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ESMO offers ‘European perspective’ on treating gynecologic cancers during the pandemic
With health care systems becoming increasingly stretched as the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps the globe, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has produced practical recommendations for prioritizing the management of cancer patients, including those with gynecologic cancers.
ESMO’s guidelines for cervical, endometrial, and epithelial ovarian cancer delineate which patients should be prioritized for treatment in the face of reduced resources and despite the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
“Many European countries have already sorted their own guidelines, either nationally or through their own societies,” said Jonathan Ledermann, MD, a professor of medical oncology at the University College London Cancer Institute who was involved in developing ESMO’s recommendations for gynecologic cancers.
Dr. Ledermann noted that the British Gynaecological Cancer Society, for example, has published guidance on COVID-19 that reflects U.K. practice.
“ESMO obviously feels a responsibility, from the European perspective, to give some guidance to their membership about the COVID-19 situation in the same way that they would put out guidelines if a new drug became available,” Dr. Ledermann said.
Prioritizing care
All of the ESMO COVID-19 guidelines group cancer patients into high-, medium-, or low-priority categories to ensure that patients who may need the most care will be seen first as hospital services become affected by the pandemic.
Those in the high-priority category are patients whose condition is either immediately life-threatening or clinically unstable or who may benefit greatly from intervention. Those in the low-priority group are patients who may be stable enough to have treatment delayed while the COVID-19 pandemic is ongoing or for whom the benefit of the intervention is low, compared with the risks of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Those in the medium-priority group are patients whose treatment is noncritical, but for whom delaying treatment for more than 6 weeks could potentially impact the overall outcome or care of the patient.
For all gynecologic cancers covered, the guidelines stress that decisions made by the multidisciplinary team need to be documented, taking the patient’s condition into account, assessing who may be the most vulnerable, and considering the available resources.
High-priority visits
Examples of patients with cervical cancer who are a high priority for outpatient visits, according to the guidelines, include patients who have acute abdominal symptoms, renal obstruction, or complications after surgery or radiotherapy. Persistent and severe symptomatic pelvic or vaginal bleeding is another reason to be categorized as high priority for an outpatient visit, alongside anuria or symptoms of deep vein thrombosis.
New patients with histologically confirmed cervical changes should also be seen as a high priority to stage their cancer, but the guidelines stress that any blood tests and imaging should be done as close to the patient’s home as possible.
Similar recommendations are made for women with endometrial cancer, with those who have potentially unstable symptoms, severe bleeding from their tumors, and signs of venous thromboembolism or anuria being at the highest priority for outpatient visits.
Women with potentially unstable epithelial ovarian cancer – who have acute abdominal pain, intestinal obstruction, or complications after surgery – are also a high priority for an outpatient visit, as are new patients who have symptomatic ascites, pleural effusion, or intestinal obstruction.
Applying guidelines in practice
Knowing that ESMO and other organizations have carefully considered the management of cancer patients specifically in relation to COVID-19 could offer oncologists “a feeling of support and some security when they make difficult decisions,” Dr. Ledermann said.
“With all guidelines, particularly in this sort of situation, we have to be very careful in terms of their interpretation, because what fits one country may not fit another, and what fits one hospital may not necessarily fit another. So they should be taken as guidance rather than prescriptive documents,” Dr. Ledermann said.
As vice president of the European Society for Gynecologic Oncology, Dr. Ledermann noted that ESGO has taken a slightly different approach than ESMO. ESGO decided to collect and post links to existing COVID-19 resources on its website rather than create its own specific recommendations.
ESGO is also producing an expert webinar series, which has, so far, covered the management of ovarian and uterine cancers, giving clinicians the chance to learn from those who have experienced dramatic changes to their services during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dr. Ledermann has no conflicts of interest.
With health care systems becoming increasingly stretched as the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps the globe, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has produced practical recommendations for prioritizing the management of cancer patients, including those with gynecologic cancers.
ESMO’s guidelines for cervical, endometrial, and epithelial ovarian cancer delineate which patients should be prioritized for treatment in the face of reduced resources and despite the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
“Many European countries have already sorted their own guidelines, either nationally or through their own societies,” said Jonathan Ledermann, MD, a professor of medical oncology at the University College London Cancer Institute who was involved in developing ESMO’s recommendations for gynecologic cancers.
Dr. Ledermann noted that the British Gynaecological Cancer Society, for example, has published guidance on COVID-19 that reflects U.K. practice.
“ESMO obviously feels a responsibility, from the European perspective, to give some guidance to their membership about the COVID-19 situation in the same way that they would put out guidelines if a new drug became available,” Dr. Ledermann said.
Prioritizing care
All of the ESMO COVID-19 guidelines group cancer patients into high-, medium-, or low-priority categories to ensure that patients who may need the most care will be seen first as hospital services become affected by the pandemic.
Those in the high-priority category are patients whose condition is either immediately life-threatening or clinically unstable or who may benefit greatly from intervention. Those in the low-priority group are patients who may be stable enough to have treatment delayed while the COVID-19 pandemic is ongoing or for whom the benefit of the intervention is low, compared with the risks of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Those in the medium-priority group are patients whose treatment is noncritical, but for whom delaying treatment for more than 6 weeks could potentially impact the overall outcome or care of the patient.
For all gynecologic cancers covered, the guidelines stress that decisions made by the multidisciplinary team need to be documented, taking the patient’s condition into account, assessing who may be the most vulnerable, and considering the available resources.
High-priority visits
Examples of patients with cervical cancer who are a high priority for outpatient visits, according to the guidelines, include patients who have acute abdominal symptoms, renal obstruction, or complications after surgery or radiotherapy. Persistent and severe symptomatic pelvic or vaginal bleeding is another reason to be categorized as high priority for an outpatient visit, alongside anuria or symptoms of deep vein thrombosis.
New patients with histologically confirmed cervical changes should also be seen as a high priority to stage their cancer, but the guidelines stress that any blood tests and imaging should be done as close to the patient’s home as possible.
Similar recommendations are made for women with endometrial cancer, with those who have potentially unstable symptoms, severe bleeding from their tumors, and signs of venous thromboembolism or anuria being at the highest priority for outpatient visits.
Women with potentially unstable epithelial ovarian cancer – who have acute abdominal pain, intestinal obstruction, or complications after surgery – are also a high priority for an outpatient visit, as are new patients who have symptomatic ascites, pleural effusion, or intestinal obstruction.
Applying guidelines in practice
Knowing that ESMO and other organizations have carefully considered the management of cancer patients specifically in relation to COVID-19 could offer oncologists “a feeling of support and some security when they make difficult decisions,” Dr. Ledermann said.
“With all guidelines, particularly in this sort of situation, we have to be very careful in terms of their interpretation, because what fits one country may not fit another, and what fits one hospital may not necessarily fit another. So they should be taken as guidance rather than prescriptive documents,” Dr. Ledermann said.
As vice president of the European Society for Gynecologic Oncology, Dr. Ledermann noted that ESGO has taken a slightly different approach than ESMO. ESGO decided to collect and post links to existing COVID-19 resources on its website rather than create its own specific recommendations.
ESGO is also producing an expert webinar series, which has, so far, covered the management of ovarian and uterine cancers, giving clinicians the chance to learn from those who have experienced dramatic changes to their services during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dr. Ledermann has no conflicts of interest.
With health care systems becoming increasingly stretched as the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps the globe, the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has produced practical recommendations for prioritizing the management of cancer patients, including those with gynecologic cancers.
ESMO’s guidelines for cervical, endometrial, and epithelial ovarian cancer delineate which patients should be prioritized for treatment in the face of reduced resources and despite the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
“Many European countries have already sorted their own guidelines, either nationally or through their own societies,” said Jonathan Ledermann, MD, a professor of medical oncology at the University College London Cancer Institute who was involved in developing ESMO’s recommendations for gynecologic cancers.
Dr. Ledermann noted that the British Gynaecological Cancer Society, for example, has published guidance on COVID-19 that reflects U.K. practice.
“ESMO obviously feels a responsibility, from the European perspective, to give some guidance to their membership about the COVID-19 situation in the same way that they would put out guidelines if a new drug became available,” Dr. Ledermann said.
Prioritizing care
All of the ESMO COVID-19 guidelines group cancer patients into high-, medium-, or low-priority categories to ensure that patients who may need the most care will be seen first as hospital services become affected by the pandemic.
Those in the high-priority category are patients whose condition is either immediately life-threatening or clinically unstable or who may benefit greatly from intervention. Those in the low-priority group are patients who may be stable enough to have treatment delayed while the COVID-19 pandemic is ongoing or for whom the benefit of the intervention is low, compared with the risks of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Those in the medium-priority group are patients whose treatment is noncritical, but for whom delaying treatment for more than 6 weeks could potentially impact the overall outcome or care of the patient.
For all gynecologic cancers covered, the guidelines stress that decisions made by the multidisciplinary team need to be documented, taking the patient’s condition into account, assessing who may be the most vulnerable, and considering the available resources.
High-priority visits
Examples of patients with cervical cancer who are a high priority for outpatient visits, according to the guidelines, include patients who have acute abdominal symptoms, renal obstruction, or complications after surgery or radiotherapy. Persistent and severe symptomatic pelvic or vaginal bleeding is another reason to be categorized as high priority for an outpatient visit, alongside anuria or symptoms of deep vein thrombosis.
New patients with histologically confirmed cervical changes should also be seen as a high priority to stage their cancer, but the guidelines stress that any blood tests and imaging should be done as close to the patient’s home as possible.
Similar recommendations are made for women with endometrial cancer, with those who have potentially unstable symptoms, severe bleeding from their tumors, and signs of venous thromboembolism or anuria being at the highest priority for outpatient visits.
Women with potentially unstable epithelial ovarian cancer – who have acute abdominal pain, intestinal obstruction, or complications after surgery – are also a high priority for an outpatient visit, as are new patients who have symptomatic ascites, pleural effusion, or intestinal obstruction.
Applying guidelines in practice
Knowing that ESMO and other organizations have carefully considered the management of cancer patients specifically in relation to COVID-19 could offer oncologists “a feeling of support and some security when they make difficult decisions,” Dr. Ledermann said.
“With all guidelines, particularly in this sort of situation, we have to be very careful in terms of their interpretation, because what fits one country may not fit another, and what fits one hospital may not necessarily fit another. So they should be taken as guidance rather than prescriptive documents,” Dr. Ledermann said.
As vice president of the European Society for Gynecologic Oncology, Dr. Ledermann noted that ESGO has taken a slightly different approach than ESMO. ESGO decided to collect and post links to existing COVID-19 resources on its website rather than create its own specific recommendations.
ESGO is also producing an expert webinar series, which has, so far, covered the management of ovarian and uterine cancers, giving clinicians the chance to learn from those who have experienced dramatic changes to their services during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dr. Ledermann has no conflicts of interest.
EHA and TIF explore how COVID-19 is affecting thalassemia and SCD patients
In a webinar designed to guide physicians in the care of hematology patients during the COVID-19 pandemic, three world experts on thalassemia and sickle cell disease (SCD) provided on-the-ground information from physicians who were dealing with the height of the crisis in their countries.
The webinar was organized by the European Hematology Association (EHA) and the Thalassemia International Federation (TIF).
Moderator Francesco Cerisoli, MD, head of research and mentoring at EHA, led the discussion with three guest speakers: Maria-Domenica Cappellini, MD, PhD, professor of hematology at the University of Milan; Androulla Eleftheriou, MD, executive director of TIF in Cyprus; and Raffaella Colombatti , MD, of the University of Padova in Italy, coordinator of the Red Cell Reserve Working Group of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology.
Italian experience with thalassemia and COVID-19
Dr. Cappellini discussed the Italian experience with 11 thalassemia patients followed by a network survey who developed COVID-19 in the northern part of Italy, where the pandemic has been most widespread.
There are no published data focusing specifically on SARS-CoV-2 infection in patients with thalassemic syndromes, but patients with preexisting comorbidities are likely to be more severely affected by SARS-CoV-2, according to Dr. Cappellini.
Of particular concern is the fact that patients with thalassemia, especially older ones, are frequently splenectomized, which renders them more vulnerable to bacterial infections and can trigger life-threatening sepsis. However, splenectomy is not known to increase the risk of viral infection or severe viral illness. Of additional concern is the fact that many thalassemia patients need routine and frequent transfusions.
Overall, the 11 thalassemia patients who developed COVID-19 experienced only mild to moderate symptoms. This is despite the fact that 72% of the patients were splenectomized, which did not appear to affect the clinical course, and all of the patients had thalassemia-related comorbidities.
Around half of the patients were hospitalized, but none of them required transfer to the ICU. One patient who was treated with chemotherapy for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in 2019 but is now in remission required more intense ventilation support with the use of continuous positive airway pressure.
Only three patients received specific treatment for COVID-19: one with hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) alone, one with HCQ plus anakinra, and one with HCQ plus ritonavir/darunavir.
Overall, “the number of infected thalassemia patients was lower than expected, likely due to earlier and more vigilant self-isolation compared to the general population,” Dr. Cappellini said. She pointed out that the first early response in February by thalassemia physicians was to warn their patients via email and phone calls about the need for self-isolation and precautions against the pandemic.
Physicians “rapidly reorganized activities, postponing nonessential ones” and managed to provide patients “a safe track at the hospital to receive their life-saving treatment in COVID-19–free areas with health care personnel wearing protective equipment” and assessment of all entering patients for COVID-19 infection, Dr. Cappellini said.
Results in additional thalassemia patients and SCD patients
Dr. Eleftheriou described 51 cases of thalassemia patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection reported to TIF as of April 16. Patients were from Cyprus, Italy, the United Kingdom, France, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, and Indonesia.
Of the 51 patients, 46 presented with mild to moderate symptoms. Five patients had severe respiratory symptoms and required hospitalization, two were hospitalized and discharged, and three died between day 5 and day 15 post hospitalization.
Dr. Colombatti followed with a brief presentation of the intersection of COVID-19 with SCD patients. She presented anecdotal data involving 32 SCD patients who exhibited COVID-19 symptoms. Dr. Colombatti obtained the data via personal communication with Pablo Bartolucci, of Hôpitaux Universitaires Henri Mondor in Créteil, France.
All 32 SCD patients were screened and treated for COVID-19, and 17 of them continued treatment for 10 days. In all, 22 patients were hospitalized, 11 were transferred to the ICU, and 1 died.
Ensuring adequate blood supply
Dr. Eleftheriou also discussed the TIF response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which focused on the adequacy of blood supplies for these patients who so often need transfusions.
Dr. Eleftheriou stated that a shortage of blood was reported in 75% of the 62 member countries of the TIF, with 58% reporting severe shortages and 35% reporting moderate to severe shortages.
The shortages resulted in many countries returning to older family/friends donation practices, rare use of whole blood transfusions, and the use of older blood transfusions (older than 28 days).
In addition, physicians have modified their transfusion strategy. They have reduced the amount of blood given to thalassemia patients from two units to one unit during any transfusion, while making arrangements for more frequent transfusions; for example, one transfusion per week but with precautions made to “limit the time spent in the clinic and to control blood supplies while safeguarding that all [thalassemia] patients will be able to get their transfusion,” Dr. Eleftheriou said.
The information in the webinar was provided with the caveat that “no general evidence-based guidance can be derived from this discussion.” There were no other disclosures given.
In a webinar designed to guide physicians in the care of hematology patients during the COVID-19 pandemic, three world experts on thalassemia and sickle cell disease (SCD) provided on-the-ground information from physicians who were dealing with the height of the crisis in their countries.
The webinar was organized by the European Hematology Association (EHA) and the Thalassemia International Federation (TIF).
Moderator Francesco Cerisoli, MD, head of research and mentoring at EHA, led the discussion with three guest speakers: Maria-Domenica Cappellini, MD, PhD, professor of hematology at the University of Milan; Androulla Eleftheriou, MD, executive director of TIF in Cyprus; and Raffaella Colombatti , MD, of the University of Padova in Italy, coordinator of the Red Cell Reserve Working Group of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology.
Italian experience with thalassemia and COVID-19
Dr. Cappellini discussed the Italian experience with 11 thalassemia patients followed by a network survey who developed COVID-19 in the northern part of Italy, where the pandemic has been most widespread.
There are no published data focusing specifically on SARS-CoV-2 infection in patients with thalassemic syndromes, but patients with preexisting comorbidities are likely to be more severely affected by SARS-CoV-2, according to Dr. Cappellini.
Of particular concern is the fact that patients with thalassemia, especially older ones, are frequently splenectomized, which renders them more vulnerable to bacterial infections and can trigger life-threatening sepsis. However, splenectomy is not known to increase the risk of viral infection or severe viral illness. Of additional concern is the fact that many thalassemia patients need routine and frequent transfusions.
Overall, the 11 thalassemia patients who developed COVID-19 experienced only mild to moderate symptoms. This is despite the fact that 72% of the patients were splenectomized, which did not appear to affect the clinical course, and all of the patients had thalassemia-related comorbidities.
Around half of the patients were hospitalized, but none of them required transfer to the ICU. One patient who was treated with chemotherapy for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in 2019 but is now in remission required more intense ventilation support with the use of continuous positive airway pressure.
Only three patients received specific treatment for COVID-19: one with hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) alone, one with HCQ plus anakinra, and one with HCQ plus ritonavir/darunavir.
Overall, “the number of infected thalassemia patients was lower than expected, likely due to earlier and more vigilant self-isolation compared to the general population,” Dr. Cappellini said. She pointed out that the first early response in February by thalassemia physicians was to warn their patients via email and phone calls about the need for self-isolation and precautions against the pandemic.
Physicians “rapidly reorganized activities, postponing nonessential ones” and managed to provide patients “a safe track at the hospital to receive their life-saving treatment in COVID-19–free areas with health care personnel wearing protective equipment” and assessment of all entering patients for COVID-19 infection, Dr. Cappellini said.
Results in additional thalassemia patients and SCD patients
Dr. Eleftheriou described 51 cases of thalassemia patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection reported to TIF as of April 16. Patients were from Cyprus, Italy, the United Kingdom, France, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, and Indonesia.
Of the 51 patients, 46 presented with mild to moderate symptoms. Five patients had severe respiratory symptoms and required hospitalization, two were hospitalized and discharged, and three died between day 5 and day 15 post hospitalization.
Dr. Colombatti followed with a brief presentation of the intersection of COVID-19 with SCD patients. She presented anecdotal data involving 32 SCD patients who exhibited COVID-19 symptoms. Dr. Colombatti obtained the data via personal communication with Pablo Bartolucci, of Hôpitaux Universitaires Henri Mondor in Créteil, France.
All 32 SCD patients were screened and treated for COVID-19, and 17 of them continued treatment for 10 days. In all, 22 patients were hospitalized, 11 were transferred to the ICU, and 1 died.
Ensuring adequate blood supply
Dr. Eleftheriou also discussed the TIF response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which focused on the adequacy of blood supplies for these patients who so often need transfusions.
Dr. Eleftheriou stated that a shortage of blood was reported in 75% of the 62 member countries of the TIF, with 58% reporting severe shortages and 35% reporting moderate to severe shortages.
The shortages resulted in many countries returning to older family/friends donation practices, rare use of whole blood transfusions, and the use of older blood transfusions (older than 28 days).
In addition, physicians have modified their transfusion strategy. They have reduced the amount of blood given to thalassemia patients from two units to one unit during any transfusion, while making arrangements for more frequent transfusions; for example, one transfusion per week but with precautions made to “limit the time spent in the clinic and to control blood supplies while safeguarding that all [thalassemia] patients will be able to get their transfusion,” Dr. Eleftheriou said.
The information in the webinar was provided with the caveat that “no general evidence-based guidance can be derived from this discussion.” There were no other disclosures given.
In a webinar designed to guide physicians in the care of hematology patients during the COVID-19 pandemic, three world experts on thalassemia and sickle cell disease (SCD) provided on-the-ground information from physicians who were dealing with the height of the crisis in their countries.
The webinar was organized by the European Hematology Association (EHA) and the Thalassemia International Federation (TIF).
Moderator Francesco Cerisoli, MD, head of research and mentoring at EHA, led the discussion with three guest speakers: Maria-Domenica Cappellini, MD, PhD, professor of hematology at the University of Milan; Androulla Eleftheriou, MD, executive director of TIF in Cyprus; and Raffaella Colombatti , MD, of the University of Padova in Italy, coordinator of the Red Cell Reserve Working Group of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology.
Italian experience with thalassemia and COVID-19
Dr. Cappellini discussed the Italian experience with 11 thalassemia patients followed by a network survey who developed COVID-19 in the northern part of Italy, where the pandemic has been most widespread.
There are no published data focusing specifically on SARS-CoV-2 infection in patients with thalassemic syndromes, but patients with preexisting comorbidities are likely to be more severely affected by SARS-CoV-2, according to Dr. Cappellini.
Of particular concern is the fact that patients with thalassemia, especially older ones, are frequently splenectomized, which renders them more vulnerable to bacterial infections and can trigger life-threatening sepsis. However, splenectomy is not known to increase the risk of viral infection or severe viral illness. Of additional concern is the fact that many thalassemia patients need routine and frequent transfusions.
Overall, the 11 thalassemia patients who developed COVID-19 experienced only mild to moderate symptoms. This is despite the fact that 72% of the patients were splenectomized, which did not appear to affect the clinical course, and all of the patients had thalassemia-related comorbidities.
Around half of the patients were hospitalized, but none of them required transfer to the ICU. One patient who was treated with chemotherapy for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in 2019 but is now in remission required more intense ventilation support with the use of continuous positive airway pressure.
Only three patients received specific treatment for COVID-19: one with hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) alone, one with HCQ plus anakinra, and one with HCQ plus ritonavir/darunavir.
Overall, “the number of infected thalassemia patients was lower than expected, likely due to earlier and more vigilant self-isolation compared to the general population,” Dr. Cappellini said. She pointed out that the first early response in February by thalassemia physicians was to warn their patients via email and phone calls about the need for self-isolation and precautions against the pandemic.
Physicians “rapidly reorganized activities, postponing nonessential ones” and managed to provide patients “a safe track at the hospital to receive their life-saving treatment in COVID-19–free areas with health care personnel wearing protective equipment” and assessment of all entering patients for COVID-19 infection, Dr. Cappellini said.
Results in additional thalassemia patients and SCD patients
Dr. Eleftheriou described 51 cases of thalassemia patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection reported to TIF as of April 16. Patients were from Cyprus, Italy, the United Kingdom, France, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, and Indonesia.
Of the 51 patients, 46 presented with mild to moderate symptoms. Five patients had severe respiratory symptoms and required hospitalization, two were hospitalized and discharged, and three died between day 5 and day 15 post hospitalization.
Dr. Colombatti followed with a brief presentation of the intersection of COVID-19 with SCD patients. She presented anecdotal data involving 32 SCD patients who exhibited COVID-19 symptoms. Dr. Colombatti obtained the data via personal communication with Pablo Bartolucci, of Hôpitaux Universitaires Henri Mondor in Créteil, France.
All 32 SCD patients were screened and treated for COVID-19, and 17 of them continued treatment for 10 days. In all, 22 patients were hospitalized, 11 were transferred to the ICU, and 1 died.
Ensuring adequate blood supply
Dr. Eleftheriou also discussed the TIF response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which focused on the adequacy of blood supplies for these patients who so often need transfusions.
Dr. Eleftheriou stated that a shortage of blood was reported in 75% of the 62 member countries of the TIF, with 58% reporting severe shortages and 35% reporting moderate to severe shortages.
The shortages resulted in many countries returning to older family/friends donation practices, rare use of whole blood transfusions, and the use of older blood transfusions (older than 28 days).
In addition, physicians have modified their transfusion strategy. They have reduced the amount of blood given to thalassemia patients from two units to one unit during any transfusion, while making arrangements for more frequent transfusions; for example, one transfusion per week but with precautions made to “limit the time spent in the clinic and to control blood supplies while safeguarding that all [thalassemia] patients will be able to get their transfusion,” Dr. Eleftheriou said.
The information in the webinar was provided with the caveat that “no general evidence-based guidance can be derived from this discussion.” There were no other disclosures given.
Want to keep cancer patients and providers safe during the pandemic? Here’s how
special feature article in the Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
according to the authors of aPrescreening, telemedicine, and limiting procedures top the authors’ list of 10 recommendations for ensuring patient safety in U.S. oncology practices. Assuring appropriate personal proctective equipment (PPE), encouraging telecommuting, and providing wellness/stress management are a few of the ways to look out for health care worker safety during the crisis.
These recommendations were drafted to provide guidance during the rapidly evolving global pandemic that, in some cases, has deluged health care delivery systems and strained the ability of providers to assure safe and effective care, said lead author Pelin Cinar, MD, of the Hellen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“I think we have been so overwhelmed that sometimes it’s difficult to get organized in our thought processes,” Dr. Cinar said in an interview. “So this [article] was really trying to provide some structure to each of the different steps that we should be addressing at minimum.”
Screening patients
Prescreening systems are a critical first step to ensure cancer centers are helping control community spread of the virus, according to the article. Whether done by phone or online, prescreening 1-2 days before a patient’s visit can help identify COVID-19 symptoms and exposure history, guiding whether patients need to be evaluated, monitored, or referred to an ED.
Next, screening clinics can help ensure cancer patients with COVID-19 symptoms are evaluated and tested in a unit with dedicated staff, according to the article.
“If symptomatic patients present to the cancer center for treatment after a negative prescreening assessment, they must be provided with a mask and directed to a screening clinic for evaluation and potential testing before moving forward with any cancer-directed therapy,” the article states.
Telemedicine and treatment
Telemedicine visits should be done whenever possible to avoid in-person visits, according to the article. Dr. Cinar said that her center, like other cancer centers, has seen a major uptick in these visits, which are typically done over video. In February, there were a total of 232 video visits at her center, which jumped to 1,702 in March, or an approximate 600% increase.
“Even though we had a relatively robust presence [before the pandemic], we still weren’t at a level where we are now,” Dr. Cinar said.
When it comes to cancer treatment, surgeries and procedures should be limited to essential or urgent cases, and, if possible, chemotherapy and systemic therapy regimens can be modified to allow for fewer visits to the cancer center or infusion center, according to the article.
Transitions to outpatient care can help further reduce the need for in-person visits, while intervals between scans can be increased, or biochemical markers can be used instead of scans.
Protecting providers
Health care workers providing cancer care should be assured appropriate PPE, and websites or other centralized resources should be in place to make sure workers are aware of current PPE guidelines and changes in workflow, according to the article.
The authors note that daily screening tools or temperature checks of symptomatic workers can help decrease the risk of exposure to others. The authors also recommend establishing clear rules for when health care workers with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 should be staying at home and returning to the job.
Telecommuting should be encouraged, with limited staff participating in onsite rotations to further reduce exposure risks, the article states.
Anxiety, insomnia, and distress have been reported among frontline health care workers managing patients with COVID-19, according to the article, which recommends wellness and stress management resources be available as an “invaluable resource” in cancer centers.
“We have to take care of ourselves to be able to take care of others,” Dr. Cinar said. “With PPE, you’re physically protecting yourself, while self-care, stress management, and wellness are also a big component of protecting ourselves.”
The report by Dr. Cinar and colleagues was an invited article from the NCCN Best Practices Committee. One coauthor reported relationships with Abbvie, Adaptive Biotechnologies, Aduro, and several other companies. Dr. Cinar and the remaining authors said they had no relevant conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Cinar P et al. J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.6004/jnccn.2020.7572.
special feature article in the Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
according to the authors of aPrescreening, telemedicine, and limiting procedures top the authors’ list of 10 recommendations for ensuring patient safety in U.S. oncology practices. Assuring appropriate personal proctective equipment (PPE), encouraging telecommuting, and providing wellness/stress management are a few of the ways to look out for health care worker safety during the crisis.
These recommendations were drafted to provide guidance during the rapidly evolving global pandemic that, in some cases, has deluged health care delivery systems and strained the ability of providers to assure safe and effective care, said lead author Pelin Cinar, MD, of the Hellen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“I think we have been so overwhelmed that sometimes it’s difficult to get organized in our thought processes,” Dr. Cinar said in an interview. “So this [article] was really trying to provide some structure to each of the different steps that we should be addressing at minimum.”
Screening patients
Prescreening systems are a critical first step to ensure cancer centers are helping control community spread of the virus, according to the article. Whether done by phone or online, prescreening 1-2 days before a patient’s visit can help identify COVID-19 symptoms and exposure history, guiding whether patients need to be evaluated, monitored, or referred to an ED.
Next, screening clinics can help ensure cancer patients with COVID-19 symptoms are evaluated and tested in a unit with dedicated staff, according to the article.
“If symptomatic patients present to the cancer center for treatment after a negative prescreening assessment, they must be provided with a mask and directed to a screening clinic for evaluation and potential testing before moving forward with any cancer-directed therapy,” the article states.
Telemedicine and treatment
Telemedicine visits should be done whenever possible to avoid in-person visits, according to the article. Dr. Cinar said that her center, like other cancer centers, has seen a major uptick in these visits, which are typically done over video. In February, there were a total of 232 video visits at her center, which jumped to 1,702 in March, or an approximate 600% increase.
“Even though we had a relatively robust presence [before the pandemic], we still weren’t at a level where we are now,” Dr. Cinar said.
When it comes to cancer treatment, surgeries and procedures should be limited to essential or urgent cases, and, if possible, chemotherapy and systemic therapy regimens can be modified to allow for fewer visits to the cancer center or infusion center, according to the article.
Transitions to outpatient care can help further reduce the need for in-person visits, while intervals between scans can be increased, or biochemical markers can be used instead of scans.
Protecting providers
Health care workers providing cancer care should be assured appropriate PPE, and websites or other centralized resources should be in place to make sure workers are aware of current PPE guidelines and changes in workflow, according to the article.
The authors note that daily screening tools or temperature checks of symptomatic workers can help decrease the risk of exposure to others. The authors also recommend establishing clear rules for when health care workers with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 should be staying at home and returning to the job.
Telecommuting should be encouraged, with limited staff participating in onsite rotations to further reduce exposure risks, the article states.
Anxiety, insomnia, and distress have been reported among frontline health care workers managing patients with COVID-19, according to the article, which recommends wellness and stress management resources be available as an “invaluable resource” in cancer centers.
“We have to take care of ourselves to be able to take care of others,” Dr. Cinar said. “With PPE, you’re physically protecting yourself, while self-care, stress management, and wellness are also a big component of protecting ourselves.”
The report by Dr. Cinar and colleagues was an invited article from the NCCN Best Practices Committee. One coauthor reported relationships with Abbvie, Adaptive Biotechnologies, Aduro, and several other companies. Dr. Cinar and the remaining authors said they had no relevant conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Cinar P et al. J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.6004/jnccn.2020.7572.
special feature article in the Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.
according to the authors of aPrescreening, telemedicine, and limiting procedures top the authors’ list of 10 recommendations for ensuring patient safety in U.S. oncology practices. Assuring appropriate personal proctective equipment (PPE), encouraging telecommuting, and providing wellness/stress management are a few of the ways to look out for health care worker safety during the crisis.
These recommendations were drafted to provide guidance during the rapidly evolving global pandemic that, in some cases, has deluged health care delivery systems and strained the ability of providers to assure safe and effective care, said lead author Pelin Cinar, MD, of the Hellen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“I think we have been so overwhelmed that sometimes it’s difficult to get organized in our thought processes,” Dr. Cinar said in an interview. “So this [article] was really trying to provide some structure to each of the different steps that we should be addressing at minimum.”
Screening patients
Prescreening systems are a critical first step to ensure cancer centers are helping control community spread of the virus, according to the article. Whether done by phone or online, prescreening 1-2 days before a patient’s visit can help identify COVID-19 symptoms and exposure history, guiding whether patients need to be evaluated, monitored, or referred to an ED.
Next, screening clinics can help ensure cancer patients with COVID-19 symptoms are evaluated and tested in a unit with dedicated staff, according to the article.
“If symptomatic patients present to the cancer center for treatment after a negative prescreening assessment, they must be provided with a mask and directed to a screening clinic for evaluation and potential testing before moving forward with any cancer-directed therapy,” the article states.
Telemedicine and treatment
Telemedicine visits should be done whenever possible to avoid in-person visits, according to the article. Dr. Cinar said that her center, like other cancer centers, has seen a major uptick in these visits, which are typically done over video. In February, there were a total of 232 video visits at her center, which jumped to 1,702 in March, or an approximate 600% increase.
“Even though we had a relatively robust presence [before the pandemic], we still weren’t at a level where we are now,” Dr. Cinar said.
When it comes to cancer treatment, surgeries and procedures should be limited to essential or urgent cases, and, if possible, chemotherapy and systemic therapy regimens can be modified to allow for fewer visits to the cancer center or infusion center, according to the article.
Transitions to outpatient care can help further reduce the need for in-person visits, while intervals between scans can be increased, or biochemical markers can be used instead of scans.
Protecting providers
Health care workers providing cancer care should be assured appropriate PPE, and websites or other centralized resources should be in place to make sure workers are aware of current PPE guidelines and changes in workflow, according to the article.
The authors note that daily screening tools or temperature checks of symptomatic workers can help decrease the risk of exposure to others. The authors also recommend establishing clear rules for when health care workers with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 should be staying at home and returning to the job.
Telecommuting should be encouraged, with limited staff participating in onsite rotations to further reduce exposure risks, the article states.
Anxiety, insomnia, and distress have been reported among frontline health care workers managing patients with COVID-19, according to the article, which recommends wellness and stress management resources be available as an “invaluable resource” in cancer centers.
“We have to take care of ourselves to be able to take care of others,” Dr. Cinar said. “With PPE, you’re physically protecting yourself, while self-care, stress management, and wellness are also a big component of protecting ourselves.”
The report by Dr. Cinar and colleagues was an invited article from the NCCN Best Practices Committee. One coauthor reported relationships with Abbvie, Adaptive Biotechnologies, Aduro, and several other companies. Dr. Cinar and the remaining authors said they had no relevant conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Cinar P et al. J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.6004/jnccn.2020.7572.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL COMPREHENSIVE CANCER NETWORK
ESMO outlines priorities for GI cancer treatment in the COVID-19 era
The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has published guidelines for managing patients with gastrointestinal cancers during the COVID-19 pandemic, helping clinicians identify patients who require immediate care and those for whom treatment can wait.
The guidelines are part of an ESMO-led initiative to address pandemic-related clinical issues. ESMO has released recommendations for solid tumors and hematologic malignancies that were drafted by leading experts representing almost 60 research centers.
According to Florian Lordick, MD, PhD, ESMO director of education and professor of oncology at the University of Leipzig Medical Center, Germany, the effort was a response to clinician requests from around the world.
“Many physicians … in their centers, in their countries, would appreciate some guidance [regarding] how to act and how to react in this crisis,” Dr. Lordick said in an interview.
“This situation is very heterogenous,” he noted. “Even within Europe, even within some countries, some [health care providers] have very limited resources. ... Others can almost do their job as usual, so it’s not easy to give recommendations today that are exactly valid for everyone.”
Prioritizing patients and interventions
To account for disparities across countries, the ESMO guidelines are categorized by patient tiers, including low, medium, and high priority, as determined by the Cancer Care Ontario, Huntsman Cancer Institute and Magnitude of Clinical Benefit Scale. The scale incorporates both patient factors and benefits of intervention.
High-priority patients are in life-threatening condition, and delaying care would jeopardize their survival and/or quality of life. Medium-priority patients are noncritical, but delaying intervention beyond 6 weeks could affect outcomes. Low-priority patients are clinically stable, and delaying intervention would not affect their quality of life and/or survival.
ESMO’s guidelines for gastrointestinal cancers include recommendations for colorectal cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, gastroesophageal tumors, and pancreatic cancer. The recommendations encompass outpatient visits, imaging and radiological/endoscopic interventions, surgical procedures, medical oncology, and radiotherapy.
According to Dr. Lordick, many patients with pancreatic cancer or gastroesophageal tumors have clinical needs that cannot wait, and the guidelines reflect that.
“We are dealing here with two cancer types that are highly aggressive, that have high mortality if not treated adequately,” Dr. Lordick said. “So we have to say that whenever there is a suspicion for one of these cancers, we put the diagnosis and staging – including imaging of these cancers – into high priority. We think, with these cancers, people cannot wait. We know that it may be difficult in some systems, but if there is a suspicion [of a pancreatic tumor], then it’s not a situation where you could wait for 6 or 8 weeks.”
Radiological diagnostic workup of suspected hepatocellular carcinoma is also a high priority, according to the guidelines. However, diagnostic imaging and endoscopy are considered medium-priority interventions for clinically suspected colorectal cancer or for patients at high risk of colorectal cancer.
The lowest-priority patients are those in the survivorship group without symptoms, Dr. Lordick said, noting that these patients are eligible for delayed or remote consultation.
Professionalism, preparedness, and patient empowerment
More generally, Dr. Lordick urged oncologists to maintain a high level of professionalism and preparedness during the pandemic.
“I think a good center really tries to create areas that are COVID-free for their cancer patients,” he said. “They try to see as soon as possible if someone is at risk of having an infection, to test these patients early, to isolate them from the other patients.”
Dr. Lordick also emphasized the importance of patient empowerment.
“Really give [patients] all the information – what they can do to protect themselves from infection, including all the things that are usually recommended, like hygiene of the hands, avoiding social contact, reporting quickly if they have symptoms,” he said. “That is something we find really important – the patient empowerment.”
To that end, the ESMO team also created a comprehensive patient guide to help those with cancer navigate the pandemic.
All of these resources are the result of a major collaboration by guideline experts from around the world, Dr. Lordick said. He expressed gratitude for their work, which was performed without pay, under a tight deadline, and often following a full day in the clinic. From concept to publication, the recommendations were completed in 14 days.“To be honest, I’m a bit surprised, even a bit proud of what people did in a short period of time,” Dr. Lordick said.He reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: ESMO. April 2020. Cancer Patient Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic
The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has published guidelines for managing patients with gastrointestinal cancers during the COVID-19 pandemic, helping clinicians identify patients who require immediate care and those for whom treatment can wait.
The guidelines are part of an ESMO-led initiative to address pandemic-related clinical issues. ESMO has released recommendations for solid tumors and hematologic malignancies that were drafted by leading experts representing almost 60 research centers.
According to Florian Lordick, MD, PhD, ESMO director of education and professor of oncology at the University of Leipzig Medical Center, Germany, the effort was a response to clinician requests from around the world.
“Many physicians … in their centers, in their countries, would appreciate some guidance [regarding] how to act and how to react in this crisis,” Dr. Lordick said in an interview.
“This situation is very heterogenous,” he noted. “Even within Europe, even within some countries, some [health care providers] have very limited resources. ... Others can almost do their job as usual, so it’s not easy to give recommendations today that are exactly valid for everyone.”
Prioritizing patients and interventions
To account for disparities across countries, the ESMO guidelines are categorized by patient tiers, including low, medium, and high priority, as determined by the Cancer Care Ontario, Huntsman Cancer Institute and Magnitude of Clinical Benefit Scale. The scale incorporates both patient factors and benefits of intervention.
High-priority patients are in life-threatening condition, and delaying care would jeopardize their survival and/or quality of life. Medium-priority patients are noncritical, but delaying intervention beyond 6 weeks could affect outcomes. Low-priority patients are clinically stable, and delaying intervention would not affect their quality of life and/or survival.
ESMO’s guidelines for gastrointestinal cancers include recommendations for colorectal cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, gastroesophageal tumors, and pancreatic cancer. The recommendations encompass outpatient visits, imaging and radiological/endoscopic interventions, surgical procedures, medical oncology, and radiotherapy.
According to Dr. Lordick, many patients with pancreatic cancer or gastroesophageal tumors have clinical needs that cannot wait, and the guidelines reflect that.
“We are dealing here with two cancer types that are highly aggressive, that have high mortality if not treated adequately,” Dr. Lordick said. “So we have to say that whenever there is a suspicion for one of these cancers, we put the diagnosis and staging – including imaging of these cancers – into high priority. We think, with these cancers, people cannot wait. We know that it may be difficult in some systems, but if there is a suspicion [of a pancreatic tumor], then it’s not a situation where you could wait for 6 or 8 weeks.”
Radiological diagnostic workup of suspected hepatocellular carcinoma is also a high priority, according to the guidelines. However, diagnostic imaging and endoscopy are considered medium-priority interventions for clinically suspected colorectal cancer or for patients at high risk of colorectal cancer.
The lowest-priority patients are those in the survivorship group without symptoms, Dr. Lordick said, noting that these patients are eligible for delayed or remote consultation.
Professionalism, preparedness, and patient empowerment
More generally, Dr. Lordick urged oncologists to maintain a high level of professionalism and preparedness during the pandemic.
“I think a good center really tries to create areas that are COVID-free for their cancer patients,” he said. “They try to see as soon as possible if someone is at risk of having an infection, to test these patients early, to isolate them from the other patients.”
Dr. Lordick also emphasized the importance of patient empowerment.
“Really give [patients] all the information – what they can do to protect themselves from infection, including all the things that are usually recommended, like hygiene of the hands, avoiding social contact, reporting quickly if they have symptoms,” he said. “That is something we find really important – the patient empowerment.”
To that end, the ESMO team also created a comprehensive patient guide to help those with cancer navigate the pandemic.
All of these resources are the result of a major collaboration by guideline experts from around the world, Dr. Lordick said. He expressed gratitude for their work, which was performed without pay, under a tight deadline, and often following a full day in the clinic. From concept to publication, the recommendations were completed in 14 days.“To be honest, I’m a bit surprised, even a bit proud of what people did in a short period of time,” Dr. Lordick said.He reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: ESMO. April 2020. Cancer Patient Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic
The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has published guidelines for managing patients with gastrointestinal cancers during the COVID-19 pandemic, helping clinicians identify patients who require immediate care and those for whom treatment can wait.
The guidelines are part of an ESMO-led initiative to address pandemic-related clinical issues. ESMO has released recommendations for solid tumors and hematologic malignancies that were drafted by leading experts representing almost 60 research centers.
According to Florian Lordick, MD, PhD, ESMO director of education and professor of oncology at the University of Leipzig Medical Center, Germany, the effort was a response to clinician requests from around the world.
“Many physicians … in their centers, in their countries, would appreciate some guidance [regarding] how to act and how to react in this crisis,” Dr. Lordick said in an interview.
“This situation is very heterogenous,” he noted. “Even within Europe, even within some countries, some [health care providers] have very limited resources. ... Others can almost do their job as usual, so it’s not easy to give recommendations today that are exactly valid for everyone.”
Prioritizing patients and interventions
To account for disparities across countries, the ESMO guidelines are categorized by patient tiers, including low, medium, and high priority, as determined by the Cancer Care Ontario, Huntsman Cancer Institute and Magnitude of Clinical Benefit Scale. The scale incorporates both patient factors and benefits of intervention.
High-priority patients are in life-threatening condition, and delaying care would jeopardize their survival and/or quality of life. Medium-priority patients are noncritical, but delaying intervention beyond 6 weeks could affect outcomes. Low-priority patients are clinically stable, and delaying intervention would not affect their quality of life and/or survival.
ESMO’s guidelines for gastrointestinal cancers include recommendations for colorectal cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, gastroesophageal tumors, and pancreatic cancer. The recommendations encompass outpatient visits, imaging and radiological/endoscopic interventions, surgical procedures, medical oncology, and radiotherapy.
According to Dr. Lordick, many patients with pancreatic cancer or gastroesophageal tumors have clinical needs that cannot wait, and the guidelines reflect that.
“We are dealing here with two cancer types that are highly aggressive, that have high mortality if not treated adequately,” Dr. Lordick said. “So we have to say that whenever there is a suspicion for one of these cancers, we put the diagnosis and staging – including imaging of these cancers – into high priority. We think, with these cancers, people cannot wait. We know that it may be difficult in some systems, but if there is a suspicion [of a pancreatic tumor], then it’s not a situation where you could wait for 6 or 8 weeks.”
Radiological diagnostic workup of suspected hepatocellular carcinoma is also a high priority, according to the guidelines. However, diagnostic imaging and endoscopy are considered medium-priority interventions for clinically suspected colorectal cancer or for patients at high risk of colorectal cancer.
The lowest-priority patients are those in the survivorship group without symptoms, Dr. Lordick said, noting that these patients are eligible for delayed or remote consultation.
Professionalism, preparedness, and patient empowerment
More generally, Dr. Lordick urged oncologists to maintain a high level of professionalism and preparedness during the pandemic.
“I think a good center really tries to create areas that are COVID-free for their cancer patients,” he said. “They try to see as soon as possible if someone is at risk of having an infection, to test these patients early, to isolate them from the other patients.”
Dr. Lordick also emphasized the importance of patient empowerment.
“Really give [patients] all the information – what they can do to protect themselves from infection, including all the things that are usually recommended, like hygiene of the hands, avoiding social contact, reporting quickly if they have symptoms,” he said. “That is something we find really important – the patient empowerment.”
To that end, the ESMO team also created a comprehensive patient guide to help those with cancer navigate the pandemic.
All of these resources are the result of a major collaboration by guideline experts from around the world, Dr. Lordick said. He expressed gratitude for their work, which was performed without pay, under a tight deadline, and often following a full day in the clinic. From concept to publication, the recommendations were completed in 14 days.“To be honest, I’m a bit surprised, even a bit proud of what people did in a short period of time,” Dr. Lordick said.He reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: ESMO. April 2020. Cancer Patient Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic
FROM ESMO
Almost half of med practices furloughing staff, one-fifth have layoffs
Clinicians all over the country already likely know this, but a survey by the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) made it official: 97% of physician practices have experienced negative financial effects directly or indirectly related to COVID-19.
The survey, which was conducted April 7-8, also shows that 55% of practices have seen a decrease in revenue and 60% have experienced a decline in patient volume since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis.
A significant number of medical practices have also been forced to lay off or furlough staff in response to the COVID-19 crisis, the MGMA said. Many practices that have not yet laid off or furloughed employees will consider doing so if the conditions persist over the next 30 days.
Through April 8, 22% of survey respondents reported they had laid off staff. In the same period, 48% had furloughed employees. The survey projects that, by May 8, if the COVID-19 situation hasn’t improved, 36% of practices will have laid off staff members and 60% will have furloughed them.
The survey received 724 applicable responses, the MGMA said. Approximately 75% of respondents are part of independent medical practices and employ fewer than 50 full-time-equivalent physicians. But the respondents belong to practices of all sizes and specialties.
The bare numbers only scratch the surface of the pain that many groups and owners of physician practices are feeling.
“Not only has 70% of our revenue disappeared, but our physicians are still working every day, exposing themselves to risks, taking care of patients, and taking care of their employees by continuing to pay them while they have taken over a 50% pay cut,” said a representative of an independent anesthesiology practice in Alabama in the MGMA press release.
“All doctors and administrative staff have deferred their salaries during this period,” a representative from a small independent practice in Mississippi that specializes in pain management said in the press release. “We have laid off most of our staff except five people.”
Employed groups tend to be in better financial shape than independent practices because they have the resources of large health care systems behind them. Some hospitals have laid off employees, however, and some of the cuts are starting to hit outpatient clinics.
Elective procedures down
In an interview conducted before the survey was released, Halee Fischer-Wright, MD, president and CEO of MGMA, said in an interview that single-specialty groups that perform elective procedures have seen “dramatic decreases in volume.” The Trump administration and at least two dozen states have asked hospitals to halt those procedures during this phase of the crisis, according to multiple media reports.
Some groups with multiple offices, Dr. Fischer-Wright noted, are deciding whether to staff them all because of their decreased volume and their concern about staff exposure to the coronavirus.
“We see them condensing down and delegating sick and well offices,” she said. “The benefit is that it allows them to be efficient with their staff use and also to place their limited PPE [personal protective equipment] supplies in the right office.”
Noting that there are costs involved in laying off staff and that practices want to retain good people if possible, Dr. Fischer-Wright advised practices to furlough employees rather than lay them off if they can.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
Clinicians all over the country already likely know this, but a survey by the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) made it official: 97% of physician practices have experienced negative financial effects directly or indirectly related to COVID-19.
The survey, which was conducted April 7-8, also shows that 55% of practices have seen a decrease in revenue and 60% have experienced a decline in patient volume since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis.
A significant number of medical practices have also been forced to lay off or furlough staff in response to the COVID-19 crisis, the MGMA said. Many practices that have not yet laid off or furloughed employees will consider doing so if the conditions persist over the next 30 days.
Through April 8, 22% of survey respondents reported they had laid off staff. In the same period, 48% had furloughed employees. The survey projects that, by May 8, if the COVID-19 situation hasn’t improved, 36% of practices will have laid off staff members and 60% will have furloughed them.
The survey received 724 applicable responses, the MGMA said. Approximately 75% of respondents are part of independent medical practices and employ fewer than 50 full-time-equivalent physicians. But the respondents belong to practices of all sizes and specialties.
The bare numbers only scratch the surface of the pain that many groups and owners of physician practices are feeling.
“Not only has 70% of our revenue disappeared, but our physicians are still working every day, exposing themselves to risks, taking care of patients, and taking care of their employees by continuing to pay them while they have taken over a 50% pay cut,” said a representative of an independent anesthesiology practice in Alabama in the MGMA press release.
“All doctors and administrative staff have deferred their salaries during this period,” a representative from a small independent practice in Mississippi that specializes in pain management said in the press release. “We have laid off most of our staff except five people.”
Employed groups tend to be in better financial shape than independent practices because they have the resources of large health care systems behind them. Some hospitals have laid off employees, however, and some of the cuts are starting to hit outpatient clinics.
Elective procedures down
In an interview conducted before the survey was released, Halee Fischer-Wright, MD, president and CEO of MGMA, said in an interview that single-specialty groups that perform elective procedures have seen “dramatic decreases in volume.” The Trump administration and at least two dozen states have asked hospitals to halt those procedures during this phase of the crisis, according to multiple media reports.
Some groups with multiple offices, Dr. Fischer-Wright noted, are deciding whether to staff them all because of their decreased volume and their concern about staff exposure to the coronavirus.
“We see them condensing down and delegating sick and well offices,” she said. “The benefit is that it allows them to be efficient with their staff use and also to place their limited PPE [personal protective equipment] supplies in the right office.”
Noting that there are costs involved in laying off staff and that practices want to retain good people if possible, Dr. Fischer-Wright advised practices to furlough employees rather than lay them off if they can.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
Clinicians all over the country already likely know this, but a survey by the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) made it official: 97% of physician practices have experienced negative financial effects directly or indirectly related to COVID-19.
The survey, which was conducted April 7-8, also shows that 55% of practices have seen a decrease in revenue and 60% have experienced a decline in patient volume since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis.
A significant number of medical practices have also been forced to lay off or furlough staff in response to the COVID-19 crisis, the MGMA said. Many practices that have not yet laid off or furloughed employees will consider doing so if the conditions persist over the next 30 days.
Through April 8, 22% of survey respondents reported they had laid off staff. In the same period, 48% had furloughed employees. The survey projects that, by May 8, if the COVID-19 situation hasn’t improved, 36% of practices will have laid off staff members and 60% will have furloughed them.
The survey received 724 applicable responses, the MGMA said. Approximately 75% of respondents are part of independent medical practices and employ fewer than 50 full-time-equivalent physicians. But the respondents belong to practices of all sizes and specialties.
The bare numbers only scratch the surface of the pain that many groups and owners of physician practices are feeling.
“Not only has 70% of our revenue disappeared, but our physicians are still working every day, exposing themselves to risks, taking care of patients, and taking care of their employees by continuing to pay them while they have taken over a 50% pay cut,” said a representative of an independent anesthesiology practice in Alabama in the MGMA press release.
“All doctors and administrative staff have deferred their salaries during this period,” a representative from a small independent practice in Mississippi that specializes in pain management said in the press release. “We have laid off most of our staff except five people.”
Employed groups tend to be in better financial shape than independent practices because they have the resources of large health care systems behind them. Some hospitals have laid off employees, however, and some of the cuts are starting to hit outpatient clinics.
Elective procedures down
In an interview conducted before the survey was released, Halee Fischer-Wright, MD, president and CEO of MGMA, said in an interview that single-specialty groups that perform elective procedures have seen “dramatic decreases in volume.” The Trump administration and at least two dozen states have asked hospitals to halt those procedures during this phase of the crisis, according to multiple media reports.
Some groups with multiple offices, Dr. Fischer-Wright noted, are deciding whether to staff them all because of their decreased volume and their concern about staff exposure to the coronavirus.
“We see them condensing down and delegating sick and well offices,” she said. “The benefit is that it allows them to be efficient with their staff use and also to place their limited PPE [personal protective equipment] supplies in the right office.”
Noting that there are costs involved in laying off staff and that practices want to retain good people if possible, Dr. Fischer-Wright advised practices to furlough employees rather than lay them off if they can.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
Cancer patients report delays in treatment because of COVID-19
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, many cancer patients are finding it increasingly difficult to receive the care they need and are facing financial challenges.
Half of the cancer patients and survivors who responded to a recent survey reported changes, delays, or disruptions to the care they were receiving. The survey, with 1,219 respondents, was conducted by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN).
“The circumstances of this virus – from the fact cancer patients are at higher risk of severe complications should they be diagnosed with COVID-19, to the fact many patients are facing serious financial strain caused by the virus’ economic effect – make getting care especially difficult,” Keysha Brooks-Coley, vice president of federal advocacy for ACS CAN, told Medscape Medical News.
Nearly a quarter (24%) of survey respondents reported a delay in care or treatment. The proportion was slightly more (27%) among those currently receiving active treatment.
In addition, 12% (13% in active treatment) stated that not only was their care delayed but that they also have not been told when services would be rescheduled.
As previously reported by Medscape Medical News, many oncology groups have issued new guidelines for cancer care in reaction to the current crisis. These include recommendations to delay cancer treatment in order to avoid exposing cancer patients to the virus.
Half of those in active treatment report disruptions
The survey was initiated by ACS CAN on March 25 and was distributed over a 2-week period. The goal was to gain a better understanding of how COVID-19 was affecting cancer patients and survivors in the United States. Of the 1,219 respondents, half (51%) were cancer patients currently undergoing active treatment.
Among the patients and survivors who were currently in active treatment, 55% reported that there have been changes, delays, or disruptions in their care. The services most frequently affected included in-person provider visits (50%), supportive services (20%), and imaging procedures to monitor tumor growth (20%).
In addition, 8% reported that their treatment, including chemotherapy and immunotherapy, had been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Financial concerns
Almost all of the survey respondents were covered by some type of insurance; 49% had coverage through an employer, 32% were covered by Medicare, 7% had privately purchased insurance, and 4% were covered through Medicaid.
Many cancer patients had already been having difficulty paying for their care, but for a substantial proportion of survey respondents, the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the problem. More than one-third (38%) stated that COVID-19 “has had a notable impact on their financial situation that affects their ability to pay for health care.”
The most common financial problems that were related to access to care include reduced work hours (14%), reduced investment values (11%), having difficulty affording food and supplies because of staying at home to avoid contracting the virus (9%), and becoming unemployed (8%).
A reduction in work hours and job loss were of particular concern to respondents because of the possible effects these would have on their health insurance coverage. Of those who reported that they or a family member living with them had lost a job, 43% had employer-sponsored health insurance. Additionally, 58% of patients or a family member whose working hours had been reduced also had health insurance through their employer
Among the entire cohort, 28% reported that they were worried that the financial impact of COVID-19 would make it difficult to pay for the health care they need as cancer survivors. This concern was highly correlated with income. Almost half (46%) of patients who earned $30,000 or less reported that they were worried, but even in household with incomes over $110,000 per year, 21% were also concerned about the financial impact.
“Now more than ever, patients need to be able to get, keep, and afford health coverage to treat their disease,” commented Brooks-Coley.
Taking action
“ACS CAN is working every day to make clear to Congress and the administration the real and immediate challenges cancer patients and survivors face during this pandemic,” said Brooks-Coley.
With nearly 50 other professional and advocacy groups, ACS CAN has sent letters to congressional leadership and the Secretary of the Department of Health & Human Services asking them to make policy changes that would help patients.
The proposed action points include having insurers allow patients to use providers who are out of network if necessary; waiving site-specific precertification and prior authorization for cancer treatment; utilizing shared decision making between patients and providers in deciding whether to use home infusion without pressure from the insurer; allowing patients to obtain 90-day supplies of medication; increasing funding for state Medicaid programs and assistance for those who have lost employee-sponsored coverage; and improving telehealth services.
“We urge Congress and the administration to keep the needs of cancer patients and survivors in mind as they continue to address the public health crisis,” she said.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, many cancer patients are finding it increasingly difficult to receive the care they need and are facing financial challenges.
Half of the cancer patients and survivors who responded to a recent survey reported changes, delays, or disruptions to the care they were receiving. The survey, with 1,219 respondents, was conducted by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN).
“The circumstances of this virus – from the fact cancer patients are at higher risk of severe complications should they be diagnosed with COVID-19, to the fact many patients are facing serious financial strain caused by the virus’ economic effect – make getting care especially difficult,” Keysha Brooks-Coley, vice president of federal advocacy for ACS CAN, told Medscape Medical News.
Nearly a quarter (24%) of survey respondents reported a delay in care or treatment. The proportion was slightly more (27%) among those currently receiving active treatment.
In addition, 12% (13% in active treatment) stated that not only was their care delayed but that they also have not been told when services would be rescheduled.
As previously reported by Medscape Medical News, many oncology groups have issued new guidelines for cancer care in reaction to the current crisis. These include recommendations to delay cancer treatment in order to avoid exposing cancer patients to the virus.
Half of those in active treatment report disruptions
The survey was initiated by ACS CAN on March 25 and was distributed over a 2-week period. The goal was to gain a better understanding of how COVID-19 was affecting cancer patients and survivors in the United States. Of the 1,219 respondents, half (51%) were cancer patients currently undergoing active treatment.
Among the patients and survivors who were currently in active treatment, 55% reported that there have been changes, delays, or disruptions in their care. The services most frequently affected included in-person provider visits (50%), supportive services (20%), and imaging procedures to monitor tumor growth (20%).
In addition, 8% reported that their treatment, including chemotherapy and immunotherapy, had been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Financial concerns
Almost all of the survey respondents were covered by some type of insurance; 49% had coverage through an employer, 32% were covered by Medicare, 7% had privately purchased insurance, and 4% were covered through Medicaid.
Many cancer patients had already been having difficulty paying for their care, but for a substantial proportion of survey respondents, the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the problem. More than one-third (38%) stated that COVID-19 “has had a notable impact on their financial situation that affects their ability to pay for health care.”
The most common financial problems that were related to access to care include reduced work hours (14%), reduced investment values (11%), having difficulty affording food and supplies because of staying at home to avoid contracting the virus (9%), and becoming unemployed (8%).
A reduction in work hours and job loss were of particular concern to respondents because of the possible effects these would have on their health insurance coverage. Of those who reported that they or a family member living with them had lost a job, 43% had employer-sponsored health insurance. Additionally, 58% of patients or a family member whose working hours had been reduced also had health insurance through their employer
Among the entire cohort, 28% reported that they were worried that the financial impact of COVID-19 would make it difficult to pay for the health care they need as cancer survivors. This concern was highly correlated with income. Almost half (46%) of patients who earned $30,000 or less reported that they were worried, but even in household with incomes over $110,000 per year, 21% were also concerned about the financial impact.
“Now more than ever, patients need to be able to get, keep, and afford health coverage to treat their disease,” commented Brooks-Coley.
Taking action
“ACS CAN is working every day to make clear to Congress and the administration the real and immediate challenges cancer patients and survivors face during this pandemic,” said Brooks-Coley.
With nearly 50 other professional and advocacy groups, ACS CAN has sent letters to congressional leadership and the Secretary of the Department of Health & Human Services asking them to make policy changes that would help patients.
The proposed action points include having insurers allow patients to use providers who are out of network if necessary; waiving site-specific precertification and prior authorization for cancer treatment; utilizing shared decision making between patients and providers in deciding whether to use home infusion without pressure from the insurer; allowing patients to obtain 90-day supplies of medication; increasing funding for state Medicaid programs and assistance for those who have lost employee-sponsored coverage; and improving telehealth services.
“We urge Congress and the administration to keep the needs of cancer patients and survivors in mind as they continue to address the public health crisis,” she said.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, many cancer patients are finding it increasingly difficult to receive the care they need and are facing financial challenges.
Half of the cancer patients and survivors who responded to a recent survey reported changes, delays, or disruptions to the care they were receiving. The survey, with 1,219 respondents, was conducted by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN).
“The circumstances of this virus – from the fact cancer patients are at higher risk of severe complications should they be diagnosed with COVID-19, to the fact many patients are facing serious financial strain caused by the virus’ economic effect – make getting care especially difficult,” Keysha Brooks-Coley, vice president of federal advocacy for ACS CAN, told Medscape Medical News.
Nearly a quarter (24%) of survey respondents reported a delay in care or treatment. The proportion was slightly more (27%) among those currently receiving active treatment.
In addition, 12% (13% in active treatment) stated that not only was their care delayed but that they also have not been told when services would be rescheduled.
As previously reported by Medscape Medical News, many oncology groups have issued new guidelines for cancer care in reaction to the current crisis. These include recommendations to delay cancer treatment in order to avoid exposing cancer patients to the virus.
Half of those in active treatment report disruptions
The survey was initiated by ACS CAN on March 25 and was distributed over a 2-week period. The goal was to gain a better understanding of how COVID-19 was affecting cancer patients and survivors in the United States. Of the 1,219 respondents, half (51%) were cancer patients currently undergoing active treatment.
Among the patients and survivors who were currently in active treatment, 55% reported that there have been changes, delays, or disruptions in their care. The services most frequently affected included in-person provider visits (50%), supportive services (20%), and imaging procedures to monitor tumor growth (20%).
In addition, 8% reported that their treatment, including chemotherapy and immunotherapy, had been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Financial concerns
Almost all of the survey respondents were covered by some type of insurance; 49% had coverage through an employer, 32% were covered by Medicare, 7% had privately purchased insurance, and 4% were covered through Medicaid.
Many cancer patients had already been having difficulty paying for their care, but for a substantial proportion of survey respondents, the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the problem. More than one-third (38%) stated that COVID-19 “has had a notable impact on their financial situation that affects their ability to pay for health care.”
The most common financial problems that were related to access to care include reduced work hours (14%), reduced investment values (11%), having difficulty affording food and supplies because of staying at home to avoid contracting the virus (9%), and becoming unemployed (8%).
A reduction in work hours and job loss were of particular concern to respondents because of the possible effects these would have on their health insurance coverage. Of those who reported that they or a family member living with them had lost a job, 43% had employer-sponsored health insurance. Additionally, 58% of patients or a family member whose working hours had been reduced also had health insurance through their employer
Among the entire cohort, 28% reported that they were worried that the financial impact of COVID-19 would make it difficult to pay for the health care they need as cancer survivors. This concern was highly correlated with income. Almost half (46%) of patients who earned $30,000 or less reported that they were worried, but even in household with incomes over $110,000 per year, 21% were also concerned about the financial impact.
“Now more than ever, patients need to be able to get, keep, and afford health coverage to treat their disease,” commented Brooks-Coley.
Taking action
“ACS CAN is working every day to make clear to Congress and the administration the real and immediate challenges cancer patients and survivors face during this pandemic,” said Brooks-Coley.
With nearly 50 other professional and advocacy groups, ACS CAN has sent letters to congressional leadership and the Secretary of the Department of Health & Human Services asking them to make policy changes that would help patients.
The proposed action points include having insurers allow patients to use providers who are out of network if necessary; waiving site-specific precertification and prior authorization for cancer treatment; utilizing shared decision making between patients and providers in deciding whether to use home infusion without pressure from the insurer; allowing patients to obtain 90-day supplies of medication; increasing funding for state Medicaid programs and assistance for those who have lost employee-sponsored coverage; and improving telehealth services.
“We urge Congress and the administration to keep the needs of cancer patients and survivors in mind as they continue to address the public health crisis,” she said.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Can convalescent plasma treat COVID-19 patients?
As an Episcopal priest, Father Robert Pace of Fort Worth, TX, is used to putting others first and reaching out to help. So when the pulmonologist who helped him through his ordeal with COVID-19 asked if he would like to donate blood to help other patients, he did not hesitate.
“I said, ‘Absolutely,’” Pace, 53, recalls. He says the idea was ‘very appealing.’ ” During his ordeal with COVID-19 in March, he had spent 3 days in the hospital, isolated and on IV fluids and oxygen. He was short of breath, with a heartbeat more rapid than usual.
Now, fully recovered, his blood was a precious commodity, antibody-rich and potentially life-saving.
As researchers scramble to test drugs to fight COVID-19, others are turning to an age-old treatment. They’re collecting the blood of survivors and giving it to patients in the throes of a severe infection, a treatment known as convalescent plasma therapy.
Doctors say the treatment will probably serve as a bridge until other drugs and a vaccine become available.
Although the FDA considers the treatment investigational, in late March, it eased access to it. Patients can get it as part of a clinical trial or through an expanded access program overseen by hospitals or universities. A doctor can also request permission to use the treatment for a single patient.
“It is considered an emergent, compassionate need,” says John Burk, MD, a pulmonologist at Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital, Fort Worth, who treated Pace. “It is a way to bring it to the bedside.” And the approval can happen quickly. Burk says he got one from the FDA just 20 minutes after requesting it for a severely ill patient.
How it works
The premise of how it works is “quite straightforward,” says Michael Joyner, MD, a professor of anesthesiology at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. “When someone is recovered and no longer symptomatic, you can harvest those antibodies from their blood and give them to someone else, and hopefully alter the course of their disease.” Joyner is the principal investigator for the FDA’s national Expanded Access to Convalescent Plasma for the Treatment of Patients with COVID-19, with 1,000 sites already signed on.
Convalescent therapy has been used to fight many other viruses, including Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), the “bird” flu, H1N1 flu, and during the 1918 flu pandemic. Joyner says the strongest evidence for it comes from the 1950s, when it was used to treat a rodent-borne illness called Argentine hemorrhagic fever. Using convalescent plasma therapy for this infection reduced the death rate from nearly 43% before the treatment became common in the late 1950s to about 3% after it was widely used, one report found.
Data about convalescent therapy specifically for COVID-19 is limited. Chinese researchers reported on five critically ill patients, all on mechanical ventilation, treated with convalescent plasma after they had received antiviral and anti-inflammatory medicines. Three could leave the hospital after 51-55 days, and two were in stable condition in the hospital 37 days after the transfusion.
In another study of 10 severely ill patients, symptoms went away or improved in all 10 within 1 to 3 days after the transfusion. Two of the three on ventilators were weaned off and put on oxygen instead. None died.
Chinese researchers also reported three cases of patients with COVID-19 given the convalescent therapy who had a satisfactory recovery.
Researchers who reviewed the track record of convalescent therapy for other conditions recently concluded that the treatment doesn’t appear to cause severe side effects and it should be studied for COVID-19.
Although information on side effects specific to this treatment is evolving, Joyner says they are “very, very low.”
According to the FDA, allergic reactions can occur with plasma therapies. Because the treatment for COVID-19 is new, it is not known if patients might have other types of reactions.
Who can donate?
Blood bank officials and researchers running the convalescent plasma programs say the desire to help is widespread, and they’ve been deluged with offers to donate. But requirements are strict.
Donors must have evidence of COVID-19 infection, documented in a variety of ways, such as a diagnostic test by nasal swab or a blood test showing antibodies. And they must be symptom-free for 14 days, with test results, or 28 days without.
The treatment involves collecting plasma, not whole blood. Plasma, the liquid part of the blood, helps with clotting and supports immunity. During the collection, a donor’s blood is put through a machine that collects the plasma only and sends the red blood cells and platelets back to the donor.
Clinical trials
Requirements may be more stringent for donors joining a formal clinical trial rather than an expanded access program. For instance, potential donors in a randomized clinical trial underway at Stony Brook University must have higher antibody levels than required by the FDA, says study leader Elliott Bennett-Guerrero, MD, medical director of perioperative quality and patient safety and professor at the Renaissance School of Medicine.
He hopes to enroll up to 500 patients from the Long Island, NY, area. While clinical trials typically have a 50-50 split, with half of subjects getting a treatment and half a placebo, Bennett-Guerrero’s study will give 80% of patients the convalescent plasma and 20% standard plasma.
Julia Sabia Motley, 57, of Merrick, NY, is hoping to become a donor for the Stony Brook study. She and her husband, Sean Motley, 59, tested positive in late March. She has to pass one more test to join the trial. Her husband is also planning to try to donate. “I can finally do something,” Sabia Motley says. Her son is in the MD-PhD program at Stony Brook and told her about the study.
Many questions remain
The treatment for COVID-19 is in its infancy. Burk has given the convalescent plasma to two patients. One is now recovering at home, and the other is on a ventilator but improving, he says.
About 200 nationwide have received the therapy, Joyner says. He expects blood supplies to increase as more people are eligible to donate.
Questions remain about how effective the convalescent therapy will be. While experts know that the COVID-19 antibodies “can be helpful in fighting the virus, we don’t know how long the antibodies in the plasma would stay in place,” Bennett-Guerrero says.
Nor do doctors know who the therapy might work best for, beyond people with a severe or life-threatening illness. When it’s been used for other infections, it’s generally given in early stages once someone has symptoms, Joyner says.
Joyner says he sees the treatment as a stopgap ‘’until concentrated antibodies are available.” Several drug companies are working to retrieve antibodies from donors and make concentrated antibody drugs.
“Typically we would think convalescent plasma might be a helpful bridge until therapies that are safe and effective and can be mass-produced are available, such as a vaccine or a drug,” Bennett-Guerrero says.
Even so, he says that he doesn’t think he will have a problem attracting donors, and that he will have repeat donors eager to help.
More information for potential donors
Blood banks, the American Red Cross, and others involved in convalescent plasma therapy have posted information online for potential donors. People who don’t meet the qualifications for COVID-19 plasma donations are welcomed as regular blood donors if they meet those criteria
According to the FDA, a donation could potentially help save the lives of up to four COVID-19 patients.
Father Pace is already planning another visit to the blood bank. To pass the time last time, he says, he prayed for the person who would eventually get his blood.
This article first appeared on WebMD.com.
As an Episcopal priest, Father Robert Pace of Fort Worth, TX, is used to putting others first and reaching out to help. So when the pulmonologist who helped him through his ordeal with COVID-19 asked if he would like to donate blood to help other patients, he did not hesitate.
“I said, ‘Absolutely,’” Pace, 53, recalls. He says the idea was ‘very appealing.’ ” During his ordeal with COVID-19 in March, he had spent 3 days in the hospital, isolated and on IV fluids and oxygen. He was short of breath, with a heartbeat more rapid than usual.
Now, fully recovered, his blood was a precious commodity, antibody-rich and potentially life-saving.
As researchers scramble to test drugs to fight COVID-19, others are turning to an age-old treatment. They’re collecting the blood of survivors and giving it to patients in the throes of a severe infection, a treatment known as convalescent plasma therapy.
Doctors say the treatment will probably serve as a bridge until other drugs and a vaccine become available.
Although the FDA considers the treatment investigational, in late March, it eased access to it. Patients can get it as part of a clinical trial or through an expanded access program overseen by hospitals or universities. A doctor can also request permission to use the treatment for a single patient.
“It is considered an emergent, compassionate need,” says John Burk, MD, a pulmonologist at Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital, Fort Worth, who treated Pace. “It is a way to bring it to the bedside.” And the approval can happen quickly. Burk says he got one from the FDA just 20 minutes after requesting it for a severely ill patient.
How it works
The premise of how it works is “quite straightforward,” says Michael Joyner, MD, a professor of anesthesiology at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. “When someone is recovered and no longer symptomatic, you can harvest those antibodies from their blood and give them to someone else, and hopefully alter the course of their disease.” Joyner is the principal investigator for the FDA’s national Expanded Access to Convalescent Plasma for the Treatment of Patients with COVID-19, with 1,000 sites already signed on.
Convalescent therapy has been used to fight many other viruses, including Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), the “bird” flu, H1N1 flu, and during the 1918 flu pandemic. Joyner says the strongest evidence for it comes from the 1950s, when it was used to treat a rodent-borne illness called Argentine hemorrhagic fever. Using convalescent plasma therapy for this infection reduced the death rate from nearly 43% before the treatment became common in the late 1950s to about 3% after it was widely used, one report found.
Data about convalescent therapy specifically for COVID-19 is limited. Chinese researchers reported on five critically ill patients, all on mechanical ventilation, treated with convalescent plasma after they had received antiviral and anti-inflammatory medicines. Three could leave the hospital after 51-55 days, and two were in stable condition in the hospital 37 days after the transfusion.
In another study of 10 severely ill patients, symptoms went away or improved in all 10 within 1 to 3 days after the transfusion. Two of the three on ventilators were weaned off and put on oxygen instead. None died.
Chinese researchers also reported three cases of patients with COVID-19 given the convalescent therapy who had a satisfactory recovery.
Researchers who reviewed the track record of convalescent therapy for other conditions recently concluded that the treatment doesn’t appear to cause severe side effects and it should be studied for COVID-19.
Although information on side effects specific to this treatment is evolving, Joyner says they are “very, very low.”
According to the FDA, allergic reactions can occur with plasma therapies. Because the treatment for COVID-19 is new, it is not known if patients might have other types of reactions.
Who can donate?
Blood bank officials and researchers running the convalescent plasma programs say the desire to help is widespread, and they’ve been deluged with offers to donate. But requirements are strict.
Donors must have evidence of COVID-19 infection, documented in a variety of ways, such as a diagnostic test by nasal swab or a blood test showing antibodies. And they must be symptom-free for 14 days, with test results, or 28 days without.
The treatment involves collecting plasma, not whole blood. Plasma, the liquid part of the blood, helps with clotting and supports immunity. During the collection, a donor’s blood is put through a machine that collects the plasma only and sends the red blood cells and platelets back to the donor.
Clinical trials
Requirements may be more stringent for donors joining a formal clinical trial rather than an expanded access program. For instance, potential donors in a randomized clinical trial underway at Stony Brook University must have higher antibody levels than required by the FDA, says study leader Elliott Bennett-Guerrero, MD, medical director of perioperative quality and patient safety and professor at the Renaissance School of Medicine.
He hopes to enroll up to 500 patients from the Long Island, NY, area. While clinical trials typically have a 50-50 split, with half of subjects getting a treatment and half a placebo, Bennett-Guerrero’s study will give 80% of patients the convalescent plasma and 20% standard plasma.
Julia Sabia Motley, 57, of Merrick, NY, is hoping to become a donor for the Stony Brook study. She and her husband, Sean Motley, 59, tested positive in late March. She has to pass one more test to join the trial. Her husband is also planning to try to donate. “I can finally do something,” Sabia Motley says. Her son is in the MD-PhD program at Stony Brook and told her about the study.
Many questions remain
The treatment for COVID-19 is in its infancy. Burk has given the convalescent plasma to two patients. One is now recovering at home, and the other is on a ventilator but improving, he says.
About 200 nationwide have received the therapy, Joyner says. He expects blood supplies to increase as more people are eligible to donate.
Questions remain about how effective the convalescent therapy will be. While experts know that the COVID-19 antibodies “can be helpful in fighting the virus, we don’t know how long the antibodies in the plasma would stay in place,” Bennett-Guerrero says.
Nor do doctors know who the therapy might work best for, beyond people with a severe or life-threatening illness. When it’s been used for other infections, it’s generally given in early stages once someone has symptoms, Joyner says.
Joyner says he sees the treatment as a stopgap ‘’until concentrated antibodies are available.” Several drug companies are working to retrieve antibodies from donors and make concentrated antibody drugs.
“Typically we would think convalescent plasma might be a helpful bridge until therapies that are safe and effective and can be mass-produced are available, such as a vaccine or a drug,” Bennett-Guerrero says.
Even so, he says that he doesn’t think he will have a problem attracting donors, and that he will have repeat donors eager to help.
More information for potential donors
Blood banks, the American Red Cross, and others involved in convalescent plasma therapy have posted information online for potential donors. People who don’t meet the qualifications for COVID-19 plasma donations are welcomed as regular blood donors if they meet those criteria
According to the FDA, a donation could potentially help save the lives of up to four COVID-19 patients.
Father Pace is already planning another visit to the blood bank. To pass the time last time, he says, he prayed for the person who would eventually get his blood.
This article first appeared on WebMD.com.
As an Episcopal priest, Father Robert Pace of Fort Worth, TX, is used to putting others first and reaching out to help. So when the pulmonologist who helped him through his ordeal with COVID-19 asked if he would like to donate blood to help other patients, he did not hesitate.
“I said, ‘Absolutely,’” Pace, 53, recalls. He says the idea was ‘very appealing.’ ” During his ordeal with COVID-19 in March, he had spent 3 days in the hospital, isolated and on IV fluids and oxygen. He was short of breath, with a heartbeat more rapid than usual.
Now, fully recovered, his blood was a precious commodity, antibody-rich and potentially life-saving.
As researchers scramble to test drugs to fight COVID-19, others are turning to an age-old treatment. They’re collecting the blood of survivors and giving it to patients in the throes of a severe infection, a treatment known as convalescent plasma therapy.
Doctors say the treatment will probably serve as a bridge until other drugs and a vaccine become available.
Although the FDA considers the treatment investigational, in late March, it eased access to it. Patients can get it as part of a clinical trial or through an expanded access program overseen by hospitals or universities. A doctor can also request permission to use the treatment for a single patient.
“It is considered an emergent, compassionate need,” says John Burk, MD, a pulmonologist at Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital, Fort Worth, who treated Pace. “It is a way to bring it to the bedside.” And the approval can happen quickly. Burk says he got one from the FDA just 20 minutes after requesting it for a severely ill patient.
How it works
The premise of how it works is “quite straightforward,” says Michael Joyner, MD, a professor of anesthesiology at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. “When someone is recovered and no longer symptomatic, you can harvest those antibodies from their blood and give them to someone else, and hopefully alter the course of their disease.” Joyner is the principal investigator for the FDA’s national Expanded Access to Convalescent Plasma for the Treatment of Patients with COVID-19, with 1,000 sites already signed on.
Convalescent therapy has been used to fight many other viruses, including Ebola, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), the “bird” flu, H1N1 flu, and during the 1918 flu pandemic. Joyner says the strongest evidence for it comes from the 1950s, when it was used to treat a rodent-borne illness called Argentine hemorrhagic fever. Using convalescent plasma therapy for this infection reduced the death rate from nearly 43% before the treatment became common in the late 1950s to about 3% after it was widely used, one report found.
Data about convalescent therapy specifically for COVID-19 is limited. Chinese researchers reported on five critically ill patients, all on mechanical ventilation, treated with convalescent plasma after they had received antiviral and anti-inflammatory medicines. Three could leave the hospital after 51-55 days, and two were in stable condition in the hospital 37 days after the transfusion.
In another study of 10 severely ill patients, symptoms went away or improved in all 10 within 1 to 3 days after the transfusion. Two of the three on ventilators were weaned off and put on oxygen instead. None died.
Chinese researchers also reported three cases of patients with COVID-19 given the convalescent therapy who had a satisfactory recovery.
Researchers who reviewed the track record of convalescent therapy for other conditions recently concluded that the treatment doesn’t appear to cause severe side effects and it should be studied for COVID-19.
Although information on side effects specific to this treatment is evolving, Joyner says they are “very, very low.”
According to the FDA, allergic reactions can occur with plasma therapies. Because the treatment for COVID-19 is new, it is not known if patients might have other types of reactions.
Who can donate?
Blood bank officials and researchers running the convalescent plasma programs say the desire to help is widespread, and they’ve been deluged with offers to donate. But requirements are strict.
Donors must have evidence of COVID-19 infection, documented in a variety of ways, such as a diagnostic test by nasal swab or a blood test showing antibodies. And they must be symptom-free for 14 days, with test results, or 28 days without.
The treatment involves collecting plasma, not whole blood. Plasma, the liquid part of the blood, helps with clotting and supports immunity. During the collection, a donor’s blood is put through a machine that collects the plasma only and sends the red blood cells and platelets back to the donor.
Clinical trials
Requirements may be more stringent for donors joining a formal clinical trial rather than an expanded access program. For instance, potential donors in a randomized clinical trial underway at Stony Brook University must have higher antibody levels than required by the FDA, says study leader Elliott Bennett-Guerrero, MD, medical director of perioperative quality and patient safety and professor at the Renaissance School of Medicine.
He hopes to enroll up to 500 patients from the Long Island, NY, area. While clinical trials typically have a 50-50 split, with half of subjects getting a treatment and half a placebo, Bennett-Guerrero’s study will give 80% of patients the convalescent plasma and 20% standard plasma.
Julia Sabia Motley, 57, of Merrick, NY, is hoping to become a donor for the Stony Brook study. She and her husband, Sean Motley, 59, tested positive in late March. She has to pass one more test to join the trial. Her husband is also planning to try to donate. “I can finally do something,” Sabia Motley says. Her son is in the MD-PhD program at Stony Brook and told her about the study.
Many questions remain
The treatment for COVID-19 is in its infancy. Burk has given the convalescent plasma to two patients. One is now recovering at home, and the other is on a ventilator but improving, he says.
About 200 nationwide have received the therapy, Joyner says. He expects blood supplies to increase as more people are eligible to donate.
Questions remain about how effective the convalescent therapy will be. While experts know that the COVID-19 antibodies “can be helpful in fighting the virus, we don’t know how long the antibodies in the plasma would stay in place,” Bennett-Guerrero says.
Nor do doctors know who the therapy might work best for, beyond people with a severe or life-threatening illness. When it’s been used for other infections, it’s generally given in early stages once someone has symptoms, Joyner says.
Joyner says he sees the treatment as a stopgap ‘’until concentrated antibodies are available.” Several drug companies are working to retrieve antibodies from donors and make concentrated antibody drugs.
“Typically we would think convalescent plasma might be a helpful bridge until therapies that are safe and effective and can be mass-produced are available, such as a vaccine or a drug,” Bennett-Guerrero says.
Even so, he says that he doesn’t think he will have a problem attracting donors, and that he will have repeat donors eager to help.
More information for potential donors
Blood banks, the American Red Cross, and others involved in convalescent plasma therapy have posted information online for potential donors. People who don’t meet the qualifications for COVID-19 plasma donations are welcomed as regular blood donors if they meet those criteria
According to the FDA, a donation could potentially help save the lives of up to four COVID-19 patients.
Father Pace is already planning another visit to the blood bank. To pass the time last time, he says, he prayed for the person who would eventually get his blood.
This article first appeared on WebMD.com.
Cancer care ‘transformed in space of a month’ because of pandemic
, the most “revolutionary” being a deep dive into telehealth, predicts Deborah Schrag, MD, MPH, a medical oncologist specializing in gastrointestinal cancers at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts.
“In the space of a month, approaches and accepted norms of cancer care delivery have been transformed of necessity,” Schrag and colleagues write in an article published in JAMA on April 13.
“Most of these changes would not have occurred without the pandemic,” they add. They predict that some changes will last after the crisis is over.
“None of us want to be thrown in the deep end.... On the other hand, sometimes it works,” Schrag told Medscape Medical News.
“The in-person visit between patient and physician has been upended,” she said.
“I don’t think there’s any going back to the way it was before because cancer patients won’t stand for it,” she said. “They’re not going to drive in to get the results of a blood test.
“I think that on balance, of course, there are situations where you need eye-to-eye contact. No one wants to have an initial oncology meeting by telehealth – doctors or patients – that’s ridiculous,” she said. “But for follow-up visits, patients are now going to be more demanding, and doctors will be more willing.”
The “essential empathy” of oncologists can still “transcend the new physical barriers presented by masks and telehealth,” Schrag and colleagues comment.
“Doctors are figuring out how to deliver empathy by Zoom,” she told Medscape Medical News. “It’s not the same, but we all convey empathy to our elderly relatives over the phone.”
Pandemic impact on oncology
While the crisis has affected all of medicine – dismantling how care is delivered and forcing clinicians to make difficult decisions regarding triage – the fact that some cancers present an immediate threat to survival means that oncology “provides a lens into the major shifts currently underway in clinical care,” Schrag and colleagues write.
They illustrate the point by highlighting systemic chemotherapy, which is provided to a large proportion of patients with advanced cancer. The pandemic has tipped the risk-benefit ratio away from treatments that have a marginal effect on quality or quantity of life, they note. It has forced an “elimination of low-value treatments that were identified by the Choosing Wisely campaign,” the authors write. Up to now, the uptake of recommendations to eliminate these treatments has been slow.
“For example, for most metastatic solid tumors, chemotherapy beyond the third regimen does not improve survival for more than a few weeks; therefore, oncologists are advising supportive care instead. For patients receiving adjuvant therapy for curable cancers, delaying initiation or abbreviating the number of cycles is appropriate. Oncologists are postponing initiation of adjuvant chemotherapy for some estrogen receptor–negative stage II breast cancers by 8 weeks and administering 6 rather than 12 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colorectal cancers,” Schrag and colleagues write.
On the other hand, even in the epicenters of the pandemic, thus far, oncologists are still delivering cancer treatments that have the potential to cure and cannot safely be delayed, they point out. “This includes most patients with new diagnoses of acute leukemia, high-grade lymphoma, and those with chemotherapy-responsive tumors such as testicular, ovarian, and small cell lung cancer. Despite the risks, oncologists are not modifying such treatments because these cancers are likely more lethal than COVID-19.”
It’s the cancer patients who fall in between these two extremes who pose the biggest treatment challenge during this crisis – the patients for whom a delay would have “moderate clinically important adverse influence on quality of life or survival.” In these cases, oncologists are “prescribing marginally less effective regimens that have lower risk of precipitating hospitalization,” the authors note.
These treatments include the use of “white cell growth factor, more stringent neutrophil counts for proceeding with a next cycle of therapy, and omitting use of steroids to manage nausea.” In addition, where possible, oncologists are substituting oral agents for intravenous agents and “myriad other modifications to minimize visits and hospitalizations.”
Most hospitals and outpatient infusion centers now prohibit visitors from accompanying patients, and oncologists are prioritizing conversations with patients about advance directives, healthcare proxies, and end-of-life care preferences. Yet, even here, telehealth offers a new, enhanced layer to those conversations by enabling families to gather with their loved one and the doctor, she said.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
, the most “revolutionary” being a deep dive into telehealth, predicts Deborah Schrag, MD, MPH, a medical oncologist specializing in gastrointestinal cancers at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts.
“In the space of a month, approaches and accepted norms of cancer care delivery have been transformed of necessity,” Schrag and colleagues write in an article published in JAMA on April 13.
“Most of these changes would not have occurred without the pandemic,” they add. They predict that some changes will last after the crisis is over.
“None of us want to be thrown in the deep end.... On the other hand, sometimes it works,” Schrag told Medscape Medical News.
“The in-person visit between patient and physician has been upended,” she said.
“I don’t think there’s any going back to the way it was before because cancer patients won’t stand for it,” she said. “They’re not going to drive in to get the results of a blood test.
“I think that on balance, of course, there are situations where you need eye-to-eye contact. No one wants to have an initial oncology meeting by telehealth – doctors or patients – that’s ridiculous,” she said. “But for follow-up visits, patients are now going to be more demanding, and doctors will be more willing.”
The “essential empathy” of oncologists can still “transcend the new physical barriers presented by masks and telehealth,” Schrag and colleagues comment.
“Doctors are figuring out how to deliver empathy by Zoom,” she told Medscape Medical News. “It’s not the same, but we all convey empathy to our elderly relatives over the phone.”
Pandemic impact on oncology
While the crisis has affected all of medicine – dismantling how care is delivered and forcing clinicians to make difficult decisions regarding triage – the fact that some cancers present an immediate threat to survival means that oncology “provides a lens into the major shifts currently underway in clinical care,” Schrag and colleagues write.
They illustrate the point by highlighting systemic chemotherapy, which is provided to a large proportion of patients with advanced cancer. The pandemic has tipped the risk-benefit ratio away from treatments that have a marginal effect on quality or quantity of life, they note. It has forced an “elimination of low-value treatments that were identified by the Choosing Wisely campaign,” the authors write. Up to now, the uptake of recommendations to eliminate these treatments has been slow.
“For example, for most metastatic solid tumors, chemotherapy beyond the third regimen does not improve survival for more than a few weeks; therefore, oncologists are advising supportive care instead. For patients receiving adjuvant therapy for curable cancers, delaying initiation or abbreviating the number of cycles is appropriate. Oncologists are postponing initiation of adjuvant chemotherapy for some estrogen receptor–negative stage II breast cancers by 8 weeks and administering 6 rather than 12 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colorectal cancers,” Schrag and colleagues write.
On the other hand, even in the epicenters of the pandemic, thus far, oncologists are still delivering cancer treatments that have the potential to cure and cannot safely be delayed, they point out. “This includes most patients with new diagnoses of acute leukemia, high-grade lymphoma, and those with chemotherapy-responsive tumors such as testicular, ovarian, and small cell lung cancer. Despite the risks, oncologists are not modifying such treatments because these cancers are likely more lethal than COVID-19.”
It’s the cancer patients who fall in between these two extremes who pose the biggest treatment challenge during this crisis – the patients for whom a delay would have “moderate clinically important adverse influence on quality of life or survival.” In these cases, oncologists are “prescribing marginally less effective regimens that have lower risk of precipitating hospitalization,” the authors note.
These treatments include the use of “white cell growth factor, more stringent neutrophil counts for proceeding with a next cycle of therapy, and omitting use of steroids to manage nausea.” In addition, where possible, oncologists are substituting oral agents for intravenous agents and “myriad other modifications to minimize visits and hospitalizations.”
Most hospitals and outpatient infusion centers now prohibit visitors from accompanying patients, and oncologists are prioritizing conversations with patients about advance directives, healthcare proxies, and end-of-life care preferences. Yet, even here, telehealth offers a new, enhanced layer to those conversations by enabling families to gather with their loved one and the doctor, she said.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
, the most “revolutionary” being a deep dive into telehealth, predicts Deborah Schrag, MD, MPH, a medical oncologist specializing in gastrointestinal cancers at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts.
“In the space of a month, approaches and accepted norms of cancer care delivery have been transformed of necessity,” Schrag and colleagues write in an article published in JAMA on April 13.
“Most of these changes would not have occurred without the pandemic,” they add. They predict that some changes will last after the crisis is over.
“None of us want to be thrown in the deep end.... On the other hand, sometimes it works,” Schrag told Medscape Medical News.
“The in-person visit between patient and physician has been upended,” she said.
“I don’t think there’s any going back to the way it was before because cancer patients won’t stand for it,” she said. “They’re not going to drive in to get the results of a blood test.
“I think that on balance, of course, there are situations where you need eye-to-eye contact. No one wants to have an initial oncology meeting by telehealth – doctors or patients – that’s ridiculous,” she said. “But for follow-up visits, patients are now going to be more demanding, and doctors will be more willing.”
The “essential empathy” of oncologists can still “transcend the new physical barriers presented by masks and telehealth,” Schrag and colleagues comment.
“Doctors are figuring out how to deliver empathy by Zoom,” she told Medscape Medical News. “It’s not the same, but we all convey empathy to our elderly relatives over the phone.”
Pandemic impact on oncology
While the crisis has affected all of medicine – dismantling how care is delivered and forcing clinicians to make difficult decisions regarding triage – the fact that some cancers present an immediate threat to survival means that oncology “provides a lens into the major shifts currently underway in clinical care,” Schrag and colleagues write.
They illustrate the point by highlighting systemic chemotherapy, which is provided to a large proportion of patients with advanced cancer. The pandemic has tipped the risk-benefit ratio away from treatments that have a marginal effect on quality or quantity of life, they note. It has forced an “elimination of low-value treatments that were identified by the Choosing Wisely campaign,” the authors write. Up to now, the uptake of recommendations to eliminate these treatments has been slow.
“For example, for most metastatic solid tumors, chemotherapy beyond the third regimen does not improve survival for more than a few weeks; therefore, oncologists are advising supportive care instead. For patients receiving adjuvant therapy for curable cancers, delaying initiation or abbreviating the number of cycles is appropriate. Oncologists are postponing initiation of adjuvant chemotherapy for some estrogen receptor–negative stage II breast cancers by 8 weeks and administering 6 rather than 12 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colorectal cancers,” Schrag and colleagues write.
On the other hand, even in the epicenters of the pandemic, thus far, oncologists are still delivering cancer treatments that have the potential to cure and cannot safely be delayed, they point out. “This includes most patients with new diagnoses of acute leukemia, high-grade lymphoma, and those with chemotherapy-responsive tumors such as testicular, ovarian, and small cell lung cancer. Despite the risks, oncologists are not modifying such treatments because these cancers are likely more lethal than COVID-19.”
It’s the cancer patients who fall in between these two extremes who pose the biggest treatment challenge during this crisis – the patients for whom a delay would have “moderate clinically important adverse influence on quality of life or survival.” In these cases, oncologists are “prescribing marginally less effective regimens that have lower risk of precipitating hospitalization,” the authors note.
These treatments include the use of “white cell growth factor, more stringent neutrophil counts for proceeding with a next cycle of therapy, and omitting use of steroids to manage nausea.” In addition, where possible, oncologists are substituting oral agents for intravenous agents and “myriad other modifications to minimize visits and hospitalizations.”
Most hospitals and outpatient infusion centers now prohibit visitors from accompanying patients, and oncologists are prioritizing conversations with patients about advance directives, healthcare proxies, and end-of-life care preferences. Yet, even here, telehealth offers a new, enhanced layer to those conversations by enabling families to gather with their loved one and the doctor, she said.
This article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pandemic strains blood supply for COVID-19 and noninfected patients
The COVID-19 pandemic is putting a strain on the blood supply and could be putting people – including those who normally get transfusions, such as patients with sickle cell disease and cancer – at risk.
“Around the beginning of March, the hematology community got wind of what was going on because the blood banks were saying think about your patients and begin to restrict blood usage because we are expecting an increase in usage for COVID-positive ICU patients,” Ifeyinwa (Ify) Osunkwo, MD, a specialist in hematology and sickle cell disease at Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C., said in an interview.
“I think that was the first call to arms around hematology ... you don’t want to shortchange somebody who is well and who is being sustained by life-giving transfusions and cut out their transfusion therapy because you are hoping to use the blood for people who are coming in with COVID-19,” she continued. “That is an ethical dilemma that no doctor wants to have to go through. But the reality is we have to do something to make it work for everybody.”
And the timing of the social restrictions due to the pandemic has added additional strain on the blood supply.
“Over the winter, traditionally, blood drives slow down because of the flu and different viruses,” she noted. “The spring and the summer are when we see the biggest recruitment and uptake of blood donation. COVID-19 hit [and] a lot of the blood drives that were traditionally scheduled to supply blood for the country have been canceled because of the new guidance for social distancing.”
Another big source of blood are health care professionals themselves and they may not be able to donate because of the extra hours being worked because of the pandemic.
In speaking about the needs for traditional patients such as those who are dealing with cancer or leukemia or sickle cell diseases as well as those who are being treated for COVID-19 in North Carolina, “we are not at the critical point, but I am a little bit nervous that we may get there because they are not going to up the usual blood drives anytime this summer. We project [sometime] in the fall, but maybe not even then. So there needs to be a significant call-out for people to make every effort to donate blood,” said Dr. Osunkwo. She added that in places such as New York City that are hot spots for the COVID-19 outbreak, the need is likely a lot greater.
She recalled a recent incident at a New York hospital that highlighted how those managing blood supplies are being restrictive and how this could be harming patients.
“A sickle cell patient came in with COVID-19 and the treatment recommendation was do a red blood cell exchange but the blood bank was nervous about getting enough blood to supply for that exchange transfusion,” she said, noting that the doctor still went to bat for that patient to get the needed treatment. “We gave her the supporting evidence that when you are on treatment for sickle cell disease, you tend to do better if you get COVID-19 or any other viral infection. The symptoms of COVID-19 in sickle cell disease is acute chest syndrome, for which the treatment is red blood cell exchange. Not doing that for [these patients] is really not giving them the optimal way of managing their disease, and managing their disease in the setting of COVID-19.”
To that end, Dr. Osunkwo stressed that doctors need to be doing all they can to get the word out that blood is needed and that the American Red Cross and other donation organizations are making it safe for people to donate. She has been using social media to highlight when her fellow doctors and others make donations as a way to motivate individuals.
“Everybody can do something during this pandemic,” she said. “Don’t feel like you are not working, that you are not a frontline worker, that you have nothing to contribute. You can donate blood. Your cousin can donate blood. You can tell your friends, your neighbors, your relatives, your enemies to go donate. We will take every kind of blood we can get because people are needing it more now. Even though we canceled elective surgeries, my patients when they get COVID-19, they need more blood ... than they usually do during their regular sickle cell admission. It is going to be the same for people who have other blood disorders like cancer and leukemia. We can’t stop life-saving treatments just because we have the COVID pandemic.”
Dr. Osunkwo also praised recent actions taken by the Food and Drug Administration to lessen some of the deferral periods for when an individual can donate.
The FDA on April 2 issued three sets of revised recommendations aimed at getting more people eligible to donate blood. All of the revised recommendations will remain in effect after the COVID-19 health emergency is declared over.
The first revised recommendation makes changes to December 2015 guidance.
For male blood donors who would have been deferred for having sex with another male partner, the deferral period has been reduced from 12 months to 3 months. That deferral period change also applies to female donors who had sex with a man who had sex with another man as well as for those with recent tattoos and piercings.
The second recommendation revises guidance from August 2013 and relates to the risk of transfusion-transmitted malaria.
Under the new recommendations, for those who traveled to malaria-endemic areas (and are residents of malaria non-endemic countries), the FDA is lowering the recommended deferral period from 12 months to 3 months, and also provides notices of an alternate procedure that permits donations without a deferral period provided the blood components are pathogen-reduced using an FDA-approved pathogen reduction device.
The third recommendation finalizes draft guidance from January that eliminates the referral period for donors who spent time in certain European countries or were on military bases in Europe and were previously considered to have been exposed to a potential risk of transmission of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease or Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.
Dr. Osunkwo reports consultancy and being on the speakers bureau and participating in the advisory board for Novartis, and relationships with a variety of other pharmaceutical companies. She is the editor-in-chief for Hematology News.
The COVID-19 pandemic is putting a strain on the blood supply and could be putting people – including those who normally get transfusions, such as patients with sickle cell disease and cancer – at risk.
“Around the beginning of March, the hematology community got wind of what was going on because the blood banks were saying think about your patients and begin to restrict blood usage because we are expecting an increase in usage for COVID-positive ICU patients,” Ifeyinwa (Ify) Osunkwo, MD, a specialist in hematology and sickle cell disease at Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C., said in an interview.
“I think that was the first call to arms around hematology ... you don’t want to shortchange somebody who is well and who is being sustained by life-giving transfusions and cut out their transfusion therapy because you are hoping to use the blood for people who are coming in with COVID-19,” she continued. “That is an ethical dilemma that no doctor wants to have to go through. But the reality is we have to do something to make it work for everybody.”
And the timing of the social restrictions due to the pandemic has added additional strain on the blood supply.
“Over the winter, traditionally, blood drives slow down because of the flu and different viruses,” she noted. “The spring and the summer are when we see the biggest recruitment and uptake of blood donation. COVID-19 hit [and] a lot of the blood drives that were traditionally scheduled to supply blood for the country have been canceled because of the new guidance for social distancing.”
Another big source of blood are health care professionals themselves and they may not be able to donate because of the extra hours being worked because of the pandemic.
In speaking about the needs for traditional patients such as those who are dealing with cancer or leukemia or sickle cell diseases as well as those who are being treated for COVID-19 in North Carolina, “we are not at the critical point, but I am a little bit nervous that we may get there because they are not going to up the usual blood drives anytime this summer. We project [sometime] in the fall, but maybe not even then. So there needs to be a significant call-out for people to make every effort to donate blood,” said Dr. Osunkwo. She added that in places such as New York City that are hot spots for the COVID-19 outbreak, the need is likely a lot greater.
She recalled a recent incident at a New York hospital that highlighted how those managing blood supplies are being restrictive and how this could be harming patients.
“A sickle cell patient came in with COVID-19 and the treatment recommendation was do a red blood cell exchange but the blood bank was nervous about getting enough blood to supply for that exchange transfusion,” she said, noting that the doctor still went to bat for that patient to get the needed treatment. “We gave her the supporting evidence that when you are on treatment for sickle cell disease, you tend to do better if you get COVID-19 or any other viral infection. The symptoms of COVID-19 in sickle cell disease is acute chest syndrome, for which the treatment is red blood cell exchange. Not doing that for [these patients] is really not giving them the optimal way of managing their disease, and managing their disease in the setting of COVID-19.”
To that end, Dr. Osunkwo stressed that doctors need to be doing all they can to get the word out that blood is needed and that the American Red Cross and other donation organizations are making it safe for people to donate. She has been using social media to highlight when her fellow doctors and others make donations as a way to motivate individuals.
“Everybody can do something during this pandemic,” she said. “Don’t feel like you are not working, that you are not a frontline worker, that you have nothing to contribute. You can donate blood. Your cousin can donate blood. You can tell your friends, your neighbors, your relatives, your enemies to go donate. We will take every kind of blood we can get because people are needing it more now. Even though we canceled elective surgeries, my patients when they get COVID-19, they need more blood ... than they usually do during their regular sickle cell admission. It is going to be the same for people who have other blood disorders like cancer and leukemia. We can’t stop life-saving treatments just because we have the COVID pandemic.”
Dr. Osunkwo also praised recent actions taken by the Food and Drug Administration to lessen some of the deferral periods for when an individual can donate.
The FDA on April 2 issued three sets of revised recommendations aimed at getting more people eligible to donate blood. All of the revised recommendations will remain in effect after the COVID-19 health emergency is declared over.
The first revised recommendation makes changes to December 2015 guidance.
For male blood donors who would have been deferred for having sex with another male partner, the deferral period has been reduced from 12 months to 3 months. That deferral period change also applies to female donors who had sex with a man who had sex with another man as well as for those with recent tattoos and piercings.
The second recommendation revises guidance from August 2013 and relates to the risk of transfusion-transmitted malaria.
Under the new recommendations, for those who traveled to malaria-endemic areas (and are residents of malaria non-endemic countries), the FDA is lowering the recommended deferral period from 12 months to 3 months, and also provides notices of an alternate procedure that permits donations without a deferral period provided the blood components are pathogen-reduced using an FDA-approved pathogen reduction device.
The third recommendation finalizes draft guidance from January that eliminates the referral period for donors who spent time in certain European countries or were on military bases in Europe and were previously considered to have been exposed to a potential risk of transmission of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease or Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.
Dr. Osunkwo reports consultancy and being on the speakers bureau and participating in the advisory board for Novartis, and relationships with a variety of other pharmaceutical companies. She is the editor-in-chief for Hematology News.
The COVID-19 pandemic is putting a strain on the blood supply and could be putting people – including those who normally get transfusions, such as patients with sickle cell disease and cancer – at risk.
“Around the beginning of March, the hematology community got wind of what was going on because the blood banks were saying think about your patients and begin to restrict blood usage because we are expecting an increase in usage for COVID-positive ICU patients,” Ifeyinwa (Ify) Osunkwo, MD, a specialist in hematology and sickle cell disease at Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C., said in an interview.
“I think that was the first call to arms around hematology ... you don’t want to shortchange somebody who is well and who is being sustained by life-giving transfusions and cut out their transfusion therapy because you are hoping to use the blood for people who are coming in with COVID-19,” she continued. “That is an ethical dilemma that no doctor wants to have to go through. But the reality is we have to do something to make it work for everybody.”
And the timing of the social restrictions due to the pandemic has added additional strain on the blood supply.
“Over the winter, traditionally, blood drives slow down because of the flu and different viruses,” she noted. “The spring and the summer are when we see the biggest recruitment and uptake of blood donation. COVID-19 hit [and] a lot of the blood drives that were traditionally scheduled to supply blood for the country have been canceled because of the new guidance for social distancing.”
Another big source of blood are health care professionals themselves and they may not be able to donate because of the extra hours being worked because of the pandemic.
In speaking about the needs for traditional patients such as those who are dealing with cancer or leukemia or sickle cell diseases as well as those who are being treated for COVID-19 in North Carolina, “we are not at the critical point, but I am a little bit nervous that we may get there because they are not going to up the usual blood drives anytime this summer. We project [sometime] in the fall, but maybe not even then. So there needs to be a significant call-out for people to make every effort to donate blood,” said Dr. Osunkwo. She added that in places such as New York City that are hot spots for the COVID-19 outbreak, the need is likely a lot greater.
She recalled a recent incident at a New York hospital that highlighted how those managing blood supplies are being restrictive and how this could be harming patients.
“A sickle cell patient came in with COVID-19 and the treatment recommendation was do a red blood cell exchange but the blood bank was nervous about getting enough blood to supply for that exchange transfusion,” she said, noting that the doctor still went to bat for that patient to get the needed treatment. “We gave her the supporting evidence that when you are on treatment for sickle cell disease, you tend to do better if you get COVID-19 or any other viral infection. The symptoms of COVID-19 in sickle cell disease is acute chest syndrome, for which the treatment is red blood cell exchange. Not doing that for [these patients] is really not giving them the optimal way of managing their disease, and managing their disease in the setting of COVID-19.”
To that end, Dr. Osunkwo stressed that doctors need to be doing all they can to get the word out that blood is needed and that the American Red Cross and other donation organizations are making it safe for people to donate. She has been using social media to highlight when her fellow doctors and others make donations as a way to motivate individuals.
“Everybody can do something during this pandemic,” she said. “Don’t feel like you are not working, that you are not a frontline worker, that you have nothing to contribute. You can donate blood. Your cousin can donate blood. You can tell your friends, your neighbors, your relatives, your enemies to go donate. We will take every kind of blood we can get because people are needing it more now. Even though we canceled elective surgeries, my patients when they get COVID-19, they need more blood ... than they usually do during their regular sickle cell admission. It is going to be the same for people who have other blood disorders like cancer and leukemia. We can’t stop life-saving treatments just because we have the COVID pandemic.”
Dr. Osunkwo also praised recent actions taken by the Food and Drug Administration to lessen some of the deferral periods for when an individual can donate.
The FDA on April 2 issued three sets of revised recommendations aimed at getting more people eligible to donate blood. All of the revised recommendations will remain in effect after the COVID-19 health emergency is declared over.
The first revised recommendation makes changes to December 2015 guidance.
For male blood donors who would have been deferred for having sex with another male partner, the deferral period has been reduced from 12 months to 3 months. That deferral period change also applies to female donors who had sex with a man who had sex with another man as well as for those with recent tattoos and piercings.
The second recommendation revises guidance from August 2013 and relates to the risk of transfusion-transmitted malaria.
Under the new recommendations, for those who traveled to malaria-endemic areas (and are residents of malaria non-endemic countries), the FDA is lowering the recommended deferral period from 12 months to 3 months, and also provides notices of an alternate procedure that permits donations without a deferral period provided the blood components are pathogen-reduced using an FDA-approved pathogen reduction device.
The third recommendation finalizes draft guidance from January that eliminates the referral period for donors who spent time in certain European countries or were on military bases in Europe and were previously considered to have been exposed to a potential risk of transmission of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease or Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.
Dr. Osunkwo reports consultancy and being on the speakers bureau and participating in the advisory board for Novartis, and relationships with a variety of other pharmaceutical companies. She is the editor-in-chief for Hematology News.
Severe COVID-19 may lower hemoglobin levels
A meta-analysis of four applicable studies found that the hemoglobin value was significantly lower in COVID-19 patients with severe disease, compared with those with milder forms, according to a letter to the editor of Hematology Transfusion and Cell Therapy by Giuseppe Lippi, MD, of the University of Verona (Italy) and colleague.
The four studies comprised 1,210 COVID-19 patients (224 with severe disease; 18.5%). The primary endpoint was defined as a composite of admission to the ICU, need of mechanical ventilation or death. The heterogeneity among the studies was high.
Overall, the hemoglobin value was found to be significantly lower in COVID-19 patients with severe disease than in those with milder forms, yielding a weighted mean difference of −7.1 g/L, with a 95% confidence interval of −8.3 g/L to −5.9 g/L.
“Initial assessment and longitudinal monitoring of hemoglobin values seems advisable in patients with the SARS-CoV-2 infection, whereby a progressive decrease in the hemoglobin concentration may reflect a worse clinical progression,” the authors stated. They also suggested that studies should be “urgently planned to assess whether transfusion support (e.g., with administration of blood or packed red blood cells) may be helpful in this clinical setting to prevent evolution into severe disease and death.”
The authors declared the had no conflicts of interest.
mlesney@mdedge.com
SOURCE: Lippi G et al. Hematol Transfus Cell Ther. 2020 Apr 11; doi:10.1016/j.htct.2020.03.001.
A meta-analysis of four applicable studies found that the hemoglobin value was significantly lower in COVID-19 patients with severe disease, compared with those with milder forms, according to a letter to the editor of Hematology Transfusion and Cell Therapy by Giuseppe Lippi, MD, of the University of Verona (Italy) and colleague.
The four studies comprised 1,210 COVID-19 patients (224 with severe disease; 18.5%). The primary endpoint was defined as a composite of admission to the ICU, need of mechanical ventilation or death. The heterogeneity among the studies was high.
Overall, the hemoglobin value was found to be significantly lower in COVID-19 patients with severe disease than in those with milder forms, yielding a weighted mean difference of −7.1 g/L, with a 95% confidence interval of −8.3 g/L to −5.9 g/L.
“Initial assessment and longitudinal monitoring of hemoglobin values seems advisable in patients with the SARS-CoV-2 infection, whereby a progressive decrease in the hemoglobin concentration may reflect a worse clinical progression,” the authors stated. They also suggested that studies should be “urgently planned to assess whether transfusion support (e.g., with administration of blood or packed red blood cells) may be helpful in this clinical setting to prevent evolution into severe disease and death.”
The authors declared the had no conflicts of interest.
mlesney@mdedge.com
SOURCE: Lippi G et al. Hematol Transfus Cell Ther. 2020 Apr 11; doi:10.1016/j.htct.2020.03.001.
A meta-analysis of four applicable studies found that the hemoglobin value was significantly lower in COVID-19 patients with severe disease, compared with those with milder forms, according to a letter to the editor of Hematology Transfusion and Cell Therapy by Giuseppe Lippi, MD, of the University of Verona (Italy) and colleague.
The four studies comprised 1,210 COVID-19 patients (224 with severe disease; 18.5%). The primary endpoint was defined as a composite of admission to the ICU, need of mechanical ventilation or death. The heterogeneity among the studies was high.
Overall, the hemoglobin value was found to be significantly lower in COVID-19 patients with severe disease than in those with milder forms, yielding a weighted mean difference of −7.1 g/L, with a 95% confidence interval of −8.3 g/L to −5.9 g/L.
“Initial assessment and longitudinal monitoring of hemoglobin values seems advisable in patients with the SARS-CoV-2 infection, whereby a progressive decrease in the hemoglobin concentration may reflect a worse clinical progression,” the authors stated. They also suggested that studies should be “urgently planned to assess whether transfusion support (e.g., with administration of blood or packed red blood cells) may be helpful in this clinical setting to prevent evolution into severe disease and death.”
The authors declared the had no conflicts of interest.
mlesney@mdedge.com
SOURCE: Lippi G et al. Hematol Transfus Cell Ther. 2020 Apr 11; doi:10.1016/j.htct.2020.03.001.
FROM HEMATOLOGY, TRANSFUSION AND CELL THERAPY