AF Burden Increases Around Time of COPD Hospitalizations

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— Patients with COPD who have exacerbations requiring hospitalization should be monitored for cardiac arrhythmias, investigators said.

This recommendation is based on results of a study of medical records showing that among more than 20,000 hospitalizations for patients with COPD without concurrent heart failure (HF), 40% patients had at least 6 minutes of daily atrial fibrillation (AF) burden, and nearly half of these patients had at least an hour of daily AF burden; patients with COPD and concurrent HF had similar daily AF burdens, reported Trent Fischer, MD, MS, senior principal scientist at Medtronic in Minneapolis.

“We can conclude that AF burden increases in the weeks after a hospitalization for COPD if they don’t have a concurrent diagnosis of heart failure. Also, having concurrent heart failure increases the risk of atrial fibrillation and increases the atrial fibrillation burden around the time of COPD hospitalization,” he said in a rapid-fire oral abstract session at the CHEST Annual Meeting.

The findings indicated a need for increased vigilance for AF around the time of a serious COPD exacerbation and may explain at least some of the increased risks for stroke observed in patients who are hospitalized for COPD exacerbations, he said.
 

Retrospective Study

Dr. Fischer and colleagues conducted the study to characterize the AF burden among patients both with and without HF who were hospitalized for acute COPD exacerbation and to determine the temporal relationship between AF and hospitalization.

They drew data from 2007 through 2021 on patients with implantable cardioverter defibrillators, cardiac resynchronization therapy devices, pacemakers, and implantable cardiac monitors, using the Optum de-identified electronic health record dataset linked with Medtronic’s CareLink database to conduct a retrospective analysis.

They looked at admissions for COPD linked to available device diagnostic parameters between 30 days prior to and 60 days after admission for COPD.

They identified a total of 20,056 COPD hospitalizations for patients with concurrent HF and 3877 for those without HF.

Among patients with HF, 43% had a daily AF burden of at least 6 minutes, and 22% had at least 1 hour of irregular rhythms. Among patients without HF, 40% had at least 6 minutes of irregular rhythms daily, and 18% had at least 1 hour.

Among patients with HF, the daily average AF burden increased from a baseline of 158 min/d 30 days before an admission to 170 min/d at admission, returning to baseline by 20 days after hospitalization.

For patients without HF, the AF burden increased from 107 min/d at baseline to 113 min/d during hospitalization and returned to baseline by 20 days after hospitalization.
 

Confounding Factor?

In the Q&A, session moderator Krishna Sundar, MBBS, MD, FCCP, a pulmonary, sleep medicine, and critical care medicine specialist at St. John’s Medical Center in Jackson, Wyoming, said that when patients with HF get admitted for COPD exacerbations, their HF typically worsens and asked Dr. Fischer how he could tell the difference.

“I know there’s a lot of interaction between heart failure and COPD. They’re well-know comorbidities, and the exacerbation of one can bring on worsening of the other. At least with this database, we can’t really tease out any sort of differences,” Dr. Fischer replied.

“I think that a diagnosis of COPD exacerbation is pretty well laid out, but it’s sometimes difficult to separate worsening of heart failure in these patients, and often these patients get treated for both problems. It’s clear that it’s the heart failure patients who are having more atrial fibrillation episodes, which is not surprising, but the question is how much is the COPD exacerbation contributing to the atrial fibrillation?” said Dr. Sundar.

The study was supported by Medtronic. Dr. Fischer is employed by the company. Dr. Sundar reported no relevant financial relationships.



A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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— Patients with COPD who have exacerbations requiring hospitalization should be monitored for cardiac arrhythmias, investigators said.

This recommendation is based on results of a study of medical records showing that among more than 20,000 hospitalizations for patients with COPD without concurrent heart failure (HF), 40% patients had at least 6 minutes of daily atrial fibrillation (AF) burden, and nearly half of these patients had at least an hour of daily AF burden; patients with COPD and concurrent HF had similar daily AF burdens, reported Trent Fischer, MD, MS, senior principal scientist at Medtronic in Minneapolis.

“We can conclude that AF burden increases in the weeks after a hospitalization for COPD if they don’t have a concurrent diagnosis of heart failure. Also, having concurrent heart failure increases the risk of atrial fibrillation and increases the atrial fibrillation burden around the time of COPD hospitalization,” he said in a rapid-fire oral abstract session at the CHEST Annual Meeting.

The findings indicated a need for increased vigilance for AF around the time of a serious COPD exacerbation and may explain at least some of the increased risks for stroke observed in patients who are hospitalized for COPD exacerbations, he said.
 

Retrospective Study

Dr. Fischer and colleagues conducted the study to characterize the AF burden among patients both with and without HF who were hospitalized for acute COPD exacerbation and to determine the temporal relationship between AF and hospitalization.

They drew data from 2007 through 2021 on patients with implantable cardioverter defibrillators, cardiac resynchronization therapy devices, pacemakers, and implantable cardiac monitors, using the Optum de-identified electronic health record dataset linked with Medtronic’s CareLink database to conduct a retrospective analysis.

They looked at admissions for COPD linked to available device diagnostic parameters between 30 days prior to and 60 days after admission for COPD.

They identified a total of 20,056 COPD hospitalizations for patients with concurrent HF and 3877 for those without HF.

Among patients with HF, 43% had a daily AF burden of at least 6 minutes, and 22% had at least 1 hour of irregular rhythms. Among patients without HF, 40% had at least 6 minutes of irregular rhythms daily, and 18% had at least 1 hour.

Among patients with HF, the daily average AF burden increased from a baseline of 158 min/d 30 days before an admission to 170 min/d at admission, returning to baseline by 20 days after hospitalization.

For patients without HF, the AF burden increased from 107 min/d at baseline to 113 min/d during hospitalization and returned to baseline by 20 days after hospitalization.
 

Confounding Factor?

In the Q&A, session moderator Krishna Sundar, MBBS, MD, FCCP, a pulmonary, sleep medicine, and critical care medicine specialist at St. John’s Medical Center in Jackson, Wyoming, said that when patients with HF get admitted for COPD exacerbations, their HF typically worsens and asked Dr. Fischer how he could tell the difference.

“I know there’s a lot of interaction between heart failure and COPD. They’re well-know comorbidities, and the exacerbation of one can bring on worsening of the other. At least with this database, we can’t really tease out any sort of differences,” Dr. Fischer replied.

“I think that a diagnosis of COPD exacerbation is pretty well laid out, but it’s sometimes difficult to separate worsening of heart failure in these patients, and often these patients get treated for both problems. It’s clear that it’s the heart failure patients who are having more atrial fibrillation episodes, which is not surprising, but the question is how much is the COPD exacerbation contributing to the atrial fibrillation?” said Dr. Sundar.

The study was supported by Medtronic. Dr. Fischer is employed by the company. Dr. Sundar reported no relevant financial relationships.



A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

— Patients with COPD who have exacerbations requiring hospitalization should be monitored for cardiac arrhythmias, investigators said.

This recommendation is based on results of a study of medical records showing that among more than 20,000 hospitalizations for patients with COPD without concurrent heart failure (HF), 40% patients had at least 6 minutes of daily atrial fibrillation (AF) burden, and nearly half of these patients had at least an hour of daily AF burden; patients with COPD and concurrent HF had similar daily AF burdens, reported Trent Fischer, MD, MS, senior principal scientist at Medtronic in Minneapolis.

“We can conclude that AF burden increases in the weeks after a hospitalization for COPD if they don’t have a concurrent diagnosis of heart failure. Also, having concurrent heart failure increases the risk of atrial fibrillation and increases the atrial fibrillation burden around the time of COPD hospitalization,” he said in a rapid-fire oral abstract session at the CHEST Annual Meeting.

The findings indicated a need for increased vigilance for AF around the time of a serious COPD exacerbation and may explain at least some of the increased risks for stroke observed in patients who are hospitalized for COPD exacerbations, he said.
 

Retrospective Study

Dr. Fischer and colleagues conducted the study to characterize the AF burden among patients both with and without HF who were hospitalized for acute COPD exacerbation and to determine the temporal relationship between AF and hospitalization.

They drew data from 2007 through 2021 on patients with implantable cardioverter defibrillators, cardiac resynchronization therapy devices, pacemakers, and implantable cardiac monitors, using the Optum de-identified electronic health record dataset linked with Medtronic’s CareLink database to conduct a retrospective analysis.

They looked at admissions for COPD linked to available device diagnostic parameters between 30 days prior to and 60 days after admission for COPD.

They identified a total of 20,056 COPD hospitalizations for patients with concurrent HF and 3877 for those without HF.

Among patients with HF, 43% had a daily AF burden of at least 6 minutes, and 22% had at least 1 hour of irregular rhythms. Among patients without HF, 40% had at least 6 minutes of irregular rhythms daily, and 18% had at least 1 hour.

Among patients with HF, the daily average AF burden increased from a baseline of 158 min/d 30 days before an admission to 170 min/d at admission, returning to baseline by 20 days after hospitalization.

For patients without HF, the AF burden increased from 107 min/d at baseline to 113 min/d during hospitalization and returned to baseline by 20 days after hospitalization.
 

Confounding Factor?

In the Q&A, session moderator Krishna Sundar, MBBS, MD, FCCP, a pulmonary, sleep medicine, and critical care medicine specialist at St. John’s Medical Center in Jackson, Wyoming, said that when patients with HF get admitted for COPD exacerbations, their HF typically worsens and asked Dr. Fischer how he could tell the difference.

“I know there’s a lot of interaction between heart failure and COPD. They’re well-know comorbidities, and the exacerbation of one can bring on worsening of the other. At least with this database, we can’t really tease out any sort of differences,” Dr. Fischer replied.

“I think that a diagnosis of COPD exacerbation is pretty well laid out, but it’s sometimes difficult to separate worsening of heart failure in these patients, and often these patients get treated for both problems. It’s clear that it’s the heart failure patients who are having more atrial fibrillation episodes, which is not surprising, but the question is how much is the COPD exacerbation contributing to the atrial fibrillation?” said Dr. Sundar.

The study was supported by Medtronic. Dr. Fischer is employed by the company. Dr. Sundar reported no relevant financial relationships.



A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Novel Intervention Slows Cognitive Decline in At-Risk Adults

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Combining cognitive remediation with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) was associated with slower cognitive decline for up to 6 years in older adults with major depressive disorder that is in remission (rMDD), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or both, new research suggests.

The cognitive remediation intervention included a series of progressively difficult computer-based and facilitator-monitored mental exercises designed to sharpen cognitive function. 

Researchers found that using cognitive remediation with tDCS slowed decline in executive function and verbal memory more than other cognitive functions. The effect was stronger among people with rMDD versus those with MCI and in those at low genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease. 

“We have developed a novel intervention, combining two interventions that if used separately have a weak effect but together have substantial and clinically meaningful effect of slowing the progression of cognitive decline,” said study author Benoit H. Mulsant, MD, chair of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and senior scientist at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, also in Toronto. 

The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry
 

High-Risk Group

Research shows that older adults with MDD or MCI are at high risk for cognitive decline and dementia. Evidence also suggests that depression in early or mid-life significantly increases the risk for dementia in late life, even if the depression has been in remission for decades.

A potential mechanism underlying this increased risk for dementia could be impaired cortical plasticity, or the ability of the brain to compensate for damage.

The PACt-MD trial included 375 older adults with rMDD, MCI, or both (mean age, 72 years; 62% women) at five academic hospitals in Toronto.

Participants received either cognitive remediation plus tDCS or sham intervention 5 days per week for 8 weeks (acute phase), followed by 5-day “boosters” every 6 months.

tDCS was administered by trained personnel and involved active stimulation for 30 minutes at the beginning of each cognitive remediation group session. The intervention targets the prefrontal cortex, a critical region for cognitive compensation in normal cognitive aging.

The sham group received a weakened version of cognitive remediation, with exercises that did not get progressively more difficult. For the sham stimulation, the current flowed at full intensity for only 54 seconds before and after 30-second ramp-up and ramp-down phases, to create a blinding effect, the authors noted. 

A geriatric psychiatrist followed all participants throughout the study, conducting assessments at baseline, month 2, and yearly for 3-7 years (mean follow-up, 48.3 months). 

Participants’ depressive symptoms were evaluated at baseline and at all follow-ups and underwent neuropsychological testing to assess six cognitive domains: processing speed, working memory, executive functioning, verbal memory, visual memory, and language.

To get a norm for the cognitive tests, researchers recruited a comparator group of 75 subjects similar in age, gender, and years of education, with no neuropsychiatric disorder or cognitive impairment. They completed the same assessments but not the intervention.

Study participants and assessors were blinded to treatment assignment.
 

Slower Cognitive Decline

Participants in the intervention group had a significantly slower decline in cognitive function, compared with those in the sham group (adjusted z score difference [active – sham] at month 60, 0.21; P = .006). This is equivalent to slowing cognitive decline by about 4 years, researchers reported. The intervention also showed a positive effect on executive function and verbal memory. 

“If I can push dementia from 85 to 89 years and you die at 86, in practice, I have prevented you from ever developing dementia,” Mulsant said.

The efficacy of cognitive remediation plus tDCS in rMDD could be tied to enhanced neuroplasticity, said Mulsant. 

The treatment worked well in people with a history of depression, regardless of MCI status, but was not as effective for people with just MCI, researchers noted. The intervention also did not work as well among people at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.

“We don’t believe we have discovered an intervention to prevent dementia in people who are at high risk for Alzheimer disease, but we have discovered an intervention that could prevent dementia in people who have an history of depression,” said Mulsant. 

These results suggest the pathways to dementia among people with MCI and rMDD are different, he added. 

Because previous research showed either treatment alone demonstrated little efficacy, researchers said the new results indicate that there may be a synergistic effect of combining the two. 

The ideal amount of treatment and optimal age for initiation still need to be determined, said Mulsant. The study did not include a comparator group without rMDD or MCI, so the observed cognitive benefits might be specific to people with these high-risk conditions. Another study limitation is lack of diversity in terms of ethnicity, race, and education. 
 

Promising, Important Findings

Commenting on the research, Badr Ratnakaran, MD, assistant professor and division director of geriatric psychiatry at Carilion Clinic–Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, said the results are promising and important because there are so few treatment options for the increasing number of older patients with depression and dementia.

The side-effect profile of the combined treatment is better than that of many pharmacologic treatments, Ratnakaran noted. As more research like this comes out, Ratnakaran predicts that cognitive remediation and tCDS will become more readily available.

“This is telling us that the field of psychiatry, and also dementia, is progressing beyond your usual pharmacotherapy treatments,” said Ratnakaran, who also is chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Council on Geriatric Psychiatry. 

The study received support from the Canada Brain Research Fund of Brain Canada, Health Canada, the Chagnon Family, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Discovery Fund. Mulsant reported holding and receiving support from the Labatt Family Chair in Biology of Depression in Late-Life Adults at the University of Toronto; being a member of the Center for Addiction and Mental Health Board of Trustees; research support from Brain Canada, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Center for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and National Institutes of Health; and nonfinancial support from Capital Solution Design and HappyNeuron. Ratnakaran reported no relevant conflicts.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Combining cognitive remediation with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) was associated with slower cognitive decline for up to 6 years in older adults with major depressive disorder that is in remission (rMDD), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or both, new research suggests.

The cognitive remediation intervention included a series of progressively difficult computer-based and facilitator-monitored mental exercises designed to sharpen cognitive function. 

Researchers found that using cognitive remediation with tDCS slowed decline in executive function and verbal memory more than other cognitive functions. The effect was stronger among people with rMDD versus those with MCI and in those at low genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease. 

“We have developed a novel intervention, combining two interventions that if used separately have a weak effect but together have substantial and clinically meaningful effect of slowing the progression of cognitive decline,” said study author Benoit H. Mulsant, MD, chair of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and senior scientist at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, also in Toronto. 

The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry
 

High-Risk Group

Research shows that older adults with MDD or MCI are at high risk for cognitive decline and dementia. Evidence also suggests that depression in early or mid-life significantly increases the risk for dementia in late life, even if the depression has been in remission for decades.

A potential mechanism underlying this increased risk for dementia could be impaired cortical plasticity, or the ability of the brain to compensate for damage.

The PACt-MD trial included 375 older adults with rMDD, MCI, or both (mean age, 72 years; 62% women) at five academic hospitals in Toronto.

Participants received either cognitive remediation plus tDCS or sham intervention 5 days per week for 8 weeks (acute phase), followed by 5-day “boosters” every 6 months.

tDCS was administered by trained personnel and involved active stimulation for 30 minutes at the beginning of each cognitive remediation group session. The intervention targets the prefrontal cortex, a critical region for cognitive compensation in normal cognitive aging.

The sham group received a weakened version of cognitive remediation, with exercises that did not get progressively more difficult. For the sham stimulation, the current flowed at full intensity for only 54 seconds before and after 30-second ramp-up and ramp-down phases, to create a blinding effect, the authors noted. 

A geriatric psychiatrist followed all participants throughout the study, conducting assessments at baseline, month 2, and yearly for 3-7 years (mean follow-up, 48.3 months). 

Participants’ depressive symptoms were evaluated at baseline and at all follow-ups and underwent neuropsychological testing to assess six cognitive domains: processing speed, working memory, executive functioning, verbal memory, visual memory, and language.

To get a norm for the cognitive tests, researchers recruited a comparator group of 75 subjects similar in age, gender, and years of education, with no neuropsychiatric disorder or cognitive impairment. They completed the same assessments but not the intervention.

Study participants and assessors were blinded to treatment assignment.
 

Slower Cognitive Decline

Participants in the intervention group had a significantly slower decline in cognitive function, compared with those in the sham group (adjusted z score difference [active – sham] at month 60, 0.21; P = .006). This is equivalent to slowing cognitive decline by about 4 years, researchers reported. The intervention also showed a positive effect on executive function and verbal memory. 

“If I can push dementia from 85 to 89 years and you die at 86, in practice, I have prevented you from ever developing dementia,” Mulsant said.

The efficacy of cognitive remediation plus tDCS in rMDD could be tied to enhanced neuroplasticity, said Mulsant. 

The treatment worked well in people with a history of depression, regardless of MCI status, but was not as effective for people with just MCI, researchers noted. The intervention also did not work as well among people at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.

“We don’t believe we have discovered an intervention to prevent dementia in people who are at high risk for Alzheimer disease, but we have discovered an intervention that could prevent dementia in people who have an history of depression,” said Mulsant. 

These results suggest the pathways to dementia among people with MCI and rMDD are different, he added. 

Because previous research showed either treatment alone demonstrated little efficacy, researchers said the new results indicate that there may be a synergistic effect of combining the two. 

The ideal amount of treatment and optimal age for initiation still need to be determined, said Mulsant. The study did not include a comparator group without rMDD or MCI, so the observed cognitive benefits might be specific to people with these high-risk conditions. Another study limitation is lack of diversity in terms of ethnicity, race, and education. 
 

Promising, Important Findings

Commenting on the research, Badr Ratnakaran, MD, assistant professor and division director of geriatric psychiatry at Carilion Clinic–Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, said the results are promising and important because there are so few treatment options for the increasing number of older patients with depression and dementia.

The side-effect profile of the combined treatment is better than that of many pharmacologic treatments, Ratnakaran noted. As more research like this comes out, Ratnakaran predicts that cognitive remediation and tCDS will become more readily available.

“This is telling us that the field of psychiatry, and also dementia, is progressing beyond your usual pharmacotherapy treatments,” said Ratnakaran, who also is chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Council on Geriatric Psychiatry. 

The study received support from the Canada Brain Research Fund of Brain Canada, Health Canada, the Chagnon Family, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Discovery Fund. Mulsant reported holding and receiving support from the Labatt Family Chair in Biology of Depression in Late-Life Adults at the University of Toronto; being a member of the Center for Addiction and Mental Health Board of Trustees; research support from Brain Canada, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Center for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and National Institutes of Health; and nonfinancial support from Capital Solution Design and HappyNeuron. Ratnakaran reported no relevant conflicts.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Combining cognitive remediation with transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) was associated with slower cognitive decline for up to 6 years in older adults with major depressive disorder that is in remission (rMDD), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or both, new research suggests.

The cognitive remediation intervention included a series of progressively difficult computer-based and facilitator-monitored mental exercises designed to sharpen cognitive function. 

Researchers found that using cognitive remediation with tDCS slowed decline in executive function and verbal memory more than other cognitive functions. The effect was stronger among people with rMDD versus those with MCI and in those at low genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease. 

“We have developed a novel intervention, combining two interventions that if used separately have a weak effect but together have substantial and clinically meaningful effect of slowing the progression of cognitive decline,” said study author Benoit H. Mulsant, MD, chair of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and senior scientist at the Center for Addiction and Mental Health, also in Toronto. 

The findings were published online in JAMA Psychiatry
 

High-Risk Group

Research shows that older adults with MDD or MCI are at high risk for cognitive decline and dementia. Evidence also suggests that depression in early or mid-life significantly increases the risk for dementia in late life, even if the depression has been in remission for decades.

A potential mechanism underlying this increased risk for dementia could be impaired cortical plasticity, or the ability of the brain to compensate for damage.

The PACt-MD trial included 375 older adults with rMDD, MCI, or both (mean age, 72 years; 62% women) at five academic hospitals in Toronto.

Participants received either cognitive remediation plus tDCS or sham intervention 5 days per week for 8 weeks (acute phase), followed by 5-day “boosters” every 6 months.

tDCS was administered by trained personnel and involved active stimulation for 30 minutes at the beginning of each cognitive remediation group session. The intervention targets the prefrontal cortex, a critical region for cognitive compensation in normal cognitive aging.

The sham group received a weakened version of cognitive remediation, with exercises that did not get progressively more difficult. For the sham stimulation, the current flowed at full intensity for only 54 seconds before and after 30-second ramp-up and ramp-down phases, to create a blinding effect, the authors noted. 

A geriatric psychiatrist followed all participants throughout the study, conducting assessments at baseline, month 2, and yearly for 3-7 years (mean follow-up, 48.3 months). 

Participants’ depressive symptoms were evaluated at baseline and at all follow-ups and underwent neuropsychological testing to assess six cognitive domains: processing speed, working memory, executive functioning, verbal memory, visual memory, and language.

To get a norm for the cognitive tests, researchers recruited a comparator group of 75 subjects similar in age, gender, and years of education, with no neuropsychiatric disorder or cognitive impairment. They completed the same assessments but not the intervention.

Study participants and assessors were blinded to treatment assignment.
 

Slower Cognitive Decline

Participants in the intervention group had a significantly slower decline in cognitive function, compared with those in the sham group (adjusted z score difference [active – sham] at month 60, 0.21; P = .006). This is equivalent to slowing cognitive decline by about 4 years, researchers reported. The intervention also showed a positive effect on executive function and verbal memory. 

“If I can push dementia from 85 to 89 years and you die at 86, in practice, I have prevented you from ever developing dementia,” Mulsant said.

The efficacy of cognitive remediation plus tDCS in rMDD could be tied to enhanced neuroplasticity, said Mulsant. 

The treatment worked well in people with a history of depression, regardless of MCI status, but was not as effective for people with just MCI, researchers noted. The intervention also did not work as well among people at genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.

“We don’t believe we have discovered an intervention to prevent dementia in people who are at high risk for Alzheimer disease, but we have discovered an intervention that could prevent dementia in people who have an history of depression,” said Mulsant. 

These results suggest the pathways to dementia among people with MCI and rMDD are different, he added. 

Because previous research showed either treatment alone demonstrated little efficacy, researchers said the new results indicate that there may be a synergistic effect of combining the two. 

The ideal amount of treatment and optimal age for initiation still need to be determined, said Mulsant. The study did not include a comparator group without rMDD or MCI, so the observed cognitive benefits might be specific to people with these high-risk conditions. Another study limitation is lack of diversity in terms of ethnicity, race, and education. 
 

Promising, Important Findings

Commenting on the research, Badr Ratnakaran, MD, assistant professor and division director of geriatric psychiatry at Carilion Clinic–Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, Roanoke, said the results are promising and important because there are so few treatment options for the increasing number of older patients with depression and dementia.

The side-effect profile of the combined treatment is better than that of many pharmacologic treatments, Ratnakaran noted. As more research like this comes out, Ratnakaran predicts that cognitive remediation and tCDS will become more readily available.

“This is telling us that the field of psychiatry, and also dementia, is progressing beyond your usual pharmacotherapy treatments,” said Ratnakaran, who also is chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Council on Geriatric Psychiatry. 

The study received support from the Canada Brain Research Fund of Brain Canada, Health Canada, the Chagnon Family, and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Discovery Fund. Mulsant reported holding and receiving support from the Labatt Family Chair in Biology of Depression in Late-Life Adults at the University of Toronto; being a member of the Center for Addiction and Mental Health Board of Trustees; research support from Brain Canada, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Center for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and National Institutes of Health; and nonfinancial support from Capital Solution Design and HappyNeuron. Ratnakaran reported no relevant conflicts.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A Finger-Prick Test for Alzheimer’s Disease?

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A finger-prick blood test can accurately identify p-tau217 — a key biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease — without the need for temperature or storage control measures.

In a pilot study, researchers found a good correlation of p-tau217 levels from blood obtained via standard venous sampling and from a single finger prick.

“We see the potential that capillary p-tau217 from dried blood spots could overcome the limitations of standard venous collection of being invasive, dependent on centrifuges and ultra-low temperature freezers, and also requiring less volume than standard plasma analysis,” said lead investigator Hanna Huber, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. 

The findings were presented at the 17th Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference.
 

Strong Link Between Venous and Capillary Samples 

p-tau217 has emerged as the most effective blood test to identify Alzheimer’s disease. However, traditional venous blood sampling requires certain infrastructure and immediate processing. Increased and simplified access to this blood biomarker could be crucial for early diagnosis, proper patient management, and prompt initiation of disease-modifying treatments. 

The DROP-AD project is investigating the diagnostic performance of finger-prick collection to accurately measure p-tau217. In the current study, the research team obtained paired venous blood and capillary blood samples from 206 adults (mean age, 71.8 years; 59% women), with or without cognitive impairment, from five European centers. A subset of participants provided a second finger-prick sample collected without any supervision. 

The capillary blood samples were obtained via a single finger prick, and then single blood drops were applied to a dried plasma spot (DPS) card, which was then shipped to a lab (without temperature control or cooling) for p-tau217 measurement. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers were available for a subset of individuals.

Throughout the entire study population, there was a “very convincing correlation” between p-tau217 levels from capillary DPS and venous plasma, Huber told conference attendees. 

Additionally, capillary DPS p-tau217 levels were able to discriminate amyloid-positive from amyloid-negative individuals, with levels of this biomarker increasing in a stepwise fashion, “from cognitively unimpaired individuals to individuals with mild cognitive impairment and, finally, to dementia patients,” Huber said.

Of note, capillary p-tau217 levels from DPS samples that were collected by research staff did not differ from unsupervised self-collected samples. 

What about the stability of the samples? Capillary DPS p-tau-217 is “stable over 2 weeks at room temperature,” Huber said. 
 

Ready for Prime Time?

Preliminary data from the DROP-AD project highlight the potential of using finger-prick blood collection to identify neurofilament light (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), two other Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers.

“We think that capillary p-tau217, but also other biomarkers, could be a widely accessible and cheap alternative for clinical practice and clinical trials in individuals with cognitive decline if the results are confirmed in longitudinal and home-sampling cohorts,” Huber concluded. 

“Measuring biomarkers by a simple finger prick could facilitate regular and autonomous sampling at home, which would be particularly useful in remote and rural settings,” she noted. 

The findings in this study confirm and extend earlier findings that the study team reported last year at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC). 

“The data shared at CTAD 2024, along with the related material previously presented at AAIC 2023, reporting on a ‘finger prick’ blood test approach is interesting and emerging work but not yet ready for clinical use,” said Rebecca M. Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association vice president of scientific engagement.

“That said, the idea of a highly accessible and scalable tool that can aid in easier and more equitable diagnosis would be welcomed by researchers, clinicians, and individuals and families affected by Alzheimer’s disease and all other dementias,” Edelmayer said.

“This finger-prick blood testing technology for Alzheimer’s biomarkers still has to be validated more broadly, but it is very promising. Advancements in technology and practice demonstrate the simplicity, transportability, and diagnostic value of blood-based biomarkers for Alzheimer’s,” she added. 

The Alzheimer’s Association is currently conducting a systematic review of the evidence and preparing clinical practice guidelines on blood-based biomarker tests for specialized healthcare settings, with publications, clinical resources, and tools anticipated in 2025, Edelmayer noted. 

The study had no commercial funding. Huber and Edelmayer report no relevant conflicts of interest. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A finger-prick blood test can accurately identify p-tau217 — a key biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease — without the need for temperature or storage control measures.

In a pilot study, researchers found a good correlation of p-tau217 levels from blood obtained via standard venous sampling and from a single finger prick.

“We see the potential that capillary p-tau217 from dried blood spots could overcome the limitations of standard venous collection of being invasive, dependent on centrifuges and ultra-low temperature freezers, and also requiring less volume than standard plasma analysis,” said lead investigator Hanna Huber, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. 

The findings were presented at the 17th Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference.
 

Strong Link Between Venous and Capillary Samples 

p-tau217 has emerged as the most effective blood test to identify Alzheimer’s disease. However, traditional venous blood sampling requires certain infrastructure and immediate processing. Increased and simplified access to this blood biomarker could be crucial for early diagnosis, proper patient management, and prompt initiation of disease-modifying treatments. 

The DROP-AD project is investigating the diagnostic performance of finger-prick collection to accurately measure p-tau217. In the current study, the research team obtained paired venous blood and capillary blood samples from 206 adults (mean age, 71.8 years; 59% women), with or without cognitive impairment, from five European centers. A subset of participants provided a second finger-prick sample collected without any supervision. 

The capillary blood samples were obtained via a single finger prick, and then single blood drops were applied to a dried plasma spot (DPS) card, which was then shipped to a lab (without temperature control or cooling) for p-tau217 measurement. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers were available for a subset of individuals.

Throughout the entire study population, there was a “very convincing correlation” between p-tau217 levels from capillary DPS and venous plasma, Huber told conference attendees. 

Additionally, capillary DPS p-tau217 levels were able to discriminate amyloid-positive from amyloid-negative individuals, with levels of this biomarker increasing in a stepwise fashion, “from cognitively unimpaired individuals to individuals with mild cognitive impairment and, finally, to dementia patients,” Huber said.

Of note, capillary p-tau217 levels from DPS samples that were collected by research staff did not differ from unsupervised self-collected samples. 

What about the stability of the samples? Capillary DPS p-tau-217 is “stable over 2 weeks at room temperature,” Huber said. 
 

Ready for Prime Time?

Preliminary data from the DROP-AD project highlight the potential of using finger-prick blood collection to identify neurofilament light (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), two other Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers.

“We think that capillary p-tau217, but also other biomarkers, could be a widely accessible and cheap alternative for clinical practice and clinical trials in individuals with cognitive decline if the results are confirmed in longitudinal and home-sampling cohorts,” Huber concluded. 

“Measuring biomarkers by a simple finger prick could facilitate regular and autonomous sampling at home, which would be particularly useful in remote and rural settings,” she noted. 

The findings in this study confirm and extend earlier findings that the study team reported last year at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC). 

“The data shared at CTAD 2024, along with the related material previously presented at AAIC 2023, reporting on a ‘finger prick’ blood test approach is interesting and emerging work but not yet ready for clinical use,” said Rebecca M. Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association vice president of scientific engagement.

“That said, the idea of a highly accessible and scalable tool that can aid in easier and more equitable diagnosis would be welcomed by researchers, clinicians, and individuals and families affected by Alzheimer’s disease and all other dementias,” Edelmayer said.

“This finger-prick blood testing technology for Alzheimer’s biomarkers still has to be validated more broadly, but it is very promising. Advancements in technology and practice demonstrate the simplicity, transportability, and diagnostic value of blood-based biomarkers for Alzheimer’s,” she added. 

The Alzheimer’s Association is currently conducting a systematic review of the evidence and preparing clinical practice guidelines on blood-based biomarker tests for specialized healthcare settings, with publications, clinical resources, and tools anticipated in 2025, Edelmayer noted. 

The study had no commercial funding. Huber and Edelmayer report no relevant conflicts of interest. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

A finger-prick blood test can accurately identify p-tau217 — a key biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease — without the need for temperature or storage control measures.

In a pilot study, researchers found a good correlation of p-tau217 levels from blood obtained via standard venous sampling and from a single finger prick.

“We see the potential that capillary p-tau217 from dried blood spots could overcome the limitations of standard venous collection of being invasive, dependent on centrifuges and ultra-low temperature freezers, and also requiring less volume than standard plasma analysis,” said lead investigator Hanna Huber, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. 

The findings were presented at the 17th Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease (CTAD) conference.
 

Strong Link Between Venous and Capillary Samples 

p-tau217 has emerged as the most effective blood test to identify Alzheimer’s disease. However, traditional venous blood sampling requires certain infrastructure and immediate processing. Increased and simplified access to this blood biomarker could be crucial for early diagnosis, proper patient management, and prompt initiation of disease-modifying treatments. 

The DROP-AD project is investigating the diagnostic performance of finger-prick collection to accurately measure p-tau217. In the current study, the research team obtained paired venous blood and capillary blood samples from 206 adults (mean age, 71.8 years; 59% women), with or without cognitive impairment, from five European centers. A subset of participants provided a second finger-prick sample collected without any supervision. 

The capillary blood samples were obtained via a single finger prick, and then single blood drops were applied to a dried plasma spot (DPS) card, which was then shipped to a lab (without temperature control or cooling) for p-tau217 measurement. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers were available for a subset of individuals.

Throughout the entire study population, there was a “very convincing correlation” between p-tau217 levels from capillary DPS and venous plasma, Huber told conference attendees. 

Additionally, capillary DPS p-tau217 levels were able to discriminate amyloid-positive from amyloid-negative individuals, with levels of this biomarker increasing in a stepwise fashion, “from cognitively unimpaired individuals to individuals with mild cognitive impairment and, finally, to dementia patients,” Huber said.

Of note, capillary p-tau217 levels from DPS samples that were collected by research staff did not differ from unsupervised self-collected samples. 

What about the stability of the samples? Capillary DPS p-tau-217 is “stable over 2 weeks at room temperature,” Huber said. 
 

Ready for Prime Time?

Preliminary data from the DROP-AD project highlight the potential of using finger-prick blood collection to identify neurofilament light (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), two other Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers.

“We think that capillary p-tau217, but also other biomarkers, could be a widely accessible and cheap alternative for clinical practice and clinical trials in individuals with cognitive decline if the results are confirmed in longitudinal and home-sampling cohorts,” Huber concluded. 

“Measuring biomarkers by a simple finger prick could facilitate regular and autonomous sampling at home, which would be particularly useful in remote and rural settings,” she noted. 

The findings in this study confirm and extend earlier findings that the study team reported last year at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC). 

“The data shared at CTAD 2024, along with the related material previously presented at AAIC 2023, reporting on a ‘finger prick’ blood test approach is interesting and emerging work but not yet ready for clinical use,” said Rebecca M. Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association vice president of scientific engagement.

“That said, the idea of a highly accessible and scalable tool that can aid in easier and more equitable diagnosis would be welcomed by researchers, clinicians, and individuals and families affected by Alzheimer’s disease and all other dementias,” Edelmayer said.

“This finger-prick blood testing technology for Alzheimer’s biomarkers still has to be validated more broadly, but it is very promising. Advancements in technology and practice demonstrate the simplicity, transportability, and diagnostic value of blood-based biomarkers for Alzheimer’s,” she added. 

The Alzheimer’s Association is currently conducting a systematic review of the evidence and preparing clinical practice guidelines on blood-based biomarker tests for specialized healthcare settings, with publications, clinical resources, and tools anticipated in 2025, Edelmayer noted. 

The study had no commercial funding. Huber and Edelmayer report no relevant conflicts of interest. 
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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FROM CTAD 2024

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Minor Progress in Gender Pay Equity, But a Big Gap Persists

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Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.

According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.

The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.

In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.

“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”

The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.

On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.

“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.

Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.

Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.

“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.

Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.

“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”

Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.

“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.” 

Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.

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

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Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.

According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.

The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.

In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.

“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”

The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.

On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.

“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.

Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.

Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.

“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.

Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.

“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”

Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.

“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.” 

Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.

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

Despite some recent progress in compensation equity, women in medicine continue to be paid significantly lower salaries than men.

According to the Female Compensation Report 2024 by Medscape, male doctors of any kind earned an average salary of about $400,000, whereas female doctors earned approximately $309,000 — a 29% gap.

The report analyzed survey data from 7000 practicing physicians who were recruited over a 4-month period starting in October 2023. The respondents comprised roughly 60% women representing over 29 specialties.

In the 2022 report, the pay gap between the genders was 32%. But some women in the field argued substantial headway is still needed.

“You can try and pick apart the data, but I’d say we’re not really making progress,” said Susan T. Hingle, MD, an internist in Illinois and president of the American Medical Women’s Association. “A decline by a couple of percentage points is not significantly addressing this pay gap that over a lifetime is huge, can be millions of dollars.”

The gender gap was narrower among female primary care physicians (PCPs) vs medical specialists. Female PCPs earned around $253,000 per year, whereas male PCPs earned about $295,000 per year. Hingle suggested that female PCPs may enjoy more pay equity because health systems have a harder time filling these positions.

On the other hand, the gap for specialists rose from 27% in 2022 to 31% in 2023. Differences in how aggressively women and men negotiate compensation packages may play a role, said Hingle.

“Taking negotiation out of the equation would be progress to me,” said Hingle.

Pay disparity did not appear to be the result of time spent on the job — female doctors reported an average of 49 work hours per week, whereas their male counterparts reported 50 work hours per week.

Meanwhile, the pay gap progressively worsened over time. Among doctors aged 28-34 years, men earned an average of $53,000 more than women. By ages 46-49, men earned an average of $157,000 more than women.

“I had to take my employer to court to get equal compensation, sad as it is to say,” said a hospitalist in North Carolina.

Nearly 60% of women surveyed felt they were not being paid fairly for their efforts, up from less than half reported in Medscape’s 2021 report. Hingle said that this figure may not only reflect sentiments about the compensation gap, but also less support on the job, including fewer physician assistants (PAs), nurses, and administrative staff.

“At my job, I do the work of multiple people,” said a survey respondent. “Junior resident, senior resident, social worker, nurse practitioner, PA — as well as try to be a teacher, researcher, [and] an excellent doctor and have the time to make patients feel as if they are not in a rush.”

Roughly 30% of women physicians said they would not choose to go into medicine again if given the chance compared with 26% of male physicians.

“Gender inequities in our profession have a direct impact,” said Shikha Jain, MD, an oncologist in Chicago and founder of the Women in Medicine nonprofit. “I think women in general don’t feel valued in the care they’re providing.” 

Jain cited bullying, harassment, and fewer opportunities for leadership and recognition as factors beyond pay that affect female physicians’ feelings of being valued.

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

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AGA Research Foundation: You Can Help

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To my fellow AGA Members, I’m not the first to tell you that real progress in the diagnosis, treatment, and cure of digestive disease is at risk. Research funding from traditional sources, like the National Institutes of Health, continues to shrink. We can expect even greater cuts on the horizon.

GI investigators in the early stages of their careers are particularly hard hit. They are finding it much more difficult to secure needed federal funding. As a result, many of these investigators are walking away from GI research frustrated by a lack of support.

Dr. Michael Camilleri

It is our hope that physicians have an abundance of new tools and treatments to care for their patients suffering from digestive disorders.

You know that research has revolutionized the care of many digestive disease patients. These patients, as well as everyone in the GI field clinicians and researchers alike, have benefited from the discoveries of passionate investigators, past and present.

This is where you can help.

New treatments and devices are the result of years of research. The AGA Research Foundation grants are critical to continuing the GI pipeline. The AGA research awards program helps researchers take new directions and discover new treatments to better patient care.

Help us fund more researchers by supporting the AGA Research Foundation with a year-end donation. Your donation will support young investigators’ research careers and help assure research is continued.

Be gracious, generous and giving to the future of the GI specialty this holiday season. There are three easy ways to give:

Make a tax-deductible donation online at www. foundation.gastro.org. 

Send a donation through the mail to: 

AGA Research Foundation 

4930 Del Ray Avenue 

Bethesda, MD 20814


Or donate over the phone by calling (301) 222-4002. All gifts are tax-deductible to the fullest extent of US law. Join us!

Dr. Camilleri is AGA Research Foundation Chair and Past AGA Institute President. He is a consultant in the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.

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To my fellow AGA Members, I’m not the first to tell you that real progress in the diagnosis, treatment, and cure of digestive disease is at risk. Research funding from traditional sources, like the National Institutes of Health, continues to shrink. We can expect even greater cuts on the horizon.

GI investigators in the early stages of their careers are particularly hard hit. They are finding it much more difficult to secure needed federal funding. As a result, many of these investigators are walking away from GI research frustrated by a lack of support.

Dr. Michael Camilleri

It is our hope that physicians have an abundance of new tools and treatments to care for their patients suffering from digestive disorders.

You know that research has revolutionized the care of many digestive disease patients. These patients, as well as everyone in the GI field clinicians and researchers alike, have benefited from the discoveries of passionate investigators, past and present.

This is where you can help.

New treatments and devices are the result of years of research. The AGA Research Foundation grants are critical to continuing the GI pipeline. The AGA research awards program helps researchers take new directions and discover new treatments to better patient care.

Help us fund more researchers by supporting the AGA Research Foundation with a year-end donation. Your donation will support young investigators’ research careers and help assure research is continued.

Be gracious, generous and giving to the future of the GI specialty this holiday season. There are three easy ways to give:

Make a tax-deductible donation online at www. foundation.gastro.org. 

Send a donation through the mail to: 

AGA Research Foundation 

4930 Del Ray Avenue 

Bethesda, MD 20814


Or donate over the phone by calling (301) 222-4002. All gifts are tax-deductible to the fullest extent of US law. Join us!

Dr. Camilleri is AGA Research Foundation Chair and Past AGA Institute President. He is a consultant in the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.

To my fellow AGA Members, I’m not the first to tell you that real progress in the diagnosis, treatment, and cure of digestive disease is at risk. Research funding from traditional sources, like the National Institutes of Health, continues to shrink. We can expect even greater cuts on the horizon.

GI investigators in the early stages of their careers are particularly hard hit. They are finding it much more difficult to secure needed federal funding. As a result, many of these investigators are walking away from GI research frustrated by a lack of support.

Dr. Michael Camilleri

It is our hope that physicians have an abundance of new tools and treatments to care for their patients suffering from digestive disorders.

You know that research has revolutionized the care of many digestive disease patients. These patients, as well as everyone in the GI field clinicians and researchers alike, have benefited from the discoveries of passionate investigators, past and present.

This is where you can help.

New treatments and devices are the result of years of research. The AGA Research Foundation grants are critical to continuing the GI pipeline. The AGA research awards program helps researchers take new directions and discover new treatments to better patient care.

Help us fund more researchers by supporting the AGA Research Foundation with a year-end donation. Your donation will support young investigators’ research careers and help assure research is continued.

Be gracious, generous and giving to the future of the GI specialty this holiday season. There are three easy ways to give:

Make a tax-deductible donation online at www. foundation.gastro.org. 

Send a donation through the mail to: 

AGA Research Foundation 

4930 Del Ray Avenue 

Bethesda, MD 20814


Or donate over the phone by calling (301) 222-4002. All gifts are tax-deductible to the fullest extent of US law. Join us!

Dr. Camilleri is AGA Research Foundation Chair and Past AGA Institute President. He is a consultant in the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.

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Unlock the Latest Clinical Updates with the 2024 PG Course OnDemand

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Did you miss out on the AGA Postgraduate Course this year? We have you covered with AGA PG Course OnDemand, a complete capture of the 2024 AGA Postgraduate Course, The Latest from the Greatest.

Visit agau.gastro.org to purchase today for flexible, on-the-go access to the latest clinical advances in the GI field.

  • Unparalleled access: Choose when and where you dive into content with convenient access from any computer or mobile device.
  • Incredible faculty: Learn from renowned experts who will offer their perspectives on cutting-edge research and clinical guidance.
  • Tangible strategies: Expert and early career faculty will guide you through challenging patient cases and provide strategies you can easily implement upon your return to the office.
  • Efficient learning: Content is organized by category: GI oncology, neurogastroenterology & motility, obesity, advanced endoscopy, and liver.
  • Continuing education: With CME testing integrated directly into each session, you can easily earn up to 16 CME and MOC credits through December 31, 2024.
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Did you miss out on the AGA Postgraduate Course this year? We have you covered with AGA PG Course OnDemand, a complete capture of the 2024 AGA Postgraduate Course, The Latest from the Greatest.

Visit agau.gastro.org to purchase today for flexible, on-the-go access to the latest clinical advances in the GI field.

  • Unparalleled access: Choose when and where you dive into content with convenient access from any computer or mobile device.
  • Incredible faculty: Learn from renowned experts who will offer their perspectives on cutting-edge research and clinical guidance.
  • Tangible strategies: Expert and early career faculty will guide you through challenging patient cases and provide strategies you can easily implement upon your return to the office.
  • Efficient learning: Content is organized by category: GI oncology, neurogastroenterology & motility, obesity, advanced endoscopy, and liver.
  • Continuing education: With CME testing integrated directly into each session, you can easily earn up to 16 CME and MOC credits through December 31, 2024.

Did you miss out on the AGA Postgraduate Course this year? We have you covered with AGA PG Course OnDemand, a complete capture of the 2024 AGA Postgraduate Course, The Latest from the Greatest.

Visit agau.gastro.org to purchase today for flexible, on-the-go access to the latest clinical advances in the GI field.

  • Unparalleled access: Choose when and where you dive into content with convenient access from any computer or mobile device.
  • Incredible faculty: Learn from renowned experts who will offer their perspectives on cutting-edge research and clinical guidance.
  • Tangible strategies: Expert and early career faculty will guide you through challenging patient cases and provide strategies you can easily implement upon your return to the office.
  • Efficient learning: Content is organized by category: GI oncology, neurogastroenterology & motility, obesity, advanced endoscopy, and liver.
  • Continuing education: With CME testing integrated directly into each session, you can easily earn up to 16 CME and MOC credits through December 31, 2024.
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VA Awards Grants to Support Adaptive Sports

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The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is awarding $15.9 million in grants to fund adaptive sports, recreational activities, and equine therapy for > 15,000 veterans and service members living with disabilities.

Marine Corps veteran Jataya Taylor — who competed in wheelchair fencing at the 2024 Paralympics — experienced mental health symptoms until she began participating in adaptive sports through an organization supported by the VA Adaptive Sports Grant Program.

“Getting involved in adaptive sports was a saving grace for me,” Taylor said. “Participating in these programs got me on the bike to start with, then got me climbing, and eventually it became an important part of my mental health to participate. I found my people. I found my new network of friends.”

Adaptive sports, which are customized to fit the needs of veterans with disabilities, include paralympic sports, archery, cycling, skiing, hunting, rock climbing, and sky diving. Mike Gooler, another Marine Corps veteran, praised the Adaptive Sports Center’s facilities in Crested Butte, Colorado, calling it “nothing short of amazing.”

“[S]ki therapy has been instrumental in helping me navigate through my experiences and injuries,” Gooler said. “Skiing provides me with sense of freedom and empowerment … and having my family by my side, witnessing my progress and sharing the joy of skiing, was truly special.”

The grant program is facilitated and managed by the National Veterans Sports Programs and Special Events Office and will provide grants to 91 national, regional, and community-based programs for fiscal year 2024 across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico.

“These grants give veterans life-changing opportunities,” Secretary of VA Denis McDonough said. “We know adaptive sports and recreational activities can be transformational for veterans living with disabilities, improving their overall physical and mental health, and also giving them important community with fellow heroes who served.”

Information about the awardees and details of the program are available at www.va.gov/adaptivesports and on Facebook at Sports4Vets.

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The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is awarding $15.9 million in grants to fund adaptive sports, recreational activities, and equine therapy for > 15,000 veterans and service members living with disabilities.

Marine Corps veteran Jataya Taylor — who competed in wheelchair fencing at the 2024 Paralympics — experienced mental health symptoms until she began participating in adaptive sports through an organization supported by the VA Adaptive Sports Grant Program.

“Getting involved in adaptive sports was a saving grace for me,” Taylor said. “Participating in these programs got me on the bike to start with, then got me climbing, and eventually it became an important part of my mental health to participate. I found my people. I found my new network of friends.”

Adaptive sports, which are customized to fit the needs of veterans with disabilities, include paralympic sports, archery, cycling, skiing, hunting, rock climbing, and sky diving. Mike Gooler, another Marine Corps veteran, praised the Adaptive Sports Center’s facilities in Crested Butte, Colorado, calling it “nothing short of amazing.”

“[S]ki therapy has been instrumental in helping me navigate through my experiences and injuries,” Gooler said. “Skiing provides me with sense of freedom and empowerment … and having my family by my side, witnessing my progress and sharing the joy of skiing, was truly special.”

The grant program is facilitated and managed by the National Veterans Sports Programs and Special Events Office and will provide grants to 91 national, regional, and community-based programs for fiscal year 2024 across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico.

“These grants give veterans life-changing opportunities,” Secretary of VA Denis McDonough said. “We know adaptive sports and recreational activities can be transformational for veterans living with disabilities, improving their overall physical and mental health, and also giving them important community with fellow heroes who served.”

Information about the awardees and details of the program are available at www.va.gov/adaptivesports and on Facebook at Sports4Vets.

The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is awarding $15.9 million in grants to fund adaptive sports, recreational activities, and equine therapy for > 15,000 veterans and service members living with disabilities.

Marine Corps veteran Jataya Taylor — who competed in wheelchair fencing at the 2024 Paralympics — experienced mental health symptoms until she began participating in adaptive sports through an organization supported by the VA Adaptive Sports Grant Program.

“Getting involved in adaptive sports was a saving grace for me,” Taylor said. “Participating in these programs got me on the bike to start with, then got me climbing, and eventually it became an important part of my mental health to participate. I found my people. I found my new network of friends.”

Adaptive sports, which are customized to fit the needs of veterans with disabilities, include paralympic sports, archery, cycling, skiing, hunting, rock climbing, and sky diving. Mike Gooler, another Marine Corps veteran, praised the Adaptive Sports Center’s facilities in Crested Butte, Colorado, calling it “nothing short of amazing.”

“[S]ki therapy has been instrumental in helping me navigate through my experiences and injuries,” Gooler said. “Skiing provides me with sense of freedom and empowerment … and having my family by my side, witnessing my progress and sharing the joy of skiing, was truly special.”

The grant program is facilitated and managed by the National Veterans Sports Programs and Special Events Office and will provide grants to 91 national, regional, and community-based programs for fiscal year 2024 across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico.

“These grants give veterans life-changing opportunities,” Secretary of VA Denis McDonough said. “We know adaptive sports and recreational activities can be transformational for veterans living with disabilities, improving their overall physical and mental health, and also giving them important community with fellow heroes who served.”

Information about the awardees and details of the program are available at www.va.gov/adaptivesports and on Facebook at Sports4Vets.

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Weight Loss Surgery, Obesity Drugs Achieve Similar Results but Have Different Safety Profiles

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Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) produces maximal weight loss in patients with obesity, compared with other surgical procedures and with weight loss drugs, according to a meta-analysis comparing the efficacy and safety of the different treatment options. 

However, tirzepatide, a long-acting glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) receptor agonist and glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA), produces comparable weight loss and has a favorable safety profile, reported principal investigator Jena Velji-Ibrahim, MD, MSc, from Prisma Health–Upstate/University of South Carolina School of Medicine in Greenville. 

In addition, there was “no significant difference in percentage total body weight loss between tirzepatide when comparing it to one-anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB), as well as laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy,” she said. 

All 11 interventions studied exerted weight loss effects, and side-effect profiles were also deemed largely favorable, particularly for endoscopic interventions, she added. 

“When we compare bariatric surgery to bariatric endoscopy, endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty and transpyloric shuttle offer a minimally invasive alternative with good weight loss outcomes and fewer adverse events,” she said.

Velji-Ibrahim presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG)
 

Comparing Weight Loss Interventions

Many of the studies comparing weight loss interventions to date have been limited by relatively small sample sizes, observational designs, and inconsistent results. This prompted Velji-Ibrahim and her colleagues to conduct what they believe to be the first-of-its-kind meta-analysis on this topic. 

They began by conducting a systematic search of the literature to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that compared the efficacy of Food and Drug Administration–approved bariatric surgeries, bariatric endoscopies, and medications — against each other or with placebo — in adults with a body mass index of 25-45, with or without concurrent type 2 diabetes. 

A network meta-analysis was then performed to assess the various interventions’ impact on percentage total weight loss and side-effect profiles. P-scores were calculated to rank the treatments and identify the preferred interventions. The duration of therapy was 52 weeks. 

In total, 34 eligible RCTs with 15,660 patients were included. Overall, the RCTs analyzed 11 weight loss treatments, including bariatric surgeries (four studies), bariatric endoscopies (three studies), and medications (four studies). 

Specifically, the bariatric surgeries included RYGB, laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, OAGB, and laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding; bariatric endoscopies included endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty, transpyloric shuttle, and intragastric balloon; and medications included tirzepatide, semaglutide, and liraglutide.

Although all interventions were associated with reductions in percentage total weight loss compared with placebo, RYGB led to the greatest reductions (19.29%) and was ranked as the first preferred treatment (97% probability). It was followed in the rankings by OAGB, tirzepatide 15 mg, laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, and semaglutide 2.4 mg. 

Tirzepatide 15 mg had a slightly lower percentage total weight loss (15.18%) but a favorable safety profile. There was no significant difference in percentage total weight loss between tirzepatide 15 mg and OAGB (mean difference, 2.97%) or laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (mean difference, 0.43%). 

There was also no significant difference in percentage total weight loss between semaglutide 2.4 mg, compared with endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty and transpyloric shuttle. 

Endoscopic sleeve, transpyloric shuttle, and intragastric balloon all resulted in weight loss > 5%. 

When compared with bariatric surgery, “endoscopic interventions had a better side-effect profile, with no increased odds of mortality and intensive care needs,” Velji-Ibrahim said. 

When it came to the medications, “the most common side effects were gastrointestinal in nature, which included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation,” she said.
 

 

 

Combining, Rather Than Comparing, Therapies

Following the presentation, session co-moderator Shivangi T. Kothari, MD, assistant professor of medicine and associate director of endoscopy at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York, shared her thoughts of what the future of obesity management research might look like. 

It’s not just going to be about percentage total weight loss, she said, but about how well the effect is sustained following the intervention. 

And we might move “away from comparing one modality to another” and instead study combination therapies, “which would be ideal,” said Kothari.

This was the focus of another meta-analysis presented at ACG 2024, in which Nihal Ijaz I. Khan, MD, and colleagues compared the efficacy of endoscopic bariatric treatment alone vs its combined use with GLP-1 RAs.

The researchers identified three retrospective studies with 266 patients, of whom 143 underwent endoscopic bariatric treatment alone (either endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty or intragastric balloon) and 123 had it combined with GLP-1 RAs, specifically liraglutide. 

They reported that superior absolute weight loss was achieved in the group of patients receiving GLP-1 RAs in combination with endoscopic bariatric treatment. The standardized mean difference in body weight loss at treatment follow-up was 0.61 (P <.01). 

“Further studies are required to evaluate the safety and adverse events comparing these two treatment modalities and to discover differences between comparing the two endoscopic options to various GLP-1 receptor agonists,” Khan noted. 

Neither study had specific funding. Velji-Ibrahim and Khan reported no relevant financial relationships. Kothari reported serving as a consultant for Boston Scientific and Olympus, as well as serving as an advisory committee/board member for Castle Biosciences.

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

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Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) produces maximal weight loss in patients with obesity, compared with other surgical procedures and with weight loss drugs, according to a meta-analysis comparing the efficacy and safety of the different treatment options. 

However, tirzepatide, a long-acting glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) receptor agonist and glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA), produces comparable weight loss and has a favorable safety profile, reported principal investigator Jena Velji-Ibrahim, MD, MSc, from Prisma Health–Upstate/University of South Carolina School of Medicine in Greenville. 

In addition, there was “no significant difference in percentage total body weight loss between tirzepatide when comparing it to one-anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB), as well as laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy,” she said. 

All 11 interventions studied exerted weight loss effects, and side-effect profiles were also deemed largely favorable, particularly for endoscopic interventions, she added. 

“When we compare bariatric surgery to bariatric endoscopy, endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty and transpyloric shuttle offer a minimally invasive alternative with good weight loss outcomes and fewer adverse events,” she said.

Velji-Ibrahim presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG)
 

Comparing Weight Loss Interventions

Many of the studies comparing weight loss interventions to date have been limited by relatively small sample sizes, observational designs, and inconsistent results. This prompted Velji-Ibrahim and her colleagues to conduct what they believe to be the first-of-its-kind meta-analysis on this topic. 

They began by conducting a systematic search of the literature to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that compared the efficacy of Food and Drug Administration–approved bariatric surgeries, bariatric endoscopies, and medications — against each other or with placebo — in adults with a body mass index of 25-45, with or without concurrent type 2 diabetes. 

A network meta-analysis was then performed to assess the various interventions’ impact on percentage total weight loss and side-effect profiles. P-scores were calculated to rank the treatments and identify the preferred interventions. The duration of therapy was 52 weeks. 

In total, 34 eligible RCTs with 15,660 patients were included. Overall, the RCTs analyzed 11 weight loss treatments, including bariatric surgeries (four studies), bariatric endoscopies (three studies), and medications (four studies). 

Specifically, the bariatric surgeries included RYGB, laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, OAGB, and laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding; bariatric endoscopies included endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty, transpyloric shuttle, and intragastric balloon; and medications included tirzepatide, semaglutide, and liraglutide.

Although all interventions were associated with reductions in percentage total weight loss compared with placebo, RYGB led to the greatest reductions (19.29%) and was ranked as the first preferred treatment (97% probability). It was followed in the rankings by OAGB, tirzepatide 15 mg, laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, and semaglutide 2.4 mg. 

Tirzepatide 15 mg had a slightly lower percentage total weight loss (15.18%) but a favorable safety profile. There was no significant difference in percentage total weight loss between tirzepatide 15 mg and OAGB (mean difference, 2.97%) or laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (mean difference, 0.43%). 

There was also no significant difference in percentage total weight loss between semaglutide 2.4 mg, compared with endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty and transpyloric shuttle. 

Endoscopic sleeve, transpyloric shuttle, and intragastric balloon all resulted in weight loss > 5%. 

When compared with bariatric surgery, “endoscopic interventions had a better side-effect profile, with no increased odds of mortality and intensive care needs,” Velji-Ibrahim said. 

When it came to the medications, “the most common side effects were gastrointestinal in nature, which included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation,” she said.
 

 

 

Combining, Rather Than Comparing, Therapies

Following the presentation, session co-moderator Shivangi T. Kothari, MD, assistant professor of medicine and associate director of endoscopy at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York, shared her thoughts of what the future of obesity management research might look like. 

It’s not just going to be about percentage total weight loss, she said, but about how well the effect is sustained following the intervention. 

And we might move “away from comparing one modality to another” and instead study combination therapies, “which would be ideal,” said Kothari.

This was the focus of another meta-analysis presented at ACG 2024, in which Nihal Ijaz I. Khan, MD, and colleagues compared the efficacy of endoscopic bariatric treatment alone vs its combined use with GLP-1 RAs.

The researchers identified three retrospective studies with 266 patients, of whom 143 underwent endoscopic bariatric treatment alone (either endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty or intragastric balloon) and 123 had it combined with GLP-1 RAs, specifically liraglutide. 

They reported that superior absolute weight loss was achieved in the group of patients receiving GLP-1 RAs in combination with endoscopic bariatric treatment. The standardized mean difference in body weight loss at treatment follow-up was 0.61 (P <.01). 

“Further studies are required to evaluate the safety and adverse events comparing these two treatment modalities and to discover differences between comparing the two endoscopic options to various GLP-1 receptor agonists,” Khan noted. 

Neither study had specific funding. Velji-Ibrahim and Khan reported no relevant financial relationships. Kothari reported serving as a consultant for Boston Scientific and Olympus, as well as serving as an advisory committee/board member for Castle Biosciences.

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

Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) produces maximal weight loss in patients with obesity, compared with other surgical procedures and with weight loss drugs, according to a meta-analysis comparing the efficacy and safety of the different treatment options. 

However, tirzepatide, a long-acting glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) receptor agonist and glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA), produces comparable weight loss and has a favorable safety profile, reported principal investigator Jena Velji-Ibrahim, MD, MSc, from Prisma Health–Upstate/University of South Carolina School of Medicine in Greenville. 

In addition, there was “no significant difference in percentage total body weight loss between tirzepatide when comparing it to one-anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB), as well as laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy,” she said. 

All 11 interventions studied exerted weight loss effects, and side-effect profiles were also deemed largely favorable, particularly for endoscopic interventions, she added. 

“When we compare bariatric surgery to bariatric endoscopy, endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty and transpyloric shuttle offer a minimally invasive alternative with good weight loss outcomes and fewer adverse events,” she said.

Velji-Ibrahim presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG)
 

Comparing Weight Loss Interventions

Many of the studies comparing weight loss interventions to date have been limited by relatively small sample sizes, observational designs, and inconsistent results. This prompted Velji-Ibrahim and her colleagues to conduct what they believe to be the first-of-its-kind meta-analysis on this topic. 

They began by conducting a systematic search of the literature to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that compared the efficacy of Food and Drug Administration–approved bariatric surgeries, bariatric endoscopies, and medications — against each other or with placebo — in adults with a body mass index of 25-45, with or without concurrent type 2 diabetes. 

A network meta-analysis was then performed to assess the various interventions’ impact on percentage total weight loss and side-effect profiles. P-scores were calculated to rank the treatments and identify the preferred interventions. The duration of therapy was 52 weeks. 

In total, 34 eligible RCTs with 15,660 patients were included. Overall, the RCTs analyzed 11 weight loss treatments, including bariatric surgeries (four studies), bariatric endoscopies (three studies), and medications (four studies). 

Specifically, the bariatric surgeries included RYGB, laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, OAGB, and laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding; bariatric endoscopies included endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty, transpyloric shuttle, and intragastric balloon; and medications included tirzepatide, semaglutide, and liraglutide.

Although all interventions were associated with reductions in percentage total weight loss compared with placebo, RYGB led to the greatest reductions (19.29%) and was ranked as the first preferred treatment (97% probability). It was followed in the rankings by OAGB, tirzepatide 15 mg, laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy, and semaglutide 2.4 mg. 

Tirzepatide 15 mg had a slightly lower percentage total weight loss (15.18%) but a favorable safety profile. There was no significant difference in percentage total weight loss between tirzepatide 15 mg and OAGB (mean difference, 2.97%) or laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (mean difference, 0.43%). 

There was also no significant difference in percentage total weight loss between semaglutide 2.4 mg, compared with endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty and transpyloric shuttle. 

Endoscopic sleeve, transpyloric shuttle, and intragastric balloon all resulted in weight loss > 5%. 

When compared with bariatric surgery, “endoscopic interventions had a better side-effect profile, with no increased odds of mortality and intensive care needs,” Velji-Ibrahim said. 

When it came to the medications, “the most common side effects were gastrointestinal in nature, which included nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation,” she said.
 

 

 

Combining, Rather Than Comparing, Therapies

Following the presentation, session co-moderator Shivangi T. Kothari, MD, assistant professor of medicine and associate director of endoscopy at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York, shared her thoughts of what the future of obesity management research might look like. 

It’s not just going to be about percentage total weight loss, she said, but about how well the effect is sustained following the intervention. 

And we might move “away from comparing one modality to another” and instead study combination therapies, “which would be ideal,” said Kothari.

This was the focus of another meta-analysis presented at ACG 2024, in which Nihal Ijaz I. Khan, MD, and colleagues compared the efficacy of endoscopic bariatric treatment alone vs its combined use with GLP-1 RAs.

The researchers identified three retrospective studies with 266 patients, of whom 143 underwent endoscopic bariatric treatment alone (either endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty or intragastric balloon) and 123 had it combined with GLP-1 RAs, specifically liraglutide. 

They reported that superior absolute weight loss was achieved in the group of patients receiving GLP-1 RAs in combination with endoscopic bariatric treatment. The standardized mean difference in body weight loss at treatment follow-up was 0.61 (P <.01). 

“Further studies are required to evaluate the safety and adverse events comparing these two treatment modalities and to discover differences between comparing the two endoscopic options to various GLP-1 receptor agonists,” Khan noted. 

Neither study had specific funding. Velji-Ibrahim and Khan reported no relevant financial relationships. Kothari reported serving as a consultant for Boston Scientific and Olympus, as well as serving as an advisory committee/board member for Castle Biosciences.

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

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Cannabis Often Used as a Substitute for Traditional Medications

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Nearly two thirds of patients with rheumatic conditions switched to medical cannabis from medications such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and opioids, with the substitution being associated with greater self-reported improvement in symptoms than nonsubstitution.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a secondary analysis of a cross-sectional survey to investigate the prevalence of switching to medical cannabis from traditional medications in patients with rheumatic conditions from the United States and Canada.
  • The survey included questions on current and past medical cannabis use, sociodemographic characteristics, medication taken and substituted, substance use, and patient-reported outcomes.
  • Of the 1727 patients who completed the survey, 763 patients (mean age, 59 years; 84.1% women) reported current use of cannabis and were included in this analysis.
  • Participants were asked if they had substituted any medications with medical cannabis and were sub-grouped accordingly.
  • They also reported any changes in symptoms after initiating cannabis, the current and anticipated duration of medical cannabis use, methods of ingestion, cannabinoid content, and frequency of use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall, 62.5% reported substituting medical cannabis for certain medications, including NSAIDs (54.7%), opioids (48.6%), sleep aids (29.6%), muscle relaxants (25.2%), benzodiazepines (15.5%), and gabapentinoids (10.5%).
  • The most common reasons given for substituting medical cannabis were fewer side effects (39%), better symptom control (27%), and fewer adverse effects (12%).
  • Participants who substituted medical cannabis reported significant improvements in symptoms such as pain, sleep, joint stiffness, muscle spasms, and inflammation, and in overall health, compared with those who did not substitute it for medications.
  • The substitution group was more likely to use inhalation methods (smoking and vaporizing) than the nonsubstitution group; they also used medical cannabis more frequently and preferred products containing delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol.

IN PRACTICE:

“The changing legal status of cannabis has allowed a greater openness with more people willing to try cannabis for symptom relief. These encouraging results of medication reduction and favorable effect of [medical cannabis] require confirmation with more rigorous methods. At this time, survey information may be seen as a signal for effect, rather than sound evidence that could be applicable to those with musculoskeletal complaints in general,” the authors wrote. 

SOURCE:

The study was led by Kevin F. Boehnke, PhD, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, and was published online in ACR Open Rheumatology.

LIMITATIONS: 

The cross-sectional nature of the study limited the determination of causality between medical cannabis use and symptom improvement. Moreover, the anonymous and self-reported nature of the survey at a single timepoint may have introduced recall bias. The sample predominantly consisted of older, White females, which may have limited the generalizability of the findings to other demographic groups.

DISCLOSURES:

Some authors received grant support from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Some others received payments, honoraria, grant funding, consulting fees, and travel support, and reported other ties with pharmaceutical companies and other institutions.

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 first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Nearly two thirds of patients with rheumatic conditions switched to medical cannabis from medications such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and opioids, with the substitution being associated with greater self-reported improvement in symptoms than nonsubstitution.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a secondary analysis of a cross-sectional survey to investigate the prevalence of switching to medical cannabis from traditional medications in patients with rheumatic conditions from the United States and Canada.
  • The survey included questions on current and past medical cannabis use, sociodemographic characteristics, medication taken and substituted, substance use, and patient-reported outcomes.
  • Of the 1727 patients who completed the survey, 763 patients (mean age, 59 years; 84.1% women) reported current use of cannabis and were included in this analysis.
  • Participants were asked if they had substituted any medications with medical cannabis and were sub-grouped accordingly.
  • They also reported any changes in symptoms after initiating cannabis, the current and anticipated duration of medical cannabis use, methods of ingestion, cannabinoid content, and frequency of use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall, 62.5% reported substituting medical cannabis for certain medications, including NSAIDs (54.7%), opioids (48.6%), sleep aids (29.6%), muscle relaxants (25.2%), benzodiazepines (15.5%), and gabapentinoids (10.5%).
  • The most common reasons given for substituting medical cannabis were fewer side effects (39%), better symptom control (27%), and fewer adverse effects (12%).
  • Participants who substituted medical cannabis reported significant improvements in symptoms such as pain, sleep, joint stiffness, muscle spasms, and inflammation, and in overall health, compared with those who did not substitute it for medications.
  • The substitution group was more likely to use inhalation methods (smoking and vaporizing) than the nonsubstitution group; they also used medical cannabis more frequently and preferred products containing delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol.

IN PRACTICE:

“The changing legal status of cannabis has allowed a greater openness with more people willing to try cannabis for symptom relief. These encouraging results of medication reduction and favorable effect of [medical cannabis] require confirmation with more rigorous methods. At this time, survey information may be seen as a signal for effect, rather than sound evidence that could be applicable to those with musculoskeletal complaints in general,” the authors wrote. 

SOURCE:

The study was led by Kevin F. Boehnke, PhD, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, and was published online in ACR Open Rheumatology.

LIMITATIONS: 

The cross-sectional nature of the study limited the determination of causality between medical cannabis use and symptom improvement. Moreover, the anonymous and self-reported nature of the survey at a single timepoint may have introduced recall bias. The sample predominantly consisted of older, White females, which may have limited the generalizability of the findings to other demographic groups.

DISCLOSURES:

Some authors received grant support from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Some others received payments, honoraria, grant funding, consulting fees, and travel support, and reported other ties with pharmaceutical companies and other institutions.

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 first appeared on Medscape.com.

Nearly two thirds of patients with rheumatic conditions switched to medical cannabis from medications such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and opioids, with the substitution being associated with greater self-reported improvement in symptoms than nonsubstitution.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers conducted a secondary analysis of a cross-sectional survey to investigate the prevalence of switching to medical cannabis from traditional medications in patients with rheumatic conditions from the United States and Canada.
  • The survey included questions on current and past medical cannabis use, sociodemographic characteristics, medication taken and substituted, substance use, and patient-reported outcomes.
  • Of the 1727 patients who completed the survey, 763 patients (mean age, 59 years; 84.1% women) reported current use of cannabis and were included in this analysis.
  • Participants were asked if they had substituted any medications with medical cannabis and were sub-grouped accordingly.
  • They also reported any changes in symptoms after initiating cannabis, the current and anticipated duration of medical cannabis use, methods of ingestion, cannabinoid content, and frequency of use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall, 62.5% reported substituting medical cannabis for certain medications, including NSAIDs (54.7%), opioids (48.6%), sleep aids (29.6%), muscle relaxants (25.2%), benzodiazepines (15.5%), and gabapentinoids (10.5%).
  • The most common reasons given for substituting medical cannabis were fewer side effects (39%), better symptom control (27%), and fewer adverse effects (12%).
  • Participants who substituted medical cannabis reported significant improvements in symptoms such as pain, sleep, joint stiffness, muscle spasms, and inflammation, and in overall health, compared with those who did not substitute it for medications.
  • The substitution group was more likely to use inhalation methods (smoking and vaporizing) than the nonsubstitution group; they also used medical cannabis more frequently and preferred products containing delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol.

IN PRACTICE:

“The changing legal status of cannabis has allowed a greater openness with more people willing to try cannabis for symptom relief. These encouraging results of medication reduction and favorable effect of [medical cannabis] require confirmation with more rigorous methods. At this time, survey information may be seen as a signal for effect, rather than sound evidence that could be applicable to those with musculoskeletal complaints in general,” the authors wrote. 

SOURCE:

The study was led by Kevin F. Boehnke, PhD, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, and was published online in ACR Open Rheumatology.

LIMITATIONS: 

The cross-sectional nature of the study limited the determination of causality between medical cannabis use and symptom improvement. Moreover, the anonymous and self-reported nature of the survey at a single timepoint may have introduced recall bias. The sample predominantly consisted of older, White females, which may have limited the generalizability of the findings to other demographic groups.

DISCLOSURES:

Some authors received grant support from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Some others received payments, honoraria, grant funding, consulting fees, and travel support, and reported other ties with pharmaceutical companies and other institutions.

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 first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Weight Loss Drugs Don’t Reduce Oocyte Retrieval

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The use of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists within a year had no apparent effect on the number of oocytes retrieved in controlled ovarian hyperstimulation (COH), based on data from 73 patients in a multicenter study.

Obesity rates continue to rise in women of reproductive age and many women are using GLP-1 agonists for weight loss, but data on the effect of these drugs on fertility treatments are lacking, said Victoria K. Lazarov, MD, of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, in an abstract presented at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) 2024 scientific congress.

Clinical opinions regarding the use, duration, and discontinuation of GLP-1 agonists during fertility treatments are variable given the limited research, Lazarov noted in her abstract. More data are needed to standardize patient counseling.

Lazarov and colleagues reviewed data from patients who sought treatment at clinics affiliated with a national fertility network from 2005 to 2023 who also utilized a GLP-1 agonist within 1 year of COH.

The study population included 73 adult women; participants were divided into six groups based on the number of days without GLP-1 agonist use prior to retrieval (0-14, 15-30, 31-60, 61-90, 91-180, and 181-365 days). The primary outcome was oocyte yield following COH.

Overall, the mean oocyte yields were not significantly different across the six timing groups (14.4, 16.2, 16.8, 7.7, 13.8, and 15, respectively; = .40).

In a secondary subgroup analysis, the researchers found an inverse relationship between oocyte yield and timing of GLP-1 agonist discontinuation in patients with body mass index (BMI) > 35. However, no changes in oocyte yield were observed in patients with BMIs in the normal or overweight range. Neither duration of GLP-1 agonist use or indication for use had a significant effect on oocyte yield across exposure group.

The findings were limited by several factors, including the relatively small study population, especially the small number of patients with obesity. “Additional investigation is needed to clarify potential effects of GLP-1 agonist use on aspiration risk during oocyte retrieval and embryo creation outcomes,” the researchers wrote in their abstract.

However, the results suggest that most women who use GLP-1 agonists experience no significant effects on oocyte retrieval and embryo creation, and that GLP-1 agonists may have a role in improving oocyte yield for obese patients, the researchers concluded.
 

Larger Studies Needed for Real Reassurance

“Infertility patients who are overweight have lower chances for conception and higher risks of pregnancy complications,” Mark Trolice, MD, professor at the University of Central Florida College of Medicine, Orlando, and founder/director of The IVF Center, Winter Park, Florida, said in an interview.

The use of GLP-1 agonists has dramatically increased given the medication’s effectiveness for weight loss, as well as its use to manage diabetes, but the use of GLP-1 agonists in pregnancy is not well known and current recommendations advise discontinuation of the medication for 6-8 weeks prior to conception, said Trolice, who was not involved in the study.

GLP-1 agonist use is associated with lowered blood glucose levels, Trolice said. “Additionally, the medication can delay gastric emptying and suppress appetite, both of which assist in weight management.”

The current study examined whether there was a difference in oocyte retrieval number in women based on days of discontinuation of GLP-1 agonists prior to the procedure, Trolice told this news organization. “Given the drug’s mechanism of action, there is no apparent biological influence that would impact oocyte yield. Consequently, the study outcome is not unexpected.”

The study purports potential reassurance that GLP-1 exposure, regardless of the duration of discontinuation, has no impact on egg retrieval number, said Trolice. However, “Based on the size of the study, to accept the findings as definitive would risk a type II statistical error.”

Two key areas for additional research are urgently needed, Trolice said, namely, the duration of time to discontinue GLP-1 agonists, if at all, prior to conception, and the discontinuation interval, if at all, prior to anesthesia to avoid airway complications.

The American Society of Anesthesiologists advises patients on daily dosing to consider holding GLP-1 agonists on the day of a procedure or surgery, and those on weekly dosing should consider discontinuing the medication 1 week before the procedure or surgery, Trolice noted.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Trolice had no financial conflicts to disclose and serves on the editorial advisory board of OB/GYN News.

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

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The use of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists within a year had no apparent effect on the number of oocytes retrieved in controlled ovarian hyperstimulation (COH), based on data from 73 patients in a multicenter study.

Obesity rates continue to rise in women of reproductive age and many women are using GLP-1 agonists for weight loss, but data on the effect of these drugs on fertility treatments are lacking, said Victoria K. Lazarov, MD, of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, in an abstract presented at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) 2024 scientific congress.

Clinical opinions regarding the use, duration, and discontinuation of GLP-1 agonists during fertility treatments are variable given the limited research, Lazarov noted in her abstract. More data are needed to standardize patient counseling.

Lazarov and colleagues reviewed data from patients who sought treatment at clinics affiliated with a national fertility network from 2005 to 2023 who also utilized a GLP-1 agonist within 1 year of COH.

The study population included 73 adult women; participants were divided into six groups based on the number of days without GLP-1 agonist use prior to retrieval (0-14, 15-30, 31-60, 61-90, 91-180, and 181-365 days). The primary outcome was oocyte yield following COH.

Overall, the mean oocyte yields were not significantly different across the six timing groups (14.4, 16.2, 16.8, 7.7, 13.8, and 15, respectively; = .40).

In a secondary subgroup analysis, the researchers found an inverse relationship between oocyte yield and timing of GLP-1 agonist discontinuation in patients with body mass index (BMI) > 35. However, no changes in oocyte yield were observed in patients with BMIs in the normal or overweight range. Neither duration of GLP-1 agonist use or indication for use had a significant effect on oocyte yield across exposure group.

The findings were limited by several factors, including the relatively small study population, especially the small number of patients with obesity. “Additional investigation is needed to clarify potential effects of GLP-1 agonist use on aspiration risk during oocyte retrieval and embryo creation outcomes,” the researchers wrote in their abstract.

However, the results suggest that most women who use GLP-1 agonists experience no significant effects on oocyte retrieval and embryo creation, and that GLP-1 agonists may have a role in improving oocyte yield for obese patients, the researchers concluded.
 

Larger Studies Needed for Real Reassurance

“Infertility patients who are overweight have lower chances for conception and higher risks of pregnancy complications,” Mark Trolice, MD, professor at the University of Central Florida College of Medicine, Orlando, and founder/director of The IVF Center, Winter Park, Florida, said in an interview.

The use of GLP-1 agonists has dramatically increased given the medication’s effectiveness for weight loss, as well as its use to manage diabetes, but the use of GLP-1 agonists in pregnancy is not well known and current recommendations advise discontinuation of the medication for 6-8 weeks prior to conception, said Trolice, who was not involved in the study.

GLP-1 agonist use is associated with lowered blood glucose levels, Trolice said. “Additionally, the medication can delay gastric emptying and suppress appetite, both of which assist in weight management.”

The current study examined whether there was a difference in oocyte retrieval number in women based on days of discontinuation of GLP-1 agonists prior to the procedure, Trolice told this news organization. “Given the drug’s mechanism of action, there is no apparent biological influence that would impact oocyte yield. Consequently, the study outcome is not unexpected.”

The study purports potential reassurance that GLP-1 exposure, regardless of the duration of discontinuation, has no impact on egg retrieval number, said Trolice. However, “Based on the size of the study, to accept the findings as definitive would risk a type II statistical error.”

Two key areas for additional research are urgently needed, Trolice said, namely, the duration of time to discontinue GLP-1 agonists, if at all, prior to conception, and the discontinuation interval, if at all, prior to anesthesia to avoid airway complications.

The American Society of Anesthesiologists advises patients on daily dosing to consider holding GLP-1 agonists on the day of a procedure or surgery, and those on weekly dosing should consider discontinuing the medication 1 week before the procedure or surgery, Trolice noted.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Trolice had no financial conflicts to disclose and serves on the editorial advisory board of OB/GYN News.

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

The use of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists within a year had no apparent effect on the number of oocytes retrieved in controlled ovarian hyperstimulation (COH), based on data from 73 patients in a multicenter study.

Obesity rates continue to rise in women of reproductive age and many women are using GLP-1 agonists for weight loss, but data on the effect of these drugs on fertility treatments are lacking, said Victoria K. Lazarov, MD, of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, in an abstract presented at the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) 2024 scientific congress.

Clinical opinions regarding the use, duration, and discontinuation of GLP-1 agonists during fertility treatments are variable given the limited research, Lazarov noted in her abstract. More data are needed to standardize patient counseling.

Lazarov and colleagues reviewed data from patients who sought treatment at clinics affiliated with a national fertility network from 2005 to 2023 who also utilized a GLP-1 agonist within 1 year of COH.

The study population included 73 adult women; participants were divided into six groups based on the number of days without GLP-1 agonist use prior to retrieval (0-14, 15-30, 31-60, 61-90, 91-180, and 181-365 days). The primary outcome was oocyte yield following COH.

Overall, the mean oocyte yields were not significantly different across the six timing groups (14.4, 16.2, 16.8, 7.7, 13.8, and 15, respectively; = .40).

In a secondary subgroup analysis, the researchers found an inverse relationship between oocyte yield and timing of GLP-1 agonist discontinuation in patients with body mass index (BMI) > 35. However, no changes in oocyte yield were observed in patients with BMIs in the normal or overweight range. Neither duration of GLP-1 agonist use or indication for use had a significant effect on oocyte yield across exposure group.

The findings were limited by several factors, including the relatively small study population, especially the small number of patients with obesity. “Additional investigation is needed to clarify potential effects of GLP-1 agonist use on aspiration risk during oocyte retrieval and embryo creation outcomes,” the researchers wrote in their abstract.

However, the results suggest that most women who use GLP-1 agonists experience no significant effects on oocyte retrieval and embryo creation, and that GLP-1 agonists may have a role in improving oocyte yield for obese patients, the researchers concluded.
 

Larger Studies Needed for Real Reassurance

“Infertility patients who are overweight have lower chances for conception and higher risks of pregnancy complications,” Mark Trolice, MD, professor at the University of Central Florida College of Medicine, Orlando, and founder/director of The IVF Center, Winter Park, Florida, said in an interview.

The use of GLP-1 agonists has dramatically increased given the medication’s effectiveness for weight loss, as well as its use to manage diabetes, but the use of GLP-1 agonists in pregnancy is not well known and current recommendations advise discontinuation of the medication for 6-8 weeks prior to conception, said Trolice, who was not involved in the study.

GLP-1 agonist use is associated with lowered blood glucose levels, Trolice said. “Additionally, the medication can delay gastric emptying and suppress appetite, both of which assist in weight management.”

The current study examined whether there was a difference in oocyte retrieval number in women based on days of discontinuation of GLP-1 agonists prior to the procedure, Trolice told this news organization. “Given the drug’s mechanism of action, there is no apparent biological influence that would impact oocyte yield. Consequently, the study outcome is not unexpected.”

The study purports potential reassurance that GLP-1 exposure, regardless of the duration of discontinuation, has no impact on egg retrieval number, said Trolice. However, “Based on the size of the study, to accept the findings as definitive would risk a type II statistical error.”

Two key areas for additional research are urgently needed, Trolice said, namely, the duration of time to discontinue GLP-1 agonists, if at all, prior to conception, and the discontinuation interval, if at all, prior to anesthesia to avoid airway complications.

The American Society of Anesthesiologists advises patients on daily dosing to consider holding GLP-1 agonists on the day of a procedure or surgery, and those on weekly dosing should consider discontinuing the medication 1 week before the procedure or surgery, Trolice noted.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Trolice had no financial conflicts to disclose and serves on the editorial advisory board of OB/GYN News.

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

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