Adolescents who exercised after a concussion recovered faster in RCT

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After a concussion, resuming aerobic exercise relatively early on – at an intensity that does not worsen symptoms – may help young athletes recover sooner, compared with stretching, a randomized controlled trial (RCT) shows.

Douglas Levere/University at Buffalo
Dr. John J. Leddy

The study adds to emerging evidence that clinicians should prescribe exercise, rather than strict rest, to facilitate concussion recovery, researchers said.

Tamara McLeod, PhD, ATC, professor and director of athletic training programs at A.T. Still University in Mesa, Ariz., hopes the findings help clinicians see that “this is an approach that should be taken.”

“Too often with concussion, patients are given a laundry list of things they are NOT allowed to do,” including sports, school, and social activities, said Dr. McLeod, who was not involved in the study.

The research, published in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, largely replicates the findings of a prior trial while addressing limitations of the previous study’s design, researchers said.

For the trial, John J. Leddy, MD, with the State University of New York at Buffalo and colleagues recruited 118 male and female adolescent athletes aged 13-18 years who had had a sport-related concussion in the past 10 days. Investigators at three community and hospital-affiliated sports medicine concussion centers in the United States randomly assigned the athletes to individualized subsymptom-threshold aerobic exercise (61 participants) or stretching exercise (57 participants) at least 20 minutes per day for up to 4 weeks. Aerobic exercise included walking, jogging, or stationary cycling at home.

“It is important that the general clinician community appreciates that prolonged rest and avoidance of physical activity until spontaneous symptom resolution is no longer an acceptable approach to caring for adolescents with concussion,” Dr. Leddy and coauthors said.

The investigators improved on the “the scientific rigor of their previous RCT by including intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses, daily symptom reporting, objective exercise adherence measurements, and greater heterogeneity of concussion severity,” said Carolyn A. Emery, PhD, and Jonathan Smirl, PhD, both with the University of Calgary (Alta.), in a related commentary. The new study is the first to show that early targeted heart rate subsymptom-threshold aerobic exercise, relative to stretching, shortened recovery time within 4 weeks after sport-related concussion (hazard ratio, 0.52) when controlling for sex, study site, and average daily exercise time, Dr. Emery and Dr. Smirl said.

A larger proportion of athletes assigned to stretching did not recover by 4 weeks, compared with those assigned to aerobic exercise (32% vs. 21%). The median time to full recovery was longer for the stretching group than for the aerobic exercise group (19 days vs. 14 days).

Among athletes who adhered to their assigned regimens, the differences were more pronounced: The median recovery time was 21 days for the stretching group, compared with 12 days for the aerobic exercise group. The rate of postconcussion symptoms beyond 28 days was 9% in the aerobic exercise group versus 31% in the stretching group, among adherent participants.

More research is needed to establish the efficacy of postconcussion aerobic exercise in adults and for nonsport injury, the researchers noted. Possible mechanisms underlying aerobic exercise’s benefits could include increased parasympathetic autonomic tone, improved cerebral blood flow regulation, or enhanced neuron repair, they suggested.

The right amount and timing of exercise, and doing so at an intensity that does not exacerbate symptoms, may be key. Other research has suggested that too much exercise, too soon may delay recovery, Dr. Emery said in an interview. “But there is now a lot of evidence to support low and moderate levels of physical activity to expedite recovery,” she said.

The study was funded by the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine. The study and commentary authors and Dr. McLeod had no disclosures.

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After a concussion, resuming aerobic exercise relatively early on – at an intensity that does not worsen symptoms – may help young athletes recover sooner, compared with stretching, a randomized controlled trial (RCT) shows.

Douglas Levere/University at Buffalo
Dr. John J. Leddy

The study adds to emerging evidence that clinicians should prescribe exercise, rather than strict rest, to facilitate concussion recovery, researchers said.

Tamara McLeod, PhD, ATC, professor and director of athletic training programs at A.T. Still University in Mesa, Ariz., hopes the findings help clinicians see that “this is an approach that should be taken.”

“Too often with concussion, patients are given a laundry list of things they are NOT allowed to do,” including sports, school, and social activities, said Dr. McLeod, who was not involved in the study.

The research, published in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, largely replicates the findings of a prior trial while addressing limitations of the previous study’s design, researchers said.

For the trial, John J. Leddy, MD, with the State University of New York at Buffalo and colleagues recruited 118 male and female adolescent athletes aged 13-18 years who had had a sport-related concussion in the past 10 days. Investigators at three community and hospital-affiliated sports medicine concussion centers in the United States randomly assigned the athletes to individualized subsymptom-threshold aerobic exercise (61 participants) or stretching exercise (57 participants) at least 20 minutes per day for up to 4 weeks. Aerobic exercise included walking, jogging, or stationary cycling at home.

“It is important that the general clinician community appreciates that prolonged rest and avoidance of physical activity until spontaneous symptom resolution is no longer an acceptable approach to caring for adolescents with concussion,” Dr. Leddy and coauthors said.

The investigators improved on the “the scientific rigor of their previous RCT by including intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses, daily symptom reporting, objective exercise adherence measurements, and greater heterogeneity of concussion severity,” said Carolyn A. Emery, PhD, and Jonathan Smirl, PhD, both with the University of Calgary (Alta.), in a related commentary. The new study is the first to show that early targeted heart rate subsymptom-threshold aerobic exercise, relative to stretching, shortened recovery time within 4 weeks after sport-related concussion (hazard ratio, 0.52) when controlling for sex, study site, and average daily exercise time, Dr. Emery and Dr. Smirl said.

A larger proportion of athletes assigned to stretching did not recover by 4 weeks, compared with those assigned to aerobic exercise (32% vs. 21%). The median time to full recovery was longer for the stretching group than for the aerobic exercise group (19 days vs. 14 days).

Among athletes who adhered to their assigned regimens, the differences were more pronounced: The median recovery time was 21 days for the stretching group, compared with 12 days for the aerobic exercise group. The rate of postconcussion symptoms beyond 28 days was 9% in the aerobic exercise group versus 31% in the stretching group, among adherent participants.

More research is needed to establish the efficacy of postconcussion aerobic exercise in adults and for nonsport injury, the researchers noted. Possible mechanisms underlying aerobic exercise’s benefits could include increased parasympathetic autonomic tone, improved cerebral blood flow regulation, or enhanced neuron repair, they suggested.

The right amount and timing of exercise, and doing so at an intensity that does not exacerbate symptoms, may be key. Other research has suggested that too much exercise, too soon may delay recovery, Dr. Emery said in an interview. “But there is now a lot of evidence to support low and moderate levels of physical activity to expedite recovery,” she said.

The study was funded by the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine. The study and commentary authors and Dr. McLeod had no disclosures.

After a concussion, resuming aerobic exercise relatively early on – at an intensity that does not worsen symptoms – may help young athletes recover sooner, compared with stretching, a randomized controlled trial (RCT) shows.

Douglas Levere/University at Buffalo
Dr. John J. Leddy

The study adds to emerging evidence that clinicians should prescribe exercise, rather than strict rest, to facilitate concussion recovery, researchers said.

Tamara McLeod, PhD, ATC, professor and director of athletic training programs at A.T. Still University in Mesa, Ariz., hopes the findings help clinicians see that “this is an approach that should be taken.”

“Too often with concussion, patients are given a laundry list of things they are NOT allowed to do,” including sports, school, and social activities, said Dr. McLeod, who was not involved in the study.

The research, published in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, largely replicates the findings of a prior trial while addressing limitations of the previous study’s design, researchers said.

For the trial, John J. Leddy, MD, with the State University of New York at Buffalo and colleagues recruited 118 male and female adolescent athletes aged 13-18 years who had had a sport-related concussion in the past 10 days. Investigators at three community and hospital-affiliated sports medicine concussion centers in the United States randomly assigned the athletes to individualized subsymptom-threshold aerobic exercise (61 participants) or stretching exercise (57 participants) at least 20 minutes per day for up to 4 weeks. Aerobic exercise included walking, jogging, or stationary cycling at home.

“It is important that the general clinician community appreciates that prolonged rest and avoidance of physical activity until spontaneous symptom resolution is no longer an acceptable approach to caring for adolescents with concussion,” Dr. Leddy and coauthors said.

The investigators improved on the “the scientific rigor of their previous RCT by including intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses, daily symptom reporting, objective exercise adherence measurements, and greater heterogeneity of concussion severity,” said Carolyn A. Emery, PhD, and Jonathan Smirl, PhD, both with the University of Calgary (Alta.), in a related commentary. The new study is the first to show that early targeted heart rate subsymptom-threshold aerobic exercise, relative to stretching, shortened recovery time within 4 weeks after sport-related concussion (hazard ratio, 0.52) when controlling for sex, study site, and average daily exercise time, Dr. Emery and Dr. Smirl said.

A larger proportion of athletes assigned to stretching did not recover by 4 weeks, compared with those assigned to aerobic exercise (32% vs. 21%). The median time to full recovery was longer for the stretching group than for the aerobic exercise group (19 days vs. 14 days).

Among athletes who adhered to their assigned regimens, the differences were more pronounced: The median recovery time was 21 days for the stretching group, compared with 12 days for the aerobic exercise group. The rate of postconcussion symptoms beyond 28 days was 9% in the aerobic exercise group versus 31% in the stretching group, among adherent participants.

More research is needed to establish the efficacy of postconcussion aerobic exercise in adults and for nonsport injury, the researchers noted. Possible mechanisms underlying aerobic exercise’s benefits could include increased parasympathetic autonomic tone, improved cerebral blood flow regulation, or enhanced neuron repair, they suggested.

The right amount and timing of exercise, and doing so at an intensity that does not exacerbate symptoms, may be key. Other research has suggested that too much exercise, too soon may delay recovery, Dr. Emery said in an interview. “But there is now a lot of evidence to support low and moderate levels of physical activity to expedite recovery,” she said.

The study was funded by the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine. The study and commentary authors and Dr. McLeod had no disclosures.

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FROM THE LANCET CHILD & ADOLESCENT HEALTH

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Cement found in man’s heart after spinal surgery

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Doctors removed a 4-inch piece of cement from a man’s heart, which had leaked into his body from a spinal surgery, according to a new report published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The 56-year-old man, who was not identified in the report, went to the emergency room after experiencing 2 days of chest pain and shortness of breath. Imaging scans showed that the chest pain was caused by a foreign object, and he was rushed to surgery.

Surgeons then located and removed a thin, sharp, cylindrical piece of cement and repaired the damage to the patient’s heart. The cement had pierced the upper right chamber of his heart and his right lung, according to the report authors from the Yale University School of Medicine.

A week before, the man had undergone a spinal surgery known as kyphoplasty. The procedure treats spine injuries by injecting a special type of medical cement into damaged vertebrae, according to USA Today. The cement had leaked into the patient’s body, hardened, and traveled to his heart.

The man has now “nearly recovered” since the heart surgery and cement removal, which occurred about a month ago, the journal report stated. He experienced no additional complications.

Cement leakage after kyphoplasty can happen but is an extremely rare complication. Less than 2% of patients who undergo the procedure for osteoporosis or brittle bones have complications, according to patient information from the American Association of Neurological Surgeons.

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

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Doctors removed a 4-inch piece of cement from a man’s heart, which had leaked into his body from a spinal surgery, according to a new report published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The 56-year-old man, who was not identified in the report, went to the emergency room after experiencing 2 days of chest pain and shortness of breath. Imaging scans showed that the chest pain was caused by a foreign object, and he was rushed to surgery.

Surgeons then located and removed a thin, sharp, cylindrical piece of cement and repaired the damage to the patient’s heart. The cement had pierced the upper right chamber of his heart and his right lung, according to the report authors from the Yale University School of Medicine.

A week before, the man had undergone a spinal surgery known as kyphoplasty. The procedure treats spine injuries by injecting a special type of medical cement into damaged vertebrae, according to USA Today. The cement had leaked into the patient’s body, hardened, and traveled to his heart.

The man has now “nearly recovered” since the heart surgery and cement removal, which occurred about a month ago, the journal report stated. He experienced no additional complications.

Cement leakage after kyphoplasty can happen but is an extremely rare complication. Less than 2% of patients who undergo the procedure for osteoporosis or brittle bones have complications, according to patient information from the American Association of Neurological Surgeons.

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

Doctors removed a 4-inch piece of cement from a man’s heart, which had leaked into his body from a spinal surgery, according to a new report published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The 56-year-old man, who was not identified in the report, went to the emergency room after experiencing 2 days of chest pain and shortness of breath. Imaging scans showed that the chest pain was caused by a foreign object, and he was rushed to surgery.

Surgeons then located and removed a thin, sharp, cylindrical piece of cement and repaired the damage to the patient’s heart. The cement had pierced the upper right chamber of his heart and his right lung, according to the report authors from the Yale University School of Medicine.

A week before, the man had undergone a spinal surgery known as kyphoplasty. The procedure treats spine injuries by injecting a special type of medical cement into damaged vertebrae, according to USA Today. The cement had leaked into the patient’s body, hardened, and traveled to his heart.

The man has now “nearly recovered” since the heart surgery and cement removal, which occurred about a month ago, the journal report stated. He experienced no additional complications.

Cement leakage after kyphoplasty can happen but is an extremely rare complication. Less than 2% of patients who undergo the procedure for osteoporosis or brittle bones have complications, according to patient information from the American Association of Neurological Surgeons.

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

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Constipation med boosts cognitive performance in mental illness

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A drug approved to treat constipation appears to improve cognitive impairment and boost brain activity for patients with mental illness, new research suggests.

In a randomized controlled trial, 44 healthy individuals were assigned to receive the selective serotonin-4 (5-HT4) receptor agonist prucalopride (Motegrity) or placebo for 1 week.

After 6 days, the active-treatment group performed significantly better on memory tests than the participants who received placebo. In addition, the drug increased activity in brain areas related to cognition.

“What we’re hoping is...these agents may be able to help those with cognitive impairment as part of their mental illness,” lead author Angharad N. de Cates, a clinical DPhil student in the department of psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, told meeting attendees.

“Currently, we’re looking to see if we can translate our finding a step further and do a similar study in those with depression,” Ms. de Cates added.

The findings were presented at the 34th European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) Congress and were simultaneously published in Translational Psychiatry.
 

“Exciting early evidence”

“Even when the low mood associated with depression is well-treated with conventional antidepressants, many patients continue to experience problems with their memory,” co-investigator Susannah Murphy, PhD, a senior research fellow at the University of Oxford, said in a release.

“Our study provides exciting early evidence in humans of a new approach that might be a helpful way to treat these residual cognitive symptoms,” Dr. Murphy added.

Preclinical and animal studies suggest that the 5-HT4 receptor is a promising treatment target for cognitive impairment in individuals with psychiatric disorders, although studies in humans have been limited by the adverse effects of early agents.

“We’ve had our eye on this receptor for a while,” explained de Cates, inasmuch as the animal data “have been so good.”

However, she said in an interview that “a lack of safe human agents made translation tricky.”

As previously reported, prucalopride, a selective high-affinity 5-HT4 partial agonist, was approved in 2018 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of chronic idiopathic constipation.

The current researchers note that the drug has “good brain penetration,” which “allowed us to investigate 5-HT4-receptor agonism in humans.”

Having previously shown that a single dose of the drug has “pro-cognitive effects,” the investigators conducted the new trial in 44 healthy participants. All were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive either prucalopride 1 mg for 7 days or placebo.

In accordance with enrollment criteria, patients were 18 to 36 years of age, right-handed, and were not pregnant or breastfeeding. Participants’ body mass index was 18 to 30 kg/m2, and they had no contraindications to the study drug. The two treatment groups were well balanced; the participants who received placebo were significantly more likely to be nonnative English speakers (P = .02).

On day 6 of treatment administration, all participants underwent 3T MRI.

Before undergoing imaging, the participants were presented with eight emotionally neutral images of animals or landscapes and were asked to indicate whether or not the images were of animals. The task was then repeated with the eight familiar images and eight novel ones.

During the scan, participants were shown the same images or eight novel images and were again asked whether or not the images contained an animal. They were also instructed to try to remember the images for a subsequent memory task. In that task, the eight original images, 48 novel images, and 27 “distractor” images were presented.
 

 

 

Better memory

In the pre-scan assessment, results showed no significant differences in the ability of members of the prucalopride and placebo groups to identify images as being familiar or different.

However, taking prucalopride was associated with significantly improved memory performance in the post-scan recall task.

Compared to the placebo group, participants in the prucalopride group were more accurate in selecting images as familiar vs distractors (P = .029) and in distinguishing images as familiar, novel, or distractors (P = .035).

Functional MRI revealed increased activity in the left and right hippocampus in response to both novel and familiar images among the participants in the prucalopride group in comparison with those in the placebo group.

There was also increased activity in the right angular gyrus in the prucalopride group in comparison with the placebo group in response to familiar images (P < .005).

“Clinically, angular gyri lesions cause language dysfunction, low mood, and poor memory and can mimic dementia or pseudodementia,” the investigators write. They note that the right angular gyrus “shows significantly decreased activity” in mild cognitive impairment.

“Therefore, the increased activity seen in the right angular gyrus following prucalopride administration in our study is consistent with the pro-cognitive behavioural effects we observed,” they add.

Ms. De Cates noted that the dose used in their study was lower than the 2 mg given for constipation.

“At the low dose, there were no differences in side effects between groups and no withdrawals from the prucalopride group for side effects. We are going to try increasing the dose in our next study actually, as we don’t have PET data to tell us what the optimal dose for binding at the receptor should be,” said Ms. de Cates.

“In safety studies, the dose was trialled in healthy volunteers at 4 mg, which was found to be safe, although perhaps less well tolerated than 2 mg,” she said.
 

Generalizable findings?

Commenting on the research, Vibe G. Frøkjær, MD, adjunct professor, department of psychology, Copenhagen University, Denmark, said the study “highlights a very interesting and much needed potential for repurposing drugs to help cognitive dysfunction.”

He noted that cognitive dysfunction is often associated with psychiatric disorders -- even in states of remission.

“Importantly, as the authors also state, it will be vital to translate these findings from healthy populations into clinical populations,” said Dr. Frøkjær, who was not involved in the research.

“It will also be important to understand if prucalopride adds to the effects of existing antidepressant treatments or can be used as a stand-alone therapy,” he added.

The study was funded by the NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Center and by the Wellcome Center for Integrative Neuroscience. Ms. De Cates has received a travel grant from the Royal College of Psychiatrists/Gatsby Foundation and support from Wellcome. The other authors have relationships with P1vital Ltd, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Sage Therapeutics, Pfizer, Zogenix, Compass Pathways, and Lundbeck.

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

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A drug approved to treat constipation appears to improve cognitive impairment and boost brain activity for patients with mental illness, new research suggests.

In a randomized controlled trial, 44 healthy individuals were assigned to receive the selective serotonin-4 (5-HT4) receptor agonist prucalopride (Motegrity) or placebo for 1 week.

After 6 days, the active-treatment group performed significantly better on memory tests than the participants who received placebo. In addition, the drug increased activity in brain areas related to cognition.

“What we’re hoping is...these agents may be able to help those with cognitive impairment as part of their mental illness,” lead author Angharad N. de Cates, a clinical DPhil student in the department of psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, told meeting attendees.

“Currently, we’re looking to see if we can translate our finding a step further and do a similar study in those with depression,” Ms. de Cates added.

The findings were presented at the 34th European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) Congress and were simultaneously published in Translational Psychiatry.
 

“Exciting early evidence”

“Even when the low mood associated with depression is well-treated with conventional antidepressants, many patients continue to experience problems with their memory,” co-investigator Susannah Murphy, PhD, a senior research fellow at the University of Oxford, said in a release.

“Our study provides exciting early evidence in humans of a new approach that might be a helpful way to treat these residual cognitive symptoms,” Dr. Murphy added.

Preclinical and animal studies suggest that the 5-HT4 receptor is a promising treatment target for cognitive impairment in individuals with psychiatric disorders, although studies in humans have been limited by the adverse effects of early agents.

“We’ve had our eye on this receptor for a while,” explained de Cates, inasmuch as the animal data “have been so good.”

However, she said in an interview that “a lack of safe human agents made translation tricky.”

As previously reported, prucalopride, a selective high-affinity 5-HT4 partial agonist, was approved in 2018 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of chronic idiopathic constipation.

The current researchers note that the drug has “good brain penetration,” which “allowed us to investigate 5-HT4-receptor agonism in humans.”

Having previously shown that a single dose of the drug has “pro-cognitive effects,” the investigators conducted the new trial in 44 healthy participants. All were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive either prucalopride 1 mg for 7 days or placebo.

In accordance with enrollment criteria, patients were 18 to 36 years of age, right-handed, and were not pregnant or breastfeeding. Participants’ body mass index was 18 to 30 kg/m2, and they had no contraindications to the study drug. The two treatment groups were well balanced; the participants who received placebo were significantly more likely to be nonnative English speakers (P = .02).

On day 6 of treatment administration, all participants underwent 3T MRI.

Before undergoing imaging, the participants were presented with eight emotionally neutral images of animals or landscapes and were asked to indicate whether or not the images were of animals. The task was then repeated with the eight familiar images and eight novel ones.

During the scan, participants were shown the same images or eight novel images and were again asked whether or not the images contained an animal. They were also instructed to try to remember the images for a subsequent memory task. In that task, the eight original images, 48 novel images, and 27 “distractor” images were presented.
 

 

 

Better memory

In the pre-scan assessment, results showed no significant differences in the ability of members of the prucalopride and placebo groups to identify images as being familiar or different.

However, taking prucalopride was associated with significantly improved memory performance in the post-scan recall task.

Compared to the placebo group, participants in the prucalopride group were more accurate in selecting images as familiar vs distractors (P = .029) and in distinguishing images as familiar, novel, or distractors (P = .035).

Functional MRI revealed increased activity in the left and right hippocampus in response to both novel and familiar images among the participants in the prucalopride group in comparison with those in the placebo group.

There was also increased activity in the right angular gyrus in the prucalopride group in comparison with the placebo group in response to familiar images (P < .005).

“Clinically, angular gyri lesions cause language dysfunction, low mood, and poor memory and can mimic dementia or pseudodementia,” the investigators write. They note that the right angular gyrus “shows significantly decreased activity” in mild cognitive impairment.

“Therefore, the increased activity seen in the right angular gyrus following prucalopride administration in our study is consistent with the pro-cognitive behavioural effects we observed,” they add.

Ms. De Cates noted that the dose used in their study was lower than the 2 mg given for constipation.

“At the low dose, there were no differences in side effects between groups and no withdrawals from the prucalopride group for side effects. We are going to try increasing the dose in our next study actually, as we don’t have PET data to tell us what the optimal dose for binding at the receptor should be,” said Ms. de Cates.

“In safety studies, the dose was trialled in healthy volunteers at 4 mg, which was found to be safe, although perhaps less well tolerated than 2 mg,” she said.
 

Generalizable findings?

Commenting on the research, Vibe G. Frøkjær, MD, adjunct professor, department of psychology, Copenhagen University, Denmark, said the study “highlights a very interesting and much needed potential for repurposing drugs to help cognitive dysfunction.”

He noted that cognitive dysfunction is often associated with psychiatric disorders -- even in states of remission.

“Importantly, as the authors also state, it will be vital to translate these findings from healthy populations into clinical populations,” said Dr. Frøkjær, who was not involved in the research.

“It will also be important to understand if prucalopride adds to the effects of existing antidepressant treatments or can be used as a stand-alone therapy,” he added.

The study was funded by the NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Center and by the Wellcome Center for Integrative Neuroscience. Ms. De Cates has received a travel grant from the Royal College of Psychiatrists/Gatsby Foundation and support from Wellcome. The other authors have relationships with P1vital Ltd, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Sage Therapeutics, Pfizer, Zogenix, Compass Pathways, and Lundbeck.

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

A drug approved to treat constipation appears to improve cognitive impairment and boost brain activity for patients with mental illness, new research suggests.

In a randomized controlled trial, 44 healthy individuals were assigned to receive the selective serotonin-4 (5-HT4) receptor agonist prucalopride (Motegrity) or placebo for 1 week.

After 6 days, the active-treatment group performed significantly better on memory tests than the participants who received placebo. In addition, the drug increased activity in brain areas related to cognition.

“What we’re hoping is...these agents may be able to help those with cognitive impairment as part of their mental illness,” lead author Angharad N. de Cates, a clinical DPhil student in the department of psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, told meeting attendees.

“Currently, we’re looking to see if we can translate our finding a step further and do a similar study in those with depression,” Ms. de Cates added.

The findings were presented at the 34th European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP) Congress and were simultaneously published in Translational Psychiatry.
 

“Exciting early evidence”

“Even when the low mood associated with depression is well-treated with conventional antidepressants, many patients continue to experience problems with their memory,” co-investigator Susannah Murphy, PhD, a senior research fellow at the University of Oxford, said in a release.

“Our study provides exciting early evidence in humans of a new approach that might be a helpful way to treat these residual cognitive symptoms,” Dr. Murphy added.

Preclinical and animal studies suggest that the 5-HT4 receptor is a promising treatment target for cognitive impairment in individuals with psychiatric disorders, although studies in humans have been limited by the adverse effects of early agents.

“We’ve had our eye on this receptor for a while,” explained de Cates, inasmuch as the animal data “have been so good.”

However, she said in an interview that “a lack of safe human agents made translation tricky.”

As previously reported, prucalopride, a selective high-affinity 5-HT4 partial agonist, was approved in 2018 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of chronic idiopathic constipation.

The current researchers note that the drug has “good brain penetration,” which “allowed us to investigate 5-HT4-receptor agonism in humans.”

Having previously shown that a single dose of the drug has “pro-cognitive effects,” the investigators conducted the new trial in 44 healthy participants. All were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive either prucalopride 1 mg for 7 days or placebo.

In accordance with enrollment criteria, patients were 18 to 36 years of age, right-handed, and were not pregnant or breastfeeding. Participants’ body mass index was 18 to 30 kg/m2, and they had no contraindications to the study drug. The two treatment groups were well balanced; the participants who received placebo were significantly more likely to be nonnative English speakers (P = .02).

On day 6 of treatment administration, all participants underwent 3T MRI.

Before undergoing imaging, the participants were presented with eight emotionally neutral images of animals or landscapes and were asked to indicate whether or not the images were of animals. The task was then repeated with the eight familiar images and eight novel ones.

During the scan, participants were shown the same images or eight novel images and were again asked whether or not the images contained an animal. They were also instructed to try to remember the images for a subsequent memory task. In that task, the eight original images, 48 novel images, and 27 “distractor” images were presented.
 

 

 

Better memory

In the pre-scan assessment, results showed no significant differences in the ability of members of the prucalopride and placebo groups to identify images as being familiar or different.

However, taking prucalopride was associated with significantly improved memory performance in the post-scan recall task.

Compared to the placebo group, participants in the prucalopride group were more accurate in selecting images as familiar vs distractors (P = .029) and in distinguishing images as familiar, novel, or distractors (P = .035).

Functional MRI revealed increased activity in the left and right hippocampus in response to both novel and familiar images among the participants in the prucalopride group in comparison with those in the placebo group.

There was also increased activity in the right angular gyrus in the prucalopride group in comparison with the placebo group in response to familiar images (P < .005).

“Clinically, angular gyri lesions cause language dysfunction, low mood, and poor memory and can mimic dementia or pseudodementia,” the investigators write. They note that the right angular gyrus “shows significantly decreased activity” in mild cognitive impairment.

“Therefore, the increased activity seen in the right angular gyrus following prucalopride administration in our study is consistent with the pro-cognitive behavioural effects we observed,” they add.

Ms. De Cates noted that the dose used in their study was lower than the 2 mg given for constipation.

“At the low dose, there were no differences in side effects between groups and no withdrawals from the prucalopride group for side effects. We are going to try increasing the dose in our next study actually, as we don’t have PET data to tell us what the optimal dose for binding at the receptor should be,” said Ms. de Cates.

“In safety studies, the dose was trialled in healthy volunteers at 4 mg, which was found to be safe, although perhaps less well tolerated than 2 mg,” she said.
 

Generalizable findings?

Commenting on the research, Vibe G. Frøkjær, MD, adjunct professor, department of psychology, Copenhagen University, Denmark, said the study “highlights a very interesting and much needed potential for repurposing drugs to help cognitive dysfunction.”

He noted that cognitive dysfunction is often associated with psychiatric disorders -- even in states of remission.

“Importantly, as the authors also state, it will be vital to translate these findings from healthy populations into clinical populations,” said Dr. Frøkjær, who was not involved in the research.

“It will also be important to understand if prucalopride adds to the effects of existing antidepressant treatments or can be used as a stand-alone therapy,” he added.

The study was funded by the NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Center and by the Wellcome Center for Integrative Neuroscience. Ms. De Cates has received a travel grant from the Royal College of Psychiatrists/Gatsby Foundation and support from Wellcome. The other authors have relationships with P1vital Ltd, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Sage Therapeutics, Pfizer, Zogenix, Compass Pathways, and Lundbeck.

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

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Case reports underscore risk of cerebral edema, AFCE in children with COVID-19

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An 8-year-old girl who was infected with SARS-CoV-2 died after developing an extremely rare condition known as acute fulminant cerebral edema (AFCE), according to pediatric neurologists who are urging colleagues to watch out for similar cases.

At least one other child in the United States has died after becoming infected with the virus and developing cerebral edema. “The rapid and devastating clinical course in both of these cases highlights the need for early recognition of a cerebral edema and AFCE as potential complications of COVID-19 in pediatric patients,” the neurologists wrote.

The case was highlighted in a poster presented at the annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society and in a report published earlier this year in Child Neurology Open.

According to pediatric neurologist Timothy Gershon, MD, PhD , of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the child appeared in clinic in July 2020. She had been healthy but was suffering from 1 day of fever, seizure-like activity (generalized convulsions and drooling), anorexia, and lethargy.

The girl, who was subsequently diagnosed with COVID-19, deteriorated in the hospital. “She received IV dexamethasone in attempts to reduce cerebral edema,” the neurologists wrote. “Regarding immunomodulatory therapy, she received intravenous immunoglobulin (2 g/kg), anakinra, and hydrocortisone; despite approval for remdesivir and COVID-19 convalescent plasma, these were ultimately withheld due to poor prognosis.”

Brain death examinations at 24 and 48 hours after cardiac arrest were consistent with brain death, they reported.

Neurologists believe the patient suffered from AFCE, “an often fatal pediatric clinical entity consisting of fever, encephalopathy, and new-onset seizures followed by rapid, diffuse, and medically-refractory cerebral edema.” They add that “AFCE occurs as a rare complication of a variety of common pediatric infections, and a CNS [central nervous system] pathogen is identified in only a minority of cases, suggesting a para-infectious mechanism of edema.”

Neurologists offered a case definition of the “recently recognized” AFCE earlier this year.

“This was an extremely rare rapid progression to cerebral edema. I think it was related to the patient’s COVID infection, but why this patient got it and others don’t is unknown,” Dr. Gershon said in an interview. “The full spectrum of neurological complications of COVID were not yet known [at the time]. We didn’t know, and still don’t know, what the causative links are between COVID and suddenly having seizures and brain swelling.”

He said he’d treat a similar patient differently now and give dexamethasone earlier in the clinical course, although “there is no data to tell us if any therapy could have reversed it.” Specifically, he said, “I’d give dexamethasone at the first sign of brain involvement, using the dosing recommended for cerebral edema, and try to get the MRI earlier in the course.”

Dr. Gershon and colleagues noted another case of fatal cerebral edema in a child, a 7-year-old boy who was treated in New York state. That case “shows that fatal cerebral edema may complicate pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome,” they wrote.

Pediatric critical care specialist Preetha Krishnan, MD, of Randall Children’s Hospital at Legacy Emanuel in Portland, Ore., helped develop the new definition of AFCE. In an interview, she said AFCE is difficult to diagnose because the signs/symptoms – such as fever, altered sensorium, and seizures – are found in other conditions such as febrile status epilepticus with a viral illness. 
“The key to recognition of AFCE is that unlike other disease processes, these children have rapid neurologic progression,” she said. “In addition, many of our AFCE patients also had vomiting and/or headache, which in retrospect was likely an indication of elevated ICP [intracranial pressure] rather than viral infection.”
She added that “if a child with fever, seizures, and encephalopathy has cerebral edema on imaging and/or has neurologic progression, AFCE should be considered. Most of our cases of AFCE had fulminant progression within the first 3 days of their head imaging noting cerebral edema. There are other neurologic diseases, such as acute necrotizing encephalopathy of childhood, that also have progressive signs/symptoms, but head imaging and lab work should help differentiate many of these etiologies.”
In regard to treatment, she said, “our unit would likely err on the side of providing as much neuroprotective measures as is reasonable, such as maintaining normothermia, consideration of hyperosmolar therapy, maintaining normocarbia and normoxemia, managing seizures, etc. I would recommend getting the entire neurocritical care team involved in the management discussion. This varies by center, but will likely include neurology, ID [infectious disease], possibly neurosurgery, and PICU.”
As for the new case report, Krishnan said COVID-19 has been linked to neurologic complications, “so it does not surprise me that AFCE is part of the neurologic spectrum of disease.”
No funding was reported, and the authors report no relevant disclosures. Dr. Krishnan has no disclosures.

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An 8-year-old girl who was infected with SARS-CoV-2 died after developing an extremely rare condition known as acute fulminant cerebral edema (AFCE), according to pediatric neurologists who are urging colleagues to watch out for similar cases.

At least one other child in the United States has died after becoming infected with the virus and developing cerebral edema. “The rapid and devastating clinical course in both of these cases highlights the need for early recognition of a cerebral edema and AFCE as potential complications of COVID-19 in pediatric patients,” the neurologists wrote.

The case was highlighted in a poster presented at the annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society and in a report published earlier this year in Child Neurology Open.

According to pediatric neurologist Timothy Gershon, MD, PhD , of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the child appeared in clinic in July 2020. She had been healthy but was suffering from 1 day of fever, seizure-like activity (generalized convulsions and drooling), anorexia, and lethargy.

The girl, who was subsequently diagnosed with COVID-19, deteriorated in the hospital. “She received IV dexamethasone in attempts to reduce cerebral edema,” the neurologists wrote. “Regarding immunomodulatory therapy, she received intravenous immunoglobulin (2 g/kg), anakinra, and hydrocortisone; despite approval for remdesivir and COVID-19 convalescent plasma, these were ultimately withheld due to poor prognosis.”

Brain death examinations at 24 and 48 hours after cardiac arrest were consistent with brain death, they reported.

Neurologists believe the patient suffered from AFCE, “an often fatal pediatric clinical entity consisting of fever, encephalopathy, and new-onset seizures followed by rapid, diffuse, and medically-refractory cerebral edema.” They add that “AFCE occurs as a rare complication of a variety of common pediatric infections, and a CNS [central nervous system] pathogen is identified in only a minority of cases, suggesting a para-infectious mechanism of edema.”

Neurologists offered a case definition of the “recently recognized” AFCE earlier this year.

“This was an extremely rare rapid progression to cerebral edema. I think it was related to the patient’s COVID infection, but why this patient got it and others don’t is unknown,” Dr. Gershon said in an interview. “The full spectrum of neurological complications of COVID were not yet known [at the time]. We didn’t know, and still don’t know, what the causative links are between COVID and suddenly having seizures and brain swelling.”

He said he’d treat a similar patient differently now and give dexamethasone earlier in the clinical course, although “there is no data to tell us if any therapy could have reversed it.” Specifically, he said, “I’d give dexamethasone at the first sign of brain involvement, using the dosing recommended for cerebral edema, and try to get the MRI earlier in the course.”

Dr. Gershon and colleagues noted another case of fatal cerebral edema in a child, a 7-year-old boy who was treated in New York state. That case “shows that fatal cerebral edema may complicate pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome,” they wrote.

Pediatric critical care specialist Preetha Krishnan, MD, of Randall Children’s Hospital at Legacy Emanuel in Portland, Ore., helped develop the new definition of AFCE. In an interview, she said AFCE is difficult to diagnose because the signs/symptoms – such as fever, altered sensorium, and seizures – are found in other conditions such as febrile status epilepticus with a viral illness. 
“The key to recognition of AFCE is that unlike other disease processes, these children have rapid neurologic progression,” she said. “In addition, many of our AFCE patients also had vomiting and/or headache, which in retrospect was likely an indication of elevated ICP [intracranial pressure] rather than viral infection.”
She added that “if a child with fever, seizures, and encephalopathy has cerebral edema on imaging and/or has neurologic progression, AFCE should be considered. Most of our cases of AFCE had fulminant progression within the first 3 days of their head imaging noting cerebral edema. There are other neurologic diseases, such as acute necrotizing encephalopathy of childhood, that also have progressive signs/symptoms, but head imaging and lab work should help differentiate many of these etiologies.”
In regard to treatment, she said, “our unit would likely err on the side of providing as much neuroprotective measures as is reasonable, such as maintaining normothermia, consideration of hyperosmolar therapy, maintaining normocarbia and normoxemia, managing seizures, etc. I would recommend getting the entire neurocritical care team involved in the management discussion. This varies by center, but will likely include neurology, ID [infectious disease], possibly neurosurgery, and PICU.”
As for the new case report, Krishnan said COVID-19 has been linked to neurologic complications, “so it does not surprise me that AFCE is part of the neurologic spectrum of disease.”
No funding was reported, and the authors report no relevant disclosures. Dr. Krishnan has no disclosures.

An 8-year-old girl who was infected with SARS-CoV-2 died after developing an extremely rare condition known as acute fulminant cerebral edema (AFCE), according to pediatric neurologists who are urging colleagues to watch out for similar cases.

At least one other child in the United States has died after becoming infected with the virus and developing cerebral edema. “The rapid and devastating clinical course in both of these cases highlights the need for early recognition of a cerebral edema and AFCE as potential complications of COVID-19 in pediatric patients,” the neurologists wrote.

The case was highlighted in a poster presented at the annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society and in a report published earlier this year in Child Neurology Open.

According to pediatric neurologist Timothy Gershon, MD, PhD , of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the child appeared in clinic in July 2020. She had been healthy but was suffering from 1 day of fever, seizure-like activity (generalized convulsions and drooling), anorexia, and lethargy.

The girl, who was subsequently diagnosed with COVID-19, deteriorated in the hospital. “She received IV dexamethasone in attempts to reduce cerebral edema,” the neurologists wrote. “Regarding immunomodulatory therapy, she received intravenous immunoglobulin (2 g/kg), anakinra, and hydrocortisone; despite approval for remdesivir and COVID-19 convalescent plasma, these were ultimately withheld due to poor prognosis.”

Brain death examinations at 24 and 48 hours after cardiac arrest were consistent with brain death, they reported.

Neurologists believe the patient suffered from AFCE, “an often fatal pediatric clinical entity consisting of fever, encephalopathy, and new-onset seizures followed by rapid, diffuse, and medically-refractory cerebral edema.” They add that “AFCE occurs as a rare complication of a variety of common pediatric infections, and a CNS [central nervous system] pathogen is identified in only a minority of cases, suggesting a para-infectious mechanism of edema.”

Neurologists offered a case definition of the “recently recognized” AFCE earlier this year.

“This was an extremely rare rapid progression to cerebral edema. I think it was related to the patient’s COVID infection, but why this patient got it and others don’t is unknown,” Dr. Gershon said in an interview. “The full spectrum of neurological complications of COVID were not yet known [at the time]. We didn’t know, and still don’t know, what the causative links are between COVID and suddenly having seizures and brain swelling.”

He said he’d treat a similar patient differently now and give dexamethasone earlier in the clinical course, although “there is no data to tell us if any therapy could have reversed it.” Specifically, he said, “I’d give dexamethasone at the first sign of brain involvement, using the dosing recommended for cerebral edema, and try to get the MRI earlier in the course.”

Dr. Gershon and colleagues noted another case of fatal cerebral edema in a child, a 7-year-old boy who was treated in New York state. That case “shows that fatal cerebral edema may complicate pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome,” they wrote.

Pediatric critical care specialist Preetha Krishnan, MD, of Randall Children’s Hospital at Legacy Emanuel in Portland, Ore., helped develop the new definition of AFCE. In an interview, she said AFCE is difficult to diagnose because the signs/symptoms – such as fever, altered sensorium, and seizures – are found in other conditions such as febrile status epilepticus with a viral illness. 
“The key to recognition of AFCE is that unlike other disease processes, these children have rapid neurologic progression,” she said. “In addition, many of our AFCE patients also had vomiting and/or headache, which in retrospect was likely an indication of elevated ICP [intracranial pressure] rather than viral infection.”
She added that “if a child with fever, seizures, and encephalopathy has cerebral edema on imaging and/or has neurologic progression, AFCE should be considered. Most of our cases of AFCE had fulminant progression within the first 3 days of their head imaging noting cerebral edema. There are other neurologic diseases, such as acute necrotizing encephalopathy of childhood, that also have progressive signs/symptoms, but head imaging and lab work should help differentiate many of these etiologies.”
In regard to treatment, she said, “our unit would likely err on the side of providing as much neuroprotective measures as is reasonable, such as maintaining normothermia, consideration of hyperosmolar therapy, maintaining normocarbia and normoxemia, managing seizures, etc. I would recommend getting the entire neurocritical care team involved in the management discussion. This varies by center, but will likely include neurology, ID [infectious disease], possibly neurosurgery, and PICU.”
As for the new case report, Krishnan said COVID-19 has been linked to neurologic complications, “so it does not surprise me that AFCE is part of the neurologic spectrum of disease.”
No funding was reported, and the authors report no relevant disclosures. Dr. Krishnan has no disclosures.

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Maternal SSRI use linked to more encephalopathy in newborns, risk still small

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Newborns of pregnant women who were treated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors during the third trimester are almost three times as likely to develop neonatal encephalopathy (NE), although the overall risk remains extremely low, a new study finds.

The findings were presented in a poster at the 50th annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society.

“Our work showed that neonates exposed to SSRI in utero had higher risks of neonatal encephalopathy even when adjusting for confounders such as maternal mental health disorders and age. SSRIs could cause side effects such as encephalopathy in neonates, and these risks need to be balanced carefully with the potential benefits of treatment to the mother,” study lead author Marie Cornet, MD, a neonatology fellow with Benioff Children’s Hospital at the University of California, San Francisco, said in an interview.

According to Dr. Cornet, “we know that SSRI exposure in utero is associated with increased risks of respiratory distress at birth, need for positive-pressure ventilation, and an abnormal neurologic exam.” The researchers launched the new study to determine if the estimated 4%-8% of pregnant women who take SSRIs may be putting their newborns at greater risk of NE.

The researchers retrospectively tracked 305,426 infants who were born in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California health system (≥35 weeks) from 2011 to 2019. The mothers had an average age of 31 years, and approximately 34.7% were White, 34.7% of unknown race, 23.3% Asian, and 6.2% Black.

The researchers defined NE as a “5-minute APGAR score <7 and abnormal level of consciousness, activity, tone, or reflexes.”

A total of 8,024 infants (2.6%) had mothers who used SSRIs in the third trimester, and 510 (0.17%) were determined to have had NE.

After adjustment for maternal depression or anxiety, maternal age, race, and hospital, exposed neonates had 2.7 times higher odds of NE (odds ratio, 2.7).

Each 25 mg per day increase in the dose of SSRIs, as equalized to doses of sertraline (Zoloft), was linked to a significant 31% increase in the odds of developing NE (OR, 1.31).

The study doesn’t examine the benefits of SSRI treatment in pregnancy. Those taking SSRIs were much more likely to have depression during pregnancy (76.5% vs. 13.5%) and anxiety (56.7% vs. 6.9%), compared with those who did not take the drug.

The possible connection between SSRIs and NE is unclear. “SSRIs may contribute to NE by a withdrawal mechanism or by a toxicity mechanism. It is also possible that SSRIs themselves are not responsible for encephalopathy, or that the severity of maternal mental health is itself responsible for increased neonatal encephalopathy,” Dr. Cornet said. “However, we believe we adjusted our results thoroughly for that. Furthermore, in this cohort, neonates born from mothers with untreated depression were not at higher risk of encephalopathy than neonates born to mothers without depression.”

She added: “When infants have acidosis or require prolonged resuscitation after birth, they get treated with therapeutic hypothermia. This invasive treatment was shown to decrease mortality and morbidity in neonates with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. However, therapeutic hypothermia may not be helpful in infants with encephalopathy due to other causes than acute hypoxia-ischemia, such as infection, inflammation, genetic conditions, or exposure to toxins. In the case of SSRIs, our results show that, while neonates often have encephalopathy, this encephalopathy is often mild and self-resolved. We did not see a statistically significant increase in acidosis or treatment with therapeutic hypothermia.”

In the future neurologists should consider SSRI use as a potential cause in cases of NE, Dr. Cornet said. “If there are no signs of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy – no evidence of acidosis, acute perinatal event – treatment with therapeutic hypothermia may not be indicated.”

Dr. Cornet said more research is in the works. “Studying the long-term side effect of SSRIs on neonatal brain development and injury is essential,” she said. “We plan to compare brain injury in neonates exposed and unexposed to SSRIs and examine long-term outcomes to assess if the effect of SSRI exposure is transient or has a lasting impact.”

This study was funded by the Thrasher Early Career Research Grant and by the Newborn Brain Research Innovation Award at UCSF. The authors have no relevant disclosures.
 

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Newborns of pregnant women who were treated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors during the third trimester are almost three times as likely to develop neonatal encephalopathy (NE), although the overall risk remains extremely low, a new study finds.

The findings were presented in a poster at the 50th annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society.

“Our work showed that neonates exposed to SSRI in utero had higher risks of neonatal encephalopathy even when adjusting for confounders such as maternal mental health disorders and age. SSRIs could cause side effects such as encephalopathy in neonates, and these risks need to be balanced carefully with the potential benefits of treatment to the mother,” study lead author Marie Cornet, MD, a neonatology fellow with Benioff Children’s Hospital at the University of California, San Francisco, said in an interview.

According to Dr. Cornet, “we know that SSRI exposure in utero is associated with increased risks of respiratory distress at birth, need for positive-pressure ventilation, and an abnormal neurologic exam.” The researchers launched the new study to determine if the estimated 4%-8% of pregnant women who take SSRIs may be putting their newborns at greater risk of NE.

The researchers retrospectively tracked 305,426 infants who were born in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California health system (≥35 weeks) from 2011 to 2019. The mothers had an average age of 31 years, and approximately 34.7% were White, 34.7% of unknown race, 23.3% Asian, and 6.2% Black.

The researchers defined NE as a “5-minute APGAR score <7 and abnormal level of consciousness, activity, tone, or reflexes.”

A total of 8,024 infants (2.6%) had mothers who used SSRIs in the third trimester, and 510 (0.17%) were determined to have had NE.

After adjustment for maternal depression or anxiety, maternal age, race, and hospital, exposed neonates had 2.7 times higher odds of NE (odds ratio, 2.7).

Each 25 mg per day increase in the dose of SSRIs, as equalized to doses of sertraline (Zoloft), was linked to a significant 31% increase in the odds of developing NE (OR, 1.31).

The study doesn’t examine the benefits of SSRI treatment in pregnancy. Those taking SSRIs were much more likely to have depression during pregnancy (76.5% vs. 13.5%) and anxiety (56.7% vs. 6.9%), compared with those who did not take the drug.

The possible connection between SSRIs and NE is unclear. “SSRIs may contribute to NE by a withdrawal mechanism or by a toxicity mechanism. It is also possible that SSRIs themselves are not responsible for encephalopathy, or that the severity of maternal mental health is itself responsible for increased neonatal encephalopathy,” Dr. Cornet said. “However, we believe we adjusted our results thoroughly for that. Furthermore, in this cohort, neonates born from mothers with untreated depression were not at higher risk of encephalopathy than neonates born to mothers without depression.”

She added: “When infants have acidosis or require prolonged resuscitation after birth, they get treated with therapeutic hypothermia. This invasive treatment was shown to decrease mortality and morbidity in neonates with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. However, therapeutic hypothermia may not be helpful in infants with encephalopathy due to other causes than acute hypoxia-ischemia, such as infection, inflammation, genetic conditions, or exposure to toxins. In the case of SSRIs, our results show that, while neonates often have encephalopathy, this encephalopathy is often mild and self-resolved. We did not see a statistically significant increase in acidosis or treatment with therapeutic hypothermia.”

In the future neurologists should consider SSRI use as a potential cause in cases of NE, Dr. Cornet said. “If there are no signs of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy – no evidence of acidosis, acute perinatal event – treatment with therapeutic hypothermia may not be indicated.”

Dr. Cornet said more research is in the works. “Studying the long-term side effect of SSRIs on neonatal brain development and injury is essential,” she said. “We plan to compare brain injury in neonates exposed and unexposed to SSRIs and examine long-term outcomes to assess if the effect of SSRI exposure is transient or has a lasting impact.”

This study was funded by the Thrasher Early Career Research Grant and by the Newborn Brain Research Innovation Award at UCSF. The authors have no relevant disclosures.
 

Newborns of pregnant women who were treated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors during the third trimester are almost three times as likely to develop neonatal encephalopathy (NE), although the overall risk remains extremely low, a new study finds.

The findings were presented in a poster at the 50th annual meeting of the Child Neurology Society.

“Our work showed that neonates exposed to SSRI in utero had higher risks of neonatal encephalopathy even when adjusting for confounders such as maternal mental health disorders and age. SSRIs could cause side effects such as encephalopathy in neonates, and these risks need to be balanced carefully with the potential benefits of treatment to the mother,” study lead author Marie Cornet, MD, a neonatology fellow with Benioff Children’s Hospital at the University of California, San Francisco, said in an interview.

According to Dr. Cornet, “we know that SSRI exposure in utero is associated with increased risks of respiratory distress at birth, need for positive-pressure ventilation, and an abnormal neurologic exam.” The researchers launched the new study to determine if the estimated 4%-8% of pregnant women who take SSRIs may be putting their newborns at greater risk of NE.

The researchers retrospectively tracked 305,426 infants who were born in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California health system (≥35 weeks) from 2011 to 2019. The mothers had an average age of 31 years, and approximately 34.7% were White, 34.7% of unknown race, 23.3% Asian, and 6.2% Black.

The researchers defined NE as a “5-minute APGAR score <7 and abnormal level of consciousness, activity, tone, or reflexes.”

A total of 8,024 infants (2.6%) had mothers who used SSRIs in the third trimester, and 510 (0.17%) were determined to have had NE.

After adjustment for maternal depression or anxiety, maternal age, race, and hospital, exposed neonates had 2.7 times higher odds of NE (odds ratio, 2.7).

Each 25 mg per day increase in the dose of SSRIs, as equalized to doses of sertraline (Zoloft), was linked to a significant 31% increase in the odds of developing NE (OR, 1.31).

The study doesn’t examine the benefits of SSRI treatment in pregnancy. Those taking SSRIs were much more likely to have depression during pregnancy (76.5% vs. 13.5%) and anxiety (56.7% vs. 6.9%), compared with those who did not take the drug.

The possible connection between SSRIs and NE is unclear. “SSRIs may contribute to NE by a withdrawal mechanism or by a toxicity mechanism. It is also possible that SSRIs themselves are not responsible for encephalopathy, or that the severity of maternal mental health is itself responsible for increased neonatal encephalopathy,” Dr. Cornet said. “However, we believe we adjusted our results thoroughly for that. Furthermore, in this cohort, neonates born from mothers with untreated depression were not at higher risk of encephalopathy than neonates born to mothers without depression.”

She added: “When infants have acidosis or require prolonged resuscitation after birth, they get treated with therapeutic hypothermia. This invasive treatment was shown to decrease mortality and morbidity in neonates with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. However, therapeutic hypothermia may not be helpful in infants with encephalopathy due to other causes than acute hypoxia-ischemia, such as infection, inflammation, genetic conditions, or exposure to toxins. In the case of SSRIs, our results show that, while neonates often have encephalopathy, this encephalopathy is often mild and self-resolved. We did not see a statistically significant increase in acidosis or treatment with therapeutic hypothermia.”

In the future neurologists should consider SSRI use as a potential cause in cases of NE, Dr. Cornet said. “If there are no signs of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy – no evidence of acidosis, acute perinatal event – treatment with therapeutic hypothermia may not be indicated.”

Dr. Cornet said more research is in the works. “Studying the long-term side effect of SSRIs on neonatal brain development and injury is essential,” she said. “We plan to compare brain injury in neonates exposed and unexposed to SSRIs and examine long-term outcomes to assess if the effect of SSRI exposure is transient or has a lasting impact.”

This study was funded by the Thrasher Early Career Research Grant and by the Newborn Brain Research Innovation Award at UCSF. The authors have no relevant disclosures.
 

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Handheld device highly sensitive in detecting amblyopia; can be used in children as young as 2 years of age

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A handheld vision screening device to test for amblyopia and strabismus has been found to have a sensitivity of 100%, a specificity of 85%, and a median acquisition time of 28 seconds, according to a study published in the Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus.

The prospective study involved 300 children recruited from two Kaiser Permanente Southern California pediatric clinics. The patients, aged 24-72 months, were first screened by trained research staff for amblyopia and strabismus using the device, called the Pediatric Vision Scanner (PVS). They were subsequently screened by a pediatric ophthalmologist who was masked to the previous screening results and who then performed a comprehensive eye examination.

With the gold-standard ophthalmologist examination, six children (2%) were identified as having amblyopia and/or strabismus. Using the PVS, all six children with amblyopia and/or strabismus were identified, yielding 100% sensitivity. PVS findings were normal for 45 children (15%), yielding a specificity rate of 85%. The positive predictive value was 26.0% (95% confidence interval, 12.4%-32.4%), and the negative predictive value was 100% (95% CI, 97.1%-100%).

The findings suggest that the device could be used to screen for amblyopia, according to Shaival S. Shah, MD, the study’s first author, who is a pediatric ophthalmologist and regional section lead of pediatric ophthalmology, Southern California Permanente Medical Group.

“A strength of this device is that it is user friendly and easy to use and very quick, which is essential when working with young children,” said Dr. Shah in an interview. He noted that the device could be used for children as young as 2 years.

Dr. Shah pointed out that the children were recruited from a pediatrician’s office and reflect more of a “real-world setting” than had they been recruited from a pediatric ophthalmology clinic.

Dr. Shah added that, with a negative predictive value of 100%, the device is highly reliable at informing the clinician that amblyopia is not present. “It did have a positive predictive value of 26%, which needs to be considered when deciding one’s vision screening strategy,” he said.

A limitation of the study is that there was no head-to-head comparison with another screening device, noted Dr. Shah. “While it may have been more useful to include another vision screening device to have a head-to-head comparison, we did not do this to limit complexity and cost.”

Michael J. Wan, MD, FRCSC, pediatric ophthalmologist, Sick Kids Hospital, Toronto, and assistant professor at the University of Toronto, told this news organization that the device has multiple strengths, including quick acquisition time and excellent detection rate of amblyopia and strabismus in children as young as 2 years.

“It is highly reliable at informing the clinician that amblyopia is not present,” said Dr. Wan, who was not involved in the study. “The PVS uses an elegant mechanism to test for amblyopia directly (as opposed to other screening devices, which only detect risk factors). This study demonstrates the impressive diagnostic accuracy of this approach. With a study population of 300 children, the PVS had a sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 85% (over 90% in cooperative children). This means that the PVS would detect essentially all cases of amblyopia and strabismus while minimizing the number of unnecessary referrals and examinations.”

He added that, although the study included children as young as 2 years, only 2.5% of the children were unable to complete the PVS test. “Detecting amblyopia in children at an age when treatment is still effective has been a longstanding goal in pediatric ophthalmology,” said Dr. Wan, who described the technology as user friendly. “Based on this study, the search for an accurate and practical pediatric vision screening device appears to be over.”

Dr. Wan said it would be useful to replicate this study with a different population to confirm the findings.

Dr. Shah and Dr. Wan disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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A handheld vision screening device to test for amblyopia and strabismus has been found to have a sensitivity of 100%, a specificity of 85%, and a median acquisition time of 28 seconds, according to a study published in the Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus.

The prospective study involved 300 children recruited from two Kaiser Permanente Southern California pediatric clinics. The patients, aged 24-72 months, were first screened by trained research staff for amblyopia and strabismus using the device, called the Pediatric Vision Scanner (PVS). They were subsequently screened by a pediatric ophthalmologist who was masked to the previous screening results and who then performed a comprehensive eye examination.

With the gold-standard ophthalmologist examination, six children (2%) were identified as having amblyopia and/or strabismus. Using the PVS, all six children with amblyopia and/or strabismus were identified, yielding 100% sensitivity. PVS findings were normal for 45 children (15%), yielding a specificity rate of 85%. The positive predictive value was 26.0% (95% confidence interval, 12.4%-32.4%), and the negative predictive value was 100% (95% CI, 97.1%-100%).

The findings suggest that the device could be used to screen for amblyopia, according to Shaival S. Shah, MD, the study’s first author, who is a pediatric ophthalmologist and regional section lead of pediatric ophthalmology, Southern California Permanente Medical Group.

“A strength of this device is that it is user friendly and easy to use and very quick, which is essential when working with young children,” said Dr. Shah in an interview. He noted that the device could be used for children as young as 2 years.

Dr. Shah pointed out that the children were recruited from a pediatrician’s office and reflect more of a “real-world setting” than had they been recruited from a pediatric ophthalmology clinic.

Dr. Shah added that, with a negative predictive value of 100%, the device is highly reliable at informing the clinician that amblyopia is not present. “It did have a positive predictive value of 26%, which needs to be considered when deciding one’s vision screening strategy,” he said.

A limitation of the study is that there was no head-to-head comparison with another screening device, noted Dr. Shah. “While it may have been more useful to include another vision screening device to have a head-to-head comparison, we did not do this to limit complexity and cost.”

Michael J. Wan, MD, FRCSC, pediatric ophthalmologist, Sick Kids Hospital, Toronto, and assistant professor at the University of Toronto, told this news organization that the device has multiple strengths, including quick acquisition time and excellent detection rate of amblyopia and strabismus in children as young as 2 years.

“It is highly reliable at informing the clinician that amblyopia is not present,” said Dr. Wan, who was not involved in the study. “The PVS uses an elegant mechanism to test for amblyopia directly (as opposed to other screening devices, which only detect risk factors). This study demonstrates the impressive diagnostic accuracy of this approach. With a study population of 300 children, the PVS had a sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 85% (over 90% in cooperative children). This means that the PVS would detect essentially all cases of amblyopia and strabismus while minimizing the number of unnecessary referrals and examinations.”

He added that, although the study included children as young as 2 years, only 2.5% of the children were unable to complete the PVS test. “Detecting amblyopia in children at an age when treatment is still effective has been a longstanding goal in pediatric ophthalmology,” said Dr. Wan, who described the technology as user friendly. “Based on this study, the search for an accurate and practical pediatric vision screening device appears to be over.”

Dr. Wan said it would be useful to replicate this study with a different population to confirm the findings.

Dr. Shah and Dr. Wan disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

A handheld vision screening device to test for amblyopia and strabismus has been found to have a sensitivity of 100%, a specificity of 85%, and a median acquisition time of 28 seconds, according to a study published in the Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus.

The prospective study involved 300 children recruited from two Kaiser Permanente Southern California pediatric clinics. The patients, aged 24-72 months, were first screened by trained research staff for amblyopia and strabismus using the device, called the Pediatric Vision Scanner (PVS). They were subsequently screened by a pediatric ophthalmologist who was masked to the previous screening results and who then performed a comprehensive eye examination.

With the gold-standard ophthalmologist examination, six children (2%) were identified as having amblyopia and/or strabismus. Using the PVS, all six children with amblyopia and/or strabismus were identified, yielding 100% sensitivity. PVS findings were normal for 45 children (15%), yielding a specificity rate of 85%. The positive predictive value was 26.0% (95% confidence interval, 12.4%-32.4%), and the negative predictive value was 100% (95% CI, 97.1%-100%).

The findings suggest that the device could be used to screen for amblyopia, according to Shaival S. Shah, MD, the study’s first author, who is a pediatric ophthalmologist and regional section lead of pediatric ophthalmology, Southern California Permanente Medical Group.

“A strength of this device is that it is user friendly and easy to use and very quick, which is essential when working with young children,” said Dr. Shah in an interview. He noted that the device could be used for children as young as 2 years.

Dr. Shah pointed out that the children were recruited from a pediatrician’s office and reflect more of a “real-world setting” than had they been recruited from a pediatric ophthalmology clinic.

Dr. Shah added that, with a negative predictive value of 100%, the device is highly reliable at informing the clinician that amblyopia is not present. “It did have a positive predictive value of 26%, which needs to be considered when deciding one’s vision screening strategy,” he said.

A limitation of the study is that there was no head-to-head comparison with another screening device, noted Dr. Shah. “While it may have been more useful to include another vision screening device to have a head-to-head comparison, we did not do this to limit complexity and cost.”

Michael J. Wan, MD, FRCSC, pediatric ophthalmologist, Sick Kids Hospital, Toronto, and assistant professor at the University of Toronto, told this news organization that the device has multiple strengths, including quick acquisition time and excellent detection rate of amblyopia and strabismus in children as young as 2 years.

“It is highly reliable at informing the clinician that amblyopia is not present,” said Dr. Wan, who was not involved in the study. “The PVS uses an elegant mechanism to test for amblyopia directly (as opposed to other screening devices, which only detect risk factors). This study demonstrates the impressive diagnostic accuracy of this approach. With a study population of 300 children, the PVS had a sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 85% (over 90% in cooperative children). This means that the PVS would detect essentially all cases of amblyopia and strabismus while minimizing the number of unnecessary referrals and examinations.”

He added that, although the study included children as young as 2 years, only 2.5% of the children were unable to complete the PVS test. “Detecting amblyopia in children at an age when treatment is still effective has been a longstanding goal in pediatric ophthalmology,” said Dr. Wan, who described the technology as user friendly. “Based on this study, the search for an accurate and practical pediatric vision screening device appears to be over.”

Dr. Wan said it would be useful to replicate this study with a different population to confirm the findings.

Dr. Shah and Dr. Wan disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared SyncThink’s Eye-Sync technology to aid in the diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury, the company has announced.

Eye-Sync is a virtual reality eye-tracking platform that provides objective measurements to aid in the assessment of concussion. It’s the first mobile, rapid test for concussion that has been cleared by the FDA, the company said.

As reported by this news organization, Eye-Sync received breakthrough designation from the FDA for this indication in March 2019.

The FDA initially cleared the Eye-Sync platform for recording, viewing, and analyzing eye movements to help clinicians identify visual tracking impairment.

The Eye-Sync technology uses a series of 60-second eye tracking assessments, neurocognitive batteries, symptom inventories, and standardized patient inventories to identify the type and severity of impairment after concussion.

“The platform generates customizable and interpretive reports that support clinical decision making and offers visual and vestibular therapies to remedy deficits and monitor improvement over time,” the company said.

In support of the application for use in concussion, SyncThink enrolled 1,655 children and adults into a clinical study that collected comprehensive patient and concussion-related data for over 12 months.

The company used these data to develop proprietary algorithms and deep learning models to identify a positive or negative indication of concussion.

The study showed that Eye-Sinc had sensitivity greater than 82% and specificity greater than 93%, “thereby providing clinicians with significant and actionable data when evaluating individuals with concussion,” the company said in a news release.

“The outcome of this study very clearly shows the effectiveness of our technology at detecting concussion and definitively demonstrates the clinical utility of Eye-Sinc,” SyncThink Chief Clinical Officer Scott Anderson said in the release.

“It also shows that the future of concussion diagnosis is no longer purely symptom-based but that of a technology driven multi-modal approach,” Mr. Anderson said.

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

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared SyncThink’s Eye-Sync technology to aid in the diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury, the company has announced.

Eye-Sync is a virtual reality eye-tracking platform that provides objective measurements to aid in the assessment of concussion. It’s the first mobile, rapid test for concussion that has been cleared by the FDA, the company said.

As reported by this news organization, Eye-Sync received breakthrough designation from the FDA for this indication in March 2019.

The FDA initially cleared the Eye-Sync platform for recording, viewing, and analyzing eye movements to help clinicians identify visual tracking impairment.

The Eye-Sync technology uses a series of 60-second eye tracking assessments, neurocognitive batteries, symptom inventories, and standardized patient inventories to identify the type and severity of impairment after concussion.

“The platform generates customizable and interpretive reports that support clinical decision making and offers visual and vestibular therapies to remedy deficits and monitor improvement over time,” the company said.

In support of the application for use in concussion, SyncThink enrolled 1,655 children and adults into a clinical study that collected comprehensive patient and concussion-related data for over 12 months.

The company used these data to develop proprietary algorithms and deep learning models to identify a positive or negative indication of concussion.

The study showed that Eye-Sinc had sensitivity greater than 82% and specificity greater than 93%, “thereby providing clinicians with significant and actionable data when evaluating individuals with concussion,” the company said in a news release.

“The outcome of this study very clearly shows the effectiveness of our technology at detecting concussion and definitively demonstrates the clinical utility of Eye-Sinc,” SyncThink Chief Clinical Officer Scott Anderson said in the release.

“It also shows that the future of concussion diagnosis is no longer purely symptom-based but that of a technology driven multi-modal approach,” Mr. Anderson said.

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

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared SyncThink’s Eye-Sync technology to aid in the diagnosis of mild traumatic brain injury, the company has announced.

Eye-Sync is a virtual reality eye-tracking platform that provides objective measurements to aid in the assessment of concussion. It’s the first mobile, rapid test for concussion that has been cleared by the FDA, the company said.

As reported by this news organization, Eye-Sync received breakthrough designation from the FDA for this indication in March 2019.

The FDA initially cleared the Eye-Sync platform for recording, viewing, and analyzing eye movements to help clinicians identify visual tracking impairment.

The Eye-Sync technology uses a series of 60-second eye tracking assessments, neurocognitive batteries, symptom inventories, and standardized patient inventories to identify the type and severity of impairment after concussion.

“The platform generates customizable and interpretive reports that support clinical decision making and offers visual and vestibular therapies to remedy deficits and monitor improvement over time,” the company said.

In support of the application for use in concussion, SyncThink enrolled 1,655 children and adults into a clinical study that collected comprehensive patient and concussion-related data for over 12 months.

The company used these data to develop proprietary algorithms and deep learning models to identify a positive or negative indication of concussion.

The study showed that Eye-Sinc had sensitivity greater than 82% and specificity greater than 93%, “thereby providing clinicians with significant and actionable data when evaluating individuals with concussion,” the company said in a news release.

“The outcome of this study very clearly shows the effectiveness of our technology at detecting concussion and definitively demonstrates the clinical utility of Eye-Sinc,” SyncThink Chief Clinical Officer Scott Anderson said in the release.

“It also shows that the future of concussion diagnosis is no longer purely symptom-based but that of a technology driven multi-modal approach,” Mr. Anderson said.

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

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Is AFib a stroke cause or innocent bystander? The debate continues

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Discovery of substantial atrial fibrillation (AFib) is usually an indication to start oral anticoagulation (OAC) for stroke prevention, but it’s far from settled whether such AFib is actually a direct cause of thromboembolic stroke. And that has implications for whether patients with occasional bouts of the arrhythmia need to be on continuous OAC.  

It’s possible that some with infrequent paroxysmal AFib can get away with OAC maintained only about as long as the arrhythmia persists, and then go off the drugs, say researchers based on their study, which, they caution, would need the support of prospective trials before such a strategy could be considered.

But importantly, in their patients who had been continuously monitored by their cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) prior to experiencing a stroke, the 30-day risk of that stroke more than tripled if their AFib burden on 1 day reached at least 5-6 hours. The risk jumped especially high within the first few days after accumulating that amount of AFib in a day, but then fell off sharply over the next few days.

Based on the study, “Your risk of stroke goes up acutely when you have an episode of AFib, and it decreases rapidly, back to baseline – certainly by 30 days and it looked like in our data by 5 days,” Daniel E. Singer, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in an interview.

Increasingly, he noted, “there’s a widespread belief that AFib is a risk marker, not a causal risk factor.” In that scenario, most embolic strokes are caused by thrombi formed as a result of an atrial myopathy, characterized by fibrosis and inflammation, that also happens to trigger AFib.

But the current findings are, “from a mechanistic point of view, very much in favor of AFib being a causal risk factor, acutely raising the risk of stroke,” said Dr. Singer, who is lead author on the analysis published online Sept. 29 in JAMA Cardiology.

Some studies have “shown that anticoagulants seem to lower stroke risk even in patients without atrial fib, and even from sources not likely to be coming from the atrium,” Mintu P. Turakhia, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, Palo Alto, said in an interview. Collectively they point to “atrial fibrillation as a cause of and a noncausal marker for stroke.”

For example, Dr. Turakhia pointed out in an editorial accompanying the current report that stroke in patients with CIEDs “may occur during prolonged periods of sinus rhythm.”

The current study, he said in an interview, doesn’t preclude atrial myopathy as one direct cause of stroke-associated thrombus, because probably both the myopathy and AFib can be culprits. Still, AFib itself it may bear more responsibility for strokes in patients with fewer competing risks for stroke.

In such patients at lower vascular risk, who may have a CHA2DS2-VASc score of only 1 or 2, for example, “AFib can become a more important cause” of ischemic stroke, Dr. Turakhia said. That’s when AFib is more likely to be temporally related to stroke as the likely culprit, the mechanism addressed by Dr. Singer and associates.

“I think we’re all trying to grapple with what the truth is,” Dr. Singer observed. Still, the current study was unusual for primarily looking at the temporal relationship between AFib and stroke, rather than stroke risk. “And once again, as we found in our earlier study, but now a much larger study, it’s a tight relationship.”

Based on the current results, he said, the risk is “high when you have AFib, and it decreases very rapidly after the AFib is over.” And, “it takes multiple hours of AFib to raise stroke risk.” Inclusion in the analysis required accumulation of at least 5.5 hours of AFib on at least 1 day in a month, the cut point at which stroke risk started to climb significantly in an earlier trial.  

In the current analysis, however, the 30-day odds ratio for stroke was a nonsignificant 2.75 for an AFib burden of 6-23 hours in a day and jumped to a significant 5.0 for a burden in excess of 23 hours in a day. “That’s a lot of AFib” before the risk actually goes up, and supports AFib as causative, Dr. Singer said. If it were the myopathy itself triggering stroke in these particular patients, the risk would be ongoing and not subject to a threshold of AFib burden.
 

 

 

Implications for noncontinuous OAC

“The hope is that there are people who have very little AFib: They may have several hours, and then they have nothing for 6 months. Do they have to be anticoagulated or not?” Dr. Singer asked.

“If you believe the risk-marker story, you might say they have to be anticoagulated. But if you believe our results, you would certainly think there’s a good chance they don’t have to be anticoagulated,” he said.

“So it is logical to think, if you have the right people and continuous monitoring, that you could have time-delimited anticoagulation.” That is, patients might start right away on a direct OAC once reaching the AFib threshold in a day, Dr. Singer said, “going on and off anticoagulants in parallel with their episodes of AFib.”

The strategy wouldn’t be feasible in patients who often experience AFib, Dr. Singer noted, “but it might work for people who have infrequent paroxysmal AFib.” It certainly would first have to be tested in prospective trials, he said. Such trials would be more practical than ever to carry out given the growing availability of continuous AFib monitoring by wearables.

“We need a trial to make the case whether it’s safe or not,” Dr. Turakhia said of such a rhythm-guided approach to OAC for AFib. The population to start with, he said, would be patients with paroxysmal AFib and low CHA2DS2-VASc scores. “If you think CHA2DS2-VASc as an integrated score of vascular risk, such patients would have a lot fewer reasons to have strokes. And if they do have a stroke, it’s more reasonable to assume that it’s likely caused by atrial fib and not just a marker.”

Importantly, such a strategy could well be safer than continuous OAC for some patients – those at the lowest vascular risk and with the most occasional AFib and lowest AFib burden “who are otherwise doing fine,” Dr. Turakhia said. In such patients on continuous OAC, he proposed, the risks of bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage could potentially exceed the expected degree of protection from ischemic events.
 

Discordant periods of AFib burden

Dr. Singer and his colleagues linked a national electronic health record database with Medtronic CareLink records covering 10 years to identify 891 patients who experienced an ischemic stroke preceded by at least 120 days of continuous heart-rhythm monitoring.

The patients were then categorized by their pattern of AFib, if any, within each of two prestroke periods: the most recent 30 days, which was the test period, and the preceding 91-120 days, the control period.

The analysis then excluded any patients who reached an AFib-burden threshold of at least 5.5 hours on any day during both the test and control periods, and those who did not attain that threshold in either period.

“The ones who had AFib in both periods mostly had permanent AFib, and ones that didn’t have AFib in either period mostly were in sinus rhythm,” Dr. Singer said. It was “close to 100%” in both cases.

Those exclusions left 66 patients, 7.4% of the total, who reached the AFib-burden threshold on at least 1 day during either the test or control periods, but not both. They included 52 and 14 patients, respectively, with “discordant” periods, that is, at least that burden of AFib in a day during either the test or control period, but not both.

Comparing AFib burden at test versus control periods among patients for whom the two periods were discordant yielded an OR for stroke of 3.71 (95% confidence interval, 2.06-6.70).

Stroke risk levels were not evenly spread throughout the 24-hour periods that met the AFib-burden threshold or the 30 days preceding the patients’ strokes. The OR for stroke was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.62-9.55) during days 1-5 following the day in which the AFib-burden threshold was met. And it was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.08-12.01) over 30 days if the AFib burden exceeded 23 hours on any day of the test period.

The study’s case-crossover design, in which each patient served as their own control, is one of its advantages, Dr. Singer observed. Most patient features, including CHA2DS2-VASc score and comorbidities, did not change appreciably from earliest to the latest 30-day period, which strengthens the comparison of the two because “you don’t have to worry about long-term confounding.”

Dr. Singer was supported by the Eliot B. and Edith C. Shoolman fund of the Massachusetts General Hospital. He discloses receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim and Bristol-Myers Squibb; personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fitbit, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, and Pfizer; and royalties from UpToDate.

Dr. Turakhia discloses personal fees from Medtronic, Abbott, Sanofi, Pfizer, Myokardia, Johnson & Johnson, Milestone Pharmaceuticals, InCarda Therapeutics, 100Plus, Forward Pharma, and AliveCor; and grants from Bristol-Myers Squibb, the American Heart Association, Apple, and Bayer.

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

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Discovery of substantial atrial fibrillation (AFib) is usually an indication to start oral anticoagulation (OAC) for stroke prevention, but it’s far from settled whether such AFib is actually a direct cause of thromboembolic stroke. And that has implications for whether patients with occasional bouts of the arrhythmia need to be on continuous OAC.  

It’s possible that some with infrequent paroxysmal AFib can get away with OAC maintained only about as long as the arrhythmia persists, and then go off the drugs, say researchers based on their study, which, they caution, would need the support of prospective trials before such a strategy could be considered.

But importantly, in their patients who had been continuously monitored by their cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) prior to experiencing a stroke, the 30-day risk of that stroke more than tripled if their AFib burden on 1 day reached at least 5-6 hours. The risk jumped especially high within the first few days after accumulating that amount of AFib in a day, but then fell off sharply over the next few days.

Based on the study, “Your risk of stroke goes up acutely when you have an episode of AFib, and it decreases rapidly, back to baseline – certainly by 30 days and it looked like in our data by 5 days,” Daniel E. Singer, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in an interview.

Increasingly, he noted, “there’s a widespread belief that AFib is a risk marker, not a causal risk factor.” In that scenario, most embolic strokes are caused by thrombi formed as a result of an atrial myopathy, characterized by fibrosis and inflammation, that also happens to trigger AFib.

But the current findings are, “from a mechanistic point of view, very much in favor of AFib being a causal risk factor, acutely raising the risk of stroke,” said Dr. Singer, who is lead author on the analysis published online Sept. 29 in JAMA Cardiology.

Some studies have “shown that anticoagulants seem to lower stroke risk even in patients without atrial fib, and even from sources not likely to be coming from the atrium,” Mintu P. Turakhia, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, Palo Alto, said in an interview. Collectively they point to “atrial fibrillation as a cause of and a noncausal marker for stroke.”

For example, Dr. Turakhia pointed out in an editorial accompanying the current report that stroke in patients with CIEDs “may occur during prolonged periods of sinus rhythm.”

The current study, he said in an interview, doesn’t preclude atrial myopathy as one direct cause of stroke-associated thrombus, because probably both the myopathy and AFib can be culprits. Still, AFib itself it may bear more responsibility for strokes in patients with fewer competing risks for stroke.

In such patients at lower vascular risk, who may have a CHA2DS2-VASc score of only 1 or 2, for example, “AFib can become a more important cause” of ischemic stroke, Dr. Turakhia said. That’s when AFib is more likely to be temporally related to stroke as the likely culprit, the mechanism addressed by Dr. Singer and associates.

“I think we’re all trying to grapple with what the truth is,” Dr. Singer observed. Still, the current study was unusual for primarily looking at the temporal relationship between AFib and stroke, rather than stroke risk. “And once again, as we found in our earlier study, but now a much larger study, it’s a tight relationship.”

Based on the current results, he said, the risk is “high when you have AFib, and it decreases very rapidly after the AFib is over.” And, “it takes multiple hours of AFib to raise stroke risk.” Inclusion in the analysis required accumulation of at least 5.5 hours of AFib on at least 1 day in a month, the cut point at which stroke risk started to climb significantly in an earlier trial.  

In the current analysis, however, the 30-day odds ratio for stroke was a nonsignificant 2.75 for an AFib burden of 6-23 hours in a day and jumped to a significant 5.0 for a burden in excess of 23 hours in a day. “That’s a lot of AFib” before the risk actually goes up, and supports AFib as causative, Dr. Singer said. If it were the myopathy itself triggering stroke in these particular patients, the risk would be ongoing and not subject to a threshold of AFib burden.
 

 

 

Implications for noncontinuous OAC

“The hope is that there are people who have very little AFib: They may have several hours, and then they have nothing for 6 months. Do they have to be anticoagulated or not?” Dr. Singer asked.

“If you believe the risk-marker story, you might say they have to be anticoagulated. But if you believe our results, you would certainly think there’s a good chance they don’t have to be anticoagulated,” he said.

“So it is logical to think, if you have the right people and continuous monitoring, that you could have time-delimited anticoagulation.” That is, patients might start right away on a direct OAC once reaching the AFib threshold in a day, Dr. Singer said, “going on and off anticoagulants in parallel with their episodes of AFib.”

The strategy wouldn’t be feasible in patients who often experience AFib, Dr. Singer noted, “but it might work for people who have infrequent paroxysmal AFib.” It certainly would first have to be tested in prospective trials, he said. Such trials would be more practical than ever to carry out given the growing availability of continuous AFib monitoring by wearables.

“We need a trial to make the case whether it’s safe or not,” Dr. Turakhia said of such a rhythm-guided approach to OAC for AFib. The population to start with, he said, would be patients with paroxysmal AFib and low CHA2DS2-VASc scores. “If you think CHA2DS2-VASc as an integrated score of vascular risk, such patients would have a lot fewer reasons to have strokes. And if they do have a stroke, it’s more reasonable to assume that it’s likely caused by atrial fib and not just a marker.”

Importantly, such a strategy could well be safer than continuous OAC for some patients – those at the lowest vascular risk and with the most occasional AFib and lowest AFib burden “who are otherwise doing fine,” Dr. Turakhia said. In such patients on continuous OAC, he proposed, the risks of bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage could potentially exceed the expected degree of protection from ischemic events.
 

Discordant periods of AFib burden

Dr. Singer and his colleagues linked a national electronic health record database with Medtronic CareLink records covering 10 years to identify 891 patients who experienced an ischemic stroke preceded by at least 120 days of continuous heart-rhythm monitoring.

The patients were then categorized by their pattern of AFib, if any, within each of two prestroke periods: the most recent 30 days, which was the test period, and the preceding 91-120 days, the control period.

The analysis then excluded any patients who reached an AFib-burden threshold of at least 5.5 hours on any day during both the test and control periods, and those who did not attain that threshold in either period.

“The ones who had AFib in both periods mostly had permanent AFib, and ones that didn’t have AFib in either period mostly were in sinus rhythm,” Dr. Singer said. It was “close to 100%” in both cases.

Those exclusions left 66 patients, 7.4% of the total, who reached the AFib-burden threshold on at least 1 day during either the test or control periods, but not both. They included 52 and 14 patients, respectively, with “discordant” periods, that is, at least that burden of AFib in a day during either the test or control period, but not both.

Comparing AFib burden at test versus control periods among patients for whom the two periods were discordant yielded an OR for stroke of 3.71 (95% confidence interval, 2.06-6.70).

Stroke risk levels were not evenly spread throughout the 24-hour periods that met the AFib-burden threshold or the 30 days preceding the patients’ strokes. The OR for stroke was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.62-9.55) during days 1-5 following the day in which the AFib-burden threshold was met. And it was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.08-12.01) over 30 days if the AFib burden exceeded 23 hours on any day of the test period.

The study’s case-crossover design, in which each patient served as their own control, is one of its advantages, Dr. Singer observed. Most patient features, including CHA2DS2-VASc score and comorbidities, did not change appreciably from earliest to the latest 30-day period, which strengthens the comparison of the two because “you don’t have to worry about long-term confounding.”

Dr. Singer was supported by the Eliot B. and Edith C. Shoolman fund of the Massachusetts General Hospital. He discloses receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim and Bristol-Myers Squibb; personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fitbit, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, and Pfizer; and royalties from UpToDate.

Dr. Turakhia discloses personal fees from Medtronic, Abbott, Sanofi, Pfizer, Myokardia, Johnson & Johnson, Milestone Pharmaceuticals, InCarda Therapeutics, 100Plus, Forward Pharma, and AliveCor; and grants from Bristol-Myers Squibb, the American Heart Association, Apple, and Bayer.

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

Discovery of substantial atrial fibrillation (AFib) is usually an indication to start oral anticoagulation (OAC) for stroke prevention, but it’s far from settled whether such AFib is actually a direct cause of thromboembolic stroke. And that has implications for whether patients with occasional bouts of the arrhythmia need to be on continuous OAC.  

It’s possible that some with infrequent paroxysmal AFib can get away with OAC maintained only about as long as the arrhythmia persists, and then go off the drugs, say researchers based on their study, which, they caution, would need the support of prospective trials before such a strategy could be considered.

But importantly, in their patients who had been continuously monitored by their cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) prior to experiencing a stroke, the 30-day risk of that stroke more than tripled if their AFib burden on 1 day reached at least 5-6 hours. The risk jumped especially high within the first few days after accumulating that amount of AFib in a day, but then fell off sharply over the next few days.

Based on the study, “Your risk of stroke goes up acutely when you have an episode of AFib, and it decreases rapidly, back to baseline – certainly by 30 days and it looked like in our data by 5 days,” Daniel E. Singer, MD, of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, said in an interview.

Increasingly, he noted, “there’s a widespread belief that AFib is a risk marker, not a causal risk factor.” In that scenario, most embolic strokes are caused by thrombi formed as a result of an atrial myopathy, characterized by fibrosis and inflammation, that also happens to trigger AFib.

But the current findings are, “from a mechanistic point of view, very much in favor of AFib being a causal risk factor, acutely raising the risk of stroke,” said Dr. Singer, who is lead author on the analysis published online Sept. 29 in JAMA Cardiology.

Some studies have “shown that anticoagulants seem to lower stroke risk even in patients without atrial fib, and even from sources not likely to be coming from the atrium,” Mintu P. Turakhia, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, Palo Alto, said in an interview. Collectively they point to “atrial fibrillation as a cause of and a noncausal marker for stroke.”

For example, Dr. Turakhia pointed out in an editorial accompanying the current report that stroke in patients with CIEDs “may occur during prolonged periods of sinus rhythm.”

The current study, he said in an interview, doesn’t preclude atrial myopathy as one direct cause of stroke-associated thrombus, because probably both the myopathy and AFib can be culprits. Still, AFib itself it may bear more responsibility for strokes in patients with fewer competing risks for stroke.

In such patients at lower vascular risk, who may have a CHA2DS2-VASc score of only 1 or 2, for example, “AFib can become a more important cause” of ischemic stroke, Dr. Turakhia said. That’s when AFib is more likely to be temporally related to stroke as the likely culprit, the mechanism addressed by Dr. Singer and associates.

“I think we’re all trying to grapple with what the truth is,” Dr. Singer observed. Still, the current study was unusual for primarily looking at the temporal relationship between AFib and stroke, rather than stroke risk. “And once again, as we found in our earlier study, but now a much larger study, it’s a tight relationship.”

Based on the current results, he said, the risk is “high when you have AFib, and it decreases very rapidly after the AFib is over.” And, “it takes multiple hours of AFib to raise stroke risk.” Inclusion in the analysis required accumulation of at least 5.5 hours of AFib on at least 1 day in a month, the cut point at which stroke risk started to climb significantly in an earlier trial.  

In the current analysis, however, the 30-day odds ratio for stroke was a nonsignificant 2.75 for an AFib burden of 6-23 hours in a day and jumped to a significant 5.0 for a burden in excess of 23 hours in a day. “That’s a lot of AFib” before the risk actually goes up, and supports AFib as causative, Dr. Singer said. If it were the myopathy itself triggering stroke in these particular patients, the risk would be ongoing and not subject to a threshold of AFib burden.
 

 

 

Implications for noncontinuous OAC

“The hope is that there are people who have very little AFib: They may have several hours, and then they have nothing for 6 months. Do they have to be anticoagulated or not?” Dr. Singer asked.

“If you believe the risk-marker story, you might say they have to be anticoagulated. But if you believe our results, you would certainly think there’s a good chance they don’t have to be anticoagulated,” he said.

“So it is logical to think, if you have the right people and continuous monitoring, that you could have time-delimited anticoagulation.” That is, patients might start right away on a direct OAC once reaching the AFib threshold in a day, Dr. Singer said, “going on and off anticoagulants in parallel with their episodes of AFib.”

The strategy wouldn’t be feasible in patients who often experience AFib, Dr. Singer noted, “but it might work for people who have infrequent paroxysmal AFib.” It certainly would first have to be tested in prospective trials, he said. Such trials would be more practical than ever to carry out given the growing availability of continuous AFib monitoring by wearables.

“We need a trial to make the case whether it’s safe or not,” Dr. Turakhia said of such a rhythm-guided approach to OAC for AFib. The population to start with, he said, would be patients with paroxysmal AFib and low CHA2DS2-VASc scores. “If you think CHA2DS2-VASc as an integrated score of vascular risk, such patients would have a lot fewer reasons to have strokes. And if they do have a stroke, it’s more reasonable to assume that it’s likely caused by atrial fib and not just a marker.”

Importantly, such a strategy could well be safer than continuous OAC for some patients – those at the lowest vascular risk and with the most occasional AFib and lowest AFib burden “who are otherwise doing fine,” Dr. Turakhia said. In such patients on continuous OAC, he proposed, the risks of bleeding and intracranial hemorrhage could potentially exceed the expected degree of protection from ischemic events.
 

Discordant periods of AFib burden

Dr. Singer and his colleagues linked a national electronic health record database with Medtronic CareLink records covering 10 years to identify 891 patients who experienced an ischemic stroke preceded by at least 120 days of continuous heart-rhythm monitoring.

The patients were then categorized by their pattern of AFib, if any, within each of two prestroke periods: the most recent 30 days, which was the test period, and the preceding 91-120 days, the control period.

The analysis then excluded any patients who reached an AFib-burden threshold of at least 5.5 hours on any day during both the test and control periods, and those who did not attain that threshold in either period.

“The ones who had AFib in both periods mostly had permanent AFib, and ones that didn’t have AFib in either period mostly were in sinus rhythm,” Dr. Singer said. It was “close to 100%” in both cases.

Those exclusions left 66 patients, 7.4% of the total, who reached the AFib-burden threshold on at least 1 day during either the test or control periods, but not both. They included 52 and 14 patients, respectively, with “discordant” periods, that is, at least that burden of AFib in a day during either the test or control period, but not both.

Comparing AFib burden at test versus control periods among patients for whom the two periods were discordant yielded an OR for stroke of 3.71 (95% confidence interval, 2.06-6.70).

Stroke risk levels were not evenly spread throughout the 24-hour periods that met the AFib-burden threshold or the 30 days preceding the patients’ strokes. The OR for stroke was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.62-9.55) during days 1-5 following the day in which the AFib-burden threshold was met. And it was 5.00 (95% CI, 2.08-12.01) over 30 days if the AFib burden exceeded 23 hours on any day of the test period.

The study’s case-crossover design, in which each patient served as their own control, is one of its advantages, Dr. Singer observed. Most patient features, including CHA2DS2-VASc score and comorbidities, did not change appreciably from earliest to the latest 30-day period, which strengthens the comparison of the two because “you don’t have to worry about long-term confounding.”

Dr. Singer was supported by the Eliot B. and Edith C. Shoolman fund of the Massachusetts General Hospital. He discloses receiving grants from Boehringer Ingelheim and Bristol-Myers Squibb; personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fitbit, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, and Pfizer; and royalties from UpToDate.

Dr. Turakhia discloses personal fees from Medtronic, Abbott, Sanofi, Pfizer, Myokardia, Johnson & Johnson, Milestone Pharmaceuticals, InCarda Therapeutics, 100Plus, Forward Pharma, and AliveCor; and grants from Bristol-Myers Squibb, the American Heart Association, Apple, and Bayer.

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

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ADHD med may reduce apathy in Alzheimer’s disease

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Methylphenidate is safe and effective for treating apathy in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), new research suggests.

Dundanim/shutterstock.com

Results from a phase 3 randomized trial showed that, after 6 months of treatment, mean score on the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) apathy subscale decreased by 4.5 points for patients who received methylphenidate vs. a decrease of 3.1 points for those who received placebo.

In addition, the safety profile showed no significant between-group differences.

“Methylphenidate offers a treatment approach providing a modest but potentially clinically significant benefit for patients and caregivers,” said the investigators, led by Jacobo E. Mintzer, MD, MBA, professor of health studies at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.

The findings were published online Sept. 27 in JAMA Neurology.
 

Common problem

Apathy, which is common among patients with AD, is associated with increased risk for mortality, financial burden, and caregiver burden. No treatment has proved effective for apathy in this population.

Two trials of methylphenidate, a catecholaminergic agent, have provided preliminary evidence of efficacy. Findings from the Apathy in Dementia Methylphenidate trial (ADMET) suggested the drug was associated with improved cognition and few adverse events. However, both trials had small patient populations and short durations.

The current investigators conducted ADMET 2, a 6-month, phase 3 trial, to investigate methylphenidate further. They recruited 200 patients (mean age, 76 years; 66% men; 90% White) at nine clinical centers that specialized in dementia care in the United States and one in Canada.

Eligible patients had a diagnosis of possible or probable AD and a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score between 10 and 28. They also had clinically significant apathy for at least 4 weeks and an available caregiver who spent more than 10 hours a week with the patient.

The researchers randomly assigned patients to receive methylphenidate (n = 99) or placebo (n = 101). For 3 days, participants in the active group received 10 mg/day of methylphenidate. After that point, they received 20 mg/day of methylphenidate for the rest of the study.

Patients in both treatment groups were given the same number of identical-appearing capsules each day.

In-person follow-up visits took place monthly for 6 months. Participants also were contacted by telephone at days 15, 45, and 75 after treatment assignment.

Participants underwent cognitive testing at baseline and at 2, 4, and 6 months. The battery of tests included the MMSE, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale – Revised Digit Span.

The trial’s two primary outcomes were mean change in NPI apathy score from baseline to 6 months and the odds of an improved rating on the Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study Clinical Global Impression of Change (ADCS-CGIC) between baseline and 6 months.

Significant change on either outcome was to be considered a signal of effective treatment.
 

Treatment-specific benefit

Ten patients in the methylphenidate group and seven in the placebo group withdrew during the study.

Mean MMSE score at baseline was 19.2 in the methylphenidate group vs. 18.5 in the placebo group, indicating moderately severe dementia. Mean baseline score on the NPI apathy subscale was 8.0 vs. 7.6, respectively.

In an adjusted, longitudinal model, mean between-group difference in change in NPI apathy score at 6 months was –1.25 (P = .002). The mean NPI apathy score decreased by 4.5 points in the methylphenidate group vs. 3.1 points in the placebo group.

The largest change in apathy score occurred during the first 2 months of treatment. At 6 months, 27% of the methylphenidate group vs. 14% of the placebo group had an NPI apathy score of 0.

In addition, 43.8% of the methylphenidate group had improvement on the ADCS-CGIC compared with 35.2% of the placebo group. The odds ratio (OR) for improvement on ADCS-CGIC for methylphenidate vs. placebo was 1.90 (P = .07).

There was also a strong association between score improvement on the NPI apathy subscale and improvement on the ADCS-CGIC subscale (OR, 2.95; P = .002).

“It is important to note that there were no group differences in any of the cognitive measures, suggesting that the effect of the treatment is specific to the treatment of apathy and not a secondary effect of improvement in cognition,” the researchers wrote.

In all, 17 serious adverse events occurred in the methylphenidate group and 10 occurred in the placebo group. However, all events were found to be hospitalizations for events not related to treatment.
 

 

 

‘Enduring effect’

Commenting on the findings, Jeffrey L. Cummings, MD, ScD, professor of brain sciences at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, noted that the reduction in NPI apathy subscale score of more than 50% was clinically meaningful.

Dr. Jeffrey L. Cummings

A more robust outcome on the ADCS-CGIC would have been desirable, he added, although that instrument is not designed specifically for apathy.

Methylphenidate’s effect on apathy observed at 2 months and remaining stable throughout the study makes it appear to be “an enduring effect, and not something that the patient accommodates to,” said Dr. Cummings, who was not involved with the research. Such a change may manifest itself in a patient’s greater willingness to help voluntarily with housework or to suggest going for a walk, he noted.

“These are not dramatic changes in cognition, of course, but they are changes in initiative and that is very important,” Dr. Cummings said. Decreased apathy also may improve quality of life for the patient’s caregiver, he added.

Overall, the findings raise the question of whether the Food and Drug Administration should recognize apathy as an indication for which drugs can be approved, said Dr. Cummings.

“For me, that would be the next major step in this line of investigation,” he concluded.

The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging. Dr. Mintzer has served as an adviser to Praxis Bioresearch and Cerevel Therapeutics on matters unrelated to this study. Dr. Cummings is the author of the Neuropsychiatric Inventory but does not receive payments for it from academic trials such as ADMET 2.
 

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

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Methylphenidate is safe and effective for treating apathy in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), new research suggests.

Dundanim/shutterstock.com

Results from a phase 3 randomized trial showed that, after 6 months of treatment, mean score on the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) apathy subscale decreased by 4.5 points for patients who received methylphenidate vs. a decrease of 3.1 points for those who received placebo.

In addition, the safety profile showed no significant between-group differences.

“Methylphenidate offers a treatment approach providing a modest but potentially clinically significant benefit for patients and caregivers,” said the investigators, led by Jacobo E. Mintzer, MD, MBA, professor of health studies at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.

The findings were published online Sept. 27 in JAMA Neurology.
 

Common problem

Apathy, which is common among patients with AD, is associated with increased risk for mortality, financial burden, and caregiver burden. No treatment has proved effective for apathy in this population.

Two trials of methylphenidate, a catecholaminergic agent, have provided preliminary evidence of efficacy. Findings from the Apathy in Dementia Methylphenidate trial (ADMET) suggested the drug was associated with improved cognition and few adverse events. However, both trials had small patient populations and short durations.

The current investigators conducted ADMET 2, a 6-month, phase 3 trial, to investigate methylphenidate further. They recruited 200 patients (mean age, 76 years; 66% men; 90% White) at nine clinical centers that specialized in dementia care in the United States and one in Canada.

Eligible patients had a diagnosis of possible or probable AD and a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score between 10 and 28. They also had clinically significant apathy for at least 4 weeks and an available caregiver who spent more than 10 hours a week with the patient.

The researchers randomly assigned patients to receive methylphenidate (n = 99) or placebo (n = 101). For 3 days, participants in the active group received 10 mg/day of methylphenidate. After that point, they received 20 mg/day of methylphenidate for the rest of the study.

Patients in both treatment groups were given the same number of identical-appearing capsules each day.

In-person follow-up visits took place monthly for 6 months. Participants also were contacted by telephone at days 15, 45, and 75 after treatment assignment.

Participants underwent cognitive testing at baseline and at 2, 4, and 6 months. The battery of tests included the MMSE, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale – Revised Digit Span.

The trial’s two primary outcomes were mean change in NPI apathy score from baseline to 6 months and the odds of an improved rating on the Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study Clinical Global Impression of Change (ADCS-CGIC) between baseline and 6 months.

Significant change on either outcome was to be considered a signal of effective treatment.
 

Treatment-specific benefit

Ten patients in the methylphenidate group and seven in the placebo group withdrew during the study.

Mean MMSE score at baseline was 19.2 in the methylphenidate group vs. 18.5 in the placebo group, indicating moderately severe dementia. Mean baseline score on the NPI apathy subscale was 8.0 vs. 7.6, respectively.

In an adjusted, longitudinal model, mean between-group difference in change in NPI apathy score at 6 months was –1.25 (P = .002). The mean NPI apathy score decreased by 4.5 points in the methylphenidate group vs. 3.1 points in the placebo group.

The largest change in apathy score occurred during the first 2 months of treatment. At 6 months, 27% of the methylphenidate group vs. 14% of the placebo group had an NPI apathy score of 0.

In addition, 43.8% of the methylphenidate group had improvement on the ADCS-CGIC compared with 35.2% of the placebo group. The odds ratio (OR) for improvement on ADCS-CGIC for methylphenidate vs. placebo was 1.90 (P = .07).

There was also a strong association between score improvement on the NPI apathy subscale and improvement on the ADCS-CGIC subscale (OR, 2.95; P = .002).

“It is important to note that there were no group differences in any of the cognitive measures, suggesting that the effect of the treatment is specific to the treatment of apathy and not a secondary effect of improvement in cognition,” the researchers wrote.

In all, 17 serious adverse events occurred in the methylphenidate group and 10 occurred in the placebo group. However, all events were found to be hospitalizations for events not related to treatment.
 

 

 

‘Enduring effect’

Commenting on the findings, Jeffrey L. Cummings, MD, ScD, professor of brain sciences at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, noted that the reduction in NPI apathy subscale score of more than 50% was clinically meaningful.

Dr. Jeffrey L. Cummings

A more robust outcome on the ADCS-CGIC would have been desirable, he added, although that instrument is not designed specifically for apathy.

Methylphenidate’s effect on apathy observed at 2 months and remaining stable throughout the study makes it appear to be “an enduring effect, and not something that the patient accommodates to,” said Dr. Cummings, who was not involved with the research. Such a change may manifest itself in a patient’s greater willingness to help voluntarily with housework or to suggest going for a walk, he noted.

“These are not dramatic changes in cognition, of course, but they are changes in initiative and that is very important,” Dr. Cummings said. Decreased apathy also may improve quality of life for the patient’s caregiver, he added.

Overall, the findings raise the question of whether the Food and Drug Administration should recognize apathy as an indication for which drugs can be approved, said Dr. Cummings.

“For me, that would be the next major step in this line of investigation,” he concluded.

The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging. Dr. Mintzer has served as an adviser to Praxis Bioresearch and Cerevel Therapeutics on matters unrelated to this study. Dr. Cummings is the author of the Neuropsychiatric Inventory but does not receive payments for it from academic trials such as ADMET 2.
 

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

Methylphenidate is safe and effective for treating apathy in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), new research suggests.

Dundanim/shutterstock.com

Results from a phase 3 randomized trial showed that, after 6 months of treatment, mean score on the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) apathy subscale decreased by 4.5 points for patients who received methylphenidate vs. a decrease of 3.1 points for those who received placebo.

In addition, the safety profile showed no significant between-group differences.

“Methylphenidate offers a treatment approach providing a modest but potentially clinically significant benefit for patients and caregivers,” said the investigators, led by Jacobo E. Mintzer, MD, MBA, professor of health studies at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.

The findings were published online Sept. 27 in JAMA Neurology.
 

Common problem

Apathy, which is common among patients with AD, is associated with increased risk for mortality, financial burden, and caregiver burden. No treatment has proved effective for apathy in this population.

Two trials of methylphenidate, a catecholaminergic agent, have provided preliminary evidence of efficacy. Findings from the Apathy in Dementia Methylphenidate trial (ADMET) suggested the drug was associated with improved cognition and few adverse events. However, both trials had small patient populations and short durations.

The current investigators conducted ADMET 2, a 6-month, phase 3 trial, to investigate methylphenidate further. They recruited 200 patients (mean age, 76 years; 66% men; 90% White) at nine clinical centers that specialized in dementia care in the United States and one in Canada.

Eligible patients had a diagnosis of possible or probable AD and a Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score between 10 and 28. They also had clinically significant apathy for at least 4 weeks and an available caregiver who spent more than 10 hours a week with the patient.

The researchers randomly assigned patients to receive methylphenidate (n = 99) or placebo (n = 101). For 3 days, participants in the active group received 10 mg/day of methylphenidate. After that point, they received 20 mg/day of methylphenidate for the rest of the study.

Patients in both treatment groups were given the same number of identical-appearing capsules each day.

In-person follow-up visits took place monthly for 6 months. Participants also were contacted by telephone at days 15, 45, and 75 after treatment assignment.

Participants underwent cognitive testing at baseline and at 2, 4, and 6 months. The battery of tests included the MMSE, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale – Revised Digit Span.

The trial’s two primary outcomes were mean change in NPI apathy score from baseline to 6 months and the odds of an improved rating on the Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study Clinical Global Impression of Change (ADCS-CGIC) between baseline and 6 months.

Significant change on either outcome was to be considered a signal of effective treatment.
 

Treatment-specific benefit

Ten patients in the methylphenidate group and seven in the placebo group withdrew during the study.

Mean MMSE score at baseline was 19.2 in the methylphenidate group vs. 18.5 in the placebo group, indicating moderately severe dementia. Mean baseline score on the NPI apathy subscale was 8.0 vs. 7.6, respectively.

In an adjusted, longitudinal model, mean between-group difference in change in NPI apathy score at 6 months was –1.25 (P = .002). The mean NPI apathy score decreased by 4.5 points in the methylphenidate group vs. 3.1 points in the placebo group.

The largest change in apathy score occurred during the first 2 months of treatment. At 6 months, 27% of the methylphenidate group vs. 14% of the placebo group had an NPI apathy score of 0.

In addition, 43.8% of the methylphenidate group had improvement on the ADCS-CGIC compared with 35.2% of the placebo group. The odds ratio (OR) for improvement on ADCS-CGIC for methylphenidate vs. placebo was 1.90 (P = .07).

There was also a strong association between score improvement on the NPI apathy subscale and improvement on the ADCS-CGIC subscale (OR, 2.95; P = .002).

“It is important to note that there were no group differences in any of the cognitive measures, suggesting that the effect of the treatment is specific to the treatment of apathy and not a secondary effect of improvement in cognition,” the researchers wrote.

In all, 17 serious adverse events occurred in the methylphenidate group and 10 occurred in the placebo group. However, all events were found to be hospitalizations for events not related to treatment.
 

 

 

‘Enduring effect’

Commenting on the findings, Jeffrey L. Cummings, MD, ScD, professor of brain sciences at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, noted that the reduction in NPI apathy subscale score of more than 50% was clinically meaningful.

Dr. Jeffrey L. Cummings

A more robust outcome on the ADCS-CGIC would have been desirable, he added, although that instrument is not designed specifically for apathy.

Methylphenidate’s effect on apathy observed at 2 months and remaining stable throughout the study makes it appear to be “an enduring effect, and not something that the patient accommodates to,” said Dr. Cummings, who was not involved with the research. Such a change may manifest itself in a patient’s greater willingness to help voluntarily with housework or to suggest going for a walk, he noted.

“These are not dramatic changes in cognition, of course, but they are changes in initiative and that is very important,” Dr. Cummings said. Decreased apathy also may improve quality of life for the patient’s caregiver, he added.

Overall, the findings raise the question of whether the Food and Drug Administration should recognize apathy as an indication for which drugs can be approved, said Dr. Cummings.

“For me, that would be the next major step in this line of investigation,” he concluded.

The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging. Dr. Mintzer has served as an adviser to Praxis Bioresearch and Cerevel Therapeutics on matters unrelated to this study. Dr. Cummings is the author of the Neuropsychiatric Inventory but does not receive payments for it from academic trials such as ADMET 2.
 

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

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More than half of U.S. children under 6 years show detectable blood lead levels

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Lead poisoning remains a significant threat to the health of young children in the United States, based on data from blood tests of more than 1 million children.

Any level of lead is potentially harmful, although blood lead levels have decreased over the past several decades in part because of the elimination of lead from many consumer products, as well as from gas, paint, and plumbing fixtures, wrote Marissa Hauptman, MD, of Boston Children’s Hospital and colleagues.

However, “numerous environmental sources of legacy lead still exist,” and children living in poverty and in older housing in particular remain at increased risk for lead exposure, they noted.

In a study published in JAMA Pediatrics, the researchers analyzed deidentified results from blood lead tests performed at a single clinical laboratory for 1,141,441 children younger than 6 years between Oct. 1, 2018, and Feb. 29, 2020. The mean age of the children was 2.3 years; approximately half were boys.

Overall, 50.5% of the children tested (576,092 children) had detectable blood lead levels (BLLs), defined as 1.0 mcg/dL or higher, and 1.9% (21,172 children) had elevated BLLs, defined as 5.0 mcg/dL or higher.

In multivariate analysis, both detectable BLLs and elevated BLLs were significantly more common among children with public insurance (adjusted odds ratios, 2.01 and 1.08, respectively).

Children in the highest vs. lowest quintile of pre-1950s housing had significantly greater odds of both detectable and elevated BLLs (aOR, 1.65 and aOR, 3.06); those in the highest vs. lowest quintiles of poverty showed similarly increased risk of detectable and elevated BLLs (aOR, 1.89 and aOR, 1.99, respectively; P < .001 for all).

When the data were broken out by ZIP code, children in predominantly Black non-Hispanic and non-Latino neighborhoods were more likely than those living in other ZIP codes to have detectable BLLs (aOR, 1.13), but less likely to have elevated BLLs (aOR, 0.83). States with the highest overall proportions of children with detectable BLLs were Nebraska (83%), Missouri (82%), and Michigan (78%).

The study findings were limited by several factors, especially the potential for selection bias because of the use of a single reference laboratory (Quest Diagnostics), that does not perform all lead testing in the United States, the researchers noted. Other limitations included variability in testing at the state level, and the use of ZIP code–level data to estimate race, ethnicity, housing, and poverty, they said.

However, the results suggest that lead exposure remains a problem in young children, with significant disparities at the individual and community level, and national efforts must focus on further reductions of lead exposure in areas of highest risk, they concluded.
 

Step up lead elimination efforts

“The removal of lead from gasoline and new paint produced a precipitous decrease in blood lead levels from a population mean of 17 mcg/dL (all ages) in 1976 to 4 mcg/dL in the early 1990s to less than 2 mcg/dL today,” wrote Philip J. Landrigan, MD, of Boston College and David Bellinger, PhD, of Harvard University, Boston, in an accompanying editorial. However, “The findings from this study underscore the urgent need to eliminate all sources of lead exposure from U.S. children’s environments,” and highlight the persistent disparities in children’s lead exposure, they said.

The authors emphasized the need to remove existing lead paint from U.S. homes, as not only the paint itself, but the dust that enters the environment as the pain wears over time, continue to account for most detectable and elevated BLLs in children. A comprehensive lead paint removal effort would be an investment that would protect children now and would protect future generations, they emphasized. They proposed “creating a lead paint removal workforce through federally supported partnerships between city governments and major unions,” that would not only protect children from disease and disability, but could potentially provide jobs and vocational programs that would have a significant impact on communities.
 

Elevated lead levels may be underreported

In fact, the situation of children’s lead exposure in the United States may be more severe than indicated by the study findings, given the variation in testing at the state and local levels, said Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a pediatrician in private practice in Cheshire, Conn.

“There are no available lead test kits in our offices, so I do worry that many elevated lead levels will be missed,” she said.

“The recent case of elevated lead levels in drinking water in Flint, Michigan, was largely detected through pediatric clinic screening and showed that elevated lead levels may remain a major issue in some communities,” said Tim Joos, MD, a clinician in combined internal medicine/pediatrics in Seattle, Wash., in an interview.

“It is important to highlight to what extent baseline and point-source lead contamination still exists, monitor progress towards lowering levels, and identify communities at high risk,” Dr. Joos emphasized. “The exact prevalence of elevated lead levels among the general pediatric populations is hard to estimate from this study because of the methodology, which looked at demographic characteristics of the subset of the pediatric population that had venous samples sent to Quest Lab,” he noted.

“As the authors pointed out, it is hard to know what biases went into deciding whether to screen or not, and whether these were confirmatory tests for elevated point of care testing done earlier in the clinic,” said Dr. Joos. “Nonetheless, it does point to the role of poverty and pre-1950s housing in elevated blood lead levels,” he added. “The study also highlights that, as the CDC considers lowering the level for what is considered an ‘elevated blood lead level’ from 5.0 to perhaps 3.5 mcg/dL, we still have a lot more work to do,” he said.

The study was funded by Quest Diagnostics and the company provided salaries to several coauthors during the study. Dr. Hauptmann disclosed support from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences during the current study and support from the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency unrelated to the current study. Dr. Landrigan had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Bellinger disclosed fees from attorneys for testimony in cases unrelated to the editorial. Dr. Kinsella had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Pediatric News. Dr. Joos had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the Pediatric News Editorial Advisory Board.

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Lead poisoning remains a significant threat to the health of young children in the United States, based on data from blood tests of more than 1 million children.

Any level of lead is potentially harmful, although blood lead levels have decreased over the past several decades in part because of the elimination of lead from many consumer products, as well as from gas, paint, and plumbing fixtures, wrote Marissa Hauptman, MD, of Boston Children’s Hospital and colleagues.

However, “numerous environmental sources of legacy lead still exist,” and children living in poverty and in older housing in particular remain at increased risk for lead exposure, they noted.

In a study published in JAMA Pediatrics, the researchers analyzed deidentified results from blood lead tests performed at a single clinical laboratory for 1,141,441 children younger than 6 years between Oct. 1, 2018, and Feb. 29, 2020. The mean age of the children was 2.3 years; approximately half were boys.

Overall, 50.5% of the children tested (576,092 children) had detectable blood lead levels (BLLs), defined as 1.0 mcg/dL or higher, and 1.9% (21,172 children) had elevated BLLs, defined as 5.0 mcg/dL or higher.

In multivariate analysis, both detectable BLLs and elevated BLLs were significantly more common among children with public insurance (adjusted odds ratios, 2.01 and 1.08, respectively).

Children in the highest vs. lowest quintile of pre-1950s housing had significantly greater odds of both detectable and elevated BLLs (aOR, 1.65 and aOR, 3.06); those in the highest vs. lowest quintiles of poverty showed similarly increased risk of detectable and elevated BLLs (aOR, 1.89 and aOR, 1.99, respectively; P < .001 for all).

When the data were broken out by ZIP code, children in predominantly Black non-Hispanic and non-Latino neighborhoods were more likely than those living in other ZIP codes to have detectable BLLs (aOR, 1.13), but less likely to have elevated BLLs (aOR, 0.83). States with the highest overall proportions of children with detectable BLLs were Nebraska (83%), Missouri (82%), and Michigan (78%).

The study findings were limited by several factors, especially the potential for selection bias because of the use of a single reference laboratory (Quest Diagnostics), that does not perform all lead testing in the United States, the researchers noted. Other limitations included variability in testing at the state level, and the use of ZIP code–level data to estimate race, ethnicity, housing, and poverty, they said.

However, the results suggest that lead exposure remains a problem in young children, with significant disparities at the individual and community level, and national efforts must focus on further reductions of lead exposure in areas of highest risk, they concluded.
 

Step up lead elimination efforts

“The removal of lead from gasoline and new paint produced a precipitous decrease in blood lead levels from a population mean of 17 mcg/dL (all ages) in 1976 to 4 mcg/dL in the early 1990s to less than 2 mcg/dL today,” wrote Philip J. Landrigan, MD, of Boston College and David Bellinger, PhD, of Harvard University, Boston, in an accompanying editorial. However, “The findings from this study underscore the urgent need to eliminate all sources of lead exposure from U.S. children’s environments,” and highlight the persistent disparities in children’s lead exposure, they said.

The authors emphasized the need to remove existing lead paint from U.S. homes, as not only the paint itself, but the dust that enters the environment as the pain wears over time, continue to account for most detectable and elevated BLLs in children. A comprehensive lead paint removal effort would be an investment that would protect children now and would protect future generations, they emphasized. They proposed “creating a lead paint removal workforce through federally supported partnerships between city governments and major unions,” that would not only protect children from disease and disability, but could potentially provide jobs and vocational programs that would have a significant impact on communities.
 

Elevated lead levels may be underreported

In fact, the situation of children’s lead exposure in the United States may be more severe than indicated by the study findings, given the variation in testing at the state and local levels, said Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a pediatrician in private practice in Cheshire, Conn.

“There are no available lead test kits in our offices, so I do worry that many elevated lead levels will be missed,” she said.

“The recent case of elevated lead levels in drinking water in Flint, Michigan, was largely detected through pediatric clinic screening and showed that elevated lead levels may remain a major issue in some communities,” said Tim Joos, MD, a clinician in combined internal medicine/pediatrics in Seattle, Wash., in an interview.

“It is important to highlight to what extent baseline and point-source lead contamination still exists, monitor progress towards lowering levels, and identify communities at high risk,” Dr. Joos emphasized. “The exact prevalence of elevated lead levels among the general pediatric populations is hard to estimate from this study because of the methodology, which looked at demographic characteristics of the subset of the pediatric population that had venous samples sent to Quest Lab,” he noted.

“As the authors pointed out, it is hard to know what biases went into deciding whether to screen or not, and whether these were confirmatory tests for elevated point of care testing done earlier in the clinic,” said Dr. Joos. “Nonetheless, it does point to the role of poverty and pre-1950s housing in elevated blood lead levels,” he added. “The study also highlights that, as the CDC considers lowering the level for what is considered an ‘elevated blood lead level’ from 5.0 to perhaps 3.5 mcg/dL, we still have a lot more work to do,” he said.

The study was funded by Quest Diagnostics and the company provided salaries to several coauthors during the study. Dr. Hauptmann disclosed support from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences during the current study and support from the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency unrelated to the current study. Dr. Landrigan had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Bellinger disclosed fees from attorneys for testimony in cases unrelated to the editorial. Dr. Kinsella had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Pediatric News. Dr. Joos had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the Pediatric News Editorial Advisory Board.

Lead poisoning remains a significant threat to the health of young children in the United States, based on data from blood tests of more than 1 million children.

Any level of lead is potentially harmful, although blood lead levels have decreased over the past several decades in part because of the elimination of lead from many consumer products, as well as from gas, paint, and plumbing fixtures, wrote Marissa Hauptman, MD, of Boston Children’s Hospital and colleagues.

However, “numerous environmental sources of legacy lead still exist,” and children living in poverty and in older housing in particular remain at increased risk for lead exposure, they noted.

In a study published in JAMA Pediatrics, the researchers analyzed deidentified results from blood lead tests performed at a single clinical laboratory for 1,141,441 children younger than 6 years between Oct. 1, 2018, and Feb. 29, 2020. The mean age of the children was 2.3 years; approximately half were boys.

Overall, 50.5% of the children tested (576,092 children) had detectable blood lead levels (BLLs), defined as 1.0 mcg/dL or higher, and 1.9% (21,172 children) had elevated BLLs, defined as 5.0 mcg/dL or higher.

In multivariate analysis, both detectable BLLs and elevated BLLs were significantly more common among children with public insurance (adjusted odds ratios, 2.01 and 1.08, respectively).

Children in the highest vs. lowest quintile of pre-1950s housing had significantly greater odds of both detectable and elevated BLLs (aOR, 1.65 and aOR, 3.06); those in the highest vs. lowest quintiles of poverty showed similarly increased risk of detectable and elevated BLLs (aOR, 1.89 and aOR, 1.99, respectively; P < .001 for all).

When the data were broken out by ZIP code, children in predominantly Black non-Hispanic and non-Latino neighborhoods were more likely than those living in other ZIP codes to have detectable BLLs (aOR, 1.13), but less likely to have elevated BLLs (aOR, 0.83). States with the highest overall proportions of children with detectable BLLs were Nebraska (83%), Missouri (82%), and Michigan (78%).

The study findings were limited by several factors, especially the potential for selection bias because of the use of a single reference laboratory (Quest Diagnostics), that does not perform all lead testing in the United States, the researchers noted. Other limitations included variability in testing at the state level, and the use of ZIP code–level data to estimate race, ethnicity, housing, and poverty, they said.

However, the results suggest that lead exposure remains a problem in young children, with significant disparities at the individual and community level, and national efforts must focus on further reductions of lead exposure in areas of highest risk, they concluded.
 

Step up lead elimination efforts

“The removal of lead from gasoline and new paint produced a precipitous decrease in blood lead levels from a population mean of 17 mcg/dL (all ages) in 1976 to 4 mcg/dL in the early 1990s to less than 2 mcg/dL today,” wrote Philip J. Landrigan, MD, of Boston College and David Bellinger, PhD, of Harvard University, Boston, in an accompanying editorial. However, “The findings from this study underscore the urgent need to eliminate all sources of lead exposure from U.S. children’s environments,” and highlight the persistent disparities in children’s lead exposure, they said.

The authors emphasized the need to remove existing lead paint from U.S. homes, as not only the paint itself, but the dust that enters the environment as the pain wears over time, continue to account for most detectable and elevated BLLs in children. A comprehensive lead paint removal effort would be an investment that would protect children now and would protect future generations, they emphasized. They proposed “creating a lead paint removal workforce through federally supported partnerships between city governments and major unions,” that would not only protect children from disease and disability, but could potentially provide jobs and vocational programs that would have a significant impact on communities.
 

Elevated lead levels may be underreported

In fact, the situation of children’s lead exposure in the United States may be more severe than indicated by the study findings, given the variation in testing at the state and local levels, said Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a pediatrician in private practice in Cheshire, Conn.

“There are no available lead test kits in our offices, so I do worry that many elevated lead levels will be missed,” she said.

“The recent case of elevated lead levels in drinking water in Flint, Michigan, was largely detected through pediatric clinic screening and showed that elevated lead levels may remain a major issue in some communities,” said Tim Joos, MD, a clinician in combined internal medicine/pediatrics in Seattle, Wash., in an interview.

“It is important to highlight to what extent baseline and point-source lead contamination still exists, monitor progress towards lowering levels, and identify communities at high risk,” Dr. Joos emphasized. “The exact prevalence of elevated lead levels among the general pediatric populations is hard to estimate from this study because of the methodology, which looked at demographic characteristics of the subset of the pediatric population that had venous samples sent to Quest Lab,” he noted.

“As the authors pointed out, it is hard to know what biases went into deciding whether to screen or not, and whether these were confirmatory tests for elevated point of care testing done earlier in the clinic,” said Dr. Joos. “Nonetheless, it does point to the role of poverty and pre-1950s housing in elevated blood lead levels,” he added. “The study also highlights that, as the CDC considers lowering the level for what is considered an ‘elevated blood lead level’ from 5.0 to perhaps 3.5 mcg/dL, we still have a lot more work to do,” he said.

The study was funded by Quest Diagnostics and the company provided salaries to several coauthors during the study. Dr. Hauptmann disclosed support from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences during the current study and support from the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency unrelated to the current study. Dr. Landrigan had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Bellinger disclosed fees from attorneys for testimony in cases unrelated to the editorial. Dr. Kinsella had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the Editorial Advisory Board of Pediatric News. Dr. Joos had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the Pediatric News Editorial Advisory Board.

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