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It’s in the Juice: Cranberries for UTI Prevention
TOPLINE:
A systematic review and network meta-analysis found cranberry juice can help prevent urinary tract infections (UTIs).
METHODOLOGY:
- With an increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance and over 50% women reporting at least one episode of UTI each year, identifying evidence supporting possible nondrug interventions is necessary, according to the study researchers from Bond University, the University of Helsinki, and the University of Oxford.
- The primary study outcome was number of UTIs in each treatment or placebo group; the secondary outcomes were UTI symptoms such as increased bladder sensation, urgency, frequency, dysuria, and consumption of antimicrobial drugs.
- Studies analyzed included people of any age and gender at a risk for UTI.
- Researchers included 3091 participants from 18 randomized controlled trials and two nonrandomized controlled trials.
TAKEAWAY:
- Studies used one of the following interventions: Cranberry nonliquid products (tablet, capsule, or fruit), cranberry liquid, liquid other than cranberry, and no treatment.
- A total of 18 studies showed a 27% lower rate of UTIs with the consumption of cranberry juice than with placebo liquid (moderate certainty evidence) and a 54% lower rate of UTIs with the consumption of cranberry juice than with no treatment (very low certainty evidence).
- Based on a meta-analysis of six studies, antibiotic use was 49% lower with the consumption of cranberry juice than with placebo liquid and 59% lower than with no treatment.
- Cranberry compounds also were associated with a decrease in prevalence of UTI symptoms.
IN PRACTICE:
“The evidence supports the use of cranberry juice for the prevention of UTIs. While increased liquids benefit the rate of UTIs and reduce antibiotic use, and cranberry compounds benefit symptoms of infection, the combination of these, in cranberry juice, provides clear and significant clinical outcomes for the reduction in UTIs and antibiotic use and should be considered for the management of UTIs,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
The study was led by Christian Moro, PhD, faculty of health sciences and medicine at Bond University in Gold Coast, Australia, and was published online in European Urology Focus on July 18, 2024.
LIMITATIONS:
The authors noted that some planned findings such as the impact on antibiotic use were reduced due to limited studies. Some studies on cranberry tablets also provided education with the intervention, which could have affected UTI recurrence rates. Nearly all the 20 studies that were analyzed included mostly women; thus, comparisons between genders were not possible.
DISCLOSURES:
Dr. Moro reported no disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
A systematic review and network meta-analysis found cranberry juice can help prevent urinary tract infections (UTIs).
METHODOLOGY:
- With an increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance and over 50% women reporting at least one episode of UTI each year, identifying evidence supporting possible nondrug interventions is necessary, according to the study researchers from Bond University, the University of Helsinki, and the University of Oxford.
- The primary study outcome was number of UTIs in each treatment or placebo group; the secondary outcomes were UTI symptoms such as increased bladder sensation, urgency, frequency, dysuria, and consumption of antimicrobial drugs.
- Studies analyzed included people of any age and gender at a risk for UTI.
- Researchers included 3091 participants from 18 randomized controlled trials and two nonrandomized controlled trials.
TAKEAWAY:
- Studies used one of the following interventions: Cranberry nonliquid products (tablet, capsule, or fruit), cranberry liquid, liquid other than cranberry, and no treatment.
- A total of 18 studies showed a 27% lower rate of UTIs with the consumption of cranberry juice than with placebo liquid (moderate certainty evidence) and a 54% lower rate of UTIs with the consumption of cranberry juice than with no treatment (very low certainty evidence).
- Based on a meta-analysis of six studies, antibiotic use was 49% lower with the consumption of cranberry juice than with placebo liquid and 59% lower than with no treatment.
- Cranberry compounds also were associated with a decrease in prevalence of UTI symptoms.
IN PRACTICE:
“The evidence supports the use of cranberry juice for the prevention of UTIs. While increased liquids benefit the rate of UTIs and reduce antibiotic use, and cranberry compounds benefit symptoms of infection, the combination of these, in cranberry juice, provides clear and significant clinical outcomes for the reduction in UTIs and antibiotic use and should be considered for the management of UTIs,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
The study was led by Christian Moro, PhD, faculty of health sciences and medicine at Bond University in Gold Coast, Australia, and was published online in European Urology Focus on July 18, 2024.
LIMITATIONS:
The authors noted that some planned findings such as the impact on antibiotic use were reduced due to limited studies. Some studies on cranberry tablets also provided education with the intervention, which could have affected UTI recurrence rates. Nearly all the 20 studies that were analyzed included mostly women; thus, comparisons between genders were not possible.
DISCLOSURES:
Dr. Moro reported no disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
TOPLINE:
A systematic review and network meta-analysis found cranberry juice can help prevent urinary tract infections (UTIs).
METHODOLOGY:
- With an increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance and over 50% women reporting at least one episode of UTI each year, identifying evidence supporting possible nondrug interventions is necessary, according to the study researchers from Bond University, the University of Helsinki, and the University of Oxford.
- The primary study outcome was number of UTIs in each treatment or placebo group; the secondary outcomes were UTI symptoms such as increased bladder sensation, urgency, frequency, dysuria, and consumption of antimicrobial drugs.
- Studies analyzed included people of any age and gender at a risk for UTI.
- Researchers included 3091 participants from 18 randomized controlled trials and two nonrandomized controlled trials.
TAKEAWAY:
- Studies used one of the following interventions: Cranberry nonliquid products (tablet, capsule, or fruit), cranberry liquid, liquid other than cranberry, and no treatment.
- A total of 18 studies showed a 27% lower rate of UTIs with the consumption of cranberry juice than with placebo liquid (moderate certainty evidence) and a 54% lower rate of UTIs with the consumption of cranberry juice than with no treatment (very low certainty evidence).
- Based on a meta-analysis of six studies, antibiotic use was 49% lower with the consumption of cranberry juice than with placebo liquid and 59% lower than with no treatment.
- Cranberry compounds also were associated with a decrease in prevalence of UTI symptoms.
IN PRACTICE:
“The evidence supports the use of cranberry juice for the prevention of UTIs. While increased liquids benefit the rate of UTIs and reduce antibiotic use, and cranberry compounds benefit symptoms of infection, the combination of these, in cranberry juice, provides clear and significant clinical outcomes for the reduction in UTIs and antibiotic use and should be considered for the management of UTIs,” the authors wrote.
SOURCE:
The study was led by Christian Moro, PhD, faculty of health sciences and medicine at Bond University in Gold Coast, Australia, and was published online in European Urology Focus on July 18, 2024.
LIMITATIONS:
The authors noted that some planned findings such as the impact on antibiotic use were reduced due to limited studies. Some studies on cranberry tablets also provided education with the intervention, which could have affected UTI recurrence rates. Nearly all the 20 studies that were analyzed included mostly women; thus, comparisons between genders were not possible.
DISCLOSURES:
Dr. Moro reported no disclosures.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Ozempic is Appealing, but Not Cost-Effective, for Obesity Treatment
, according to a modeling study that compared the drugs with surgery and endoscopy.
Sleeve gastrectomy (SG) for moderate to severe (class II/III) obesity and the less invasive endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty (ESG) for mild (class I) obesity were both cost effective strategies to reduce obesity, the researchers report.
“SG should be offered as the first-line treatment for class II and class III obesity,” write Monica Saumoy, MD, of the Center for Digestive Health, Penn Medicine Princeton Medical Center, Plainsboro, N.J., and coauthors. “ESG is an effective and cost-effective nonsurgical treatment for class I, class II and class III obesity, and more efforts are needed to ensure that patients have access to this procedure.
“While semaglutide is highly effective for weight loss, and there is substantial patient interest, it is not currently cost-effective due to its high cost,” they add. “With methods to reduce semaglutide’s annual cost, it may provide an effective and cost-effective method to reduce the morbidity related to obesity.”
The study was published in Gut.
Cost Concerns
One in two Americans will likely be obese by 2030, according to current models, and nearly one in four adults will be severely obese.
Several weight-loss therapies exist to treat obesity. Evidence shows bariatric surgery is effective in reducing weight, metabolic comorbidities, and mortality in people with obesity compared with lifestyle intervention alone, but surgery has risks, adverse events, and poor national uptake. Patients are likely more interested in less invasive options, the authors write.
Recent trials have reported effective weight loss from less invasive options. A five-year follow-up of the randomized controlled MERIT trial found that ESG was associated with a 13.6% total body weight loss for people with mild to moderate obesity.
On the pharmaceutical front, other randomized controlled trials have shown that semaglutide is linked with as much as 17% total body weight loss at two years. Also, recent guidance from the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) states that long-term treatment with a semaglutide is the preferred strategy for weight loss.
“However, concerns about the cost and the cost-effectiveness of these [less invasive] interventions have limited their usage in the USA,” the study authors write.
The aim of the study was to perform a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing SG, ESG, semaglutide, and lifestyle interventions (LI) for patients with obesity in class I (defined as BMI 30-34.9 kg/m2), class II (35-29.9 kg/m2), and class III (>40kg/m2) obesity.
Researchers used a state-transition, semi-Markov microsimulation model to analyze the effectiveness of ESG, SG, semaglutide, and LI in a simulated 40-year-old with three different base-case scenarios of class I, II, or III obesity. They then performed a detailed threshold and sensitivity analysis to change the cost of treatment modalities and the semaglutide adherence rate. Outcome measures included a willingness-to-pay threshold of US $100,000/quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs).
Cost-Effectiveness of Treatments
When the treatment modalities were compared with each other, findings showed that for class I obesity, ESG was cost effective (US $4,105/QALY). For class II and III obesity, SG was cost-effective as well (US $5,883/QALY) and (US $7,821/QALY), respectively.
In all classes of obesity, SG and ESG were cost-effective compared with LI. Semaglutide was not cost-effective compared with LI for class I, II, and III obesity (ICER US $508,414/QALY, $420,483/QALY, and $350,637/QALY, respectively).
“For semaglutide to be cost-effective when compared with ESG, it would have to cost less than US $1,879 (class III), US $1,204 (class II), or US $297 (class I) annually,” the authors note.
The authors addressed recent guidelines to consider bariatric surgery in all obese patients. They recommend SG remain the standard of care for patients with severe obesity.
But national projections show that SG would address only 0.5% of life-years lost due to obesity.
“Barring a dramatic increase in patient adherence, bariatric surgery will not likely successfully mitigate the harm from the obesity epidemic,” they write.
“ESG may fill this gap and provide an additional option for patients with obesity as it demonstrated sustained weight loss at 2-5 years.” While insurance coverage is limited, they write, “our model demonstrates that payer coverage for ESG would provide an alternative tool to combat the obesity epidemic as part of a multidisciplinary approach.”
Semaglutide shows sustained weight loss in trials for up to two years but has a substantial annual cost, the authors note.
At lower prices, semaglutide can make a “major impact on the obesity pandemic as it can be prescribed in multiple healthcare settings and due to increased patient interested in non-invasive obesity treatment,” they write.
One limitation to the study is a lack of long-term data available for ESG and semaglutide. Authors were also not able to use a lifetime horizon because of a lack of long-term weight loss.
One study author reports financial relationships with BSC, Cook Medical, Surgical Intuitive, and Olympus America. Another author reports relationships with ACI, AGA-Varia, BSC, Dark Canyon Labs, Endiatx, Medtronic, Olympus, Virgo Systems; equity: AGA-Varia, Dark Canyon Labs, Endiatx, EndoSound, and Virgo Systems. The rest of the authors have no conflicts to disclose.
, according to a modeling study that compared the drugs with surgery and endoscopy.
Sleeve gastrectomy (SG) for moderate to severe (class II/III) obesity and the less invasive endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty (ESG) for mild (class I) obesity were both cost effective strategies to reduce obesity, the researchers report.
“SG should be offered as the first-line treatment for class II and class III obesity,” write Monica Saumoy, MD, of the Center for Digestive Health, Penn Medicine Princeton Medical Center, Plainsboro, N.J., and coauthors. “ESG is an effective and cost-effective nonsurgical treatment for class I, class II and class III obesity, and more efforts are needed to ensure that patients have access to this procedure.
“While semaglutide is highly effective for weight loss, and there is substantial patient interest, it is not currently cost-effective due to its high cost,” they add. “With methods to reduce semaglutide’s annual cost, it may provide an effective and cost-effective method to reduce the morbidity related to obesity.”
The study was published in Gut.
Cost Concerns
One in two Americans will likely be obese by 2030, according to current models, and nearly one in four adults will be severely obese.
Several weight-loss therapies exist to treat obesity. Evidence shows bariatric surgery is effective in reducing weight, metabolic comorbidities, and mortality in people with obesity compared with lifestyle intervention alone, but surgery has risks, adverse events, and poor national uptake. Patients are likely more interested in less invasive options, the authors write.
Recent trials have reported effective weight loss from less invasive options. A five-year follow-up of the randomized controlled MERIT trial found that ESG was associated with a 13.6% total body weight loss for people with mild to moderate obesity.
On the pharmaceutical front, other randomized controlled trials have shown that semaglutide is linked with as much as 17% total body weight loss at two years. Also, recent guidance from the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) states that long-term treatment with a semaglutide is the preferred strategy for weight loss.
“However, concerns about the cost and the cost-effectiveness of these [less invasive] interventions have limited their usage in the USA,” the study authors write.
The aim of the study was to perform a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing SG, ESG, semaglutide, and lifestyle interventions (LI) for patients with obesity in class I (defined as BMI 30-34.9 kg/m2), class II (35-29.9 kg/m2), and class III (>40kg/m2) obesity.
Researchers used a state-transition, semi-Markov microsimulation model to analyze the effectiveness of ESG, SG, semaglutide, and LI in a simulated 40-year-old with three different base-case scenarios of class I, II, or III obesity. They then performed a detailed threshold and sensitivity analysis to change the cost of treatment modalities and the semaglutide adherence rate. Outcome measures included a willingness-to-pay threshold of US $100,000/quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs).
Cost-Effectiveness of Treatments
When the treatment modalities were compared with each other, findings showed that for class I obesity, ESG was cost effective (US $4,105/QALY). For class II and III obesity, SG was cost-effective as well (US $5,883/QALY) and (US $7,821/QALY), respectively.
In all classes of obesity, SG and ESG were cost-effective compared with LI. Semaglutide was not cost-effective compared with LI for class I, II, and III obesity (ICER US $508,414/QALY, $420,483/QALY, and $350,637/QALY, respectively).
“For semaglutide to be cost-effective when compared with ESG, it would have to cost less than US $1,879 (class III), US $1,204 (class II), or US $297 (class I) annually,” the authors note.
The authors addressed recent guidelines to consider bariatric surgery in all obese patients. They recommend SG remain the standard of care for patients with severe obesity.
But national projections show that SG would address only 0.5% of life-years lost due to obesity.
“Barring a dramatic increase in patient adherence, bariatric surgery will not likely successfully mitigate the harm from the obesity epidemic,” they write.
“ESG may fill this gap and provide an additional option for patients with obesity as it demonstrated sustained weight loss at 2-5 years.” While insurance coverage is limited, they write, “our model demonstrates that payer coverage for ESG would provide an alternative tool to combat the obesity epidemic as part of a multidisciplinary approach.”
Semaglutide shows sustained weight loss in trials for up to two years but has a substantial annual cost, the authors note.
At lower prices, semaglutide can make a “major impact on the obesity pandemic as it can be prescribed in multiple healthcare settings and due to increased patient interested in non-invasive obesity treatment,” they write.
One limitation to the study is a lack of long-term data available for ESG and semaglutide. Authors were also not able to use a lifetime horizon because of a lack of long-term weight loss.
One study author reports financial relationships with BSC, Cook Medical, Surgical Intuitive, and Olympus America. Another author reports relationships with ACI, AGA-Varia, BSC, Dark Canyon Labs, Endiatx, Medtronic, Olympus, Virgo Systems; equity: AGA-Varia, Dark Canyon Labs, Endiatx, EndoSound, and Virgo Systems. The rest of the authors have no conflicts to disclose.
, according to a modeling study that compared the drugs with surgery and endoscopy.
Sleeve gastrectomy (SG) for moderate to severe (class II/III) obesity and the less invasive endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty (ESG) for mild (class I) obesity were both cost effective strategies to reduce obesity, the researchers report.
“SG should be offered as the first-line treatment for class II and class III obesity,” write Monica Saumoy, MD, of the Center for Digestive Health, Penn Medicine Princeton Medical Center, Plainsboro, N.J., and coauthors. “ESG is an effective and cost-effective nonsurgical treatment for class I, class II and class III obesity, and more efforts are needed to ensure that patients have access to this procedure.
“While semaglutide is highly effective for weight loss, and there is substantial patient interest, it is not currently cost-effective due to its high cost,” they add. “With methods to reduce semaglutide’s annual cost, it may provide an effective and cost-effective method to reduce the morbidity related to obesity.”
The study was published in Gut.
Cost Concerns
One in two Americans will likely be obese by 2030, according to current models, and nearly one in four adults will be severely obese.
Several weight-loss therapies exist to treat obesity. Evidence shows bariatric surgery is effective in reducing weight, metabolic comorbidities, and mortality in people with obesity compared with lifestyle intervention alone, but surgery has risks, adverse events, and poor national uptake. Patients are likely more interested in less invasive options, the authors write.
Recent trials have reported effective weight loss from less invasive options. A five-year follow-up of the randomized controlled MERIT trial found that ESG was associated with a 13.6% total body weight loss for people with mild to moderate obesity.
On the pharmaceutical front, other randomized controlled trials have shown that semaglutide is linked with as much as 17% total body weight loss at two years. Also, recent guidance from the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) states that long-term treatment with a semaglutide is the preferred strategy for weight loss.
“However, concerns about the cost and the cost-effectiveness of these [less invasive] interventions have limited their usage in the USA,” the study authors write.
The aim of the study was to perform a cost-effectiveness analysis comparing SG, ESG, semaglutide, and lifestyle interventions (LI) for patients with obesity in class I (defined as BMI 30-34.9 kg/m2), class II (35-29.9 kg/m2), and class III (>40kg/m2) obesity.
Researchers used a state-transition, semi-Markov microsimulation model to analyze the effectiveness of ESG, SG, semaglutide, and LI in a simulated 40-year-old with three different base-case scenarios of class I, II, or III obesity. They then performed a detailed threshold and sensitivity analysis to change the cost of treatment modalities and the semaglutide adherence rate. Outcome measures included a willingness-to-pay threshold of US $100,000/quality-adjusted life years (QALY) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs).
Cost-Effectiveness of Treatments
When the treatment modalities were compared with each other, findings showed that for class I obesity, ESG was cost effective (US $4,105/QALY). For class II and III obesity, SG was cost-effective as well (US $5,883/QALY) and (US $7,821/QALY), respectively.
In all classes of obesity, SG and ESG were cost-effective compared with LI. Semaglutide was not cost-effective compared with LI for class I, II, and III obesity (ICER US $508,414/QALY, $420,483/QALY, and $350,637/QALY, respectively).
“For semaglutide to be cost-effective when compared with ESG, it would have to cost less than US $1,879 (class III), US $1,204 (class II), or US $297 (class I) annually,” the authors note.
The authors addressed recent guidelines to consider bariatric surgery in all obese patients. They recommend SG remain the standard of care for patients with severe obesity.
But national projections show that SG would address only 0.5% of life-years lost due to obesity.
“Barring a dramatic increase in patient adherence, bariatric surgery will not likely successfully mitigate the harm from the obesity epidemic,” they write.
“ESG may fill this gap and provide an additional option for patients with obesity as it demonstrated sustained weight loss at 2-5 years.” While insurance coverage is limited, they write, “our model demonstrates that payer coverage for ESG would provide an alternative tool to combat the obesity epidemic as part of a multidisciplinary approach.”
Semaglutide shows sustained weight loss in trials for up to two years but has a substantial annual cost, the authors note.
At lower prices, semaglutide can make a “major impact on the obesity pandemic as it can be prescribed in multiple healthcare settings and due to increased patient interested in non-invasive obesity treatment,” they write.
One limitation to the study is a lack of long-term data available for ESG and semaglutide. Authors were also not able to use a lifetime horizon because of a lack of long-term weight loss.
One study author reports financial relationships with BSC, Cook Medical, Surgical Intuitive, and Olympus America. Another author reports relationships with ACI, AGA-Varia, BSC, Dark Canyon Labs, Endiatx, Medtronic, Olympus, Virgo Systems; equity: AGA-Varia, Dark Canyon Labs, Endiatx, EndoSound, and Virgo Systems. The rest of the authors have no conflicts to disclose.
FROM GUT
Pilot study educates barbers about pseudofolliculitis barbae
A
.The results were published in a research letter in JAMA Dermatology. “Educating barbers on dermatologic conditions that disproportionately affect Black males and establishing referral services between barbers and dermatologists could serve as plausible interventions,” the authors wrote.
PFB — or “razor bumps” in layman’s terms — is a chronic, inflammatory follicular disorder, which can occur in any racial group, but primarily affects Black men, noted the corresponding author of the study, Xavier Rice, MD, a dermatology resident at Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri. PFB manifests as bumps and pustules or nodules along the beard line and are painful, he said in an interview. “They tend to leave scars once they resolve,” and impair the ability to shave, he noted.
In some communities, Black men may see their barbers more often than primary care doctors or dermatologists, “so if you equip the barbers with the knowledge to recognize the disease, make recommendations on how to prevent and to treat, and also form some allyship with barbers and dermatologists, then we can get referrals for people, especially the ones with severe disease,” he said. A lot of the barbers in the study said that “they didn’t receive much education on how to properly address it [PFB] and they had a lot of miseducation about what actually caused it,” added Dr. Rice, who was a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, when the study was conducted.
Study involved 40 barbers
For the study, Dr. Rice and his coauthors surveyed 40 barbers in the Houston, Texas, area; 39 were Black and one was Hispanic; 75% were men and 25% were women. Most (90%) said that at least 60% of their clients were Black. Between January and April 2022, the barbers received questionnaires before and after participating in a session that involved a review of a comprehensive educational brochure with information on the recognition, cause, prevention, and treatment of PFB, which they then kept for reference and to provide to clients as needed. “Common myths and nuanced home remedies from barber experience were also addressed,” the authors wrote.
No more than 2 weeks after the information session, each barber completed a posttest questionnaire.
Based on their responses to pretest questions, 39 of the 40 barbers understood that Black men were the group most impacted by PFB and that a person with severe PFB should see a physician. In the pretest survey, 12 barbers (30%) correctly recognized a photo of PFB, which increased to 39 (97.5%) in the posttest survey. In the pretest survey, two barbers (5%) identified laser hair removal as the most effective treatment for PFB, compared with 37 (92.5%) in the posttest survey.
Overall, the mean percentage of correct scores out of 20 questions was 54.8% in the pretest survey, increasing to 91% in the posttest survey (P <.001).
Limitations of the studies included heterogeneity in the survey response options that potentially could have introduced bias, the authors wrote. Another was that since there is a lack of evidence for ideal treatment strategies for PFB, there may have been some uncertainty among the correct answers for the survey that might have contributed to variability in responses. “Further research and implementation of these interventions are needed in efforts to improve health outcomes,” they added.
“Barbers can serve as allies in referral services,” Dr. Rice said in the interview. “They can be the first line for a number of diseases that are related to hair.”
Part of his role as a dermatologist, he added, includes going into a community with “boots on the ground” and talking to people who will see these patients “because access to care, presentation to big hospital systems can be challenging.”
Dr. Rice and the other study authors had no not report any financial disclosures.
A
.The results were published in a research letter in JAMA Dermatology. “Educating barbers on dermatologic conditions that disproportionately affect Black males and establishing referral services between barbers and dermatologists could serve as plausible interventions,” the authors wrote.
PFB — or “razor bumps” in layman’s terms — is a chronic, inflammatory follicular disorder, which can occur in any racial group, but primarily affects Black men, noted the corresponding author of the study, Xavier Rice, MD, a dermatology resident at Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri. PFB manifests as bumps and pustules or nodules along the beard line and are painful, he said in an interview. “They tend to leave scars once they resolve,” and impair the ability to shave, he noted.
In some communities, Black men may see their barbers more often than primary care doctors or dermatologists, “so if you equip the barbers with the knowledge to recognize the disease, make recommendations on how to prevent and to treat, and also form some allyship with barbers and dermatologists, then we can get referrals for people, especially the ones with severe disease,” he said. A lot of the barbers in the study said that “they didn’t receive much education on how to properly address it [PFB] and they had a lot of miseducation about what actually caused it,” added Dr. Rice, who was a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, when the study was conducted.
Study involved 40 barbers
For the study, Dr. Rice and his coauthors surveyed 40 barbers in the Houston, Texas, area; 39 were Black and one was Hispanic; 75% were men and 25% were women. Most (90%) said that at least 60% of their clients were Black. Between January and April 2022, the barbers received questionnaires before and after participating in a session that involved a review of a comprehensive educational brochure with information on the recognition, cause, prevention, and treatment of PFB, which they then kept for reference and to provide to clients as needed. “Common myths and nuanced home remedies from barber experience were also addressed,” the authors wrote.
No more than 2 weeks after the information session, each barber completed a posttest questionnaire.
Based on their responses to pretest questions, 39 of the 40 barbers understood that Black men were the group most impacted by PFB and that a person with severe PFB should see a physician. In the pretest survey, 12 barbers (30%) correctly recognized a photo of PFB, which increased to 39 (97.5%) in the posttest survey. In the pretest survey, two barbers (5%) identified laser hair removal as the most effective treatment for PFB, compared with 37 (92.5%) in the posttest survey.
Overall, the mean percentage of correct scores out of 20 questions was 54.8% in the pretest survey, increasing to 91% in the posttest survey (P <.001).
Limitations of the studies included heterogeneity in the survey response options that potentially could have introduced bias, the authors wrote. Another was that since there is a lack of evidence for ideal treatment strategies for PFB, there may have been some uncertainty among the correct answers for the survey that might have contributed to variability in responses. “Further research and implementation of these interventions are needed in efforts to improve health outcomes,” they added.
“Barbers can serve as allies in referral services,” Dr. Rice said in the interview. “They can be the first line for a number of diseases that are related to hair.”
Part of his role as a dermatologist, he added, includes going into a community with “boots on the ground” and talking to people who will see these patients “because access to care, presentation to big hospital systems can be challenging.”
Dr. Rice and the other study authors had no not report any financial disclosures.
A
.The results were published in a research letter in JAMA Dermatology. “Educating barbers on dermatologic conditions that disproportionately affect Black males and establishing referral services between barbers and dermatologists could serve as plausible interventions,” the authors wrote.
PFB — or “razor bumps” in layman’s terms — is a chronic, inflammatory follicular disorder, which can occur in any racial group, but primarily affects Black men, noted the corresponding author of the study, Xavier Rice, MD, a dermatology resident at Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri. PFB manifests as bumps and pustules or nodules along the beard line and are painful, he said in an interview. “They tend to leave scars once they resolve,” and impair the ability to shave, he noted.
In some communities, Black men may see their barbers more often than primary care doctors or dermatologists, “so if you equip the barbers with the knowledge to recognize the disease, make recommendations on how to prevent and to treat, and also form some allyship with barbers and dermatologists, then we can get referrals for people, especially the ones with severe disease,” he said. A lot of the barbers in the study said that “they didn’t receive much education on how to properly address it [PFB] and they had a lot of miseducation about what actually caused it,” added Dr. Rice, who was a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, when the study was conducted.
Study involved 40 barbers
For the study, Dr. Rice and his coauthors surveyed 40 barbers in the Houston, Texas, area; 39 were Black and one was Hispanic; 75% were men and 25% were women. Most (90%) said that at least 60% of their clients were Black. Between January and April 2022, the barbers received questionnaires before and after participating in a session that involved a review of a comprehensive educational brochure with information on the recognition, cause, prevention, and treatment of PFB, which they then kept for reference and to provide to clients as needed. “Common myths and nuanced home remedies from barber experience were also addressed,” the authors wrote.
No more than 2 weeks after the information session, each barber completed a posttest questionnaire.
Based on their responses to pretest questions, 39 of the 40 barbers understood that Black men were the group most impacted by PFB and that a person with severe PFB should see a physician. In the pretest survey, 12 barbers (30%) correctly recognized a photo of PFB, which increased to 39 (97.5%) in the posttest survey. In the pretest survey, two barbers (5%) identified laser hair removal as the most effective treatment for PFB, compared with 37 (92.5%) in the posttest survey.
Overall, the mean percentage of correct scores out of 20 questions was 54.8% in the pretest survey, increasing to 91% in the posttest survey (P <.001).
Limitations of the studies included heterogeneity in the survey response options that potentially could have introduced bias, the authors wrote. Another was that since there is a lack of evidence for ideal treatment strategies for PFB, there may have been some uncertainty among the correct answers for the survey that might have contributed to variability in responses. “Further research and implementation of these interventions are needed in efforts to improve health outcomes,” they added.
“Barbers can serve as allies in referral services,” Dr. Rice said in the interview. “They can be the first line for a number of diseases that are related to hair.”
Part of his role as a dermatologist, he added, includes going into a community with “boots on the ground” and talking to people who will see these patients “because access to care, presentation to big hospital systems can be challenging.”
Dr. Rice and the other study authors had no not report any financial disclosures.
FROM JAMA DERMATOLOGY
Laser epilation may reduce pilonidal disease recurrences when added to standard care
according to the results of a randomized trial.
The study, recently published in JAMA Surgery, enrolled 302 patients ages 11-21 with pilonidal disease. Half of the participants were assigned to receive LE (laser hair removal) plus standard treatment (improved hygiene plus mechanical or chemical hair removal), and half were assigned to receive standard care alone.
At 1 year, 10.4% of the patients who had received LE plus standard treatment had experienced a recurrence of pilonidal disease, compared with 33.6% of patients in the standard treatment group (P < .001). Rates were based on the data available on 96 patients in the LE group and 134 patients in the standard care group.
“These results provide further evidence that laser epilation is safe, well-tolerated, and should be available as an initial treatment option or adjunct treatment modality for all eligible patients,” first author Peter C. Minneci, MD, chair of surgery at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware Valley, Wilmington, Del, said in a press release reporting the results. “There have been few comparative studies that have investigated recurrence rates after LE versus other treatment modalities,” he and his coauthors wrote in the study, noting that the study “was the first, to our knowledge, to compare LE as an adjunct to standard care versus standard care alone and demonstrate a decrease in recurrence rates.”
Pilonidal disease, a common condition, results when cysts form between the buttocks and is most common in adolescents and young adults. It is thought to recur about 33% of the time, with most cases recurring within 1 year of treatment.
In practice, there are large variations in management strategies for pilonidal disease because evidence for an ideal treatment approach is lacking, Dr. Minneci and coauthors wrote. Although lifestyle modifications and nonepilation hair removal strategies have been linked to a reduced need for surgery, compliance with these strategies is low. Additionally, recurrence contributes to “a high degree of psychosocial stress in patients, who often miss school or sports and may avoid social activities,” Dr. Minneci said in the press release. Therefore, some practitioners have begun using LE – which uses selective thermolysis to remove the hair shaft, follicle, and bulb – as an adjunct to standard treatments in the hopes of avoiding surgery.
A few studies have shown LE is effective in reducing pilonidal disease recurrence, but these studies had small sample sizes, according to the authors.
Study methods
The randomized, nonblinded clinical trial was conducted between 2017 and 2022 at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, and enrolled patients aged 11-21 years with a history of pilonidal disease, who did not have active disease.
Those in the control group (151 patients) had an in-person clinic visit where they received education and training about hair removal in the gluteal cleft, and were provided with supplies for hair removal (chemical epilation or shaving) for 6 months (standard of care). Those in the LE group (151 patients) received standard of care therapy, and also received one LE treatment every 4-6 weeks for a total of five treatments. They were encouraged to perform hair removal using chemical or mechanical depilation between visits.
At the 1-year follow-up, data were available in 96 patients in the LE group and 134 patients in the standard care group. At that time, the proportion of those who had a recurrence within 1 year was significantly lower in the LE group than in the standard care group (mean difference, –23.2%; 95% CI, –33.2% to –13.1%; P < .001).
In addition, over the course of a year, those in the LE-treated group had significantly higher Child Attitude Toward Illness scores, indicating that they felt more positively about their illness at 6 months than participants in the standard care group. There were no differences between the groups in terms of patient or caregiver disability days, patient- or caregiver-reported health-related quality of life, health care satisfaction, or perceived stigma. In the LE group, no burns were reported, and no inability to tolerate treatment because of pain.
The study had several limitations, including the potential for participation bias, and because of a loss to follow-up, primary and secondary outcomes were missing data points, which was higher in the LE group. Loss to follow-up in the LE arm increased after 6 months, when laser treatments ended, with many of those patients not completing surveys at 9 and 12 months. The hospital’s pilonidal clinic shut down for 3 months during the COVID-19 pandemic, and when the clinic reopened, 15 patients in the LE arm withdrew from the study.
|In the press release, Dr. Minneci said that confirmation of the effectiveness of LE could help justify insurance coverage for pilonidal disease, noting that LE is usually not covered with insurance, and a course of treatment could cost $800-$1,500.
Dr. Minneci and four of the other six coauthors reported receiving grants from Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute during the conduct of the study. One author reported receiving grants from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities outside the submitted work. The research was funded by a grant from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
according to the results of a randomized trial.
The study, recently published in JAMA Surgery, enrolled 302 patients ages 11-21 with pilonidal disease. Half of the participants were assigned to receive LE (laser hair removal) plus standard treatment (improved hygiene plus mechanical or chemical hair removal), and half were assigned to receive standard care alone.
At 1 year, 10.4% of the patients who had received LE plus standard treatment had experienced a recurrence of pilonidal disease, compared with 33.6% of patients in the standard treatment group (P < .001). Rates were based on the data available on 96 patients in the LE group and 134 patients in the standard care group.
“These results provide further evidence that laser epilation is safe, well-tolerated, and should be available as an initial treatment option or adjunct treatment modality for all eligible patients,” first author Peter C. Minneci, MD, chair of surgery at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware Valley, Wilmington, Del, said in a press release reporting the results. “There have been few comparative studies that have investigated recurrence rates after LE versus other treatment modalities,” he and his coauthors wrote in the study, noting that the study “was the first, to our knowledge, to compare LE as an adjunct to standard care versus standard care alone and demonstrate a decrease in recurrence rates.”
Pilonidal disease, a common condition, results when cysts form between the buttocks and is most common in adolescents and young adults. It is thought to recur about 33% of the time, with most cases recurring within 1 year of treatment.
In practice, there are large variations in management strategies for pilonidal disease because evidence for an ideal treatment approach is lacking, Dr. Minneci and coauthors wrote. Although lifestyle modifications and nonepilation hair removal strategies have been linked to a reduced need for surgery, compliance with these strategies is low. Additionally, recurrence contributes to “a high degree of psychosocial stress in patients, who often miss school or sports and may avoid social activities,” Dr. Minneci said in the press release. Therefore, some practitioners have begun using LE – which uses selective thermolysis to remove the hair shaft, follicle, and bulb – as an adjunct to standard treatments in the hopes of avoiding surgery.
A few studies have shown LE is effective in reducing pilonidal disease recurrence, but these studies had small sample sizes, according to the authors.
Study methods
The randomized, nonblinded clinical trial was conducted between 2017 and 2022 at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, and enrolled patients aged 11-21 years with a history of pilonidal disease, who did not have active disease.
Those in the control group (151 patients) had an in-person clinic visit where they received education and training about hair removal in the gluteal cleft, and were provided with supplies for hair removal (chemical epilation or shaving) for 6 months (standard of care). Those in the LE group (151 patients) received standard of care therapy, and also received one LE treatment every 4-6 weeks for a total of five treatments. They were encouraged to perform hair removal using chemical or mechanical depilation between visits.
At the 1-year follow-up, data were available in 96 patients in the LE group and 134 patients in the standard care group. At that time, the proportion of those who had a recurrence within 1 year was significantly lower in the LE group than in the standard care group (mean difference, –23.2%; 95% CI, –33.2% to –13.1%; P < .001).
In addition, over the course of a year, those in the LE-treated group had significantly higher Child Attitude Toward Illness scores, indicating that they felt more positively about their illness at 6 months than participants in the standard care group. There were no differences between the groups in terms of patient or caregiver disability days, patient- or caregiver-reported health-related quality of life, health care satisfaction, or perceived stigma. In the LE group, no burns were reported, and no inability to tolerate treatment because of pain.
The study had several limitations, including the potential for participation bias, and because of a loss to follow-up, primary and secondary outcomes were missing data points, which was higher in the LE group. Loss to follow-up in the LE arm increased after 6 months, when laser treatments ended, with many of those patients not completing surveys at 9 and 12 months. The hospital’s pilonidal clinic shut down for 3 months during the COVID-19 pandemic, and when the clinic reopened, 15 patients in the LE arm withdrew from the study.
|In the press release, Dr. Minneci said that confirmation of the effectiveness of LE could help justify insurance coverage for pilonidal disease, noting that LE is usually not covered with insurance, and a course of treatment could cost $800-$1,500.
Dr. Minneci and four of the other six coauthors reported receiving grants from Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute during the conduct of the study. One author reported receiving grants from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities outside the submitted work. The research was funded by a grant from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
according to the results of a randomized trial.
The study, recently published in JAMA Surgery, enrolled 302 patients ages 11-21 with pilonidal disease. Half of the participants were assigned to receive LE (laser hair removal) plus standard treatment (improved hygiene plus mechanical or chemical hair removal), and half were assigned to receive standard care alone.
At 1 year, 10.4% of the patients who had received LE plus standard treatment had experienced a recurrence of pilonidal disease, compared with 33.6% of patients in the standard treatment group (P < .001). Rates were based on the data available on 96 patients in the LE group and 134 patients in the standard care group.
“These results provide further evidence that laser epilation is safe, well-tolerated, and should be available as an initial treatment option or adjunct treatment modality for all eligible patients,” first author Peter C. Minneci, MD, chair of surgery at Nemours Children’s Health, Delaware Valley, Wilmington, Del, said in a press release reporting the results. “There have been few comparative studies that have investigated recurrence rates after LE versus other treatment modalities,” he and his coauthors wrote in the study, noting that the study “was the first, to our knowledge, to compare LE as an adjunct to standard care versus standard care alone and demonstrate a decrease in recurrence rates.”
Pilonidal disease, a common condition, results when cysts form between the buttocks and is most common in adolescents and young adults. It is thought to recur about 33% of the time, with most cases recurring within 1 year of treatment.
In practice, there are large variations in management strategies for pilonidal disease because evidence for an ideal treatment approach is lacking, Dr. Minneci and coauthors wrote. Although lifestyle modifications and nonepilation hair removal strategies have been linked to a reduced need for surgery, compliance with these strategies is low. Additionally, recurrence contributes to “a high degree of psychosocial stress in patients, who often miss school or sports and may avoid social activities,” Dr. Minneci said in the press release. Therefore, some practitioners have begun using LE – which uses selective thermolysis to remove the hair shaft, follicle, and bulb – as an adjunct to standard treatments in the hopes of avoiding surgery.
A few studies have shown LE is effective in reducing pilonidal disease recurrence, but these studies had small sample sizes, according to the authors.
Study methods
The randomized, nonblinded clinical trial was conducted between 2017 and 2022 at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, and enrolled patients aged 11-21 years with a history of pilonidal disease, who did not have active disease.
Those in the control group (151 patients) had an in-person clinic visit where they received education and training about hair removal in the gluteal cleft, and were provided with supplies for hair removal (chemical epilation or shaving) for 6 months (standard of care). Those in the LE group (151 patients) received standard of care therapy, and also received one LE treatment every 4-6 weeks for a total of five treatments. They were encouraged to perform hair removal using chemical or mechanical depilation between visits.
At the 1-year follow-up, data were available in 96 patients in the LE group and 134 patients in the standard care group. At that time, the proportion of those who had a recurrence within 1 year was significantly lower in the LE group than in the standard care group (mean difference, –23.2%; 95% CI, –33.2% to –13.1%; P < .001).
In addition, over the course of a year, those in the LE-treated group had significantly higher Child Attitude Toward Illness scores, indicating that they felt more positively about their illness at 6 months than participants in the standard care group. There were no differences between the groups in terms of patient or caregiver disability days, patient- or caregiver-reported health-related quality of life, health care satisfaction, or perceived stigma. In the LE group, no burns were reported, and no inability to tolerate treatment because of pain.
The study had several limitations, including the potential for participation bias, and because of a loss to follow-up, primary and secondary outcomes were missing data points, which was higher in the LE group. Loss to follow-up in the LE arm increased after 6 months, when laser treatments ended, with many of those patients not completing surveys at 9 and 12 months. The hospital’s pilonidal clinic shut down for 3 months during the COVID-19 pandemic, and when the clinic reopened, 15 patients in the LE arm withdrew from the study.
|In the press release, Dr. Minneci said that confirmation of the effectiveness of LE could help justify insurance coverage for pilonidal disease, noting that LE is usually not covered with insurance, and a course of treatment could cost $800-$1,500.
Dr. Minneci and four of the other six coauthors reported receiving grants from Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute during the conduct of the study. One author reported receiving grants from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities outside the submitted work. The research was funded by a grant from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
FROM JAMA SURGERY