COVID-19 vaccination has little impact on menstrual cycle

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Women may rest a bit easier thanks to results from a study showing that vaccination against the SARS-CoV-2 virus has almost no impact on a woman’s menstrual cycle. The issue is significant, as regular menstruation is a sign of health and fertility, and fears of disturbances might increase vaccination hesitancy as COVID-19 cases continue to surge.

Alison Edelman, MD, MPH, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, led a group studying prospective data on almost 24,000 menstrual cycles reported by almost 4,000 U.S. women.

Dr. Alison Edelman

The investigators found that COVID-19 vaccination was associated with a less than 1-day change in cycle length for the menstrual cycles after the first and second inoculations, compared with prevaccine cycles. Vaccination had no effect on the actual number of days menstrual bleeding lasted.

The study looked at the menstrual patterns of women aged 18-45 years with normal cycle lengths of 24-38 days for the three consecutive cycles before the first vaccine dose and for three consecutive postvaccine cycles. The final sample included 2,403 vaccinated and 1,556 unvaccinated individuals.

In vaccinated women, the study initially found a slight average increase in cycle length after dose one of 71% of a day and 91% of a day after dose two. Following adjustments, those increases dropped to 64% of a day after the first dose and 79% of a day after the second dose.

In unvaccinated women, the study looked at six cycles over a similar time period and found no significant changes from baseline.

“Coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination is associated with a small change in cycle length but not menses length,” Dr. Edelman’s group concluded in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

In the rare instance that a woman received two vaccine doses within the same menstrual cycle, the change in length could increase to 2 days. These variations appear to resolve quickly, possibly as soon as the next cycle after vaccination and do not indicate any cause for long-term physical or reproductive health concern, according to the authors.

Reports by women on social media, however, have suggested that postvaccine menstrual disruptions are more common with, for example, heavier and breakthrough bleeding. But it appears such changes are temporary and resolve quickly.

“These findings are reassuring and validating,” Dr. Edelman said in an interview. On a population level, the changes indicate no cause for concern for long-term physical or reproductive health and no reason to avoid vaccination. “On a personal level, people want this information so they know what to expect when they get vaccinated, and not worry about a pregnancy scare or be disappointed if they were trying for pregnancy.”

Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research
Dr. Christine Metz

According to the International Federation of Gynecologists and Obstetricians, variations in cycle length of fewer than 8 days are considered normal, said Christine Metz, PhD, a research biologist and a professor of molecular medicine at the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y. “Thus, the extra 17 hours added to the menstrual cycle length in the vaccination group in this study is well within the ‘normal’ range.”

In a group of about 1,600 menstruating women being studied at Dr. Metz’s center, some have anecdotally reported transient cycle changes post vaccination for COVID-19, including delays in menstruation onset and changes in bleeding patterns.

Exactly how vaccination might alter menstrual cycle length is not known and has not been studied with vaccination against other infections such as influenza and meningococcal disease.

“Many factors are known to affect menstrual cycle length including changes in diet, sleep, and exercise, as well as sickness, travel, and stress,” Dr. Metz said. The COVID-19 vaccines have affected people in different ways, with side effects ranging from injection-site pain to nausea, aches, fever, and fatigue. “Vaccination side effects, particularly if severe, could lead to changes in diet, exercise, and sleep, and feelings of sickness and/or stress.”

These stressors can alter hormone production and stability, as well as the body’s response to hormones such as estrogen, progesterone, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, and other hormones associated with female reproduction. “Because these hormones regulate the menstrual cycle, variations in these hormones can either shorten or lengthen the cycle,” Dr. Metz explained.

More research needs to be done at the global level, according to the authors. “Questions remain about other possible changes in menstrual cycles, such as menstrual symptoms, unscheduled bleeding, and changes in the quality and quantity of menstrual bleeding.”

This research was funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institutes of Health’s Office of Research on Women’s Health. Dr. Edelman reported support from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the World Health Organization, Gynuity, and the Karolinska Institute as well as royalties from UpToDate. Other study authors reported similar relationships with not-for-profit and private-sector companies. Three coauthors are employees of Natural Cycles, a fertility tracking device that was used in the study. Dr. Metz disclosed no conflicts of interest with regard to her comments.
 

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Women may rest a bit easier thanks to results from a study showing that vaccination against the SARS-CoV-2 virus has almost no impact on a woman’s menstrual cycle. The issue is significant, as regular menstruation is a sign of health and fertility, and fears of disturbances might increase vaccination hesitancy as COVID-19 cases continue to surge.

Alison Edelman, MD, MPH, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, led a group studying prospective data on almost 24,000 menstrual cycles reported by almost 4,000 U.S. women.

Dr. Alison Edelman

The investigators found that COVID-19 vaccination was associated with a less than 1-day change in cycle length for the menstrual cycles after the first and second inoculations, compared with prevaccine cycles. Vaccination had no effect on the actual number of days menstrual bleeding lasted.

The study looked at the menstrual patterns of women aged 18-45 years with normal cycle lengths of 24-38 days for the three consecutive cycles before the first vaccine dose and for three consecutive postvaccine cycles. The final sample included 2,403 vaccinated and 1,556 unvaccinated individuals.

In vaccinated women, the study initially found a slight average increase in cycle length after dose one of 71% of a day and 91% of a day after dose two. Following adjustments, those increases dropped to 64% of a day after the first dose and 79% of a day after the second dose.

In unvaccinated women, the study looked at six cycles over a similar time period and found no significant changes from baseline.

“Coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination is associated with a small change in cycle length but not menses length,” Dr. Edelman’s group concluded in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

In the rare instance that a woman received two vaccine doses within the same menstrual cycle, the change in length could increase to 2 days. These variations appear to resolve quickly, possibly as soon as the next cycle after vaccination and do not indicate any cause for long-term physical or reproductive health concern, according to the authors.

Reports by women on social media, however, have suggested that postvaccine menstrual disruptions are more common with, for example, heavier and breakthrough bleeding. But it appears such changes are temporary and resolve quickly.

“These findings are reassuring and validating,” Dr. Edelman said in an interview. On a population level, the changes indicate no cause for concern for long-term physical or reproductive health and no reason to avoid vaccination. “On a personal level, people want this information so they know what to expect when they get vaccinated, and not worry about a pregnancy scare or be disappointed if they were trying for pregnancy.”

Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research
Dr. Christine Metz

According to the International Federation of Gynecologists and Obstetricians, variations in cycle length of fewer than 8 days are considered normal, said Christine Metz, PhD, a research biologist and a professor of molecular medicine at the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y. “Thus, the extra 17 hours added to the menstrual cycle length in the vaccination group in this study is well within the ‘normal’ range.”

In a group of about 1,600 menstruating women being studied at Dr. Metz’s center, some have anecdotally reported transient cycle changes post vaccination for COVID-19, including delays in menstruation onset and changes in bleeding patterns.

Exactly how vaccination might alter menstrual cycle length is not known and has not been studied with vaccination against other infections such as influenza and meningococcal disease.

“Many factors are known to affect menstrual cycle length including changes in diet, sleep, and exercise, as well as sickness, travel, and stress,” Dr. Metz said. The COVID-19 vaccines have affected people in different ways, with side effects ranging from injection-site pain to nausea, aches, fever, and fatigue. “Vaccination side effects, particularly if severe, could lead to changes in diet, exercise, and sleep, and feelings of sickness and/or stress.”

These stressors can alter hormone production and stability, as well as the body’s response to hormones such as estrogen, progesterone, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, and other hormones associated with female reproduction. “Because these hormones regulate the menstrual cycle, variations in these hormones can either shorten or lengthen the cycle,” Dr. Metz explained.

More research needs to be done at the global level, according to the authors. “Questions remain about other possible changes in menstrual cycles, such as menstrual symptoms, unscheduled bleeding, and changes in the quality and quantity of menstrual bleeding.”

This research was funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institutes of Health’s Office of Research on Women’s Health. Dr. Edelman reported support from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the World Health Organization, Gynuity, and the Karolinska Institute as well as royalties from UpToDate. Other study authors reported similar relationships with not-for-profit and private-sector companies. Three coauthors are employees of Natural Cycles, a fertility tracking device that was used in the study. Dr. Metz disclosed no conflicts of interest with regard to her comments.
 

 

Women may rest a bit easier thanks to results from a study showing that vaccination against the SARS-CoV-2 virus has almost no impact on a woman’s menstrual cycle. The issue is significant, as regular menstruation is a sign of health and fertility, and fears of disturbances might increase vaccination hesitancy as COVID-19 cases continue to surge.

Alison Edelman, MD, MPH, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, led a group studying prospective data on almost 24,000 menstrual cycles reported by almost 4,000 U.S. women.

Dr. Alison Edelman

The investigators found that COVID-19 vaccination was associated with a less than 1-day change in cycle length for the menstrual cycles after the first and second inoculations, compared with prevaccine cycles. Vaccination had no effect on the actual number of days menstrual bleeding lasted.

The study looked at the menstrual patterns of women aged 18-45 years with normal cycle lengths of 24-38 days for the three consecutive cycles before the first vaccine dose and for three consecutive postvaccine cycles. The final sample included 2,403 vaccinated and 1,556 unvaccinated individuals.

In vaccinated women, the study initially found a slight average increase in cycle length after dose one of 71% of a day and 91% of a day after dose two. Following adjustments, those increases dropped to 64% of a day after the first dose and 79% of a day after the second dose.

In unvaccinated women, the study looked at six cycles over a similar time period and found no significant changes from baseline.

“Coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination is associated with a small change in cycle length but not menses length,” Dr. Edelman’s group concluded in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

In the rare instance that a woman received two vaccine doses within the same menstrual cycle, the change in length could increase to 2 days. These variations appear to resolve quickly, possibly as soon as the next cycle after vaccination and do not indicate any cause for long-term physical or reproductive health concern, according to the authors.

Reports by women on social media, however, have suggested that postvaccine menstrual disruptions are more common with, for example, heavier and breakthrough bleeding. But it appears such changes are temporary and resolve quickly.

“These findings are reassuring and validating,” Dr. Edelman said in an interview. On a population level, the changes indicate no cause for concern for long-term physical or reproductive health and no reason to avoid vaccination. “On a personal level, people want this information so they know what to expect when they get vaccinated, and not worry about a pregnancy scare or be disappointed if they were trying for pregnancy.”

Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research
Dr. Christine Metz

According to the International Federation of Gynecologists and Obstetricians, variations in cycle length of fewer than 8 days are considered normal, said Christine Metz, PhD, a research biologist and a professor of molecular medicine at the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y. “Thus, the extra 17 hours added to the menstrual cycle length in the vaccination group in this study is well within the ‘normal’ range.”

In a group of about 1,600 menstruating women being studied at Dr. Metz’s center, some have anecdotally reported transient cycle changes post vaccination for COVID-19, including delays in menstruation onset and changes in bleeding patterns.

Exactly how vaccination might alter menstrual cycle length is not known and has not been studied with vaccination against other infections such as influenza and meningococcal disease.

“Many factors are known to affect menstrual cycle length including changes in diet, sleep, and exercise, as well as sickness, travel, and stress,” Dr. Metz said. The COVID-19 vaccines have affected people in different ways, with side effects ranging from injection-site pain to nausea, aches, fever, and fatigue. “Vaccination side effects, particularly if severe, could lead to changes in diet, exercise, and sleep, and feelings of sickness and/or stress.”

These stressors can alter hormone production and stability, as well as the body’s response to hormones such as estrogen, progesterone, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, and other hormones associated with female reproduction. “Because these hormones regulate the menstrual cycle, variations in these hormones can either shorten or lengthen the cycle,” Dr. Metz explained.

More research needs to be done at the global level, according to the authors. “Questions remain about other possible changes in menstrual cycles, such as menstrual symptoms, unscheduled bleeding, and changes in the quality and quantity of menstrual bleeding.”

This research was funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institutes of Health’s Office of Research on Women’s Health. Dr. Edelman reported support from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the World Health Organization, Gynuity, and the Karolinska Institute as well as royalties from UpToDate. Other study authors reported similar relationships with not-for-profit and private-sector companies. Three coauthors are employees of Natural Cycles, a fertility tracking device that was used in the study. Dr. Metz disclosed no conflicts of interest with regard to her comments.
 

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New blood test could identify pregnant women who are at risk of preeclampsia

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Pregnant women who are at risk of preeclampsia can now be identified early before symptoms develop, finds new research from Kings College London and Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, published in Nature.

The study, supported by the National Institute for Health Research and in partnership with the Mirvie RNA platform, analyzed the genetic material from over 2,500 blood samples of pregnant women from eight independent cohorts with multiple demographics, including socioeconomic background, geographic location, ethnicity, and nationality, collected 14.5 weeks before delivery.

“Because the study drew upon samples for a diverse group of women, including participants recruited across King’s Health Partners, the molecular signature is very reliable and has potential to outperform currently available tests,” said Rachel Tribe, PhD, department of women and children’s health, King’s College London.

Researchers used plasma cell-free RNA (cfRNA) transcripts to examine the standard molecular mechanism between the fetus, maternal, and placental tissues in order to determine fetal development and healthy pregnancy progression. Deviation from the standard cfRNA expression was also observed to establish the molecular pathway for those at risk of preeclampsia before clinical presentation.

A cfRNA signal from a single blood sample showed a 32.3% positive-predictive value and 75% sensitivity, which exceeds current positive-predictive values from recent clinical state-of-the-art models.

In addition, 73% of participants with a positive-predictive value were identified “as destined to have a medically indicated preterm birth over 3 months in advance of the preeclampsia symptoms,” said the authors.

With up to 1 in 12 pregnancies affected by preeclampsia, and the diagnosis most often only being made in the third trimester, these results provide a promising outlook for pregnant women “so that they can be more closely monitored and treated by the clinicians involved,” commented Dr. Tribe.

“We are now focused on ongoing clinical research to further validate these results and improve the understanding of other pregnancy complications,” she said. “As a scientist, it was also extremely interesting to see that the molecular signature tells us something about mechanisms associated with health in pregnancy and complications including preeclampsia; such knowledge will aid development of treatment strategies in the future.”

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

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Pregnant women who are at risk of preeclampsia can now be identified early before symptoms develop, finds new research from Kings College London and Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, published in Nature.

The study, supported by the National Institute for Health Research and in partnership with the Mirvie RNA platform, analyzed the genetic material from over 2,500 blood samples of pregnant women from eight independent cohorts with multiple demographics, including socioeconomic background, geographic location, ethnicity, and nationality, collected 14.5 weeks before delivery.

“Because the study drew upon samples for a diverse group of women, including participants recruited across King’s Health Partners, the molecular signature is very reliable and has potential to outperform currently available tests,” said Rachel Tribe, PhD, department of women and children’s health, King’s College London.

Researchers used plasma cell-free RNA (cfRNA) transcripts to examine the standard molecular mechanism between the fetus, maternal, and placental tissues in order to determine fetal development and healthy pregnancy progression. Deviation from the standard cfRNA expression was also observed to establish the molecular pathway for those at risk of preeclampsia before clinical presentation.

A cfRNA signal from a single blood sample showed a 32.3% positive-predictive value and 75% sensitivity, which exceeds current positive-predictive values from recent clinical state-of-the-art models.

In addition, 73% of participants with a positive-predictive value were identified “as destined to have a medically indicated preterm birth over 3 months in advance of the preeclampsia symptoms,” said the authors.

With up to 1 in 12 pregnancies affected by preeclampsia, and the diagnosis most often only being made in the third trimester, these results provide a promising outlook for pregnant women “so that they can be more closely monitored and treated by the clinicians involved,” commented Dr. Tribe.

“We are now focused on ongoing clinical research to further validate these results and improve the understanding of other pregnancy complications,” she said. “As a scientist, it was also extremely interesting to see that the molecular signature tells us something about mechanisms associated with health in pregnancy and complications including preeclampsia; such knowledge will aid development of treatment strategies in the future.”

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

 

Pregnant women who are at risk of preeclampsia can now be identified early before symptoms develop, finds new research from Kings College London and Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, published in Nature.

The study, supported by the National Institute for Health Research and in partnership with the Mirvie RNA platform, analyzed the genetic material from over 2,500 blood samples of pregnant women from eight independent cohorts with multiple demographics, including socioeconomic background, geographic location, ethnicity, and nationality, collected 14.5 weeks before delivery.

“Because the study drew upon samples for a diverse group of women, including participants recruited across King’s Health Partners, the molecular signature is very reliable and has potential to outperform currently available tests,” said Rachel Tribe, PhD, department of women and children’s health, King’s College London.

Researchers used plasma cell-free RNA (cfRNA) transcripts to examine the standard molecular mechanism between the fetus, maternal, and placental tissues in order to determine fetal development and healthy pregnancy progression. Deviation from the standard cfRNA expression was also observed to establish the molecular pathway for those at risk of preeclampsia before clinical presentation.

A cfRNA signal from a single blood sample showed a 32.3% positive-predictive value and 75% sensitivity, which exceeds current positive-predictive values from recent clinical state-of-the-art models.

In addition, 73% of participants with a positive-predictive value were identified “as destined to have a medically indicated preterm birth over 3 months in advance of the preeclampsia symptoms,” said the authors.

With up to 1 in 12 pregnancies affected by preeclampsia, and the diagnosis most often only being made in the third trimester, these results provide a promising outlook for pregnant women “so that they can be more closely monitored and treated by the clinicians involved,” commented Dr. Tribe.

“We are now focused on ongoing clinical research to further validate these results and improve the understanding of other pregnancy complications,” she said. “As a scientist, it was also extremely interesting to see that the molecular signature tells us something about mechanisms associated with health in pregnancy and complications including preeclampsia; such knowledge will aid development of treatment strategies in the future.”

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

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Pill not enough for ‘sexual problems’ female cancer patients face

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The antidepressant bupropion failed to improve sexual dysfunction in female cancer survivors, according to new findings published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Using the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) as a measurement tool, investigators found that desire scores were not significantly different for participants who received bupropion versus a placebo over the 9-week study period.

“Sexual health is a complex phenomenon and [our results suggest that] no one intervention is going to solve the broader issue,” lead author Debra Barton, RN, PhD, FAAN, professor in the School of Nursing at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, told this news organization.

Sexual dysfunction is common among cancer survivors and experienced across multiple cancer types and stages of disease. Research shows that as many as 70% of female cancer survivors report loss of desire, compared with up to one-third of the general population.

Common sexual concerns among female cancer survivors include low desire, arousal issues, lack of appropriate lubrication, difficulty in achieving orgasm, and pain with penetrative sexual activity. Additionally, these women may experience significant overlap of symptoms, and often encounter multiple sexual issues that are exacerbated by a range of cancer treatments.

“It’s a huge problem,” Maryam B. Lustberg, MD, MPH, from Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, Conn., and colleagues wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Despite the prevalence of sexual dysfunction among cancer survivors, effective treatments remain elusive. Preliminary evidence suggests that bupropion, already approved for seasonal affective disorder, major depressive disorder, and smoking cessation, may also enhance libido.

Dr. Barton and colleagues conducted this phase 2 trial to determine whether bupropion can improve sexual desire in female cancer survivors without undesirable side effects.

In the study, Dr. Barton and colleagues compared two dose levels of extended-release bupropion in a cohort of 230 postmenopausal women diagnosed with breast or gynecologic cancer and low baseline FSFI desire scores (<3.3), who had completed definitive cancer therapy.

Participants were randomized to receive either 150 mg (79 patients) or 300 mg (74 patients) once daily of extended-release bupropion, or placebo (77 patients).

Barton and colleagues then evaluated whether sexual desire significantly improved over the 9-week study period comparing the bupropion arms and the placebo group.

Overall, the authors found no significant differences (mean between-arm change for 150 mg once daily and placebo of 0.02; P = .93; mean between-arm change for 300 mg once daily and placebo of –0.02; P = .92). Mean scores at 9 weeks on the desire subscale were 2.17, 2.27, and 2.30 for 150 mg, 300 mg, and the placebo group, respectively.

In addition, none of the subscales – which included arousal, lubrication, and orgasm – or the total score showed a significant difference between arms at either 5 or 9 weeks.

Bupropion did, however, appear to be well tolerated. No grade 4-5 treatment-related adverse events occurred. In the 150-mg bupropion arm, two patients (2.6%) experienced a grade 3 event (insomnia and headache) and one patient in the 300-mg bupropion arm (1.4%) and placebo arm (1.3%) experienced a grade 3 event related to treatment (hypertension and headache, respectively).

In the accompanying editorial, Dr. Lustberg and colleagues “applaud the authors for conducting a study in this population of cancer survivors,” noting that “evidenced-based approaches have not been extensively studied.”

Dr. Lustberg and colleagues also commented that other randomized controlled clinical trials evaluating sexual desire disorder assessed outcomes using additional metrics, such as the Female Sexual Distress Scale–Revised questionnaire, which measures distress related to sexual dysfunction and low desire, in particular.

“The use of specific validated instruments for libido in place of the FSFI might have helped determine the effect of the study intervention in this reported trial,” they wrote.

Overall, according to Dr. Lustberg and colleagues, the negative results of this study indicate that a multidisciplinary clinical approach may be needed.

“As much as we would like to have one intervention that addresses this prominent issue, the evidence strongly suggests that cancer-related sexual problems may need an integrative biopsychosocial model that intervenes on biologic, psychologic, interpersonal, and social-cultural factors, not just on one factor, such as libido,” they wrote. “Such work may require access to multidisciplinary care with specialists in women’s health, pelvic floor rehabilitation, and psychosocial oncology.”

Dr. Barton said she has been developing a multicomponent approach to addressing sexual health in female cancer survivors.

However, she noted, “there is still much we do not fully understand about the broader impact of the degree of hormone deprivation in the population of female cancer survivors. A better understanding would provide clearer targets for interventions.” 

The study was supported by the National Cancer Institute and Breast Cancer Research Foundation. Dr. Barton has disclosed research funding from Merck. Dr. Lustberg reported receiving honoraria from Novartis and Biotheranostics; consulting or advising with PledPharma, Disarm Therapeutics, Pfizer; and other relationships with Cynosure/Hologic.

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

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The antidepressant bupropion failed to improve sexual dysfunction in female cancer survivors, according to new findings published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Using the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) as a measurement tool, investigators found that desire scores were not significantly different for participants who received bupropion versus a placebo over the 9-week study period.

“Sexual health is a complex phenomenon and [our results suggest that] no one intervention is going to solve the broader issue,” lead author Debra Barton, RN, PhD, FAAN, professor in the School of Nursing at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, told this news organization.

Sexual dysfunction is common among cancer survivors and experienced across multiple cancer types and stages of disease. Research shows that as many as 70% of female cancer survivors report loss of desire, compared with up to one-third of the general population.

Common sexual concerns among female cancer survivors include low desire, arousal issues, lack of appropriate lubrication, difficulty in achieving orgasm, and pain with penetrative sexual activity. Additionally, these women may experience significant overlap of symptoms, and often encounter multiple sexual issues that are exacerbated by a range of cancer treatments.

“It’s a huge problem,” Maryam B. Lustberg, MD, MPH, from Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, Conn., and colleagues wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Despite the prevalence of sexual dysfunction among cancer survivors, effective treatments remain elusive. Preliminary evidence suggests that bupropion, already approved for seasonal affective disorder, major depressive disorder, and smoking cessation, may also enhance libido.

Dr. Barton and colleagues conducted this phase 2 trial to determine whether bupropion can improve sexual desire in female cancer survivors without undesirable side effects.

In the study, Dr. Barton and colleagues compared two dose levels of extended-release bupropion in a cohort of 230 postmenopausal women diagnosed with breast or gynecologic cancer and low baseline FSFI desire scores (<3.3), who had completed definitive cancer therapy.

Participants were randomized to receive either 150 mg (79 patients) or 300 mg (74 patients) once daily of extended-release bupropion, or placebo (77 patients).

Barton and colleagues then evaluated whether sexual desire significantly improved over the 9-week study period comparing the bupropion arms and the placebo group.

Overall, the authors found no significant differences (mean between-arm change for 150 mg once daily and placebo of 0.02; P = .93; mean between-arm change for 300 mg once daily and placebo of –0.02; P = .92). Mean scores at 9 weeks on the desire subscale were 2.17, 2.27, and 2.30 for 150 mg, 300 mg, and the placebo group, respectively.

In addition, none of the subscales – which included arousal, lubrication, and orgasm – or the total score showed a significant difference between arms at either 5 or 9 weeks.

Bupropion did, however, appear to be well tolerated. No grade 4-5 treatment-related adverse events occurred. In the 150-mg bupropion arm, two patients (2.6%) experienced a grade 3 event (insomnia and headache) and one patient in the 300-mg bupropion arm (1.4%) and placebo arm (1.3%) experienced a grade 3 event related to treatment (hypertension and headache, respectively).

In the accompanying editorial, Dr. Lustberg and colleagues “applaud the authors for conducting a study in this population of cancer survivors,” noting that “evidenced-based approaches have not been extensively studied.”

Dr. Lustberg and colleagues also commented that other randomized controlled clinical trials evaluating sexual desire disorder assessed outcomes using additional metrics, such as the Female Sexual Distress Scale–Revised questionnaire, which measures distress related to sexual dysfunction and low desire, in particular.

“The use of specific validated instruments for libido in place of the FSFI might have helped determine the effect of the study intervention in this reported trial,” they wrote.

Overall, according to Dr. Lustberg and colleagues, the negative results of this study indicate that a multidisciplinary clinical approach may be needed.

“As much as we would like to have one intervention that addresses this prominent issue, the evidence strongly suggests that cancer-related sexual problems may need an integrative biopsychosocial model that intervenes on biologic, psychologic, interpersonal, and social-cultural factors, not just on one factor, such as libido,” they wrote. “Such work may require access to multidisciplinary care with specialists in women’s health, pelvic floor rehabilitation, and psychosocial oncology.”

Dr. Barton said she has been developing a multicomponent approach to addressing sexual health in female cancer survivors.

However, she noted, “there is still much we do not fully understand about the broader impact of the degree of hormone deprivation in the population of female cancer survivors. A better understanding would provide clearer targets for interventions.” 

The study was supported by the National Cancer Institute and Breast Cancer Research Foundation. Dr. Barton has disclosed research funding from Merck. Dr. Lustberg reported receiving honoraria from Novartis and Biotheranostics; consulting or advising with PledPharma, Disarm Therapeutics, Pfizer; and other relationships with Cynosure/Hologic.

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

 

The antidepressant bupropion failed to improve sexual dysfunction in female cancer survivors, according to new findings published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Using the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) as a measurement tool, investigators found that desire scores were not significantly different for participants who received bupropion versus a placebo over the 9-week study period.

“Sexual health is a complex phenomenon and [our results suggest that] no one intervention is going to solve the broader issue,” lead author Debra Barton, RN, PhD, FAAN, professor in the School of Nursing at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, told this news organization.

Sexual dysfunction is common among cancer survivors and experienced across multiple cancer types and stages of disease. Research shows that as many as 70% of female cancer survivors report loss of desire, compared with up to one-third of the general population.

Common sexual concerns among female cancer survivors include low desire, arousal issues, lack of appropriate lubrication, difficulty in achieving orgasm, and pain with penetrative sexual activity. Additionally, these women may experience significant overlap of symptoms, and often encounter multiple sexual issues that are exacerbated by a range of cancer treatments.

“It’s a huge problem,” Maryam B. Lustberg, MD, MPH, from Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, Conn., and colleagues wrote in an accompanying editorial.

Despite the prevalence of sexual dysfunction among cancer survivors, effective treatments remain elusive. Preliminary evidence suggests that bupropion, already approved for seasonal affective disorder, major depressive disorder, and smoking cessation, may also enhance libido.

Dr. Barton and colleagues conducted this phase 2 trial to determine whether bupropion can improve sexual desire in female cancer survivors without undesirable side effects.

In the study, Dr. Barton and colleagues compared two dose levels of extended-release bupropion in a cohort of 230 postmenopausal women diagnosed with breast or gynecologic cancer and low baseline FSFI desire scores (<3.3), who had completed definitive cancer therapy.

Participants were randomized to receive either 150 mg (79 patients) or 300 mg (74 patients) once daily of extended-release bupropion, or placebo (77 patients).

Barton and colleagues then evaluated whether sexual desire significantly improved over the 9-week study period comparing the bupropion arms and the placebo group.

Overall, the authors found no significant differences (mean between-arm change for 150 mg once daily and placebo of 0.02; P = .93; mean between-arm change for 300 mg once daily and placebo of –0.02; P = .92). Mean scores at 9 weeks on the desire subscale were 2.17, 2.27, and 2.30 for 150 mg, 300 mg, and the placebo group, respectively.

In addition, none of the subscales – which included arousal, lubrication, and orgasm – or the total score showed a significant difference between arms at either 5 or 9 weeks.

Bupropion did, however, appear to be well tolerated. No grade 4-5 treatment-related adverse events occurred. In the 150-mg bupropion arm, two patients (2.6%) experienced a grade 3 event (insomnia and headache) and one patient in the 300-mg bupropion arm (1.4%) and placebo arm (1.3%) experienced a grade 3 event related to treatment (hypertension and headache, respectively).

In the accompanying editorial, Dr. Lustberg and colleagues “applaud the authors for conducting a study in this population of cancer survivors,” noting that “evidenced-based approaches have not been extensively studied.”

Dr. Lustberg and colleagues also commented that other randomized controlled clinical trials evaluating sexual desire disorder assessed outcomes using additional metrics, such as the Female Sexual Distress Scale–Revised questionnaire, which measures distress related to sexual dysfunction and low desire, in particular.

“The use of specific validated instruments for libido in place of the FSFI might have helped determine the effect of the study intervention in this reported trial,” they wrote.

Overall, according to Dr. Lustberg and colleagues, the negative results of this study indicate that a multidisciplinary clinical approach may be needed.

“As much as we would like to have one intervention that addresses this prominent issue, the evidence strongly suggests that cancer-related sexual problems may need an integrative biopsychosocial model that intervenes on biologic, psychologic, interpersonal, and social-cultural factors, not just on one factor, such as libido,” they wrote. “Such work may require access to multidisciplinary care with specialists in women’s health, pelvic floor rehabilitation, and psychosocial oncology.”

Dr. Barton said she has been developing a multicomponent approach to addressing sexual health in female cancer survivors.

However, she noted, “there is still much we do not fully understand about the broader impact of the degree of hormone deprivation in the population of female cancer survivors. A better understanding would provide clearer targets for interventions.” 

The study was supported by the National Cancer Institute and Breast Cancer Research Foundation. Dr. Barton has disclosed research funding from Merck. Dr. Lustberg reported receiving honoraria from Novartis and Biotheranostics; consulting or advising with PledPharma, Disarm Therapeutics, Pfizer; and other relationships with Cynosure/Hologic.

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

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Statin therapy seems safe in pregnancy

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Statins may be safe when used during pregnancy, with no increase in risk for fetal anomalies, although there may be a higher risk for low birth weight and preterm labor, results of a large study from Taiwan suggest.

The Food and Drug Administration relaxed its warning on statins in July 2021, removing the drug’s blanket contraindication in all pregnant women.

Removal of the broadly worded contraindication should “enable health care professionals and patients to make individual decisions about benefit and risk, especially for those at very high risk of heart attack or stroke,” the FDA said in their announcement.

“Our findings suggested that statins may be used during pregnancy with no increase in the rate of congenital anomalies,” wrote Jui-Chun Chang, MD, from Taichung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan, and colleagues in the new study, published online Dec. 30, 2021, in JAMA Network Open.

“For pregnant women at low risk, statins should be used carefully after assessing the risks of low birth weight and preterm birth,” they said. “For women with dyslipidemia or high-risk cardiovascular disease, as well as those who use statins before conception, statins may be continuously used with no increased risks of neonatal adverse effects.”

The study included more than 1.4 million pregnant women aged 18 years and older who gave birth to their first child between 2004 and 2014.

A total of 469 women (mean age, 32.6 years; mean gestational age, 38.4 weeks) who used statins during pregnancy were compared with 4,690 matched controls who had no statin exposure during pregnancy.

After controlling for maternal comorbidities and age, women who used statins during pregnancy were more apt to have low-birth-weight babies weighing less than 2,500 g (risk ratio, 1.51; 95% confidence interval, 1.05-2.16) and to deliver preterm (RR, 1.99; 95% CI, 1.46-2.71).

The statin-exposed babies were also more likely to have a lower 1-minute Apgar score (RR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.04-3.20). Importantly, however, there was no increase in risk for fetal anomalies in the statin-exposed infants, the researchers said.

In addition, for women who used statins for more than 3 months prior to pregnancy, maintaining statin use during pregnancy did not increase the risk for adverse neonatal outcomes, including congenital anomalies, low birth weight, preterm birth, very low birth weight, low Apgar scores, and fetal distress.

The researchers called for further studies to confirm their observations.

Funding for the study was provided by Taichung Veterans General Hospital. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Statins may be safe when used during pregnancy, with no increase in risk for fetal anomalies, although there may be a higher risk for low birth weight and preterm labor, results of a large study from Taiwan suggest.

The Food and Drug Administration relaxed its warning on statins in July 2021, removing the drug’s blanket contraindication in all pregnant women.

Removal of the broadly worded contraindication should “enable health care professionals and patients to make individual decisions about benefit and risk, especially for those at very high risk of heart attack or stroke,” the FDA said in their announcement.

“Our findings suggested that statins may be used during pregnancy with no increase in the rate of congenital anomalies,” wrote Jui-Chun Chang, MD, from Taichung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan, and colleagues in the new study, published online Dec. 30, 2021, in JAMA Network Open.

“For pregnant women at low risk, statins should be used carefully after assessing the risks of low birth weight and preterm birth,” they said. “For women with dyslipidemia or high-risk cardiovascular disease, as well as those who use statins before conception, statins may be continuously used with no increased risks of neonatal adverse effects.”

The study included more than 1.4 million pregnant women aged 18 years and older who gave birth to their first child between 2004 and 2014.

A total of 469 women (mean age, 32.6 years; mean gestational age, 38.4 weeks) who used statins during pregnancy were compared with 4,690 matched controls who had no statin exposure during pregnancy.

After controlling for maternal comorbidities and age, women who used statins during pregnancy were more apt to have low-birth-weight babies weighing less than 2,500 g (risk ratio, 1.51; 95% confidence interval, 1.05-2.16) and to deliver preterm (RR, 1.99; 95% CI, 1.46-2.71).

The statin-exposed babies were also more likely to have a lower 1-minute Apgar score (RR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.04-3.20). Importantly, however, there was no increase in risk for fetal anomalies in the statin-exposed infants, the researchers said.

In addition, for women who used statins for more than 3 months prior to pregnancy, maintaining statin use during pregnancy did not increase the risk for adverse neonatal outcomes, including congenital anomalies, low birth weight, preterm birth, very low birth weight, low Apgar scores, and fetal distress.

The researchers called for further studies to confirm their observations.

Funding for the study was provided by Taichung Veterans General Hospital. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

Statins may be safe when used during pregnancy, with no increase in risk for fetal anomalies, although there may be a higher risk for low birth weight and preterm labor, results of a large study from Taiwan suggest.

The Food and Drug Administration relaxed its warning on statins in July 2021, removing the drug’s blanket contraindication in all pregnant women.

Removal of the broadly worded contraindication should “enable health care professionals and patients to make individual decisions about benefit and risk, especially for those at very high risk of heart attack or stroke,” the FDA said in their announcement.

“Our findings suggested that statins may be used during pregnancy with no increase in the rate of congenital anomalies,” wrote Jui-Chun Chang, MD, from Taichung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan, and colleagues in the new study, published online Dec. 30, 2021, in JAMA Network Open.

“For pregnant women at low risk, statins should be used carefully after assessing the risks of low birth weight and preterm birth,” they said. “For women with dyslipidemia or high-risk cardiovascular disease, as well as those who use statins before conception, statins may be continuously used with no increased risks of neonatal adverse effects.”

The study included more than 1.4 million pregnant women aged 18 years and older who gave birth to their first child between 2004 and 2014.

A total of 469 women (mean age, 32.6 years; mean gestational age, 38.4 weeks) who used statins during pregnancy were compared with 4,690 matched controls who had no statin exposure during pregnancy.

After controlling for maternal comorbidities and age, women who used statins during pregnancy were more apt to have low-birth-weight babies weighing less than 2,500 g (risk ratio, 1.51; 95% confidence interval, 1.05-2.16) and to deliver preterm (RR, 1.99; 95% CI, 1.46-2.71).

The statin-exposed babies were also more likely to have a lower 1-minute Apgar score (RR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.04-3.20). Importantly, however, there was no increase in risk for fetal anomalies in the statin-exposed infants, the researchers said.

In addition, for women who used statins for more than 3 months prior to pregnancy, maintaining statin use during pregnancy did not increase the risk for adverse neonatal outcomes, including congenital anomalies, low birth weight, preterm birth, very low birth weight, low Apgar scores, and fetal distress.

The researchers called for further studies to confirm their observations.

Funding for the study was provided by Taichung Veterans General Hospital. The authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Helping teens make the switch from pediatrics to gynecology

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For many adolescents, the first visit to a gynecologist can be intimidating. The prospect of meeting a new doctor who will ask prying, deeply personal questions about sex and menstruation is scary. And, in all likelihood, a parent, older sibling, or friend has warned them about the notorious pelvic exam.

The exact timing of when adolescent patients should start seeing a gynecologist varies based on when a patient starts puberty. Primary care physicians and pediatricians can help teens transition by referring patients to an adolescent-friendly practice and clearing up some of the misconceptions that surround the first gynecology visit. Gynecologists, on the other side of the referral, can help patients transition by guaranteeing confidentiality and creating a safe space for young patients.

This news organization interviewed three experts in adolescent health about when teens should start having their gynecological needs addressed and how their physicians can help them undergo that transition.
 

Age-appropriate care

“Most people get very limited information about their reproductive health,” said Anne-Marie E. Amies Oelschlager, MD, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist at Seattle Children’s, Seattle, and a member of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) clinical consensus committee on gynecology.

Official guidelines from ACOG call for the initial reproductive health visit to take place between the ages of 13 and 15 years. The exact age may vary, however, depending on the specific needs of the patient.

For example, some patients begin menstruating early, at age 9 or 10, said Mary Romano, MD, MPH, a pediatrician and adolescent medicine specialist at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital, Nashville, Tenn. Pediatricians who are uncomfortable educating young patients about menstruation should refer the patient to a gynecologist or a pediatric gynecologist for whom such discussions are routine.

If a patient does not have a menstrual cycle by age 14 or 15, that also should be addressed by a family physician or gynecologist, Dr. Romano added.

“The importance here is addressing the reproductive health of the teen starting really at the age of 10 or 12, or once puberty starts,” said Patricia S. Huguelet, MD, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist at Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora. In those early visits, the physician can provide “anticipatory guidance,” counseling the teen on what is normal in terms of menstruation, sex, and relationships, and addressing what is not, she said.

Ideally, patients who were designated female at birth but now identify as male or nonbinary will meet with a gynecologist early on in the gender affirmation process and a gynecologist will continue to consult as part of the patient’s interdisciplinary care team, added Dr. Romano, who counsels LGBTQ+ youth as part of her practice. A gynecologist may support these patients in myriad ways, including helping those who are considering or using puberty blockers and providing reproductive and health education to patients in a way that is sensitive to the patient’s gender identity.
 

 

 

Patient referrals

Some pediatricians and family practice physicians may be talking with their patients about topics such as menstrual cycles and contraception. But those who are uncomfortable asking adolescent patients about their reproductive and sexual health should refer them to a gynecologist or specialist in adolescent medicine, Dr. Romano advised.

“The biggest benefit I’ve noticed is often [patients] come from a pediatrician or family medicine provider and they often appreciate the opportunity to talk to a doctor they haven’t met before about the more personal questions they may have,” Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.

Referring adolescents to a specialist who has either trained in adolescent medicine or has experience treating that age group has benefits, Dr. Romano said. Clinicians with that experience understand adolescents are not “mini-adults” but have unique developmental and medical issues. How to counsel and educate them carries unique challenges, she said.

For example, heavy menstrual bleeding is a leading reason a patient – either an adult or an adolescent – presents to a gynecologist, Dr. Huguelet said. But the pathology differs vastly for those two age groups. For patients in their 30s and 40s, polyps and fibroids are common problems associated with heavy bleeding. Those conditions are rare in adolescents, whereas bleeding disorders are common, she said.

Most patients will continue to see their pediatricians and primary care providers for other issues. And in some areas, gynecologists can reinforce advice from pediatricians, such as encouraging patients to get the HPV vaccine, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.
 

Common misconceptions

Primary care physicians can also dispel common misconceptions teens – and their parents – have about gynecology. Some parents may believe that certain methods of birth control cause cancer or infertility, have concerns about the HPV vaccine, or think hormonal therapies are harmful, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said. But the biggest misconception involves the infamous pelvic exam.

“Lots of patients assume that every time they go to the gynecologist they are going to have a pelvic exam,” she said. “When I say, ‘We don’t have to do that,’ they are so relieved.”

Guidelines have changed since the parents of today’s teens were going to the gynecologist for the first time. Many patients now do not need an initial Pap smear until age 25, following a recent guideline change by the American Cancer Society. (ACOG is considering adopting the same stance but still recommends screening start at 21.) “Most patients do not need an exam, even when it comes to sexual health and screening [for sexually transmitted infections], that can be done without an exam,” Dr. Huguelet said.
 

Confidentiality and comfort

On the other side of the referral, gynecologists should follow several best practices to treat adolescent patients. Arguably the most important part of the initial gynecologic visit is to give patients the option of one-on-one time with the physician with no parent in the room. During that time, the physician should make it clear that what they discuss is confidential and will not be shared with their parent or guardian, Dr. Huguelet said. Patients should also have the option of having a friend or another nonparent individual in the room with them during this one-on-one time with the physician, particularly if the patient does not feel comfortable discussing sensitive subjects completely on her own.

Adolescents receive better care, disclose more, and perceive they are getting better care when the process is confidential, Dr. Romano said. Confidentiality does have limits, however, which physicians should also make sure their patients understand, according to the ACOG guidelines for the initial reproductive visit. These limitations can vary by state depending on issues related to mandatory reporting, insurance billing, and legal requirements of patient notifications of specific services such as abortion.

The use of electronic medical records has raised additional challenges when it comes to communicating privately with adolescent patients, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said. In her practice, she tries to ensure the adolescent is the one with the login information for their records. If not, her office will have the patient’s cell number to text or call securely.

“We feel strongly adolescents should be able to access reproductive health care, mental health care, and care for substance abuse disorders without parental notification,” Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.

Telehealth visits can also be helpful for adolescents coming to gynecology for the first time. And taking the time to establish a rapport with patients at the start of the visit is key, Dr. Huguelet said. By directing questions to the adolescent patient rather than the parent, Dr. Huguelet said, the physician demonstrates that the teen’s treatment needs come first.

ACOG has guidelines on other steps gynecology practices, including those that see both adults and teens, can take to make their offices and visits adolescent-friendly. These steps include asking patients about their preferred names and pronouns at the start of the visit or as part of the initial intake form, training office staff to be comfortable with issues related to adolescent sexuality and gender and sexual diversity among patients, providing a place for teens to wait separately from obstetrics patients, and having age-appropriate literature on hand for adolescents to learn about reproductive health.

After that first reproductive health visit, gynecologists and primary care providers should partner to ensure the whole health of their patients is being addressed, Dr. Huguelet said.

“Collaboration is always going to better serve patients in any area,” said Dr. Romano, “and certainly this area is no different.”

Dr. Amies Oelschlager, Dr. Romano, and Dr. Huguelet have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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For many adolescents, the first visit to a gynecologist can be intimidating. The prospect of meeting a new doctor who will ask prying, deeply personal questions about sex and menstruation is scary. And, in all likelihood, a parent, older sibling, or friend has warned them about the notorious pelvic exam.

The exact timing of when adolescent patients should start seeing a gynecologist varies based on when a patient starts puberty. Primary care physicians and pediatricians can help teens transition by referring patients to an adolescent-friendly practice and clearing up some of the misconceptions that surround the first gynecology visit. Gynecologists, on the other side of the referral, can help patients transition by guaranteeing confidentiality and creating a safe space for young patients.

This news organization interviewed three experts in adolescent health about when teens should start having their gynecological needs addressed and how their physicians can help them undergo that transition.
 

Age-appropriate care

“Most people get very limited information about their reproductive health,” said Anne-Marie E. Amies Oelschlager, MD, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist at Seattle Children’s, Seattle, and a member of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) clinical consensus committee on gynecology.

Official guidelines from ACOG call for the initial reproductive health visit to take place between the ages of 13 and 15 years. The exact age may vary, however, depending on the specific needs of the patient.

For example, some patients begin menstruating early, at age 9 or 10, said Mary Romano, MD, MPH, a pediatrician and adolescent medicine specialist at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital, Nashville, Tenn. Pediatricians who are uncomfortable educating young patients about menstruation should refer the patient to a gynecologist or a pediatric gynecologist for whom such discussions are routine.

If a patient does not have a menstrual cycle by age 14 or 15, that also should be addressed by a family physician or gynecologist, Dr. Romano added.

“The importance here is addressing the reproductive health of the teen starting really at the age of 10 or 12, or once puberty starts,” said Patricia S. Huguelet, MD, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist at Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora. In those early visits, the physician can provide “anticipatory guidance,” counseling the teen on what is normal in terms of menstruation, sex, and relationships, and addressing what is not, she said.

Ideally, patients who were designated female at birth but now identify as male or nonbinary will meet with a gynecologist early on in the gender affirmation process and a gynecologist will continue to consult as part of the patient’s interdisciplinary care team, added Dr. Romano, who counsels LGBTQ+ youth as part of her practice. A gynecologist may support these patients in myriad ways, including helping those who are considering or using puberty blockers and providing reproductive and health education to patients in a way that is sensitive to the patient’s gender identity.
 

 

 

Patient referrals

Some pediatricians and family practice physicians may be talking with their patients about topics such as menstrual cycles and contraception. But those who are uncomfortable asking adolescent patients about their reproductive and sexual health should refer them to a gynecologist or specialist in adolescent medicine, Dr. Romano advised.

“The biggest benefit I’ve noticed is often [patients] come from a pediatrician or family medicine provider and they often appreciate the opportunity to talk to a doctor they haven’t met before about the more personal questions they may have,” Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.

Referring adolescents to a specialist who has either trained in adolescent medicine or has experience treating that age group has benefits, Dr. Romano said. Clinicians with that experience understand adolescents are not “mini-adults” but have unique developmental and medical issues. How to counsel and educate them carries unique challenges, she said.

For example, heavy menstrual bleeding is a leading reason a patient – either an adult or an adolescent – presents to a gynecologist, Dr. Huguelet said. But the pathology differs vastly for those two age groups. For patients in their 30s and 40s, polyps and fibroids are common problems associated with heavy bleeding. Those conditions are rare in adolescents, whereas bleeding disorders are common, she said.

Most patients will continue to see their pediatricians and primary care providers for other issues. And in some areas, gynecologists can reinforce advice from pediatricians, such as encouraging patients to get the HPV vaccine, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.
 

Common misconceptions

Primary care physicians can also dispel common misconceptions teens – and their parents – have about gynecology. Some parents may believe that certain methods of birth control cause cancer or infertility, have concerns about the HPV vaccine, or think hormonal therapies are harmful, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said. But the biggest misconception involves the infamous pelvic exam.

“Lots of patients assume that every time they go to the gynecologist they are going to have a pelvic exam,” she said. “When I say, ‘We don’t have to do that,’ they are so relieved.”

Guidelines have changed since the parents of today’s teens were going to the gynecologist for the first time. Many patients now do not need an initial Pap smear until age 25, following a recent guideline change by the American Cancer Society. (ACOG is considering adopting the same stance but still recommends screening start at 21.) “Most patients do not need an exam, even when it comes to sexual health and screening [for sexually transmitted infections], that can be done without an exam,” Dr. Huguelet said.
 

Confidentiality and comfort

On the other side of the referral, gynecologists should follow several best practices to treat adolescent patients. Arguably the most important part of the initial gynecologic visit is to give patients the option of one-on-one time with the physician with no parent in the room. During that time, the physician should make it clear that what they discuss is confidential and will not be shared with their parent or guardian, Dr. Huguelet said. Patients should also have the option of having a friend or another nonparent individual in the room with them during this one-on-one time with the physician, particularly if the patient does not feel comfortable discussing sensitive subjects completely on her own.

Adolescents receive better care, disclose more, and perceive they are getting better care when the process is confidential, Dr. Romano said. Confidentiality does have limits, however, which physicians should also make sure their patients understand, according to the ACOG guidelines for the initial reproductive visit. These limitations can vary by state depending on issues related to mandatory reporting, insurance billing, and legal requirements of patient notifications of specific services such as abortion.

The use of electronic medical records has raised additional challenges when it comes to communicating privately with adolescent patients, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said. In her practice, she tries to ensure the adolescent is the one with the login information for their records. If not, her office will have the patient’s cell number to text or call securely.

“We feel strongly adolescents should be able to access reproductive health care, mental health care, and care for substance abuse disorders without parental notification,” Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.

Telehealth visits can also be helpful for adolescents coming to gynecology for the first time. And taking the time to establish a rapport with patients at the start of the visit is key, Dr. Huguelet said. By directing questions to the adolescent patient rather than the parent, Dr. Huguelet said, the physician demonstrates that the teen’s treatment needs come first.

ACOG has guidelines on other steps gynecology practices, including those that see both adults and teens, can take to make their offices and visits adolescent-friendly. These steps include asking patients about their preferred names and pronouns at the start of the visit or as part of the initial intake form, training office staff to be comfortable with issues related to adolescent sexuality and gender and sexual diversity among patients, providing a place for teens to wait separately from obstetrics patients, and having age-appropriate literature on hand for adolescents to learn about reproductive health.

After that first reproductive health visit, gynecologists and primary care providers should partner to ensure the whole health of their patients is being addressed, Dr. Huguelet said.

“Collaboration is always going to better serve patients in any area,” said Dr. Romano, “and certainly this area is no different.”

Dr. Amies Oelschlager, Dr. Romano, and Dr. Huguelet have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

For many adolescents, the first visit to a gynecologist can be intimidating. The prospect of meeting a new doctor who will ask prying, deeply personal questions about sex and menstruation is scary. And, in all likelihood, a parent, older sibling, or friend has warned them about the notorious pelvic exam.

The exact timing of when adolescent patients should start seeing a gynecologist varies based on when a patient starts puberty. Primary care physicians and pediatricians can help teens transition by referring patients to an adolescent-friendly practice and clearing up some of the misconceptions that surround the first gynecology visit. Gynecologists, on the other side of the referral, can help patients transition by guaranteeing confidentiality and creating a safe space for young patients.

This news organization interviewed three experts in adolescent health about when teens should start having their gynecological needs addressed and how their physicians can help them undergo that transition.
 

Age-appropriate care

“Most people get very limited information about their reproductive health,” said Anne-Marie E. Amies Oelschlager, MD, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist at Seattle Children’s, Seattle, and a member of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) clinical consensus committee on gynecology.

Official guidelines from ACOG call for the initial reproductive health visit to take place between the ages of 13 and 15 years. The exact age may vary, however, depending on the specific needs of the patient.

For example, some patients begin menstruating early, at age 9 or 10, said Mary Romano, MD, MPH, a pediatrician and adolescent medicine specialist at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital, Nashville, Tenn. Pediatricians who are uncomfortable educating young patients about menstruation should refer the patient to a gynecologist or a pediatric gynecologist for whom such discussions are routine.

If a patient does not have a menstrual cycle by age 14 or 15, that also should be addressed by a family physician or gynecologist, Dr. Romano added.

“The importance here is addressing the reproductive health of the teen starting really at the age of 10 or 12, or once puberty starts,” said Patricia S. Huguelet, MD, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist at Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora. In those early visits, the physician can provide “anticipatory guidance,” counseling the teen on what is normal in terms of menstruation, sex, and relationships, and addressing what is not, she said.

Ideally, patients who were designated female at birth but now identify as male or nonbinary will meet with a gynecologist early on in the gender affirmation process and a gynecologist will continue to consult as part of the patient’s interdisciplinary care team, added Dr. Romano, who counsels LGBTQ+ youth as part of her practice. A gynecologist may support these patients in myriad ways, including helping those who are considering or using puberty blockers and providing reproductive and health education to patients in a way that is sensitive to the patient’s gender identity.
 

 

 

Patient referrals

Some pediatricians and family practice physicians may be talking with their patients about topics such as menstrual cycles and contraception. But those who are uncomfortable asking adolescent patients about their reproductive and sexual health should refer them to a gynecologist or specialist in adolescent medicine, Dr. Romano advised.

“The biggest benefit I’ve noticed is often [patients] come from a pediatrician or family medicine provider and they often appreciate the opportunity to talk to a doctor they haven’t met before about the more personal questions they may have,” Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.

Referring adolescents to a specialist who has either trained in adolescent medicine or has experience treating that age group has benefits, Dr. Romano said. Clinicians with that experience understand adolescents are not “mini-adults” but have unique developmental and medical issues. How to counsel and educate them carries unique challenges, she said.

For example, heavy menstrual bleeding is a leading reason a patient – either an adult or an adolescent – presents to a gynecologist, Dr. Huguelet said. But the pathology differs vastly for those two age groups. For patients in their 30s and 40s, polyps and fibroids are common problems associated with heavy bleeding. Those conditions are rare in adolescents, whereas bleeding disorders are common, she said.

Most patients will continue to see their pediatricians and primary care providers for other issues. And in some areas, gynecologists can reinforce advice from pediatricians, such as encouraging patients to get the HPV vaccine, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.
 

Common misconceptions

Primary care physicians can also dispel common misconceptions teens – and their parents – have about gynecology. Some parents may believe that certain methods of birth control cause cancer or infertility, have concerns about the HPV vaccine, or think hormonal therapies are harmful, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said. But the biggest misconception involves the infamous pelvic exam.

“Lots of patients assume that every time they go to the gynecologist they are going to have a pelvic exam,” she said. “When I say, ‘We don’t have to do that,’ they are so relieved.”

Guidelines have changed since the parents of today’s teens were going to the gynecologist for the first time. Many patients now do not need an initial Pap smear until age 25, following a recent guideline change by the American Cancer Society. (ACOG is considering adopting the same stance but still recommends screening start at 21.) “Most patients do not need an exam, even when it comes to sexual health and screening [for sexually transmitted infections], that can be done without an exam,” Dr. Huguelet said.
 

Confidentiality and comfort

On the other side of the referral, gynecologists should follow several best practices to treat adolescent patients. Arguably the most important part of the initial gynecologic visit is to give patients the option of one-on-one time with the physician with no parent in the room. During that time, the physician should make it clear that what they discuss is confidential and will not be shared with their parent or guardian, Dr. Huguelet said. Patients should also have the option of having a friend or another nonparent individual in the room with them during this one-on-one time with the physician, particularly if the patient does not feel comfortable discussing sensitive subjects completely on her own.

Adolescents receive better care, disclose more, and perceive they are getting better care when the process is confidential, Dr. Romano said. Confidentiality does have limits, however, which physicians should also make sure their patients understand, according to the ACOG guidelines for the initial reproductive visit. These limitations can vary by state depending on issues related to mandatory reporting, insurance billing, and legal requirements of patient notifications of specific services such as abortion.

The use of electronic medical records has raised additional challenges when it comes to communicating privately with adolescent patients, Dr. Amies Oelschlager said. In her practice, she tries to ensure the adolescent is the one with the login information for their records. If not, her office will have the patient’s cell number to text or call securely.

“We feel strongly adolescents should be able to access reproductive health care, mental health care, and care for substance abuse disorders without parental notification,” Dr. Amies Oelschlager said.

Telehealth visits can also be helpful for adolescents coming to gynecology for the first time. And taking the time to establish a rapport with patients at the start of the visit is key, Dr. Huguelet said. By directing questions to the adolescent patient rather than the parent, Dr. Huguelet said, the physician demonstrates that the teen’s treatment needs come first.

ACOG has guidelines on other steps gynecology practices, including those that see both adults and teens, can take to make their offices and visits adolescent-friendly. These steps include asking patients about their preferred names and pronouns at the start of the visit or as part of the initial intake form, training office staff to be comfortable with issues related to adolescent sexuality and gender and sexual diversity among patients, providing a place for teens to wait separately from obstetrics patients, and having age-appropriate literature on hand for adolescents to learn about reproductive health.

After that first reproductive health visit, gynecologists and primary care providers should partner to ensure the whole health of their patients is being addressed, Dr. Huguelet said.

“Collaboration is always going to better serve patients in any area,” said Dr. Romano, “and certainly this area is no different.”

Dr. Amies Oelschlager, Dr. Romano, and Dr. Huguelet have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Tech can help teens connect with docs about sexual health

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Maria Trent, MD, MPH, was studying ways clinicians can leverage technology to care for adolescents years before COVID-19 exposed the challenges and advantages of telehealth.

Dr. Trent, a pediatrician and adolescent medicine specialist and professor of pediatrics at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, has long believed that the phones in her patients’ pockets have the potential to improve the sexual health of youth. The pandemic has only made that view stronger.

“They’re a generation that’s really wired and online,” Dr. Trent told this news organization. “I think that we can meet them in that space.”

Her research has incorporated texting, apps, and videos. Out of necessity, technology increasingly became part of patient care during the pandemic. “We had to stretch our ability to do some basic triage and assessments of patients online,” Dr. Trent said.

Even when clinics are closed, doctors might be able to provide initial care remotely, such as writing prescriptions to manage symptoms or directing patients to a lab for testing.

Telemedicine could allow a clinician to guide a teenager who thinks they might be pregnant to take a store-bought test and avoid possible exposure to COVID-19 in the ED, for instance.

But doctors have concerns about the legal and practical limits of privacy and confidentiality. Who else is at home listening to a phone conversation? Are parents accessing the patient’s online portal? Will parents receive an explanation of benefits that lists testing for a sexually transmitted infection, or see a testing kit that is delivered to their home?

When a young patient needs in-person care, transportation can be a barrier. And then there’s the matter of clinicians being able to bill for telehealth services.

Practices are learning how to navigate these issues, and relevant laws vary by state.

“I think this is going to become part of standard practice,” Dr. Trent said. “I think we have to do the hard work to make sure that it’s safe, that it’s accessible, and that it is actually improving care.”
 

Texts, apps, videos

In one early study, Dr. Trent and colleagues found that showing adolescents with pelvic inflammatory disease a 6-minute video may improve treatment rates for their sexual partners.

Another study provided preliminary evidence that text messaging support might improve clinic attendance for moderately long-acting reversible contraception.

A third trial showed that adolescents and young adults with pelvic inflammatory disease who were randomly assigned to receive text-message prompts to take their medications and provide information about the doses they consumed had greater decreases in Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis infections, compared with patients who received standard care.

Dr. Trent and coinvestigators are assessing a technology-based intervention for youth with HIV, in which patients can use an app to submit videos of themselves taking antiretroviral therapy and report any side effects. The technology provides a way to monitor patients remotely and support them between visits, she said.
 

Will pandemic-driven options remain?

In 2020, Laura D. Lindberg, PhD, principal research scientist at the Guttmacher Institute in New York, and coauthors discussed the possible ramifications of the pandemic on the sexual and reproductive health of adolescents and young adults.

If telemedicine options driven by COVID-19 are here to stay, adolescents and young adults could be “the age group most likely to continue that approach rather than returning to traditional in-person visits,” the researchers wrote. “Innovations in health care service provision, such as use of telemedicine and obtaining contraceptives and STI testing by mail, will help expand access to [sexual and reproductive health] care for young people.”

At the 2021 annual conference of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Dr. Trent described telehealth as a viable way to provide sexual and reproductive health care to adolescents and young adults, including anticipatory guidance, contraception counseling, coordination of follow-up care and testing, and connecting patients to resources.

Her presentation cited several websites that can help patients receive testing for STIs, including Yes Means Test, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s GetTested page, and I Want the Kit. Planned Parenthood has telehealth options, and the Kaiser Family Foundation compiled information about 26 online platforms that were providing contraception or STI services.
 

Who else is in the room?

“There’s only so much time in the day and so many patients you can see, regardless of whether you have telehealth or not,” said David L. Bell, MD, MPH, president of the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine and a coauthor of the Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health paper. In addition, “you never know who else is in the room” with the patient on the other end, added Dr. Bell, a professor of population and family health and pediatrics at the Columbia University Medical Center and medical director of the Young Men’s Clinic, both in New York.

In some respects, young patients may not be able to participate in telehealth visits the same way they would in a medical office, Dr. Trent acknowledged. Encouraging the use of headphones is one way to help protect confidentiality when talking with patients who are at home and might not be alone.

But if patients are able to find a private space for remote visits, they might be more open than usual. In that way, telemedicine could provide additional opportunities to address issues like substance use disorders and mental health, as well, she said.

“Then, if they need something, we have to problem solve,” Dr. Trent said. Next steps may involve engaging a parent or getting the patient to a lab or the clinic.
 

Sex ed may be lacking

The Perspectives article also raised concerns that the pandemic might exacerbate shortcomings in sex education, which already may have been lacking.

“Before the pandemic, schools were a key source of formal sex education for young people,” the authors wrote. “Sex education, which was already limited in many areas of the country, has likely not been included in the national shift to online learning. Even when in-person schooling resumes, missed sex education instruction is unlikely to be made up, given the modest attention it received prior to the pandemic.”

A recently published study in the Journal of Adolescent Health indicates that American teenagers currently receive less formal sex education than they did 25 years ago, with “troubling” inequities by race.

Researchers surveyed adolescents about what they had learned about topics such as how to say no to sex, methods of birth control and where to get them, and STIs.

Dr. Lindberg and Leslie M. Kantor, PhD, MPH, professor and chair of the department of urban-global public health at Rutgers University, Newark, N.J., conducted the analysis.

“Pediatricians and other health care providers that work with children and adolescents have a critical role to play in providing information about sexuality to both the patients and to the parents,” said Dr. Kantor, who also coauthored the Perspectives article with Dr. Lindberg and Dr. Bell. The new research “shows that doctors play an even more critical role, because they can’t assume that their patients are going to get the information that they need in a timely way from schools.”

By age 15, 21% of girls and 20% of boys have had sexual intercourse at least once, according to data from the 2015-2017 National Survey of Family Growth. By age 17, the percentages were 53% of girls and 48% of boys. By age 20, the percentages were 79% of women and 77% of men. The CDC’s 2021 guidelines on treatment and screening for STIs note that prevalence rates of certain infections – such as chlamydia and gonorrhea in females – are highest among adolescents and young adults.

Those trends underscore the importance of counseling on sexual health that clinicians can provide, but time constraints may limit how much they can discuss in a single session with a patient. To cover all topics that are important to parents and patients, doctors may need to discuss sexual and reproductive health sooner and more frequently.

Young people are getting more and more explicit information from their phones and media, yet educators are giving them less information to navigate these topics and learn what’s real, Dr. Kantor said. That mismatch can be toxic. In a December 2021 interview with Howard Stern, the pop star Billie Eilish said she started watching pornography at about age 11 and frequently watched videos that were violent. “I think it really destroyed my brain and I feel incredibly devastated that I was exposed to so much porn,” Ms. Eilish told Mr. Stern.

Researchers and a psychologist told CNN that the singer’s story may be typical. It also highlights a need to be aware of kids’ online activities and to have conversations about how pornography may not depict healthy interactions, they said.

Beyond discussing a plan for preventing pregnancy and STIs, Dr. Kantor encouraged discussions about what constitutes healthy relationships, as well as check-ins about intimate partner violence and how romantic relationships are going.

“I think for pediatricians and for parents, it’s a muscle,” she said. “As you bring up these topics more, listen, and respond, you get more comfortable with it.”

Dr. Trent has served as an advisory board member on a sexual health council for Trojan (Church & Dwight Company) and has received research funding from Hologic and research supplies from SpeeDx. Dr. Bell has received funds from the Merck Foundation, Merck, and Gilead. Dr. Kantor had no disclosures.

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

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Maria Trent, MD, MPH, was studying ways clinicians can leverage technology to care for adolescents years before COVID-19 exposed the challenges and advantages of telehealth.

Dr. Trent, a pediatrician and adolescent medicine specialist and professor of pediatrics at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, has long believed that the phones in her patients’ pockets have the potential to improve the sexual health of youth. The pandemic has only made that view stronger.

“They’re a generation that’s really wired and online,” Dr. Trent told this news organization. “I think that we can meet them in that space.”

Her research has incorporated texting, apps, and videos. Out of necessity, technology increasingly became part of patient care during the pandemic. “We had to stretch our ability to do some basic triage and assessments of patients online,” Dr. Trent said.

Even when clinics are closed, doctors might be able to provide initial care remotely, such as writing prescriptions to manage symptoms or directing patients to a lab for testing.

Telemedicine could allow a clinician to guide a teenager who thinks they might be pregnant to take a store-bought test and avoid possible exposure to COVID-19 in the ED, for instance.

But doctors have concerns about the legal and practical limits of privacy and confidentiality. Who else is at home listening to a phone conversation? Are parents accessing the patient’s online portal? Will parents receive an explanation of benefits that lists testing for a sexually transmitted infection, or see a testing kit that is delivered to their home?

When a young patient needs in-person care, transportation can be a barrier. And then there’s the matter of clinicians being able to bill for telehealth services.

Practices are learning how to navigate these issues, and relevant laws vary by state.

“I think this is going to become part of standard practice,” Dr. Trent said. “I think we have to do the hard work to make sure that it’s safe, that it’s accessible, and that it is actually improving care.”
 

Texts, apps, videos

In one early study, Dr. Trent and colleagues found that showing adolescents with pelvic inflammatory disease a 6-minute video may improve treatment rates for their sexual partners.

Another study provided preliminary evidence that text messaging support might improve clinic attendance for moderately long-acting reversible contraception.

A third trial showed that adolescents and young adults with pelvic inflammatory disease who were randomly assigned to receive text-message prompts to take their medications and provide information about the doses they consumed had greater decreases in Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis infections, compared with patients who received standard care.

Dr. Trent and coinvestigators are assessing a technology-based intervention for youth with HIV, in which patients can use an app to submit videos of themselves taking antiretroviral therapy and report any side effects. The technology provides a way to monitor patients remotely and support them between visits, she said.
 

Will pandemic-driven options remain?

In 2020, Laura D. Lindberg, PhD, principal research scientist at the Guttmacher Institute in New York, and coauthors discussed the possible ramifications of the pandemic on the sexual and reproductive health of adolescents and young adults.

If telemedicine options driven by COVID-19 are here to stay, adolescents and young adults could be “the age group most likely to continue that approach rather than returning to traditional in-person visits,” the researchers wrote. “Innovations in health care service provision, such as use of telemedicine and obtaining contraceptives and STI testing by mail, will help expand access to [sexual and reproductive health] care for young people.”

At the 2021 annual conference of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Dr. Trent described telehealth as a viable way to provide sexual and reproductive health care to adolescents and young adults, including anticipatory guidance, contraception counseling, coordination of follow-up care and testing, and connecting patients to resources.

Her presentation cited several websites that can help patients receive testing for STIs, including Yes Means Test, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s GetTested page, and I Want the Kit. Planned Parenthood has telehealth options, and the Kaiser Family Foundation compiled information about 26 online platforms that were providing contraception or STI services.
 

Who else is in the room?

“There’s only so much time in the day and so many patients you can see, regardless of whether you have telehealth or not,” said David L. Bell, MD, MPH, president of the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine and a coauthor of the Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health paper. In addition, “you never know who else is in the room” with the patient on the other end, added Dr. Bell, a professor of population and family health and pediatrics at the Columbia University Medical Center and medical director of the Young Men’s Clinic, both in New York.

In some respects, young patients may not be able to participate in telehealth visits the same way they would in a medical office, Dr. Trent acknowledged. Encouraging the use of headphones is one way to help protect confidentiality when talking with patients who are at home and might not be alone.

But if patients are able to find a private space for remote visits, they might be more open than usual. In that way, telemedicine could provide additional opportunities to address issues like substance use disorders and mental health, as well, she said.

“Then, if they need something, we have to problem solve,” Dr. Trent said. Next steps may involve engaging a parent or getting the patient to a lab or the clinic.
 

Sex ed may be lacking

The Perspectives article also raised concerns that the pandemic might exacerbate shortcomings in sex education, which already may have been lacking.

“Before the pandemic, schools were a key source of formal sex education for young people,” the authors wrote. “Sex education, which was already limited in many areas of the country, has likely not been included in the national shift to online learning. Even when in-person schooling resumes, missed sex education instruction is unlikely to be made up, given the modest attention it received prior to the pandemic.”

A recently published study in the Journal of Adolescent Health indicates that American teenagers currently receive less formal sex education than they did 25 years ago, with “troubling” inequities by race.

Researchers surveyed adolescents about what they had learned about topics such as how to say no to sex, methods of birth control and where to get them, and STIs.

Dr. Lindberg and Leslie M. Kantor, PhD, MPH, professor and chair of the department of urban-global public health at Rutgers University, Newark, N.J., conducted the analysis.

“Pediatricians and other health care providers that work with children and adolescents have a critical role to play in providing information about sexuality to both the patients and to the parents,” said Dr. Kantor, who also coauthored the Perspectives article with Dr. Lindberg and Dr. Bell. The new research “shows that doctors play an even more critical role, because they can’t assume that their patients are going to get the information that they need in a timely way from schools.”

By age 15, 21% of girls and 20% of boys have had sexual intercourse at least once, according to data from the 2015-2017 National Survey of Family Growth. By age 17, the percentages were 53% of girls and 48% of boys. By age 20, the percentages were 79% of women and 77% of men. The CDC’s 2021 guidelines on treatment and screening for STIs note that prevalence rates of certain infections – such as chlamydia and gonorrhea in females – are highest among adolescents and young adults.

Those trends underscore the importance of counseling on sexual health that clinicians can provide, but time constraints may limit how much they can discuss in a single session with a patient. To cover all topics that are important to parents and patients, doctors may need to discuss sexual and reproductive health sooner and more frequently.

Young people are getting more and more explicit information from their phones and media, yet educators are giving them less information to navigate these topics and learn what’s real, Dr. Kantor said. That mismatch can be toxic. In a December 2021 interview with Howard Stern, the pop star Billie Eilish said she started watching pornography at about age 11 and frequently watched videos that were violent. “I think it really destroyed my brain and I feel incredibly devastated that I was exposed to so much porn,” Ms. Eilish told Mr. Stern.

Researchers and a psychologist told CNN that the singer’s story may be typical. It also highlights a need to be aware of kids’ online activities and to have conversations about how pornography may not depict healthy interactions, they said.

Beyond discussing a plan for preventing pregnancy and STIs, Dr. Kantor encouraged discussions about what constitutes healthy relationships, as well as check-ins about intimate partner violence and how romantic relationships are going.

“I think for pediatricians and for parents, it’s a muscle,” she said. “As you bring up these topics more, listen, and respond, you get more comfortable with it.”

Dr. Trent has served as an advisory board member on a sexual health council for Trojan (Church & Dwight Company) and has received research funding from Hologic and research supplies from SpeeDx. Dr. Bell has received funds from the Merck Foundation, Merck, and Gilead. Dr. Kantor had no disclosures.

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

 

Maria Trent, MD, MPH, was studying ways clinicians can leverage technology to care for adolescents years before COVID-19 exposed the challenges and advantages of telehealth.

Dr. Trent, a pediatrician and adolescent medicine specialist and professor of pediatrics at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, has long believed that the phones in her patients’ pockets have the potential to improve the sexual health of youth. The pandemic has only made that view stronger.

“They’re a generation that’s really wired and online,” Dr. Trent told this news organization. “I think that we can meet them in that space.”

Her research has incorporated texting, apps, and videos. Out of necessity, technology increasingly became part of patient care during the pandemic. “We had to stretch our ability to do some basic triage and assessments of patients online,” Dr. Trent said.

Even when clinics are closed, doctors might be able to provide initial care remotely, such as writing prescriptions to manage symptoms or directing patients to a lab for testing.

Telemedicine could allow a clinician to guide a teenager who thinks they might be pregnant to take a store-bought test and avoid possible exposure to COVID-19 in the ED, for instance.

But doctors have concerns about the legal and practical limits of privacy and confidentiality. Who else is at home listening to a phone conversation? Are parents accessing the patient’s online portal? Will parents receive an explanation of benefits that lists testing for a sexually transmitted infection, or see a testing kit that is delivered to their home?

When a young patient needs in-person care, transportation can be a barrier. And then there’s the matter of clinicians being able to bill for telehealth services.

Practices are learning how to navigate these issues, and relevant laws vary by state.

“I think this is going to become part of standard practice,” Dr. Trent said. “I think we have to do the hard work to make sure that it’s safe, that it’s accessible, and that it is actually improving care.”
 

Texts, apps, videos

In one early study, Dr. Trent and colleagues found that showing adolescents with pelvic inflammatory disease a 6-minute video may improve treatment rates for their sexual partners.

Another study provided preliminary evidence that text messaging support might improve clinic attendance for moderately long-acting reversible contraception.

A third trial showed that adolescents and young adults with pelvic inflammatory disease who were randomly assigned to receive text-message prompts to take their medications and provide information about the doses they consumed had greater decreases in Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis infections, compared with patients who received standard care.

Dr. Trent and coinvestigators are assessing a technology-based intervention for youth with HIV, in which patients can use an app to submit videos of themselves taking antiretroviral therapy and report any side effects. The technology provides a way to monitor patients remotely and support them between visits, she said.
 

Will pandemic-driven options remain?

In 2020, Laura D. Lindberg, PhD, principal research scientist at the Guttmacher Institute in New York, and coauthors discussed the possible ramifications of the pandemic on the sexual and reproductive health of adolescents and young adults.

If telemedicine options driven by COVID-19 are here to stay, adolescents and young adults could be “the age group most likely to continue that approach rather than returning to traditional in-person visits,” the researchers wrote. “Innovations in health care service provision, such as use of telemedicine and obtaining contraceptives and STI testing by mail, will help expand access to [sexual and reproductive health] care for young people.”

At the 2021 annual conference of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Dr. Trent described telehealth as a viable way to provide sexual and reproductive health care to adolescents and young adults, including anticipatory guidance, contraception counseling, coordination of follow-up care and testing, and connecting patients to resources.

Her presentation cited several websites that can help patients receive testing for STIs, including Yes Means Test, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s GetTested page, and I Want the Kit. Planned Parenthood has telehealth options, and the Kaiser Family Foundation compiled information about 26 online platforms that were providing contraception or STI services.
 

Who else is in the room?

“There’s only so much time in the day and so many patients you can see, regardless of whether you have telehealth or not,” said David L. Bell, MD, MPH, president of the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine and a coauthor of the Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health paper. In addition, “you never know who else is in the room” with the patient on the other end, added Dr. Bell, a professor of population and family health and pediatrics at the Columbia University Medical Center and medical director of the Young Men’s Clinic, both in New York.

In some respects, young patients may not be able to participate in telehealth visits the same way they would in a medical office, Dr. Trent acknowledged. Encouraging the use of headphones is one way to help protect confidentiality when talking with patients who are at home and might not be alone.

But if patients are able to find a private space for remote visits, they might be more open than usual. In that way, telemedicine could provide additional opportunities to address issues like substance use disorders and mental health, as well, she said.

“Then, if they need something, we have to problem solve,” Dr. Trent said. Next steps may involve engaging a parent or getting the patient to a lab or the clinic.
 

Sex ed may be lacking

The Perspectives article also raised concerns that the pandemic might exacerbate shortcomings in sex education, which already may have been lacking.

“Before the pandemic, schools were a key source of formal sex education for young people,” the authors wrote. “Sex education, which was already limited in many areas of the country, has likely not been included in the national shift to online learning. Even when in-person schooling resumes, missed sex education instruction is unlikely to be made up, given the modest attention it received prior to the pandemic.”

A recently published study in the Journal of Adolescent Health indicates that American teenagers currently receive less formal sex education than they did 25 years ago, with “troubling” inequities by race.

Researchers surveyed adolescents about what they had learned about topics such as how to say no to sex, methods of birth control and where to get them, and STIs.

Dr. Lindberg and Leslie M. Kantor, PhD, MPH, professor and chair of the department of urban-global public health at Rutgers University, Newark, N.J., conducted the analysis.

“Pediatricians and other health care providers that work with children and adolescents have a critical role to play in providing information about sexuality to both the patients and to the parents,” said Dr. Kantor, who also coauthored the Perspectives article with Dr. Lindberg and Dr. Bell. The new research “shows that doctors play an even more critical role, because they can’t assume that their patients are going to get the information that they need in a timely way from schools.”

By age 15, 21% of girls and 20% of boys have had sexual intercourse at least once, according to data from the 2015-2017 National Survey of Family Growth. By age 17, the percentages were 53% of girls and 48% of boys. By age 20, the percentages were 79% of women and 77% of men. The CDC’s 2021 guidelines on treatment and screening for STIs note that prevalence rates of certain infections – such as chlamydia and gonorrhea in females – are highest among adolescents and young adults.

Those trends underscore the importance of counseling on sexual health that clinicians can provide, but time constraints may limit how much they can discuss in a single session with a patient. To cover all topics that are important to parents and patients, doctors may need to discuss sexual and reproductive health sooner and more frequently.

Young people are getting more and more explicit information from their phones and media, yet educators are giving them less information to navigate these topics and learn what’s real, Dr. Kantor said. That mismatch can be toxic. In a December 2021 interview with Howard Stern, the pop star Billie Eilish said she started watching pornography at about age 11 and frequently watched videos that were violent. “I think it really destroyed my brain and I feel incredibly devastated that I was exposed to so much porn,” Ms. Eilish told Mr. Stern.

Researchers and a psychologist told CNN that the singer’s story may be typical. It also highlights a need to be aware of kids’ online activities and to have conversations about how pornography may not depict healthy interactions, they said.

Beyond discussing a plan for preventing pregnancy and STIs, Dr. Kantor encouraged discussions about what constitutes healthy relationships, as well as check-ins about intimate partner violence and how romantic relationships are going.

“I think for pediatricians and for parents, it’s a muscle,” she said. “As you bring up these topics more, listen, and respond, you get more comfortable with it.”

Dr. Trent has served as an advisory board member on a sexual health council for Trojan (Church & Dwight Company) and has received research funding from Hologic and research supplies from SpeeDx. Dr. Bell has received funds from the Merck Foundation, Merck, and Gilead. Dr. Kantor had no disclosures.

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

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Even healthy Black and Hispanic women have more cesareans than White women

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New research offers more insight into potentially dangerous racial disparities in cesarean deliveries: In first-time live births, healthy African-American and Hispanic mothers were 21% and 26% more likely than White mothers, respectively, to deliver by cesarean section despite being low risk. The higher number of cesareans appeared to boost their risk of morbidity.

“A 20% increased odds of cesarean among otherwise healthy, low-risk, nulliparous individuals at term – with limited medical or obstetric explanation – is a significant concern, especially when considering that cesarean is the most common surgical procedure in the U.S.,” said study author Michelle P. Debbink, MD, PhD, an assistant professor with the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Utah, in an interview.

Dr. Debbink and colleagues launched the study, published in the Jan. 2022 issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology, to better understand the racial gap in cesarean sections, which are considered riskier than vaginal deliveries. “Several studies have shown that Black women undergo cesarean more frequently than non-Hispanic White women. Numerous studies also show that Hispanic/Latina women undergo cesarean more frequently than White women, although these data are a bit more mixed,” she said. “What we don’t know, however, is why these differences occur and whether there are clues in the data which can point us toward interventions to close the gap.”

One theory, she said, is that Black and Hispanic women have more comorbidities and therefore more cesareans. To test that idea, the researchers found a cohort of healthy women in a randomized trial that studied the induction of labor.

For the study, they focused on 5,759 women (24.3% Black, 30% Hispanic, 46.6% White). Major differences between the groups included maternal age (average = 21 for Black, 22 for Hispanic, and 26 for White, P < .001), private insurance (17% for Black and Hispanic, 75% for White; P < .001), and full or part-time employment (37% for Black, 31% for Hispanic, and 71% for White; P < .001).

A total of 1,158 of the women (20.1%) underwent cesarean deliveries, accounting for 23% of deliveries by Black women, 22.8% of those by Hispanic women, and 17.6% of those by White women (P < .001). Black women were 21% more likely than White women to give birth via cesarean (adjusted relative risk = 1.21, 95% CI: 1.03-1.42) and Hispanic women were 26% more likely (aRR = 1.26, 95% CI: 1.08-1.46).

The study doesn’t explore why Black and Hispanic women have more cesarean deliveries. However, Dr. Debbink said, “we hypothesize that the difference likely stems more from differing treatment of Black or Hispanic individuals during labor.” It’s unlikely, she said, that these women are more likely to prefer cesarean sections. For one thing, she said, other research hasn’t shown a difference in preferences by race.

The researchers also analyzed maternal morbidity, defined as “transfusion of 4 or more units of red blood cells, any transfusion of other products, postpartum infection, intensive care unit admission, hysterectomy, venous thromboembolism, or maternal death.”

The study found that while few women (2.3%) suffered from morbidity, Black (aRR = 2.05, 95% CI: 1.21-3.47) and Hispanic (aRR = 1.92, 95% CI: 1.17-3.14) women were more likely to suffer from it than White women.

The researchers report that “cesarean birth accounted for an estimated 15.8% (95% CI: 2.1%-48.7%) and 16.5% (95% CI: 4.0%-44.0%) of excess maternal morbidity among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic people, respectively.”

“Both endometritis and wound complications are much more common among individuals with cesarean, and blood clots, hysterectomy, and ICU admission are also more common after cesarean compared with vaginal delivery,” Dr. Debbink said.

The message of the study, she said, is that the health care system “perpetuates gaps in cesarean delivery for Black and Hispanic individuals compared to White individuals” even in low-risk, first-time live births. “We do not yet know exactly what the right levers are to address this gap, but it is important that we ob-gyns examine our practice patterns and our hospitals’ practice patterns to ensure equity for all our patients.”

Rebecca Delafield, PhD, an assistant professor of Native Hawaiian Health at the University of Hawaii, praised the study as “well-conducted” in an interview. “I agree with the assessment that while the cesarean delivery accounts for a modest proportion of excess morbidity in this study, the impact at the population level is significant,” said Dr. Delafield, who studies health disparities and didn’t take part in the study. “Delivery is complex and the causes of disparities observed are likely multifactorial, therefore research such as this is necessary and compelling.”

She added: “It is becoming increasingly evident that studies investigating racial/ethnic disparities in cesarean delivery and other maternal health outcomes must look beyond maternal behavioral or medical risk factors – e.g., obesity or hypertension – and consider the contribution of a broader set of factors, including societal prejudices.”

The study is funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. One study author reports funding from GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Moderna, and UpToDate (contributor) and from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (via her institution). Dr. Debbink, the other authors, and Dr. Delafield report no disclosures.

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New research offers more insight into potentially dangerous racial disparities in cesarean deliveries: In first-time live births, healthy African-American and Hispanic mothers were 21% and 26% more likely than White mothers, respectively, to deliver by cesarean section despite being low risk. The higher number of cesareans appeared to boost their risk of morbidity.

“A 20% increased odds of cesarean among otherwise healthy, low-risk, nulliparous individuals at term – with limited medical or obstetric explanation – is a significant concern, especially when considering that cesarean is the most common surgical procedure in the U.S.,” said study author Michelle P. Debbink, MD, PhD, an assistant professor with the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Utah, in an interview.

Dr. Debbink and colleagues launched the study, published in the Jan. 2022 issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology, to better understand the racial gap in cesarean sections, which are considered riskier than vaginal deliveries. “Several studies have shown that Black women undergo cesarean more frequently than non-Hispanic White women. Numerous studies also show that Hispanic/Latina women undergo cesarean more frequently than White women, although these data are a bit more mixed,” she said. “What we don’t know, however, is why these differences occur and whether there are clues in the data which can point us toward interventions to close the gap.”

One theory, she said, is that Black and Hispanic women have more comorbidities and therefore more cesareans. To test that idea, the researchers found a cohort of healthy women in a randomized trial that studied the induction of labor.

For the study, they focused on 5,759 women (24.3% Black, 30% Hispanic, 46.6% White). Major differences between the groups included maternal age (average = 21 for Black, 22 for Hispanic, and 26 for White, P < .001), private insurance (17% for Black and Hispanic, 75% for White; P < .001), and full or part-time employment (37% for Black, 31% for Hispanic, and 71% for White; P < .001).

A total of 1,158 of the women (20.1%) underwent cesarean deliveries, accounting for 23% of deliveries by Black women, 22.8% of those by Hispanic women, and 17.6% of those by White women (P < .001). Black women were 21% more likely than White women to give birth via cesarean (adjusted relative risk = 1.21, 95% CI: 1.03-1.42) and Hispanic women were 26% more likely (aRR = 1.26, 95% CI: 1.08-1.46).

The study doesn’t explore why Black and Hispanic women have more cesarean deliveries. However, Dr. Debbink said, “we hypothesize that the difference likely stems more from differing treatment of Black or Hispanic individuals during labor.” It’s unlikely, she said, that these women are more likely to prefer cesarean sections. For one thing, she said, other research hasn’t shown a difference in preferences by race.

The researchers also analyzed maternal morbidity, defined as “transfusion of 4 or more units of red blood cells, any transfusion of other products, postpartum infection, intensive care unit admission, hysterectomy, venous thromboembolism, or maternal death.”

The study found that while few women (2.3%) suffered from morbidity, Black (aRR = 2.05, 95% CI: 1.21-3.47) and Hispanic (aRR = 1.92, 95% CI: 1.17-3.14) women were more likely to suffer from it than White women.

The researchers report that “cesarean birth accounted for an estimated 15.8% (95% CI: 2.1%-48.7%) and 16.5% (95% CI: 4.0%-44.0%) of excess maternal morbidity among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic people, respectively.”

“Both endometritis and wound complications are much more common among individuals with cesarean, and blood clots, hysterectomy, and ICU admission are also more common after cesarean compared with vaginal delivery,” Dr. Debbink said.

The message of the study, she said, is that the health care system “perpetuates gaps in cesarean delivery for Black and Hispanic individuals compared to White individuals” even in low-risk, first-time live births. “We do not yet know exactly what the right levers are to address this gap, but it is important that we ob-gyns examine our practice patterns and our hospitals’ practice patterns to ensure equity for all our patients.”

Rebecca Delafield, PhD, an assistant professor of Native Hawaiian Health at the University of Hawaii, praised the study as “well-conducted” in an interview. “I agree with the assessment that while the cesarean delivery accounts for a modest proportion of excess morbidity in this study, the impact at the population level is significant,” said Dr. Delafield, who studies health disparities and didn’t take part in the study. “Delivery is complex and the causes of disparities observed are likely multifactorial, therefore research such as this is necessary and compelling.”

She added: “It is becoming increasingly evident that studies investigating racial/ethnic disparities in cesarean delivery and other maternal health outcomes must look beyond maternal behavioral or medical risk factors – e.g., obesity or hypertension – and consider the contribution of a broader set of factors, including societal prejudices.”

The study is funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. One study author reports funding from GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Moderna, and UpToDate (contributor) and from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (via her institution). Dr. Debbink, the other authors, and Dr. Delafield report no disclosures.

 

New research offers more insight into potentially dangerous racial disparities in cesarean deliveries: In first-time live births, healthy African-American and Hispanic mothers were 21% and 26% more likely than White mothers, respectively, to deliver by cesarean section despite being low risk. The higher number of cesareans appeared to boost their risk of morbidity.

“A 20% increased odds of cesarean among otherwise healthy, low-risk, nulliparous individuals at term – with limited medical or obstetric explanation – is a significant concern, especially when considering that cesarean is the most common surgical procedure in the U.S.,” said study author Michelle P. Debbink, MD, PhD, an assistant professor with the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Utah, in an interview.

Dr. Debbink and colleagues launched the study, published in the Jan. 2022 issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology, to better understand the racial gap in cesarean sections, which are considered riskier than vaginal deliveries. “Several studies have shown that Black women undergo cesarean more frequently than non-Hispanic White women. Numerous studies also show that Hispanic/Latina women undergo cesarean more frequently than White women, although these data are a bit more mixed,” she said. “What we don’t know, however, is why these differences occur and whether there are clues in the data which can point us toward interventions to close the gap.”

One theory, she said, is that Black and Hispanic women have more comorbidities and therefore more cesareans. To test that idea, the researchers found a cohort of healthy women in a randomized trial that studied the induction of labor.

For the study, they focused on 5,759 women (24.3% Black, 30% Hispanic, 46.6% White). Major differences between the groups included maternal age (average = 21 for Black, 22 for Hispanic, and 26 for White, P < .001), private insurance (17% for Black and Hispanic, 75% for White; P < .001), and full or part-time employment (37% for Black, 31% for Hispanic, and 71% for White; P < .001).

A total of 1,158 of the women (20.1%) underwent cesarean deliveries, accounting for 23% of deliveries by Black women, 22.8% of those by Hispanic women, and 17.6% of those by White women (P < .001). Black women were 21% more likely than White women to give birth via cesarean (adjusted relative risk = 1.21, 95% CI: 1.03-1.42) and Hispanic women were 26% more likely (aRR = 1.26, 95% CI: 1.08-1.46).

The study doesn’t explore why Black and Hispanic women have more cesarean deliveries. However, Dr. Debbink said, “we hypothesize that the difference likely stems more from differing treatment of Black or Hispanic individuals during labor.” It’s unlikely, she said, that these women are more likely to prefer cesarean sections. For one thing, she said, other research hasn’t shown a difference in preferences by race.

The researchers also analyzed maternal morbidity, defined as “transfusion of 4 or more units of red blood cells, any transfusion of other products, postpartum infection, intensive care unit admission, hysterectomy, venous thromboembolism, or maternal death.”

The study found that while few women (2.3%) suffered from morbidity, Black (aRR = 2.05, 95% CI: 1.21-3.47) and Hispanic (aRR = 1.92, 95% CI: 1.17-3.14) women were more likely to suffer from it than White women.

The researchers report that “cesarean birth accounted for an estimated 15.8% (95% CI: 2.1%-48.7%) and 16.5% (95% CI: 4.0%-44.0%) of excess maternal morbidity among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic people, respectively.”

“Both endometritis and wound complications are much more common among individuals with cesarean, and blood clots, hysterectomy, and ICU admission are also more common after cesarean compared with vaginal delivery,” Dr. Debbink said.

The message of the study, she said, is that the health care system “perpetuates gaps in cesarean delivery for Black and Hispanic individuals compared to White individuals” even in low-risk, first-time live births. “We do not yet know exactly what the right levers are to address this gap, but it is important that we ob-gyns examine our practice patterns and our hospitals’ practice patterns to ensure equity for all our patients.”

Rebecca Delafield, PhD, an assistant professor of Native Hawaiian Health at the University of Hawaii, praised the study as “well-conducted” in an interview. “I agree with the assessment that while the cesarean delivery accounts for a modest proportion of excess morbidity in this study, the impact at the population level is significant,” said Dr. Delafield, who studies health disparities and didn’t take part in the study. “Delivery is complex and the causes of disparities observed are likely multifactorial, therefore research such as this is necessary and compelling.”

She added: “It is becoming increasingly evident that studies investigating racial/ethnic disparities in cesarean delivery and other maternal health outcomes must look beyond maternal behavioral or medical risk factors – e.g., obesity or hypertension – and consider the contribution of a broader set of factors, including societal prejudices.”

The study is funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. One study author reports funding from GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Moderna, and UpToDate (contributor) and from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (via her institution). Dr. Debbink, the other authors, and Dr. Delafield report no disclosures.

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EMA panel backs linzagolix for uterine fibroid symptoms

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The European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) on December 17 recommended approval of linzagolix (Yselty, ObsEva), an oral gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, for the management of moderate to severe symptoms of uterine fibroids (UF) in adult women of reproductive age.

If approved, linzagolix – which is taken once per day – would become the first GnRH receptor antagonist with a nonhormonal option to reach the market. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration in November accepted ObsEva’s new drug application for the medication, with a decision expected by September 2022.

“The positive CHMP opinion is an important milestone for millions of women in the EU living with UF to address the diverse medical needs of the women who suffer from this condition,” said Brian O’Callaghan, CEO of ObsEva, in a statement. “We will continue our productive, ongoing dialogue with [the] EMA toward potential marketing authorization in the EU and, in parallel, continue to work with the FDA to advance linzagolix through the U.S. regulatory process.”

The committee’s positive opinion was based on 52-week results from PRIMROSE 1 and PRIMROSE 2 phase 3 trials, involving more than 1,000 patients in the United States and Europe, as well as results from 76-week follow-up studies of patients in those trials. The two phase 3 trials assessed a 200-mg and 100-mg dose of linzagolix, with and without hormone add-back therapy (ABT; 1 mg estradiol and 0.5 mg norethisterone acetate).

According to ObsEVA, both trials met their primary endpoints, with all doses showing statistically significant and clinically relevant reductions in heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB) compared to placebo. The trials also achieved several secondary endpoints, including reduction in pain, rates of amenorrhea, time to reduced HMB, and amenorrhea and for the high dose without ABT, reductions in uterine and fibroid volume, the company said.

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

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The European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) on December 17 recommended approval of linzagolix (Yselty, ObsEva), an oral gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, for the management of moderate to severe symptoms of uterine fibroids (UF) in adult women of reproductive age.

If approved, linzagolix – which is taken once per day – would become the first GnRH receptor antagonist with a nonhormonal option to reach the market. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration in November accepted ObsEva’s new drug application for the medication, with a decision expected by September 2022.

“The positive CHMP opinion is an important milestone for millions of women in the EU living with UF to address the diverse medical needs of the women who suffer from this condition,” said Brian O’Callaghan, CEO of ObsEva, in a statement. “We will continue our productive, ongoing dialogue with [the] EMA toward potential marketing authorization in the EU and, in parallel, continue to work with the FDA to advance linzagolix through the U.S. regulatory process.”

The committee’s positive opinion was based on 52-week results from PRIMROSE 1 and PRIMROSE 2 phase 3 trials, involving more than 1,000 patients in the United States and Europe, as well as results from 76-week follow-up studies of patients in those trials. The two phase 3 trials assessed a 200-mg and 100-mg dose of linzagolix, with and without hormone add-back therapy (ABT; 1 mg estradiol and 0.5 mg norethisterone acetate).

According to ObsEVA, both trials met their primary endpoints, with all doses showing statistically significant and clinically relevant reductions in heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB) compared to placebo. The trials also achieved several secondary endpoints, including reduction in pain, rates of amenorrhea, time to reduced HMB, and amenorrhea and for the high dose without ABT, reductions in uterine and fibroid volume, the company said.

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

The European Medicines Agency’s (EMA) Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) on December 17 recommended approval of linzagolix (Yselty, ObsEva), an oral gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, for the management of moderate to severe symptoms of uterine fibroids (UF) in adult women of reproductive age.

If approved, linzagolix – which is taken once per day – would become the first GnRH receptor antagonist with a nonhormonal option to reach the market. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration in November accepted ObsEva’s new drug application for the medication, with a decision expected by September 2022.

“The positive CHMP opinion is an important milestone for millions of women in the EU living with UF to address the diverse medical needs of the women who suffer from this condition,” said Brian O’Callaghan, CEO of ObsEva, in a statement. “We will continue our productive, ongoing dialogue with [the] EMA toward potential marketing authorization in the EU and, in parallel, continue to work with the FDA to advance linzagolix through the U.S. regulatory process.”

The committee’s positive opinion was based on 52-week results from PRIMROSE 1 and PRIMROSE 2 phase 3 trials, involving more than 1,000 patients in the United States and Europe, as well as results from 76-week follow-up studies of patients in those trials. The two phase 3 trials assessed a 200-mg and 100-mg dose of linzagolix, with and without hormone add-back therapy (ABT; 1 mg estradiol and 0.5 mg norethisterone acetate).

According to ObsEVA, both trials met their primary endpoints, with all doses showing statistically significant and clinically relevant reductions in heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB) compared to placebo. The trials also achieved several secondary endpoints, including reduction in pain, rates of amenorrhea, time to reduced HMB, and amenorrhea and for the high dose without ABT, reductions in uterine and fibroid volume, the company said.

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

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Axilla swelling after COVID booster puts focus on mammogram timing

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Axilla swelling, one of the side effects of the initial COVID-19 vaccine series in women, has also materialized with the boosters.

This inflammation is caused by the enlargement of lymph nodes and can show up as an abnormal finding on mammograms and other types of chest scans, causing concern and even the need for additional imaging and follow up, wrote Constance D. Lehman, MD, PhD, and colleagues in an article published in Journal of the American College of Radiology.

Lymph node swelling is a normal immune system reaction to vaccination, and “COVID-19 vaccinations in the arm are a well-documented cause of inflammatory unilateral axillary adenopathy,” noted Dr. Lehman, in an interview. The side effect will occur on the side of the body where the patient received a vaccine, and it is not always noticeable to the woman experiencing it, she said.

“We’re finding that the patients’ bodies are responding to the booster in many ways that are similar to the initial COVID vaccines, with lymph node swelling, muscle aches and pains, headaches, and so on,” said Dr. Lehman, who is chief of breast imaging at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. There have been no real differences in reactions between the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, she added.

Because axillary lymph node swelling can obscure mammogram results, staff of at least a few imaging centers, including Penn State Breast Center in Hershey, Pa., and Providence Women’s Imaging Center in Torrance, Calif., told this news organization that they are asking women to delay mammogram imaging either 6 weeks or 4-6 weeks after getting a COVID-19 booster.
 

Experts’ suggestions on mammograms, boosters timing

Other experts, including Jessica Leung, MD, acknowledged that vaccine-related reactive adenopathy is seen after the booster dose and provided recommendations for the timing of getting mammograms and the booster with this in mind.

“I would recommend getting the screening mammogram first, which can be followed immediately by vaccination, even on the same day,” said Jessica Leung, MD, a professor of diagnostic radiology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Tex.

“If this is not possible from the scheduling perspective, then the patient should consult her health care provider regarding whether it is okay to wait a bit after receiving the vaccine before getting her screening mammogram.”

The answer to that question will likely depend on the time interval since the prior mammogram and the patient’s personal risk factors for developing breast cancer. Dr. Leung noted. “This is all predicated on the assumption that the patient is asymptomatic. If she has any symptoms, for example a palpable breast lump, then she should seek medical attention regardless of timing of vaccination.”

The same holds true for boosters, she said.

She emphasized that careful consideration should be given before delaying the mammogram. “The medical community has a great deal more knowledge at this time than in the early days of COVID-19 vaccination, so we are often able to identify reactive adenopathy related to vaccination. If patients were to delay the mammogram, any reactive adenopathy may persist, on average, for 4-6 weeks.”

Debra Patt, MD, PhD, MBA, executive vice president at Texas Oncology, professor at the University of Texas at Austin, provided a specific example of when a patient should not delay the diagnostic imaging, which is “in the event that there is an abnormal mass in the breast that requires evaluation.”

Providers are now prepared to address these issues, she added.
 

 

 

Dr. Lehman’s nuanced recommendations

“It’s easy to get both a mammogram and booster, and just a matter of timing them – so that the reaction doesn’t interfere with the mammography results,” Dr. Lehman said.

But she emphasized that women should not be choosing between their mammograms or a booster. “We are now saying the same thing that we did with the initial vaccine,” said Dr. Lehman. “We don’t want patients delaying their mammograms, and we don’t want them delaying their boosters – both are critical to staying healthy.”

In her center, a model was developed to navigate vaccine-associated adenopathy. While this approach was developed for the primary vaccine series, the same applies for the booster, which is essentially a third dose of the same vaccine, explained Dr. Lehman.

When patients present for mammography, ultrasound, or MRI, the technologist will document their COVID-19 vaccination status (first or second dose or booster), the date it was given, and the location. Adding vaccination documentation to intake forms helps to support appropriate management of patients who undergo imaging after COVID-19 vaccination. Six weeks is used as the cutoff point for defining “recent” vaccination.

For patients who are getting a screening mammography or MRI, and who have no symptoms beyond unilateral axillary adenopathy on the same side of the body where they received the COVID-19 vaccination (given in the arm) within a 6-week period, the following is included in the screening mammography or screening MRI report: “In the specific setting of a patient with documented recent (within the past 6 weeks) COVID-19 vaccination in the ipsilateral arm, axillary adenopathy is a benign imaging finding. No further imaging is indicated at this time. If there is clinical concern that persists more than 6 weeks after the patient received the final vaccine dose, axillary ultrasound is recommended.”

The experts interviewed reported no conflicts of interest.

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Axilla swelling, one of the side effects of the initial COVID-19 vaccine series in women, has also materialized with the boosters.

This inflammation is caused by the enlargement of lymph nodes and can show up as an abnormal finding on mammograms and other types of chest scans, causing concern and even the need for additional imaging and follow up, wrote Constance D. Lehman, MD, PhD, and colleagues in an article published in Journal of the American College of Radiology.

Lymph node swelling is a normal immune system reaction to vaccination, and “COVID-19 vaccinations in the arm are a well-documented cause of inflammatory unilateral axillary adenopathy,” noted Dr. Lehman, in an interview. The side effect will occur on the side of the body where the patient received a vaccine, and it is not always noticeable to the woman experiencing it, she said.

“We’re finding that the patients’ bodies are responding to the booster in many ways that are similar to the initial COVID vaccines, with lymph node swelling, muscle aches and pains, headaches, and so on,” said Dr. Lehman, who is chief of breast imaging at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. There have been no real differences in reactions between the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, she added.

Because axillary lymph node swelling can obscure mammogram results, staff of at least a few imaging centers, including Penn State Breast Center in Hershey, Pa., and Providence Women’s Imaging Center in Torrance, Calif., told this news organization that they are asking women to delay mammogram imaging either 6 weeks or 4-6 weeks after getting a COVID-19 booster.
 

Experts’ suggestions on mammograms, boosters timing

Other experts, including Jessica Leung, MD, acknowledged that vaccine-related reactive adenopathy is seen after the booster dose and provided recommendations for the timing of getting mammograms and the booster with this in mind.

“I would recommend getting the screening mammogram first, which can be followed immediately by vaccination, even on the same day,” said Jessica Leung, MD, a professor of diagnostic radiology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Tex.

“If this is not possible from the scheduling perspective, then the patient should consult her health care provider regarding whether it is okay to wait a bit after receiving the vaccine before getting her screening mammogram.”

The answer to that question will likely depend on the time interval since the prior mammogram and the patient’s personal risk factors for developing breast cancer. Dr. Leung noted. “This is all predicated on the assumption that the patient is asymptomatic. If she has any symptoms, for example a palpable breast lump, then she should seek medical attention regardless of timing of vaccination.”

The same holds true for boosters, she said.

She emphasized that careful consideration should be given before delaying the mammogram. “The medical community has a great deal more knowledge at this time than in the early days of COVID-19 vaccination, so we are often able to identify reactive adenopathy related to vaccination. If patients were to delay the mammogram, any reactive adenopathy may persist, on average, for 4-6 weeks.”

Debra Patt, MD, PhD, MBA, executive vice president at Texas Oncology, professor at the University of Texas at Austin, provided a specific example of when a patient should not delay the diagnostic imaging, which is “in the event that there is an abnormal mass in the breast that requires evaluation.”

Providers are now prepared to address these issues, she added.
 

 

 

Dr. Lehman’s nuanced recommendations

“It’s easy to get both a mammogram and booster, and just a matter of timing them – so that the reaction doesn’t interfere with the mammography results,” Dr. Lehman said.

But she emphasized that women should not be choosing between their mammograms or a booster. “We are now saying the same thing that we did with the initial vaccine,” said Dr. Lehman. “We don’t want patients delaying their mammograms, and we don’t want them delaying their boosters – both are critical to staying healthy.”

In her center, a model was developed to navigate vaccine-associated adenopathy. While this approach was developed for the primary vaccine series, the same applies for the booster, which is essentially a third dose of the same vaccine, explained Dr. Lehman.

When patients present for mammography, ultrasound, or MRI, the technologist will document their COVID-19 vaccination status (first or second dose or booster), the date it was given, and the location. Adding vaccination documentation to intake forms helps to support appropriate management of patients who undergo imaging after COVID-19 vaccination. Six weeks is used as the cutoff point for defining “recent” vaccination.

For patients who are getting a screening mammography or MRI, and who have no symptoms beyond unilateral axillary adenopathy on the same side of the body where they received the COVID-19 vaccination (given in the arm) within a 6-week period, the following is included in the screening mammography or screening MRI report: “In the specific setting of a patient with documented recent (within the past 6 weeks) COVID-19 vaccination in the ipsilateral arm, axillary adenopathy is a benign imaging finding. No further imaging is indicated at this time. If there is clinical concern that persists more than 6 weeks after the patient received the final vaccine dose, axillary ultrasound is recommended.”

The experts interviewed reported no conflicts of interest.

Axilla swelling, one of the side effects of the initial COVID-19 vaccine series in women, has also materialized with the boosters.

This inflammation is caused by the enlargement of lymph nodes and can show up as an abnormal finding on mammograms and other types of chest scans, causing concern and even the need for additional imaging and follow up, wrote Constance D. Lehman, MD, PhD, and colleagues in an article published in Journal of the American College of Radiology.

Lymph node swelling is a normal immune system reaction to vaccination, and “COVID-19 vaccinations in the arm are a well-documented cause of inflammatory unilateral axillary adenopathy,” noted Dr. Lehman, in an interview. The side effect will occur on the side of the body where the patient received a vaccine, and it is not always noticeable to the woman experiencing it, she said.

“We’re finding that the patients’ bodies are responding to the booster in many ways that are similar to the initial COVID vaccines, with lymph node swelling, muscle aches and pains, headaches, and so on,” said Dr. Lehman, who is chief of breast imaging at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. There have been no real differences in reactions between the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, she added.

Because axillary lymph node swelling can obscure mammogram results, staff of at least a few imaging centers, including Penn State Breast Center in Hershey, Pa., and Providence Women’s Imaging Center in Torrance, Calif., told this news organization that they are asking women to delay mammogram imaging either 6 weeks or 4-6 weeks after getting a COVID-19 booster.
 

Experts’ suggestions on mammograms, boosters timing

Other experts, including Jessica Leung, MD, acknowledged that vaccine-related reactive adenopathy is seen after the booster dose and provided recommendations for the timing of getting mammograms and the booster with this in mind.

“I would recommend getting the screening mammogram first, which can be followed immediately by vaccination, even on the same day,” said Jessica Leung, MD, a professor of diagnostic radiology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Tex.

“If this is not possible from the scheduling perspective, then the patient should consult her health care provider regarding whether it is okay to wait a bit after receiving the vaccine before getting her screening mammogram.”

The answer to that question will likely depend on the time interval since the prior mammogram and the patient’s personal risk factors for developing breast cancer. Dr. Leung noted. “This is all predicated on the assumption that the patient is asymptomatic. If she has any symptoms, for example a palpable breast lump, then she should seek medical attention regardless of timing of vaccination.”

The same holds true for boosters, she said.

She emphasized that careful consideration should be given before delaying the mammogram. “The medical community has a great deal more knowledge at this time than in the early days of COVID-19 vaccination, so we are often able to identify reactive adenopathy related to vaccination. If patients were to delay the mammogram, any reactive adenopathy may persist, on average, for 4-6 weeks.”

Debra Patt, MD, PhD, MBA, executive vice president at Texas Oncology, professor at the University of Texas at Austin, provided a specific example of when a patient should not delay the diagnostic imaging, which is “in the event that there is an abnormal mass in the breast that requires evaluation.”

Providers are now prepared to address these issues, she added.
 

 

 

Dr. Lehman’s nuanced recommendations

“It’s easy to get both a mammogram and booster, and just a matter of timing them – so that the reaction doesn’t interfere with the mammography results,” Dr. Lehman said.

But she emphasized that women should not be choosing between their mammograms or a booster. “We are now saying the same thing that we did with the initial vaccine,” said Dr. Lehman. “We don’t want patients delaying their mammograms, and we don’t want them delaying their boosters – both are critical to staying healthy.”

In her center, a model was developed to navigate vaccine-associated adenopathy. While this approach was developed for the primary vaccine series, the same applies for the booster, which is essentially a third dose of the same vaccine, explained Dr. Lehman.

When patients present for mammography, ultrasound, or MRI, the technologist will document their COVID-19 vaccination status (first or second dose or booster), the date it was given, and the location. Adding vaccination documentation to intake forms helps to support appropriate management of patients who undergo imaging after COVID-19 vaccination. Six weeks is used as the cutoff point for defining “recent” vaccination.

For patients who are getting a screening mammography or MRI, and who have no symptoms beyond unilateral axillary adenopathy on the same side of the body where they received the COVID-19 vaccination (given in the arm) within a 6-week period, the following is included in the screening mammography or screening MRI report: “In the specific setting of a patient with documented recent (within the past 6 weeks) COVID-19 vaccination in the ipsilateral arm, axillary adenopathy is a benign imaging finding. No further imaging is indicated at this time. If there is clinical concern that persists more than 6 weeks after the patient received the final vaccine dose, axillary ultrasound is recommended.”

The experts interviewed reported no conflicts of interest.

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FDA agrees that mifepristone is safe enough to dispense by mail

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The Food and Drug Administration has announced that women no longer will have to pick up the abortion pill mifepristone (Mifeprex) in person at certain certified sites and can get a prescription via an online consultation and delivery through the mail.

In April 2021, the FDA lifted the in-person dispensing requirement for mifepristone for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and in December the agency made that decision permanent.

As this news organization reported on April 12, 2021, acting commissioner of food and drugs, Janet Woodcock, MD, stated that the FDA would “permit the dispensing of mifepristone through the mail when done by or under the supervision of a certified prescriber; or through a mail-order pharmacy under the supervision of a certified prescriber.”

That decision came after suspension of the in-person dispensing requirement in response to COVID-19 safety concerns for patients as well as providers associated with in-person clinic visits.
 

Decision comes amid Supreme Court debate

The FDA decision comes as the Supreme Court nears a decision on whether to overturn its 1973 ruling on Roe v. Wade.

Additionally, the Supreme Court on returned a lawsuit over Texas’ ban on abortions after 6 weeks to a federal appeals court that has twice allowed the law to stay in effect, rather than to a district judge who wanted it blocked.

Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO, of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement, “Abortion is time sensitive, essential health care, and this decision will remove a sometimes insurmountable barrier for patients seeking an abortion. With abortion rights at risk like never before, the FDA’s decision is a long overdue step toward expanding people’s access to safe medication abortion.”

Georgeanne Usova, senior legislative counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union told CNBC News: “The FDA’s decision will come as a tremendous relief for countless abortion and miscarriage patients.”

Catherine D. Cansino, MD, MPH, associate clinical professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of California, Davis, and member of the editorial advisory board for ObGyn News said in an interview: “I think that this change is a long time coming and speaks to the fact that science matters and medicine prevails over politics. We need to protect health rights first!”

Others expressed doubt or outrage.

Fidelma Rigby, MD, a professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology, division of maternal fetal medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, said in an interview: “My concern is that what if there is an ectopic pregnancy? I’m not as enthusiastic as some of my partners would be about this announcement.”

“The FDA’s decision today places women at risk,” said Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee. “These changes do not make this abortion process safer for women. What these changes do is make the process easier for the abortion industry.”

The antiabortion groups Charlotte Lozier Institute and the Susan B. Anthony List were among other organizations issuing statements against Dec. 16’s FDA ruling.

The FDA stated that mifepristone prescribers will still need to earn certification and training. Additionally, the agency said dispensing pharmacies will have to be certified.

The FDA said in updated guidance on its website that after conducting a review of the Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy for mifepristone, it “determined that the data support modification of the REMS to reduce burden on patient access and the health care delivery system and to ensure the benefits of the product outweigh the risks.”

The modifications include:

  • “Removing the requirement that mifepristone be dispensed only in certain health care settings, specifically clinics, medical offices, and hospitals (referred to as the ‘in-person dispensing requirement’).”
  • Adding a requirement that pharmacies must be certified to dispense the drug.

The FDA said removing the in-person dispensing rule will allow delivery of mifepristone by mail via certified prescribers or pharmacies, in addition to in-person dispensing in clinics, medical offices, and hospitals.

In 2018, an expert National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine panel concluded that requiring that medication abortion be provided at only certain facilities, solely by a physician or in the physical presence of certain providers, did not improve safety or quality of care.

Mifepristone is used, together with misoprostol, to end an early pregnancy. The FDA first approved Mifeprex in 2000 for use through 10 weeks’ gestation. According to the FDA, mifepristone is approved in more than 60 other countries.
 

Many states bar mailing of abortion pills

However, according to the Guttmacher Institute, 19 U.S. states have laws that bar telehealth consultations or mailing of abortion pills.

Reuters reported that women in those states would not be able to make use of the rule change get the drug delivered to their home but could potentially travel to other states to obtain medication abortion.

“States such as California and New York that have sought to strengthen access to abortion may make the drug available to women from other states,” Reuters reported.

Jessica Arons, senior advocacy and policy counsel for reproductive freedom at the ACLU, told CBS News, “Medication abortion is one more lens through which we see that we are witnessing a tale of two countries. Half the states are protecting access to abortion and half are trying every single way they can to eliminate access to abortion care.”
 

Positive results when Canada lifted restrictions

As this news organization has reported, a study found positive results when Canada lifted restrictions on access to the abortion pills and a good safety profile for mifepristone.

A study in the New England Journal of Medicine found abortion rates remained stable and adverse events were rare after mifepristone prescribing restrictions were lifted in Canada.

Senior author Wendy V. Norman, MD, professor in the department of family practice at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said in a statement, “Our study is a signal to other countries that restrictions are not necessary to ensure patient safety.”

Another recent study in JAMA Network Open (2021 Aug 24. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.22320) found that abortion via telehealth prescriptions may be just as safe and effective as in-person care.

The study investigators said that, “of the 110 women from whom researchers collected remote abortion outcome data, 95% had a complete abortion without additional medical interventions, such as aspiration or surgery, and none experienced adverse events. Researchers said this efficacy rate is similar to in-person visits.”

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The Food and Drug Administration has announced that women no longer will have to pick up the abortion pill mifepristone (Mifeprex) in person at certain certified sites and can get a prescription via an online consultation and delivery through the mail.

In April 2021, the FDA lifted the in-person dispensing requirement for mifepristone for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and in December the agency made that decision permanent.

As this news organization reported on April 12, 2021, acting commissioner of food and drugs, Janet Woodcock, MD, stated that the FDA would “permit the dispensing of mifepristone through the mail when done by or under the supervision of a certified prescriber; or through a mail-order pharmacy under the supervision of a certified prescriber.”

That decision came after suspension of the in-person dispensing requirement in response to COVID-19 safety concerns for patients as well as providers associated with in-person clinic visits.
 

Decision comes amid Supreme Court debate

The FDA decision comes as the Supreme Court nears a decision on whether to overturn its 1973 ruling on Roe v. Wade.

Additionally, the Supreme Court on returned a lawsuit over Texas’ ban on abortions after 6 weeks to a federal appeals court that has twice allowed the law to stay in effect, rather than to a district judge who wanted it blocked.

Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO, of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement, “Abortion is time sensitive, essential health care, and this decision will remove a sometimes insurmountable barrier for patients seeking an abortion. With abortion rights at risk like never before, the FDA’s decision is a long overdue step toward expanding people’s access to safe medication abortion.”

Georgeanne Usova, senior legislative counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union told CNBC News: “The FDA’s decision will come as a tremendous relief for countless abortion and miscarriage patients.”

Catherine D. Cansino, MD, MPH, associate clinical professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of California, Davis, and member of the editorial advisory board for ObGyn News said in an interview: “I think that this change is a long time coming and speaks to the fact that science matters and medicine prevails over politics. We need to protect health rights first!”

Others expressed doubt or outrage.

Fidelma Rigby, MD, a professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology, division of maternal fetal medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, said in an interview: “My concern is that what if there is an ectopic pregnancy? I’m not as enthusiastic as some of my partners would be about this announcement.”

“The FDA’s decision today places women at risk,” said Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee. “These changes do not make this abortion process safer for women. What these changes do is make the process easier for the abortion industry.”

The antiabortion groups Charlotte Lozier Institute and the Susan B. Anthony List were among other organizations issuing statements against Dec. 16’s FDA ruling.

The FDA stated that mifepristone prescribers will still need to earn certification and training. Additionally, the agency said dispensing pharmacies will have to be certified.

The FDA said in updated guidance on its website that after conducting a review of the Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy for mifepristone, it “determined that the data support modification of the REMS to reduce burden on patient access and the health care delivery system and to ensure the benefits of the product outweigh the risks.”

The modifications include:

  • “Removing the requirement that mifepristone be dispensed only in certain health care settings, specifically clinics, medical offices, and hospitals (referred to as the ‘in-person dispensing requirement’).”
  • Adding a requirement that pharmacies must be certified to dispense the drug.

The FDA said removing the in-person dispensing rule will allow delivery of mifepristone by mail via certified prescribers or pharmacies, in addition to in-person dispensing in clinics, medical offices, and hospitals.

In 2018, an expert National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine panel concluded that requiring that medication abortion be provided at only certain facilities, solely by a physician or in the physical presence of certain providers, did not improve safety or quality of care.

Mifepristone is used, together with misoprostol, to end an early pregnancy. The FDA first approved Mifeprex in 2000 for use through 10 weeks’ gestation. According to the FDA, mifepristone is approved in more than 60 other countries.
 

Many states bar mailing of abortion pills

However, according to the Guttmacher Institute, 19 U.S. states have laws that bar telehealth consultations or mailing of abortion pills.

Reuters reported that women in those states would not be able to make use of the rule change get the drug delivered to their home but could potentially travel to other states to obtain medication abortion.

“States such as California and New York that have sought to strengthen access to abortion may make the drug available to women from other states,” Reuters reported.

Jessica Arons, senior advocacy and policy counsel for reproductive freedom at the ACLU, told CBS News, “Medication abortion is one more lens through which we see that we are witnessing a tale of two countries. Half the states are protecting access to abortion and half are trying every single way they can to eliminate access to abortion care.”
 

Positive results when Canada lifted restrictions

As this news organization has reported, a study found positive results when Canada lifted restrictions on access to the abortion pills and a good safety profile for mifepristone.

A study in the New England Journal of Medicine found abortion rates remained stable and adverse events were rare after mifepristone prescribing restrictions were lifted in Canada.

Senior author Wendy V. Norman, MD, professor in the department of family practice at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said in a statement, “Our study is a signal to other countries that restrictions are not necessary to ensure patient safety.”

Another recent study in JAMA Network Open (2021 Aug 24. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.22320) found that abortion via telehealth prescriptions may be just as safe and effective as in-person care.

The study investigators said that, “of the 110 women from whom researchers collected remote abortion outcome data, 95% had a complete abortion without additional medical interventions, such as aspiration or surgery, and none experienced adverse events. Researchers said this efficacy rate is similar to in-person visits.”

The Food and Drug Administration has announced that women no longer will have to pick up the abortion pill mifepristone (Mifeprex) in person at certain certified sites and can get a prescription via an online consultation and delivery through the mail.

In April 2021, the FDA lifted the in-person dispensing requirement for mifepristone for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and in December the agency made that decision permanent.

As this news organization reported on April 12, 2021, acting commissioner of food and drugs, Janet Woodcock, MD, stated that the FDA would “permit the dispensing of mifepristone through the mail when done by or under the supervision of a certified prescriber; or through a mail-order pharmacy under the supervision of a certified prescriber.”

That decision came after suspension of the in-person dispensing requirement in response to COVID-19 safety concerns for patients as well as providers associated with in-person clinic visits.
 

Decision comes amid Supreme Court debate

The FDA decision comes as the Supreme Court nears a decision on whether to overturn its 1973 ruling on Roe v. Wade.

Additionally, the Supreme Court on returned a lawsuit over Texas’ ban on abortions after 6 weeks to a federal appeals court that has twice allowed the law to stay in effect, rather than to a district judge who wanted it blocked.

Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO, of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement, “Abortion is time sensitive, essential health care, and this decision will remove a sometimes insurmountable barrier for patients seeking an abortion. With abortion rights at risk like never before, the FDA’s decision is a long overdue step toward expanding people’s access to safe medication abortion.”

Georgeanne Usova, senior legislative counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union told CNBC News: “The FDA’s decision will come as a tremendous relief for countless abortion and miscarriage patients.”

Catherine D. Cansino, MD, MPH, associate clinical professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of California, Davis, and member of the editorial advisory board for ObGyn News said in an interview: “I think that this change is a long time coming and speaks to the fact that science matters and medicine prevails over politics. We need to protect health rights first!”

Others expressed doubt or outrage.

Fidelma Rigby, MD, a professor in the department of obstetrics and gynecology, division of maternal fetal medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, said in an interview: “My concern is that what if there is an ectopic pregnancy? I’m not as enthusiastic as some of my partners would be about this announcement.”

“The FDA’s decision today places women at risk,” said Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee. “These changes do not make this abortion process safer for women. What these changes do is make the process easier for the abortion industry.”

The antiabortion groups Charlotte Lozier Institute and the Susan B. Anthony List were among other organizations issuing statements against Dec. 16’s FDA ruling.

The FDA stated that mifepristone prescribers will still need to earn certification and training. Additionally, the agency said dispensing pharmacies will have to be certified.

The FDA said in updated guidance on its website that after conducting a review of the Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy for mifepristone, it “determined that the data support modification of the REMS to reduce burden on patient access and the health care delivery system and to ensure the benefits of the product outweigh the risks.”

The modifications include:

  • “Removing the requirement that mifepristone be dispensed only in certain health care settings, specifically clinics, medical offices, and hospitals (referred to as the ‘in-person dispensing requirement’).”
  • Adding a requirement that pharmacies must be certified to dispense the drug.

The FDA said removing the in-person dispensing rule will allow delivery of mifepristone by mail via certified prescribers or pharmacies, in addition to in-person dispensing in clinics, medical offices, and hospitals.

In 2018, an expert National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine panel concluded that requiring that medication abortion be provided at only certain facilities, solely by a physician or in the physical presence of certain providers, did not improve safety or quality of care.

Mifepristone is used, together with misoprostol, to end an early pregnancy. The FDA first approved Mifeprex in 2000 for use through 10 weeks’ gestation. According to the FDA, mifepristone is approved in more than 60 other countries.
 

Many states bar mailing of abortion pills

However, according to the Guttmacher Institute, 19 U.S. states have laws that bar telehealth consultations or mailing of abortion pills.

Reuters reported that women in those states would not be able to make use of the rule change get the drug delivered to their home but could potentially travel to other states to obtain medication abortion.

“States such as California and New York that have sought to strengthen access to abortion may make the drug available to women from other states,” Reuters reported.

Jessica Arons, senior advocacy and policy counsel for reproductive freedom at the ACLU, told CBS News, “Medication abortion is one more lens through which we see that we are witnessing a tale of two countries. Half the states are protecting access to abortion and half are trying every single way they can to eliminate access to abortion care.”
 

Positive results when Canada lifted restrictions

As this news organization has reported, a study found positive results when Canada lifted restrictions on access to the abortion pills and a good safety profile for mifepristone.

A study in the New England Journal of Medicine found abortion rates remained stable and adverse events were rare after mifepristone prescribing restrictions were lifted in Canada.

Senior author Wendy V. Norman, MD, professor in the department of family practice at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, said in a statement, “Our study is a signal to other countries that restrictions are not necessary to ensure patient safety.”

Another recent study in JAMA Network Open (2021 Aug 24. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.22320) found that abortion via telehealth prescriptions may be just as safe and effective as in-person care.

The study investigators said that, “of the 110 women from whom researchers collected remote abortion outcome data, 95% had a complete abortion without additional medical interventions, such as aspiration or surgery, and none experienced adverse events. Researchers said this efficacy rate is similar to in-person visits.”

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