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MDedge conference coverage features onsite reporting of the latest study results and expert perspectives from leading researchers.
Four PTSD blood biomarkers identified
“More accurate means of predicting or screening for PTSD could help to overcome the disorder by identifying individuals at high risk of developing PTSD and providing them with early intervention or prevention strategies,” said study investigator Stacy-Ann Miller, MS.
She also noted that the biomarkers could be used to monitor treatment for PTSD, identify subtypes of PTSD, and lead to a new understanding of the mechanisms underlying PTSD.
The findings were presented at Discover BMB, the annual meeting of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
Toward better clinical assessment
The findings originated from research conducted by the Department of Defense–initiated PTSD Systems Biology Consortium. The consortium’s goals include developing a reproducible panel of blood-based biomarkers with high sensitivity and specificity for PTSD diagnosis and is made up of about 45 researchers, led by Marti Jett, PhD, Charles Marmar, MD, and Francis J. Doyle III, PhD.
The researchers analyzed blood samples from 1,000 active-duty Army personnel from the 101st Airborne at Fort Campbell, Ky. Participants were assessed before and after deployment to Afghanistan in February 2014 and are referred to as the Fort Campbell Cohort (FCC). Participants’ age ranged from 25 to 30 and approximately 6% were female.
Investigators collected blood samples from the service members and looked for four biomarkers: glycolytic ratio, arginine, serotonin, and glutamate. The team then divided the participants into four groups – those with PTSD (PTSD Checklist score above 30), those who were subthreshold for PTSD (PTSD Checklist score 15-30), those who had high resilience, and those who had low levels of resilience.
The resilience groups were determined based on answers to the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire, Patient Health Questionnaire, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Intensive Combat Exposure (DRRI-D), the number of deployments, whether they had moderate or severe traumatic brain injury, and scores on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test.
Those who scored in the high range at current or prior time points or who were PTSD/subthreshold at prior time points were placed in the low resilience group.
Ms. Miller noted that those in the PTSD group had more severe symptoms than those in the PTSD subthreshold group based on the longitudinal clinical assessment at 3-6 months, 5 years, and longer post deployment. The low resilience group had a much higher rate of PTSD post deployment than the high resilience group.
Investigators found participants with PTSD or subthreshold PTSD had significantly higher glycolic ratios and lower arginine than those with high resilience. They also found that those with PTSD had significantly lower serotonin and higher glutamate levels versus those with high resilience. These associations were independent of factors such as sex, age, body mass index, smoking, and caffeine consumption.
Ms. Miller said that the study results require further validation by the consortium’s labs and third-party labs.
“We are also interested in determining the most appropriate time to screen soldiers for PTSD, as it has been noted that the time period where we see the most psychological issues is around 2-3 months post return from deployment and when the soldier is preparing for their next assignment, perhaps a next deployment,” she said.
She added that previous studies have identified several promising biomarkers of PTSD. “However, like much of the research data, the study sample was comprised mainly of combat-exposed males. With more women serving on the front lines, the military faces new challenges in how combat affects females in the military,” including sex-specific biomarkers that will improve clinical assessment for female soldiers.
Eventually, the team would also like to be able to apply their research to the civilian population experiencing PTSD.
“Our research is anticipated to be useful in helping the medical provider select appropriate therapeutic interventions,” Ms. Miller said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
“More accurate means of predicting or screening for PTSD could help to overcome the disorder by identifying individuals at high risk of developing PTSD and providing them with early intervention or prevention strategies,” said study investigator Stacy-Ann Miller, MS.
She also noted that the biomarkers could be used to monitor treatment for PTSD, identify subtypes of PTSD, and lead to a new understanding of the mechanisms underlying PTSD.
The findings were presented at Discover BMB, the annual meeting of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
Toward better clinical assessment
The findings originated from research conducted by the Department of Defense–initiated PTSD Systems Biology Consortium. The consortium’s goals include developing a reproducible panel of blood-based biomarkers with high sensitivity and specificity for PTSD diagnosis and is made up of about 45 researchers, led by Marti Jett, PhD, Charles Marmar, MD, and Francis J. Doyle III, PhD.
The researchers analyzed blood samples from 1,000 active-duty Army personnel from the 101st Airborne at Fort Campbell, Ky. Participants were assessed before and after deployment to Afghanistan in February 2014 and are referred to as the Fort Campbell Cohort (FCC). Participants’ age ranged from 25 to 30 and approximately 6% were female.
Investigators collected blood samples from the service members and looked for four biomarkers: glycolytic ratio, arginine, serotonin, and glutamate. The team then divided the participants into four groups – those with PTSD (PTSD Checklist score above 30), those who were subthreshold for PTSD (PTSD Checklist score 15-30), those who had high resilience, and those who had low levels of resilience.
The resilience groups were determined based on answers to the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire, Patient Health Questionnaire, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Intensive Combat Exposure (DRRI-D), the number of deployments, whether they had moderate or severe traumatic brain injury, and scores on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test.
Those who scored in the high range at current or prior time points or who were PTSD/subthreshold at prior time points were placed in the low resilience group.
Ms. Miller noted that those in the PTSD group had more severe symptoms than those in the PTSD subthreshold group based on the longitudinal clinical assessment at 3-6 months, 5 years, and longer post deployment. The low resilience group had a much higher rate of PTSD post deployment than the high resilience group.
Investigators found participants with PTSD or subthreshold PTSD had significantly higher glycolic ratios and lower arginine than those with high resilience. They also found that those with PTSD had significantly lower serotonin and higher glutamate levels versus those with high resilience. These associations were independent of factors such as sex, age, body mass index, smoking, and caffeine consumption.
Ms. Miller said that the study results require further validation by the consortium’s labs and third-party labs.
“We are also interested in determining the most appropriate time to screen soldiers for PTSD, as it has been noted that the time period where we see the most psychological issues is around 2-3 months post return from deployment and when the soldier is preparing for their next assignment, perhaps a next deployment,” she said.
She added that previous studies have identified several promising biomarkers of PTSD. “However, like much of the research data, the study sample was comprised mainly of combat-exposed males. With more women serving on the front lines, the military faces new challenges in how combat affects females in the military,” including sex-specific biomarkers that will improve clinical assessment for female soldiers.
Eventually, the team would also like to be able to apply their research to the civilian population experiencing PTSD.
“Our research is anticipated to be useful in helping the medical provider select appropriate therapeutic interventions,” Ms. Miller said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
“More accurate means of predicting or screening for PTSD could help to overcome the disorder by identifying individuals at high risk of developing PTSD and providing them with early intervention or prevention strategies,” said study investigator Stacy-Ann Miller, MS.
She also noted that the biomarkers could be used to monitor treatment for PTSD, identify subtypes of PTSD, and lead to a new understanding of the mechanisms underlying PTSD.
The findings were presented at Discover BMB, the annual meeting of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
Toward better clinical assessment
The findings originated from research conducted by the Department of Defense–initiated PTSD Systems Biology Consortium. The consortium’s goals include developing a reproducible panel of blood-based biomarkers with high sensitivity and specificity for PTSD diagnosis and is made up of about 45 researchers, led by Marti Jett, PhD, Charles Marmar, MD, and Francis J. Doyle III, PhD.
The researchers analyzed blood samples from 1,000 active-duty Army personnel from the 101st Airborne at Fort Campbell, Ky. Participants were assessed before and after deployment to Afghanistan in February 2014 and are referred to as the Fort Campbell Cohort (FCC). Participants’ age ranged from 25 to 30 and approximately 6% were female.
Investigators collected blood samples from the service members and looked for four biomarkers: glycolytic ratio, arginine, serotonin, and glutamate. The team then divided the participants into four groups – those with PTSD (PTSD Checklist score above 30), those who were subthreshold for PTSD (PTSD Checklist score 15-30), those who had high resilience, and those who had low levels of resilience.
The resilience groups were determined based on answers to the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire, Patient Health Questionnaire, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Intensive Combat Exposure (DRRI-D), the number of deployments, whether they had moderate or severe traumatic brain injury, and scores on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test.
Those who scored in the high range at current or prior time points or who were PTSD/subthreshold at prior time points were placed in the low resilience group.
Ms. Miller noted that those in the PTSD group had more severe symptoms than those in the PTSD subthreshold group based on the longitudinal clinical assessment at 3-6 months, 5 years, and longer post deployment. The low resilience group had a much higher rate of PTSD post deployment than the high resilience group.
Investigators found participants with PTSD or subthreshold PTSD had significantly higher glycolic ratios and lower arginine than those with high resilience. They also found that those with PTSD had significantly lower serotonin and higher glutamate levels versus those with high resilience. These associations were independent of factors such as sex, age, body mass index, smoking, and caffeine consumption.
Ms. Miller said that the study results require further validation by the consortium’s labs and third-party labs.
“We are also interested in determining the most appropriate time to screen soldiers for PTSD, as it has been noted that the time period where we see the most psychological issues is around 2-3 months post return from deployment and when the soldier is preparing for their next assignment, perhaps a next deployment,” she said.
She added that previous studies have identified several promising biomarkers of PTSD. “However, like much of the research data, the study sample was comprised mainly of combat-exposed males. With more women serving on the front lines, the military faces new challenges in how combat affects females in the military,” including sex-specific biomarkers that will improve clinical assessment for female soldiers.
Eventually, the team would also like to be able to apply their research to the civilian population experiencing PTSD.
“Our research is anticipated to be useful in helping the medical provider select appropriate therapeutic interventions,” Ms. Miller said.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM DISCOVER BMB
Practicing ethical medicine ‘is a requirement,’ not a luxury, expert says
NEW ORLEANS – , but results from a national survey of dermatology residency program directors suggest that ethics training is not a priority.
Of the 139 dermatology residency program or associate program directors surveyed in 2022, only 43% responded. Of these, 55% said that their program had no ethics curriculum. Among programs with an ethics curriculum, 75% were implemented in the past 10 years, and the most common settings for teaching ethics were formal didactics (32%) and ad hoc during clinical encounters (28%). Reported barriers to implementing and/or maintaining an ethics curriculum included a lack of time (30%), lack of faculty with expertise (24%), and lack of useful resources (20%).
“Clearly, medical ethics is needed more to be part of our dermatology residency curriculum,” one of the study authors, Jane M. Grant-Kels, MD, professor of dermatology, pathology, and pediatrics, and founding chair of dermatology at the University of Connecticut, Farmington, said during a plenary lecture at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. “Why? Because even though we’re physicians, and some of us have big egos, we are just human beings. We have all the faults and frailties of other humans. What we do as doctors often has unintended consequences that impact patients and society at large.”
Dr. Grant-Kels, one of the editors of the textbook “Dermatoethics”, said that, while she does not believe that physicians are intentionally unethical, “we stumble into bad behavior because we fool ourselves. We think that we are ethical. We think our colleagues are ethical, and we don’t view them with a clear, transparent eye. This is referred to as ethical fading or bounded ethicality.”
Similar to religion and good behavior, one can’t really teach someone to be ethical, she continued. “But you can teach people to think about ethics and to recognize an ethical dilemma when they’re in one,” she said. “Most articles that are available [pertain to] whether ethics can be taught or not, but there are very few resources available on how to actually teach ethics.”
That, she added, has been her goal for the last 2 decades: “How do I teach ethics without sounding like I’m more ethical than anybody else, and how do I make it relevant and fun? It’s a difficult challenge.”
Pillars of medical ethics
Dr. Grant-Kels defined ethics as a way of determining how individuals ought to act based on concepts of right and wrong. An ethical dilemma is when an individual faces two competing possibilities: either both justifiable or both unjustifiable, and you have to make a decision. The four pillars of medical ethics, she noted, are beneficence (the notion that the patient’s best interests come first); nonmaleficence (do no intentional harm); autonomy (the patient’s right to refuse or choose a treatment); and justice (fairness in how health care is distributed).
“Medical ethics are the moral principles by which physicians should conduct themselves,” she said. “There is normative ethics, which involves decisions about which moral norms or ethical arguments should we accept and why; and applied ethics, or applications of these norms to specific problems or cases. No ethics is better than bad ethics, and we can see that even in today’s world. The lack of ethics, or poor ethics, or the wrong ethics has terrible consequences.”
Ethics instruction
Dr. Grant-Kels provided a “top 10 list” of tips for incorporating ethics instruction into dermatology residency programs and clinical practices:
- Make room for ethics in your curriculum. “It’s not science, and it needs to be discussed and developed with faculty and residents,” she said.
- Focus on real situations that residents will experience. Discuss what you should do, what you might have done, and why.
- Share stories and be truthful. Include other faculty members, “because you need different perspectives,” she said.
- Go beyond what is right and wrong, and the rationale. “You have to talk about the impact, because decisions you make have unintended consequences for individual patients and for patient care in general,” Dr. Grant-Kels said.
- Practice, practice, practice. Make time for discussions involving ethics, “because it takes a lot of education to be able to identify ethical issues and process them,” she said. “The truth is, we can rationalize almost anything and convince ourselves that we made the right choice. That’s why we need to continue to practice good ethics.”
- Challenge the residents. “Decisions are not always straightforward,” she said. “Pressures push us and we start to justify small decisions and then bigger decisions. This is a very gray zone. What’s ethical for one person may not be ethical to another.”
- Encourage residents and colleagues to ask the right questions and give them confidence to make the right decisions. “We have to work in an environment of ethics,” Dr. Grant-Kels said. “Many of us are role models, and we are not always behaving the way we should be. As role models, we need to be aware of that.”
- Expose residents to a variety of issues. Ethics vary depending on the situation, the people involved, and the information presented.
- Ethics cannot just come up in an ethics class. “We need to foster a culture of ethics,” she said. “If things go wrong and unethical behavior is noted, it needs to be brought to the floor and discussed.”
- Discuss the misguided pursuit of happiness and ethical decision-making. In the opinion of Dr. Grant-Kels, people can behave badly when they’re pursuing something like a career advancement, a new house, or an expensive object like a car or a boat. “They think that if they get that job or get that promotion or if they buy that big house or they buy that sports car, they’re going to be really happy,” she said.
“That’s called impact bias, which causes focalism, where you focus on that one thing, like ‘I’m going to make a lot of money’ or ‘I’m going to buy that big house on the mountain.’ The truth is, buying that car doesn’t make you happy. Buying that big house doesn’t make you happy. We need to combat focalism with professionalism, which means conducting oneself with responsibility, integrity, accountability, and excellence. Practicing ethical medicine is not a luxury; it’s a requirement. We should all try for aspirational ethics.”
Dr. Grant-Kels reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
NEW ORLEANS – , but results from a national survey of dermatology residency program directors suggest that ethics training is not a priority.
Of the 139 dermatology residency program or associate program directors surveyed in 2022, only 43% responded. Of these, 55% said that their program had no ethics curriculum. Among programs with an ethics curriculum, 75% were implemented in the past 10 years, and the most common settings for teaching ethics were formal didactics (32%) and ad hoc during clinical encounters (28%). Reported barriers to implementing and/or maintaining an ethics curriculum included a lack of time (30%), lack of faculty with expertise (24%), and lack of useful resources (20%).
“Clearly, medical ethics is needed more to be part of our dermatology residency curriculum,” one of the study authors, Jane M. Grant-Kels, MD, professor of dermatology, pathology, and pediatrics, and founding chair of dermatology at the University of Connecticut, Farmington, said during a plenary lecture at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. “Why? Because even though we’re physicians, and some of us have big egos, we are just human beings. We have all the faults and frailties of other humans. What we do as doctors often has unintended consequences that impact patients and society at large.”
Dr. Grant-Kels, one of the editors of the textbook “Dermatoethics”, said that, while she does not believe that physicians are intentionally unethical, “we stumble into bad behavior because we fool ourselves. We think that we are ethical. We think our colleagues are ethical, and we don’t view them with a clear, transparent eye. This is referred to as ethical fading or bounded ethicality.”
Similar to religion and good behavior, one can’t really teach someone to be ethical, she continued. “But you can teach people to think about ethics and to recognize an ethical dilemma when they’re in one,” she said. “Most articles that are available [pertain to] whether ethics can be taught or not, but there are very few resources available on how to actually teach ethics.”
That, she added, has been her goal for the last 2 decades: “How do I teach ethics without sounding like I’m more ethical than anybody else, and how do I make it relevant and fun? It’s a difficult challenge.”
Pillars of medical ethics
Dr. Grant-Kels defined ethics as a way of determining how individuals ought to act based on concepts of right and wrong. An ethical dilemma is when an individual faces two competing possibilities: either both justifiable or both unjustifiable, and you have to make a decision. The four pillars of medical ethics, she noted, are beneficence (the notion that the patient’s best interests come first); nonmaleficence (do no intentional harm); autonomy (the patient’s right to refuse or choose a treatment); and justice (fairness in how health care is distributed).
“Medical ethics are the moral principles by which physicians should conduct themselves,” she said. “There is normative ethics, which involves decisions about which moral norms or ethical arguments should we accept and why; and applied ethics, or applications of these norms to specific problems or cases. No ethics is better than bad ethics, and we can see that even in today’s world. The lack of ethics, or poor ethics, or the wrong ethics has terrible consequences.”
Ethics instruction
Dr. Grant-Kels provided a “top 10 list” of tips for incorporating ethics instruction into dermatology residency programs and clinical practices:
- Make room for ethics in your curriculum. “It’s not science, and it needs to be discussed and developed with faculty and residents,” she said.
- Focus on real situations that residents will experience. Discuss what you should do, what you might have done, and why.
- Share stories and be truthful. Include other faculty members, “because you need different perspectives,” she said.
- Go beyond what is right and wrong, and the rationale. “You have to talk about the impact, because decisions you make have unintended consequences for individual patients and for patient care in general,” Dr. Grant-Kels said.
- Practice, practice, practice. Make time for discussions involving ethics, “because it takes a lot of education to be able to identify ethical issues and process them,” she said. “The truth is, we can rationalize almost anything and convince ourselves that we made the right choice. That’s why we need to continue to practice good ethics.”
- Challenge the residents. “Decisions are not always straightforward,” she said. “Pressures push us and we start to justify small decisions and then bigger decisions. This is a very gray zone. What’s ethical for one person may not be ethical to another.”
- Encourage residents and colleagues to ask the right questions and give them confidence to make the right decisions. “We have to work in an environment of ethics,” Dr. Grant-Kels said. “Many of us are role models, and we are not always behaving the way we should be. As role models, we need to be aware of that.”
- Expose residents to a variety of issues. Ethics vary depending on the situation, the people involved, and the information presented.
- Ethics cannot just come up in an ethics class. “We need to foster a culture of ethics,” she said. “If things go wrong and unethical behavior is noted, it needs to be brought to the floor and discussed.”
- Discuss the misguided pursuit of happiness and ethical decision-making. In the opinion of Dr. Grant-Kels, people can behave badly when they’re pursuing something like a career advancement, a new house, or an expensive object like a car or a boat. “They think that if they get that job or get that promotion or if they buy that big house or they buy that sports car, they’re going to be really happy,” she said.
“That’s called impact bias, which causes focalism, where you focus on that one thing, like ‘I’m going to make a lot of money’ or ‘I’m going to buy that big house on the mountain.’ The truth is, buying that car doesn’t make you happy. Buying that big house doesn’t make you happy. We need to combat focalism with professionalism, which means conducting oneself with responsibility, integrity, accountability, and excellence. Practicing ethical medicine is not a luxury; it’s a requirement. We should all try for aspirational ethics.”
Dr. Grant-Kels reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
NEW ORLEANS – , but results from a national survey of dermatology residency program directors suggest that ethics training is not a priority.
Of the 139 dermatology residency program or associate program directors surveyed in 2022, only 43% responded. Of these, 55% said that their program had no ethics curriculum. Among programs with an ethics curriculum, 75% were implemented in the past 10 years, and the most common settings for teaching ethics were formal didactics (32%) and ad hoc during clinical encounters (28%). Reported barriers to implementing and/or maintaining an ethics curriculum included a lack of time (30%), lack of faculty with expertise (24%), and lack of useful resources (20%).
“Clearly, medical ethics is needed more to be part of our dermatology residency curriculum,” one of the study authors, Jane M. Grant-Kels, MD, professor of dermatology, pathology, and pediatrics, and founding chair of dermatology at the University of Connecticut, Farmington, said during a plenary lecture at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. “Why? Because even though we’re physicians, and some of us have big egos, we are just human beings. We have all the faults and frailties of other humans. What we do as doctors often has unintended consequences that impact patients and society at large.”
Dr. Grant-Kels, one of the editors of the textbook “Dermatoethics”, said that, while she does not believe that physicians are intentionally unethical, “we stumble into bad behavior because we fool ourselves. We think that we are ethical. We think our colleagues are ethical, and we don’t view them with a clear, transparent eye. This is referred to as ethical fading or bounded ethicality.”
Similar to religion and good behavior, one can’t really teach someone to be ethical, she continued. “But you can teach people to think about ethics and to recognize an ethical dilemma when they’re in one,” she said. “Most articles that are available [pertain to] whether ethics can be taught or not, but there are very few resources available on how to actually teach ethics.”
That, she added, has been her goal for the last 2 decades: “How do I teach ethics without sounding like I’m more ethical than anybody else, and how do I make it relevant and fun? It’s a difficult challenge.”
Pillars of medical ethics
Dr. Grant-Kels defined ethics as a way of determining how individuals ought to act based on concepts of right and wrong. An ethical dilemma is when an individual faces two competing possibilities: either both justifiable or both unjustifiable, and you have to make a decision. The four pillars of medical ethics, she noted, are beneficence (the notion that the patient’s best interests come first); nonmaleficence (do no intentional harm); autonomy (the patient’s right to refuse or choose a treatment); and justice (fairness in how health care is distributed).
“Medical ethics are the moral principles by which physicians should conduct themselves,” she said. “There is normative ethics, which involves decisions about which moral norms or ethical arguments should we accept and why; and applied ethics, or applications of these norms to specific problems or cases. No ethics is better than bad ethics, and we can see that even in today’s world. The lack of ethics, or poor ethics, or the wrong ethics has terrible consequences.”
Ethics instruction
Dr. Grant-Kels provided a “top 10 list” of tips for incorporating ethics instruction into dermatology residency programs and clinical practices:
- Make room for ethics in your curriculum. “It’s not science, and it needs to be discussed and developed with faculty and residents,” she said.
- Focus on real situations that residents will experience. Discuss what you should do, what you might have done, and why.
- Share stories and be truthful. Include other faculty members, “because you need different perspectives,” she said.
- Go beyond what is right and wrong, and the rationale. “You have to talk about the impact, because decisions you make have unintended consequences for individual patients and for patient care in general,” Dr. Grant-Kels said.
- Practice, practice, practice. Make time for discussions involving ethics, “because it takes a lot of education to be able to identify ethical issues and process them,” she said. “The truth is, we can rationalize almost anything and convince ourselves that we made the right choice. That’s why we need to continue to practice good ethics.”
- Challenge the residents. “Decisions are not always straightforward,” she said. “Pressures push us and we start to justify small decisions and then bigger decisions. This is a very gray zone. What’s ethical for one person may not be ethical to another.”
- Encourage residents and colleagues to ask the right questions and give them confidence to make the right decisions. “We have to work in an environment of ethics,” Dr. Grant-Kels said. “Many of us are role models, and we are not always behaving the way we should be. As role models, we need to be aware of that.”
- Expose residents to a variety of issues. Ethics vary depending on the situation, the people involved, and the information presented.
- Ethics cannot just come up in an ethics class. “We need to foster a culture of ethics,” she said. “If things go wrong and unethical behavior is noted, it needs to be brought to the floor and discussed.”
- Discuss the misguided pursuit of happiness and ethical decision-making. In the opinion of Dr. Grant-Kels, people can behave badly when they’re pursuing something like a career advancement, a new house, or an expensive object like a car or a boat. “They think that if they get that job or get that promotion or if they buy that big house or they buy that sports car, they’re going to be really happy,” she said.
“That’s called impact bias, which causes focalism, where you focus on that one thing, like ‘I’m going to make a lot of money’ or ‘I’m going to buy that big house on the mountain.’ The truth is, buying that car doesn’t make you happy. Buying that big house doesn’t make you happy. We need to combat focalism with professionalism, which means conducting oneself with responsibility, integrity, accountability, and excellence. Practicing ethical medicine is not a luxury; it’s a requirement. We should all try for aspirational ethics.”
Dr. Grant-Kels reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
AT AAD 2023
Kidney disease skews Alzheimer’s biomarker testing
New research provides more evidence that
In a cross-sectional study of adults with and those without cognitive impairment, chronic kidney disease was associated with increased plasma concentrations of phosphorylated tau (p-tau) 217 and 181.
However, there were no associations between chronic kidney disease and the ratio of p-tau217 to unphosphorylated tau 217 (pT217/T217), and the associations with p-tau181 to unphosphorylated tau 181 (pT181/T181) were attenuated in patients with cognitive impairment.
“These novel findings suggest that plasma measures of the phosphorylated to unphosphorylated tau ratios are more accurate than p-tau forms alone as they correlate less with individual difference in glomerular filtration rate or impaired kidney function,” reported an investigative team led by Oskar Hansson, MD, PhD, with Lund University in Sweden.
“Thus, to mitigate the effects of non-Alzheimer’s–related comorbidities like chronic kidney disease on the performance of plasma Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers, certain tau ratios, and specifically pT217/T217, should be considered for implementation in clinical practice and drug trials,” they added.
The study was published online in JAMA Neurology to coincide with a presentation at the International Conference on Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Diseases in Gothenburg, Sweden.
Skewed tau levels
Plasma biomarkers of amyloid-beta (Abeta) and tau pathologies, and in particular variants in p-tau217 and p-tau181, have shown promise for use in Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis and prognosis. However, previous reports have suggested that chronic kidney disease might influence plasma p-tau217 and p-tau181 concentrations, potentially decreasing their usefulness in the diagnostic workup of dementia.
Researchers investigated associations of chronic kidney disease with plasma ratios of p-tau217 and p-tau181 to the corresponding unphosphorylated peptides in Alzheimer’s disease.
The data came from 473 older adults, with and without cognitive impairment, from the Swedish BioFinder-2 study who had plasma tau assessments and chronic kidney disease status established within 6 months of plasma collection.
The researchers found that lower estimated glomerular filtration rate levels (indicative of kidney dysfunction) were associated with higher plasma concentrations of phosphorylated and unphosphorylated tau peptides measured simultaneously using the tau immunoprecipitation mass spectrometry assay.
However, the correlations with estimated glomerular filtration rate were nonsignificant for the pT217/T217 ratio in individuals with cognitive impairment and were significantly attenuated for pT217/T217 in cognitively unimpaired individuals and for pT181/T181 in both cognitively unimpaired and impaired individuals.
“Importantly, we demonstrate that there were no significant associations between chronic kidney disease and the pT217/T217 ratio and changes in plasma pT181/T181 associated with chronic kidney disease were small or nonsignificant,” the researchers noted.
“Our results indicate that by using p-tau/tau ratios we may be able to reduce the variability in plasma p-tau levels driven by impaired kidney function and consequently such ratios are more robust measures of brain p-tau pathology in individuals with both early- and later-stage Alzheimer’s disease,” they added.
The researchers believe this is likely true for the ratios of other related proteins – a view that is supported by findings of attenuated associations of chronic kidney disease with Abeta42/40, compared with Abeta42 and Abeta40 in the current study and in previous studies.
Important clinical implications
Reached for comment, Rebecca Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association senior director of scientific engagement, noted that research continues to indicate that blood biomarkers have “promise for improving, and possibly even redefining, the clinical workup for Alzheimer’s disease.
“Many of the Alzheimer’s blood tests in development today have focused on core blood biomarkers associated with amyloid accumulation and tau tangle formation in the brain,” Dr. Edelmayer said.
“Before these tests can be used more broadly in the clinic, we need to understand all of the variables that may impact the results of various blood biomarkers, including differences that may be driven by race, ethnicity, sex, and underlying health conditions, such as chronic kidney disease.
“This study corroborates other research suggesting that some Alzheimer’s-associated markers can be affected by chronic kidney disease, but by using ratios of amyloid or tau markers, we may be able to minimize these differences in results caused by underlying disease,” Dr. Edelmayer said.
Howard Fillit, MD, cofounder and chief science officer at the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, said, “Using these ratios makes a lot of sense because the ratios wouldn’t change with kidney function. I think this is an important advance in clinical utilization of these tests.”
Dr. Fillit noted that older people often have declining kidney function, which can be easily measured by glomerular filtration rate. Changes in blood levels of these markers with declining kidney function are “not unexpected, but [it’s] important that it’s been demonstrated.
“As we go forward, maybe the future utilization of these tests will be not only recording the ratios but also reporting the ratios in the context of somebody’s glomerular filtration rate. You could imagine a scenario where when the test is done, it’s automatically done alongside of glomerular filtration rate,” Dr. Fillit said in an interview.
The study was supported by Coins for Alzheimer’s Research Trust, the Tracy Family Stable Isotope Labeling Quantitation Center, and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Dr. Hansson has received support to his institution from ADx, AVID Radiopharmaceuticals, Biogen, Eli Lilly, Eisai, Fujirebio, GE Healthcare, Pfizer, and Roche; consultancy/speaker fees from Amylyx, Alzpath, Biogen, Cerveau, Fujirebio, Genentech, Novartis, Roche, and Siemens; and personal fees from Eli Lilly, Eisai, Bioarctic, and Biogen outside the submitted work. Dr. Edelmayer and Dr. Fillit have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
New research provides more evidence that
In a cross-sectional study of adults with and those without cognitive impairment, chronic kidney disease was associated with increased plasma concentrations of phosphorylated tau (p-tau) 217 and 181.
However, there were no associations between chronic kidney disease and the ratio of p-tau217 to unphosphorylated tau 217 (pT217/T217), and the associations with p-tau181 to unphosphorylated tau 181 (pT181/T181) were attenuated in patients with cognitive impairment.
“These novel findings suggest that plasma measures of the phosphorylated to unphosphorylated tau ratios are more accurate than p-tau forms alone as they correlate less with individual difference in glomerular filtration rate or impaired kidney function,” reported an investigative team led by Oskar Hansson, MD, PhD, with Lund University in Sweden.
“Thus, to mitigate the effects of non-Alzheimer’s–related comorbidities like chronic kidney disease on the performance of plasma Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers, certain tau ratios, and specifically pT217/T217, should be considered for implementation in clinical practice and drug trials,” they added.
The study was published online in JAMA Neurology to coincide with a presentation at the International Conference on Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Diseases in Gothenburg, Sweden.
Skewed tau levels
Plasma biomarkers of amyloid-beta (Abeta) and tau pathologies, and in particular variants in p-tau217 and p-tau181, have shown promise for use in Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis and prognosis. However, previous reports have suggested that chronic kidney disease might influence plasma p-tau217 and p-tau181 concentrations, potentially decreasing their usefulness in the diagnostic workup of dementia.
Researchers investigated associations of chronic kidney disease with plasma ratios of p-tau217 and p-tau181 to the corresponding unphosphorylated peptides in Alzheimer’s disease.
The data came from 473 older adults, with and without cognitive impairment, from the Swedish BioFinder-2 study who had plasma tau assessments and chronic kidney disease status established within 6 months of plasma collection.
The researchers found that lower estimated glomerular filtration rate levels (indicative of kidney dysfunction) were associated with higher plasma concentrations of phosphorylated and unphosphorylated tau peptides measured simultaneously using the tau immunoprecipitation mass spectrometry assay.
However, the correlations with estimated glomerular filtration rate were nonsignificant for the pT217/T217 ratio in individuals with cognitive impairment and were significantly attenuated for pT217/T217 in cognitively unimpaired individuals and for pT181/T181 in both cognitively unimpaired and impaired individuals.
“Importantly, we demonstrate that there were no significant associations between chronic kidney disease and the pT217/T217 ratio and changes in plasma pT181/T181 associated with chronic kidney disease were small or nonsignificant,” the researchers noted.
“Our results indicate that by using p-tau/tau ratios we may be able to reduce the variability in plasma p-tau levels driven by impaired kidney function and consequently such ratios are more robust measures of brain p-tau pathology in individuals with both early- and later-stage Alzheimer’s disease,” they added.
The researchers believe this is likely true for the ratios of other related proteins – a view that is supported by findings of attenuated associations of chronic kidney disease with Abeta42/40, compared with Abeta42 and Abeta40 in the current study and in previous studies.
Important clinical implications
Reached for comment, Rebecca Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association senior director of scientific engagement, noted that research continues to indicate that blood biomarkers have “promise for improving, and possibly even redefining, the clinical workup for Alzheimer’s disease.
“Many of the Alzheimer’s blood tests in development today have focused on core blood biomarkers associated with amyloid accumulation and tau tangle formation in the brain,” Dr. Edelmayer said.
“Before these tests can be used more broadly in the clinic, we need to understand all of the variables that may impact the results of various blood biomarkers, including differences that may be driven by race, ethnicity, sex, and underlying health conditions, such as chronic kidney disease.
“This study corroborates other research suggesting that some Alzheimer’s-associated markers can be affected by chronic kidney disease, but by using ratios of amyloid or tau markers, we may be able to minimize these differences in results caused by underlying disease,” Dr. Edelmayer said.
Howard Fillit, MD, cofounder and chief science officer at the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, said, “Using these ratios makes a lot of sense because the ratios wouldn’t change with kidney function. I think this is an important advance in clinical utilization of these tests.”
Dr. Fillit noted that older people often have declining kidney function, which can be easily measured by glomerular filtration rate. Changes in blood levels of these markers with declining kidney function are “not unexpected, but [it’s] important that it’s been demonstrated.
“As we go forward, maybe the future utilization of these tests will be not only recording the ratios but also reporting the ratios in the context of somebody’s glomerular filtration rate. You could imagine a scenario where when the test is done, it’s automatically done alongside of glomerular filtration rate,” Dr. Fillit said in an interview.
The study was supported by Coins for Alzheimer’s Research Trust, the Tracy Family Stable Isotope Labeling Quantitation Center, and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Dr. Hansson has received support to his institution from ADx, AVID Radiopharmaceuticals, Biogen, Eli Lilly, Eisai, Fujirebio, GE Healthcare, Pfizer, and Roche; consultancy/speaker fees from Amylyx, Alzpath, Biogen, Cerveau, Fujirebio, Genentech, Novartis, Roche, and Siemens; and personal fees from Eli Lilly, Eisai, Bioarctic, and Biogen outside the submitted work. Dr. Edelmayer and Dr. Fillit have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
New research provides more evidence that
In a cross-sectional study of adults with and those without cognitive impairment, chronic kidney disease was associated with increased plasma concentrations of phosphorylated tau (p-tau) 217 and 181.
However, there were no associations between chronic kidney disease and the ratio of p-tau217 to unphosphorylated tau 217 (pT217/T217), and the associations with p-tau181 to unphosphorylated tau 181 (pT181/T181) were attenuated in patients with cognitive impairment.
“These novel findings suggest that plasma measures of the phosphorylated to unphosphorylated tau ratios are more accurate than p-tau forms alone as they correlate less with individual difference in glomerular filtration rate or impaired kidney function,” reported an investigative team led by Oskar Hansson, MD, PhD, with Lund University in Sweden.
“Thus, to mitigate the effects of non-Alzheimer’s–related comorbidities like chronic kidney disease on the performance of plasma Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers, certain tau ratios, and specifically pT217/T217, should be considered for implementation in clinical practice and drug trials,” they added.
The study was published online in JAMA Neurology to coincide with a presentation at the International Conference on Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Diseases in Gothenburg, Sweden.
Skewed tau levels
Plasma biomarkers of amyloid-beta (Abeta) and tau pathologies, and in particular variants in p-tau217 and p-tau181, have shown promise for use in Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis and prognosis. However, previous reports have suggested that chronic kidney disease might influence plasma p-tau217 and p-tau181 concentrations, potentially decreasing their usefulness in the diagnostic workup of dementia.
Researchers investigated associations of chronic kidney disease with plasma ratios of p-tau217 and p-tau181 to the corresponding unphosphorylated peptides in Alzheimer’s disease.
The data came from 473 older adults, with and without cognitive impairment, from the Swedish BioFinder-2 study who had plasma tau assessments and chronic kidney disease status established within 6 months of plasma collection.
The researchers found that lower estimated glomerular filtration rate levels (indicative of kidney dysfunction) were associated with higher plasma concentrations of phosphorylated and unphosphorylated tau peptides measured simultaneously using the tau immunoprecipitation mass spectrometry assay.
However, the correlations with estimated glomerular filtration rate were nonsignificant for the pT217/T217 ratio in individuals with cognitive impairment and were significantly attenuated for pT217/T217 in cognitively unimpaired individuals and for pT181/T181 in both cognitively unimpaired and impaired individuals.
“Importantly, we demonstrate that there were no significant associations between chronic kidney disease and the pT217/T217 ratio and changes in plasma pT181/T181 associated with chronic kidney disease were small or nonsignificant,” the researchers noted.
“Our results indicate that by using p-tau/tau ratios we may be able to reduce the variability in plasma p-tau levels driven by impaired kidney function and consequently such ratios are more robust measures of brain p-tau pathology in individuals with both early- and later-stage Alzheimer’s disease,” they added.
The researchers believe this is likely true for the ratios of other related proteins – a view that is supported by findings of attenuated associations of chronic kidney disease with Abeta42/40, compared with Abeta42 and Abeta40 in the current study and in previous studies.
Important clinical implications
Reached for comment, Rebecca Edelmayer, PhD, Alzheimer’s Association senior director of scientific engagement, noted that research continues to indicate that blood biomarkers have “promise for improving, and possibly even redefining, the clinical workup for Alzheimer’s disease.
“Many of the Alzheimer’s blood tests in development today have focused on core blood biomarkers associated with amyloid accumulation and tau tangle formation in the brain,” Dr. Edelmayer said.
“Before these tests can be used more broadly in the clinic, we need to understand all of the variables that may impact the results of various blood biomarkers, including differences that may be driven by race, ethnicity, sex, and underlying health conditions, such as chronic kidney disease.
“This study corroborates other research suggesting that some Alzheimer’s-associated markers can be affected by chronic kidney disease, but by using ratios of amyloid or tau markers, we may be able to minimize these differences in results caused by underlying disease,” Dr. Edelmayer said.
Howard Fillit, MD, cofounder and chief science officer at the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, said, “Using these ratios makes a lot of sense because the ratios wouldn’t change with kidney function. I think this is an important advance in clinical utilization of these tests.”
Dr. Fillit noted that older people often have declining kidney function, which can be easily measured by glomerular filtration rate. Changes in blood levels of these markers with declining kidney function are “not unexpected, but [it’s] important that it’s been demonstrated.
“As we go forward, maybe the future utilization of these tests will be not only recording the ratios but also reporting the ratios in the context of somebody’s glomerular filtration rate. You could imagine a scenario where when the test is done, it’s automatically done alongside of glomerular filtration rate,” Dr. Fillit said in an interview.
The study was supported by Coins for Alzheimer’s Research Trust, the Tracy Family Stable Isotope Labeling Quantitation Center, and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Dr. Hansson has received support to his institution from ADx, AVID Radiopharmaceuticals, Biogen, Eli Lilly, Eisai, Fujirebio, GE Healthcare, Pfizer, and Roche; consultancy/speaker fees from Amylyx, Alzpath, Biogen, Cerveau, Fujirebio, Genentech, Novartis, Roche, and Siemens; and personal fees from Eli Lilly, Eisai, Bioarctic, and Biogen outside the submitted work. Dr. Edelmayer and Dr. Fillit have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
FROM AD/PD 2023
Pretransfer visits with pediatric and adult rheumatologists smooth adolescent transition
NEW ORLEANS – Implementing a pediatric transition program in which a patient meets with both their pediatric and soon-to-be adult rheumatologist during a visit before formal transition resulted in less time setting up the first adult visit, according to research presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium.
The presentation was one of two that focused on ways to improve the transition from pediatric to adult care for rheumatology patients. The other, a poster from researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, took the first steps toward learning what factors can help predict a successful transition.
“This period of transitioning from pediatric to adult care, both rheumatology specific and otherwise, is a high-risk time,” John M. Bridges, MD, a fourth-year pediatric rheumatology fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told attendees. “There are changes in insurance coverage, employment, geographic mobility, and shifting responsibilities between parents and children in the setting of a still-developing frontal lobe that contribute to the risk of this period. Risks include disease flare, and then organ damage, as well as issues with decreasing medication and therapy, adherence, unscheduled care utilization, and increasing loss to follow-up.”
Dr. Bridges developed a structured transition program called the Bridge to Adult Care from Childhood for Young Adults with Rheumatic Disease (BACC YARD) aimed at improving the pediatric transition period. The analysis he presented focused specifically on reducing loss to follow-up by introducing a pretransfer visit with both rheumatologists. The patient first meets with their pediatric rheumatologist.
During that visit, the adult rheumatologist attends and discusses the patient’s history and current therapy with the pediatric rheumatologist before entering the patient’s room and having “a brief introductory conversation, a sort of verbal handoff and handshake, in front of the patient,” Dr. Bridges explained. “Then I assume responsibility for this patient and their next visit is to see me, both proverbially and literally down the street at the adulthood rheumatology clinic, where this patient becomes a part of my continuity cohort.”
Bridges entered patients from this BACC YARD cohort into an observational registry that included their dual provider pretransfer visit and a posttransfer visit, occurring between July 2020 and May 2022. He compared these patients with a historical control cohort of 45 patients from March 2018 to March 2020, who had at least two pediatric rheumatology visits prior to their transfer to adult care and no documentation of outside rheumatology visits during the study period. Specifically, he examined at the requested and actual interval between patients’ final pediatric rheumatology visit and their first adult rheumatology visit.
The intervention cohort included 86 patients, mostly female (73%), with a median age of 20. About two-thirds were White (65%) and one-third (34%) were Black. One patient was Asian, and 7% were Hispanic. Just over half the patients had juvenile idiopathic arthritis (58%), and 30% had lupus and related connective tissue diseases. The other patients had vasculitis, uveitis, inflammatory myopathy, relapsing polychondritis, morphea, or syndrome of undifferentiated recurrent fever.
A total of 8% of these patients had previously been lost to follow-up at Children’s of Alabama before they re-established rheumatology care at UAB, and 3.5% came from a pediatric rheumatologist from somewhere other than Children’s of Alabama but established adult care at UAB through the BACC YARD program. Among the remaining patients, 65% (n = 56) had both a dual provider pretransfer visit and a posttransfer visit.
The BACC YARD patients requested their next rheumatology visit (the first adult one) a median 119 days after their last pediatric visit, and the actual time until that visit was a median 141 days (P < .05). By comparison, the 45 patients in the historical control group had a median 261 days between their last pediatric visit and their first adult visit (P < .001). The median days between visits was shorter for those with JIA (129 days) and lupus (119 days) than for patients with other conditions (149 days).
Bridges acknowledged that the study was limited by the small size of the cohort and potential contextual factors related to individual patients’ circumstances.
“We’re continuing to make iterative changes to this process to try to continue to improve the transition and its outcomes in this cohort,” Dr. Bridges said.
Aimee Hersh, MD, an associate professor of pediatric rheumatology and division chief of pediatric rheumatology at the University of Utah and Primary Children’s Hospital, both in Salt Lake City, attended the presentation and noted that the University of Utah has a very similar transfer program.
“I think one of the challenges of that model, and our model, is that you have to have a very specific type of physician who is both [medical-pediatrics] trained and has a specific interest in transition,” Dr. Hersh said in an interview. She noted that the adult rheumatologist at her institution didn’t train in pediatric rheumatology but did complete a meds-peds residency. “So if you can find an adult rheumatologist who can do something similar, can see older adolescent patients and serve as that transition bridge, then I think it is feasible.”
For practices that don’t have the resources for this kind of program, Dr. Hersh recommended the Got Transition program, which provides transition guidance that can be applied to any adolescent population with chronic illness.
The other study, led by Kristiana Nasto, BS, a third-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, reported on the findings from one aspect of a program also developed to improve the transition from pediatric to adult care for rheumatology patients. It included periodic self-reported evaluation using the validated Adolescent Assessment of Preparation for Transition (ADAPT) survey. As the first step to better understanding the factors that can predict successful transition, the researchers surveyed returning patients with any rheumatologic diagnosis, aged 14 years and older, between July 2021 and November 2022.
Since the survey was automated through the electronic medical record, patients and their caregivers could respond during in-person or virtual visit check-in. The researchers calculated three composite scores out of 100 for self-management, prescription management, and transfer planning, using responses from the ADAPT survey. Among 462 patients who returned 670 surveys, 87% provided surveys that could be scored for at least one composite score. Most respondents were female (75%), White (69%), non-Hispanic (64%), English speaking (90%), and aged 14-17 years (83%).
The overall average score for self-management from 401 respondents was 35. For prescription management, the average score was 59 from 288 respondents, and the average transfer planning score was 17 from 367 respondents. Self-management and transfer planning scores both improved with age (P = .0001). Self-management scores rose from an average of 20 at age 14 to an average of 64 at age 18 and older. Transfer planning scores increased from an average of 1 at age 14 to an average of 49 at age 18 and older. Prescription management scores remained high across all ages, from an average of 59 at age 14 to an average score of 66 at age 18 and older (P = .044). Although the scores did not statistically vary by age or race, Hispanic patients did score higher in self-management with an average of 44.5, compared with 31 among other patients (P = .0001).
Only 21% of patients completed two surveys, and 8.4% completed all three surveys. The average time between the first and second surveys was 4 months, during which there was no statistically significant change in self-management or prescription management scores, but transfer planning scores did increase from 14 to 21 (P = .008) among the 90 patients who completed those surveys.
The researchers concluded from their analysis that “participation in the transition pathway can rapidly improve transfer planning scores, [but] opportunities remain to improve readiness in all domains.” The researchers are in the process of developing Spanish-language surveys.
No external funding was noted for either study. Dr. Bridges, Dr. Hersh, and Ms. Nasto reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW ORLEANS – Implementing a pediatric transition program in which a patient meets with both their pediatric and soon-to-be adult rheumatologist during a visit before formal transition resulted in less time setting up the first adult visit, according to research presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium.
The presentation was one of two that focused on ways to improve the transition from pediatric to adult care for rheumatology patients. The other, a poster from researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, took the first steps toward learning what factors can help predict a successful transition.
“This period of transitioning from pediatric to adult care, both rheumatology specific and otherwise, is a high-risk time,” John M. Bridges, MD, a fourth-year pediatric rheumatology fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told attendees. “There are changes in insurance coverage, employment, geographic mobility, and shifting responsibilities between parents and children in the setting of a still-developing frontal lobe that contribute to the risk of this period. Risks include disease flare, and then organ damage, as well as issues with decreasing medication and therapy, adherence, unscheduled care utilization, and increasing loss to follow-up.”
Dr. Bridges developed a structured transition program called the Bridge to Adult Care from Childhood for Young Adults with Rheumatic Disease (BACC YARD) aimed at improving the pediatric transition period. The analysis he presented focused specifically on reducing loss to follow-up by introducing a pretransfer visit with both rheumatologists. The patient first meets with their pediatric rheumatologist.
During that visit, the adult rheumatologist attends and discusses the patient’s history and current therapy with the pediatric rheumatologist before entering the patient’s room and having “a brief introductory conversation, a sort of verbal handoff and handshake, in front of the patient,” Dr. Bridges explained. “Then I assume responsibility for this patient and their next visit is to see me, both proverbially and literally down the street at the adulthood rheumatology clinic, where this patient becomes a part of my continuity cohort.”
Bridges entered patients from this BACC YARD cohort into an observational registry that included their dual provider pretransfer visit and a posttransfer visit, occurring between July 2020 and May 2022. He compared these patients with a historical control cohort of 45 patients from March 2018 to March 2020, who had at least two pediatric rheumatology visits prior to their transfer to adult care and no documentation of outside rheumatology visits during the study period. Specifically, he examined at the requested and actual interval between patients’ final pediatric rheumatology visit and their first adult rheumatology visit.
The intervention cohort included 86 patients, mostly female (73%), with a median age of 20. About two-thirds were White (65%) and one-third (34%) were Black. One patient was Asian, and 7% were Hispanic. Just over half the patients had juvenile idiopathic arthritis (58%), and 30% had lupus and related connective tissue diseases. The other patients had vasculitis, uveitis, inflammatory myopathy, relapsing polychondritis, morphea, or syndrome of undifferentiated recurrent fever.
A total of 8% of these patients had previously been lost to follow-up at Children’s of Alabama before they re-established rheumatology care at UAB, and 3.5% came from a pediatric rheumatologist from somewhere other than Children’s of Alabama but established adult care at UAB through the BACC YARD program. Among the remaining patients, 65% (n = 56) had both a dual provider pretransfer visit and a posttransfer visit.
The BACC YARD patients requested their next rheumatology visit (the first adult one) a median 119 days after their last pediatric visit, and the actual time until that visit was a median 141 days (P < .05). By comparison, the 45 patients in the historical control group had a median 261 days between their last pediatric visit and their first adult visit (P < .001). The median days between visits was shorter for those with JIA (129 days) and lupus (119 days) than for patients with other conditions (149 days).
Bridges acknowledged that the study was limited by the small size of the cohort and potential contextual factors related to individual patients’ circumstances.
“We’re continuing to make iterative changes to this process to try to continue to improve the transition and its outcomes in this cohort,” Dr. Bridges said.
Aimee Hersh, MD, an associate professor of pediatric rheumatology and division chief of pediatric rheumatology at the University of Utah and Primary Children’s Hospital, both in Salt Lake City, attended the presentation and noted that the University of Utah has a very similar transfer program.
“I think one of the challenges of that model, and our model, is that you have to have a very specific type of physician who is both [medical-pediatrics] trained and has a specific interest in transition,” Dr. Hersh said in an interview. She noted that the adult rheumatologist at her institution didn’t train in pediatric rheumatology but did complete a meds-peds residency. “So if you can find an adult rheumatologist who can do something similar, can see older adolescent patients and serve as that transition bridge, then I think it is feasible.”
For practices that don’t have the resources for this kind of program, Dr. Hersh recommended the Got Transition program, which provides transition guidance that can be applied to any adolescent population with chronic illness.
The other study, led by Kristiana Nasto, BS, a third-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, reported on the findings from one aspect of a program also developed to improve the transition from pediatric to adult care for rheumatology patients. It included periodic self-reported evaluation using the validated Adolescent Assessment of Preparation for Transition (ADAPT) survey. As the first step to better understanding the factors that can predict successful transition, the researchers surveyed returning patients with any rheumatologic diagnosis, aged 14 years and older, between July 2021 and November 2022.
Since the survey was automated through the electronic medical record, patients and their caregivers could respond during in-person or virtual visit check-in. The researchers calculated three composite scores out of 100 for self-management, prescription management, and transfer planning, using responses from the ADAPT survey. Among 462 patients who returned 670 surveys, 87% provided surveys that could be scored for at least one composite score. Most respondents were female (75%), White (69%), non-Hispanic (64%), English speaking (90%), and aged 14-17 years (83%).
The overall average score for self-management from 401 respondents was 35. For prescription management, the average score was 59 from 288 respondents, and the average transfer planning score was 17 from 367 respondents. Self-management and transfer planning scores both improved with age (P = .0001). Self-management scores rose from an average of 20 at age 14 to an average of 64 at age 18 and older. Transfer planning scores increased from an average of 1 at age 14 to an average of 49 at age 18 and older. Prescription management scores remained high across all ages, from an average of 59 at age 14 to an average score of 66 at age 18 and older (P = .044). Although the scores did not statistically vary by age or race, Hispanic patients did score higher in self-management with an average of 44.5, compared with 31 among other patients (P = .0001).
Only 21% of patients completed two surveys, and 8.4% completed all three surveys. The average time between the first and second surveys was 4 months, during which there was no statistically significant change in self-management or prescription management scores, but transfer planning scores did increase from 14 to 21 (P = .008) among the 90 patients who completed those surveys.
The researchers concluded from their analysis that “participation in the transition pathway can rapidly improve transfer planning scores, [but] opportunities remain to improve readiness in all domains.” The researchers are in the process of developing Spanish-language surveys.
No external funding was noted for either study. Dr. Bridges, Dr. Hersh, and Ms. Nasto reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW ORLEANS – Implementing a pediatric transition program in which a patient meets with both their pediatric and soon-to-be adult rheumatologist during a visit before formal transition resulted in less time setting up the first adult visit, according to research presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium.
The presentation was one of two that focused on ways to improve the transition from pediatric to adult care for rheumatology patients. The other, a poster from researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, took the first steps toward learning what factors can help predict a successful transition.
“This period of transitioning from pediatric to adult care, both rheumatology specific and otherwise, is a high-risk time,” John M. Bridges, MD, a fourth-year pediatric rheumatology fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told attendees. “There are changes in insurance coverage, employment, geographic mobility, and shifting responsibilities between parents and children in the setting of a still-developing frontal lobe that contribute to the risk of this period. Risks include disease flare, and then organ damage, as well as issues with decreasing medication and therapy, adherence, unscheduled care utilization, and increasing loss to follow-up.”
Dr. Bridges developed a structured transition program called the Bridge to Adult Care from Childhood for Young Adults with Rheumatic Disease (BACC YARD) aimed at improving the pediatric transition period. The analysis he presented focused specifically on reducing loss to follow-up by introducing a pretransfer visit with both rheumatologists. The patient first meets with their pediatric rheumatologist.
During that visit, the adult rheumatologist attends and discusses the patient’s history and current therapy with the pediatric rheumatologist before entering the patient’s room and having “a brief introductory conversation, a sort of verbal handoff and handshake, in front of the patient,” Dr. Bridges explained. “Then I assume responsibility for this patient and their next visit is to see me, both proverbially and literally down the street at the adulthood rheumatology clinic, where this patient becomes a part of my continuity cohort.”
Bridges entered patients from this BACC YARD cohort into an observational registry that included their dual provider pretransfer visit and a posttransfer visit, occurring between July 2020 and May 2022. He compared these patients with a historical control cohort of 45 patients from March 2018 to March 2020, who had at least two pediatric rheumatology visits prior to their transfer to adult care and no documentation of outside rheumatology visits during the study period. Specifically, he examined at the requested and actual interval between patients’ final pediatric rheumatology visit and their first adult rheumatology visit.
The intervention cohort included 86 patients, mostly female (73%), with a median age of 20. About two-thirds were White (65%) and one-third (34%) were Black. One patient was Asian, and 7% were Hispanic. Just over half the patients had juvenile idiopathic arthritis (58%), and 30% had lupus and related connective tissue diseases. The other patients had vasculitis, uveitis, inflammatory myopathy, relapsing polychondritis, morphea, or syndrome of undifferentiated recurrent fever.
A total of 8% of these patients had previously been lost to follow-up at Children’s of Alabama before they re-established rheumatology care at UAB, and 3.5% came from a pediatric rheumatologist from somewhere other than Children’s of Alabama but established adult care at UAB through the BACC YARD program. Among the remaining patients, 65% (n = 56) had both a dual provider pretransfer visit and a posttransfer visit.
The BACC YARD patients requested their next rheumatology visit (the first adult one) a median 119 days after their last pediatric visit, and the actual time until that visit was a median 141 days (P < .05). By comparison, the 45 patients in the historical control group had a median 261 days between their last pediatric visit and their first adult visit (P < .001). The median days between visits was shorter for those with JIA (129 days) and lupus (119 days) than for patients with other conditions (149 days).
Bridges acknowledged that the study was limited by the small size of the cohort and potential contextual factors related to individual patients’ circumstances.
“We’re continuing to make iterative changes to this process to try to continue to improve the transition and its outcomes in this cohort,” Dr. Bridges said.
Aimee Hersh, MD, an associate professor of pediatric rheumatology and division chief of pediatric rheumatology at the University of Utah and Primary Children’s Hospital, both in Salt Lake City, attended the presentation and noted that the University of Utah has a very similar transfer program.
“I think one of the challenges of that model, and our model, is that you have to have a very specific type of physician who is both [medical-pediatrics] trained and has a specific interest in transition,” Dr. Hersh said in an interview. She noted that the adult rheumatologist at her institution didn’t train in pediatric rheumatology but did complete a meds-peds residency. “So if you can find an adult rheumatologist who can do something similar, can see older adolescent patients and serve as that transition bridge, then I think it is feasible.”
For practices that don’t have the resources for this kind of program, Dr. Hersh recommended the Got Transition program, which provides transition guidance that can be applied to any adolescent population with chronic illness.
The other study, led by Kristiana Nasto, BS, a third-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, reported on the findings from one aspect of a program also developed to improve the transition from pediatric to adult care for rheumatology patients. It included periodic self-reported evaluation using the validated Adolescent Assessment of Preparation for Transition (ADAPT) survey. As the first step to better understanding the factors that can predict successful transition, the researchers surveyed returning patients with any rheumatologic diagnosis, aged 14 years and older, between July 2021 and November 2022.
Since the survey was automated through the electronic medical record, patients and their caregivers could respond during in-person or virtual visit check-in. The researchers calculated three composite scores out of 100 for self-management, prescription management, and transfer planning, using responses from the ADAPT survey. Among 462 patients who returned 670 surveys, 87% provided surveys that could be scored for at least one composite score. Most respondents were female (75%), White (69%), non-Hispanic (64%), English speaking (90%), and aged 14-17 years (83%).
The overall average score for self-management from 401 respondents was 35. For prescription management, the average score was 59 from 288 respondents, and the average transfer planning score was 17 from 367 respondents. Self-management and transfer planning scores both improved with age (P = .0001). Self-management scores rose from an average of 20 at age 14 to an average of 64 at age 18 and older. Transfer planning scores increased from an average of 1 at age 14 to an average of 49 at age 18 and older. Prescription management scores remained high across all ages, from an average of 59 at age 14 to an average score of 66 at age 18 and older (P = .044). Although the scores did not statistically vary by age or race, Hispanic patients did score higher in self-management with an average of 44.5, compared with 31 among other patients (P = .0001).
Only 21% of patients completed two surveys, and 8.4% completed all three surveys. The average time between the first and second surveys was 4 months, during which there was no statistically significant change in self-management or prescription management scores, but transfer planning scores did increase from 14 to 21 (P = .008) among the 90 patients who completed those surveys.
The researchers concluded from their analysis that “participation in the transition pathway can rapidly improve transfer planning scores, [but] opportunities remain to improve readiness in all domains.” The researchers are in the process of developing Spanish-language surveys.
No external funding was noted for either study. Dr. Bridges, Dr. Hersh, and Ms. Nasto reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
AT PRSYM 2023
Childhood lupus severity linked to social determinants of health
NEW ORLEANS – The sociodemographic characteristics of Black and Hispanic children with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) appear to play a strong role in influencing the severity of disease in these patients, according to two studies presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium.
One study showed an association between multiple determinants of health and disease severity among children seen in a large Texas city, and a separate descriptive cross-sectional cohort study of predominantly Black children at two centers in Mississippi and Alabama reinforced the finding of greater severity of disease and social hardships among this racial group.
The findings from both studies supplement existing evidence that the prevalence of childhood-onset SLE is greater among Black and Hispanic children.
“Several demographic and social determinants of health parameters influenced disease severity at levels that reached statistical significance, including insurance status, race/ethnicity, referral source, PCP [primary care provider] availability, primary language, and transportation needs,” Emily Beil, MD, a pediatric rheumatologist at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, told attendees at the conference, which was sponsored by the American College of Rheumatology. Her team’s goal, she said, was to “better understand our patient population and social disparities that contribute to disease severity.”
Dr. Beil and her colleagues conducted a retrospective review of 136 children who had been diagnosed with childhood-onset SLE between January 2018 and May 2022 at Texas Children’s Hospital. Only children who were younger than 18 years at the time of diagnosis at Texas Children’s were included. The analysis considered demographics, clinical characteristics, insurance status, social work consultation, access to a primary care provider, transportation needs, primary language, and other parameters related to social determinants of health.
The average age of the patients was 13 years, and most were girls (82%). Just over half were Hispanic (53%), and just over a quarter were Black (26%). Half had Medicaid or participated in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and 1 in 10 were uninsured (10%). Half the diagnoses were made during an inpatient admission; 36% were made on the floor, and 14% were made in the intensive care unit (ICU).
The average Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI) score was 12.5, and 48.5% of patients had severe disease, indicated by a score of at least 12. Only two in three children were documented as having a primary care physician (66%), and 32% preferred a language other than English. Most of the children (80%) had a social work consult.
Black and biracial children had higher SLEDAI scores at presentation. Non-Hispanic White children were less likely to have a social work consult, compared with other racial/ethnic groups (P = .01 for both). Central nervous system involvement was most prevalent among Black patients (P = .004). Cyclophosphamide was used most often for Black and biracial patients.
Uninsured patients were most likely to be diagnosed on an inpatient floor. The highest proportion of ICU admissions was among patients insured by Medicaid (P = .034). Average SLEDAI scores were highest among uninsured patients, followed by Medicaid patients. More than half of the patients who did not have insurance lacked access to a regular primary care provider, compared with 12% of Medicaid patients and 7% of privately insured patients (P = .001). All the uninsured patients had transportation needs, which was a significantly higher rate than among those with Medicaid (13%) or private insurance (15%) (P = .001). The highest percentage of social work consults was among patients who were insured by Medicaid or were without insurance (P = .001).
Salient demographics and clinical features
In the second presentation, Anita Dhanrajani, MD, assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, began by noting that Alabama and Mississippi are ranked in the top 10 states for the highest poverty rate: Mississippi is No. 1, and Alabama is No. 7. Further, 40% of children in Mississippi and 29% of children in Alabama are of African American ancestry, she said.
“So, we know that this population that we’re dealing with has several high-risk factors that can lead them to have poor outcomes, and yet, we haven’t really ever characterized their clinical features or their social demographic features,” Dr. Dhanrajani told attendees. “My hope is that with this very miniscule first step, we’re able to move towards solutions to decrease health care disparities in this population.”
She presented findings regarding the first of three aims in the study, which was to describe the baseline clinical, demographic, and socioeconomic profiles of childhood lupus patients at the two centers. The two other aims were to examine genetic factors potentially linked to poor outcomes in the cohort and to assess the mental health status of the population.
The study relied on a retrospective chart review for the 17 patients at the University of Mississippi Medical Center and on Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance registry data for the 19 patients at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Most of the patients (86%) were female, Black (78%), and insured by Medicaid (64%). The average age at diagnosis was 13 years. Most (83%) also lived in a ZIP code that met the criteria for a medium-high or high Social Vulnerability Index. The children had to travel an average 75 miles to see a rheumatologist, compared with the national average of 43 miles.
At diagnosis, their average Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics (SLICC) score was 8.8, their average American College of Rheumatology score was 5.2, and their average SLEDAI score was 12.1 – the latter was substantially higher than the average 3.1 score in a multiethnic Canadian cohort (the 1000 Canadian Faces of Lupus Study) with 10% Black children (P < .00001). The SLEDAI score dropped to 6.8 at 6 months and to 4 at 1 year. Nearly half (47%) had a SLICC Damage Index (SDI) greater than 0, and one-third had an SDI of 2 or greater, compared with 16% and 7%, respectively, reported in other recent studies (P < .0001 for both).
“These disparities are very difficult to investigate in terms of causal relationships and [are] likely to be very modifiable,” Coziana Ciurtin, MD, PhD, associate professor of rheumatology at University College London, told this news organization. “I think the socioeconomic status, the level of education, poverty, [type of] medical insurance, and probably genetic variants are all underpinning the presentation, damage, or disease activity being very high, and also organ involvement,” such as the greater CNS involvement seen in non-White patients.
Being mindful of these risk profiles can help doctors in asking about patients’ support at home and their families’ education, beliefs, and cultural practices, Dr. Ciurtin added. “Helping them to engage and be involved in decision-making is probably the most important” aspect of learning this information about families, she said.
Collecting this information should not be the sole responsibility of the physician, added Eve Smith, PhD, MBCHB, an academic clinical lecturer at the University of Liverpool, England, who attended the presentations. Dr. Smith noted a discussion in a work group during the previous day of the conference concerning questionnaires for screening patients regarding the need for social services and for identifying areas in which patients and their families were having difficulties.
“Obviously, if you’re going to do that, you have to have access to someone who can actually help to deal with that. Some hospitals have patient navigators that can help, for example, with a food security issue to highlight resources within the community, so it’s not all on the doctor,” Dr. Smith said. “To really make a difference in this area, it can’t just be down to the doctor. There needs to be social care, there needs to be community-based interventions and things to do about it. Doctors can help identify these patients, or maybe somebody in the [medical] team can help with that, but there needs to be an intervention. Otherwise, you’re left with this problem without a solution that you can’t do anything about.”
The researchers did not note any external funding for either study. Dr. Beil, Dr. Dhanrajani, Dr. Smith, and Dr. Ciurtin reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW ORLEANS – The sociodemographic characteristics of Black and Hispanic children with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) appear to play a strong role in influencing the severity of disease in these patients, according to two studies presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium.
One study showed an association between multiple determinants of health and disease severity among children seen in a large Texas city, and a separate descriptive cross-sectional cohort study of predominantly Black children at two centers in Mississippi and Alabama reinforced the finding of greater severity of disease and social hardships among this racial group.
The findings from both studies supplement existing evidence that the prevalence of childhood-onset SLE is greater among Black and Hispanic children.
“Several demographic and social determinants of health parameters influenced disease severity at levels that reached statistical significance, including insurance status, race/ethnicity, referral source, PCP [primary care provider] availability, primary language, and transportation needs,” Emily Beil, MD, a pediatric rheumatologist at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, told attendees at the conference, which was sponsored by the American College of Rheumatology. Her team’s goal, she said, was to “better understand our patient population and social disparities that contribute to disease severity.”
Dr. Beil and her colleagues conducted a retrospective review of 136 children who had been diagnosed with childhood-onset SLE between January 2018 and May 2022 at Texas Children’s Hospital. Only children who were younger than 18 years at the time of diagnosis at Texas Children’s were included. The analysis considered demographics, clinical characteristics, insurance status, social work consultation, access to a primary care provider, transportation needs, primary language, and other parameters related to social determinants of health.
The average age of the patients was 13 years, and most were girls (82%). Just over half were Hispanic (53%), and just over a quarter were Black (26%). Half had Medicaid or participated in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and 1 in 10 were uninsured (10%). Half the diagnoses were made during an inpatient admission; 36% were made on the floor, and 14% were made in the intensive care unit (ICU).
The average Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI) score was 12.5, and 48.5% of patients had severe disease, indicated by a score of at least 12. Only two in three children were documented as having a primary care physician (66%), and 32% preferred a language other than English. Most of the children (80%) had a social work consult.
Black and biracial children had higher SLEDAI scores at presentation. Non-Hispanic White children were less likely to have a social work consult, compared with other racial/ethnic groups (P = .01 for both). Central nervous system involvement was most prevalent among Black patients (P = .004). Cyclophosphamide was used most often for Black and biracial patients.
Uninsured patients were most likely to be diagnosed on an inpatient floor. The highest proportion of ICU admissions was among patients insured by Medicaid (P = .034). Average SLEDAI scores were highest among uninsured patients, followed by Medicaid patients. More than half of the patients who did not have insurance lacked access to a regular primary care provider, compared with 12% of Medicaid patients and 7% of privately insured patients (P = .001). All the uninsured patients had transportation needs, which was a significantly higher rate than among those with Medicaid (13%) or private insurance (15%) (P = .001). The highest percentage of social work consults was among patients who were insured by Medicaid or were without insurance (P = .001).
Salient demographics and clinical features
In the second presentation, Anita Dhanrajani, MD, assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, began by noting that Alabama and Mississippi are ranked in the top 10 states for the highest poverty rate: Mississippi is No. 1, and Alabama is No. 7. Further, 40% of children in Mississippi and 29% of children in Alabama are of African American ancestry, she said.
“So, we know that this population that we’re dealing with has several high-risk factors that can lead them to have poor outcomes, and yet, we haven’t really ever characterized their clinical features or their social demographic features,” Dr. Dhanrajani told attendees. “My hope is that with this very miniscule first step, we’re able to move towards solutions to decrease health care disparities in this population.”
She presented findings regarding the first of three aims in the study, which was to describe the baseline clinical, demographic, and socioeconomic profiles of childhood lupus patients at the two centers. The two other aims were to examine genetic factors potentially linked to poor outcomes in the cohort and to assess the mental health status of the population.
The study relied on a retrospective chart review for the 17 patients at the University of Mississippi Medical Center and on Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance registry data for the 19 patients at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Most of the patients (86%) were female, Black (78%), and insured by Medicaid (64%). The average age at diagnosis was 13 years. Most (83%) also lived in a ZIP code that met the criteria for a medium-high or high Social Vulnerability Index. The children had to travel an average 75 miles to see a rheumatologist, compared with the national average of 43 miles.
At diagnosis, their average Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics (SLICC) score was 8.8, their average American College of Rheumatology score was 5.2, and their average SLEDAI score was 12.1 – the latter was substantially higher than the average 3.1 score in a multiethnic Canadian cohort (the 1000 Canadian Faces of Lupus Study) with 10% Black children (P < .00001). The SLEDAI score dropped to 6.8 at 6 months and to 4 at 1 year. Nearly half (47%) had a SLICC Damage Index (SDI) greater than 0, and one-third had an SDI of 2 or greater, compared with 16% and 7%, respectively, reported in other recent studies (P < .0001 for both).
“These disparities are very difficult to investigate in terms of causal relationships and [are] likely to be very modifiable,” Coziana Ciurtin, MD, PhD, associate professor of rheumatology at University College London, told this news organization. “I think the socioeconomic status, the level of education, poverty, [type of] medical insurance, and probably genetic variants are all underpinning the presentation, damage, or disease activity being very high, and also organ involvement,” such as the greater CNS involvement seen in non-White patients.
Being mindful of these risk profiles can help doctors in asking about patients’ support at home and their families’ education, beliefs, and cultural practices, Dr. Ciurtin added. “Helping them to engage and be involved in decision-making is probably the most important” aspect of learning this information about families, she said.
Collecting this information should not be the sole responsibility of the physician, added Eve Smith, PhD, MBCHB, an academic clinical lecturer at the University of Liverpool, England, who attended the presentations. Dr. Smith noted a discussion in a work group during the previous day of the conference concerning questionnaires for screening patients regarding the need for social services and for identifying areas in which patients and their families were having difficulties.
“Obviously, if you’re going to do that, you have to have access to someone who can actually help to deal with that. Some hospitals have patient navigators that can help, for example, with a food security issue to highlight resources within the community, so it’s not all on the doctor,” Dr. Smith said. “To really make a difference in this area, it can’t just be down to the doctor. There needs to be social care, there needs to be community-based interventions and things to do about it. Doctors can help identify these patients, or maybe somebody in the [medical] team can help with that, but there needs to be an intervention. Otherwise, you’re left with this problem without a solution that you can’t do anything about.”
The researchers did not note any external funding for either study. Dr. Beil, Dr. Dhanrajani, Dr. Smith, and Dr. Ciurtin reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW ORLEANS – The sociodemographic characteristics of Black and Hispanic children with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) appear to play a strong role in influencing the severity of disease in these patients, according to two studies presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium.
One study showed an association between multiple determinants of health and disease severity among children seen in a large Texas city, and a separate descriptive cross-sectional cohort study of predominantly Black children at two centers in Mississippi and Alabama reinforced the finding of greater severity of disease and social hardships among this racial group.
The findings from both studies supplement existing evidence that the prevalence of childhood-onset SLE is greater among Black and Hispanic children.
“Several demographic and social determinants of health parameters influenced disease severity at levels that reached statistical significance, including insurance status, race/ethnicity, referral source, PCP [primary care provider] availability, primary language, and transportation needs,” Emily Beil, MD, a pediatric rheumatologist at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, told attendees at the conference, which was sponsored by the American College of Rheumatology. Her team’s goal, she said, was to “better understand our patient population and social disparities that contribute to disease severity.”
Dr. Beil and her colleagues conducted a retrospective review of 136 children who had been diagnosed with childhood-onset SLE between January 2018 and May 2022 at Texas Children’s Hospital. Only children who were younger than 18 years at the time of diagnosis at Texas Children’s were included. The analysis considered demographics, clinical characteristics, insurance status, social work consultation, access to a primary care provider, transportation needs, primary language, and other parameters related to social determinants of health.
The average age of the patients was 13 years, and most were girls (82%). Just over half were Hispanic (53%), and just over a quarter were Black (26%). Half had Medicaid or participated in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and 1 in 10 were uninsured (10%). Half the diagnoses were made during an inpatient admission; 36% were made on the floor, and 14% were made in the intensive care unit (ICU).
The average Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI) score was 12.5, and 48.5% of patients had severe disease, indicated by a score of at least 12. Only two in three children were documented as having a primary care physician (66%), and 32% preferred a language other than English. Most of the children (80%) had a social work consult.
Black and biracial children had higher SLEDAI scores at presentation. Non-Hispanic White children were less likely to have a social work consult, compared with other racial/ethnic groups (P = .01 for both). Central nervous system involvement was most prevalent among Black patients (P = .004). Cyclophosphamide was used most often for Black and biracial patients.
Uninsured patients were most likely to be diagnosed on an inpatient floor. The highest proportion of ICU admissions was among patients insured by Medicaid (P = .034). Average SLEDAI scores were highest among uninsured patients, followed by Medicaid patients. More than half of the patients who did not have insurance lacked access to a regular primary care provider, compared with 12% of Medicaid patients and 7% of privately insured patients (P = .001). All the uninsured patients had transportation needs, which was a significantly higher rate than among those with Medicaid (13%) or private insurance (15%) (P = .001). The highest percentage of social work consults was among patients who were insured by Medicaid or were without insurance (P = .001).
Salient demographics and clinical features
In the second presentation, Anita Dhanrajani, MD, assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, began by noting that Alabama and Mississippi are ranked in the top 10 states for the highest poverty rate: Mississippi is No. 1, and Alabama is No. 7. Further, 40% of children in Mississippi and 29% of children in Alabama are of African American ancestry, she said.
“So, we know that this population that we’re dealing with has several high-risk factors that can lead them to have poor outcomes, and yet, we haven’t really ever characterized their clinical features or their social demographic features,” Dr. Dhanrajani told attendees. “My hope is that with this very miniscule first step, we’re able to move towards solutions to decrease health care disparities in this population.”
She presented findings regarding the first of three aims in the study, which was to describe the baseline clinical, demographic, and socioeconomic profiles of childhood lupus patients at the two centers. The two other aims were to examine genetic factors potentially linked to poor outcomes in the cohort and to assess the mental health status of the population.
The study relied on a retrospective chart review for the 17 patients at the University of Mississippi Medical Center and on Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance registry data for the 19 patients at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Most of the patients (86%) were female, Black (78%), and insured by Medicaid (64%). The average age at diagnosis was 13 years. Most (83%) also lived in a ZIP code that met the criteria for a medium-high or high Social Vulnerability Index. The children had to travel an average 75 miles to see a rheumatologist, compared with the national average of 43 miles.
At diagnosis, their average Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics (SLICC) score was 8.8, their average American College of Rheumatology score was 5.2, and their average SLEDAI score was 12.1 – the latter was substantially higher than the average 3.1 score in a multiethnic Canadian cohort (the 1000 Canadian Faces of Lupus Study) with 10% Black children (P < .00001). The SLEDAI score dropped to 6.8 at 6 months and to 4 at 1 year. Nearly half (47%) had a SLICC Damage Index (SDI) greater than 0, and one-third had an SDI of 2 or greater, compared with 16% and 7%, respectively, reported in other recent studies (P < .0001 for both).
“These disparities are very difficult to investigate in terms of causal relationships and [are] likely to be very modifiable,” Coziana Ciurtin, MD, PhD, associate professor of rheumatology at University College London, told this news organization. “I think the socioeconomic status, the level of education, poverty, [type of] medical insurance, and probably genetic variants are all underpinning the presentation, damage, or disease activity being very high, and also organ involvement,” such as the greater CNS involvement seen in non-White patients.
Being mindful of these risk profiles can help doctors in asking about patients’ support at home and their families’ education, beliefs, and cultural practices, Dr. Ciurtin added. “Helping them to engage and be involved in decision-making is probably the most important” aspect of learning this information about families, she said.
Collecting this information should not be the sole responsibility of the physician, added Eve Smith, PhD, MBCHB, an academic clinical lecturer at the University of Liverpool, England, who attended the presentations. Dr. Smith noted a discussion in a work group during the previous day of the conference concerning questionnaires for screening patients regarding the need for social services and for identifying areas in which patients and their families were having difficulties.
“Obviously, if you’re going to do that, you have to have access to someone who can actually help to deal with that. Some hospitals have patient navigators that can help, for example, with a food security issue to highlight resources within the community, so it’s not all on the doctor,” Dr. Smith said. “To really make a difference in this area, it can’t just be down to the doctor. There needs to be social care, there needs to be community-based interventions and things to do about it. Doctors can help identify these patients, or maybe somebody in the [medical] team can help with that, but there needs to be an intervention. Otherwise, you’re left with this problem without a solution that you can’t do anything about.”
The researchers did not note any external funding for either study. Dr. Beil, Dr. Dhanrajani, Dr. Smith, and Dr. Ciurtin reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
AT PRSYM 2023
Little change in rheumatology faculty coverage in pediatric residency programs in nearly 20 years
NEW ORLEANS – More than one-third of pediatric residency programs do not have a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty, a situation that has changed little since 2004, according to a poster presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium 2023 conference.
“This shortage has significant downstream effects,” according to author Miriah Gillispie-Taylor, MD, an assistant professor of pediatric rheumatology at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston. Without adequate education, it’s unreasonable to expect that a pediatrician will recognize the great diversity of presentations among rheumatic diseases, for example. “Without recognition, patients are not referred in a timely manner, and earlier identification and treatment of rheumatic diseases leads to improved outcomes,” Dr. Gillispie-Taylor said.
Currently, eight U.S. states do not have a board-certified pediatric rheumatologist, including Alaska. Dr. Gillispie-Taylor cited a 2006 study that found that one-third of medical schools (33%) and 40% of U.S. pediatric residency programs did not have an on-site pediatric rheumatologist in 2004.
As the long-standing workforce shortage in pediatric rheumatology continues, Dr. Gillispie-Taylor and her colleagues investigated whether increasing awareness of this problem has influenced the number of United States and Puerto Rico residency training programs with pediatric rheumatology faculty from 2004 to present.
The researchers identified 212 pediatric residency programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education for 2022-2023 and reviewed their program website to see which ones had affiliated pediatric rheumatology faculty. After determining the faculty from the website for 85% of the programs, the researchers emailed the other programs to find out whether a pediatric rheumatologist was on faculty, filling out another 6% of the programs. Most of the remaining uncategorized programs (7%) were categorized at a meeting of the Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance medical education workgroup. Only 2% of programs could not be ultimately categorized.
The region with the greatest proportion of pediatric residency programs that had a pediatric rheumatologist was the Southeast, where 95% (36 of 38 programs) of programs had one on faculty. The Southwest, comprising Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona, had the lowest proportion: 43% (9 of 21 programs). For the other regions, 69% of the West/Pacific Northwest (18 of 26), 62% of the Midwest (28 of 45), and 61% of the Northeast (39 of 64) programs had a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty. Three of Puerto Rico’s four programs had one as well.
Overall, 63% of programs had a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty, and 36% did not; the state of three programs was unknown.
The large proportion of programs without a pediatric rheumatologist “limits exposure to rheumatologic conditions and learning opportunities during residency and contribute to declining fellow match rates,” the authors concluded. They noted that only 62.8% of pediatric rheumatology fellowship positions were filled in 2022, down slightly from the 69.2% filled in 2021, according to report data from the National Matching Resident Program.
The researchers acknowledged that their results could be skewed if website information was outdated for any programs, and it’s difficult to determine which programs might lack resources on the basis of only publicly available information. Though programs without pediatric rheumatologists might benefit from visiting professorships, it can be difficult to identify which ones, they added.
The authors recommend two next steps: one, establishing areas of essential knowledge in pediatric rheumatology to enable the creation of learning objectives so programs can focus their educational efforts; and two, continuing efforts to understand residents’ motivation to pursue fellowships in pediatric rheumatology for the purpose of improving recruitment.
Two medical students at Dr. Gillispie-Taylor’s institution spoke with this news organization about their thoughts on the findings and how they were approaching their own career goals in medicine in light of these findings.
Kyla Fergason, a second-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, said that she thinks she wants to pursue pediatrics or meds-peds. Though she’s not sure whether she specifically wants to pursue pediatric rheumatology, she is very interested in the area and said that she has learned much from the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium conference. She found the dearth of pediatric rheumatology faculty at residency programs worrisome, particularly in states like Alaska and Hawaii because they aren’t contiguous with the rest of the United States. Only three pediatric rheumatologists are practicing in Hawaii.
“It’s really concerning that sometimes there is not any rheumatologist there to see the patient,” Ms. Fergason told this news organization. “These are diseases that affect people chronically throughout their entire lives, so it’s definitely concerning to think that, at a time when they could be helped and there could be interventions made, none are made because there’s just no one available.”
Kristiana Nasto, a third-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, is similarly interested in pediatrics but leaning more toward meds-peds and has an interest in rheumatology as well. She was surprised at how many programs had no pediatric rheumatologist on faculty because Baylor has a robust program.
“I was not aware of the fact that other states or other parts of Texas do not have the luxury of the great rheumatologists that we have at Baylor College of Medicine,” Ms. Nasto said. “That can definitely impact care for many patients because some of these rheumatologic diseases are so unique and challenging to treat that they require specialized care, so it makes me a bit sad that this is the case.”
Dr. Gillispie-Taylor has received an educational grant from Pfizer. Ms. Fergason and Ms. Nasto had no disclosures. No external funding was noted for the study.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW ORLEANS – More than one-third of pediatric residency programs do not have a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty, a situation that has changed little since 2004, according to a poster presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium 2023 conference.
“This shortage has significant downstream effects,” according to author Miriah Gillispie-Taylor, MD, an assistant professor of pediatric rheumatology at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston. Without adequate education, it’s unreasonable to expect that a pediatrician will recognize the great diversity of presentations among rheumatic diseases, for example. “Without recognition, patients are not referred in a timely manner, and earlier identification and treatment of rheumatic diseases leads to improved outcomes,” Dr. Gillispie-Taylor said.
Currently, eight U.S. states do not have a board-certified pediatric rheumatologist, including Alaska. Dr. Gillispie-Taylor cited a 2006 study that found that one-third of medical schools (33%) and 40% of U.S. pediatric residency programs did not have an on-site pediatric rheumatologist in 2004.
As the long-standing workforce shortage in pediatric rheumatology continues, Dr. Gillispie-Taylor and her colleagues investigated whether increasing awareness of this problem has influenced the number of United States and Puerto Rico residency training programs with pediatric rheumatology faculty from 2004 to present.
The researchers identified 212 pediatric residency programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education for 2022-2023 and reviewed their program website to see which ones had affiliated pediatric rheumatology faculty. After determining the faculty from the website for 85% of the programs, the researchers emailed the other programs to find out whether a pediatric rheumatologist was on faculty, filling out another 6% of the programs. Most of the remaining uncategorized programs (7%) were categorized at a meeting of the Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance medical education workgroup. Only 2% of programs could not be ultimately categorized.
The region with the greatest proportion of pediatric residency programs that had a pediatric rheumatologist was the Southeast, where 95% (36 of 38 programs) of programs had one on faculty. The Southwest, comprising Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona, had the lowest proportion: 43% (9 of 21 programs). For the other regions, 69% of the West/Pacific Northwest (18 of 26), 62% of the Midwest (28 of 45), and 61% of the Northeast (39 of 64) programs had a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty. Three of Puerto Rico’s four programs had one as well.
Overall, 63% of programs had a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty, and 36% did not; the state of three programs was unknown.
The large proportion of programs without a pediatric rheumatologist “limits exposure to rheumatologic conditions and learning opportunities during residency and contribute to declining fellow match rates,” the authors concluded. They noted that only 62.8% of pediatric rheumatology fellowship positions were filled in 2022, down slightly from the 69.2% filled in 2021, according to report data from the National Matching Resident Program.
The researchers acknowledged that their results could be skewed if website information was outdated for any programs, and it’s difficult to determine which programs might lack resources on the basis of only publicly available information. Though programs without pediatric rheumatologists might benefit from visiting professorships, it can be difficult to identify which ones, they added.
The authors recommend two next steps: one, establishing areas of essential knowledge in pediatric rheumatology to enable the creation of learning objectives so programs can focus their educational efforts; and two, continuing efforts to understand residents’ motivation to pursue fellowships in pediatric rheumatology for the purpose of improving recruitment.
Two medical students at Dr. Gillispie-Taylor’s institution spoke with this news organization about their thoughts on the findings and how they were approaching their own career goals in medicine in light of these findings.
Kyla Fergason, a second-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, said that she thinks she wants to pursue pediatrics or meds-peds. Though she’s not sure whether she specifically wants to pursue pediatric rheumatology, she is very interested in the area and said that she has learned much from the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium conference. She found the dearth of pediatric rheumatology faculty at residency programs worrisome, particularly in states like Alaska and Hawaii because they aren’t contiguous with the rest of the United States. Only three pediatric rheumatologists are practicing in Hawaii.
“It’s really concerning that sometimes there is not any rheumatologist there to see the patient,” Ms. Fergason told this news organization. “These are diseases that affect people chronically throughout their entire lives, so it’s definitely concerning to think that, at a time when they could be helped and there could be interventions made, none are made because there’s just no one available.”
Kristiana Nasto, a third-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, is similarly interested in pediatrics but leaning more toward meds-peds and has an interest in rheumatology as well. She was surprised at how many programs had no pediatric rheumatologist on faculty because Baylor has a robust program.
“I was not aware of the fact that other states or other parts of Texas do not have the luxury of the great rheumatologists that we have at Baylor College of Medicine,” Ms. Nasto said. “That can definitely impact care for many patients because some of these rheumatologic diseases are so unique and challenging to treat that they require specialized care, so it makes me a bit sad that this is the case.”
Dr. Gillispie-Taylor has received an educational grant from Pfizer. Ms. Fergason and Ms. Nasto had no disclosures. No external funding was noted for the study.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
NEW ORLEANS – More than one-third of pediatric residency programs do not have a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty, a situation that has changed little since 2004, according to a poster presented at the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium 2023 conference.
“This shortage has significant downstream effects,” according to author Miriah Gillispie-Taylor, MD, an assistant professor of pediatric rheumatology at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston. Without adequate education, it’s unreasonable to expect that a pediatrician will recognize the great diversity of presentations among rheumatic diseases, for example. “Without recognition, patients are not referred in a timely manner, and earlier identification and treatment of rheumatic diseases leads to improved outcomes,” Dr. Gillispie-Taylor said.
Currently, eight U.S. states do not have a board-certified pediatric rheumatologist, including Alaska. Dr. Gillispie-Taylor cited a 2006 study that found that one-third of medical schools (33%) and 40% of U.S. pediatric residency programs did not have an on-site pediatric rheumatologist in 2004.
As the long-standing workforce shortage in pediatric rheumatology continues, Dr. Gillispie-Taylor and her colleagues investigated whether increasing awareness of this problem has influenced the number of United States and Puerto Rico residency training programs with pediatric rheumatology faculty from 2004 to present.
The researchers identified 212 pediatric residency programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education for 2022-2023 and reviewed their program website to see which ones had affiliated pediatric rheumatology faculty. After determining the faculty from the website for 85% of the programs, the researchers emailed the other programs to find out whether a pediatric rheumatologist was on faculty, filling out another 6% of the programs. Most of the remaining uncategorized programs (7%) were categorized at a meeting of the Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance medical education workgroup. Only 2% of programs could not be ultimately categorized.
The region with the greatest proportion of pediatric residency programs that had a pediatric rheumatologist was the Southeast, where 95% (36 of 38 programs) of programs had one on faculty. The Southwest, comprising Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona, had the lowest proportion: 43% (9 of 21 programs). For the other regions, 69% of the West/Pacific Northwest (18 of 26), 62% of the Midwest (28 of 45), and 61% of the Northeast (39 of 64) programs had a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty. Three of Puerto Rico’s four programs had one as well.
Overall, 63% of programs had a pediatric rheumatologist on faculty, and 36% did not; the state of three programs was unknown.
The large proportion of programs without a pediatric rheumatologist “limits exposure to rheumatologic conditions and learning opportunities during residency and contribute to declining fellow match rates,” the authors concluded. They noted that only 62.8% of pediatric rheumatology fellowship positions were filled in 2022, down slightly from the 69.2% filled in 2021, according to report data from the National Matching Resident Program.
The researchers acknowledged that their results could be skewed if website information was outdated for any programs, and it’s difficult to determine which programs might lack resources on the basis of only publicly available information. Though programs without pediatric rheumatologists might benefit from visiting professorships, it can be difficult to identify which ones, they added.
The authors recommend two next steps: one, establishing areas of essential knowledge in pediatric rheumatology to enable the creation of learning objectives so programs can focus their educational efforts; and two, continuing efforts to understand residents’ motivation to pursue fellowships in pediatric rheumatology for the purpose of improving recruitment.
Two medical students at Dr. Gillispie-Taylor’s institution spoke with this news organization about their thoughts on the findings and how they were approaching their own career goals in medicine in light of these findings.
Kyla Fergason, a second-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, said that she thinks she wants to pursue pediatrics or meds-peds. Though she’s not sure whether she specifically wants to pursue pediatric rheumatology, she is very interested in the area and said that she has learned much from the Pediatric Rheumatology Symposium conference. She found the dearth of pediatric rheumatology faculty at residency programs worrisome, particularly in states like Alaska and Hawaii because they aren’t contiguous with the rest of the United States. Only three pediatric rheumatologists are practicing in Hawaii.
“It’s really concerning that sometimes there is not any rheumatologist there to see the patient,” Ms. Fergason told this news organization. “These are diseases that affect people chronically throughout their entire lives, so it’s definitely concerning to think that, at a time when they could be helped and there could be interventions made, none are made because there’s just no one available.”
Kristiana Nasto, a third-year medical student at Baylor College of Medicine, is similarly interested in pediatrics but leaning more toward meds-peds and has an interest in rheumatology as well. She was surprised at how many programs had no pediatric rheumatologist on faculty because Baylor has a robust program.
“I was not aware of the fact that other states or other parts of Texas do not have the luxury of the great rheumatologists that we have at Baylor College of Medicine,” Ms. Nasto said. “That can definitely impact care for many patients because some of these rheumatologic diseases are so unique and challenging to treat that they require specialized care, so it makes me a bit sad that this is the case.”
Dr. Gillispie-Taylor has received an educational grant from Pfizer. Ms. Fergason and Ms. Nasto had no disclosures. No external funding was noted for the study.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
AT PRSYM 2023
Music at bedtime may aid depression-related insomnia
PARIS –
The Music to Improve Sleep Quality in Adults With Depression and Insomnia (MUSTAFI) trial randomly assigned more than 110 outpatients with depression to either a music intervention or a waiting list. Sleep quality and quality of life significantly improved after listening to music for half an hour at bedtime for 4 weeks.
“This is a low-cost, safe intervention that has no side effects and may easily be implemented in psychiatry” along with existing treatments, lead researcher Helle Nystrup Lund, PhD, unit for depression, Aalborg (Denmark) University Hospital, said in an interview.
The findings were presented at the European Psychiatric Association 2023 Congress, and recently published in the Nordic Journal of Psychiatry.
Difficult to resolve
The researchers noted that insomnia is common in patients with depression and is “difficult to resolve.”
They noted that, while music is commonly used as a sleep aid and a growing evidence base suggests it has positive effects, there have been few investigations into the effectiveness of music for patients with depression-related insomnia.
To fill this research gap, 112 outpatients with depression and comorbid insomnia who were receiving care at a single center were randomly assigned to either an intervention group or a wait list control group.
Participants in the intervention group listened to music for a minimum of 30 minutes at bedtime for 4 weeks. The music was delivered via the MusicStar app, which is available as a free download from the Apple and Android (Google Play) app stores. The app was developed by Dr. Lund and Lars Rye Bertelsen, a PhD student and music therapist at Aalborg University Hospital.
The app is designed as a multicolored star, with each arm of the star linking to a playlist lasting between 30 minutes and 1 hour. Each color of the star indicates a different tempo of music.
Blue playlists, Dr. Lund explained, offer the quietest music, green is more lively, and red is the most dynamic. Gray playlists linked to project-related soundtracks, such as summer rain.
Dr. Lund said organizing the playlists by stimuli and color code, instead of genre, allows users to regulate their level of arousal and makes the music choice intuitive and easy.
She said that the genres of music include New Age, folk, pop, classical, and film soundtracks, “but no hard rock.”
“There’s actually a quite large selection of music available, because studies show that individual choice is important, as are personal preferences,” she said, adding that the endless choices offered by streaming services can cause confusion.
“So we made curated playlists and designed them with well-known pieces, but also with newly composed music not associated with anything,” Dr. Lund said.
Participants were assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, and two World Health Organization well-being questionnaires (WHO-5, WHOQOL-BREF), as well as actigraphy.
Results showed that, at 4 weeks, participants in the intervention group experienced significant improvements in sleep quality in comparison with control persons. The effect size for the PSQI was –2.1, and for quality of life on the WHO-5, the effect size was 8.4.
A subanalysis revealed that the length of nocturnal sleep in the intervention group increased by an average of 18 minutes during the study from a baseline of approximately 5 hours per night, said Dr. Lund.
However, there were no changes in actigraphy measurements and no significant improvements in HAMD-17 scores.
Dr. Lund said that, on the basis of these positive findings, music intervention as a sleep aid is now offered at Aalborg University Hospital to patients with depression-related insomnia.
Clinically meaningful?
Commenting on the findings, Gerald J. Haeffel, PhD, department of psychology, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind., said that overall, the study showed there was a change in sleep-quality and quality of life scores of “about 10% in each.”
“This, on the surface, would seem to be a meaningful change,” although it is less clear whether it is “clinically meaningful.” Perhaps it is, “but it would be nice to have more information.”
It would be useful, he said, to “show the means for each group pre- to postintervention, along with standard deviations,” he added.
Dr. Haeffel added that on the basis of current results, it isn’t possible to determine whether individuals’ control over music choice is important.
“We have no idea if ‘choice’ or length of playlist had any causal role in the results. One would need to run a study with the same playlist, but in one group people have to listen to whatever song comes on versus another condition in which they get to choose a song off the same list,” he said.
He noted that his group conducted a study in which highly popular music that was chosen by individual participants was found to have a positive effect. Even so, he said, “we could not determine if it was ‘choice’ or ‘popularity’ that caused the positive effects of music.”
In addition, he said, the reason music has a positive effect on insomnia remains unclear.
“It is not because it helped with depression, and it’s not because it’s actually changing objective sleep parameters. It could be that it improves mood right before bed or helps distract people right before bed. At the same time, it could also just be a placebo effect,” said Dr. Haeffel.
In addition, he said, it’s important to note that the music intervention had no comparator, so “maybe just doing something different or getting to talk with researchers created the effect and has nothing to do with music.”
Overall, he believes that there are “not enough data” to use the sleep intervention that was employed in the current study “as primary intervention, but future work could show its usefulness as a supplement.”
Dr. Lund and Mr. Bertelsen reported ownership and sales of the MusicStar app. Dr. Haeffel reported no relevant financial relationships.
PARIS –
The Music to Improve Sleep Quality in Adults With Depression and Insomnia (MUSTAFI) trial randomly assigned more than 110 outpatients with depression to either a music intervention or a waiting list. Sleep quality and quality of life significantly improved after listening to music for half an hour at bedtime for 4 weeks.
“This is a low-cost, safe intervention that has no side effects and may easily be implemented in psychiatry” along with existing treatments, lead researcher Helle Nystrup Lund, PhD, unit for depression, Aalborg (Denmark) University Hospital, said in an interview.
The findings were presented at the European Psychiatric Association 2023 Congress, and recently published in the Nordic Journal of Psychiatry.
Difficult to resolve
The researchers noted that insomnia is common in patients with depression and is “difficult to resolve.”
They noted that, while music is commonly used as a sleep aid and a growing evidence base suggests it has positive effects, there have been few investigations into the effectiveness of music for patients with depression-related insomnia.
To fill this research gap, 112 outpatients with depression and comorbid insomnia who were receiving care at a single center were randomly assigned to either an intervention group or a wait list control group.
Participants in the intervention group listened to music for a minimum of 30 minutes at bedtime for 4 weeks. The music was delivered via the MusicStar app, which is available as a free download from the Apple and Android (Google Play) app stores. The app was developed by Dr. Lund and Lars Rye Bertelsen, a PhD student and music therapist at Aalborg University Hospital.
The app is designed as a multicolored star, with each arm of the star linking to a playlist lasting between 30 minutes and 1 hour. Each color of the star indicates a different tempo of music.
Blue playlists, Dr. Lund explained, offer the quietest music, green is more lively, and red is the most dynamic. Gray playlists linked to project-related soundtracks, such as summer rain.
Dr. Lund said organizing the playlists by stimuli and color code, instead of genre, allows users to regulate their level of arousal and makes the music choice intuitive and easy.
She said that the genres of music include New Age, folk, pop, classical, and film soundtracks, “but no hard rock.”
“There’s actually a quite large selection of music available, because studies show that individual choice is important, as are personal preferences,” she said, adding that the endless choices offered by streaming services can cause confusion.
“So we made curated playlists and designed them with well-known pieces, but also with newly composed music not associated with anything,” Dr. Lund said.
Participants were assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, and two World Health Organization well-being questionnaires (WHO-5, WHOQOL-BREF), as well as actigraphy.
Results showed that, at 4 weeks, participants in the intervention group experienced significant improvements in sleep quality in comparison with control persons. The effect size for the PSQI was –2.1, and for quality of life on the WHO-5, the effect size was 8.4.
A subanalysis revealed that the length of nocturnal sleep in the intervention group increased by an average of 18 minutes during the study from a baseline of approximately 5 hours per night, said Dr. Lund.
However, there were no changes in actigraphy measurements and no significant improvements in HAMD-17 scores.
Dr. Lund said that, on the basis of these positive findings, music intervention as a sleep aid is now offered at Aalborg University Hospital to patients with depression-related insomnia.
Clinically meaningful?
Commenting on the findings, Gerald J. Haeffel, PhD, department of psychology, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind., said that overall, the study showed there was a change in sleep-quality and quality of life scores of “about 10% in each.”
“This, on the surface, would seem to be a meaningful change,” although it is less clear whether it is “clinically meaningful.” Perhaps it is, “but it would be nice to have more information.”
It would be useful, he said, to “show the means for each group pre- to postintervention, along with standard deviations,” he added.
Dr. Haeffel added that on the basis of current results, it isn’t possible to determine whether individuals’ control over music choice is important.
“We have no idea if ‘choice’ or length of playlist had any causal role in the results. One would need to run a study with the same playlist, but in one group people have to listen to whatever song comes on versus another condition in which they get to choose a song off the same list,” he said.
He noted that his group conducted a study in which highly popular music that was chosen by individual participants was found to have a positive effect. Even so, he said, “we could not determine if it was ‘choice’ or ‘popularity’ that caused the positive effects of music.”
In addition, he said, the reason music has a positive effect on insomnia remains unclear.
“It is not because it helped with depression, and it’s not because it’s actually changing objective sleep parameters. It could be that it improves mood right before bed or helps distract people right before bed. At the same time, it could also just be a placebo effect,” said Dr. Haeffel.
In addition, he said, it’s important to note that the music intervention had no comparator, so “maybe just doing something different or getting to talk with researchers created the effect and has nothing to do with music.”
Overall, he believes that there are “not enough data” to use the sleep intervention that was employed in the current study “as primary intervention, but future work could show its usefulness as a supplement.”
Dr. Lund and Mr. Bertelsen reported ownership and sales of the MusicStar app. Dr. Haeffel reported no relevant financial relationships.
PARIS –
The Music to Improve Sleep Quality in Adults With Depression and Insomnia (MUSTAFI) trial randomly assigned more than 110 outpatients with depression to either a music intervention or a waiting list. Sleep quality and quality of life significantly improved after listening to music for half an hour at bedtime for 4 weeks.
“This is a low-cost, safe intervention that has no side effects and may easily be implemented in psychiatry” along with existing treatments, lead researcher Helle Nystrup Lund, PhD, unit for depression, Aalborg (Denmark) University Hospital, said in an interview.
The findings were presented at the European Psychiatric Association 2023 Congress, and recently published in the Nordic Journal of Psychiatry.
Difficult to resolve
The researchers noted that insomnia is common in patients with depression and is “difficult to resolve.”
They noted that, while music is commonly used as a sleep aid and a growing evidence base suggests it has positive effects, there have been few investigations into the effectiveness of music for patients with depression-related insomnia.
To fill this research gap, 112 outpatients with depression and comorbid insomnia who were receiving care at a single center were randomly assigned to either an intervention group or a wait list control group.
Participants in the intervention group listened to music for a minimum of 30 minutes at bedtime for 4 weeks. The music was delivered via the MusicStar app, which is available as a free download from the Apple and Android (Google Play) app stores. The app was developed by Dr. Lund and Lars Rye Bertelsen, a PhD student and music therapist at Aalborg University Hospital.
The app is designed as a multicolored star, with each arm of the star linking to a playlist lasting between 30 minutes and 1 hour. Each color of the star indicates a different tempo of music.
Blue playlists, Dr. Lund explained, offer the quietest music, green is more lively, and red is the most dynamic. Gray playlists linked to project-related soundtracks, such as summer rain.
Dr. Lund said organizing the playlists by stimuli and color code, instead of genre, allows users to regulate their level of arousal and makes the music choice intuitive and easy.
She said that the genres of music include New Age, folk, pop, classical, and film soundtracks, “but no hard rock.”
“There’s actually a quite large selection of music available, because studies show that individual choice is important, as are personal preferences,” she said, adding that the endless choices offered by streaming services can cause confusion.
“So we made curated playlists and designed them with well-known pieces, but also with newly composed music not associated with anything,” Dr. Lund said.
Participants were assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, and two World Health Organization well-being questionnaires (WHO-5, WHOQOL-BREF), as well as actigraphy.
Results showed that, at 4 weeks, participants in the intervention group experienced significant improvements in sleep quality in comparison with control persons. The effect size for the PSQI was –2.1, and for quality of life on the WHO-5, the effect size was 8.4.
A subanalysis revealed that the length of nocturnal sleep in the intervention group increased by an average of 18 minutes during the study from a baseline of approximately 5 hours per night, said Dr. Lund.
However, there were no changes in actigraphy measurements and no significant improvements in HAMD-17 scores.
Dr. Lund said that, on the basis of these positive findings, music intervention as a sleep aid is now offered at Aalborg University Hospital to patients with depression-related insomnia.
Clinically meaningful?
Commenting on the findings, Gerald J. Haeffel, PhD, department of psychology, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind., said that overall, the study showed there was a change in sleep-quality and quality of life scores of “about 10% in each.”
“This, on the surface, would seem to be a meaningful change,” although it is less clear whether it is “clinically meaningful.” Perhaps it is, “but it would be nice to have more information.”
It would be useful, he said, to “show the means for each group pre- to postintervention, along with standard deviations,” he added.
Dr. Haeffel added that on the basis of current results, it isn’t possible to determine whether individuals’ control over music choice is important.
“We have no idea if ‘choice’ or length of playlist had any causal role in the results. One would need to run a study with the same playlist, but in one group people have to listen to whatever song comes on versus another condition in which they get to choose a song off the same list,” he said.
He noted that his group conducted a study in which highly popular music that was chosen by individual participants was found to have a positive effect. Even so, he said, “we could not determine if it was ‘choice’ or ‘popularity’ that caused the positive effects of music.”
In addition, he said, the reason music has a positive effect on insomnia remains unclear.
“It is not because it helped with depression, and it’s not because it’s actually changing objective sleep parameters. It could be that it improves mood right before bed or helps distract people right before bed. At the same time, it could also just be a placebo effect,” said Dr. Haeffel.
In addition, he said, it’s important to note that the music intervention had no comparator, so “maybe just doing something different or getting to talk with researchers created the effect and has nothing to do with music.”
Overall, he believes that there are “not enough data” to use the sleep intervention that was employed in the current study “as primary intervention, but future work could show its usefulness as a supplement.”
Dr. Lund and Mr. Bertelsen reported ownership and sales of the MusicStar app. Dr. Haeffel reported no relevant financial relationships.
AT EPA 2023
Impact of child abuse differs by gender
PARIS – , new research shows.
Investigators found childhood emotional and sexual abuse had a greater effect on women than men, whereas men were more adversely affected by emotional and physical neglect.
“Our findings indicate that exposure to childhood maltreatment increases the risk of having psychiatric symptoms in both men and women,” lead researcher Thanavadee Prachason, PhD, department of psychiatry and neuropsychology, Maastricht (the Netherlands) University Medical Center, said in a press release.
“Exposure to emotionally or sexually abusive experiences during childhood increases the risk of a variety of psychiatric symptoms, particularly in women. In contrast, a history of emotional or physical neglect in childhood increases the risk of having psychiatric symptoms more in men,” Dr. Prachason added.
The findings were presented at the European Psychiatric Association 2023 Congress.
A leading mental illness risk factor
Study presenter Laura Fusar-Poli, MD, PhD, from the department of brain and behavioral sciences, University of Pavia (Italy), said that the differential impact of trauma subtypes in men and women indicate that both gender and the type of childhood adversity experienced need to be taken into account in future studies.
Dr. Fusar-Poli began by highlighting that 13%-36% of individuals have experienced some kind of childhood trauma, with 30% exposed to at least two types of trauma.
Trauma has been identified as a risk factor for a range of mental health problems.
“It is estimated that, worldwide, around one third of all psychiatric disorders are related to childhood trauma,” senior researcher Sinan Gül
Consequently, “childhood trauma is a leading preventable risk factor for mental illness,” he added.
Previous research suggests the subtype of trauma has an impact on subsequent biological changes and clinical outcomes, and that there are gender differences in the effects of childhood trauma.
To investigate, the researchers examined data from TwinssCan, a Belgian cohort of twins and siblings aged 15-35 years without a diagnosis of pervasive mental disorders.
The study included 477 females and 314 males who had completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire–Short Form (CTQ) and the Symptom Checklist-90 SR (SCL-90) to determine exposure to childhood adversity and levels of psychopathology, respectively.
Results showed that total CTQ scores were significantly associated with total SCL-90 scores in both men and women, as well as with each of the nine symptom domains of the SCL-90 (P < .001 for all assessments). These included psychoticism, paranoid ideation, anxiety, depression, somatization, obsessive-compulsive, interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, and phobic anxiety.
There were no significant differences in the associations with total CTQ scores between men and women.
However, when the researchers examined trauma subtypes and psychopathology, clear gender differences emerged.
Investigators found a significant association between emotional abuse on the CTQ and total SCL-90 scores in both men (P < .023) and women (P < .001), but that the association was significantly stronger in women (P = .043).
Sexual abuse was significantly associated with total SCL-90 scores in women (P < .001), while emotional neglect and physical neglect were significantly associated with psychopathology scores in men (P = .026 and P < .001, respectively).
“Physical neglect may include experiences of not having enough to eat, wearing dirty clothes, not being taken care of, and not getting taken to the doctor when the person was growing up,” said Dr. Prachason.
“Emotional neglect may include childhood experiences like not feeling loved or important, and not feeling close to the family.”
In women, emotional abuse was significantly associated with all nine symptom domains of the SCL-90, while sexual abuse was associated with seven: psychoticism, paranoid ideation, anxiety, depression, somatization, obsessive-compulsive, and hostility.
Physical neglect, in men, was significantly associated with eight of the symptom domains (all but somatization), but emotional neglect was linked only to depression, Dr. Fusar-Poli reported.
“This study showed a very important consequence of childhood trauma, and not only in people with mental disorders. I would like to underline that this is a general population, composed of adolescents and young adults, which is the age in which the majority of mental disorders starts, Dr. Fusar-Poli said in an interview.
She emphasized that psychotic disorders are only a part of the “broad range” of conditions that may be related to childhood trauma, which “can have an impact on sub-threshold symptoms that can affect functioning and quality of life in the general population.”
Addressing the differential findings in men and women, Dr. Gül
However, he said, this is “something that we really need understand,” as there is likely an underlying mechanism, “and not only a biological mechanism but probably a societal one.”
Dr. Gül
Compromised cognitive, emotional function
Commenting on the findings for this news organization, Elaine F. Walker, PhD, professor of psychology and neuroscience at Emory University in Atlanta, said stress exposure in general, including childhood trauma, “has transdiagnostic effects on vulnerability to mental disorders.”
“The effects are primarily mediated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, which triggers the release of cortisol. When persistently elevated, this can result in neurobiological processes that have adverse effects on brain structure and circuitry which, in turn, compromises cognitive and emotional functioning,” said Dr. Walker, who was not associated with the study.
She noted that, “while it is possible that there are sex differences in biological sensitivity to certain subtypes of childhood trauma, it may also be the case that sex differences in the likelihood of exposure to trauma subtypes is actually the key factor.”
“At the present time, there are not specific treatment protocols aimed at addressing childhood trauma subtypes, but most experienced therapists will incorporate information about the individual’s trauma history in their treatment,” Dr. Walker added.
Also commenting on the research, Philip Gorwood, MD, PhD, head of the Clinique des Maladies Mentales et de l’Encéphale at Centre Hospitalier Sainte Anne in Paris, said the results are “important … as childhood trauma has been clearly recognized as a major risk factor for the vast majority of psychiatric disorders, but with poor knowledge of gender specificities.”
“Understanding which aspects of trauma are more damaging according to gender will facilitate research on the resilience process. Many intervention strategies will indeed benefit from a more personalized approach,” he said in a statement. Dr. Gorwood was not involved with this study.
The study authors, Dr. Gorwood, and Dr. Walker report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
PARIS – , new research shows.
Investigators found childhood emotional and sexual abuse had a greater effect on women than men, whereas men were more adversely affected by emotional and physical neglect.
“Our findings indicate that exposure to childhood maltreatment increases the risk of having psychiatric symptoms in both men and women,” lead researcher Thanavadee Prachason, PhD, department of psychiatry and neuropsychology, Maastricht (the Netherlands) University Medical Center, said in a press release.
“Exposure to emotionally or sexually abusive experiences during childhood increases the risk of a variety of psychiatric symptoms, particularly in women. In contrast, a history of emotional or physical neglect in childhood increases the risk of having psychiatric symptoms more in men,” Dr. Prachason added.
The findings were presented at the European Psychiatric Association 2023 Congress.
A leading mental illness risk factor
Study presenter Laura Fusar-Poli, MD, PhD, from the department of brain and behavioral sciences, University of Pavia (Italy), said that the differential impact of trauma subtypes in men and women indicate that both gender and the type of childhood adversity experienced need to be taken into account in future studies.
Dr. Fusar-Poli began by highlighting that 13%-36% of individuals have experienced some kind of childhood trauma, with 30% exposed to at least two types of trauma.
Trauma has been identified as a risk factor for a range of mental health problems.
“It is estimated that, worldwide, around one third of all psychiatric disorders are related to childhood trauma,” senior researcher Sinan Gül
Consequently, “childhood trauma is a leading preventable risk factor for mental illness,” he added.
Previous research suggests the subtype of trauma has an impact on subsequent biological changes and clinical outcomes, and that there are gender differences in the effects of childhood trauma.
To investigate, the researchers examined data from TwinssCan, a Belgian cohort of twins and siblings aged 15-35 years without a diagnosis of pervasive mental disorders.
The study included 477 females and 314 males who had completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire–Short Form (CTQ) and the Symptom Checklist-90 SR (SCL-90) to determine exposure to childhood adversity and levels of psychopathology, respectively.
Results showed that total CTQ scores were significantly associated with total SCL-90 scores in both men and women, as well as with each of the nine symptom domains of the SCL-90 (P < .001 for all assessments). These included psychoticism, paranoid ideation, anxiety, depression, somatization, obsessive-compulsive, interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, and phobic anxiety.
There were no significant differences in the associations with total CTQ scores between men and women.
However, when the researchers examined trauma subtypes and psychopathology, clear gender differences emerged.
Investigators found a significant association between emotional abuse on the CTQ and total SCL-90 scores in both men (P < .023) and women (P < .001), but that the association was significantly stronger in women (P = .043).
Sexual abuse was significantly associated with total SCL-90 scores in women (P < .001), while emotional neglect and physical neglect were significantly associated with psychopathology scores in men (P = .026 and P < .001, respectively).
“Physical neglect may include experiences of not having enough to eat, wearing dirty clothes, not being taken care of, and not getting taken to the doctor when the person was growing up,” said Dr. Prachason.
“Emotional neglect may include childhood experiences like not feeling loved or important, and not feeling close to the family.”
In women, emotional abuse was significantly associated with all nine symptom domains of the SCL-90, while sexual abuse was associated with seven: psychoticism, paranoid ideation, anxiety, depression, somatization, obsessive-compulsive, and hostility.
Physical neglect, in men, was significantly associated with eight of the symptom domains (all but somatization), but emotional neglect was linked only to depression, Dr. Fusar-Poli reported.
“This study showed a very important consequence of childhood trauma, and not only in people with mental disorders. I would like to underline that this is a general population, composed of adolescents and young adults, which is the age in which the majority of mental disorders starts, Dr. Fusar-Poli said in an interview.
She emphasized that psychotic disorders are only a part of the “broad range” of conditions that may be related to childhood trauma, which “can have an impact on sub-threshold symptoms that can affect functioning and quality of life in the general population.”
Addressing the differential findings in men and women, Dr. Gül
However, he said, this is “something that we really need understand,” as there is likely an underlying mechanism, “and not only a biological mechanism but probably a societal one.”
Dr. Gül
Compromised cognitive, emotional function
Commenting on the findings for this news organization, Elaine F. Walker, PhD, professor of psychology and neuroscience at Emory University in Atlanta, said stress exposure in general, including childhood trauma, “has transdiagnostic effects on vulnerability to mental disorders.”
“The effects are primarily mediated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, which triggers the release of cortisol. When persistently elevated, this can result in neurobiological processes that have adverse effects on brain structure and circuitry which, in turn, compromises cognitive and emotional functioning,” said Dr. Walker, who was not associated with the study.
She noted that, “while it is possible that there are sex differences in biological sensitivity to certain subtypes of childhood trauma, it may also be the case that sex differences in the likelihood of exposure to trauma subtypes is actually the key factor.”
“At the present time, there are not specific treatment protocols aimed at addressing childhood trauma subtypes, but most experienced therapists will incorporate information about the individual’s trauma history in their treatment,” Dr. Walker added.
Also commenting on the research, Philip Gorwood, MD, PhD, head of the Clinique des Maladies Mentales et de l’Encéphale at Centre Hospitalier Sainte Anne in Paris, said the results are “important … as childhood trauma has been clearly recognized as a major risk factor for the vast majority of psychiatric disorders, but with poor knowledge of gender specificities.”
“Understanding which aspects of trauma are more damaging according to gender will facilitate research on the resilience process. Many intervention strategies will indeed benefit from a more personalized approach,” he said in a statement. Dr. Gorwood was not involved with this study.
The study authors, Dr. Gorwood, and Dr. Walker report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
PARIS – , new research shows.
Investigators found childhood emotional and sexual abuse had a greater effect on women than men, whereas men were more adversely affected by emotional and physical neglect.
“Our findings indicate that exposure to childhood maltreatment increases the risk of having psychiatric symptoms in both men and women,” lead researcher Thanavadee Prachason, PhD, department of psychiatry and neuropsychology, Maastricht (the Netherlands) University Medical Center, said in a press release.
“Exposure to emotionally or sexually abusive experiences during childhood increases the risk of a variety of psychiatric symptoms, particularly in women. In contrast, a history of emotional or physical neglect in childhood increases the risk of having psychiatric symptoms more in men,” Dr. Prachason added.
The findings were presented at the European Psychiatric Association 2023 Congress.
A leading mental illness risk factor
Study presenter Laura Fusar-Poli, MD, PhD, from the department of brain and behavioral sciences, University of Pavia (Italy), said that the differential impact of trauma subtypes in men and women indicate that both gender and the type of childhood adversity experienced need to be taken into account in future studies.
Dr. Fusar-Poli began by highlighting that 13%-36% of individuals have experienced some kind of childhood trauma, with 30% exposed to at least two types of trauma.
Trauma has been identified as a risk factor for a range of mental health problems.
“It is estimated that, worldwide, around one third of all psychiatric disorders are related to childhood trauma,” senior researcher Sinan Gül
Consequently, “childhood trauma is a leading preventable risk factor for mental illness,” he added.
Previous research suggests the subtype of trauma has an impact on subsequent biological changes and clinical outcomes, and that there are gender differences in the effects of childhood trauma.
To investigate, the researchers examined data from TwinssCan, a Belgian cohort of twins and siblings aged 15-35 years without a diagnosis of pervasive mental disorders.
The study included 477 females and 314 males who had completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire–Short Form (CTQ) and the Symptom Checklist-90 SR (SCL-90) to determine exposure to childhood adversity and levels of psychopathology, respectively.
Results showed that total CTQ scores were significantly associated with total SCL-90 scores in both men and women, as well as with each of the nine symptom domains of the SCL-90 (P < .001 for all assessments). These included psychoticism, paranoid ideation, anxiety, depression, somatization, obsessive-compulsive, interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, and phobic anxiety.
There were no significant differences in the associations with total CTQ scores between men and women.
However, when the researchers examined trauma subtypes and psychopathology, clear gender differences emerged.
Investigators found a significant association between emotional abuse on the CTQ and total SCL-90 scores in both men (P < .023) and women (P < .001), but that the association was significantly stronger in women (P = .043).
Sexual abuse was significantly associated with total SCL-90 scores in women (P < .001), while emotional neglect and physical neglect were significantly associated with psychopathology scores in men (P = .026 and P < .001, respectively).
“Physical neglect may include experiences of not having enough to eat, wearing dirty clothes, not being taken care of, and not getting taken to the doctor when the person was growing up,” said Dr. Prachason.
“Emotional neglect may include childhood experiences like not feeling loved or important, and not feeling close to the family.”
In women, emotional abuse was significantly associated with all nine symptom domains of the SCL-90, while sexual abuse was associated with seven: psychoticism, paranoid ideation, anxiety, depression, somatization, obsessive-compulsive, and hostility.
Physical neglect, in men, was significantly associated with eight of the symptom domains (all but somatization), but emotional neglect was linked only to depression, Dr. Fusar-Poli reported.
“This study showed a very important consequence of childhood trauma, and not only in people with mental disorders. I would like to underline that this is a general population, composed of adolescents and young adults, which is the age in which the majority of mental disorders starts, Dr. Fusar-Poli said in an interview.
She emphasized that psychotic disorders are only a part of the “broad range” of conditions that may be related to childhood trauma, which “can have an impact on sub-threshold symptoms that can affect functioning and quality of life in the general population.”
Addressing the differential findings in men and women, Dr. Gül
However, he said, this is “something that we really need understand,” as there is likely an underlying mechanism, “and not only a biological mechanism but probably a societal one.”
Dr. Gül
Compromised cognitive, emotional function
Commenting on the findings for this news organization, Elaine F. Walker, PhD, professor of psychology and neuroscience at Emory University in Atlanta, said stress exposure in general, including childhood trauma, “has transdiagnostic effects on vulnerability to mental disorders.”
“The effects are primarily mediated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, which triggers the release of cortisol. When persistently elevated, this can result in neurobiological processes that have adverse effects on brain structure and circuitry which, in turn, compromises cognitive and emotional functioning,” said Dr. Walker, who was not associated with the study.
She noted that, “while it is possible that there are sex differences in biological sensitivity to certain subtypes of childhood trauma, it may also be the case that sex differences in the likelihood of exposure to trauma subtypes is actually the key factor.”
“At the present time, there are not specific treatment protocols aimed at addressing childhood trauma subtypes, but most experienced therapists will incorporate information about the individual’s trauma history in their treatment,” Dr. Walker added.
Also commenting on the research, Philip Gorwood, MD, PhD, head of the Clinique des Maladies Mentales et de l’Encéphale at Centre Hospitalier Sainte Anne in Paris, said the results are “important … as childhood trauma has been clearly recognized as a major risk factor for the vast majority of psychiatric disorders, but with poor knowledge of gender specificities.”
“Understanding which aspects of trauma are more damaging according to gender will facilitate research on the resilience process. Many intervention strategies will indeed benefit from a more personalized approach,” he said in a statement. Dr. Gorwood was not involved with this study.
The study authors, Dr. Gorwood, and Dr. Walker report no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
AT EPA 2023
Metabolic syndrome linked to knee pain in middle adulthood
DENVER – Metabolic syndrome in both early and mid-adulthood is associated with symptoms of knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.
To supplement existing evidence on the association between metabolic syndrome and joint pain in older adults, the researchers investigated the association in middle-aged adults over a 10- to 13-year period.
The researchers analyzed data from the Childhood Determinants of Adult Health study, which enrolled 2,447 adults with an average age of 31 between 2004 and 2006 and conducted follow-up in 1,549 participants with an average age of 44, during 2014-2019. The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) was used at follow-up only to assess knee symptoms of pain, stiffness, and dysfunction, as well as the overall score.
Data at both time points included fasting blood biochemistry, waist circumference, and blood pressure measures. The criteria for metabolic syndrome requires presence of central obesity (a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in males or 80 cm in females) and two of the following four factors:
- Raised triglycerides (at least 150 mg/dL) or specific treatment for this lipid abnormality.
- Reduced HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL in males and below 50 mg/dL in females) or treatment for this.
- Raised blood pressure (at least 130 mm Hg systolic or at least 85 mm Hg diastolic) or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension.
- Raised fasting blood glucose (at least 100 mg/dL) or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes.
The researchers grouped the participants on the basis of having no metabolic syndrome at either life stage, having metabolic syndrome in young adulthood but not at follow-up (improved), having developed metabolic syndrome at follow-up (incident), and having metabolic syndrome at both time points (persistent). Most of the participants did not have the metabolic syndrome at either time point (85%), whereas 2% improved in mid-adulthood, 9% developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood, and 4% had persistent metabolic syndrome.
At follow-up, 43% of the participants reported pain on the WOMAC, and the average WOMAC score was 10. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome increased from 8% in young adulthood to 13% in mid-adulthood, with an increase in abdominal obesity prevalence from 29% to 47%. Metabolic syndrome at any time point – whether improved later, developed later, or persistent – was associated with more knee symptoms, compared with no metabolic syndrome.
Presence of metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood was associated with knee symptoms from the total WOMAC score (ratio of means, 1.33; P < .001) after adjustment for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolic syndrome was also independently associated in mid-adulthood with knee pain (RoM, 1.29; P < .001) and poor function (RoM, 1.37; P < .001).
Those who developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood had the greatest association with overall knee symptoms (RoM, 1.56; P < .001) and with knee pain (RoM, 1.52; P < .001). Although improved and persistent metabolic syndrome were both significantly associated with total WOMAC score, neither was significantly associated with knee pain after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI.
The three individual metabolic criteria independently associated with overall WOMAC score were abdominal obesity (RoM, 1.09), hypertension (RoM, 1.44), and low HDL (RoM, 1.17; P < .001 for all).
Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, a professor of medicine and associate director of the Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview that this topic is especially important because there’s so little understanding of the role of comorbid conditions and osteoarthritis.
“There were some key things that I thought were wonderful about this study – the longitudinal nature and the fact that they had collected metabolic syndrome [criteria] at multiple time points and were able to look at persistent versus incident metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Callahan said. “We frequently don’t have that kind of trajectory.”
Jaqueline Lourdes Rios, PhD, an assistant professor of orthopedics at University Medical Center Utrecht (Netherlands), said in an interview that the study raised questions about whether treating metabolic syndrome could help prevent the progression of osteoarthritis to some extent. “Although, if you already have damage in your cartilage, and if you have a lot of inflammation that’s local, it might be a bit trickier than just treating metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Lourdes Rios added. “Then, it might help, it might not.” Either way, she said, it’s certainly worthwhile for physicians to spend time discussing interventions to address metabolic syndrome “because you treat the patient, not a knee.”
Dr. Ding, Dr. Lourdes Rios, and Dr. Callahan had no relevant financial relationships to disclose. The researchers did not note any external funding.
DENVER – Metabolic syndrome in both early and mid-adulthood is associated with symptoms of knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.
To supplement existing evidence on the association between metabolic syndrome and joint pain in older adults, the researchers investigated the association in middle-aged adults over a 10- to 13-year period.
The researchers analyzed data from the Childhood Determinants of Adult Health study, which enrolled 2,447 adults with an average age of 31 between 2004 and 2006 and conducted follow-up in 1,549 participants with an average age of 44, during 2014-2019. The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) was used at follow-up only to assess knee symptoms of pain, stiffness, and dysfunction, as well as the overall score.
Data at both time points included fasting blood biochemistry, waist circumference, and blood pressure measures. The criteria for metabolic syndrome requires presence of central obesity (a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in males or 80 cm in females) and two of the following four factors:
- Raised triglycerides (at least 150 mg/dL) or specific treatment for this lipid abnormality.
- Reduced HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL in males and below 50 mg/dL in females) or treatment for this.
- Raised blood pressure (at least 130 mm Hg systolic or at least 85 mm Hg diastolic) or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension.
- Raised fasting blood glucose (at least 100 mg/dL) or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes.
The researchers grouped the participants on the basis of having no metabolic syndrome at either life stage, having metabolic syndrome in young adulthood but not at follow-up (improved), having developed metabolic syndrome at follow-up (incident), and having metabolic syndrome at both time points (persistent). Most of the participants did not have the metabolic syndrome at either time point (85%), whereas 2% improved in mid-adulthood, 9% developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood, and 4% had persistent metabolic syndrome.
At follow-up, 43% of the participants reported pain on the WOMAC, and the average WOMAC score was 10. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome increased from 8% in young adulthood to 13% in mid-adulthood, with an increase in abdominal obesity prevalence from 29% to 47%. Metabolic syndrome at any time point – whether improved later, developed later, or persistent – was associated with more knee symptoms, compared with no metabolic syndrome.
Presence of metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood was associated with knee symptoms from the total WOMAC score (ratio of means, 1.33; P < .001) after adjustment for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolic syndrome was also independently associated in mid-adulthood with knee pain (RoM, 1.29; P < .001) and poor function (RoM, 1.37; P < .001).
Those who developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood had the greatest association with overall knee symptoms (RoM, 1.56; P < .001) and with knee pain (RoM, 1.52; P < .001). Although improved and persistent metabolic syndrome were both significantly associated with total WOMAC score, neither was significantly associated with knee pain after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI.
The three individual metabolic criteria independently associated with overall WOMAC score were abdominal obesity (RoM, 1.09), hypertension (RoM, 1.44), and low HDL (RoM, 1.17; P < .001 for all).
Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, a professor of medicine and associate director of the Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview that this topic is especially important because there’s so little understanding of the role of comorbid conditions and osteoarthritis.
“There were some key things that I thought were wonderful about this study – the longitudinal nature and the fact that they had collected metabolic syndrome [criteria] at multiple time points and were able to look at persistent versus incident metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Callahan said. “We frequently don’t have that kind of trajectory.”
Jaqueline Lourdes Rios, PhD, an assistant professor of orthopedics at University Medical Center Utrecht (Netherlands), said in an interview that the study raised questions about whether treating metabolic syndrome could help prevent the progression of osteoarthritis to some extent. “Although, if you already have damage in your cartilage, and if you have a lot of inflammation that’s local, it might be a bit trickier than just treating metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Lourdes Rios added. “Then, it might help, it might not.” Either way, she said, it’s certainly worthwhile for physicians to spend time discussing interventions to address metabolic syndrome “because you treat the patient, not a knee.”
Dr. Ding, Dr. Lourdes Rios, and Dr. Callahan had no relevant financial relationships to disclose. The researchers did not note any external funding.
DENVER – Metabolic syndrome in both early and mid-adulthood is associated with symptoms of knee osteoarthritis, according to a study presented at the OARSI 2023 World Congress.
To supplement existing evidence on the association between metabolic syndrome and joint pain in older adults, the researchers investigated the association in middle-aged adults over a 10- to 13-year period.
The researchers analyzed data from the Childhood Determinants of Adult Health study, which enrolled 2,447 adults with an average age of 31 between 2004 and 2006 and conducted follow-up in 1,549 participants with an average age of 44, during 2014-2019. The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) was used at follow-up only to assess knee symptoms of pain, stiffness, and dysfunction, as well as the overall score.
Data at both time points included fasting blood biochemistry, waist circumference, and blood pressure measures. The criteria for metabolic syndrome requires presence of central obesity (a waist circumference of at least 94 cm in males or 80 cm in females) and two of the following four factors:
- Raised triglycerides (at least 150 mg/dL) or specific treatment for this lipid abnormality.
- Reduced HDL cholesterol (below 40 mg/dL in males and below 50 mg/dL in females) or treatment for this.
- Raised blood pressure (at least 130 mm Hg systolic or at least 85 mm Hg diastolic) or treatment of previously diagnosed hypertension.
- Raised fasting blood glucose (at least 100 mg/dL) or previously diagnosed type 2 diabetes.
The researchers grouped the participants on the basis of having no metabolic syndrome at either life stage, having metabolic syndrome in young adulthood but not at follow-up (improved), having developed metabolic syndrome at follow-up (incident), and having metabolic syndrome at both time points (persistent). Most of the participants did not have the metabolic syndrome at either time point (85%), whereas 2% improved in mid-adulthood, 9% developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood, and 4% had persistent metabolic syndrome.
At follow-up, 43% of the participants reported pain on the WOMAC, and the average WOMAC score was 10. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome increased from 8% in young adulthood to 13% in mid-adulthood, with an increase in abdominal obesity prevalence from 29% to 47%. Metabolic syndrome at any time point – whether improved later, developed later, or persistent – was associated with more knee symptoms, compared with no metabolic syndrome.
Presence of metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood was associated with knee symptoms from the total WOMAC score (ratio of means, 1.33; P < .001) after adjustment for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolic syndrome was also independently associated in mid-adulthood with knee pain (RoM, 1.29; P < .001) and poor function (RoM, 1.37; P < .001).
Those who developed incident metabolic syndrome in mid-adulthood had the greatest association with overall knee symptoms (RoM, 1.56; P < .001) and with knee pain (RoM, 1.52; P < .001). Although improved and persistent metabolic syndrome were both significantly associated with total WOMAC score, neither was significantly associated with knee pain after adjustment for age, sex, and BMI.
The three individual metabolic criteria independently associated with overall WOMAC score were abdominal obesity (RoM, 1.09), hypertension (RoM, 1.44), and low HDL (RoM, 1.17; P < .001 for all).
Leigh F. Callahan, PhD, a professor of medicine and associate director of the Thurston Arthritis Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in an interview that this topic is especially important because there’s so little understanding of the role of comorbid conditions and osteoarthritis.
“There were some key things that I thought were wonderful about this study – the longitudinal nature and the fact that they had collected metabolic syndrome [criteria] at multiple time points and were able to look at persistent versus incident metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Callahan said. “We frequently don’t have that kind of trajectory.”
Jaqueline Lourdes Rios, PhD, an assistant professor of orthopedics at University Medical Center Utrecht (Netherlands), said in an interview that the study raised questions about whether treating metabolic syndrome could help prevent the progression of osteoarthritis to some extent. “Although, if you already have damage in your cartilage, and if you have a lot of inflammation that’s local, it might be a bit trickier than just treating metabolic syndrome,” Dr. Lourdes Rios added. “Then, it might help, it might not.” Either way, she said, it’s certainly worthwhile for physicians to spend time discussing interventions to address metabolic syndrome “because you treat the patient, not a knee.”
Dr. Ding, Dr. Lourdes Rios, and Dr. Callahan had no relevant financial relationships to disclose. The researchers did not note any external funding.
AT OARSI 2023
Expect increased demand for experienced dermatologic care of Asian skin
NEW ORLEANS – With the Asian population estimated to increase to 41 million by 2050 in the United States, expect the demand for experienced dermatologic care of patients with Asian skin to increase in the coming years, Hye Jin (Leah) Chung, MD, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology.
“Asians account for about 60% of the global population,” said Dr. Chung, assistant professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School, and director of the Asian Skin Clinic at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston. Along with the estimate that Asians are expected to make up 25% of Canada’s population by 2036, “we will most likely encounter more Asian skin type patients in North America,” Dr. Chung said, noting that the Asian population “is very diverse, ranging from skin type 3 in Far East Asia to skin type 5 in India.”
During her presentation, she provided tips for treating hypertrophic scars and keloids in this patient population when intralesional corticosteroids fail. Typically, her first option is to combine an intralesional corticosteroid with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), a pyrimidine analogue with antimetabolite activity. 5-FU “can cause cell apoptosis of endothelial cells and fibroblasts (which steroids cannot), cell cycle arrest, and TGF-beta [transforming growth factor beta]-induced COL1A2 transcription,” Dr. Chung said. The recommended ratio between 5-FU and steroids in the literature is variable, from a 9:1 ratio to a 1:1 ratio. “In my practice I do not inject more than 100 mg at a time,” she said. Several studies of this approach led by Asian investigators used weekly injections, “but that’s not practical in the U.S. I usually do monthly injections.”
A large systematic review and meta-analysis confirmed that the combination of intralesional triamcinolone acetonide and 5-FU achieved a better efficacy and fewer complications than triamcinolone alone for treating hypertrophic scars and keloids. Potential side effects from 5-FU injections include pain/pruritus, transient hyperpigmentation (especially in skin types 4-6), ulceration, teratogenicity, and transient alopecia.
A more recent meta-analysis comparing the efficacy of multiple drug injections for hypertrophic scars and keloids confirmed that the combination of triamcinolone and 5-FU was superior to bleomycin, verapamil, 5-FU alone, and triamcinolone alone. “And, there was no difference between 5-FU/steroid combination and botulinum toxin A,” Dr. Chung added. “Some parts of the world are using botulinum toxin with mixed results. Based on the amount of toxin required for keloids, this would be cost prohibitive in the U.S.”
Another approach to treating hypertrophic scars and keloids in Asian skin is laser-assisted drug delivery. “First, you can use a fractional ablative laser to create a hole in the epidermis and dermis,” Dr. Chung said. “Then you can apply the suspension topically to the holes. You can also use a steroid ointment or cream after laser treatment for drug delivery.”
Combining pulsed dye laser with steroid injections is another option. Pulsed dye lasers coagulate microvasculature within keloid tissue, “which can cause tissue hypoxia and can decrease growth factors or cytokines for fibrosis within the tissue,” Dr. Chung said. At the cellular level, pulsed dye laser alone can decrease connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), TGF-beta 1, proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and collagen III, and increases matrix metalloproteinase–13 (MMP-13), P53, ERK and p38 MAPK, apoptosis, blockade of AP-1 transcription, and cell cycle changes.
In 2004, plastic surgeons in Korea described a new approach for removing earlobe keloids, which they termed a “keloid fillet flap”. For the procedure, about 50% of the keloid margin is incised with a #15 scalpel blade. “Then you dissect the keloid from the surrounding tissue with a blade or curved scissors,” Dr. Chung said. “Next, you excise the keloid, so you have some dead space. After hemostasis you place the fillet flap to cover the wound. After you trim the redundant tissue, you can close it with epidermal sutures.”
In her clinical experience, she finds the fillet flap “very helpful for fast recovery” and it is associated with less pain. “Several studies have confirmed an excellent improvement of keloids, low recurrence rate, and rare side effects from a fillet flap and adjuvant intralesional corticosteroids. Occasionally, you may see flap necrosis but usually patients do well with topical antibiotics or petrolatum jelly.”
Dr. Chung also discussed her approach to treating papular scars in Asian patients. She described papular scars as underrecognized, anetoderma-like scars on the central face and trunk. “They comprise about 11% of all acne scars but up to 19% of patients with such scars may not recall a history of acne,” she said. Biopsies of papular scars reveal marked reduction or thinning of elastic fibers around hair follicles.
“Papular scars are difficult to treat,” she said. “If you have a conventional Er:YAG or CO2 laser, you can create tiny holes within the scars,” she said, referring to studies on these approaches. Another treatment option is needle-guided radiofrequency, she noted.
Dr. Chung reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
NEW ORLEANS – With the Asian population estimated to increase to 41 million by 2050 in the United States, expect the demand for experienced dermatologic care of patients with Asian skin to increase in the coming years, Hye Jin (Leah) Chung, MD, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology.
“Asians account for about 60% of the global population,” said Dr. Chung, assistant professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School, and director of the Asian Skin Clinic at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston. Along with the estimate that Asians are expected to make up 25% of Canada’s population by 2036, “we will most likely encounter more Asian skin type patients in North America,” Dr. Chung said, noting that the Asian population “is very diverse, ranging from skin type 3 in Far East Asia to skin type 5 in India.”
During her presentation, she provided tips for treating hypertrophic scars and keloids in this patient population when intralesional corticosteroids fail. Typically, her first option is to combine an intralesional corticosteroid with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), a pyrimidine analogue with antimetabolite activity. 5-FU “can cause cell apoptosis of endothelial cells and fibroblasts (which steroids cannot), cell cycle arrest, and TGF-beta [transforming growth factor beta]-induced COL1A2 transcription,” Dr. Chung said. The recommended ratio between 5-FU and steroids in the literature is variable, from a 9:1 ratio to a 1:1 ratio. “In my practice I do not inject more than 100 mg at a time,” she said. Several studies of this approach led by Asian investigators used weekly injections, “but that’s not practical in the U.S. I usually do monthly injections.”
A large systematic review and meta-analysis confirmed that the combination of intralesional triamcinolone acetonide and 5-FU achieved a better efficacy and fewer complications than triamcinolone alone for treating hypertrophic scars and keloids. Potential side effects from 5-FU injections include pain/pruritus, transient hyperpigmentation (especially in skin types 4-6), ulceration, teratogenicity, and transient alopecia.
A more recent meta-analysis comparing the efficacy of multiple drug injections for hypertrophic scars and keloids confirmed that the combination of triamcinolone and 5-FU was superior to bleomycin, verapamil, 5-FU alone, and triamcinolone alone. “And, there was no difference between 5-FU/steroid combination and botulinum toxin A,” Dr. Chung added. “Some parts of the world are using botulinum toxin with mixed results. Based on the amount of toxin required for keloids, this would be cost prohibitive in the U.S.”
Another approach to treating hypertrophic scars and keloids in Asian skin is laser-assisted drug delivery. “First, you can use a fractional ablative laser to create a hole in the epidermis and dermis,” Dr. Chung said. “Then you can apply the suspension topically to the holes. You can also use a steroid ointment or cream after laser treatment for drug delivery.”
Combining pulsed dye laser with steroid injections is another option. Pulsed dye lasers coagulate microvasculature within keloid tissue, “which can cause tissue hypoxia and can decrease growth factors or cytokines for fibrosis within the tissue,” Dr. Chung said. At the cellular level, pulsed dye laser alone can decrease connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), TGF-beta 1, proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and collagen III, and increases matrix metalloproteinase–13 (MMP-13), P53, ERK and p38 MAPK, apoptosis, blockade of AP-1 transcription, and cell cycle changes.
In 2004, plastic surgeons in Korea described a new approach for removing earlobe keloids, which they termed a “keloid fillet flap”. For the procedure, about 50% of the keloid margin is incised with a #15 scalpel blade. “Then you dissect the keloid from the surrounding tissue with a blade or curved scissors,” Dr. Chung said. “Next, you excise the keloid, so you have some dead space. After hemostasis you place the fillet flap to cover the wound. After you trim the redundant tissue, you can close it with epidermal sutures.”
In her clinical experience, she finds the fillet flap “very helpful for fast recovery” and it is associated with less pain. “Several studies have confirmed an excellent improvement of keloids, low recurrence rate, and rare side effects from a fillet flap and adjuvant intralesional corticosteroids. Occasionally, you may see flap necrosis but usually patients do well with topical antibiotics or petrolatum jelly.”
Dr. Chung also discussed her approach to treating papular scars in Asian patients. She described papular scars as underrecognized, anetoderma-like scars on the central face and trunk. “They comprise about 11% of all acne scars but up to 19% of patients with such scars may not recall a history of acne,” she said. Biopsies of papular scars reveal marked reduction or thinning of elastic fibers around hair follicles.
“Papular scars are difficult to treat,” she said. “If you have a conventional Er:YAG or CO2 laser, you can create tiny holes within the scars,” she said, referring to studies on these approaches. Another treatment option is needle-guided radiofrequency, she noted.
Dr. Chung reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
NEW ORLEANS – With the Asian population estimated to increase to 41 million by 2050 in the United States, expect the demand for experienced dermatologic care of patients with Asian skin to increase in the coming years, Hye Jin (Leah) Chung, MD, said at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology.
“Asians account for about 60% of the global population,” said Dr. Chung, assistant professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School, and director of the Asian Skin Clinic at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston. Along with the estimate that Asians are expected to make up 25% of Canada’s population by 2036, “we will most likely encounter more Asian skin type patients in North America,” Dr. Chung said, noting that the Asian population “is very diverse, ranging from skin type 3 in Far East Asia to skin type 5 in India.”
During her presentation, she provided tips for treating hypertrophic scars and keloids in this patient population when intralesional corticosteroids fail. Typically, her first option is to combine an intralesional corticosteroid with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), a pyrimidine analogue with antimetabolite activity. 5-FU “can cause cell apoptosis of endothelial cells and fibroblasts (which steroids cannot), cell cycle arrest, and TGF-beta [transforming growth factor beta]-induced COL1A2 transcription,” Dr. Chung said. The recommended ratio between 5-FU and steroids in the literature is variable, from a 9:1 ratio to a 1:1 ratio. “In my practice I do not inject more than 100 mg at a time,” she said. Several studies of this approach led by Asian investigators used weekly injections, “but that’s not practical in the U.S. I usually do monthly injections.”
A large systematic review and meta-analysis confirmed that the combination of intralesional triamcinolone acetonide and 5-FU achieved a better efficacy and fewer complications than triamcinolone alone for treating hypertrophic scars and keloids. Potential side effects from 5-FU injections include pain/pruritus, transient hyperpigmentation (especially in skin types 4-6), ulceration, teratogenicity, and transient alopecia.
A more recent meta-analysis comparing the efficacy of multiple drug injections for hypertrophic scars and keloids confirmed that the combination of triamcinolone and 5-FU was superior to bleomycin, verapamil, 5-FU alone, and triamcinolone alone. “And, there was no difference between 5-FU/steroid combination and botulinum toxin A,” Dr. Chung added. “Some parts of the world are using botulinum toxin with mixed results. Based on the amount of toxin required for keloids, this would be cost prohibitive in the U.S.”
Another approach to treating hypertrophic scars and keloids in Asian skin is laser-assisted drug delivery. “First, you can use a fractional ablative laser to create a hole in the epidermis and dermis,” Dr. Chung said. “Then you can apply the suspension topically to the holes. You can also use a steroid ointment or cream after laser treatment for drug delivery.”
Combining pulsed dye laser with steroid injections is another option. Pulsed dye lasers coagulate microvasculature within keloid tissue, “which can cause tissue hypoxia and can decrease growth factors or cytokines for fibrosis within the tissue,” Dr. Chung said. At the cellular level, pulsed dye laser alone can decrease connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), TGF-beta 1, proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and collagen III, and increases matrix metalloproteinase–13 (MMP-13), P53, ERK and p38 MAPK, apoptosis, blockade of AP-1 transcription, and cell cycle changes.
In 2004, plastic surgeons in Korea described a new approach for removing earlobe keloids, which they termed a “keloid fillet flap”. For the procedure, about 50% of the keloid margin is incised with a #15 scalpel blade. “Then you dissect the keloid from the surrounding tissue with a blade or curved scissors,” Dr. Chung said. “Next, you excise the keloid, so you have some dead space. After hemostasis you place the fillet flap to cover the wound. After you trim the redundant tissue, you can close it with epidermal sutures.”
In her clinical experience, she finds the fillet flap “very helpful for fast recovery” and it is associated with less pain. “Several studies have confirmed an excellent improvement of keloids, low recurrence rate, and rare side effects from a fillet flap and adjuvant intralesional corticosteroids. Occasionally, you may see flap necrosis but usually patients do well with topical antibiotics or petrolatum jelly.”
Dr. Chung also discussed her approach to treating papular scars in Asian patients. She described papular scars as underrecognized, anetoderma-like scars on the central face and trunk. “They comprise about 11% of all acne scars but up to 19% of patients with such scars may not recall a history of acne,” she said. Biopsies of papular scars reveal marked reduction or thinning of elastic fibers around hair follicles.
“Papular scars are difficult to treat,” she said. “If you have a conventional Er:YAG or CO2 laser, you can create tiny holes within the scars,” she said, referring to studies on these approaches. Another treatment option is needle-guided radiofrequency, she noted.
Dr. Chung reported having no relevant financial disclosures.
AT AAD 2023