Schwender had no financial conflicts to disclose.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Inflammatory arthritis (IA) occurred in one-third of patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) in a large observational study and was significantly associated with poor quality of life and physical function, as well as diffuse disease, musculoskeletal manifestations, myositis, and sicca.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers reviewed data from 1717 adults with SSc who were enrolled in the Australian  Cohort Study to identify those with IA, defined as the presence of synovitis in one or more joints on clinical examination documented by the treating physician.
  • The primary outcome was health-related quality of life (HRQoL) based on patient reports using the Medical Outcomes Short Form 36 and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System, and physical function measured with the Health Assessment Questionnaire.

TAKEAWAY:

  • IA was identified in 33.3% of the study participants over a median of 4.3 years’ follow-up. IA occurred at a median age of about 60 years and after a median SSc disease duration of 7.9 years. No significant differences in baseline demographics appeared between patients with and without IA.
  • Patients with IA had significantly increased risk for diffuse cutaneous SSc (odds ratio [OR], 1.33), concurrent musculoskeletal manifestations such as tendon friction rubs and joint contractures (OR, 1.70), myositis (OR, 2.11), and sicca symptoms (OR, 1.57), compared with those without.
  • Patients with IA reported significantly lower HRQoL scores and significantly greater physical disability, compared with those who did not have IA (P < .001 for both).
  • IA was significantly less common among patients with , compared with those without pulmonary arterial hypertension (7.2% vs 11.3%; P = .007).

IN PRACTICE:

“Recognizing the presence of IA in SSc is an important first step, as its treatment and monitoring may alleviate some of the associated morbidity,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

The lead author of the study was Eric Schwender, a medical student at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland. The study was published online in Arthritis Care & Research.

LIMITATIONS:

The inability to assess distribution and severity of IA limited the results, as did the inability to assess the impact of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs in patients with IA.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Scleroderma Australia, Arthritis Australia, Actelion Australia, Bayer, CSL Biotherapies, GlaxoSmithKline Australia, and Pfizer, as well as grants to several researchers from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Lead author Mr. Schwender had no financial conflicts to disclose.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Lichen Sclerosus: The Silent Genital Health Concern Often Missed

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Thu, 02/22/2024 - 06:51

Ashley Winter, MD, remembers the first time she Googled the skin condition lichen sclerosus. Most of the websites listed the autoimmune condition as a rare disease.

In the realm of genital health, some conditions remain shrouded in silence and consequently are more likely to go undercounted and underdiagnosed, said Dr. Winter, a urologist based in Los Angeles.

“I truly believe that we just miss the diagnosis a vast majority of the time because there isn’t enough training on [detecting] it,” said Dr. Winter.

Lichen sclerosus primarily affects the skin in the genital and anal regions. Estimates of the disease range between 1 in 300 and 1 in 1000 people, according to the US National Institutes of Health. The condition also more commonly occurs among women, and symptoms include hypopigmentation, itching, pain, changes in skin appearance, and skin atrophy.

“Most cases [affect the] genital [area] only, so often patients don’t bring it up because they don’t want to be examined,” said Sarah Lonowski, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and codirector of the Multidisciplinary Autoimmune Skin Disease/Derm-Rheum Program at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. “It’s a sensitive area, it’s an uncomfortable area to have examined, so it comes with a lot of emotional burden,” for patients, Dr. Lonowski said.

Receiving a lichen sclerosis diagnosis can take 5 years or longer, in part because the condition’s symptoms can lead clinicians to first make a diagnosis of a yeast infection or bacterial vaginosis, according to Christina Kraus, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at UCI Health in Irvine, California.

“There is still limited information on this condition in medical education, and it is not uncommon for clinicians who are not in dermatology or gynecology to be unfamiliar with this diagnosis,” Dr. Kraus said.

Because no medical tests are available to confirm lichen sclerosus, clinicians diagnose the condition based on the skin’s appearance and symptoms. In some cases, a skin biopsy may help differentiate it from similar rashes that occur in the genital area.

Prepubescent children and postmenopausal women are most likely to develop genital lichen sclerosis, so pediatricians and primary care physicians may be the first to see possible cases, Dr. Lonowski said.

Patients “may not mention it unless they’re asked,” Dr. Lonowski said, adding clinicians can inquire with patients about genital health, examine bothersome areas, “and refer if you’re not sure.”

Clinicians may also miss the condition during physical exams if they do not examine the vulvar skin, she said. The exact cause also remains elusive, but researchers believe genetic and hormonal factors, as well as an overactive immune response, may contribute to development of the condition.
 

Watch Out for Presentation

While lichen sclerosus more frequently occurs in women, men are also affected by the condition. Benjamin N. Breyer, MD, professor and chair of urology at the University of California San Francisco, said lichen sclerosus is one of the most common skin conditions he treats in his male patients.

“Advanced cases can cause urethral narrowing, which is a condition I treat commonly,” said Dr. Breyer. “Lichen sclerosus is often an underrecognized cause of pain or tearing with erections and sex in men.”

Similar to women, lichen sclerosus presents as white color changes on the skin. For men, the condition can also result in fusion of the shaft skin to the head of the penis and burying or concealment of the penis, Dr. Breyer said.

“This leads to challenges with intimacy and urination and can have extensive impacts on quality of life,” said Dr. Breyer.

For women, the skin changes often extend to the perianal area and can cause scarring, said Dr. Kraus.

“Early scarring may present as adherence of the labia minora to the labia majora or inability to fully retract the clitoral hood from the clitoris,” said Dr. Kraus.

In both men and women, lichen sclerosus and another autoimmune condition known as morphea, characterized by skin hardening and discoloration, often present together, said Dr. Lonowski.

“If you have a patient with known morphea, it’s important to ask about genital symptoms,” said Dr. Lonowski. “The association between the two is fairly strong.”

Circumcision is often the first step to help prevent chronic inflammation among male patients, said Dr. Breyer. Because lichen sclerosus is associated with an increased risk for penile cancer, “it is important to biopsy suspicious lesions,” Dr. Breyer added.

Increasing awareness of lichen sclerosus is crucial for early detection and timely intervention, said Dr. Lonowski. The first-line treatment of genital lichen sclerosus is strong topical steroid ointments to reduce inflammation. Clinicians might prescribe this treatment for use twice daily for 2-3 months and then assesses the patient on their response.

“It is fairly responsive to treatment in most cases,” said Dr. Lonowski.

Once symptoms have improved, Dr. Lonowski transitions patients to a maintenance regimen, which might include using the same steroid but only three times a week, switching to a topical with a less potent steroid dosage, or using a combination of a topical steroid and a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory cream. Despite the prolonged use of the drug, she said patients with lichen sclerosus usually do not present with side effects like discoloration or thinning of skin.

“You may achieve control or remission, but we don’t stop treatment completely because we know the natural history of the disease is to have flares and recurrence.”

If left untreated, the condition can lead to atrophy, scarring, and distortion of the genital anatomy and, in some cases, develop into squamous cell carcinoma.

“The fact that you can do a topical cream intervention and prevent cancer is huge,” said Dr. Winter.

She said open discussions surrounding genital health led by primary care providers can destigmatize conditions like lichen sclerosus and promote early detection and management.

“We need to foster an environment where individuals feel comfortable discussing their symptoms openly,” Dr. Winter said. “Increased awareness can pave the way for early detection, which is crucial for managing the condition effectively.”

The experts included in the story reported no relevant disclosures.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Ashley Winter, MD, remembers the first time she Googled the skin condition lichen sclerosus. Most of the websites listed the autoimmune condition as a rare disease.

In the realm of genital health, some conditions remain shrouded in silence and consequently are more likely to go undercounted and underdiagnosed, said Dr. Winter, a urologist based in Los Angeles.

“I truly believe that we just miss the diagnosis a vast majority of the time because there isn’t enough training on [detecting] it,” said Dr. Winter.

Lichen sclerosus primarily affects the skin in the genital and anal regions. Estimates of the disease range between 1 in 300 and 1 in 1000 people, according to the US National Institutes of Health. The condition also more commonly occurs among women, and symptoms include hypopigmentation, itching, pain, changes in skin appearance, and skin atrophy.

“Most cases [affect the] genital [area] only, so often patients don’t bring it up because they don’t want to be examined,” said Sarah Lonowski, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and codirector of the Multidisciplinary Autoimmune Skin Disease/Derm-Rheum Program at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. “It’s a sensitive area, it’s an uncomfortable area to have examined, so it comes with a lot of emotional burden,” for patients, Dr. Lonowski said.

Receiving a lichen sclerosis diagnosis can take 5 years or longer, in part because the condition’s symptoms can lead clinicians to first make a diagnosis of a yeast infection or bacterial vaginosis, according to Christina Kraus, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at UCI Health in Irvine, California.

“There is still limited information on this condition in medical education, and it is not uncommon for clinicians who are not in dermatology or gynecology to be unfamiliar with this diagnosis,” Dr. Kraus said.

Because no medical tests are available to confirm lichen sclerosus, clinicians diagnose the condition based on the skin’s appearance and symptoms. In some cases, a skin biopsy may help differentiate it from similar rashes that occur in the genital area.

Prepubescent children and postmenopausal women are most likely to develop genital lichen sclerosis, so pediatricians and primary care physicians may be the first to see possible cases, Dr. Lonowski said.

Patients “may not mention it unless they’re asked,” Dr. Lonowski said, adding clinicians can inquire with patients about genital health, examine bothersome areas, “and refer if you’re not sure.”

Clinicians may also miss the condition during physical exams if they do not examine the vulvar skin, she said. The exact cause also remains elusive, but researchers believe genetic and hormonal factors, as well as an overactive immune response, may contribute to development of the condition.
 

Watch Out for Presentation

While lichen sclerosus more frequently occurs in women, men are also affected by the condition. Benjamin N. Breyer, MD, professor and chair of urology at the University of California San Francisco, said lichen sclerosus is one of the most common skin conditions he treats in his male patients.

“Advanced cases can cause urethral narrowing, which is a condition I treat commonly,” said Dr. Breyer. “Lichen sclerosus is often an underrecognized cause of pain or tearing with erections and sex in men.”

Similar to women, lichen sclerosus presents as white color changes on the skin. For men, the condition can also result in fusion of the shaft skin to the head of the penis and burying or concealment of the penis, Dr. Breyer said.

“This leads to challenges with intimacy and urination and can have extensive impacts on quality of life,” said Dr. Breyer.

For women, the skin changes often extend to the perianal area and can cause scarring, said Dr. Kraus.

“Early scarring may present as adherence of the labia minora to the labia majora or inability to fully retract the clitoral hood from the clitoris,” said Dr. Kraus.

In both men and women, lichen sclerosus and another autoimmune condition known as morphea, characterized by skin hardening and discoloration, often present together, said Dr. Lonowski.

“If you have a patient with known morphea, it’s important to ask about genital symptoms,” said Dr. Lonowski. “The association between the two is fairly strong.”

Circumcision is often the first step to help prevent chronic inflammation among male patients, said Dr. Breyer. Because lichen sclerosus is associated with an increased risk for penile cancer, “it is important to biopsy suspicious lesions,” Dr. Breyer added.

Increasing awareness of lichen sclerosus is crucial for early detection and timely intervention, said Dr. Lonowski. The first-line treatment of genital lichen sclerosus is strong topical steroid ointments to reduce inflammation. Clinicians might prescribe this treatment for use twice daily for 2-3 months and then assesses the patient on their response.

“It is fairly responsive to treatment in most cases,” said Dr. Lonowski.

Once symptoms have improved, Dr. Lonowski transitions patients to a maintenance regimen, which might include using the same steroid but only three times a week, switching to a topical with a less potent steroid dosage, or using a combination of a topical steroid and a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory cream. Despite the prolonged use of the drug, she said patients with lichen sclerosus usually do not present with side effects like discoloration or thinning of skin.

“You may achieve control or remission, but we don’t stop treatment completely because we know the natural history of the disease is to have flares and recurrence.”

If left untreated, the condition can lead to atrophy, scarring, and distortion of the genital anatomy and, in some cases, develop into squamous cell carcinoma.

“The fact that you can do a topical cream intervention and prevent cancer is huge,” said Dr. Winter.

She said open discussions surrounding genital health led by primary care providers can destigmatize conditions like lichen sclerosus and promote early detection and management.

“We need to foster an environment where individuals feel comfortable discussing their symptoms openly,” Dr. Winter said. “Increased awareness can pave the way for early detection, which is crucial for managing the condition effectively.”

The experts included in the story reported no relevant disclosures.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Ashley Winter, MD, remembers the first time she Googled the skin condition lichen sclerosus. Most of the websites listed the autoimmune condition as a rare disease.

In the realm of genital health, some conditions remain shrouded in silence and consequently are more likely to go undercounted and underdiagnosed, said Dr. Winter, a urologist based in Los Angeles.

“I truly believe that we just miss the diagnosis a vast majority of the time because there isn’t enough training on [detecting] it,” said Dr. Winter.

Lichen sclerosus primarily affects the skin in the genital and anal regions. Estimates of the disease range between 1 in 300 and 1 in 1000 people, according to the US National Institutes of Health. The condition also more commonly occurs among women, and symptoms include hypopigmentation, itching, pain, changes in skin appearance, and skin atrophy.

“Most cases [affect the] genital [area] only, so often patients don’t bring it up because they don’t want to be examined,” said Sarah Lonowski, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and codirector of the Multidisciplinary Autoimmune Skin Disease/Derm-Rheum Program at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. “It’s a sensitive area, it’s an uncomfortable area to have examined, so it comes with a lot of emotional burden,” for patients, Dr. Lonowski said.

Receiving a lichen sclerosis diagnosis can take 5 years or longer, in part because the condition’s symptoms can lead clinicians to first make a diagnosis of a yeast infection or bacterial vaginosis, according to Christina Kraus, MD, assistant professor of dermatology at UCI Health in Irvine, California.

“There is still limited information on this condition in medical education, and it is not uncommon for clinicians who are not in dermatology or gynecology to be unfamiliar with this diagnosis,” Dr. Kraus said.

Because no medical tests are available to confirm lichen sclerosus, clinicians diagnose the condition based on the skin’s appearance and symptoms. In some cases, a skin biopsy may help differentiate it from similar rashes that occur in the genital area.

Prepubescent children and postmenopausal women are most likely to develop genital lichen sclerosis, so pediatricians and primary care physicians may be the first to see possible cases, Dr. Lonowski said.

Patients “may not mention it unless they’re asked,” Dr. Lonowski said, adding clinicians can inquire with patients about genital health, examine bothersome areas, “and refer if you’re not sure.”

Clinicians may also miss the condition during physical exams if they do not examine the vulvar skin, she said. The exact cause also remains elusive, but researchers believe genetic and hormonal factors, as well as an overactive immune response, may contribute to development of the condition.
 

Watch Out for Presentation

While lichen sclerosus more frequently occurs in women, men are also affected by the condition. Benjamin N. Breyer, MD, professor and chair of urology at the University of California San Francisco, said lichen sclerosus is one of the most common skin conditions he treats in his male patients.

“Advanced cases can cause urethral narrowing, which is a condition I treat commonly,” said Dr. Breyer. “Lichen sclerosus is often an underrecognized cause of pain or tearing with erections and sex in men.”

Similar to women, lichen sclerosus presents as white color changes on the skin. For men, the condition can also result in fusion of the shaft skin to the head of the penis and burying or concealment of the penis, Dr. Breyer said.

“This leads to challenges with intimacy and urination and can have extensive impacts on quality of life,” said Dr. Breyer.

For women, the skin changes often extend to the perianal area and can cause scarring, said Dr. Kraus.

“Early scarring may present as adherence of the labia minora to the labia majora or inability to fully retract the clitoral hood from the clitoris,” said Dr. Kraus.

In both men and women, lichen sclerosus and another autoimmune condition known as morphea, characterized by skin hardening and discoloration, often present together, said Dr. Lonowski.

“If you have a patient with known morphea, it’s important to ask about genital symptoms,” said Dr. Lonowski. “The association between the two is fairly strong.”

Circumcision is often the first step to help prevent chronic inflammation among male patients, said Dr. Breyer. Because lichen sclerosus is associated with an increased risk for penile cancer, “it is important to biopsy suspicious lesions,” Dr. Breyer added.

Increasing awareness of lichen sclerosus is crucial for early detection and timely intervention, said Dr. Lonowski. The first-line treatment of genital lichen sclerosus is strong topical steroid ointments to reduce inflammation. Clinicians might prescribe this treatment for use twice daily for 2-3 months and then assesses the patient on their response.

“It is fairly responsive to treatment in most cases,” said Dr. Lonowski.

Once symptoms have improved, Dr. Lonowski transitions patients to a maintenance regimen, which might include using the same steroid but only three times a week, switching to a topical with a less potent steroid dosage, or using a combination of a topical steroid and a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory cream. Despite the prolonged use of the drug, she said patients with lichen sclerosus usually do not present with side effects like discoloration or thinning of skin.

“You may achieve control or remission, but we don’t stop treatment completely because we know the natural history of the disease is to have flares and recurrence.”

If left untreated, the condition can lead to atrophy, scarring, and distortion of the genital anatomy and, in some cases, develop into squamous cell carcinoma.

“The fact that you can do a topical cream intervention and prevent cancer is huge,” said Dr. Winter.

She said open discussions surrounding genital health led by primary care providers can destigmatize conditions like lichen sclerosus and promote early detection and management.

“We need to foster an environment where individuals feel comfortable discussing their symptoms openly,” Dr. Winter said. “Increased awareness can pave the way for early detection, which is crucial for managing the condition effectively.”

The experts included in the story reported no relevant disclosures.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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