Ischemic stroke rates higher in young women than young men

Article Type
Changed

Young women appear to be at a higher risk of ischemic stroke than young men, according to a new systematic review of studies on this topic.

The review included 19 studies that reported on sex-specific stroke incidence among young adults and found that overall, in young adults aged 18-35 years, there were 44% more women with ischemic strokes than men.

This gap narrowed in the age group 35-45 years, for which there was conflicting evidence whether more men or women have ischemic strokes.

“An assertion that young women may be disproportionately at risk of ischemic stroke represents a significant departure from our current scientific understanding and may have important implications about the etiology of ischemic strokes in young adults,” the authors note.

“One of the take-home messages from this study is that stroke happens across the entire age spectrum, including young adults, even if they do not have traditional risk factors,” study coauthor Sharon N. Poisson, MD, associate professor of neurology at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, told this news organization.

“If a young person presents with focal neurological symptoms, the possibility of a stroke should not be discounted just because they may not fit the typical profile of a stroke patient. We need more education of the population that young people – including young women – can have a stroke and that fast action to call emergency services is critical,” she said.  

The study was published online Jan. 24 in the journal Stroke as part of a special “Go Red for Women” spotlight issue.

The researchers note that historically it has been believed that men have a higher incidence of stroke in every age group until very old age. However, recent evidence focused on the young adult age group has reported that there are more young women (ages 18-45) with ischemic strokes compared with young men, suggesting that young women may be disproportionately at risk compared with their male counterparts.

Pointing out that a better understanding of these sex differences is important in implementing strategies that can more effectively prevent and treat strokes in this age group, the researchers conducted the current review to synthesize the updated evidence.

They searched PubMed from January 2008 to July 2021 for relevant studies that were population-based and reported stroke incidence by sex or sex-specific incidence rate ratios of young adults age 45 and younger. Statistical synthesis was performed to estimate sex difference by age group (less than or equal to 35, 35-45 and less than or equal to 45 years) and stroke type.

They found 19 relevant studies, including three that reported on overlapping data, with a total of 69,793 young adults (33,775 women and 36,018 men).   



Nine studies did not show a statistically significant sex difference among young adults less than or equal to 45 years. Three studies found higher rates of ischemic stroke among men among young adults less than or equal to 30 to 35 years. Four studies showed more women with ischemic strokes among young adults less than or equal to 35 years.

Overall, there was an effect of a significantly higher incidence of ischemic stroke in women younger than age 35 years, with an incidence rate ratio (IRR) of 1.44. In the 35- to 45-year age group, there was a nonsignificant sex difference in the rate of ischemic stroke, with a slight trend toward a higher incidence in women (IRR, 1.08).

“In this study the sex difference was not clear in the 35-45 age group. But in the age group of over 45 years we know that men have a higher risk of stroke than women, which is probably related to a higher level of atherosclerotic risk factors,” Dr. Poisson commented.

“Interpreting data on stroke in young people is challenging, as stroke is not so common in this population,” she said. “Combining multiple studies helps, but this also introduces a lot of variability, so we need to interpret these results with some caution. However, this is certainly intriguing data and suggests that something interesting may be going on in young adults,” she added. “These observations give us an initial clue that we need to look further into this issue.”

The study did not look at the possible mechanisms behind the results, as the current data came from administrative datasets that are limited in terms of the information collected.  

But Dr. Poisson noted that the traditional risk factors for stroke are high blood pressure and the usual atherosclerotic factors such as high cholesterol.

“These are normally more common in men than in women, and myocardial infarction is more common in younger men than in younger women. But the observation that young women may have a higher risk of stroke than young men suggests that something different may be going on in the mechanism for stroke.” 

She pointed out that women have some unique risk factors for stroke, including oral contraceptive use, pregnancy, and the postpartum period, particularly pre-eclampsia during pregnancy. In addition, migraine, especially migraine with aura, is associated with an increased stroke risk, and migraine is more common in young women than in young men.  

“We don’t completely understand the role of these risk factors, but they may contribute to the results that we found,” Dr. Poisson commented. “The role of estrogen in stroke is complicated. While estrogen is generally thought to be protective against atherosclerotic risk factors, it also increases risk of clotting, so high estrogen states like pregnancy increase risk of stroke,” she added.  

To better understand what is happening, prospectively collected clinical data on younger patients who have had a stroke are needed. Some such studies are underway, but a concerted effort to do this in a large, multicenter registry would be desirable, Dr. Poisson said.

She noted that the presentation of a stroke in young people would be similar to that in the older population, with the most recent acronym to help recognize stroke symptoms being “BE FAST” – balance, eyes (vision), face (drooping), arm, speech (slurred), time (call emergency services quickly).

Call for more women in clinical trials

In an accompanying commentary, Cheryl Bushnell, MD, professor of neurology at Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, N.C., and Moira Kapral, MD, professor in medicine and health policy at the University of Toronto, say these findings support the need for further study to understand and address the causes and risk factors of stroke in young women.

However, they point out that representation and reporting of women in clinical trials of acute stroke continues to be suboptimal, and they call for improved incorporation of sex and gender into study design, analysis, and interpretation, which they say is critical for producing research that is broadly generalizable and applicable to different populations. 

Coauthor Stacey L. Daugherty, MD, is funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Poisson and Dr. Kapral have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bushnell reports ownership interest in Care Directions.

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

Publications
Topics
Sections

Young women appear to be at a higher risk of ischemic stroke than young men, according to a new systematic review of studies on this topic.

The review included 19 studies that reported on sex-specific stroke incidence among young adults and found that overall, in young adults aged 18-35 years, there were 44% more women with ischemic strokes than men.

This gap narrowed in the age group 35-45 years, for which there was conflicting evidence whether more men or women have ischemic strokes.

“An assertion that young women may be disproportionately at risk of ischemic stroke represents a significant departure from our current scientific understanding and may have important implications about the etiology of ischemic strokes in young adults,” the authors note.

“One of the take-home messages from this study is that stroke happens across the entire age spectrum, including young adults, even if they do not have traditional risk factors,” study coauthor Sharon N. Poisson, MD, associate professor of neurology at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, told this news organization.

“If a young person presents with focal neurological symptoms, the possibility of a stroke should not be discounted just because they may not fit the typical profile of a stroke patient. We need more education of the population that young people – including young women – can have a stroke and that fast action to call emergency services is critical,” she said.  

The study was published online Jan. 24 in the journal Stroke as part of a special “Go Red for Women” spotlight issue.

The researchers note that historically it has been believed that men have a higher incidence of stroke in every age group until very old age. However, recent evidence focused on the young adult age group has reported that there are more young women (ages 18-45) with ischemic strokes compared with young men, suggesting that young women may be disproportionately at risk compared with their male counterparts.

Pointing out that a better understanding of these sex differences is important in implementing strategies that can more effectively prevent and treat strokes in this age group, the researchers conducted the current review to synthesize the updated evidence.

They searched PubMed from January 2008 to July 2021 for relevant studies that were population-based and reported stroke incidence by sex or sex-specific incidence rate ratios of young adults age 45 and younger. Statistical synthesis was performed to estimate sex difference by age group (less than or equal to 35, 35-45 and less than or equal to 45 years) and stroke type.

They found 19 relevant studies, including three that reported on overlapping data, with a total of 69,793 young adults (33,775 women and 36,018 men).   



Nine studies did not show a statistically significant sex difference among young adults less than or equal to 45 years. Three studies found higher rates of ischemic stroke among men among young adults less than or equal to 30 to 35 years. Four studies showed more women with ischemic strokes among young adults less than or equal to 35 years.

Overall, there was an effect of a significantly higher incidence of ischemic stroke in women younger than age 35 years, with an incidence rate ratio (IRR) of 1.44. In the 35- to 45-year age group, there was a nonsignificant sex difference in the rate of ischemic stroke, with a slight trend toward a higher incidence in women (IRR, 1.08).

“In this study the sex difference was not clear in the 35-45 age group. But in the age group of over 45 years we know that men have a higher risk of stroke than women, which is probably related to a higher level of atherosclerotic risk factors,” Dr. Poisson commented.

“Interpreting data on stroke in young people is challenging, as stroke is not so common in this population,” she said. “Combining multiple studies helps, but this also introduces a lot of variability, so we need to interpret these results with some caution. However, this is certainly intriguing data and suggests that something interesting may be going on in young adults,” she added. “These observations give us an initial clue that we need to look further into this issue.”

The study did not look at the possible mechanisms behind the results, as the current data came from administrative datasets that are limited in terms of the information collected.  

But Dr. Poisson noted that the traditional risk factors for stroke are high blood pressure and the usual atherosclerotic factors such as high cholesterol.

“These are normally more common in men than in women, and myocardial infarction is more common in younger men than in younger women. But the observation that young women may have a higher risk of stroke than young men suggests that something different may be going on in the mechanism for stroke.” 

She pointed out that women have some unique risk factors for stroke, including oral contraceptive use, pregnancy, and the postpartum period, particularly pre-eclampsia during pregnancy. In addition, migraine, especially migraine with aura, is associated with an increased stroke risk, and migraine is more common in young women than in young men.  

“We don’t completely understand the role of these risk factors, but they may contribute to the results that we found,” Dr. Poisson commented. “The role of estrogen in stroke is complicated. While estrogen is generally thought to be protective against atherosclerotic risk factors, it also increases risk of clotting, so high estrogen states like pregnancy increase risk of stroke,” she added.  

To better understand what is happening, prospectively collected clinical data on younger patients who have had a stroke are needed. Some such studies are underway, but a concerted effort to do this in a large, multicenter registry would be desirable, Dr. Poisson said.

She noted that the presentation of a stroke in young people would be similar to that in the older population, with the most recent acronym to help recognize stroke symptoms being “BE FAST” – balance, eyes (vision), face (drooping), arm, speech (slurred), time (call emergency services quickly).

Call for more women in clinical trials

In an accompanying commentary, Cheryl Bushnell, MD, professor of neurology at Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, N.C., and Moira Kapral, MD, professor in medicine and health policy at the University of Toronto, say these findings support the need for further study to understand and address the causes and risk factors of stroke in young women.

However, they point out that representation and reporting of women in clinical trials of acute stroke continues to be suboptimal, and they call for improved incorporation of sex and gender into study design, analysis, and interpretation, which they say is critical for producing research that is broadly generalizable and applicable to different populations. 

Coauthor Stacey L. Daugherty, MD, is funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Poisson and Dr. Kapral have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bushnell reports ownership interest in Care Directions.

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

Young women appear to be at a higher risk of ischemic stroke than young men, according to a new systematic review of studies on this topic.

The review included 19 studies that reported on sex-specific stroke incidence among young adults and found that overall, in young adults aged 18-35 years, there were 44% more women with ischemic strokes than men.

This gap narrowed in the age group 35-45 years, for which there was conflicting evidence whether more men or women have ischemic strokes.

“An assertion that young women may be disproportionately at risk of ischemic stroke represents a significant departure from our current scientific understanding and may have important implications about the etiology of ischemic strokes in young adults,” the authors note.

“One of the take-home messages from this study is that stroke happens across the entire age spectrum, including young adults, even if they do not have traditional risk factors,” study coauthor Sharon N. Poisson, MD, associate professor of neurology at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Denver, told this news organization.

“If a young person presents with focal neurological symptoms, the possibility of a stroke should not be discounted just because they may not fit the typical profile of a stroke patient. We need more education of the population that young people – including young women – can have a stroke and that fast action to call emergency services is critical,” she said.  

The study was published online Jan. 24 in the journal Stroke as part of a special “Go Red for Women” spotlight issue.

The researchers note that historically it has been believed that men have a higher incidence of stroke in every age group until very old age. However, recent evidence focused on the young adult age group has reported that there are more young women (ages 18-45) with ischemic strokes compared with young men, suggesting that young women may be disproportionately at risk compared with their male counterparts.

Pointing out that a better understanding of these sex differences is important in implementing strategies that can more effectively prevent and treat strokes in this age group, the researchers conducted the current review to synthesize the updated evidence.

They searched PubMed from January 2008 to July 2021 for relevant studies that were population-based and reported stroke incidence by sex or sex-specific incidence rate ratios of young adults age 45 and younger. Statistical synthesis was performed to estimate sex difference by age group (less than or equal to 35, 35-45 and less than or equal to 45 years) and stroke type.

They found 19 relevant studies, including three that reported on overlapping data, with a total of 69,793 young adults (33,775 women and 36,018 men).   



Nine studies did not show a statistically significant sex difference among young adults less than or equal to 45 years. Three studies found higher rates of ischemic stroke among men among young adults less than or equal to 30 to 35 years. Four studies showed more women with ischemic strokes among young adults less than or equal to 35 years.

Overall, there was an effect of a significantly higher incidence of ischemic stroke in women younger than age 35 years, with an incidence rate ratio (IRR) of 1.44. In the 35- to 45-year age group, there was a nonsignificant sex difference in the rate of ischemic stroke, with a slight trend toward a higher incidence in women (IRR, 1.08).

“In this study the sex difference was not clear in the 35-45 age group. But in the age group of over 45 years we know that men have a higher risk of stroke than women, which is probably related to a higher level of atherosclerotic risk factors,” Dr. Poisson commented.

“Interpreting data on stroke in young people is challenging, as stroke is not so common in this population,” she said. “Combining multiple studies helps, but this also introduces a lot of variability, so we need to interpret these results with some caution. However, this is certainly intriguing data and suggests that something interesting may be going on in young adults,” she added. “These observations give us an initial clue that we need to look further into this issue.”

The study did not look at the possible mechanisms behind the results, as the current data came from administrative datasets that are limited in terms of the information collected.  

But Dr. Poisson noted that the traditional risk factors for stroke are high blood pressure and the usual atherosclerotic factors such as high cholesterol.

“These are normally more common in men than in women, and myocardial infarction is more common in younger men than in younger women. But the observation that young women may have a higher risk of stroke than young men suggests that something different may be going on in the mechanism for stroke.” 

She pointed out that women have some unique risk factors for stroke, including oral contraceptive use, pregnancy, and the postpartum period, particularly pre-eclampsia during pregnancy. In addition, migraine, especially migraine with aura, is associated with an increased stroke risk, and migraine is more common in young women than in young men.  

“We don’t completely understand the role of these risk factors, but they may contribute to the results that we found,” Dr. Poisson commented. “The role of estrogen in stroke is complicated. While estrogen is generally thought to be protective against atherosclerotic risk factors, it also increases risk of clotting, so high estrogen states like pregnancy increase risk of stroke,” she added.  

To better understand what is happening, prospectively collected clinical data on younger patients who have had a stroke are needed. Some such studies are underway, but a concerted effort to do this in a large, multicenter registry would be desirable, Dr. Poisson said.

She noted that the presentation of a stroke in young people would be similar to that in the older population, with the most recent acronym to help recognize stroke symptoms being “BE FAST” – balance, eyes (vision), face (drooping), arm, speech (slurred), time (call emergency services quickly).

Call for more women in clinical trials

In an accompanying commentary, Cheryl Bushnell, MD, professor of neurology at Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, N.C., and Moira Kapral, MD, professor in medicine and health policy at the University of Toronto, say these findings support the need for further study to understand and address the causes and risk factors of stroke in young women.

However, they point out that representation and reporting of women in clinical trials of acute stroke continues to be suboptimal, and they call for improved incorporation of sex and gender into study design, analysis, and interpretation, which they say is critical for producing research that is broadly generalizable and applicable to different populations. 

Coauthor Stacey L. Daugherty, MD, is funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Poisson and Dr. Kapral have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bushnell reports ownership interest in Care Directions.

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

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Yoga maneuver may prevent vasovagal syncope

Article Type
Changed

Regular practice of a specific yoga maneuver appears to reduce susceptibility to reflex vasovagal syncope, a new study suggests.

The tadasana exercise – a movement-based contemplative practice that gradually corrects orthostatic imbalance by strengthening protective neuromuscular reflexes – practiced for just 15 minutes twice a day, was associated with the complete elimination of episodes of vasovagal syncope for many patients.

“These exercises are very easy to perform, inexpensive, and very effective. This is a very easy fix for a scary and potentially dangerous condition,” lead author Hygriv Rao, MD, said in an interview. “We are excited about these results. We thought it would work, but we did not expect it to be so effective. It seems to work for almost all patients.

“We found that, with the tadasana maneuver, episodes of full syncope, where the patient actually loses consciousness, ceased completely, and episodes of near-syncope, where the patient feels faint but does not completely pass out, were greatly reduced,” Dr. Rao added. “The actual loss of consciousness, which is the most dangerous part, is practically gone. This gives a lot of confidence to patients and their families.”

The researchers reported their initial results from a pilot study of the technique in a letter to JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology that was published online Jan. 26, 2022.

Dr. Rao, a cardiologist at the KIMS Hospitals, Hyderabad, India, explained that vasovagal syncope is a brief loss of consciousness caused by a neurologically induced drop in blood pressure caused by faulty neuromuscular reflexes.

It is typically triggered by emotional stress, prolonged standing, or getting up from a sitting position too quickly.

Very few treatments have been shown effective, with current management approaches involving avoiding triggers, increasing fluids, and if the individual feels an episode coming on, they can take steps to stop it by lying down, raising their legs, or lowering their head to increase blood flow to the brain.

“Recently, there has been a lot of interest in yoga as a preventative therapy for vasovagal syncope,” Dr. Rao noted. “We considered various yoga positions and we chose the tadasana maneuver to study in this context as it resembles exercises sometimes given to patients with vasovagal syncope but with some differences including the addition of synchronized breathing, which may help stabilize autonomic tone.”

For the tadasana maneuver, the individual stands straight with their feet together, arms by their side (against a wall if they need support), and alternatively lift the front and back part of their feet.

They first lift their toes with their weight resting on the ball of their feet, then after a few seconds they raise their heels with their weight on the front of the foot. Then after a few more seconds they lift their arms over their shoulders, stretching upward while standing on their toes.

These movements are synchronized with breathing exercises, with the individual taking a deep breath in as they lift their arms and breathing out again on lowering the arms.

“Each movement takes a few seconds, and each cycle of movements takes about 2 minutes. If this is performed 8 times, then this would take about 15 minutes. We recommend this 15-minute routine twice a day,” Dr. Rao said.

For the current study, 113 patients diagnosed with recurrent vasovagal disorder were counseled to practice standard physical maneuvers and maintain adequate hydration. Medications were prescribed at the discretion of the treating physician.

Of these, 61 patients were additionally trained to practice the tadasana maneuver and asked to practice the movement for 15 minutes twice a day. The mean durations of symptoms and follow-up in the two groups were similar. The average follow-up was about 20 months.

Results showed that episodes of both near-syncope and syncope decreased in both groups but there was a much larger reduction in the patients practicing the tadasana maneuver.

Before treatment, the 52 patients in the conventional group experienced 163 syncope or near-syncope events. At follow-up, 22 symptom recurrences occurred in 12 patients (23%). Total mean events per patient declined from 3 to 0.4.

Full syncope events in this group declined from 65 in 32 patients to 2 in 2 patients (mean per patient, 1.3 to 1), and near-syncope events fell from 98 in 34 patients to 20 in 10 patients (mean per patient, 2.0 to 0.4).

In the tadasana group, 61 patients had 378 syncope/near-syncope events before treatment; at follow-up, only 6 events occurred in 5 patients (8%). Per patient, total events declined from a mean of 6 to 0.1.

Full syncope events fell from 108 in 48 patients to 0 (mean per patient, 1.8 to 0), and near-syncope events declined from 269 in 33 patients to 6 in 5 patients (mean per patient, 4.4 to 0.1).

“This combination of exercise and breathing influences the neuromuscular reflex malfunction that occurs in vasovagal syncope,” Dr. Rao noted. “The movements focus on strengthening neuromuscular reflexes in the quadriceps and the calf muscles, which can increase the blood circulation and venous return, thus preventing blood pooling in the lower body.”

The researchers said this pilot study offers three main findings. First, both conventional therapy and conventional plus tadasana therapy appeared to benefit patients, compared with their respective baseline symptom burden. Second, application of tadasana as an adjunctive treatment was associated with fewer total event recurrences (that is, syncope and near-syncope combined), and third, tadasana was well tolerated, with no adverse events reported.

“The reduction in total events (i.e., syncope and near-syncope events), compared with pretreatment numbers, was substantial and most tadasana patients were managed without any pharmacotherapy,” the authors reported.

Dr. Rao noted that at baseline almost all patients in both groups were taking medications for the condition, but during the study these medications were reduced as fewer episodes occurred. At the end of the follow-up, 80% of the conventional group were still taking medication, compared with just 14% of those in the tadasana group.

Patients had an initial training session in person with a yoga instructor and then received follow-on training by video online. Dr. Rao said there was a very high rate of compliance, “almost 100%.”

He reports that a total of 200 patients have now been treated with this approach at his hospital with very similar results to those seen in the initial study.

This work was supported in part by a grant from the Dr Earl E. Bakken Family in support of heart-brain research. Dr. Rao disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Publications
Topics
Sections

Regular practice of a specific yoga maneuver appears to reduce susceptibility to reflex vasovagal syncope, a new study suggests.

The tadasana exercise – a movement-based contemplative practice that gradually corrects orthostatic imbalance by strengthening protective neuromuscular reflexes – practiced for just 15 minutes twice a day, was associated with the complete elimination of episodes of vasovagal syncope for many patients.

“These exercises are very easy to perform, inexpensive, and very effective. This is a very easy fix for a scary and potentially dangerous condition,” lead author Hygriv Rao, MD, said in an interview. “We are excited about these results. We thought it would work, but we did not expect it to be so effective. It seems to work for almost all patients.

“We found that, with the tadasana maneuver, episodes of full syncope, where the patient actually loses consciousness, ceased completely, and episodes of near-syncope, where the patient feels faint but does not completely pass out, were greatly reduced,” Dr. Rao added. “The actual loss of consciousness, which is the most dangerous part, is practically gone. This gives a lot of confidence to patients and their families.”

The researchers reported their initial results from a pilot study of the technique in a letter to JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology that was published online Jan. 26, 2022.

Dr. Rao, a cardiologist at the KIMS Hospitals, Hyderabad, India, explained that vasovagal syncope is a brief loss of consciousness caused by a neurologically induced drop in blood pressure caused by faulty neuromuscular reflexes.

It is typically triggered by emotional stress, prolonged standing, or getting up from a sitting position too quickly.

Very few treatments have been shown effective, with current management approaches involving avoiding triggers, increasing fluids, and if the individual feels an episode coming on, they can take steps to stop it by lying down, raising their legs, or lowering their head to increase blood flow to the brain.

“Recently, there has been a lot of interest in yoga as a preventative therapy for vasovagal syncope,” Dr. Rao noted. “We considered various yoga positions and we chose the tadasana maneuver to study in this context as it resembles exercises sometimes given to patients with vasovagal syncope but with some differences including the addition of synchronized breathing, which may help stabilize autonomic tone.”

For the tadasana maneuver, the individual stands straight with their feet together, arms by their side (against a wall if they need support), and alternatively lift the front and back part of their feet.

They first lift their toes with their weight resting on the ball of their feet, then after a few seconds they raise their heels with their weight on the front of the foot. Then after a few more seconds they lift their arms over their shoulders, stretching upward while standing on their toes.

These movements are synchronized with breathing exercises, with the individual taking a deep breath in as they lift their arms and breathing out again on lowering the arms.

“Each movement takes a few seconds, and each cycle of movements takes about 2 minutes. If this is performed 8 times, then this would take about 15 minutes. We recommend this 15-minute routine twice a day,” Dr. Rao said.

For the current study, 113 patients diagnosed with recurrent vasovagal disorder were counseled to practice standard physical maneuvers and maintain adequate hydration. Medications were prescribed at the discretion of the treating physician.

Of these, 61 patients were additionally trained to practice the tadasana maneuver and asked to practice the movement for 15 minutes twice a day. The mean durations of symptoms and follow-up in the two groups were similar. The average follow-up was about 20 months.

Results showed that episodes of both near-syncope and syncope decreased in both groups but there was a much larger reduction in the patients practicing the tadasana maneuver.

Before treatment, the 52 patients in the conventional group experienced 163 syncope or near-syncope events. At follow-up, 22 symptom recurrences occurred in 12 patients (23%). Total mean events per patient declined from 3 to 0.4.

Full syncope events in this group declined from 65 in 32 patients to 2 in 2 patients (mean per patient, 1.3 to 1), and near-syncope events fell from 98 in 34 patients to 20 in 10 patients (mean per patient, 2.0 to 0.4).

In the tadasana group, 61 patients had 378 syncope/near-syncope events before treatment; at follow-up, only 6 events occurred in 5 patients (8%). Per patient, total events declined from a mean of 6 to 0.1.

Full syncope events fell from 108 in 48 patients to 0 (mean per patient, 1.8 to 0), and near-syncope events declined from 269 in 33 patients to 6 in 5 patients (mean per patient, 4.4 to 0.1).

“This combination of exercise and breathing influences the neuromuscular reflex malfunction that occurs in vasovagal syncope,” Dr. Rao noted. “The movements focus on strengthening neuromuscular reflexes in the quadriceps and the calf muscles, which can increase the blood circulation and venous return, thus preventing blood pooling in the lower body.”

The researchers said this pilot study offers three main findings. First, both conventional therapy and conventional plus tadasana therapy appeared to benefit patients, compared with their respective baseline symptom burden. Second, application of tadasana as an adjunctive treatment was associated with fewer total event recurrences (that is, syncope and near-syncope combined), and third, tadasana was well tolerated, with no adverse events reported.

“The reduction in total events (i.e., syncope and near-syncope events), compared with pretreatment numbers, was substantial and most tadasana patients were managed without any pharmacotherapy,” the authors reported.

Dr. Rao noted that at baseline almost all patients in both groups were taking medications for the condition, but during the study these medications were reduced as fewer episodes occurred. At the end of the follow-up, 80% of the conventional group were still taking medication, compared with just 14% of those in the tadasana group.

Patients had an initial training session in person with a yoga instructor and then received follow-on training by video online. Dr. Rao said there was a very high rate of compliance, “almost 100%.”

He reports that a total of 200 patients have now been treated with this approach at his hospital with very similar results to those seen in the initial study.

This work was supported in part by a grant from the Dr Earl E. Bakken Family in support of heart-brain research. Dr. Rao disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Regular practice of a specific yoga maneuver appears to reduce susceptibility to reflex vasovagal syncope, a new study suggests.

The tadasana exercise – a movement-based contemplative practice that gradually corrects orthostatic imbalance by strengthening protective neuromuscular reflexes – practiced for just 15 minutes twice a day, was associated with the complete elimination of episodes of vasovagal syncope for many patients.

“These exercises are very easy to perform, inexpensive, and very effective. This is a very easy fix for a scary and potentially dangerous condition,” lead author Hygriv Rao, MD, said in an interview. “We are excited about these results. We thought it would work, but we did not expect it to be so effective. It seems to work for almost all patients.

“We found that, with the tadasana maneuver, episodes of full syncope, where the patient actually loses consciousness, ceased completely, and episodes of near-syncope, where the patient feels faint but does not completely pass out, were greatly reduced,” Dr. Rao added. “The actual loss of consciousness, which is the most dangerous part, is practically gone. This gives a lot of confidence to patients and their families.”

The researchers reported their initial results from a pilot study of the technique in a letter to JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology that was published online Jan. 26, 2022.

Dr. Rao, a cardiologist at the KIMS Hospitals, Hyderabad, India, explained that vasovagal syncope is a brief loss of consciousness caused by a neurologically induced drop in blood pressure caused by faulty neuromuscular reflexes.

It is typically triggered by emotional stress, prolonged standing, or getting up from a sitting position too quickly.

Very few treatments have been shown effective, with current management approaches involving avoiding triggers, increasing fluids, and if the individual feels an episode coming on, they can take steps to stop it by lying down, raising their legs, or lowering their head to increase blood flow to the brain.

“Recently, there has been a lot of interest in yoga as a preventative therapy for vasovagal syncope,” Dr. Rao noted. “We considered various yoga positions and we chose the tadasana maneuver to study in this context as it resembles exercises sometimes given to patients with vasovagal syncope but with some differences including the addition of synchronized breathing, which may help stabilize autonomic tone.”

For the tadasana maneuver, the individual stands straight with their feet together, arms by their side (against a wall if they need support), and alternatively lift the front and back part of their feet.

They first lift their toes with their weight resting on the ball of their feet, then after a few seconds they raise their heels with their weight on the front of the foot. Then after a few more seconds they lift their arms over their shoulders, stretching upward while standing on their toes.

These movements are synchronized with breathing exercises, with the individual taking a deep breath in as they lift their arms and breathing out again on lowering the arms.

“Each movement takes a few seconds, and each cycle of movements takes about 2 minutes. If this is performed 8 times, then this would take about 15 minutes. We recommend this 15-minute routine twice a day,” Dr. Rao said.

For the current study, 113 patients diagnosed with recurrent vasovagal disorder were counseled to practice standard physical maneuvers and maintain adequate hydration. Medications were prescribed at the discretion of the treating physician.

Of these, 61 patients were additionally trained to practice the tadasana maneuver and asked to practice the movement for 15 minutes twice a day. The mean durations of symptoms and follow-up in the two groups were similar. The average follow-up was about 20 months.

Results showed that episodes of both near-syncope and syncope decreased in both groups but there was a much larger reduction in the patients practicing the tadasana maneuver.

Before treatment, the 52 patients in the conventional group experienced 163 syncope or near-syncope events. At follow-up, 22 symptom recurrences occurred in 12 patients (23%). Total mean events per patient declined from 3 to 0.4.

Full syncope events in this group declined from 65 in 32 patients to 2 in 2 patients (mean per patient, 1.3 to 1), and near-syncope events fell from 98 in 34 patients to 20 in 10 patients (mean per patient, 2.0 to 0.4).

In the tadasana group, 61 patients had 378 syncope/near-syncope events before treatment; at follow-up, only 6 events occurred in 5 patients (8%). Per patient, total events declined from a mean of 6 to 0.1.

Full syncope events fell from 108 in 48 patients to 0 (mean per patient, 1.8 to 0), and near-syncope events declined from 269 in 33 patients to 6 in 5 patients (mean per patient, 4.4 to 0.1).

“This combination of exercise and breathing influences the neuromuscular reflex malfunction that occurs in vasovagal syncope,” Dr. Rao noted. “The movements focus on strengthening neuromuscular reflexes in the quadriceps and the calf muscles, which can increase the blood circulation and venous return, thus preventing blood pooling in the lower body.”

The researchers said this pilot study offers three main findings. First, both conventional therapy and conventional plus tadasana therapy appeared to benefit patients, compared with their respective baseline symptom burden. Second, application of tadasana as an adjunctive treatment was associated with fewer total event recurrences (that is, syncope and near-syncope combined), and third, tadasana was well tolerated, with no adverse events reported.

“The reduction in total events (i.e., syncope and near-syncope events), compared with pretreatment numbers, was substantial and most tadasana patients were managed without any pharmacotherapy,” the authors reported.

Dr. Rao noted that at baseline almost all patients in both groups were taking medications for the condition, but during the study these medications were reduced as fewer episodes occurred. At the end of the follow-up, 80% of the conventional group were still taking medication, compared with just 14% of those in the tadasana group.

Patients had an initial training session in person with a yoga instructor and then received follow-on training by video online. Dr. Rao said there was a very high rate of compliance, “almost 100%.”

He reports that a total of 200 patients have now been treated with this approach at his hospital with very similar results to those seen in the initial study.

This work was supported in part by a grant from the Dr Earl E. Bakken Family in support of heart-brain research. Dr. Rao disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM JACC: CLINICAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Brain stimulation for improved memory?

Article Type
Changed

Electrical brain stimulation may have the potential to improve verbal memory, results of a small study of patients with epilepsy suggest.

Investigators observed improvements in patients implanted with a responsive neurostimulation system (RNS) to control seizures, in that the patients had improved word recall when the system was activated.

Dr. Zulfi Haneef

Beyond epilepsy, “we suspect that our results would be broadly applicable regardless of the underlying condition, for example, memory loss with Alzheimer’s disease or traumatic brain injury,” Zulfi Haneef, MBBS, MD, associate professor of neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, said in an interview.

“Mental health conditions such as depression or psychosis could also benefit from targeted electrical stimulation. While we focused on enhancing a preferred brain function [such as memory], parallel areas of research may target enhancing function [such as weakness following stroke] or suppressing function [to manage conditions such as chronic pain,]” Dr. Haneef added.

The study was published online Jan. 17, 2022, in Neurosurgery.

As reported by this news organization, the RNS system (NeuroPace) is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat medically refractory focal seizures in adults. Following implantation of the system, patients attend the clinic for adjustments about every 8-12 weeks.

The investigators studied 17 patients with epilepsy and RNS implants who attended the clinic for routine appointments. A clinical neuropsychologist administered the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test–Revised (HVLT-R), a well-validated list-learning measure of memory and verbal learning.

Patients were read a list of 12 semantically related words and asked to recall the list after three different learning trials. Active or sham stimulation was performed for every third word presented for immediate recall. 

The investigators found that the HVLT-R delayed recall raw score was higher for the stimulation condition, compared with the nonstimulation condition (paired t-test, P = .04; effect size, d = 0.627).

“The patients were not aware of when the RNS system was being activated. We alternated when patients were undergoing stimulation versus no stimulation, and still found that when patients’ RNS systems were activated, their memory recall score was greater than when there was no stimulation,” Dr. Haneef said in a release.

This suggests the “human memory can be potentially improved by direct electrical brain stimulation at extremely low currents,” Dr. Haneef said in an interview.

Most patients in the study had stimulation of the hippocampus, the brain’s memory center.

“Moving forward we would want to look at how different patterns or standardized stimulation patterns affect memory. Ultimately, the underlying brain rhythms responsible for these changes in brain function need to be understood so that a more targeted and precise application of electrical stimulation can be achieved,” Dr. Haneef said.

The researchers also caution that, for this preliminary study, no follow-up testing was conducted to determine whether the memory improvement was transient and settled back to baseline after a specified period.

However, they note, this study lays the groundwork for larger-scale and extensive studies examining the nuanced effects of brain stimulation on human cognition and memory.

The study was funded by the Mike Hogg Foundation. Dr. Haneef and two coauthors received coverage for travel expenses but no honorarium for a NeuroPace advisory meeting.

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

Publications
Topics
Sections

Electrical brain stimulation may have the potential to improve verbal memory, results of a small study of patients with epilepsy suggest.

Investigators observed improvements in patients implanted with a responsive neurostimulation system (RNS) to control seizures, in that the patients had improved word recall when the system was activated.

Dr. Zulfi Haneef

Beyond epilepsy, “we suspect that our results would be broadly applicable regardless of the underlying condition, for example, memory loss with Alzheimer’s disease or traumatic brain injury,” Zulfi Haneef, MBBS, MD, associate professor of neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, said in an interview.

“Mental health conditions such as depression or psychosis could also benefit from targeted electrical stimulation. While we focused on enhancing a preferred brain function [such as memory], parallel areas of research may target enhancing function [such as weakness following stroke] or suppressing function [to manage conditions such as chronic pain,]” Dr. Haneef added.

The study was published online Jan. 17, 2022, in Neurosurgery.

As reported by this news organization, the RNS system (NeuroPace) is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat medically refractory focal seizures in adults. Following implantation of the system, patients attend the clinic for adjustments about every 8-12 weeks.

The investigators studied 17 patients with epilepsy and RNS implants who attended the clinic for routine appointments. A clinical neuropsychologist administered the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test–Revised (HVLT-R), a well-validated list-learning measure of memory and verbal learning.

Patients were read a list of 12 semantically related words and asked to recall the list after three different learning trials. Active or sham stimulation was performed for every third word presented for immediate recall. 

The investigators found that the HVLT-R delayed recall raw score was higher for the stimulation condition, compared with the nonstimulation condition (paired t-test, P = .04; effect size, d = 0.627).

“The patients were not aware of when the RNS system was being activated. We alternated when patients were undergoing stimulation versus no stimulation, and still found that when patients’ RNS systems were activated, their memory recall score was greater than when there was no stimulation,” Dr. Haneef said in a release.

This suggests the “human memory can be potentially improved by direct electrical brain stimulation at extremely low currents,” Dr. Haneef said in an interview.

Most patients in the study had stimulation of the hippocampus, the brain’s memory center.

“Moving forward we would want to look at how different patterns or standardized stimulation patterns affect memory. Ultimately, the underlying brain rhythms responsible for these changes in brain function need to be understood so that a more targeted and precise application of electrical stimulation can be achieved,” Dr. Haneef said.

The researchers also caution that, for this preliminary study, no follow-up testing was conducted to determine whether the memory improvement was transient and settled back to baseline after a specified period.

However, they note, this study lays the groundwork for larger-scale and extensive studies examining the nuanced effects of brain stimulation on human cognition and memory.

The study was funded by the Mike Hogg Foundation. Dr. Haneef and two coauthors received coverage for travel expenses but no honorarium for a NeuroPace advisory meeting.

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

Electrical brain stimulation may have the potential to improve verbal memory, results of a small study of patients with epilepsy suggest.

Investigators observed improvements in patients implanted with a responsive neurostimulation system (RNS) to control seizures, in that the patients had improved word recall when the system was activated.

Dr. Zulfi Haneef

Beyond epilepsy, “we suspect that our results would be broadly applicable regardless of the underlying condition, for example, memory loss with Alzheimer’s disease or traumatic brain injury,” Zulfi Haneef, MBBS, MD, associate professor of neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, said in an interview.

“Mental health conditions such as depression or psychosis could also benefit from targeted electrical stimulation. While we focused on enhancing a preferred brain function [such as memory], parallel areas of research may target enhancing function [such as weakness following stroke] or suppressing function [to manage conditions such as chronic pain,]” Dr. Haneef added.

The study was published online Jan. 17, 2022, in Neurosurgery.

As reported by this news organization, the RNS system (NeuroPace) is approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat medically refractory focal seizures in adults. Following implantation of the system, patients attend the clinic for adjustments about every 8-12 weeks.

The investigators studied 17 patients with epilepsy and RNS implants who attended the clinic for routine appointments. A clinical neuropsychologist administered the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test–Revised (HVLT-R), a well-validated list-learning measure of memory and verbal learning.

Patients were read a list of 12 semantically related words and asked to recall the list after three different learning trials. Active or sham stimulation was performed for every third word presented for immediate recall. 

The investigators found that the HVLT-R delayed recall raw score was higher for the stimulation condition, compared with the nonstimulation condition (paired t-test, P = .04; effect size, d = 0.627).

“The patients were not aware of when the RNS system was being activated. We alternated when patients were undergoing stimulation versus no stimulation, and still found that when patients’ RNS systems were activated, their memory recall score was greater than when there was no stimulation,” Dr. Haneef said in a release.

This suggests the “human memory can be potentially improved by direct electrical brain stimulation at extremely low currents,” Dr. Haneef said in an interview.

Most patients in the study had stimulation of the hippocampus, the brain’s memory center.

“Moving forward we would want to look at how different patterns or standardized stimulation patterns affect memory. Ultimately, the underlying brain rhythms responsible for these changes in brain function need to be understood so that a more targeted and precise application of electrical stimulation can be achieved,” Dr. Haneef said.

The researchers also caution that, for this preliminary study, no follow-up testing was conducted to determine whether the memory improvement was transient and settled back to baseline after a specified period.

However, they note, this study lays the groundwork for larger-scale and extensive studies examining the nuanced effects of brain stimulation on human cognition and memory.

The study was funded by the Mike Hogg Foundation. Dr. Haneef and two coauthors received coverage for travel expenses but no honorarium for a NeuroPace advisory meeting.

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

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM NEUROSURGERY

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Early, subtle, cardiac changes tied to midlife cognitive decline

Article Type
Changed

Subclinical changes in cardiac structure and diastolic function in early adulthood may serve as risk markers for cognitive decline in midlife, new research suggests.

Cardiovascular disease risk factors such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and diabetes have been associated with an increased risk for cognitive impairment, but much less is known about heart structure and function and the risks for cognition.

“We showed for the first time that, even before the occurrence of cardiovascular disease, people with abnormalities in cardiac structure and function as early as in young adulthood have lower midlife cognition,” investigators Laure Rouch, PharmD, PhD, and Kristine Yaffe, MD, both with the department of psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, said in a joint email.

“This study reminds us that heart health is key to brain health and that the overlap and interplay between the two is not limited to patients with end-stage heart disease,” Dr. Rouch and Dr. Yaffe said.

The findings were published online Jan. 26, 2022, in Neurology.
 

Heart/brain connection

The analysis included 2,653 participants in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.

Echocardiograms were obtained at year 5, 25, and 30 study visits – at mean ages of 30, 50, and 55 years, respectively. At year 30, participants underwent a standard battery of tests measuring global cognition, processing speed, executive function, delayed verbal memory, and verbal fluency.

Over 25 years, there was an average increase in left ventricular mass of 0.27 g/m2 per year – from a mean of 80.5 g/m2 in year 5 to 86.0 g/m2 in year 30.

Left atrial volume increased by an average of 0.42 mL/m2 per year, from 16 mL/m2 in year 5 to 26 mL/m2 in year 30.

Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) decreased by 0.11% per year, from 63.3% in year 5 to 59.7% in year 30.

After adjustment for demographics and education, an increase in left ventricular mass of at least 1 standard deviation over 25 years was associated with lower cognition on most tests (P ≤ .02).

An increase in left atrial volume over the study period was associated with lower global cognition (P = .04), whereas a decrease in LVEF was not associated with cognition. Further adjustment for cardiovascular risk factors yielded similar results.

“A more effective collaboration is needed between cardiologists and neurologists to promote healthy brain aging,” Dr. Rouch and Dr. Yaffe said.

“Echocardiography is a widely available, relatively inexpensive, and noninvasive imaging method that could be integrated into a risk assessment for cognitive impairment,” they added.

Looking ahead, the investigators noted there is a need for further research to determine whether interventions to improve cardiac structure and diastolic function could also benefit brain health.

They should also investigate the role of arterial stiffness and cerebral small vessel disease in the relationship between cardiac structure, function, and cognition, the researchers added.
 

First structural biomarker

Commenting on the study, Shaheen E. Lakhan, MD, PhD, a neurologist in Newton, Mass., said the study is important because, “thus far, the connections have really been physiological parameters,” such as blood pressure and cognitive health.

“This is really strong evidence of a structural cardiac biomarker that can be measured before and independent of changes in physiology or diseased state,” said Dr. Lakhan, who was not involved with the research.

As more and more interventions are being introduced for addressing disorders of cognition, “this potential structural finding may serve as a solid biomarker to determine” what lifestyle or drug therapy should be taken, he added.

Also weighing in on the findings, Pierre Fayad, MD, professor in the department of neurological sciences and director of the Nebraska Stroke Center, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, said CARDIA is “an important study” providing “precious data.”

The reported changes in cardiac structure and function “precede the clinical symptomatology, as the follow-up stops before they enter into later adulthood, where the risk of clinical events dramatically rises. Meaning these patients still have not had stroke, congestive heart failure, heart attack or dementia, but some of them could be on that trajectory later in their life,” Dr. Fayad told this news organization.

Documenting such changes over time is “valuable to give an insight into what leads us to such progression,” he noted.

How reliably predictive the findings are for eventual clinical cognitive impairment “will need to be confirmed and verified” in future studies, he added.

“If verified, it could be helpful to provide interventions to those with the left atrial volume enlargement marker and see their effectiveness at preventing eventual clinical cognitive impairment,” said Dr. Fayad.

The CARDIA study is supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in collaboration with the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Northwestern University, the University of Minnesota, and the Kaiser Foundation Research Institute. Rouch, Lakhan, and Dr. Fayad have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews - 30(3)
Publications
Topics
Sections

Subclinical changes in cardiac structure and diastolic function in early adulthood may serve as risk markers for cognitive decline in midlife, new research suggests.

Cardiovascular disease risk factors such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and diabetes have been associated with an increased risk for cognitive impairment, but much less is known about heart structure and function and the risks for cognition.

“We showed for the first time that, even before the occurrence of cardiovascular disease, people with abnormalities in cardiac structure and function as early as in young adulthood have lower midlife cognition,” investigators Laure Rouch, PharmD, PhD, and Kristine Yaffe, MD, both with the department of psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, said in a joint email.

“This study reminds us that heart health is key to brain health and that the overlap and interplay between the two is not limited to patients with end-stage heart disease,” Dr. Rouch and Dr. Yaffe said.

The findings were published online Jan. 26, 2022, in Neurology.
 

Heart/brain connection

The analysis included 2,653 participants in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.

Echocardiograms were obtained at year 5, 25, and 30 study visits – at mean ages of 30, 50, and 55 years, respectively. At year 30, participants underwent a standard battery of tests measuring global cognition, processing speed, executive function, delayed verbal memory, and verbal fluency.

Over 25 years, there was an average increase in left ventricular mass of 0.27 g/m2 per year – from a mean of 80.5 g/m2 in year 5 to 86.0 g/m2 in year 30.

Left atrial volume increased by an average of 0.42 mL/m2 per year, from 16 mL/m2 in year 5 to 26 mL/m2 in year 30.

Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) decreased by 0.11% per year, from 63.3% in year 5 to 59.7% in year 30.

After adjustment for demographics and education, an increase in left ventricular mass of at least 1 standard deviation over 25 years was associated with lower cognition on most tests (P ≤ .02).

An increase in left atrial volume over the study period was associated with lower global cognition (P = .04), whereas a decrease in LVEF was not associated with cognition. Further adjustment for cardiovascular risk factors yielded similar results.

“A more effective collaboration is needed between cardiologists and neurologists to promote healthy brain aging,” Dr. Rouch and Dr. Yaffe said.

“Echocardiography is a widely available, relatively inexpensive, and noninvasive imaging method that could be integrated into a risk assessment for cognitive impairment,” they added.

Looking ahead, the investigators noted there is a need for further research to determine whether interventions to improve cardiac structure and diastolic function could also benefit brain health.

They should also investigate the role of arterial stiffness and cerebral small vessel disease in the relationship between cardiac structure, function, and cognition, the researchers added.
 

First structural biomarker

Commenting on the study, Shaheen E. Lakhan, MD, PhD, a neurologist in Newton, Mass., said the study is important because, “thus far, the connections have really been physiological parameters,” such as blood pressure and cognitive health.

“This is really strong evidence of a structural cardiac biomarker that can be measured before and independent of changes in physiology or diseased state,” said Dr. Lakhan, who was not involved with the research.

As more and more interventions are being introduced for addressing disorders of cognition, “this potential structural finding may serve as a solid biomarker to determine” what lifestyle or drug therapy should be taken, he added.

Also weighing in on the findings, Pierre Fayad, MD, professor in the department of neurological sciences and director of the Nebraska Stroke Center, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, said CARDIA is “an important study” providing “precious data.”

The reported changes in cardiac structure and function “precede the clinical symptomatology, as the follow-up stops before they enter into later adulthood, where the risk of clinical events dramatically rises. Meaning these patients still have not had stroke, congestive heart failure, heart attack or dementia, but some of them could be on that trajectory later in their life,” Dr. Fayad told this news organization.

Documenting such changes over time is “valuable to give an insight into what leads us to such progression,” he noted.

How reliably predictive the findings are for eventual clinical cognitive impairment “will need to be confirmed and verified” in future studies, he added.

“If verified, it could be helpful to provide interventions to those with the left atrial volume enlargement marker and see their effectiveness at preventing eventual clinical cognitive impairment,” said Dr. Fayad.

The CARDIA study is supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in collaboration with the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Northwestern University, the University of Minnesota, and the Kaiser Foundation Research Institute. Rouch, Lakhan, and Dr. Fayad have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Subclinical changes in cardiac structure and diastolic function in early adulthood may serve as risk markers for cognitive decline in midlife, new research suggests.

Cardiovascular disease risk factors such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and diabetes have been associated with an increased risk for cognitive impairment, but much less is known about heart structure and function and the risks for cognition.

“We showed for the first time that, even before the occurrence of cardiovascular disease, people with abnormalities in cardiac structure and function as early as in young adulthood have lower midlife cognition,” investigators Laure Rouch, PharmD, PhD, and Kristine Yaffe, MD, both with the department of psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, said in a joint email.

“This study reminds us that heart health is key to brain health and that the overlap and interplay between the two is not limited to patients with end-stage heart disease,” Dr. Rouch and Dr. Yaffe said.

The findings were published online Jan. 26, 2022, in Neurology.
 

Heart/brain connection

The analysis included 2,653 participants in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.

Echocardiograms were obtained at year 5, 25, and 30 study visits – at mean ages of 30, 50, and 55 years, respectively. At year 30, participants underwent a standard battery of tests measuring global cognition, processing speed, executive function, delayed verbal memory, and verbal fluency.

Over 25 years, there was an average increase in left ventricular mass of 0.27 g/m2 per year – from a mean of 80.5 g/m2 in year 5 to 86.0 g/m2 in year 30.

Left atrial volume increased by an average of 0.42 mL/m2 per year, from 16 mL/m2 in year 5 to 26 mL/m2 in year 30.

Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) decreased by 0.11% per year, from 63.3% in year 5 to 59.7% in year 30.

After adjustment for demographics and education, an increase in left ventricular mass of at least 1 standard deviation over 25 years was associated with lower cognition on most tests (P ≤ .02).

An increase in left atrial volume over the study period was associated with lower global cognition (P = .04), whereas a decrease in LVEF was not associated with cognition. Further adjustment for cardiovascular risk factors yielded similar results.

“A more effective collaboration is needed between cardiologists and neurologists to promote healthy brain aging,” Dr. Rouch and Dr. Yaffe said.

“Echocardiography is a widely available, relatively inexpensive, and noninvasive imaging method that could be integrated into a risk assessment for cognitive impairment,” they added.

Looking ahead, the investigators noted there is a need for further research to determine whether interventions to improve cardiac structure and diastolic function could also benefit brain health.

They should also investigate the role of arterial stiffness and cerebral small vessel disease in the relationship between cardiac structure, function, and cognition, the researchers added.
 

First structural biomarker

Commenting on the study, Shaheen E. Lakhan, MD, PhD, a neurologist in Newton, Mass., said the study is important because, “thus far, the connections have really been physiological parameters,” such as blood pressure and cognitive health.

“This is really strong evidence of a structural cardiac biomarker that can be measured before and independent of changes in physiology or diseased state,” said Dr. Lakhan, who was not involved with the research.

As more and more interventions are being introduced for addressing disorders of cognition, “this potential structural finding may serve as a solid biomarker to determine” what lifestyle or drug therapy should be taken, he added.

Also weighing in on the findings, Pierre Fayad, MD, professor in the department of neurological sciences and director of the Nebraska Stroke Center, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, said CARDIA is “an important study” providing “precious data.”

The reported changes in cardiac structure and function “precede the clinical symptomatology, as the follow-up stops before they enter into later adulthood, where the risk of clinical events dramatically rises. Meaning these patients still have not had stroke, congestive heart failure, heart attack or dementia, but some of them could be on that trajectory later in their life,” Dr. Fayad told this news organization.

Documenting such changes over time is “valuable to give an insight into what leads us to such progression,” he noted.

How reliably predictive the findings are for eventual clinical cognitive impairment “will need to be confirmed and verified” in future studies, he added.

“If verified, it could be helpful to provide interventions to those with the left atrial volume enlargement marker and see their effectiveness at preventing eventual clinical cognitive impairment,” said Dr. Fayad.

The CARDIA study is supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in collaboration with the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Northwestern University, the University of Minnesota, and the Kaiser Foundation Research Institute. Rouch, Lakhan, and Dr. Fayad have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews - 30(3)
Issue
Neurology Reviews - 30(3)
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM NEUROLOGY

Citation Override
Publish date: January 28, 2022
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Berries, red wine linked to lower mortality in Parkinson’s disease

Article Type
Changed

Berries, red wine, and other foods rich in flavonoids are associated with a lower risk for death in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), new research suggests.

In a prospective analysis of more than 1,200 participants with an eventual PD diagnosis, those who ate three or more servings of flavonoid-rich foods a week had a 70% lower mortality versus those consuming one or fewer servings of such foods per month.

“Adopting a healthy dietary pattern that is high in colorful fruits and veggies like berries, even after a Parkinson diagnosis, could slow disease progression and improve survival rate,” study investigator Xiang Gao, MD, PhD, professor and director, Nutritional Epidemiology Lab, department of nutritional sciences, Penn State University, University Park, said in an interview.

The findings were published online Jan. 26, 2022, in Neurology.

First evidence of survival advantage

Flavonoids are plant-derived polyphenolic molecules found in fruits such as berries, apples, and oranges; vegetables such as kale and broccoli; and beverages, including tea and red wine. They are the dietary components that give many foods their vibrant color.

Certain flavonoids have been shown previously to have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.

A previous study by Dr. Gao and colleagues showed that flavonoids were associated with a lower future risk for developing PD. However, it did not provide evidence these nutrients improved survival rates among PD patients.

The new analysis included participants from the ongoing Nurses’ Health Study (NHS) of female registered nurses, which began in 1976, and male participants from the ongoing Health Professionals Follow-up Study (HPFS), which began in 1986.

All participants answered questionnaires at baseline and then biennially to update information on demographics, lifestyle, medical history, and occurrence of chronic disease.

Using validated food-frequency questionnaires completed every 4 years, researchers assessed dietary intakes of total flavonoid, six flavonoid subclasses, and flavonoid-rich foods such as tea, apples, berries, oranges and orange juice, and red wine.

They examined flavonoid intake both before and after a PD diagnosis to minimize the potential for reverse causality. The investigators noted that patients with PD have difficulty swallowing and handling food and cutlery, which could impact their consumption of flavonoid-rich foods.

Frequency of consumption of flavonoid-rich foods was categorized into four groups: one or less servings per month (the reference group), one to three servings per month, one to two servings per week, and three or more servings per week.

The analysis included 599 women and 652 men who were newly diagnosed with PD. The mean age at PD diagnosis was 72 years, and the mean time between the last prediagnosis dietary assessment and PD diagnosis was 32 months.

The primary outcome measure was all-cause mortality. There were 528 deaths in men and 416 deaths in women during an average of 33 years of follow-up.
 

Neuroprotective pathway?

After controlling for age, lifestyle behaviors, medical history, and total energy and caffeine intake, results showed that higher total flavonoid intake before PD diagnosis was associated with a lower risk for all-cause mortality after diagnosis in men, with a hazard ratio of 0.53 (95% confidence interval, 0.39-0.71) when comparing the highest and lowest quartiles (P for trend < .001).

However, this association was not found in women (HR, 0.93; 95% CI, 0.68-1.28; P for trend = .69).

The pooled HR was 0.70 (95% CI, 0.40-1.22; P for trend = .25) with significant heterogeneity (P = .01).

There were significant associations between a higher prediagnosis intake of certain flavonoids and lower mortality risk. The pooled HR comparing the highest versus lowest intake quartiles was 0.66 for anthocyanin, 0.78 for flavones, and 0.69 for flavan-3-ols (P < .05 for all).

Compared with participants who consumed less than one serving a month, those consuming more than three servings a week prediagnosis of berries or red wine had a lower mortality risk (pooled HR, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.58-1.02 for berries and HR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.51-0.91 for red wine).

After PD diagnosis, higher flavonoid consumption was associated with better survival rates in both men and women.

It’s unclear why there was a gender difference in the association between prediagnosis flavonoid intake and mortality but not for postdiagnosis flavonoid intakes, Dr. Gao said.

A potential neuroprotective pathway by which flavonoids reduce mortality in PD involves direct radical scavenging, which lowers oxidative stress and chronic neuroinflammation levels, he noted.

“Certain flavonoids, for example, anthocyanins, have been shown to exert antiapoptosis effects and protect cognition and motor functions. They could also increase dopamine release,” Dr. Gao added.

Study limitations included not having detailed information on participants’ PD disease severity and that both the NHS and HPFS include predominantly White health care professionals, which limits the generalizability of the results, the investigators noted.
 

No direct link

Commenting on the findings, Michael S. Okun, MD, medical advisor at the Parkinson’s Foundation and director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida Health, Gainesville, said the study adds to growing evidence suggesting “subsets of flavonoids and especially berries and wine will have benefits pre- and post–Parkinson’s disease diagnosis.”

However, he emphasized that patients should not take up drinking red wine just to improve survival.

“We don’t recommend that folks who are already diagnosed with Parkinson’s drink alcohol, especially without physician supervision,” said Dr. Okun, who was not involved with the research.

Also commenting for this article, Gunter Kuhnle, PhD, professor of nutrition and food science, University of Reading (England), said because the study doesn’t appear to adjust for socioeconomic status, the results may be driven by factors such as income and education and not food intake.

The study found a beneficial association with anthocyanins, which are mainly found in expensive berries, and with flavan-3-ols found mainly in tea, which in the United States is often a marker of higher income, said Dr. Kuhnle.

The advantage of assessing dietary intake of flavonoids using a food-frequency questionnaire, as was done in this study, is that it captures long-term patterns. However, the disadvantage is a loss in “resolution” by combining similar foods, Dr. Kuhnle noted.

Since flavonoids are found in most fruits and vegetables, high flavonoid intake “might simply be a marker of fruit and vegetable intake and therefore a ‘healthy’ dietary pattern,” he concluded.

The study received funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Dr. Gao and Dr. Okun reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Kuhnle has conducted research into the associations between flavanol and health, some of which has been funded by Mars.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews - 30(3)
Publications
Topics
Sections

Berries, red wine, and other foods rich in flavonoids are associated with a lower risk for death in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), new research suggests.

In a prospective analysis of more than 1,200 participants with an eventual PD diagnosis, those who ate three or more servings of flavonoid-rich foods a week had a 70% lower mortality versus those consuming one or fewer servings of such foods per month.

“Adopting a healthy dietary pattern that is high in colorful fruits and veggies like berries, even after a Parkinson diagnosis, could slow disease progression and improve survival rate,” study investigator Xiang Gao, MD, PhD, professor and director, Nutritional Epidemiology Lab, department of nutritional sciences, Penn State University, University Park, said in an interview.

The findings were published online Jan. 26, 2022, in Neurology.

First evidence of survival advantage

Flavonoids are plant-derived polyphenolic molecules found in fruits such as berries, apples, and oranges; vegetables such as kale and broccoli; and beverages, including tea and red wine. They are the dietary components that give many foods their vibrant color.

Certain flavonoids have been shown previously to have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.

A previous study by Dr. Gao and colleagues showed that flavonoids were associated with a lower future risk for developing PD. However, it did not provide evidence these nutrients improved survival rates among PD patients.

The new analysis included participants from the ongoing Nurses’ Health Study (NHS) of female registered nurses, which began in 1976, and male participants from the ongoing Health Professionals Follow-up Study (HPFS), which began in 1986.

All participants answered questionnaires at baseline and then biennially to update information on demographics, lifestyle, medical history, and occurrence of chronic disease.

Using validated food-frequency questionnaires completed every 4 years, researchers assessed dietary intakes of total flavonoid, six flavonoid subclasses, and flavonoid-rich foods such as tea, apples, berries, oranges and orange juice, and red wine.

They examined flavonoid intake both before and after a PD diagnosis to minimize the potential for reverse causality. The investigators noted that patients with PD have difficulty swallowing and handling food and cutlery, which could impact their consumption of flavonoid-rich foods.

Frequency of consumption of flavonoid-rich foods was categorized into four groups: one or less servings per month (the reference group), one to three servings per month, one to two servings per week, and three or more servings per week.

The analysis included 599 women and 652 men who were newly diagnosed with PD. The mean age at PD diagnosis was 72 years, and the mean time between the last prediagnosis dietary assessment and PD diagnosis was 32 months.

The primary outcome measure was all-cause mortality. There were 528 deaths in men and 416 deaths in women during an average of 33 years of follow-up.
 

Neuroprotective pathway?

After controlling for age, lifestyle behaviors, medical history, and total energy and caffeine intake, results showed that higher total flavonoid intake before PD diagnosis was associated with a lower risk for all-cause mortality after diagnosis in men, with a hazard ratio of 0.53 (95% confidence interval, 0.39-0.71) when comparing the highest and lowest quartiles (P for trend < .001).

However, this association was not found in women (HR, 0.93; 95% CI, 0.68-1.28; P for trend = .69).

The pooled HR was 0.70 (95% CI, 0.40-1.22; P for trend = .25) with significant heterogeneity (P = .01).

There were significant associations between a higher prediagnosis intake of certain flavonoids and lower mortality risk. The pooled HR comparing the highest versus lowest intake quartiles was 0.66 for anthocyanin, 0.78 for flavones, and 0.69 for flavan-3-ols (P < .05 for all).

Compared with participants who consumed less than one serving a month, those consuming more than three servings a week prediagnosis of berries or red wine had a lower mortality risk (pooled HR, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.58-1.02 for berries and HR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.51-0.91 for red wine).

After PD diagnosis, higher flavonoid consumption was associated with better survival rates in both men and women.

It’s unclear why there was a gender difference in the association between prediagnosis flavonoid intake and mortality but not for postdiagnosis flavonoid intakes, Dr. Gao said.

A potential neuroprotective pathway by which flavonoids reduce mortality in PD involves direct radical scavenging, which lowers oxidative stress and chronic neuroinflammation levels, he noted.

“Certain flavonoids, for example, anthocyanins, have been shown to exert antiapoptosis effects and protect cognition and motor functions. They could also increase dopamine release,” Dr. Gao added.

Study limitations included not having detailed information on participants’ PD disease severity and that both the NHS and HPFS include predominantly White health care professionals, which limits the generalizability of the results, the investigators noted.
 

No direct link

Commenting on the findings, Michael S. Okun, MD, medical advisor at the Parkinson’s Foundation and director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida Health, Gainesville, said the study adds to growing evidence suggesting “subsets of flavonoids and especially berries and wine will have benefits pre- and post–Parkinson’s disease diagnosis.”

However, he emphasized that patients should not take up drinking red wine just to improve survival.

“We don’t recommend that folks who are already diagnosed with Parkinson’s drink alcohol, especially without physician supervision,” said Dr. Okun, who was not involved with the research.

Also commenting for this article, Gunter Kuhnle, PhD, professor of nutrition and food science, University of Reading (England), said because the study doesn’t appear to adjust for socioeconomic status, the results may be driven by factors such as income and education and not food intake.

The study found a beneficial association with anthocyanins, which are mainly found in expensive berries, and with flavan-3-ols found mainly in tea, which in the United States is often a marker of higher income, said Dr. Kuhnle.

The advantage of assessing dietary intake of flavonoids using a food-frequency questionnaire, as was done in this study, is that it captures long-term patterns. However, the disadvantage is a loss in “resolution” by combining similar foods, Dr. Kuhnle noted.

Since flavonoids are found in most fruits and vegetables, high flavonoid intake “might simply be a marker of fruit and vegetable intake and therefore a ‘healthy’ dietary pattern,” he concluded.

The study received funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Dr. Gao and Dr. Okun reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Kuhnle has conducted research into the associations between flavanol and health, some of which has been funded by Mars.

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

Berries, red wine, and other foods rich in flavonoids are associated with a lower risk for death in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), new research suggests.

In a prospective analysis of more than 1,200 participants with an eventual PD diagnosis, those who ate three or more servings of flavonoid-rich foods a week had a 70% lower mortality versus those consuming one or fewer servings of such foods per month.

“Adopting a healthy dietary pattern that is high in colorful fruits and veggies like berries, even after a Parkinson diagnosis, could slow disease progression and improve survival rate,” study investigator Xiang Gao, MD, PhD, professor and director, Nutritional Epidemiology Lab, department of nutritional sciences, Penn State University, University Park, said in an interview.

The findings were published online Jan. 26, 2022, in Neurology.

First evidence of survival advantage

Flavonoids are plant-derived polyphenolic molecules found in fruits such as berries, apples, and oranges; vegetables such as kale and broccoli; and beverages, including tea and red wine. They are the dietary components that give many foods their vibrant color.

Certain flavonoids have been shown previously to have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.

A previous study by Dr. Gao and colleagues showed that flavonoids were associated with a lower future risk for developing PD. However, it did not provide evidence these nutrients improved survival rates among PD patients.

The new analysis included participants from the ongoing Nurses’ Health Study (NHS) of female registered nurses, which began in 1976, and male participants from the ongoing Health Professionals Follow-up Study (HPFS), which began in 1986.

All participants answered questionnaires at baseline and then biennially to update information on demographics, lifestyle, medical history, and occurrence of chronic disease.

Using validated food-frequency questionnaires completed every 4 years, researchers assessed dietary intakes of total flavonoid, six flavonoid subclasses, and flavonoid-rich foods such as tea, apples, berries, oranges and orange juice, and red wine.

They examined flavonoid intake both before and after a PD diagnosis to minimize the potential for reverse causality. The investigators noted that patients with PD have difficulty swallowing and handling food and cutlery, which could impact their consumption of flavonoid-rich foods.

Frequency of consumption of flavonoid-rich foods was categorized into four groups: one or less servings per month (the reference group), one to three servings per month, one to two servings per week, and three or more servings per week.

The analysis included 599 women and 652 men who were newly diagnosed with PD. The mean age at PD diagnosis was 72 years, and the mean time between the last prediagnosis dietary assessment and PD diagnosis was 32 months.

The primary outcome measure was all-cause mortality. There were 528 deaths in men and 416 deaths in women during an average of 33 years of follow-up.
 

Neuroprotective pathway?

After controlling for age, lifestyle behaviors, medical history, and total energy and caffeine intake, results showed that higher total flavonoid intake before PD diagnosis was associated with a lower risk for all-cause mortality after diagnosis in men, with a hazard ratio of 0.53 (95% confidence interval, 0.39-0.71) when comparing the highest and lowest quartiles (P for trend < .001).

However, this association was not found in women (HR, 0.93; 95% CI, 0.68-1.28; P for trend = .69).

The pooled HR was 0.70 (95% CI, 0.40-1.22; P for trend = .25) with significant heterogeneity (P = .01).

There were significant associations between a higher prediagnosis intake of certain flavonoids and lower mortality risk. The pooled HR comparing the highest versus lowest intake quartiles was 0.66 for anthocyanin, 0.78 for flavones, and 0.69 for flavan-3-ols (P < .05 for all).

Compared with participants who consumed less than one serving a month, those consuming more than three servings a week prediagnosis of berries or red wine had a lower mortality risk (pooled HR, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.58-1.02 for berries and HR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.51-0.91 for red wine).

After PD diagnosis, higher flavonoid consumption was associated with better survival rates in both men and women.

It’s unclear why there was a gender difference in the association between prediagnosis flavonoid intake and mortality but not for postdiagnosis flavonoid intakes, Dr. Gao said.

A potential neuroprotective pathway by which flavonoids reduce mortality in PD involves direct radical scavenging, which lowers oxidative stress and chronic neuroinflammation levels, he noted.

“Certain flavonoids, for example, anthocyanins, have been shown to exert antiapoptosis effects and protect cognition and motor functions. They could also increase dopamine release,” Dr. Gao added.

Study limitations included not having detailed information on participants’ PD disease severity and that both the NHS and HPFS include predominantly White health care professionals, which limits the generalizability of the results, the investigators noted.
 

No direct link

Commenting on the findings, Michael S. Okun, MD, medical advisor at the Parkinson’s Foundation and director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida Health, Gainesville, said the study adds to growing evidence suggesting “subsets of flavonoids and especially berries and wine will have benefits pre- and post–Parkinson’s disease diagnosis.”

However, he emphasized that patients should not take up drinking red wine just to improve survival.

“We don’t recommend that folks who are already diagnosed with Parkinson’s drink alcohol, especially without physician supervision,” said Dr. Okun, who was not involved with the research.

Also commenting for this article, Gunter Kuhnle, PhD, professor of nutrition and food science, University of Reading (England), said because the study doesn’t appear to adjust for socioeconomic status, the results may be driven by factors such as income and education and not food intake.

The study found a beneficial association with anthocyanins, which are mainly found in expensive berries, and with flavan-3-ols found mainly in tea, which in the United States is often a marker of higher income, said Dr. Kuhnle.

The advantage of assessing dietary intake of flavonoids using a food-frequency questionnaire, as was done in this study, is that it captures long-term patterns. However, the disadvantage is a loss in “resolution” by combining similar foods, Dr. Kuhnle noted.

Since flavonoids are found in most fruits and vegetables, high flavonoid intake “might simply be a marker of fruit and vegetable intake and therefore a ‘healthy’ dietary pattern,” he concluded.

The study received funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Dr. Gao and Dr. Okun reported no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Kuhnle has conducted research into the associations between flavanol and health, some of which has been funded by Mars.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews - 30(3)
Issue
Neurology Reviews - 30(3)
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM NEUROLOGY

Citation Override
Publish date: January 27, 2022
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Novel biomarker found for Alzheimer’s disease

Article Type
Changed

 

The study covered in this summary was published in medRxiv.org as a preprint and has not yet been peer reviewed.

Key takeaways

  • Measurement of the rate of cellular amyloid uptake and metabolic production of toxic amyloid species could be used as novel biomarkers for early and/or differential diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD).
  • Estimated beta-amyloid (Aβ42) cellular uptake can be more than two times greater in AD patients compared to cognitively normal subjects. A less pronounced yet increased uptake rate was also observed in patients with late-onset mild cognitive impairment (MCI). This increased uptake may prove to be a key mechanism defining age-related AD progression.
  • The increased cellular amyloid uptake in AD and LMCI may lead to quicker disease progression, but early-onset MCI may result from increased production of toxic amyloid metabolites.

Why this matters

  • Additional biomarkers for AD could greatly aid diagnosis and course prediction, as they are currently limited to PET scan analysis of amyloid plaque deposits and concentration of Aβ42 in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
  • Amyloid deposits found by PET have a positive correlation with AD diagnosis. In contrast, CSF-Aβ42 and AD diagnosis or cognitive decline are negatively correlated. Normal cognition (NC) is associated with higher CSF beta-amyloid levels, but previous research has not explained why CSF-Aβ42 levels can be equivalent in patients with NC but high amyloid load and patients with AD and low amyloid load.

Study design

  • The authors of this retrospective study used anonymized data obtained from the Alzheimer’s’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). ADNI’s goal has been to test whether serial MRI scans, PET scans, biomarkers, and clinical/neuropsychological assessment can be combined to measure the progression of MCI and AD.
  • Study subjects had either an AD diagnosis or NC and were divided into two groups: low amyloid load and high amyloid load. The fraction of patients with an AD diagnosis was calculated as a function of CSF-Aβ42.
  • Calculations and statistical comparisons were performed using Microsoft Excel and custom-written C++ programs.

Key results

  • The lowest levels of CSF-Aβ42 correlated with the highest percentage of AD-diagnosed patients, estimated to be 27% in subjects with low amyloid deposit density and 65% in those with high deposit density.
  • The relationship between CSF-Aβ42 levels and amyloid load can be described using a simple mathematical model: Amyloid concentration in the interstitial cells is equal to the synthesis rate divided by the density of amyloid deposits plus the sum of the rate of amyloid removal through the CSF and the cellular amyloid uptake rate.
  • AD and late-onset MCI patients had a significantly higher amyloid removal rate compared to NC subjects.
  • Early-onset MCI patients had Aβ42 turnover similar to that of NC subjects, pointing to a different underlying mechanism such as enzymatic disbalance.

Limitations

  • The model used to explain amyloid exchange between the interstitial space and the CSF is oversimplified; the actual process is more complex.
  • Synthesis and uptake rates of Aβ42 vary throughout areas of the brain. The model assumes a homogeneous distribution within the interstitial compartment.

Study disclosures

  • Research reported in this publication was not supported by any external funding. Data collection and sharing for this project were funded by ADNI.

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

Publications
Topics
Sections

 

The study covered in this summary was published in medRxiv.org as a preprint and has not yet been peer reviewed.

Key takeaways

  • Measurement of the rate of cellular amyloid uptake and metabolic production of toxic amyloid species could be used as novel biomarkers for early and/or differential diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD).
  • Estimated beta-amyloid (Aβ42) cellular uptake can be more than two times greater in AD patients compared to cognitively normal subjects. A less pronounced yet increased uptake rate was also observed in patients with late-onset mild cognitive impairment (MCI). This increased uptake may prove to be a key mechanism defining age-related AD progression.
  • The increased cellular amyloid uptake in AD and LMCI may lead to quicker disease progression, but early-onset MCI may result from increased production of toxic amyloid metabolites.

Why this matters

  • Additional biomarkers for AD could greatly aid diagnosis and course prediction, as they are currently limited to PET scan analysis of amyloid plaque deposits and concentration of Aβ42 in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
  • Amyloid deposits found by PET have a positive correlation with AD diagnosis. In contrast, CSF-Aβ42 and AD diagnosis or cognitive decline are negatively correlated. Normal cognition (NC) is associated with higher CSF beta-amyloid levels, but previous research has not explained why CSF-Aβ42 levels can be equivalent in patients with NC but high amyloid load and patients with AD and low amyloid load.

Study design

  • The authors of this retrospective study used anonymized data obtained from the Alzheimer’s’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). ADNI’s goal has been to test whether serial MRI scans, PET scans, biomarkers, and clinical/neuropsychological assessment can be combined to measure the progression of MCI and AD.
  • Study subjects had either an AD diagnosis or NC and were divided into two groups: low amyloid load and high amyloid load. The fraction of patients with an AD diagnosis was calculated as a function of CSF-Aβ42.
  • Calculations and statistical comparisons were performed using Microsoft Excel and custom-written C++ programs.

Key results

  • The lowest levels of CSF-Aβ42 correlated with the highest percentage of AD-diagnosed patients, estimated to be 27% in subjects with low amyloid deposit density and 65% in those with high deposit density.
  • The relationship between CSF-Aβ42 levels and amyloid load can be described using a simple mathematical model: Amyloid concentration in the interstitial cells is equal to the synthesis rate divided by the density of amyloid deposits plus the sum of the rate of amyloid removal through the CSF and the cellular amyloid uptake rate.
  • AD and late-onset MCI patients had a significantly higher amyloid removal rate compared to NC subjects.
  • Early-onset MCI patients had Aβ42 turnover similar to that of NC subjects, pointing to a different underlying mechanism such as enzymatic disbalance.

Limitations

  • The model used to explain amyloid exchange between the interstitial space and the CSF is oversimplified; the actual process is more complex.
  • Synthesis and uptake rates of Aβ42 vary throughout areas of the brain. The model assumes a homogeneous distribution within the interstitial compartment.

Study disclosures

  • Research reported in this publication was not supported by any external funding. Data collection and sharing for this project were funded by ADNI.

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

 

The study covered in this summary was published in medRxiv.org as a preprint and has not yet been peer reviewed.

Key takeaways

  • Measurement of the rate of cellular amyloid uptake and metabolic production of toxic amyloid species could be used as novel biomarkers for early and/or differential diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD).
  • Estimated beta-amyloid (Aβ42) cellular uptake can be more than two times greater in AD patients compared to cognitively normal subjects. A less pronounced yet increased uptake rate was also observed in patients with late-onset mild cognitive impairment (MCI). This increased uptake may prove to be a key mechanism defining age-related AD progression.
  • The increased cellular amyloid uptake in AD and LMCI may lead to quicker disease progression, but early-onset MCI may result from increased production of toxic amyloid metabolites.

Why this matters

  • Additional biomarkers for AD could greatly aid diagnosis and course prediction, as they are currently limited to PET scan analysis of amyloid plaque deposits and concentration of Aβ42 in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
  • Amyloid deposits found by PET have a positive correlation with AD diagnosis. In contrast, CSF-Aβ42 and AD diagnosis or cognitive decline are negatively correlated. Normal cognition (NC) is associated with higher CSF beta-amyloid levels, but previous research has not explained why CSF-Aβ42 levels can be equivalent in patients with NC but high amyloid load and patients with AD and low amyloid load.

Study design

  • The authors of this retrospective study used anonymized data obtained from the Alzheimer’s’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). ADNI’s goal has been to test whether serial MRI scans, PET scans, biomarkers, and clinical/neuropsychological assessment can be combined to measure the progression of MCI and AD.
  • Study subjects had either an AD diagnosis or NC and were divided into two groups: low amyloid load and high amyloid load. The fraction of patients with an AD diagnosis was calculated as a function of CSF-Aβ42.
  • Calculations and statistical comparisons were performed using Microsoft Excel and custom-written C++ programs.

Key results

  • The lowest levels of CSF-Aβ42 correlated with the highest percentage of AD-diagnosed patients, estimated to be 27% in subjects with low amyloid deposit density and 65% in those with high deposit density.
  • The relationship between CSF-Aβ42 levels and amyloid load can be described using a simple mathematical model: Amyloid concentration in the interstitial cells is equal to the synthesis rate divided by the density of amyloid deposits plus the sum of the rate of amyloid removal through the CSF and the cellular amyloid uptake rate.
  • AD and late-onset MCI patients had a significantly higher amyloid removal rate compared to NC subjects.
  • Early-onset MCI patients had Aβ42 turnover similar to that of NC subjects, pointing to a different underlying mechanism such as enzymatic disbalance.

Limitations

  • The model used to explain amyloid exchange between the interstitial space and the CSF is oversimplified; the actual process is more complex.
  • Synthesis and uptake rates of Aβ42 vary throughout areas of the brain. The model assumes a homogeneous distribution within the interstitial compartment.

Study disclosures

  • Research reported in this publication was not supported by any external funding. Data collection and sharing for this project were funded by ADNI.

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

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Can supercomputers really keep up with the human brain?

Article Type
Changed

An adult brain contains about 86 billion neurons and even more supercomputing power to closely monitor the entire human brain.

All those neurons have trillions of synapses – or connection points – that make up the circuitry the brain uses to control everything we do from reasoning to breathing to walking. And scientists with the Human Brain Project are trying to build new computing tools that can zoom in on every one of these synapses, peer inside cells, and zoom out to focus on entire regions of the brain at once.

Imaging the human brain at the cellular level would require several petabytes of data, researchers from the Human Brain Project report in Science. If you have an old smartphone or tablet with 32GB of storage, you’d need more than 31,000 of them to get a single petabyte of storage.

Using an electron microscope to image the entire brain would require more than one exabyte of data, the scientists point out. That’s more than a million petabytes.

Giacomo Indiveri, PhD, professor of neuroinformatics at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, says we need to fundamentally change the way we build computers. Delivering the keynote address at the Human Brain Project Summit in October, he warned we will use 20% of all the world’s electricity on computing by the year 2025.

To meet the computing challenges posed by the quest to map every bit of the human brain, researchers are working to produce the first two exascale supercomputers within the next 5 years. When they’re done, these machines will provide brain scientists with supercomputers powerful enough to explore the human brain in all its complexities.

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

Publications
Topics
Sections

An adult brain contains about 86 billion neurons and even more supercomputing power to closely monitor the entire human brain.

All those neurons have trillions of synapses – or connection points – that make up the circuitry the brain uses to control everything we do from reasoning to breathing to walking. And scientists with the Human Brain Project are trying to build new computing tools that can zoom in on every one of these synapses, peer inside cells, and zoom out to focus on entire regions of the brain at once.

Imaging the human brain at the cellular level would require several petabytes of data, researchers from the Human Brain Project report in Science. If you have an old smartphone or tablet with 32GB of storage, you’d need more than 31,000 of them to get a single petabyte of storage.

Using an electron microscope to image the entire brain would require more than one exabyte of data, the scientists point out. That’s more than a million petabytes.

Giacomo Indiveri, PhD, professor of neuroinformatics at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, says we need to fundamentally change the way we build computers. Delivering the keynote address at the Human Brain Project Summit in October, he warned we will use 20% of all the world’s electricity on computing by the year 2025.

To meet the computing challenges posed by the quest to map every bit of the human brain, researchers are working to produce the first two exascale supercomputers within the next 5 years. When they’re done, these machines will provide brain scientists with supercomputers powerful enough to explore the human brain in all its complexities.

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

An adult brain contains about 86 billion neurons and even more supercomputing power to closely monitor the entire human brain.

All those neurons have trillions of synapses – or connection points – that make up the circuitry the brain uses to control everything we do from reasoning to breathing to walking. And scientists with the Human Brain Project are trying to build new computing tools that can zoom in on every one of these synapses, peer inside cells, and zoom out to focus on entire regions of the brain at once.

Imaging the human brain at the cellular level would require several petabytes of data, researchers from the Human Brain Project report in Science. If you have an old smartphone or tablet with 32GB of storage, you’d need more than 31,000 of them to get a single petabyte of storage.

Using an electron microscope to image the entire brain would require more than one exabyte of data, the scientists point out. That’s more than a million petabytes.

Giacomo Indiveri, PhD, professor of neuroinformatics at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, says we need to fundamentally change the way we build computers. Delivering the keynote address at the Human Brain Project Summit in October, he warned we will use 20% of all the world’s electricity on computing by the year 2025.

To meet the computing challenges posed by the quest to map every bit of the human brain, researchers are working to produce the first two exascale supercomputers within the next 5 years. When they’re done, these machines will provide brain scientists with supercomputers powerful enough to explore the human brain in all its complexities.

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

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM SCIENCE

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Epstein-Barr virus a likely leading cause of multiple sclerosis

Article Type
Changed

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is the likely cause of multiple sclerosis (MS), new research confirms. Investigators found the risk of MS increased 32-fold following EBV infection.

This study is the first to provide compelling evidence of a causal link between EBV and MS, principal investigator Alberto Ascherio, MD, DrPH, professor of epidemiology, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, and professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, told this news organization.

The “prevailing” view has been that MS is “an autoimmune disease of unknown etiology,” said Dr. Ascherio. “Now we know MS is a complication of a viral infection.” With this knowledge, he added, “we can redirect research” to find antiviral drugs to treat the disease.

The study was published online Jan. 13 in Science.
 

Unique dataset

A chronic disease of the central nervous system, MS involves an inflammatory attack on the myelin sheath and the axons it insulates. The disease affects 2.8 million people worldwide.

EBV is a human herpesvirus that can cause infectious mononucleosis. After infection, it persists in latent form in B-lymphocytes.

EBV is common and infects about 95% of adults. Most individuals are already infected with the virus by age 18 or 20 years, making it difficult to study uninfected populations, said Dr. Ascherio.

However, access to a “huge” database of more than 10 million active-duty U.S. service personnel made this possible, he said.

Service members are screened for HIV at the start of their service care and biennially thereafter. The investigators used stored blood samples to determine the relation between EBV infection and MS over a 20-year period from 1993 to 2013.

Researchers examined 801 MS case patients and 1,566 matched controls without MS. Most individuals were under 20 at the time of their first blood collection. Symptom onset for those who developed MS was a median of 10 years after the first sample was obtained.

Only one of the 801 MS case patients had no serologic evidence of EBV. This individual may have been infected with the virus after the last blood collection, failed to seroconvert in response to infection, or was misdiagnosed, the investigators note.

The hazard ratio for MS between EBV seroconversion versus persistent EBV seronegative was 32.4 (95% CI, 4.3-245.3; P < .001).
 

An MS vaccine?

MS risk was not increased after infection with cytomegalovirus, a herpesvirus that is transmitted through saliva, as is EBV.

Researchers measured serum concentrations of neurofilament light chain (sNflL), a biomarker of neuroaxonal degeneration, in samples from EBV-negative individuals at baseline. There were no signs of neuroaxonal degeneration before EBV seroconversion in subjects who later developed MS.

This indicates that “EBV infection preceded not only symptom onset but also the time of the first detectable pathological mechanisms underlying MS,” the investigators note.

The very magnitude of increased MS risk of MS observed EBV almost completely rules out confounding by known risk factors. Smoking and vitamin D deficiency double the risk, and genetic predisposition and childhood obesity also only raise the risks of MS to a “moderate” degree, said Dr. Ascherio.

It’s not clear why only some people infected with EBV go on to develop MS, he said.

The idea that reverse causation – that immune dysregulation during the preclinical phase of MS increases susceptibility to EBV infection – is unlikely, the investigators note. For instance, EBV seroconversion occurs before elevation of sNfL levels, an early marker of preclinical MS.

Since most MS cases appear to be caused by EBV, a suitable vaccine might thwart the disease. “A vaccine could, in theory, prevent infection and prevent MS,” said Dr. Ascherio, adding that there’s ongoing work to develop such a vaccine.

Another approach is to target the virus driving MS disease progression. Developing appropriate antivirals might treat and even cure MS, said Dr. Ascherio.
 

 

 

‘Compelling data’

In an accompanying commentary, William H. Robinson, MD, PhD, professor, Division of Immunology and Rheumatology, department of medicine, Stanford (Calif.) University, and a colleague said the study findings “provide compelling data that implicate EBV as the trigger for the development of MS.”

The mechanism or mechanisms by which EBV leads to MS “remain elusive,” the commentary authors write.

“Possibilities include molecular mimicry, through which EBV viral protein sequences mimic human myelin proteins and other CNS proteins and thereby induce autoimmunity against myelin and CNS antigens,” they note.

As other factors, including genetic susceptibility, are important to MS, EBV infection is likely necessary but not sufficient to trigger MS, said the commentary. “Infection with EBV is the initial pathogenic step in MS, but additional fuses must be ignited for the full pathophysiology.”

The commentary authors query whether there may be “new opportunities” for therapy with vaccines or antivirals. “Now that the initial trigger for MS has been identified, perhaps MS could be eradicated.”

In a statement from the Science Media Center, an independent venture promoting views from the scientific community, two other experts offered their take on the study.

Paul Farrell, PhD, professor of tumor virology, Imperial College London, said the paper “provides very clear confirmation of a causal role for EBV in most cases of MS.”

While there’s evidence that a vaccine can prevent the EBV disease infectious mononucleosis, no vaccine candidate has yet prevented the virus from infecting and establishing long-term persistence in people, noted Dr. Farrell.

“So, at this stage it is not clear whether a vaccine of the types currently being developed would be able to prevent the long-term effects of EBV in MS,” he said.

Daniel Davis, PhD, professor of immunology, University of Manchester, United Kingdom, commented that the value of this new discovery is not an immediate medical cure or treatment but is “a major step forward” in understanding MS.

The study “sets up new research working out the precise details of how this virus can sometimes lead to an autoimmune disease,” said Dr. Davis. “There is no shortage of ideas in how this might happen in principle and hopefully the correct details will emerge soon.”

The study received funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the German Research Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Dr. Ascherio reports no relevant financial relaitonships. Dr. Robinson is a coinventor on a patent application filed by Stanford University that includes antibodies to EBV. Dr. Farrell reports serving on an ad hoc review panel for GSK on EBV vaccines in 2019 as a one off. He has a current grant from MRC on EBV biology, including some EBV sequence variation, but the grant is not about MS. Dr. Davis reports no relevant financial relationships.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews- 30(2)
Publications
Topics
Sections

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is the likely cause of multiple sclerosis (MS), new research confirms. Investigators found the risk of MS increased 32-fold following EBV infection.

This study is the first to provide compelling evidence of a causal link between EBV and MS, principal investigator Alberto Ascherio, MD, DrPH, professor of epidemiology, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, and professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, told this news organization.

The “prevailing” view has been that MS is “an autoimmune disease of unknown etiology,” said Dr. Ascherio. “Now we know MS is a complication of a viral infection.” With this knowledge, he added, “we can redirect research” to find antiviral drugs to treat the disease.

The study was published online Jan. 13 in Science.
 

Unique dataset

A chronic disease of the central nervous system, MS involves an inflammatory attack on the myelin sheath and the axons it insulates. The disease affects 2.8 million people worldwide.

EBV is a human herpesvirus that can cause infectious mononucleosis. After infection, it persists in latent form in B-lymphocytes.

EBV is common and infects about 95% of adults. Most individuals are already infected with the virus by age 18 or 20 years, making it difficult to study uninfected populations, said Dr. Ascherio.

However, access to a “huge” database of more than 10 million active-duty U.S. service personnel made this possible, he said.

Service members are screened for HIV at the start of their service care and biennially thereafter. The investigators used stored blood samples to determine the relation between EBV infection and MS over a 20-year period from 1993 to 2013.

Researchers examined 801 MS case patients and 1,566 matched controls without MS. Most individuals were under 20 at the time of their first blood collection. Symptom onset for those who developed MS was a median of 10 years after the first sample was obtained.

Only one of the 801 MS case patients had no serologic evidence of EBV. This individual may have been infected with the virus after the last blood collection, failed to seroconvert in response to infection, or was misdiagnosed, the investigators note.

The hazard ratio for MS between EBV seroconversion versus persistent EBV seronegative was 32.4 (95% CI, 4.3-245.3; P < .001).
 

An MS vaccine?

MS risk was not increased after infection with cytomegalovirus, a herpesvirus that is transmitted through saliva, as is EBV.

Researchers measured serum concentrations of neurofilament light chain (sNflL), a biomarker of neuroaxonal degeneration, in samples from EBV-negative individuals at baseline. There were no signs of neuroaxonal degeneration before EBV seroconversion in subjects who later developed MS.

This indicates that “EBV infection preceded not only symptom onset but also the time of the first detectable pathological mechanisms underlying MS,” the investigators note.

The very magnitude of increased MS risk of MS observed EBV almost completely rules out confounding by known risk factors. Smoking and vitamin D deficiency double the risk, and genetic predisposition and childhood obesity also only raise the risks of MS to a “moderate” degree, said Dr. Ascherio.

It’s not clear why only some people infected with EBV go on to develop MS, he said.

The idea that reverse causation – that immune dysregulation during the preclinical phase of MS increases susceptibility to EBV infection – is unlikely, the investigators note. For instance, EBV seroconversion occurs before elevation of sNfL levels, an early marker of preclinical MS.

Since most MS cases appear to be caused by EBV, a suitable vaccine might thwart the disease. “A vaccine could, in theory, prevent infection and prevent MS,” said Dr. Ascherio, adding that there’s ongoing work to develop such a vaccine.

Another approach is to target the virus driving MS disease progression. Developing appropriate antivirals might treat and even cure MS, said Dr. Ascherio.
 

 

 

‘Compelling data’

In an accompanying commentary, William H. Robinson, MD, PhD, professor, Division of Immunology and Rheumatology, department of medicine, Stanford (Calif.) University, and a colleague said the study findings “provide compelling data that implicate EBV as the trigger for the development of MS.”

The mechanism or mechanisms by which EBV leads to MS “remain elusive,” the commentary authors write.

“Possibilities include molecular mimicry, through which EBV viral protein sequences mimic human myelin proteins and other CNS proteins and thereby induce autoimmunity against myelin and CNS antigens,” they note.

As other factors, including genetic susceptibility, are important to MS, EBV infection is likely necessary but not sufficient to trigger MS, said the commentary. “Infection with EBV is the initial pathogenic step in MS, but additional fuses must be ignited for the full pathophysiology.”

The commentary authors query whether there may be “new opportunities” for therapy with vaccines or antivirals. “Now that the initial trigger for MS has been identified, perhaps MS could be eradicated.”

In a statement from the Science Media Center, an independent venture promoting views from the scientific community, two other experts offered their take on the study.

Paul Farrell, PhD, professor of tumor virology, Imperial College London, said the paper “provides very clear confirmation of a causal role for EBV in most cases of MS.”

While there’s evidence that a vaccine can prevent the EBV disease infectious mononucleosis, no vaccine candidate has yet prevented the virus from infecting and establishing long-term persistence in people, noted Dr. Farrell.

“So, at this stage it is not clear whether a vaccine of the types currently being developed would be able to prevent the long-term effects of EBV in MS,” he said.

Daniel Davis, PhD, professor of immunology, University of Manchester, United Kingdom, commented that the value of this new discovery is not an immediate medical cure or treatment but is “a major step forward” in understanding MS.

The study “sets up new research working out the precise details of how this virus can sometimes lead to an autoimmune disease,” said Dr. Davis. “There is no shortage of ideas in how this might happen in principle and hopefully the correct details will emerge soon.”

The study received funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the German Research Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Dr. Ascherio reports no relevant financial relaitonships. Dr. Robinson is a coinventor on a patent application filed by Stanford University that includes antibodies to EBV. Dr. Farrell reports serving on an ad hoc review panel for GSK on EBV vaccines in 2019 as a one off. He has a current grant from MRC on EBV biology, including some EBV sequence variation, but the grant is not about MS. Dr. Davis reports no relevant financial relationships.

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

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is the likely cause of multiple sclerosis (MS), new research confirms. Investigators found the risk of MS increased 32-fold following EBV infection.

This study is the first to provide compelling evidence of a causal link between EBV and MS, principal investigator Alberto Ascherio, MD, DrPH, professor of epidemiology, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, and professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, told this news organization.

The “prevailing” view has been that MS is “an autoimmune disease of unknown etiology,” said Dr. Ascherio. “Now we know MS is a complication of a viral infection.” With this knowledge, he added, “we can redirect research” to find antiviral drugs to treat the disease.

The study was published online Jan. 13 in Science.
 

Unique dataset

A chronic disease of the central nervous system, MS involves an inflammatory attack on the myelin sheath and the axons it insulates. The disease affects 2.8 million people worldwide.

EBV is a human herpesvirus that can cause infectious mononucleosis. After infection, it persists in latent form in B-lymphocytes.

EBV is common and infects about 95% of adults. Most individuals are already infected with the virus by age 18 or 20 years, making it difficult to study uninfected populations, said Dr. Ascherio.

However, access to a “huge” database of more than 10 million active-duty U.S. service personnel made this possible, he said.

Service members are screened for HIV at the start of their service care and biennially thereafter. The investigators used stored blood samples to determine the relation between EBV infection and MS over a 20-year period from 1993 to 2013.

Researchers examined 801 MS case patients and 1,566 matched controls without MS. Most individuals were under 20 at the time of their first blood collection. Symptom onset for those who developed MS was a median of 10 years after the first sample was obtained.

Only one of the 801 MS case patients had no serologic evidence of EBV. This individual may have been infected with the virus after the last blood collection, failed to seroconvert in response to infection, or was misdiagnosed, the investigators note.

The hazard ratio for MS between EBV seroconversion versus persistent EBV seronegative was 32.4 (95% CI, 4.3-245.3; P < .001).
 

An MS vaccine?

MS risk was not increased after infection with cytomegalovirus, a herpesvirus that is transmitted through saliva, as is EBV.

Researchers measured serum concentrations of neurofilament light chain (sNflL), a biomarker of neuroaxonal degeneration, in samples from EBV-negative individuals at baseline. There were no signs of neuroaxonal degeneration before EBV seroconversion in subjects who later developed MS.

This indicates that “EBV infection preceded not only symptom onset but also the time of the first detectable pathological mechanisms underlying MS,” the investigators note.

The very magnitude of increased MS risk of MS observed EBV almost completely rules out confounding by known risk factors. Smoking and vitamin D deficiency double the risk, and genetic predisposition and childhood obesity also only raise the risks of MS to a “moderate” degree, said Dr. Ascherio.

It’s not clear why only some people infected with EBV go on to develop MS, he said.

The idea that reverse causation – that immune dysregulation during the preclinical phase of MS increases susceptibility to EBV infection – is unlikely, the investigators note. For instance, EBV seroconversion occurs before elevation of sNfL levels, an early marker of preclinical MS.

Since most MS cases appear to be caused by EBV, a suitable vaccine might thwart the disease. “A vaccine could, in theory, prevent infection and prevent MS,” said Dr. Ascherio, adding that there’s ongoing work to develop such a vaccine.

Another approach is to target the virus driving MS disease progression. Developing appropriate antivirals might treat and even cure MS, said Dr. Ascherio.
 

 

 

‘Compelling data’

In an accompanying commentary, William H. Robinson, MD, PhD, professor, Division of Immunology and Rheumatology, department of medicine, Stanford (Calif.) University, and a colleague said the study findings “provide compelling data that implicate EBV as the trigger for the development of MS.”

The mechanism or mechanisms by which EBV leads to MS “remain elusive,” the commentary authors write.

“Possibilities include molecular mimicry, through which EBV viral protein sequences mimic human myelin proteins and other CNS proteins and thereby induce autoimmunity against myelin and CNS antigens,” they note.

As other factors, including genetic susceptibility, are important to MS, EBV infection is likely necessary but not sufficient to trigger MS, said the commentary. “Infection with EBV is the initial pathogenic step in MS, but additional fuses must be ignited for the full pathophysiology.”

The commentary authors query whether there may be “new opportunities” for therapy with vaccines or antivirals. “Now that the initial trigger for MS has been identified, perhaps MS could be eradicated.”

In a statement from the Science Media Center, an independent venture promoting views from the scientific community, two other experts offered their take on the study.

Paul Farrell, PhD, professor of tumor virology, Imperial College London, said the paper “provides very clear confirmation of a causal role for EBV in most cases of MS.”

While there’s evidence that a vaccine can prevent the EBV disease infectious mononucleosis, no vaccine candidate has yet prevented the virus from infecting and establishing long-term persistence in people, noted Dr. Farrell.

“So, at this stage it is not clear whether a vaccine of the types currently being developed would be able to prevent the long-term effects of EBV in MS,” he said.

Daniel Davis, PhD, professor of immunology, University of Manchester, United Kingdom, commented that the value of this new discovery is not an immediate medical cure or treatment but is “a major step forward” in understanding MS.

The study “sets up new research working out the precise details of how this virus can sometimes lead to an autoimmune disease,” said Dr. Davis. “There is no shortage of ideas in how this might happen in principle and hopefully the correct details will emerge soon.”

The study received funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the German Research Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Dr. Ascherio reports no relevant financial relaitonships. Dr. Robinson is a coinventor on a patent application filed by Stanford University that includes antibodies to EBV. Dr. Farrell reports serving on an ad hoc review panel for GSK on EBV vaccines in 2019 as a one off. He has a current grant from MRC on EBV biology, including some EBV sequence variation, but the grant is not about MS. Dr. Davis reports no relevant financial relationships.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews- 30(2)
Issue
Neurology Reviews- 30(2)
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM SCIENCE

Citation Override
Publish date: January 14, 2022
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Medicare intends to limit payment for controversial Alzheimer’s drug

Article Type
Changed

Medicare intends to limit coverage of the controversial Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab (Aduhelm, Biogen) via a special program intended to help assess how well this exorbitantly expensive medication works, federal officials announced Jan. 11.

On Dec. 20, 2021, Biogen announced a plan to reduce the annual U.S. cost of the drug by 50% – from $56,000 to $28,200 – as Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services officials were deciding on Medicare’s coverage policy for the medication.

In making its proposed coverage decision, the CMS announced it will pay for aducanumab, a monoclonal antibody, under its coverage-with-evidence-development (CED) mechanism. In making its decision, the CMS approached aducanumab as the first of a potential new class of monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. Food and Drug Administration–approved drugs in this class would be covered for those with Medicare only if they are enrolled in qualifying clinical trials, the CMS said. The agency will accept public comments on this decision for 30 days.  

In a statement, CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said the agency is “committed to providing the American public with a clear, trusted, evidence-based decision that is made only after a thorough analysis of public feedback on the benefits and risks of coverage for Medicare patients.”

As previously reported, the FDA approved aducanumab on June 7, 2021, via an accelerated approval process. The approval, which set off a firestorm of controversy that included resignations of three FDA Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee panel members, was granted based on the medication’s ability to reduce beta-amyloid plaque.

Under the accelerated approval mechanism, Biogen still must deliver solid scientific proof that aducanumab has clinically significant disease-modifying effects. However, the final evidence won’t be in any time soon. In its approval letter, the FDA set a 2030 deadline for a final report on this research.

 

‘Unusual but appropriate’ step

The Medicare decision marks something of a shift in the agency’s approach to paying for medications. On a call with reporters, Tamara Syrek Jensen, JD, director of CMS’ Coverage and Analysis Group, admitted that the agency had taken an “unusual but appropriate” step in trying to set a national policy regarding payment for a drug.

On the same call, Lee Fleisher, MD, CMS’ chief medical officer, addressed the challenges presented by aducanumab, given the serious need for treatments for Alzheimer’s disease. “As a practicing physician, I cannot overemphasize the need to understand the risks and benefits of a given treatment in order to better inform patients and their families,” Dr. Fleisher said. “We do know based on some of the evidence that there may be potential promise with this treatment. That’s why it is critical for us to pursue additional scientific evidence.”

The coverage-with-evidence program will allow Medicare to aid in gathering data, while protecting patients, Dr. Fleisher noted.

“CMS is using its authority provided by Congress to determine if the drug is considered reasonable and necessary, meaning that the benefits of improvement of cognition outweigh the harms in the Medicare population,” Dr. Fleisher said.
 

Biogen disappointed

Cambridge, Mass.–based Biogen urged the CMS to reconsider its approach to payment for aducanumab. In a statement, the company said Medicare should cover “the class of amyloid-directed therapies with the populations studied in the respective clinical trials and guided by expert recommendations for appropriate use.

“We believe Alzheimer’s patients should have access consistent with other therapies with FDA accelerated approval,” Biogen said in the release.

In the company’s view, the CED approach will “significantly limit patient access to an FDA-approved treatment, especially for underserved patients as evidenced in other CED determinations.

“CEDs can take months to years to initiate, and hundreds of Alzheimer’s patients – the majority of whom are Medicare beneficiaries – are progressing each day from mild to moderate disease stages, where treatment may no longer be an option,” Biogen said.

Drug makers had been worried about CMS opting for CED even before the draft decision was unveiled.
 

Others weigh in

BIO, the trade group for biotechnology companies, urged the CMS to provide access to aducanumab without excess restrictions.

There already are concerns among drug makers about CMS efforts “to impose new coverage barriers – and, in particular, coverage with evidence development,” Crystal Kuntz, vice president of policy and research at BIO, and Andy Cosgrove, the organization’s senior director for policy and research, noted in a July 2021 comment about the aducanumab review.

Medicare should instead continue to provide access to medicines for indications that the FDA has approved, with additional flexibility for off-label indications of cancer drugs, they noted. “We believe this should continue to be the case, to ensure that vulnerable Medicare beneficiaries have necessary access to life-altering and lifesaving medications,” the BIO officials wrote.

However, the CMS also received many pleas from physicians asking the agency to limit use of aducanumab at least until there is evidence that it produces a significant clinical benefit.

In a press release, Howard Fillit, MD, cofounder and chief science officer of the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, applauded the decision, describing it as “the right call.

“This decision supports conducting additional clinical trials, which are needed to obtain further insights into the clinical efficacy and safety profile of this drug in real-world populations. This decision has implications for other drugs in this class in late-stage development. If these trials show more clear and robust clinical efficacy, then it is possible the FDA will give these amyloid monoclonal antibodies full approval, and Medicare would be likely to provide full payment,” he added.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews- 30(2)
Publications
Topics
Sections

Medicare intends to limit coverage of the controversial Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab (Aduhelm, Biogen) via a special program intended to help assess how well this exorbitantly expensive medication works, federal officials announced Jan. 11.

On Dec. 20, 2021, Biogen announced a plan to reduce the annual U.S. cost of the drug by 50% – from $56,000 to $28,200 – as Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services officials were deciding on Medicare’s coverage policy for the medication.

In making its proposed coverage decision, the CMS announced it will pay for aducanumab, a monoclonal antibody, under its coverage-with-evidence-development (CED) mechanism. In making its decision, the CMS approached aducanumab as the first of a potential new class of monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. Food and Drug Administration–approved drugs in this class would be covered for those with Medicare only if they are enrolled in qualifying clinical trials, the CMS said. The agency will accept public comments on this decision for 30 days.  

In a statement, CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said the agency is “committed to providing the American public with a clear, trusted, evidence-based decision that is made only after a thorough analysis of public feedback on the benefits and risks of coverage for Medicare patients.”

As previously reported, the FDA approved aducanumab on June 7, 2021, via an accelerated approval process. The approval, which set off a firestorm of controversy that included resignations of three FDA Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee panel members, was granted based on the medication’s ability to reduce beta-amyloid plaque.

Under the accelerated approval mechanism, Biogen still must deliver solid scientific proof that aducanumab has clinically significant disease-modifying effects. However, the final evidence won’t be in any time soon. In its approval letter, the FDA set a 2030 deadline for a final report on this research.

 

‘Unusual but appropriate’ step

The Medicare decision marks something of a shift in the agency’s approach to paying for medications. On a call with reporters, Tamara Syrek Jensen, JD, director of CMS’ Coverage and Analysis Group, admitted that the agency had taken an “unusual but appropriate” step in trying to set a national policy regarding payment for a drug.

On the same call, Lee Fleisher, MD, CMS’ chief medical officer, addressed the challenges presented by aducanumab, given the serious need for treatments for Alzheimer’s disease. “As a practicing physician, I cannot overemphasize the need to understand the risks and benefits of a given treatment in order to better inform patients and their families,” Dr. Fleisher said. “We do know based on some of the evidence that there may be potential promise with this treatment. That’s why it is critical for us to pursue additional scientific evidence.”

The coverage-with-evidence program will allow Medicare to aid in gathering data, while protecting patients, Dr. Fleisher noted.

“CMS is using its authority provided by Congress to determine if the drug is considered reasonable and necessary, meaning that the benefits of improvement of cognition outweigh the harms in the Medicare population,” Dr. Fleisher said.
 

Biogen disappointed

Cambridge, Mass.–based Biogen urged the CMS to reconsider its approach to payment for aducanumab. In a statement, the company said Medicare should cover “the class of amyloid-directed therapies with the populations studied in the respective clinical trials and guided by expert recommendations for appropriate use.

“We believe Alzheimer’s patients should have access consistent with other therapies with FDA accelerated approval,” Biogen said in the release.

In the company’s view, the CED approach will “significantly limit patient access to an FDA-approved treatment, especially for underserved patients as evidenced in other CED determinations.

“CEDs can take months to years to initiate, and hundreds of Alzheimer’s patients – the majority of whom are Medicare beneficiaries – are progressing each day from mild to moderate disease stages, where treatment may no longer be an option,” Biogen said.

Drug makers had been worried about CMS opting for CED even before the draft decision was unveiled.
 

Others weigh in

BIO, the trade group for biotechnology companies, urged the CMS to provide access to aducanumab without excess restrictions.

There already are concerns among drug makers about CMS efforts “to impose new coverage barriers – and, in particular, coverage with evidence development,” Crystal Kuntz, vice president of policy and research at BIO, and Andy Cosgrove, the organization’s senior director for policy and research, noted in a July 2021 comment about the aducanumab review.

Medicare should instead continue to provide access to medicines for indications that the FDA has approved, with additional flexibility for off-label indications of cancer drugs, they noted. “We believe this should continue to be the case, to ensure that vulnerable Medicare beneficiaries have necessary access to life-altering and lifesaving medications,” the BIO officials wrote.

However, the CMS also received many pleas from physicians asking the agency to limit use of aducanumab at least until there is evidence that it produces a significant clinical benefit.

In a press release, Howard Fillit, MD, cofounder and chief science officer of the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, applauded the decision, describing it as “the right call.

“This decision supports conducting additional clinical trials, which are needed to obtain further insights into the clinical efficacy and safety profile of this drug in real-world populations. This decision has implications for other drugs in this class in late-stage development. If these trials show more clear and robust clinical efficacy, then it is possible the FDA will give these amyloid monoclonal antibodies full approval, and Medicare would be likely to provide full payment,” he added.

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

Medicare intends to limit coverage of the controversial Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab (Aduhelm, Biogen) via a special program intended to help assess how well this exorbitantly expensive medication works, federal officials announced Jan. 11.

On Dec. 20, 2021, Biogen announced a plan to reduce the annual U.S. cost of the drug by 50% – from $56,000 to $28,200 – as Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services officials were deciding on Medicare’s coverage policy for the medication.

In making its proposed coverage decision, the CMS announced it will pay for aducanumab, a monoclonal antibody, under its coverage-with-evidence-development (CED) mechanism. In making its decision, the CMS approached aducanumab as the first of a potential new class of monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. Food and Drug Administration–approved drugs in this class would be covered for those with Medicare only if they are enrolled in qualifying clinical trials, the CMS said. The agency will accept public comments on this decision for 30 days.  

In a statement, CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said the agency is “committed to providing the American public with a clear, trusted, evidence-based decision that is made only after a thorough analysis of public feedback on the benefits and risks of coverage for Medicare patients.”

As previously reported, the FDA approved aducanumab on June 7, 2021, via an accelerated approval process. The approval, which set off a firestorm of controversy that included resignations of three FDA Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee panel members, was granted based on the medication’s ability to reduce beta-amyloid plaque.

Under the accelerated approval mechanism, Biogen still must deliver solid scientific proof that aducanumab has clinically significant disease-modifying effects. However, the final evidence won’t be in any time soon. In its approval letter, the FDA set a 2030 deadline for a final report on this research.

 

‘Unusual but appropriate’ step

The Medicare decision marks something of a shift in the agency’s approach to paying for medications. On a call with reporters, Tamara Syrek Jensen, JD, director of CMS’ Coverage and Analysis Group, admitted that the agency had taken an “unusual but appropriate” step in trying to set a national policy regarding payment for a drug.

On the same call, Lee Fleisher, MD, CMS’ chief medical officer, addressed the challenges presented by aducanumab, given the serious need for treatments for Alzheimer’s disease. “As a practicing physician, I cannot overemphasize the need to understand the risks and benefits of a given treatment in order to better inform patients and their families,” Dr. Fleisher said. “We do know based on some of the evidence that there may be potential promise with this treatment. That’s why it is critical for us to pursue additional scientific evidence.”

The coverage-with-evidence program will allow Medicare to aid in gathering data, while protecting patients, Dr. Fleisher noted.

“CMS is using its authority provided by Congress to determine if the drug is considered reasonable and necessary, meaning that the benefits of improvement of cognition outweigh the harms in the Medicare population,” Dr. Fleisher said.
 

Biogen disappointed

Cambridge, Mass.–based Biogen urged the CMS to reconsider its approach to payment for aducanumab. In a statement, the company said Medicare should cover “the class of amyloid-directed therapies with the populations studied in the respective clinical trials and guided by expert recommendations for appropriate use.

“We believe Alzheimer’s patients should have access consistent with other therapies with FDA accelerated approval,” Biogen said in the release.

In the company’s view, the CED approach will “significantly limit patient access to an FDA-approved treatment, especially for underserved patients as evidenced in other CED determinations.

“CEDs can take months to years to initiate, and hundreds of Alzheimer’s patients – the majority of whom are Medicare beneficiaries – are progressing each day from mild to moderate disease stages, where treatment may no longer be an option,” Biogen said.

Drug makers had been worried about CMS opting for CED even before the draft decision was unveiled.
 

Others weigh in

BIO, the trade group for biotechnology companies, urged the CMS to provide access to aducanumab without excess restrictions.

There already are concerns among drug makers about CMS efforts “to impose new coverage barriers – and, in particular, coverage with evidence development,” Crystal Kuntz, vice president of policy and research at BIO, and Andy Cosgrove, the organization’s senior director for policy and research, noted in a July 2021 comment about the aducanumab review.

Medicare should instead continue to provide access to medicines for indications that the FDA has approved, with additional flexibility for off-label indications of cancer drugs, they noted. “We believe this should continue to be the case, to ensure that vulnerable Medicare beneficiaries have necessary access to life-altering and lifesaving medications,” the BIO officials wrote.

However, the CMS also received many pleas from physicians asking the agency to limit use of aducanumab at least until there is evidence that it produces a significant clinical benefit.

In a press release, Howard Fillit, MD, cofounder and chief science officer of the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, applauded the decision, describing it as “the right call.

“This decision supports conducting additional clinical trials, which are needed to obtain further insights into the clinical efficacy and safety profile of this drug in real-world populations. This decision has implications for other drugs in this class in late-stage development. If these trials show more clear and robust clinical efficacy, then it is possible the FDA will give these amyloid monoclonal antibodies full approval, and Medicare would be likely to provide full payment,” he added.

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

Issue
Neurology Reviews- 30(2)
Issue
Neurology Reviews- 30(2)
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Citation Override
Publish date: January 12, 2022
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article

Augmented autism screening pays big dividends

Article Type
Changed

A new, augmented autism-screening strategy boosted the number of boys diagnosed with the condition, especially Spanish speakers, a new study finds. The research was published in JAMA Pediatrics

The number of diagnoses in girls didn’t budge significantly, however, surprising researchers. Still, the findings suggest that “multistage screening and appropriate access to diagnostic services can really move the needle on the early detection of autism and reducing disparities in autism diagnosis and detection,” said lead author R. Christopher Sheldrick, PhD, a Boston University research associate professor of health law, policy, and management, in an interview.

While early intervention is considered crucial, U.S. research suggests that several groups of children – the poor, racial and ethnic minorities, and non-English speakers – are more likely to be diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) later in life. “They have much lower access to appropriate services, both to get kids diagnosed and to get the kinds of interventions that can be helpful for families,” Dr. Sheldrick said. “Our study is about trying to close the gap around diagnosis, the first step.”

For the new study, the researchers implemented an intervention strategy in Massachusetts at three Early Intervention (EI) programs, which provide autism screening to children who are referred by pediatricians or parents. The researchers then tracked the programs, all in Boston, and nine comparison programs from the greater Boston area from 2012 to 2018.

Overall, 33,326 children were assessed, all aged 14-36 months. Those at the intervention programs were chosen because they had high levels of poverty. Children at those programs were more likely to be Black than those at the comparison programs (30.7% vs. 12.2%), to be Spanish speakers (28.9% vs. 12.5%), and to be in the lowest household income bracket (66.9% vs. 54.2%). In both groups, about 64% of the children were male.

The intervention strategy aimed to reduce the reliance on screening tests. Instead, the study authors write, “our protocol emphasizes ASD screening as a process that includes clinician and parent decision-making.”

As Dr. Sheldrick explained, parents and specialists observe children together “and then decide whether it’s worth taking the next step, which is a full diagnostic assessment with a licensed professional.” According to the study, either the parent(s) or the specialists could make the referral for a full, university-based assessment.

The goal was to help specialists use their professional judgment more, he said, and refer children who don’t show signs of ASD via a screening instrument but still spark concern, he said. “We’re really trying to create a system in which the screening tools support professional judgment, but don’t really replace it.”

After weighting, the researchers found that diagnoses of ASD were more common in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (incidence rate ratio, 1.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-2.1, P < .001), accounting for an extra 8.1 diagnoses per 1,000 per quarter. Among Spanish-speaking families only, diagnoses grew even more in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (IRR, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.6-4.3; P < .001), representing 15.4 additional diagnoses per 1,000 children per quarter.

There was also an increase in diagnoses among boys in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (IRR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.4-2.3; P < .001), accounting for 14.8 additional diagnoses per 1,000 children per quarter. However, there was no statistically significant increase in diagnosis among girls (IRR, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.6-1.7; P = .84).

The finding about girls surprised the researchers. “The program was highly effective for boys, but really didn’t have any effect for girls,” Dr. Sheldrick said. “Even though autism is considered to be more common in boys, there are questions about whether it’s underidentified in girls. These data would be consistent with that view. So there’s work to do to be able to recognize how a young girl with autism might present and how you might note that in a sensitive way and then respond appropriately.”

The overall message of the study is “that screening with appropriate supports can make a difference,” he said. However, he acknowledged that the extra cost of the program is unclear. “We did not systematically collect data on cost,” he said, noting that the funding for the study paid for both the intervention and the analysis.

For now, he said, researchers are following the children in the study to see if they were able to access treatment services. Some of the investigators are also taking part in a randomized study to evaluate an intervention in children with social communication disorders, he said.

In an accompanying commentary, three pediatric specialists noted that the study is the first to analyze ASD screening in EI. “This study supports the notion of ASD screening as an iterative, multistep process that optimally involves multiple community stakeholders with varying levels of developmental expertise who have done the work to build trust with families,” write pediatrician Kate E. Wallis, MD, MPH, of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, graduate student Monica M. Abdul-Chani, MA, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and pediatrician Katharine E. Zuckerman, MD, MPH, of Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.

In regard to disparities in diagnosis in Spanish-speaking families, the commentary authors write that “locating a greater proportion of the ASD identification process in EI, which families are already familiar with, has no to low cost for families, and is likely geographically closer for families, can reduce structural barriers to identification.”

They add that the emphasis within Latino families on the “building of warm and caring relationships with others based on mutual trust and respect” can allow EI specialists to “develop relationships with families who may be afraid or skeptical of sharing what could be considered personal details of their family life.”

The commentary authors also note that “it remains all too common for language delays to be attributed to child exposure to two languages, even though data do not support this attribution. Bilingual EI staff can help to demystify this perpetual myth and better estimate a child’s communication and social skills in both languages as they communicate and play.”

The study was funded by grants from the Health Resources Services Administration and the National Institute of Mental Health. Dr. Sheldrick is cocreator of the Parent’s Observations of Social Interaction (POSI), which is one of the two first-stage screeners used in this study. He conducts research related to this instrument but receives no royalties. He reports grants from the National Institutes of Health. Coauthor Alice S. Carter, PhD, is cocreator of the POSI but receives no royalties. She is also cocreator of the Brief Infant Toddler Social Emotional Assessment, which is one of the two first-stage screeners used in this study, and receives royalties on the sale of the instrument. She reports grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Health Resources and Services Administration. Study coauthor Thomas I. Mackie, PhD, MPH, reports grants from the National Institute of Mental Health. Study coauthor Noah Hoch reports grants from the Health Resources Services Administration and the National Institute of Mental Health. No other disclosures from study authors are reported. Dr. Zuckerman reported grants from the National Institutes of Health and National Institute of Mental Health and consulting fees from H2N related to autism. The other commentary authors report no disclosures.

Publications
Topics
Sections

A new, augmented autism-screening strategy boosted the number of boys diagnosed with the condition, especially Spanish speakers, a new study finds. The research was published in JAMA Pediatrics

The number of diagnoses in girls didn’t budge significantly, however, surprising researchers. Still, the findings suggest that “multistage screening and appropriate access to diagnostic services can really move the needle on the early detection of autism and reducing disparities in autism diagnosis and detection,” said lead author R. Christopher Sheldrick, PhD, a Boston University research associate professor of health law, policy, and management, in an interview.

While early intervention is considered crucial, U.S. research suggests that several groups of children – the poor, racial and ethnic minorities, and non-English speakers – are more likely to be diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) later in life. “They have much lower access to appropriate services, both to get kids diagnosed and to get the kinds of interventions that can be helpful for families,” Dr. Sheldrick said. “Our study is about trying to close the gap around diagnosis, the first step.”

For the new study, the researchers implemented an intervention strategy in Massachusetts at three Early Intervention (EI) programs, which provide autism screening to children who are referred by pediatricians or parents. The researchers then tracked the programs, all in Boston, and nine comparison programs from the greater Boston area from 2012 to 2018.

Overall, 33,326 children were assessed, all aged 14-36 months. Those at the intervention programs were chosen because they had high levels of poverty. Children at those programs were more likely to be Black than those at the comparison programs (30.7% vs. 12.2%), to be Spanish speakers (28.9% vs. 12.5%), and to be in the lowest household income bracket (66.9% vs. 54.2%). In both groups, about 64% of the children were male.

The intervention strategy aimed to reduce the reliance on screening tests. Instead, the study authors write, “our protocol emphasizes ASD screening as a process that includes clinician and parent decision-making.”

As Dr. Sheldrick explained, parents and specialists observe children together “and then decide whether it’s worth taking the next step, which is a full diagnostic assessment with a licensed professional.” According to the study, either the parent(s) or the specialists could make the referral for a full, university-based assessment.

The goal was to help specialists use their professional judgment more, he said, and refer children who don’t show signs of ASD via a screening instrument but still spark concern, he said. “We’re really trying to create a system in which the screening tools support professional judgment, but don’t really replace it.”

After weighting, the researchers found that diagnoses of ASD were more common in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (incidence rate ratio, 1.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-2.1, P < .001), accounting for an extra 8.1 diagnoses per 1,000 per quarter. Among Spanish-speaking families only, diagnoses grew even more in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (IRR, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.6-4.3; P < .001), representing 15.4 additional diagnoses per 1,000 children per quarter.

There was also an increase in diagnoses among boys in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (IRR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.4-2.3; P < .001), accounting for 14.8 additional diagnoses per 1,000 children per quarter. However, there was no statistically significant increase in diagnosis among girls (IRR, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.6-1.7; P = .84).

The finding about girls surprised the researchers. “The program was highly effective for boys, but really didn’t have any effect for girls,” Dr. Sheldrick said. “Even though autism is considered to be more common in boys, there are questions about whether it’s underidentified in girls. These data would be consistent with that view. So there’s work to do to be able to recognize how a young girl with autism might present and how you might note that in a sensitive way and then respond appropriately.”

The overall message of the study is “that screening with appropriate supports can make a difference,” he said. However, he acknowledged that the extra cost of the program is unclear. “We did not systematically collect data on cost,” he said, noting that the funding for the study paid for both the intervention and the analysis.

For now, he said, researchers are following the children in the study to see if they were able to access treatment services. Some of the investigators are also taking part in a randomized study to evaluate an intervention in children with social communication disorders, he said.

In an accompanying commentary, three pediatric specialists noted that the study is the first to analyze ASD screening in EI. “This study supports the notion of ASD screening as an iterative, multistep process that optimally involves multiple community stakeholders with varying levels of developmental expertise who have done the work to build trust with families,” write pediatrician Kate E. Wallis, MD, MPH, of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, graduate student Monica M. Abdul-Chani, MA, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and pediatrician Katharine E. Zuckerman, MD, MPH, of Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.

In regard to disparities in diagnosis in Spanish-speaking families, the commentary authors write that “locating a greater proportion of the ASD identification process in EI, which families are already familiar with, has no to low cost for families, and is likely geographically closer for families, can reduce structural barriers to identification.”

They add that the emphasis within Latino families on the “building of warm and caring relationships with others based on mutual trust and respect” can allow EI specialists to “develop relationships with families who may be afraid or skeptical of sharing what could be considered personal details of their family life.”

The commentary authors also note that “it remains all too common for language delays to be attributed to child exposure to two languages, even though data do not support this attribution. Bilingual EI staff can help to demystify this perpetual myth and better estimate a child’s communication and social skills in both languages as they communicate and play.”

The study was funded by grants from the Health Resources Services Administration and the National Institute of Mental Health. Dr. Sheldrick is cocreator of the Parent’s Observations of Social Interaction (POSI), which is one of the two first-stage screeners used in this study. He conducts research related to this instrument but receives no royalties. He reports grants from the National Institutes of Health. Coauthor Alice S. Carter, PhD, is cocreator of the POSI but receives no royalties. She is also cocreator of the Brief Infant Toddler Social Emotional Assessment, which is one of the two first-stage screeners used in this study, and receives royalties on the sale of the instrument. She reports grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Health Resources and Services Administration. Study coauthor Thomas I. Mackie, PhD, MPH, reports grants from the National Institute of Mental Health. Study coauthor Noah Hoch reports grants from the Health Resources Services Administration and the National Institute of Mental Health. No other disclosures from study authors are reported. Dr. Zuckerman reported grants from the National Institutes of Health and National Institute of Mental Health and consulting fees from H2N related to autism. The other commentary authors report no disclosures.

A new, augmented autism-screening strategy boosted the number of boys diagnosed with the condition, especially Spanish speakers, a new study finds. The research was published in JAMA Pediatrics

The number of diagnoses in girls didn’t budge significantly, however, surprising researchers. Still, the findings suggest that “multistage screening and appropriate access to diagnostic services can really move the needle on the early detection of autism and reducing disparities in autism diagnosis and detection,” said lead author R. Christopher Sheldrick, PhD, a Boston University research associate professor of health law, policy, and management, in an interview.

While early intervention is considered crucial, U.S. research suggests that several groups of children – the poor, racial and ethnic minorities, and non-English speakers – are more likely to be diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) later in life. “They have much lower access to appropriate services, both to get kids diagnosed and to get the kinds of interventions that can be helpful for families,” Dr. Sheldrick said. “Our study is about trying to close the gap around diagnosis, the first step.”

For the new study, the researchers implemented an intervention strategy in Massachusetts at three Early Intervention (EI) programs, which provide autism screening to children who are referred by pediatricians or parents. The researchers then tracked the programs, all in Boston, and nine comparison programs from the greater Boston area from 2012 to 2018.

Overall, 33,326 children were assessed, all aged 14-36 months. Those at the intervention programs were chosen because they had high levels of poverty. Children at those programs were more likely to be Black than those at the comparison programs (30.7% vs. 12.2%), to be Spanish speakers (28.9% vs. 12.5%), and to be in the lowest household income bracket (66.9% vs. 54.2%). In both groups, about 64% of the children were male.

The intervention strategy aimed to reduce the reliance on screening tests. Instead, the study authors write, “our protocol emphasizes ASD screening as a process that includes clinician and parent decision-making.”

As Dr. Sheldrick explained, parents and specialists observe children together “and then decide whether it’s worth taking the next step, which is a full diagnostic assessment with a licensed professional.” According to the study, either the parent(s) or the specialists could make the referral for a full, university-based assessment.

The goal was to help specialists use their professional judgment more, he said, and refer children who don’t show signs of ASD via a screening instrument but still spark concern, he said. “We’re really trying to create a system in which the screening tools support professional judgment, but don’t really replace it.”

After weighting, the researchers found that diagnoses of ASD were more common in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (incidence rate ratio, 1.6; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-2.1, P < .001), accounting for an extra 8.1 diagnoses per 1,000 per quarter. Among Spanish-speaking families only, diagnoses grew even more in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (IRR, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.6-4.3; P < .001), representing 15.4 additional diagnoses per 1,000 children per quarter.

There was also an increase in diagnoses among boys in the intervention sites vs. comparison sites (IRR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.4-2.3; P < .001), accounting for 14.8 additional diagnoses per 1,000 children per quarter. However, there was no statistically significant increase in diagnosis among girls (IRR, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.6-1.7; P = .84).

The finding about girls surprised the researchers. “The program was highly effective for boys, but really didn’t have any effect for girls,” Dr. Sheldrick said. “Even though autism is considered to be more common in boys, there are questions about whether it’s underidentified in girls. These data would be consistent with that view. So there’s work to do to be able to recognize how a young girl with autism might present and how you might note that in a sensitive way and then respond appropriately.”

The overall message of the study is “that screening with appropriate supports can make a difference,” he said. However, he acknowledged that the extra cost of the program is unclear. “We did not systematically collect data on cost,” he said, noting that the funding for the study paid for both the intervention and the analysis.

For now, he said, researchers are following the children in the study to see if they were able to access treatment services. Some of the investigators are also taking part in a randomized study to evaluate an intervention in children with social communication disorders, he said.

In an accompanying commentary, three pediatric specialists noted that the study is the first to analyze ASD screening in EI. “This study supports the notion of ASD screening as an iterative, multistep process that optimally involves multiple community stakeholders with varying levels of developmental expertise who have done the work to build trust with families,” write pediatrician Kate E. Wallis, MD, MPH, of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, graduate student Monica M. Abdul-Chani, MA, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and pediatrician Katharine E. Zuckerman, MD, MPH, of Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.

In regard to disparities in diagnosis in Spanish-speaking families, the commentary authors write that “locating a greater proportion of the ASD identification process in EI, which families are already familiar with, has no to low cost for families, and is likely geographically closer for families, can reduce structural barriers to identification.”

They add that the emphasis within Latino families on the “building of warm and caring relationships with others based on mutual trust and respect” can allow EI specialists to “develop relationships with families who may be afraid or skeptical of sharing what could be considered personal details of their family life.”

The commentary authors also note that “it remains all too common for language delays to be attributed to child exposure to two languages, even though data do not support this attribution. Bilingual EI staff can help to demystify this perpetual myth and better estimate a child’s communication and social skills in both languages as they communicate and play.”

The study was funded by grants from the Health Resources Services Administration and the National Institute of Mental Health. Dr. Sheldrick is cocreator of the Parent’s Observations of Social Interaction (POSI), which is one of the two first-stage screeners used in this study. He conducts research related to this instrument but receives no royalties. He reports grants from the National Institutes of Health. Coauthor Alice S. Carter, PhD, is cocreator of the POSI but receives no royalties. She is also cocreator of the Brief Infant Toddler Social Emotional Assessment, which is one of the two first-stage screeners used in this study, and receives royalties on the sale of the instrument. She reports grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Health Resources and Services Administration. Study coauthor Thomas I. Mackie, PhD, MPH, reports grants from the National Institute of Mental Health. Study coauthor Noah Hoch reports grants from the Health Resources Services Administration and the National Institute of Mental Health. No other disclosures from study authors are reported. Dr. Zuckerman reported grants from the National Institutes of Health and National Institute of Mental Health and consulting fees from H2N related to autism. The other commentary authors report no disclosures.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source

FROM JAMA PEDIATRICS

Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica
Hide sidebar & use full width
render the right sidebar.
Conference Recap Checkbox
Not Conference Recap
Clinical Edge
Display the Slideshow in this Article
Medscape Article
Display survey writer
Reuters content
Disable Inline Native ads
WebMD Article