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COVID on the Floor Linked to Outbreaks on Two Hospital Wards

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The viral burden of SARS-CoV-2 on floors, even in healthcare worker–only areas, was strongly associated with COVID-19 outbreaks in two acute-care hospitals, according to a new study from Ontario, Canada.

With every 10-fold increase in viral copies, the chance of an impending outbreak of COVID-19 rose 22-fold. The results suggest that frequent floor sampling could play an important role in a more localized surveillance of the virus, the authors wrote.

“These data add to the mounting evidence that built environment detection for SARS-CoV-2 may provide an additional layer of monitoring and could help inform local infection prevention and control measures,” they wrote.

The study was published online in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology
 

Preventing Future Suffering 

The current study builds on the researchers’ previous work, which found the same correlation between viral load on floors and COVID outbreaks in long-term care homes. 

Currently, the best-known method of environmental surveillance for COVID is wastewater detection. “Swabbing the floors would be another approach to surveillance,” senior author Caroline Nott, MD, infectious disease physician at the Ottawa Hospital, said in an interview. 

“We do have environmental surveillance with wastewater, but while this may tell you what’s going on in the city, it doesn’t tell you what is going on in a particular ward of a hospital, for instance,” she added. 

Nott and her colleagues believe that swabbing, which is easy and relatively inexpensive, will become another tool to examine the built environment. “Instead of having to close a whole hospital, for example, we could just close one room instead of an entire ward if swabbing showed a high concentration of COVID,” Nott said. 

The current study was conducted at two hospitals in Ontario between July 2022 and March 2023. The floors of healthcare worker–only areas on four inpatient adult wards were swabbed. These areas included changing rooms, meeting rooms, staff washrooms, nursing stations, and interdisciplinary team rooms.

SARS-CoV-2 RNA was detected on 537 of 760 floor swabs (71%). The overall positivity rate in the first hospital was 90% (n = 280). In the second hospital, the rate was 60% (n = 480).

Four COVID-19 outbreaks occurred in the first acute care hospital, and seven outbreaks occurred at the second hospital. Outbreaks occurred mostly among hospitalized patients (140 cases), but also in four hospital workers.

COVID-19 still requires vigilance, said Nott. “We weren’t prepared for COVID, and so as a result, many people died or have suffered long-term effects, especially vulnerable people like those being treated in hospital or in long-term care facilities. We want to develop methods to prevent similar suffering in the future, whether it’s a new COVID variant or a different pathogen altogether.” 
 

Changing Surveillance Practice?

“This is a good study,” Steven Rogak, PhD, professor of mechanical engineering at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver, Canada, said in an interivew. “The fundamental idea is that respiratory droplets and aerosols will deposit on the floor, and polymerase chain reaction [PCR] tests of swabs will provide a surrogate measurement of what might have been inhaled. There are solid statistics that it worked for the hospitals studied,” said Rogak, who studies aerosols at UBC’s Energy and Aerosols Laboratory. Rogak did not participate in the study. 

“The authors note several limitations, including that increased healthcare worker testing may have been triggered by the higher values of PCR counts from the floor swabs. But this doesn’t seem to be a problem to me, because if the floor swabs motivate the hospital to test workers more, and that results in identifying outbreaks sooner, then great,” he said.

“Another limitation is that if the hospital has better HVAC or uses air purifiers, it could remove the most infectious aerosols, but the large droplets that fall quickly to the ground would remain, and this would still result in high PCR counts from floor swabs. In this case, perhaps the floor swabs would be a poorer indication of impending outbreaks,” said Rogak.

Determining the best timing and location for floor swabbing might be challenging and specific to the particular hospital, he added. ”For example, you would not want to take swabs from floors right after they are cleaned. Overall, I think this method deserves further development, and it could become a standard technique, but the details might require refinement for widespread application.”

Adrian Popp, MD, chair of the Infectious Disease Service at Huntington Hospital–Northwell Health in New York, said that, although interesting, the study would not change his current practice.

“I’m going to start testing the environment in different rooms in the hospital, and yes, I might find different amounts of COVID, but what does that mean? If pieces of RNA from COVID are on the floor, the likelihood is that they’re not infectious,” Popp said in an interview.

“Hospital workers do get sick with COVID, and sometimes they are asymptomatic and come to work. Patients may come into the hospital for another reason and be sick with COVID. There are many ways people who work in the hospital, as well as the patients, can get COVID. To me, it means that in that hospital and community there is a lot of COVID, but I can’t tell if there is causation here. Who is giving COVID to whom? What am I supposed to do with the information?” 

The study was supported by the Northern Ontario Academic Medicine Association Clinical Innovation Opportunities Fund, the Ottawa Hospital Academic Medical Organization Innovation Fund, and a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Operating Grant. One author was a consultant for ProofDx, a startup company creating a point-of-care diagnostic test for COVID-19, and is an advisor for SIGNAL1, a startup company deploying machine-learning models to improve inpatient care. Nott, Rogak, and Popp reported having no relevant financial relationships.

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

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The viral burden of SARS-CoV-2 on floors, even in healthcare worker–only areas, was strongly associated with COVID-19 outbreaks in two acute-care hospitals, according to a new study from Ontario, Canada.

With every 10-fold increase in viral copies, the chance of an impending outbreak of COVID-19 rose 22-fold. The results suggest that frequent floor sampling could play an important role in a more localized surveillance of the virus, the authors wrote.

“These data add to the mounting evidence that built environment detection for SARS-CoV-2 may provide an additional layer of monitoring and could help inform local infection prevention and control measures,” they wrote.

The study was published online in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology
 

Preventing Future Suffering 

The current study builds on the researchers’ previous work, which found the same correlation between viral load on floors and COVID outbreaks in long-term care homes. 

Currently, the best-known method of environmental surveillance for COVID is wastewater detection. “Swabbing the floors would be another approach to surveillance,” senior author Caroline Nott, MD, infectious disease physician at the Ottawa Hospital, said in an interview. 

“We do have environmental surveillance with wastewater, but while this may tell you what’s going on in the city, it doesn’t tell you what is going on in a particular ward of a hospital, for instance,” she added. 

Nott and her colleagues believe that swabbing, which is easy and relatively inexpensive, will become another tool to examine the built environment. “Instead of having to close a whole hospital, for example, we could just close one room instead of an entire ward if swabbing showed a high concentration of COVID,” Nott said. 

The current study was conducted at two hospitals in Ontario between July 2022 and March 2023. The floors of healthcare worker–only areas on four inpatient adult wards were swabbed. These areas included changing rooms, meeting rooms, staff washrooms, nursing stations, and interdisciplinary team rooms.

SARS-CoV-2 RNA was detected on 537 of 760 floor swabs (71%). The overall positivity rate in the first hospital was 90% (n = 280). In the second hospital, the rate was 60% (n = 480).

Four COVID-19 outbreaks occurred in the first acute care hospital, and seven outbreaks occurred at the second hospital. Outbreaks occurred mostly among hospitalized patients (140 cases), but also in four hospital workers.

COVID-19 still requires vigilance, said Nott. “We weren’t prepared for COVID, and so as a result, many people died or have suffered long-term effects, especially vulnerable people like those being treated in hospital or in long-term care facilities. We want to develop methods to prevent similar suffering in the future, whether it’s a new COVID variant or a different pathogen altogether.” 
 

Changing Surveillance Practice?

“This is a good study,” Steven Rogak, PhD, professor of mechanical engineering at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver, Canada, said in an interivew. “The fundamental idea is that respiratory droplets and aerosols will deposit on the floor, and polymerase chain reaction [PCR] tests of swabs will provide a surrogate measurement of what might have been inhaled. There are solid statistics that it worked for the hospitals studied,” said Rogak, who studies aerosols at UBC’s Energy and Aerosols Laboratory. Rogak did not participate in the study. 

“The authors note several limitations, including that increased healthcare worker testing may have been triggered by the higher values of PCR counts from the floor swabs. But this doesn’t seem to be a problem to me, because if the floor swabs motivate the hospital to test workers more, and that results in identifying outbreaks sooner, then great,” he said.

“Another limitation is that if the hospital has better HVAC or uses air purifiers, it could remove the most infectious aerosols, but the large droplets that fall quickly to the ground would remain, and this would still result in high PCR counts from floor swabs. In this case, perhaps the floor swabs would be a poorer indication of impending outbreaks,” said Rogak.

Determining the best timing and location for floor swabbing might be challenging and specific to the particular hospital, he added. ”For example, you would not want to take swabs from floors right after they are cleaned. Overall, I think this method deserves further development, and it could become a standard technique, but the details might require refinement for widespread application.”

Adrian Popp, MD, chair of the Infectious Disease Service at Huntington Hospital–Northwell Health in New York, said that, although interesting, the study would not change his current practice.

“I’m going to start testing the environment in different rooms in the hospital, and yes, I might find different amounts of COVID, but what does that mean? If pieces of RNA from COVID are on the floor, the likelihood is that they’re not infectious,” Popp said in an interview.

“Hospital workers do get sick with COVID, and sometimes they are asymptomatic and come to work. Patients may come into the hospital for another reason and be sick with COVID. There are many ways people who work in the hospital, as well as the patients, can get COVID. To me, it means that in that hospital and community there is a lot of COVID, but I can’t tell if there is causation here. Who is giving COVID to whom? What am I supposed to do with the information?” 

The study was supported by the Northern Ontario Academic Medicine Association Clinical Innovation Opportunities Fund, the Ottawa Hospital Academic Medical Organization Innovation Fund, and a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Operating Grant. One author was a consultant for ProofDx, a startup company creating a point-of-care diagnostic test for COVID-19, and is an advisor for SIGNAL1, a startup company deploying machine-learning models to improve inpatient care. Nott, Rogak, and Popp reported having no relevant financial relationships.

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

The viral burden of SARS-CoV-2 on floors, even in healthcare worker–only areas, was strongly associated with COVID-19 outbreaks in two acute-care hospitals, according to a new study from Ontario, Canada.

With every 10-fold increase in viral copies, the chance of an impending outbreak of COVID-19 rose 22-fold. The results suggest that frequent floor sampling could play an important role in a more localized surveillance of the virus, the authors wrote.

“These data add to the mounting evidence that built environment detection for SARS-CoV-2 may provide an additional layer of monitoring and could help inform local infection prevention and control measures,” they wrote.

The study was published online in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology
 

Preventing Future Suffering 

The current study builds on the researchers’ previous work, which found the same correlation between viral load on floors and COVID outbreaks in long-term care homes. 

Currently, the best-known method of environmental surveillance for COVID is wastewater detection. “Swabbing the floors would be another approach to surveillance,” senior author Caroline Nott, MD, infectious disease physician at the Ottawa Hospital, said in an interview. 

“We do have environmental surveillance with wastewater, but while this may tell you what’s going on in the city, it doesn’t tell you what is going on in a particular ward of a hospital, for instance,” she added. 

Nott and her colleagues believe that swabbing, which is easy and relatively inexpensive, will become another tool to examine the built environment. “Instead of having to close a whole hospital, for example, we could just close one room instead of an entire ward if swabbing showed a high concentration of COVID,” Nott said. 

The current study was conducted at two hospitals in Ontario between July 2022 and March 2023. The floors of healthcare worker–only areas on four inpatient adult wards were swabbed. These areas included changing rooms, meeting rooms, staff washrooms, nursing stations, and interdisciplinary team rooms.

SARS-CoV-2 RNA was detected on 537 of 760 floor swabs (71%). The overall positivity rate in the first hospital was 90% (n = 280). In the second hospital, the rate was 60% (n = 480).

Four COVID-19 outbreaks occurred in the first acute care hospital, and seven outbreaks occurred at the second hospital. Outbreaks occurred mostly among hospitalized patients (140 cases), but also in four hospital workers.

COVID-19 still requires vigilance, said Nott. “We weren’t prepared for COVID, and so as a result, many people died or have suffered long-term effects, especially vulnerable people like those being treated in hospital or in long-term care facilities. We want to develop methods to prevent similar suffering in the future, whether it’s a new COVID variant or a different pathogen altogether.” 
 

Changing Surveillance Practice?

“This is a good study,” Steven Rogak, PhD, professor of mechanical engineering at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver, Canada, said in an interivew. “The fundamental idea is that respiratory droplets and aerosols will deposit on the floor, and polymerase chain reaction [PCR] tests of swabs will provide a surrogate measurement of what might have been inhaled. There are solid statistics that it worked for the hospitals studied,” said Rogak, who studies aerosols at UBC’s Energy and Aerosols Laboratory. Rogak did not participate in the study. 

“The authors note several limitations, including that increased healthcare worker testing may have been triggered by the higher values of PCR counts from the floor swabs. But this doesn’t seem to be a problem to me, because if the floor swabs motivate the hospital to test workers more, and that results in identifying outbreaks sooner, then great,” he said.

“Another limitation is that if the hospital has better HVAC or uses air purifiers, it could remove the most infectious aerosols, but the large droplets that fall quickly to the ground would remain, and this would still result in high PCR counts from floor swabs. In this case, perhaps the floor swabs would be a poorer indication of impending outbreaks,” said Rogak.

Determining the best timing and location for floor swabbing might be challenging and specific to the particular hospital, he added. ”For example, you would not want to take swabs from floors right after they are cleaned. Overall, I think this method deserves further development, and it could become a standard technique, but the details might require refinement for widespread application.”

Adrian Popp, MD, chair of the Infectious Disease Service at Huntington Hospital–Northwell Health in New York, said that, although interesting, the study would not change his current practice.

“I’m going to start testing the environment in different rooms in the hospital, and yes, I might find different amounts of COVID, but what does that mean? If pieces of RNA from COVID are on the floor, the likelihood is that they’re not infectious,” Popp said in an interview.

“Hospital workers do get sick with COVID, and sometimes they are asymptomatic and come to work. Patients may come into the hospital for another reason and be sick with COVID. There are many ways people who work in the hospital, as well as the patients, can get COVID. To me, it means that in that hospital and community there is a lot of COVID, but I can’t tell if there is causation here. Who is giving COVID to whom? What am I supposed to do with the information?” 

The study was supported by the Northern Ontario Academic Medicine Association Clinical Innovation Opportunities Fund, the Ottawa Hospital Academic Medical Organization Innovation Fund, and a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Operating Grant. One author was a consultant for ProofDx, a startup company creating a point-of-care diagnostic test for COVID-19, and is an advisor for SIGNAL1, a startup company deploying machine-learning models to improve inpatient care. Nott, Rogak, and Popp reported having no relevant financial relationships.

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

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FROM INFECTION CONTROL & HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY

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Which Specialists Should Lead BP Control Efforts?

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Fri, 11/01/2024 - 12:40

Current efforts to control high blood pressure (BP) are failing in the United States and globally.

The first World Health Organization (WHO) global report on hypertension found that only 54% of adults with hypertension are diagnosed, 42% get treatment, and just 21% have their hypertension controlled.

In the United States, almost half (48%) of adults have high BP, defined as a systolic BP > 130 mm Hg, or a diastolic BP > 80 mm Hg, or are taking medication for high BP, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only about one in four adults (22.5%) with high BP have their BP under control.

High BP is a major risk factor for coronary heart disease, heart failure, and stroke, and the problem of controlling it is only getting worse. In 2024, the American Heart Association estimates that, “among adults, prevalence of hypertension will increase from 51.2% in 2020 to 61.0% in 2050.”
 

Pharmacists Most Effective

Though many factors contribute to hypertension, researchers have found that the kind of specialist leading the hypertension team may play a role in success. Currently, most BP control teams are led by physicians in primary care.

In a recent meta-analysis involving 100 randomized controlled trials and more than 90,000 patients in Circulation, Katherine T. Mills, PhD, School of Public Health, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, and colleagues found that, while all the groups studied who led BP control efforts were successful in reducing BP, pharmacist- and community health worker–led teams saw the biggest reductions.

Those groups’ efforts resulted in the greatest systolic BP drops: −7.3 mm Hg (pharmacists) and −7.1 mm Hg (community health workers). Groups led by nurses and physicians saw systolic changes of −3 and −2.4 mm Hg, respectively.

Similarly, pharmacist- and community health worker–led efforts saw the greatest diastolic BP reductions (−3.8 and −3.1 mm Hg), compared with nurse-led (−1.6) and physician-led (−1.2) efforts.
 

Reductions Enough to Cut Cardiovascular Disease Risk

The reduction numbers for pharmacists are clinically meaningful, Mills said in an interview. “It’s greater than a lot of what we see from individual lifestyle changes,” such as reducing sodium intake or increasing physical activity.

“It’s a big enough blood pressure change to have meaningful reduction in risk of cardiovascular disease,” she said.

This evidence that the leader of the team matters is particularly important because the treatment of hypertension is not in doubt. Something else is not working the way it should.

“We have basically all the scientific evidence we need in terms of what interventions work. But there’s a big gap between that and what’s actually being done in the real world,” she said.

Mills said she was not surprised that pharmacists got the best results “because so much of it has to do with titrating medications and finding the right kind of medications for each patient.”

Additionally, BP management and control falls right into pharmacists’ wheelhouse, Mills noted, including evaluating medication side effects and talking to patients about medication adherence.
 

Why Pharmacists May Be More Successful

In an accompanying editorial, Ross T. Tsuyuki, PharmD, with the EPICORE Centre, Division of Cardiology, University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, and coauthors said the Mills study provides further data to support pharmacists leading BP control efforts, but it’s not the data that have been keeping the model from changing. The barriers include turf wars and lack of legislative change.

The editorialists also said having pharmacist-led BP teams is only the first step. “We need pharmacists to independently prescribe,” they wrote.

“Since individual states govern the scope of practice of pharmacists,” the editorialists wrote, “we have the enormous task of changing regulations to allow pharmacists to independently prescribe for hypertension. But it can be done. The Canadian province of Alberta allows pharmacists to prescribe. And more recently, Idaho. While most states allow some sort of collaborative (dependent) prescribing, that is only a first step.”

Allowing pharmacists to independently prescribe will help populations who do not have a physician or can’t get access to a physician, the editorialists wrote. But changing state legislation would be a lengthy and complex effort.
 

Physician-Led BP Control Model ‘Seems to Fail Miserably’

Coauthor of the editorial, Florian Rader, MD, MSc, medical director of the Hypertension Center of Excellence at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California, said in an interview that, currently, physician-led teams are the norm, “and that model seems to fail miserably.”

He offered several key reasons for that. In primary care, patients with hypertension often have other problems — they may have high cholesterol or diabetes. “They may have acute illnesses that bother them as well as hypertension that doesn’t bother them,” he said.

Physicians tend to find excuses not to increase or add BP medications, Rader said. “We tend then to blame ‘white coat effect’ or say ‘you’re just nervous today.’ ”

Pharmacists, comparatively, are more protocol driven, he said. “They essentially look at blood pressure and they have an algorithm in their mind. If the blood pressure hits the guideline-stated bar, start this medication. If it hits another bar, increase or add another medication.”

Rader said turf wars are also keeping physician-led teams from changing, fueled by fears that patients will seek care from pharmacists instead of physicians.

“I don’t think the pharmacists will steal a single patient,” Rader said. “If a physician had a healthcare partner like a pharmacist to optimize blood pressure, then [patients] come back to the physician with normalized BP on the right medications. I think it’s a total win-win. I think we just have to get over that.”

Pharmacist-led warfarin clinics are very well established, Rader said, “but for whatever reason, when it comes to blood pressure, physicians are a little bit more hesitant.”
 

Collaboration Yes, Independent No

Hypertension expert Donald J. DiPette, MD, Health Sciences Distinguished Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at University of South Carolina, Columbia, said he completely agrees with Mills and colleagues’ conclusion. “Pharmacists and community health workers are most effective at leading BP intervention implementation and should be prioritized in future hypertension control efforts.”

The conclusion “is in line with the thinking of major organizations,” said DiPette, who helped develop the WHO’s most recent pharmacological treatment of hypertension guidelines. “WHO suggests that pharmacological treatment of hypertension can be provided by nonphysician professionals such as pharmacists and nurses as long as the following conditions are met: Proper training, prescribing authority, specific management protocols, and physician oversight.”

DiPette strongly believes BP control efforts should be supervised by a physician, but that could come in different ways. He suggested a collaborative but physician-supervised development of a protocol. Everyone contributes, but the physician signs off on it.

As for the Idaho example of independent practice for pharmacists, DiPette said he doesn’t think that will make a big difference in control rates. “That’s still not team-based care.”
 

Community Health Workers Key

He said he was also glad to see community healthcare workers emerge as the next-most-effective group after pharmacists to lead BP control teams. This is particularly important as BP control efforts globally need to consider the cultural experience of individual communities. “The community worker is on the ground, and can help overcome some of the cultural barriers,” he said.

“The key is to focus on team-based care and moving away from silo practice,” DiPette said.

Physicians, he said, often fall into “clinical or therapeutic inertia,” where BP is concerned. “We fail to titrate or add additional hypertensive medications even when they’re clearly indicated by the blood pressure. This is a problem not with the individual patient or the healthcare system, this is on us as physicians.”

Nonphysicians are more aligned with following protocols and guidelines, irrespective of the dynamics of what’s going on, he said.

And following protocols rigidly is a good thing for hypertension. “We’re not overtreating hypertension,” he emphasized. “We’re undertreating it.”

Reversing the trend on hypertension will take a sea change in medicine — changing institutions, systems, and individuals who have been doing things the same way for decades, he said.

“Our hypertension control rates are dismal,” DiPette said. “What’s more alarming is they’re going down. That’s the urgency. That’s the burning platform. We must strongly consider doing something different.”

Tsuyuki has received investigator-initiated arm’s length research grants from Merck, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, and Sanofi. He has been a speaker/consultant for Merck, Emergent BioSolutions, and Shoppers Drug Mart/Loblaw Companies Limited. Rader has been a consultant for Bristol Meyers Squibb, Cytokinetics, Idorsia, Medtronic, and ReCor Medical. Mills and coauthors reported no relevant financial relationships. DiPette declared no relevant financial relationships. He was part of a leadership team that developed WHO guidelines on hypertension.

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

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Current efforts to control high blood pressure (BP) are failing in the United States and globally.

The first World Health Organization (WHO) global report on hypertension found that only 54% of adults with hypertension are diagnosed, 42% get treatment, and just 21% have their hypertension controlled.

In the United States, almost half (48%) of adults have high BP, defined as a systolic BP > 130 mm Hg, or a diastolic BP > 80 mm Hg, or are taking medication for high BP, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only about one in four adults (22.5%) with high BP have their BP under control.

High BP is a major risk factor for coronary heart disease, heart failure, and stroke, and the problem of controlling it is only getting worse. In 2024, the American Heart Association estimates that, “among adults, prevalence of hypertension will increase from 51.2% in 2020 to 61.0% in 2050.”
 

Pharmacists Most Effective

Though many factors contribute to hypertension, researchers have found that the kind of specialist leading the hypertension team may play a role in success. Currently, most BP control teams are led by physicians in primary care.

In a recent meta-analysis involving 100 randomized controlled trials and more than 90,000 patients in Circulation, Katherine T. Mills, PhD, School of Public Health, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, and colleagues found that, while all the groups studied who led BP control efforts were successful in reducing BP, pharmacist- and community health worker–led teams saw the biggest reductions.

Those groups’ efforts resulted in the greatest systolic BP drops: −7.3 mm Hg (pharmacists) and −7.1 mm Hg (community health workers). Groups led by nurses and physicians saw systolic changes of −3 and −2.4 mm Hg, respectively.

Similarly, pharmacist- and community health worker–led efforts saw the greatest diastolic BP reductions (−3.8 and −3.1 mm Hg), compared with nurse-led (−1.6) and physician-led (−1.2) efforts.
 

Reductions Enough to Cut Cardiovascular Disease Risk

The reduction numbers for pharmacists are clinically meaningful, Mills said in an interview. “It’s greater than a lot of what we see from individual lifestyle changes,” such as reducing sodium intake or increasing physical activity.

“It’s a big enough blood pressure change to have meaningful reduction in risk of cardiovascular disease,” she said.

This evidence that the leader of the team matters is particularly important because the treatment of hypertension is not in doubt. Something else is not working the way it should.

“We have basically all the scientific evidence we need in terms of what interventions work. But there’s a big gap between that and what’s actually being done in the real world,” she said.

Mills said she was not surprised that pharmacists got the best results “because so much of it has to do with titrating medications and finding the right kind of medications for each patient.”

Additionally, BP management and control falls right into pharmacists’ wheelhouse, Mills noted, including evaluating medication side effects and talking to patients about medication adherence.
 

Why Pharmacists May Be More Successful

In an accompanying editorial, Ross T. Tsuyuki, PharmD, with the EPICORE Centre, Division of Cardiology, University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, and coauthors said the Mills study provides further data to support pharmacists leading BP control efforts, but it’s not the data that have been keeping the model from changing. The barriers include turf wars and lack of legislative change.

The editorialists also said having pharmacist-led BP teams is only the first step. “We need pharmacists to independently prescribe,” they wrote.

“Since individual states govern the scope of practice of pharmacists,” the editorialists wrote, “we have the enormous task of changing regulations to allow pharmacists to independently prescribe for hypertension. But it can be done. The Canadian province of Alberta allows pharmacists to prescribe. And more recently, Idaho. While most states allow some sort of collaborative (dependent) prescribing, that is only a first step.”

Allowing pharmacists to independently prescribe will help populations who do not have a physician or can’t get access to a physician, the editorialists wrote. But changing state legislation would be a lengthy and complex effort.
 

Physician-Led BP Control Model ‘Seems to Fail Miserably’

Coauthor of the editorial, Florian Rader, MD, MSc, medical director of the Hypertension Center of Excellence at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California, said in an interview that, currently, physician-led teams are the norm, “and that model seems to fail miserably.”

He offered several key reasons for that. In primary care, patients with hypertension often have other problems — they may have high cholesterol or diabetes. “They may have acute illnesses that bother them as well as hypertension that doesn’t bother them,” he said.

Physicians tend to find excuses not to increase or add BP medications, Rader said. “We tend then to blame ‘white coat effect’ or say ‘you’re just nervous today.’ ”

Pharmacists, comparatively, are more protocol driven, he said. “They essentially look at blood pressure and they have an algorithm in their mind. If the blood pressure hits the guideline-stated bar, start this medication. If it hits another bar, increase or add another medication.”

Rader said turf wars are also keeping physician-led teams from changing, fueled by fears that patients will seek care from pharmacists instead of physicians.

“I don’t think the pharmacists will steal a single patient,” Rader said. “If a physician had a healthcare partner like a pharmacist to optimize blood pressure, then [patients] come back to the physician with normalized BP on the right medications. I think it’s a total win-win. I think we just have to get over that.”

Pharmacist-led warfarin clinics are very well established, Rader said, “but for whatever reason, when it comes to blood pressure, physicians are a little bit more hesitant.”
 

Collaboration Yes, Independent No

Hypertension expert Donald J. DiPette, MD, Health Sciences Distinguished Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at University of South Carolina, Columbia, said he completely agrees with Mills and colleagues’ conclusion. “Pharmacists and community health workers are most effective at leading BP intervention implementation and should be prioritized in future hypertension control efforts.”

The conclusion “is in line with the thinking of major organizations,” said DiPette, who helped develop the WHO’s most recent pharmacological treatment of hypertension guidelines. “WHO suggests that pharmacological treatment of hypertension can be provided by nonphysician professionals such as pharmacists and nurses as long as the following conditions are met: Proper training, prescribing authority, specific management protocols, and physician oversight.”

DiPette strongly believes BP control efforts should be supervised by a physician, but that could come in different ways. He suggested a collaborative but physician-supervised development of a protocol. Everyone contributes, but the physician signs off on it.

As for the Idaho example of independent practice for pharmacists, DiPette said he doesn’t think that will make a big difference in control rates. “That’s still not team-based care.”
 

Community Health Workers Key

He said he was also glad to see community healthcare workers emerge as the next-most-effective group after pharmacists to lead BP control teams. This is particularly important as BP control efforts globally need to consider the cultural experience of individual communities. “The community worker is on the ground, and can help overcome some of the cultural barriers,” he said.

“The key is to focus on team-based care and moving away from silo practice,” DiPette said.

Physicians, he said, often fall into “clinical or therapeutic inertia,” where BP is concerned. “We fail to titrate or add additional hypertensive medications even when they’re clearly indicated by the blood pressure. This is a problem not with the individual patient or the healthcare system, this is on us as physicians.”

Nonphysicians are more aligned with following protocols and guidelines, irrespective of the dynamics of what’s going on, he said.

And following protocols rigidly is a good thing for hypertension. “We’re not overtreating hypertension,” he emphasized. “We’re undertreating it.”

Reversing the trend on hypertension will take a sea change in medicine — changing institutions, systems, and individuals who have been doing things the same way for decades, he said.

“Our hypertension control rates are dismal,” DiPette said. “What’s more alarming is they’re going down. That’s the urgency. That’s the burning platform. We must strongly consider doing something different.”

Tsuyuki has received investigator-initiated arm’s length research grants from Merck, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, and Sanofi. He has been a speaker/consultant for Merck, Emergent BioSolutions, and Shoppers Drug Mart/Loblaw Companies Limited. Rader has been a consultant for Bristol Meyers Squibb, Cytokinetics, Idorsia, Medtronic, and ReCor Medical. Mills and coauthors reported no relevant financial relationships. DiPette declared no relevant financial relationships. He was part of a leadership team that developed WHO guidelines on hypertension.

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

Current efforts to control high blood pressure (BP) are failing in the United States and globally.

The first World Health Organization (WHO) global report on hypertension found that only 54% of adults with hypertension are diagnosed, 42% get treatment, and just 21% have their hypertension controlled.

In the United States, almost half (48%) of adults have high BP, defined as a systolic BP > 130 mm Hg, or a diastolic BP > 80 mm Hg, or are taking medication for high BP, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only about one in four adults (22.5%) with high BP have their BP under control.

High BP is a major risk factor for coronary heart disease, heart failure, and stroke, and the problem of controlling it is only getting worse. In 2024, the American Heart Association estimates that, “among adults, prevalence of hypertension will increase from 51.2% in 2020 to 61.0% in 2050.”
 

Pharmacists Most Effective

Though many factors contribute to hypertension, researchers have found that the kind of specialist leading the hypertension team may play a role in success. Currently, most BP control teams are led by physicians in primary care.

In a recent meta-analysis involving 100 randomized controlled trials and more than 90,000 patients in Circulation, Katherine T. Mills, PhD, School of Public Health, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, and colleagues found that, while all the groups studied who led BP control efforts were successful in reducing BP, pharmacist- and community health worker–led teams saw the biggest reductions.

Those groups’ efforts resulted in the greatest systolic BP drops: −7.3 mm Hg (pharmacists) and −7.1 mm Hg (community health workers). Groups led by nurses and physicians saw systolic changes of −3 and −2.4 mm Hg, respectively.

Similarly, pharmacist- and community health worker–led efforts saw the greatest diastolic BP reductions (−3.8 and −3.1 mm Hg), compared with nurse-led (−1.6) and physician-led (−1.2) efforts.
 

Reductions Enough to Cut Cardiovascular Disease Risk

The reduction numbers for pharmacists are clinically meaningful, Mills said in an interview. “It’s greater than a lot of what we see from individual lifestyle changes,” such as reducing sodium intake or increasing physical activity.

“It’s a big enough blood pressure change to have meaningful reduction in risk of cardiovascular disease,” she said.

This evidence that the leader of the team matters is particularly important because the treatment of hypertension is not in doubt. Something else is not working the way it should.

“We have basically all the scientific evidence we need in terms of what interventions work. But there’s a big gap between that and what’s actually being done in the real world,” she said.

Mills said she was not surprised that pharmacists got the best results “because so much of it has to do with titrating medications and finding the right kind of medications for each patient.”

Additionally, BP management and control falls right into pharmacists’ wheelhouse, Mills noted, including evaluating medication side effects and talking to patients about medication adherence.
 

Why Pharmacists May Be More Successful

In an accompanying editorial, Ross T. Tsuyuki, PharmD, with the EPICORE Centre, Division of Cardiology, University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, and coauthors said the Mills study provides further data to support pharmacists leading BP control efforts, but it’s not the data that have been keeping the model from changing. The barriers include turf wars and lack of legislative change.

The editorialists also said having pharmacist-led BP teams is only the first step. “We need pharmacists to independently prescribe,” they wrote.

“Since individual states govern the scope of practice of pharmacists,” the editorialists wrote, “we have the enormous task of changing regulations to allow pharmacists to independently prescribe for hypertension. But it can be done. The Canadian province of Alberta allows pharmacists to prescribe. And more recently, Idaho. While most states allow some sort of collaborative (dependent) prescribing, that is only a first step.”

Allowing pharmacists to independently prescribe will help populations who do not have a physician or can’t get access to a physician, the editorialists wrote. But changing state legislation would be a lengthy and complex effort.
 

Physician-Led BP Control Model ‘Seems to Fail Miserably’

Coauthor of the editorial, Florian Rader, MD, MSc, medical director of the Hypertension Center of Excellence at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California, said in an interview that, currently, physician-led teams are the norm, “and that model seems to fail miserably.”

He offered several key reasons for that. In primary care, patients with hypertension often have other problems — they may have high cholesterol or diabetes. “They may have acute illnesses that bother them as well as hypertension that doesn’t bother them,” he said.

Physicians tend to find excuses not to increase or add BP medications, Rader said. “We tend then to blame ‘white coat effect’ or say ‘you’re just nervous today.’ ”

Pharmacists, comparatively, are more protocol driven, he said. “They essentially look at blood pressure and they have an algorithm in their mind. If the blood pressure hits the guideline-stated bar, start this medication. If it hits another bar, increase or add another medication.”

Rader said turf wars are also keeping physician-led teams from changing, fueled by fears that patients will seek care from pharmacists instead of physicians.

“I don’t think the pharmacists will steal a single patient,” Rader said. “If a physician had a healthcare partner like a pharmacist to optimize blood pressure, then [patients] come back to the physician with normalized BP on the right medications. I think it’s a total win-win. I think we just have to get over that.”

Pharmacist-led warfarin clinics are very well established, Rader said, “but for whatever reason, when it comes to blood pressure, physicians are a little bit more hesitant.”
 

Collaboration Yes, Independent No

Hypertension expert Donald J. DiPette, MD, Health Sciences Distinguished Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at University of South Carolina, Columbia, said he completely agrees with Mills and colleagues’ conclusion. “Pharmacists and community health workers are most effective at leading BP intervention implementation and should be prioritized in future hypertension control efforts.”

The conclusion “is in line with the thinking of major organizations,” said DiPette, who helped develop the WHO’s most recent pharmacological treatment of hypertension guidelines. “WHO suggests that pharmacological treatment of hypertension can be provided by nonphysician professionals such as pharmacists and nurses as long as the following conditions are met: Proper training, prescribing authority, specific management protocols, and physician oversight.”

DiPette strongly believes BP control efforts should be supervised by a physician, but that could come in different ways. He suggested a collaborative but physician-supervised development of a protocol. Everyone contributes, but the physician signs off on it.

As for the Idaho example of independent practice for pharmacists, DiPette said he doesn’t think that will make a big difference in control rates. “That’s still not team-based care.”
 

Community Health Workers Key

He said he was also glad to see community healthcare workers emerge as the next-most-effective group after pharmacists to lead BP control teams. This is particularly important as BP control efforts globally need to consider the cultural experience of individual communities. “The community worker is on the ground, and can help overcome some of the cultural barriers,” he said.

“The key is to focus on team-based care and moving away from silo practice,” DiPette said.

Physicians, he said, often fall into “clinical or therapeutic inertia,” where BP is concerned. “We fail to titrate or add additional hypertensive medications even when they’re clearly indicated by the blood pressure. This is a problem not with the individual patient or the healthcare system, this is on us as physicians.”

Nonphysicians are more aligned with following protocols and guidelines, irrespective of the dynamics of what’s going on, he said.

And following protocols rigidly is a good thing for hypertension. “We’re not overtreating hypertension,” he emphasized. “We’re undertreating it.”

Reversing the trend on hypertension will take a sea change in medicine — changing institutions, systems, and individuals who have been doing things the same way for decades, he said.

“Our hypertension control rates are dismal,” DiPette said. “What’s more alarming is they’re going down. That’s the urgency. That’s the burning platform. We must strongly consider doing something different.”

Tsuyuki has received investigator-initiated arm’s length research grants from Merck, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, and Sanofi. He has been a speaker/consultant for Merck, Emergent BioSolutions, and Shoppers Drug Mart/Loblaw Companies Limited. Rader has been a consultant for Bristol Meyers Squibb, Cytokinetics, Idorsia, Medtronic, and ReCor Medical. Mills and coauthors reported no relevant financial relationships. DiPette declared no relevant financial relationships. He was part of a leadership team that developed WHO guidelines on hypertension.

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

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Over-the-Counter UTI Products: What Primary Care Clinicians Need to Know

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Fri, 11/01/2024 - 11:51

When it comes to managing urinary tract infections (UTIs), patients often turn to over-the-counter (OTC) products in search of quick relief. However, recent research suggests some products promise more than they can deliver and can vary widely in price and ingredients. For primary care clinicians, understanding these differences could make all the difference in offering effective, cost-conscious advice to patients.

Researchers from the University of Wisconsin analyzed OTC products marketed for urinary tract health in three major US drugstores and found significant price variations and a wide array of active ingredients.

Their study, presented at the American Urogynecologic Society’s PFD Week conference, found that the price of OTC products fluctuates dramatically. Phenazopyridine hydrochloride, commonly used for UTI symptom relief, ranged from $0.17 to $0.83 per tablet, the study found. Methenamine/sodium salicylate combinations, which are marketed for UTI prevention, varied from $0.13 to $0.33 per tablet. Cranberry supplements — often touted for their preventive benefits — showed the most extreme price range, from as low as $0.07 to as high as $1.00 per serving.

The study also looked into the ingredients, which were categorized into five main groups: Phenazopyridine hydrochloride, methenamine/sodium salicylate, cranberry supplements, D-mannose, and cranberry/D-mannose combinations.

These ingredients vary not only in price but also in the strength of scientific evidence supporting their use.

The researchers concluded:

  • Phenazopyridine hydrochloride offers effective symptom relief but is not a UTI treatment.
  • Methenamine/sodium salicylate shows potential for preventing recurrent UTIs in certain patients.
  • Cranberry supplements have limited evidence for preventing UTIs, with no proof they treat infections.
  • D-mannose has shown promise for short-term use in preventing recurrent UTIs, though more research is needed to weigh its effectiveness in the long run.

“No OTC product within its respective category is superior to another,” said Ushma J. Patel, MD, a fellow in Urogynecology and Reconstructive Pelvic Surgery at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, and lead author of the study.

Patel and her coresearcher also found that many products are falsely marketed as treatments for UTI.

“The products in each type of category are for symptom relief or UTI prevention — not treatment,” said Patel. “These products within the categories described are interchangeable, and consumers should make cost-effective choices as no product is superior to another within its respective category.”

This presents the opportunity for clinicians to guide individuals to pick the right products while explaining that symptom relief doesn’t necessarily mean an infection is being treated, Patel said.

Indeed, Patel proposed that clinicians utilize a summary table created from their findings to offer patients vetted information about OTC UTI products.

And, while OTC products can provide benefits, they should not replace proper medical evaluation and treatment of UTIs.

“If patients are experiencing ongoing symptoms or develop new-onset symptoms despite trialing an over-the-counter product, they should contact a healthcare provider,” said Patel. “OTC products can provide symptom relief until patients are able to see a healthcare provider.”

The researchers reported no relevant disclosures.

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

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When it comes to managing urinary tract infections (UTIs), patients often turn to over-the-counter (OTC) products in search of quick relief. However, recent research suggests some products promise more than they can deliver and can vary widely in price and ingredients. For primary care clinicians, understanding these differences could make all the difference in offering effective, cost-conscious advice to patients.

Researchers from the University of Wisconsin analyzed OTC products marketed for urinary tract health in three major US drugstores and found significant price variations and a wide array of active ingredients.

Their study, presented at the American Urogynecologic Society’s PFD Week conference, found that the price of OTC products fluctuates dramatically. Phenazopyridine hydrochloride, commonly used for UTI symptom relief, ranged from $0.17 to $0.83 per tablet, the study found. Methenamine/sodium salicylate combinations, which are marketed for UTI prevention, varied from $0.13 to $0.33 per tablet. Cranberry supplements — often touted for their preventive benefits — showed the most extreme price range, from as low as $0.07 to as high as $1.00 per serving.

The study also looked into the ingredients, which were categorized into five main groups: Phenazopyridine hydrochloride, methenamine/sodium salicylate, cranberry supplements, D-mannose, and cranberry/D-mannose combinations.

These ingredients vary not only in price but also in the strength of scientific evidence supporting their use.

The researchers concluded:

  • Phenazopyridine hydrochloride offers effective symptom relief but is not a UTI treatment.
  • Methenamine/sodium salicylate shows potential for preventing recurrent UTIs in certain patients.
  • Cranberry supplements have limited evidence for preventing UTIs, with no proof they treat infections.
  • D-mannose has shown promise for short-term use in preventing recurrent UTIs, though more research is needed to weigh its effectiveness in the long run.

“No OTC product within its respective category is superior to another,” said Ushma J. Patel, MD, a fellow in Urogynecology and Reconstructive Pelvic Surgery at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, and lead author of the study.

Patel and her coresearcher also found that many products are falsely marketed as treatments for UTI.

“The products in each type of category are for symptom relief or UTI prevention — not treatment,” said Patel. “These products within the categories described are interchangeable, and consumers should make cost-effective choices as no product is superior to another within its respective category.”

This presents the opportunity for clinicians to guide individuals to pick the right products while explaining that symptom relief doesn’t necessarily mean an infection is being treated, Patel said.

Indeed, Patel proposed that clinicians utilize a summary table created from their findings to offer patients vetted information about OTC UTI products.

And, while OTC products can provide benefits, they should not replace proper medical evaluation and treatment of UTIs.

“If patients are experiencing ongoing symptoms or develop new-onset symptoms despite trialing an over-the-counter product, they should contact a healthcare provider,” said Patel. “OTC products can provide symptom relief until patients are able to see a healthcare provider.”

The researchers reported no relevant disclosures.

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

When it comes to managing urinary tract infections (UTIs), patients often turn to over-the-counter (OTC) products in search of quick relief. However, recent research suggests some products promise more than they can deliver and can vary widely in price and ingredients. For primary care clinicians, understanding these differences could make all the difference in offering effective, cost-conscious advice to patients.

Researchers from the University of Wisconsin analyzed OTC products marketed for urinary tract health in three major US drugstores and found significant price variations and a wide array of active ingredients.

Their study, presented at the American Urogynecologic Society’s PFD Week conference, found that the price of OTC products fluctuates dramatically. Phenazopyridine hydrochloride, commonly used for UTI symptom relief, ranged from $0.17 to $0.83 per tablet, the study found. Methenamine/sodium salicylate combinations, which are marketed for UTI prevention, varied from $0.13 to $0.33 per tablet. Cranberry supplements — often touted for their preventive benefits — showed the most extreme price range, from as low as $0.07 to as high as $1.00 per serving.

The study also looked into the ingredients, which were categorized into five main groups: Phenazopyridine hydrochloride, methenamine/sodium salicylate, cranberry supplements, D-mannose, and cranberry/D-mannose combinations.

These ingredients vary not only in price but also in the strength of scientific evidence supporting their use.

The researchers concluded:

  • Phenazopyridine hydrochloride offers effective symptom relief but is not a UTI treatment.
  • Methenamine/sodium salicylate shows potential for preventing recurrent UTIs in certain patients.
  • Cranberry supplements have limited evidence for preventing UTIs, with no proof they treat infections.
  • D-mannose has shown promise for short-term use in preventing recurrent UTIs, though more research is needed to weigh its effectiveness in the long run.

“No OTC product within its respective category is superior to another,” said Ushma J. Patel, MD, a fellow in Urogynecology and Reconstructive Pelvic Surgery at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, and lead author of the study.

Patel and her coresearcher also found that many products are falsely marketed as treatments for UTI.

“The products in each type of category are for symptom relief or UTI prevention — not treatment,” said Patel. “These products within the categories described are interchangeable, and consumers should make cost-effective choices as no product is superior to another within its respective category.”

This presents the opportunity for clinicians to guide individuals to pick the right products while explaining that symptom relief doesn’t necessarily mean an infection is being treated, Patel said.

Indeed, Patel proposed that clinicians utilize a summary table created from their findings to offer patients vetted information about OTC UTI products.

And, while OTC products can provide benefits, they should not replace proper medical evaluation and treatment of UTIs.

“If patients are experiencing ongoing symptoms or develop new-onset symptoms despite trialing an over-the-counter product, they should contact a healthcare provider,” said Patel. “OTC products can provide symptom relief until patients are able to see a healthcare provider.”

The researchers reported no relevant disclosures.

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

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FDA OKs New Drug for Urinary Tract Infections

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Fri, 11/01/2024 - 11:27

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Orlynvah, a new oral treatment for uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) in women who have limited options for effective antibiotic therapy.

Uncomplicated UTIs are bladder infections that typically affect women who don’t have other issues like kidney disease or urinary tract abnormalities. These infections are common, affecting around half of all women at least once in their lives.

Treating UTIs can be difficult when standard antibiotics don’t work well, often because of antibiotic resistance or certain health conditions. Orlynvah offers a promising new option by combining two drugs, sulopenem etzadroxil and probenecid, in one oral tablet. This combination helps keep the antibiotic in the body longer, making it work better, especially against bacteria that resist traditional treatments. Orlynvah is specifically approved to target infections from bacteria like Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Proteus mirabilis, which can be harder to treat.

Marjorie Golden, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut, described Orlynvah as a much-needed alternative for women struggling with difficult-to-treat UTIs. 

“Orlynvah has the potential to be an important treatment option for those who need it,” she said in a news release from Iterum Therapeutics, the drug’s maker.

The FDA approved Orlynvah based on two large clinical trials involving over 3,800 women. In these studies, Orlynvah worked as well as or better than antibiotics like ciprofloxacin and Augmentin. It was generally well-tolerated, though common side effects included diarrhea, nausea, yeast infections, and headaches.

The FDA advises people to discuss their medical history with their doctor before taking Orlynvah, especially if they have conditions like gout, kidney stones, or allergies to other antibiotics.

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

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The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Orlynvah, a new oral treatment for uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) in women who have limited options for effective antibiotic therapy.

Uncomplicated UTIs are bladder infections that typically affect women who don’t have other issues like kidney disease or urinary tract abnormalities. These infections are common, affecting around half of all women at least once in their lives.

Treating UTIs can be difficult when standard antibiotics don’t work well, often because of antibiotic resistance or certain health conditions. Orlynvah offers a promising new option by combining two drugs, sulopenem etzadroxil and probenecid, in one oral tablet. This combination helps keep the antibiotic in the body longer, making it work better, especially against bacteria that resist traditional treatments. Orlynvah is specifically approved to target infections from bacteria like Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Proteus mirabilis, which can be harder to treat.

Marjorie Golden, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut, described Orlynvah as a much-needed alternative for women struggling with difficult-to-treat UTIs. 

“Orlynvah has the potential to be an important treatment option for those who need it,” she said in a news release from Iterum Therapeutics, the drug’s maker.

The FDA approved Orlynvah based on two large clinical trials involving over 3,800 women. In these studies, Orlynvah worked as well as or better than antibiotics like ciprofloxacin and Augmentin. It was generally well-tolerated, though common side effects included diarrhea, nausea, yeast infections, and headaches.

The FDA advises people to discuss their medical history with their doctor before taking Orlynvah, especially if they have conditions like gout, kidney stones, or allergies to other antibiotics.

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

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Orlynvah, a new oral treatment for uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) in women who have limited options for effective antibiotic therapy.

Uncomplicated UTIs are bladder infections that typically affect women who don’t have other issues like kidney disease or urinary tract abnormalities. These infections are common, affecting around half of all women at least once in their lives.

Treating UTIs can be difficult when standard antibiotics don’t work well, often because of antibiotic resistance or certain health conditions. Orlynvah offers a promising new option by combining two drugs, sulopenem etzadroxil and probenecid, in one oral tablet. This combination helps keep the antibiotic in the body longer, making it work better, especially against bacteria that resist traditional treatments. Orlynvah is specifically approved to target infections from bacteria like Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Proteus mirabilis, which can be harder to treat.

Marjorie Golden, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut, described Orlynvah as a much-needed alternative for women struggling with difficult-to-treat UTIs. 

“Orlynvah has the potential to be an important treatment option for those who need it,” she said in a news release from Iterum Therapeutics, the drug’s maker.

The FDA approved Orlynvah based on two large clinical trials involving over 3,800 women. In these studies, Orlynvah worked as well as or better than antibiotics like ciprofloxacin and Augmentin. It was generally well-tolerated, though common side effects included diarrhea, nausea, yeast infections, and headaches.

The FDA advises people to discuss their medical history with their doctor before taking Orlynvah, especially if they have conditions like gout, kidney stones, or allergies to other antibiotics.

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

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Can Fish Skin Grafts Heal Diabetic Foot Ulcers?

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Changed
Thu, 10/31/2024 - 15:47

 

TOPLINE:

Intact fish skin grafts, sourced from Atlantic cod, show superior and faster healing than standard wound care practices in patients with deep and penetrating diabetic foot ulcers.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Standard wound care for diabetic foot ulcers involves vascular assessment, surgical debridement, use of appropriate dressings, infection management, and glycemic control; however, standard care is typically associated with poor outcomes.
  • Researchers conducted a multicenter clinical trial in 15 tertiary care centers with diabetic foot units across France, Italy, Germany, and Sweden to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intact fish skin grafts over standard-of-care practices in treating complex diabetic foot ulcers.
  • A total of 255 patients aged 18 years or older with diabetes and lower limb wounds penetrating to the tendon, capsule, bone, or joint were randomly assigned to receive either an intact fish skin graft or standard wound care for 14 weeks.
  • The primary endpoint was the percentage of wounds achieving complete closure by 16 weeks.
  • Wound healing was also assessed at 20 and 24 weeks.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of wounds healed at 16 weeks was higher with intact fish skin grafts than with standard-of-care (44.0% vs 26.4% adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 2.58; 95% CI, 1.48-4.56).
  • The fish skin grafts continued to be more effective than standard wound care practices at weeks 20 (aOR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.27–3.70) and 24 (aOR, 2.19; 95% CI, 1.31–3.70).
  • The mean time to healing was 17.31 weeks for the intact fish skin graft group and 19.37 weeks for the standard-of-care group; intact fish skin grafts were also associated with faster healing times than standard wound care (hazard ratio, 1.59; 95% CI, 1.07-2.36).
  • Target wound infections were the most common adverse events, occurring in a similar number of patients in both the groups.

IN PRACTICE:

“Our trial demonstrated treatment of complex diabetic foot ulcers with intact fish skin grafts achieved a significantly greater proportion of diabetic foot ulcers healed at 16 weeks than standard of care, and was associated with increased healing at 20 and 24 weeks. That these results were achieved in non-superficial UT [University of Texas diabetic wound classification system] grade 2 and 3 diabetic foot ulcers and included ischemic and/or infected diabetic foot ulcers is of importance,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Dured Dardari, MD, PhD, Center Hospitalier Sud Francilien, Corbeil-Essonnes, France, and was published online in NEJM Evidence.

LIMITATIONS:

No limitations were discussed for this study.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by European Commission Fast Track to Innovation Horizon 2020 and Kerecis. Two authors reported being employees with or without stock options at Kerecis, and other authors reported having ties with many sources including Kerecis.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Intact fish skin grafts, sourced from Atlantic cod, show superior and faster healing than standard wound care practices in patients with deep and penetrating diabetic foot ulcers.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Standard wound care for diabetic foot ulcers involves vascular assessment, surgical debridement, use of appropriate dressings, infection management, and glycemic control; however, standard care is typically associated with poor outcomes.
  • Researchers conducted a multicenter clinical trial in 15 tertiary care centers with diabetic foot units across France, Italy, Germany, and Sweden to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intact fish skin grafts over standard-of-care practices in treating complex diabetic foot ulcers.
  • A total of 255 patients aged 18 years or older with diabetes and lower limb wounds penetrating to the tendon, capsule, bone, or joint were randomly assigned to receive either an intact fish skin graft or standard wound care for 14 weeks.
  • The primary endpoint was the percentage of wounds achieving complete closure by 16 weeks.
  • Wound healing was also assessed at 20 and 24 weeks.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of wounds healed at 16 weeks was higher with intact fish skin grafts than with standard-of-care (44.0% vs 26.4% adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 2.58; 95% CI, 1.48-4.56).
  • The fish skin grafts continued to be more effective than standard wound care practices at weeks 20 (aOR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.27–3.70) and 24 (aOR, 2.19; 95% CI, 1.31–3.70).
  • The mean time to healing was 17.31 weeks for the intact fish skin graft group and 19.37 weeks for the standard-of-care group; intact fish skin grafts were also associated with faster healing times than standard wound care (hazard ratio, 1.59; 95% CI, 1.07-2.36).
  • Target wound infections were the most common adverse events, occurring in a similar number of patients in both the groups.

IN PRACTICE:

“Our trial demonstrated treatment of complex diabetic foot ulcers with intact fish skin grafts achieved a significantly greater proportion of diabetic foot ulcers healed at 16 weeks than standard of care, and was associated with increased healing at 20 and 24 weeks. That these results were achieved in non-superficial UT [University of Texas diabetic wound classification system] grade 2 and 3 diabetic foot ulcers and included ischemic and/or infected diabetic foot ulcers is of importance,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Dured Dardari, MD, PhD, Center Hospitalier Sud Francilien, Corbeil-Essonnes, France, and was published online in NEJM Evidence.

LIMITATIONS:

No limitations were discussed for this study.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by European Commission Fast Track to Innovation Horizon 2020 and Kerecis. Two authors reported being employees with or without stock options at Kerecis, and other authors reported having ties with many sources including Kerecis.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Intact fish skin grafts, sourced from Atlantic cod, show superior and faster healing than standard wound care practices in patients with deep and penetrating diabetic foot ulcers.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Standard wound care for diabetic foot ulcers involves vascular assessment, surgical debridement, use of appropriate dressings, infection management, and glycemic control; however, standard care is typically associated with poor outcomes.
  • Researchers conducted a multicenter clinical trial in 15 tertiary care centers with diabetic foot units across France, Italy, Germany, and Sweden to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intact fish skin grafts over standard-of-care practices in treating complex diabetic foot ulcers.
  • A total of 255 patients aged 18 years or older with diabetes and lower limb wounds penetrating to the tendon, capsule, bone, or joint were randomly assigned to receive either an intact fish skin graft or standard wound care for 14 weeks.
  • The primary endpoint was the percentage of wounds achieving complete closure by 16 weeks.
  • Wound healing was also assessed at 20 and 24 weeks.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The proportion of wounds healed at 16 weeks was higher with intact fish skin grafts than with standard-of-care (44.0% vs 26.4% adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 2.58; 95% CI, 1.48-4.56).
  • The fish skin grafts continued to be more effective than standard wound care practices at weeks 20 (aOR, 2.15; 95% CI, 1.27–3.70) and 24 (aOR, 2.19; 95% CI, 1.31–3.70).
  • The mean time to healing was 17.31 weeks for the intact fish skin graft group and 19.37 weeks for the standard-of-care group; intact fish skin grafts were also associated with faster healing times than standard wound care (hazard ratio, 1.59; 95% CI, 1.07-2.36).
  • Target wound infections were the most common adverse events, occurring in a similar number of patients in both the groups.

IN PRACTICE:

“Our trial demonstrated treatment of complex diabetic foot ulcers with intact fish skin grafts achieved a significantly greater proportion of diabetic foot ulcers healed at 16 weeks than standard of care, and was associated with increased healing at 20 and 24 weeks. That these results were achieved in non-superficial UT [University of Texas diabetic wound classification system] grade 2 and 3 diabetic foot ulcers and included ischemic and/or infected diabetic foot ulcers is of importance,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Dured Dardari, MD, PhD, Center Hospitalier Sud Francilien, Corbeil-Essonnes, France, and was published online in NEJM Evidence.

LIMITATIONS:

No limitations were discussed for this study.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by European Commission Fast Track to Innovation Horizon 2020 and Kerecis. Two authors reported being employees with or without stock options at Kerecis, and other authors reported having ties with many sources including Kerecis.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Patients With Chronic Cough Report Relief With Semen Strychni

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 10/31/2024 - 14:14

If standard therapies don’t give relief to patients with refractory cough associated with interstitial lung disease, maybe a little poison could do the trick.

Among 41 patients with idiopathic interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features (IPAFs) who had intractable cough, treatment with the traditional Chinese medicine semen strychni was associated with a significant improvement in patient-reported outcomes, reported Mingwan Su, MD, from Guang’anmen Hospital and the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing, China.

“Semen strychni is associated with reduction in cough and can be an effective drug therapy for refractory cough in association with IPAFs,” she said in an oral abstract session at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

Semen strychni is derived from the dried seeds of the plant Strychnos nux-vomica L. Its main toxic component is strychnine, the poison said to be favored by legendary mystery writer Agatha Christie.

Semen strychni is a central nervous system agonist that has reported efficacy in the treatment of musculoskeletal and autoimmune conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

The medication also has immunomodulatory properties, Su said, and is thought to have beneficial effects against cough associated with IPAFs by reducing hypersensitivity.
 

Case-Control Study

To test this, Su and colleagues conducted a single-center retrospective study of the effects of semen strychni on 41 patients with IPAF-associated cough who were treated with low-dose oral semen strychni 300 mg/d for 2 weeks. These patients were paired with 41 control individuals matched for age, sex, and disease course. Control individuals received standard of care therapies.

The investigators found that for the primary endpoint of a change in the visual analog scale (VAS) at 2 weeks, there was a significantly greater reduction from baseline among patients treated with semen strychni compared with control individuals, with a baseline mean VAS score of 4.9 reduced to 2.1 at the end of treatment, vs 4.6 pre- to 3.3 post-treatment for control individuals. This difference translated to an odds ratio (OR) favoring semen strychni of 0.75 (P < .001).

In addition, the toxic compound was also associated with greater patient-reported improvement in the quality of life, as measured using the Leicester Cough Questionnaire, a 19-item scale that measures quality of life for people with chronic cough. Patients in the experimental arm had mean scores of 11.9 before treatment and 19 at the end of therapy compared with 12 and 15.1 points, respectively, among individuals in the control arm. This translated to an OR of 3.8 (P < .001) for patients on semen strychni.

The toxin appeared to be generally safe. There were no reported cases of pain, fainting, or bleeding in either study group, although there was one case of muscle twitching in the semen strychni group, Su reported.

There is evidence to suggest that semen strychni may have a calming effect on cough through action in the STAT3 pathway, considered to be a promising therapeutic target for musculoskeletal conditions, Su noted.
 

Not Ready for Prime Time

“My feeling is that these kinds of abstracts are welcome, but this is far from reality at this point,” said Vijay Balasubramanian, MD, clinical professor of medicine and director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Program at the University of California San Francisco.

“We need some kind of a regulated way of understanding dose characteristics and pharmacokinetics, and so it should be followed by more systematic studies,” he said in an interview.

Both Balasubramanian and his co-moderator Andrew R. Berman, MD, director of the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and Allergy and Rheumatology at Rutgers Health New Jersey Medical School in Newark, New Jersey, said that they sympathize with clinicians and their patients who seek out unusual therapies such as semen strychni.

“It’s very frustrating to treat chronic cough, especially associated with fibrotic lung disease, and the extent to which researchers will go to find that one product that perhaps can make a difference is understandable,” Berman told this news organization.

Su did not report a study funding source. Su, Balasubramanian, and Berman reported no relevant financial relationships.

 

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

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If standard therapies don’t give relief to patients with refractory cough associated with interstitial lung disease, maybe a little poison could do the trick.

Among 41 patients with idiopathic interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features (IPAFs) who had intractable cough, treatment with the traditional Chinese medicine semen strychni was associated with a significant improvement in patient-reported outcomes, reported Mingwan Su, MD, from Guang’anmen Hospital and the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing, China.

“Semen strychni is associated with reduction in cough and can be an effective drug therapy for refractory cough in association with IPAFs,” she said in an oral abstract session at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

Semen strychni is derived from the dried seeds of the plant Strychnos nux-vomica L. Its main toxic component is strychnine, the poison said to be favored by legendary mystery writer Agatha Christie.

Semen strychni is a central nervous system agonist that has reported efficacy in the treatment of musculoskeletal and autoimmune conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

The medication also has immunomodulatory properties, Su said, and is thought to have beneficial effects against cough associated with IPAFs by reducing hypersensitivity.
 

Case-Control Study

To test this, Su and colleagues conducted a single-center retrospective study of the effects of semen strychni on 41 patients with IPAF-associated cough who were treated with low-dose oral semen strychni 300 mg/d for 2 weeks. These patients were paired with 41 control individuals matched for age, sex, and disease course. Control individuals received standard of care therapies.

The investigators found that for the primary endpoint of a change in the visual analog scale (VAS) at 2 weeks, there was a significantly greater reduction from baseline among patients treated with semen strychni compared with control individuals, with a baseline mean VAS score of 4.9 reduced to 2.1 at the end of treatment, vs 4.6 pre- to 3.3 post-treatment for control individuals. This difference translated to an odds ratio (OR) favoring semen strychni of 0.75 (P < .001).

In addition, the toxic compound was also associated with greater patient-reported improvement in the quality of life, as measured using the Leicester Cough Questionnaire, a 19-item scale that measures quality of life for people with chronic cough. Patients in the experimental arm had mean scores of 11.9 before treatment and 19 at the end of therapy compared with 12 and 15.1 points, respectively, among individuals in the control arm. This translated to an OR of 3.8 (P < .001) for patients on semen strychni.

The toxin appeared to be generally safe. There were no reported cases of pain, fainting, or bleeding in either study group, although there was one case of muscle twitching in the semen strychni group, Su reported.

There is evidence to suggest that semen strychni may have a calming effect on cough through action in the STAT3 pathway, considered to be a promising therapeutic target for musculoskeletal conditions, Su noted.
 

Not Ready for Prime Time

“My feeling is that these kinds of abstracts are welcome, but this is far from reality at this point,” said Vijay Balasubramanian, MD, clinical professor of medicine and director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Program at the University of California San Francisco.

“We need some kind of a regulated way of understanding dose characteristics and pharmacokinetics, and so it should be followed by more systematic studies,” he said in an interview.

Both Balasubramanian and his co-moderator Andrew R. Berman, MD, director of the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and Allergy and Rheumatology at Rutgers Health New Jersey Medical School in Newark, New Jersey, said that they sympathize with clinicians and their patients who seek out unusual therapies such as semen strychni.

“It’s very frustrating to treat chronic cough, especially associated with fibrotic lung disease, and the extent to which researchers will go to find that one product that perhaps can make a difference is understandable,” Berman told this news organization.

Su did not report a study funding source. Su, Balasubramanian, and Berman reported no relevant financial relationships.

 

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

If standard therapies don’t give relief to patients with refractory cough associated with interstitial lung disease, maybe a little poison could do the trick.

Among 41 patients with idiopathic interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features (IPAFs) who had intractable cough, treatment with the traditional Chinese medicine semen strychni was associated with a significant improvement in patient-reported outcomes, reported Mingwan Su, MD, from Guang’anmen Hospital and the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences in Beijing, China.

“Semen strychni is associated with reduction in cough and can be an effective drug therapy for refractory cough in association with IPAFs,” she said in an oral abstract session at the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) 2024 Annual Meeting.

Semen strychni is derived from the dried seeds of the plant Strychnos nux-vomica L. Its main toxic component is strychnine, the poison said to be favored by legendary mystery writer Agatha Christie.

Semen strychni is a central nervous system agonist that has reported efficacy in the treatment of musculoskeletal and autoimmune conditions, including rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

The medication also has immunomodulatory properties, Su said, and is thought to have beneficial effects against cough associated with IPAFs by reducing hypersensitivity.
 

Case-Control Study

To test this, Su and colleagues conducted a single-center retrospective study of the effects of semen strychni on 41 patients with IPAF-associated cough who were treated with low-dose oral semen strychni 300 mg/d for 2 weeks. These patients were paired with 41 control individuals matched for age, sex, and disease course. Control individuals received standard of care therapies.

The investigators found that for the primary endpoint of a change in the visual analog scale (VAS) at 2 weeks, there was a significantly greater reduction from baseline among patients treated with semen strychni compared with control individuals, with a baseline mean VAS score of 4.9 reduced to 2.1 at the end of treatment, vs 4.6 pre- to 3.3 post-treatment for control individuals. This difference translated to an odds ratio (OR) favoring semen strychni of 0.75 (P < .001).

In addition, the toxic compound was also associated with greater patient-reported improvement in the quality of life, as measured using the Leicester Cough Questionnaire, a 19-item scale that measures quality of life for people with chronic cough. Patients in the experimental arm had mean scores of 11.9 before treatment and 19 at the end of therapy compared with 12 and 15.1 points, respectively, among individuals in the control arm. This translated to an OR of 3.8 (P < .001) for patients on semen strychni.

The toxin appeared to be generally safe. There were no reported cases of pain, fainting, or bleeding in either study group, although there was one case of muscle twitching in the semen strychni group, Su reported.

There is evidence to suggest that semen strychni may have a calming effect on cough through action in the STAT3 pathway, considered to be a promising therapeutic target for musculoskeletal conditions, Su noted.
 

Not Ready for Prime Time

“My feeling is that these kinds of abstracts are welcome, but this is far from reality at this point,” said Vijay Balasubramanian, MD, clinical professor of medicine and director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Program at the University of California San Francisco.

“We need some kind of a regulated way of understanding dose characteristics and pharmacokinetics, and so it should be followed by more systematic studies,” he said in an interview.

Both Balasubramanian and his co-moderator Andrew R. Berman, MD, director of the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and Allergy and Rheumatology at Rutgers Health New Jersey Medical School in Newark, New Jersey, said that they sympathize with clinicians and their patients who seek out unusual therapies such as semen strychni.

“It’s very frustrating to treat chronic cough, especially associated with fibrotic lung disease, and the extent to which researchers will go to find that one product that perhaps can make a difference is understandable,” Berman told this news organization.

Su did not report a study funding source. Su, Balasubramanian, and Berman reported no relevant financial relationships.

 

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

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Managing Age-Related Muscle Loss in Primary Care

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 10/31/2024 - 14:04

Scene 1: Exercise Medicine Clinic, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil I just finished one evaluation on physical fitness and health and looked at my schedule. My next patient would be a 65-year-old man. How fit will he be? Will he have evident age-related muscle loss? I gave myself a short break and my mind went to the late 1970s. 

Once upon a time, the practice of medicine was based primarily on the skill of your physical examination, previous experiences, and your ability to reason logically and make solid deductions. In 1979, the stethoscope was part of my dress code. After one elective semester as a research fellow at the Ambrose Cardiorespiratory Unit at McMaster University Medical Centre, in Hamilton, Canada, where I was honored to witness the dawn of evidence-based medicine, I graduated from Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. I still remember being introduced to some promising novelties in cardiology, such as M-mode echocardiograms and myocardial scintigraphy. Radiology was primarily centered on x-rays, and lab testing was basic and poorly automatized.

Over the following decades, medical practice changed dramatically with the incorporation of new technologies. Recent advances in diagnostic tools, genetics, artificial intelligence, and sophisticated statistical analyses, along with well-collected scientific data, have molded how clinicians should think and work.

At the same time, clinical profiles also changed. Internists and primary care physicians are regularly managing patients who are, on average, older and have or are on the way to having potentially life-threatening chronic diseases, accompanied by poor lifestyle habits, and, highly important, often some degree of disability, frailty, and loss of independence. Many of them exhibit age-related muscle loss. 

Scene 2: Exercise Medicine Clinic, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 

Conscious of the benefits of interrupting my sitting time with activity, I left my office and walked to meet my patient in the waiting room. I called his name and introduced myself. I watched how he listened and reacted to my speech, and how easy or hard it was for him to rise from the chair — readiness, velocity, and number of supports required: none, one, or two hands. I offered my own hand to him, and when we shook, I gauged the strength of his grip. 

I invited him into my office and took note of his somatotype and body composition, and whether he had any central obesity. Of course, and I should by no means miss this chance, I carefully observed how he walked in — his gait, speed, balance, posture — how he pulled up the chair, and how he managed to lower himself into his seat. Before I even sat in my own chair, I asked him if he remembered what his body weight was 5 years ago and what it was today. Before we got started in earnest, I had already managed to collect several pieces of relevant information. 

Exercise Physiology: Changing Landscape

Muscle activity depends on muscle mass and function, and peaks somewhere between ages 25 and 35 before declining. The drop is slow in the early stages but accelerates rapidly after age 60 or 65.

Two of the most relevant variables in muscle function are strength and power. As a product of force and velocity, muscle power could be a more crucial factor than strength for many daily activities that demand movement against gravity or inertia, such as placing carry-on baggage in the overhead bin of an airplane or rising from the floor or chair.

The association between muscle mass and muscle strength or power is moderate, and physiologic data have indicated that the decline of muscle power with aging is faster and larger than that of muscle strength.

The term “sarcopenia” has become definitively incorporated into the medical glossary. From the Greek (“sark” and “penia”), sarcopenia was defined as reduced muscle mass, but more recently it has encompassed muscle strength in its definition. However, a recent consensus paper from the Global Leadership Initiative in Sarcopenia, using a Delphi approach, rejected the inclusion of muscle power in the concept of sarcopenia. On the other hand, a long time ago, some authors coined and advocated the use the term “dynapenia” to more precisely reflect the reduced levels of muscle strength and power that often accompany aging.

The best available intervention to counteract age-related deterioration of muscle activity is resistance exercise. The types of resistance exercises vary widely — by number of sets and repetitions, intervals between sets, speed of execution of movement, and percentage of maximal weight/load.

We recently proposed that, after an evaluation to identify the main muscle variable requiring attention, the resistance exercise program should be individually tailored and prescribed according to the objective to counteract sarcopenia or dynapenia.

What is more important for autonomy and better daily living conditions in old and very old individuals: muscle mass, muscle strength, or muscle power? More likely the response is muscle power — in practical terms, dynapenia rather than sarcopenia. This short video presents practical tips for obtaining optimal results in fighting dynapenia. The first choice should be power training or high velocity–based training, emphasizing two to three sets of six to eight repetitions performed as fast as possible (on the concentric or shortening phase of muscle contraction) with relatively high loads.

Internists and primary care physicians are most likely satisfied with the information they obtain by simple observation, and already can superficially grade the magnitude of a patient’s age-related muscle loss and its consequences to daily living.

However, those who want more objective information on nonaerobic physical fitness can add one to three simple tests to their consultation: the sitting-rising test (SRT); the 10-second one-legged test (10sOLS test); and the Flexitest. Poor performance on each of these — and particularly all three — is strongly associated with an increased risk for premature death in middle-aged and older individuals. These tests require no extra equipment and can be performed rapidly, and interpreting the results takes only a few moments using published reference values.

Age-related muscle loss profoundly affects our ability to sit and rise from the floor, so if time is limited, the SRT is the best assessment, as it measures all nonaerobic components of physical fitness. For a quick interpretation, consider that SRT scores vary from 0 to 10, do not substantially differ by sex, and that a composite score equal to or greater than 8 will reflect a minimum age-adjusted percentile of 61, most likely indicating relevant age-related muscle loss is not yet occurring. 
 

Dr. Araújo is Professor and Dean of Research and Education, Exercise Medicine Clinic (CLINIMEX), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He reported conflicts of interest with INBRAMED.


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

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Scene 1: Exercise Medicine Clinic, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil I just finished one evaluation on physical fitness and health and looked at my schedule. My next patient would be a 65-year-old man. How fit will he be? Will he have evident age-related muscle loss? I gave myself a short break and my mind went to the late 1970s. 

Once upon a time, the practice of medicine was based primarily on the skill of your physical examination, previous experiences, and your ability to reason logically and make solid deductions. In 1979, the stethoscope was part of my dress code. After one elective semester as a research fellow at the Ambrose Cardiorespiratory Unit at McMaster University Medical Centre, in Hamilton, Canada, where I was honored to witness the dawn of evidence-based medicine, I graduated from Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. I still remember being introduced to some promising novelties in cardiology, such as M-mode echocardiograms and myocardial scintigraphy. Radiology was primarily centered on x-rays, and lab testing was basic and poorly automatized.

Over the following decades, medical practice changed dramatically with the incorporation of new technologies. Recent advances in diagnostic tools, genetics, artificial intelligence, and sophisticated statistical analyses, along with well-collected scientific data, have molded how clinicians should think and work.

At the same time, clinical profiles also changed. Internists and primary care physicians are regularly managing patients who are, on average, older and have or are on the way to having potentially life-threatening chronic diseases, accompanied by poor lifestyle habits, and, highly important, often some degree of disability, frailty, and loss of independence. Many of them exhibit age-related muscle loss. 

Scene 2: Exercise Medicine Clinic, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 

Conscious of the benefits of interrupting my sitting time with activity, I left my office and walked to meet my patient in the waiting room. I called his name and introduced myself. I watched how he listened and reacted to my speech, and how easy or hard it was for him to rise from the chair — readiness, velocity, and number of supports required: none, one, or two hands. I offered my own hand to him, and when we shook, I gauged the strength of his grip. 

I invited him into my office and took note of his somatotype and body composition, and whether he had any central obesity. Of course, and I should by no means miss this chance, I carefully observed how he walked in — his gait, speed, balance, posture — how he pulled up the chair, and how he managed to lower himself into his seat. Before I even sat in my own chair, I asked him if he remembered what his body weight was 5 years ago and what it was today. Before we got started in earnest, I had already managed to collect several pieces of relevant information. 

Exercise Physiology: Changing Landscape

Muscle activity depends on muscle mass and function, and peaks somewhere between ages 25 and 35 before declining. The drop is slow in the early stages but accelerates rapidly after age 60 or 65.

Two of the most relevant variables in muscle function are strength and power. As a product of force and velocity, muscle power could be a more crucial factor than strength for many daily activities that demand movement against gravity or inertia, such as placing carry-on baggage in the overhead bin of an airplane or rising from the floor or chair.

The association between muscle mass and muscle strength or power is moderate, and physiologic data have indicated that the decline of muscle power with aging is faster and larger than that of muscle strength.

The term “sarcopenia” has become definitively incorporated into the medical glossary. From the Greek (“sark” and “penia”), sarcopenia was defined as reduced muscle mass, but more recently it has encompassed muscle strength in its definition. However, a recent consensus paper from the Global Leadership Initiative in Sarcopenia, using a Delphi approach, rejected the inclusion of muscle power in the concept of sarcopenia. On the other hand, a long time ago, some authors coined and advocated the use the term “dynapenia” to more precisely reflect the reduced levels of muscle strength and power that often accompany aging.

The best available intervention to counteract age-related deterioration of muscle activity is resistance exercise. The types of resistance exercises vary widely — by number of sets and repetitions, intervals between sets, speed of execution of movement, and percentage of maximal weight/load.

We recently proposed that, after an evaluation to identify the main muscle variable requiring attention, the resistance exercise program should be individually tailored and prescribed according to the objective to counteract sarcopenia or dynapenia.

What is more important for autonomy and better daily living conditions in old and very old individuals: muscle mass, muscle strength, or muscle power? More likely the response is muscle power — in practical terms, dynapenia rather than sarcopenia. This short video presents practical tips for obtaining optimal results in fighting dynapenia. The first choice should be power training or high velocity–based training, emphasizing two to three sets of six to eight repetitions performed as fast as possible (on the concentric or shortening phase of muscle contraction) with relatively high loads.

Internists and primary care physicians are most likely satisfied with the information they obtain by simple observation, and already can superficially grade the magnitude of a patient’s age-related muscle loss and its consequences to daily living.

However, those who want more objective information on nonaerobic physical fitness can add one to three simple tests to their consultation: the sitting-rising test (SRT); the 10-second one-legged test (10sOLS test); and the Flexitest. Poor performance on each of these — and particularly all three — is strongly associated with an increased risk for premature death in middle-aged and older individuals. These tests require no extra equipment and can be performed rapidly, and interpreting the results takes only a few moments using published reference values.

Age-related muscle loss profoundly affects our ability to sit and rise from the floor, so if time is limited, the SRT is the best assessment, as it measures all nonaerobic components of physical fitness. For a quick interpretation, consider that SRT scores vary from 0 to 10, do not substantially differ by sex, and that a composite score equal to or greater than 8 will reflect a minimum age-adjusted percentile of 61, most likely indicating relevant age-related muscle loss is not yet occurring. 
 

Dr. Araújo is Professor and Dean of Research and Education, Exercise Medicine Clinic (CLINIMEX), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He reported conflicts of interest with INBRAMED.


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

Scene 1: Exercise Medicine Clinic, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil I just finished one evaluation on physical fitness and health and looked at my schedule. My next patient would be a 65-year-old man. How fit will he be? Will he have evident age-related muscle loss? I gave myself a short break and my mind went to the late 1970s. 

Once upon a time, the practice of medicine was based primarily on the skill of your physical examination, previous experiences, and your ability to reason logically and make solid deductions. In 1979, the stethoscope was part of my dress code. After one elective semester as a research fellow at the Ambrose Cardiorespiratory Unit at McMaster University Medical Centre, in Hamilton, Canada, where I was honored to witness the dawn of evidence-based medicine, I graduated from Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. I still remember being introduced to some promising novelties in cardiology, such as M-mode echocardiograms and myocardial scintigraphy. Radiology was primarily centered on x-rays, and lab testing was basic and poorly automatized.

Over the following decades, medical practice changed dramatically with the incorporation of new technologies. Recent advances in diagnostic tools, genetics, artificial intelligence, and sophisticated statistical analyses, along with well-collected scientific data, have molded how clinicians should think and work.

At the same time, clinical profiles also changed. Internists and primary care physicians are regularly managing patients who are, on average, older and have or are on the way to having potentially life-threatening chronic diseases, accompanied by poor lifestyle habits, and, highly important, often some degree of disability, frailty, and loss of independence. Many of them exhibit age-related muscle loss. 

Scene 2: Exercise Medicine Clinic, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 

Conscious of the benefits of interrupting my sitting time with activity, I left my office and walked to meet my patient in the waiting room. I called his name and introduced myself. I watched how he listened and reacted to my speech, and how easy or hard it was for him to rise from the chair — readiness, velocity, and number of supports required: none, one, or two hands. I offered my own hand to him, and when we shook, I gauged the strength of his grip. 

I invited him into my office and took note of his somatotype and body composition, and whether he had any central obesity. Of course, and I should by no means miss this chance, I carefully observed how he walked in — his gait, speed, balance, posture — how he pulled up the chair, and how he managed to lower himself into his seat. Before I even sat in my own chair, I asked him if he remembered what his body weight was 5 years ago and what it was today. Before we got started in earnest, I had already managed to collect several pieces of relevant information. 

Exercise Physiology: Changing Landscape

Muscle activity depends on muscle mass and function, and peaks somewhere between ages 25 and 35 before declining. The drop is slow in the early stages but accelerates rapidly after age 60 or 65.

Two of the most relevant variables in muscle function are strength and power. As a product of force and velocity, muscle power could be a more crucial factor than strength for many daily activities that demand movement against gravity or inertia, such as placing carry-on baggage in the overhead bin of an airplane or rising from the floor or chair.

The association between muscle mass and muscle strength or power is moderate, and physiologic data have indicated that the decline of muscle power with aging is faster and larger than that of muscle strength.

The term “sarcopenia” has become definitively incorporated into the medical glossary. From the Greek (“sark” and “penia”), sarcopenia was defined as reduced muscle mass, but more recently it has encompassed muscle strength in its definition. However, a recent consensus paper from the Global Leadership Initiative in Sarcopenia, using a Delphi approach, rejected the inclusion of muscle power in the concept of sarcopenia. On the other hand, a long time ago, some authors coined and advocated the use the term “dynapenia” to more precisely reflect the reduced levels of muscle strength and power that often accompany aging.

The best available intervention to counteract age-related deterioration of muscle activity is resistance exercise. The types of resistance exercises vary widely — by number of sets and repetitions, intervals between sets, speed of execution of movement, and percentage of maximal weight/load.

We recently proposed that, after an evaluation to identify the main muscle variable requiring attention, the resistance exercise program should be individually tailored and prescribed according to the objective to counteract sarcopenia or dynapenia.

What is more important for autonomy and better daily living conditions in old and very old individuals: muscle mass, muscle strength, or muscle power? More likely the response is muscle power — in practical terms, dynapenia rather than sarcopenia. This short video presents practical tips for obtaining optimal results in fighting dynapenia. The first choice should be power training or high velocity–based training, emphasizing two to three sets of six to eight repetitions performed as fast as possible (on the concentric or shortening phase of muscle contraction) with relatively high loads.

Internists and primary care physicians are most likely satisfied with the information they obtain by simple observation, and already can superficially grade the magnitude of a patient’s age-related muscle loss and its consequences to daily living.

However, those who want more objective information on nonaerobic physical fitness can add one to three simple tests to their consultation: the sitting-rising test (SRT); the 10-second one-legged test (10sOLS test); and the Flexitest. Poor performance on each of these — and particularly all three — is strongly associated with an increased risk for premature death in middle-aged and older individuals. These tests require no extra equipment and can be performed rapidly, and interpreting the results takes only a few moments using published reference values.

Age-related muscle loss profoundly affects our ability to sit and rise from the floor, so if time is limited, the SRT is the best assessment, as it measures all nonaerobic components of physical fitness. For a quick interpretation, consider that SRT scores vary from 0 to 10, do not substantially differ by sex, and that a composite score equal to or greater than 8 will reflect a minimum age-adjusted percentile of 61, most likely indicating relevant age-related muscle loss is not yet occurring. 
 

Dr. Araújo is Professor and Dean of Research and Education, Exercise Medicine Clinic (CLINIMEX), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He reported conflicts of interest with INBRAMED.


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

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Is This Methadone’s Moment?

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Thu, 10/31/2024 - 11:57

Methadone has been shown to be highly effective for opioid use disorder. So why is it still so difficult to prescribe in the United States and is that about to change?

A recent study from Canada adds to the growing body of evidence supporting methadone’s effectiveness in treating opioid use disorder and bolsters efforts to expand access in the United States by removing restrictive barriers.

This paper included more than 30,000 patients with opioid use disorder and showed those on methadone were almost 60% significantly less likely to stop treatment at 24 months than their peers assigned to buprenorphine/naloxone (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.58), with no difference in mortality risk (aHR, 0.57).

“In Canada, unlike the US, methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone are both available in office-based settings. Methadone really outperforms buprenorphine/naloxone in being able to retain people in treatment, which is our main goal and comes with a host of benefits,” Bohdan Nosyk, PhD, with Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, who worked on the study, said in an interview.

In addition, a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of relevant research involving more than 1 million patients with opioid use disorder also showed better treatment retention with methadone than with buprenorphine.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, relaxed methadone regulations, that included take-home medications, did not lead to an increase in overdoses. Instead, these changes improved treatment retention and patient experiences, highlighting the potential benefits of further deregulation.
 

‘Atrocious’ Outdated Policies

However, despite methadone’s proven efficacy and safety for opioid use disorder, it remains vastly underutilized because of outdated US policies restricting its use to opioid treatment programs (OTPs).

“It’s absolutely atrocious that methadone policies have not kept up with the evidence. If you look at other countries that have expanded their access to methadone, their overdose rates have fallen dramatically,” said Leslie Suen, MD, with the University of California, San Francisco, and coauthor of a recent JAMA Viewpoint on this topic.

“Methadone is a very good medication that’s been shown over and over to be very effective and safe,” Alan Leshner, PhD, past director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in an interview.

“There is no reason why it couldn’t be administered through pharmacies or through physicians’ offices as long as it’s done in a controlled and careful way,” said Leshner.

Leshner chaired the committee that produced the 2019 report Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Save Lives.

“We learned during COVID that increasing the amount of take-home methadone and increasing access does not lead to an increase in deaths or an increase in overdose, so it’s hard to find a reason not to do it,” he said.
 

Change Finally on the Horizon?

Several recent and proposed policy changes could revolutionize methadone delivery in the United States.

In March 2022, in response to the pandemic, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allowed hospitals to dispense up to a 3-day supply of methadone (known as the 72-hour rule) to bridge care transitions without needing OTPs.

In April 2024, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and DEA codified many methadone and buprenorphine delivery flexibilities granted temporarily during the pandemic, including increased use of telehealth assessments and earlier access to take-home methadone doses.

Another contemporary policy change is expansion of the Americans with Disabilities Act mandating that patients taking medications for opioid use disorder, such as methadone, be able to continue treatment when transitioning to settings such as hospitals, jails, and skilled nursing facilities.

At the state level, California Governor Gavin Newsom recently signed a bill, effective immediately, that expands access to methadone treatment in his state.

On the horizon at the federal level is the Modernizing Opioid Treatment Access Act (MOTAA) — the bipartisan and bicameral bill introduced by Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), along with Rep. Donald Norcross (D-NJ) and Rep. Don Bacon, (R-NE) — that would allow methadone to be prescribed by addiction specialists and dispensed in community pharmacies.
 

 

 

An Ethical Imperative

“With only about 2000 OTP clinics clustered in urban areas, less than 25% of people who are diagnosed with opioid use disorder are actually able to access methadone,” Caty Simon, with the National Survivors Union, Greensboro, North Carolina, and coauthor of the JAMA Viewpoint, said in an interview.

While MOTAA represents a major step forward, limiting methadone prescribing to addiction specialists may not fully address the treatment gap, particularly in rural and underserved areas, Simon said.

To optimize methadone’s potential, she’d like to see further expansion of prescribing privileges to general healthcare providers.

“As someone with lived and living experience of opioid use and treatment, and somebody who works nationally and locally in organizations of people impacted by drug use, I know people in my area right now — marginalized people of color — who would have much better chances of survival if they were able to access methadone. If MOTAA passed tomorrow, we could save so many lives. There is an ethical imperative to pass it,” Simon said.

Leshner said he is “always very concerned about access, particularly for underserved populations, poor people, people living in rural areas. If you can access the medications you need, you’re in big trouble.”

Is this methadone’s moment? “I’m a little optimistic, but I haven’t seen the progress I would like to see,” Leshner said.

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

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Methadone has been shown to be highly effective for opioid use disorder. So why is it still so difficult to prescribe in the United States and is that about to change?

A recent study from Canada adds to the growing body of evidence supporting methadone’s effectiveness in treating opioid use disorder and bolsters efforts to expand access in the United States by removing restrictive barriers.

This paper included more than 30,000 patients with opioid use disorder and showed those on methadone were almost 60% significantly less likely to stop treatment at 24 months than their peers assigned to buprenorphine/naloxone (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.58), with no difference in mortality risk (aHR, 0.57).

“In Canada, unlike the US, methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone are both available in office-based settings. Methadone really outperforms buprenorphine/naloxone in being able to retain people in treatment, which is our main goal and comes with a host of benefits,” Bohdan Nosyk, PhD, with Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, who worked on the study, said in an interview.

In addition, a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of relevant research involving more than 1 million patients with opioid use disorder also showed better treatment retention with methadone than with buprenorphine.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, relaxed methadone regulations, that included take-home medications, did not lead to an increase in overdoses. Instead, these changes improved treatment retention and patient experiences, highlighting the potential benefits of further deregulation.
 

‘Atrocious’ Outdated Policies

However, despite methadone’s proven efficacy and safety for opioid use disorder, it remains vastly underutilized because of outdated US policies restricting its use to opioid treatment programs (OTPs).

“It’s absolutely atrocious that methadone policies have not kept up with the evidence. If you look at other countries that have expanded their access to methadone, their overdose rates have fallen dramatically,” said Leslie Suen, MD, with the University of California, San Francisco, and coauthor of a recent JAMA Viewpoint on this topic.

“Methadone is a very good medication that’s been shown over and over to be very effective and safe,” Alan Leshner, PhD, past director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in an interview.

“There is no reason why it couldn’t be administered through pharmacies or through physicians’ offices as long as it’s done in a controlled and careful way,” said Leshner.

Leshner chaired the committee that produced the 2019 report Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Save Lives.

“We learned during COVID that increasing the amount of take-home methadone and increasing access does not lead to an increase in deaths or an increase in overdose, so it’s hard to find a reason not to do it,” he said.
 

Change Finally on the Horizon?

Several recent and proposed policy changes could revolutionize methadone delivery in the United States.

In March 2022, in response to the pandemic, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allowed hospitals to dispense up to a 3-day supply of methadone (known as the 72-hour rule) to bridge care transitions without needing OTPs.

In April 2024, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and DEA codified many methadone and buprenorphine delivery flexibilities granted temporarily during the pandemic, including increased use of telehealth assessments and earlier access to take-home methadone doses.

Another contemporary policy change is expansion of the Americans with Disabilities Act mandating that patients taking medications for opioid use disorder, such as methadone, be able to continue treatment when transitioning to settings such as hospitals, jails, and skilled nursing facilities.

At the state level, California Governor Gavin Newsom recently signed a bill, effective immediately, that expands access to methadone treatment in his state.

On the horizon at the federal level is the Modernizing Opioid Treatment Access Act (MOTAA) — the bipartisan and bicameral bill introduced by Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), along with Rep. Donald Norcross (D-NJ) and Rep. Don Bacon, (R-NE) — that would allow methadone to be prescribed by addiction specialists and dispensed in community pharmacies.
 

 

 

An Ethical Imperative

“With only about 2000 OTP clinics clustered in urban areas, less than 25% of people who are diagnosed with opioid use disorder are actually able to access methadone,” Caty Simon, with the National Survivors Union, Greensboro, North Carolina, and coauthor of the JAMA Viewpoint, said in an interview.

While MOTAA represents a major step forward, limiting methadone prescribing to addiction specialists may not fully address the treatment gap, particularly in rural and underserved areas, Simon said.

To optimize methadone’s potential, she’d like to see further expansion of prescribing privileges to general healthcare providers.

“As someone with lived and living experience of opioid use and treatment, and somebody who works nationally and locally in organizations of people impacted by drug use, I know people in my area right now — marginalized people of color — who would have much better chances of survival if they were able to access methadone. If MOTAA passed tomorrow, we could save so many lives. There is an ethical imperative to pass it,” Simon said.

Leshner said he is “always very concerned about access, particularly for underserved populations, poor people, people living in rural areas. If you can access the medications you need, you’re in big trouble.”

Is this methadone’s moment? “I’m a little optimistic, but I haven’t seen the progress I would like to see,” Leshner said.

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

Methadone has been shown to be highly effective for opioid use disorder. So why is it still so difficult to prescribe in the United States and is that about to change?

A recent study from Canada adds to the growing body of evidence supporting methadone’s effectiveness in treating opioid use disorder and bolsters efforts to expand access in the United States by removing restrictive barriers.

This paper included more than 30,000 patients with opioid use disorder and showed those on methadone were almost 60% significantly less likely to stop treatment at 24 months than their peers assigned to buprenorphine/naloxone (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.58), with no difference in mortality risk (aHR, 0.57).

“In Canada, unlike the US, methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone are both available in office-based settings. Methadone really outperforms buprenorphine/naloxone in being able to retain people in treatment, which is our main goal and comes with a host of benefits,” Bohdan Nosyk, PhD, with Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, who worked on the study, said in an interview.

In addition, a recent systematic review and meta-analysis of relevant research involving more than 1 million patients with opioid use disorder also showed better treatment retention with methadone than with buprenorphine.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, relaxed methadone regulations, that included take-home medications, did not lead to an increase in overdoses. Instead, these changes improved treatment retention and patient experiences, highlighting the potential benefits of further deregulation.
 

‘Atrocious’ Outdated Policies

However, despite methadone’s proven efficacy and safety for opioid use disorder, it remains vastly underutilized because of outdated US policies restricting its use to opioid treatment programs (OTPs).

“It’s absolutely atrocious that methadone policies have not kept up with the evidence. If you look at other countries that have expanded their access to methadone, their overdose rates have fallen dramatically,” said Leslie Suen, MD, with the University of California, San Francisco, and coauthor of a recent JAMA Viewpoint on this topic.

“Methadone is a very good medication that’s been shown over and over to be very effective and safe,” Alan Leshner, PhD, past director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in an interview.

“There is no reason why it couldn’t be administered through pharmacies or through physicians’ offices as long as it’s done in a controlled and careful way,” said Leshner.

Leshner chaired the committee that produced the 2019 report Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Save Lives.

“We learned during COVID that increasing the amount of take-home methadone and increasing access does not lead to an increase in deaths or an increase in overdose, so it’s hard to find a reason not to do it,” he said.
 

Change Finally on the Horizon?

Several recent and proposed policy changes could revolutionize methadone delivery in the United States.

In March 2022, in response to the pandemic, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allowed hospitals to dispense up to a 3-day supply of methadone (known as the 72-hour rule) to bridge care transitions without needing OTPs.

In April 2024, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and DEA codified many methadone and buprenorphine delivery flexibilities granted temporarily during the pandemic, including increased use of telehealth assessments and earlier access to take-home methadone doses.

Another contemporary policy change is expansion of the Americans with Disabilities Act mandating that patients taking medications for opioid use disorder, such as methadone, be able to continue treatment when transitioning to settings such as hospitals, jails, and skilled nursing facilities.

At the state level, California Governor Gavin Newsom recently signed a bill, effective immediately, that expands access to methadone treatment in his state.

On the horizon at the federal level is the Modernizing Opioid Treatment Access Act (MOTAA) — the bipartisan and bicameral bill introduced by Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), along with Rep. Donald Norcross (D-NJ) and Rep. Don Bacon, (R-NE) — that would allow methadone to be prescribed by addiction specialists and dispensed in community pharmacies.
 

 

 

An Ethical Imperative

“With only about 2000 OTP clinics clustered in urban areas, less than 25% of people who are diagnosed with opioid use disorder are actually able to access methadone,” Caty Simon, with the National Survivors Union, Greensboro, North Carolina, and coauthor of the JAMA Viewpoint, said in an interview.

While MOTAA represents a major step forward, limiting methadone prescribing to addiction specialists may not fully address the treatment gap, particularly in rural and underserved areas, Simon said.

To optimize methadone’s potential, she’d like to see further expansion of prescribing privileges to general healthcare providers.

“As someone with lived and living experience of opioid use and treatment, and somebody who works nationally and locally in organizations of people impacted by drug use, I know people in my area right now — marginalized people of color — who would have much better chances of survival if they were able to access methadone. If MOTAA passed tomorrow, we could save so many lives. There is an ethical imperative to pass it,” Simon said.

Leshner said he is “always very concerned about access, particularly for underserved populations, poor people, people living in rural areas. If you can access the medications you need, you’re in big trouble.”

Is this methadone’s moment? “I’m a little optimistic, but I haven’t seen the progress I would like to see,” Leshner said.

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

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The Pediatrician’s Role in Suicide Prevention

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Thu, 10/31/2024 - 11:31

When she was 5 years old, Katherine Edson, LCSW, tried to end her life by drowning herself. “I was enduring severe physical and sexual abuse, and it had become unbearable,” she said. “I waded into a lake, knowing there was a point when it would become too deep and I’d go under.”

As she was walking toward the deeper water, it occurred to her that if she died, she wouldn’t be able to eat Rice Krispies again. “I thought, ‘no more Snap, Crackle, and Pop’ — the three little mascots on the cereal box — and I felt sad,” said Edson, a New York–based retired therapist. “But I still kept walking.”

A man on the shore saw her disappear under the water and pulled her out. “I remember vomiting a lot of water and I remember that the man had tattoos, but I don’t remember how I felt to be alive. I was just numb.”

Edson thinks there were clues her pediatrician missed. “We lived in a small Southern town. Everyone knew my parents were alcoholics. I was very dissociated and withdrawn in general and during pediatric visits. My affect broadcasted that something was wrong, but no one asked if I was okay.”

She acknowledged that professionals in those days “weren’t tuned in to mental health issues in kids. At least there’s more awareness today and hopefully more training — especially since it seems like more kids are trying to end their lives today than when I was growing up.”
 

Alarming Statistics

According to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), suicide is the second leading cause of death for people aged 10-24 years. Data from Children’s Hospital Association’s Pediatric Health Information System revealed that suicide attempts, ideation, and self-injury have become the most common mental health conditions seen in the emergency departments (EDs) of children’s hospitals, with a 166% increase in ED visits for suicide attempts in children aged 5-18 years, between 2016 and 2022.

Psychiatrist Helen Egger, MD, chief medical officer and co-founder of Little Otter, a specialty pediatric and whole family digital mental health company, recently coauthored a report analyzing data on 1434 children who completed a screening session and comprehensive diagnostic assessment at Little Otter from May 2023 to February 2024 (n = 1016 children aged 8-14 years and n = 418 aged 3-7 years).

Little Otter
Dr. Helen Egger


Almost one fifth of the older children presented with current positive suicide risk (suicidal ideation and/or behavior in the last month), while 6% of the younger age group presented with current suicide risk. The youngest was 5 years old.
 

Points of Contact

“It’s known that most children who die by suicide had a recent visit with a health professional — a pediatrician or child mental health professional. It’s unlikely that the child was fine and then, a few weeks later, stopped being fine. The likelihood is that the child wasn’t fine during that visit, but the clinician didn’t ask about mental health,” Egger said.

 

 

Christine Crawford, MD, MPH, associate medical director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), said that awareness of pediatric and adolescent suicidality is relevant to all physicians who treat children. “When you’re working with kids, anything can come up. Be prepared to navigate the conversation. You can never predict who the patient will feel most comfortable disclosing these thoughts to.”

NAMI
Dr. Christine Crawford


Pediatricians are the physicians most likely to be seen by children, and it’s important for pediatricians to inquire about a child’s mood, especially during child visits, according to Crawford, author of the book You Are Not Alone for Parents and Caregivers: The NAMI Guide to Navigating Your Child’s Mental Health.

Donald E. Greydanus, MD, professor and founding chair, Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan, said many fellow pediatricians have said the highly compressed exam doesn’t allow enough time to ask questions. “But pediatricians must find a way to make time,” he said. “Asking about depression and potential suicidality is top priority and can help keep your patients alive.”

Some pediatricians have told him, “I’m not prepared to provide counseling.” But “your role isn’t to provide counseling, just to open the conversation, offer hope, and direct the youngster to resources that can help.”
 

Don’t Be Afraid to Ask

According to the AAP, all children aged 12 years or older should be screened for suicidal risk, and children aged 8-11 years should be screened “when clinically indicated.” AAP also recommends annual screening for depression in children aged 12 years or older. However, Egger thinks that screening for depression should start sooner.

Katherine Kay Greydanus
Dr. Donald E. Greydanus

It can be tempting to screen by merely giving a youngster a form to fill out in the waiting room, but Greydanus strongly advises against this approach. “The important thing is having rapport with the child, being in the same room together. You can ask some simple questions. ‘How are you doing? How are things at school? How are things with your family?’”

“When you’re screening for depression and have a kid who’s talking about sadness or low mood for more than 2 weeks and endorsing other symptoms, such as problems with sleep or appetite, difficulty concentrating, anhedonia, losing interest in things they’d usually enjoy, feeling they’re a burden to others, hopelessness about the future, being unable to function the way they used to — that person meets criteria for depression and you should have a high suspicion and concern about potential suicide,” said Crawford, assistant professor of psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine.

She suggested probing further and being direct. “It sounds like you’ve been having a tough time. You talk about being sad. I wonder if you’re feeling so sad that you might not want to be alive anymore.” Some healthcare providers “tiptoe around when it comes to suicide, but it’s better to be direct and communicate the question in simple, plain language: ‘Have you ever had thoughts about hurting or killing yourself, that life is no longer worth living, or life would be easier for your family if you weren’t alive?’”

It’s a common myth that asking about depression or suicidality will “plant a seed” or “put ideas in people’s heads,” potentially leading to suicidality. “What we know to be true is that asking about suicide doesn’t put lives at risk. In fact, the contrary is true,” according to Crawford. Several studies have refuted this myth.

Two screening tools that might be helpful in ascertaining the presence of depression and suicidality are the PHQ-9 modified for Adolescents and the four-question Ask Suicide-Screening Questions.
 

 

 

Probe for More Details

If a child or adolescent affirms suicidal ideation, it’s important to ask if they have a plan, Crawford advised. “If they say, ‘yes,’ don’t run out of the office or shut down the conversation by picking up the phone and calling the closest child psychiatrist. We want kids to open up as much as possible when they’ve already opened up a little. So continue the conversation.”

If a child has a plan, the risk for following through on that plan is “high,” Crawford emphasized. “You want the maximum amount of information at your fingertips because this will equip you to navigate the next step in getting the child help.”

The suicide plan may not be realistic and, if carried out, might not actually end in death, especially in younger children. “A 6-year-old might say, ‘I’m gonna drink a whole bottle of apple juice and my belly will explode.’ Or ‘I’ll take 10 extra vitamins.’ The objective lethality of the plan doesn’t matter in that moment. What matters is that the child believes it’s going to work, and it provides a window into how depressed that child is.”

Greydanus added that it’s important to understand what might be going on in the child’s life. Could there be abuse in the family? Is the child being bullied? Bullying can take place at school or online, he noted. The overall risk for suicidal thoughts is elevated for youth who are involved in bullying, whether they’re the bully or the one being bullied.

Kirk Smalley, president and co-founder of Stand for the Silent, an organization designed to bring awareness about the devastating effects of bullying, agreed that pediatricians a should ask children if they’re being bullied. “Sometimes, kids will open up to someone who isn’t a parent or a teacher, who might be seen as ‘too close’ to the situation,” Smalley said.

“Let them know you’re a trusted adult they can confide in and you’re willing to help them navigate this — and then follow through,” advised Smalley, whose 11-year-old son died by suicide after being subjected to bullying.
 

Painting a Complete Picture

Crawford advises clinicians to “look at the whole picture and piece it together.”

For example, “if the child is functioning, going to school, maintaining relationships with other people, and not experiencing symptoms of depression but discloses the desire to kill him/herself, understand the context.” Sometimes, adolescents can be impulsive. Decision-making “can be driven by emotion.” The teen may have experienced emotional distress, such as “conflict with a peer, arguments with a parent, or romantic heartbreak. She might say, ‘I’m going to kill myself if I ever see him holding hands with another girl.’”

In the setting of an acute stressor, such as a breakup, the child might not need a higher level of care such as hospitalization. “But for non-psychiatry providers, it’s unclear if the child might act on it, so it’s important to have the child evaluated; talk to collateral supports, such as parents, teachers, or a therapist if they have one; and see what makes sense for that specific child.”

She also recommended “getting a sense if the kid is future-oriented in thinking. If they’re talking about an upcoming concert this weekend, or wanting to get to basketball practice, that’s reassuring. It suggests the likelihood of following through [on suicide] is low.”

And assess coping strategies. “You can say, ‘I see you’re really going through a lot. I worry that these thoughts will come up in school. What do you think you’d do in the moment if these thoughts come up?’ If there’s a coping strategy — for example, ‘I’d talk to my friend during lunch’ — that’s also reassuring,” Crawford said.

Of course, that doesn’t mean the statement should be ignored or dismissed. Rather, it informs the next preventive steps and how intensive the level of care should be.
 

 

 

Next Steps: Involving the Family, Getting Help

It’s particularly concerning if the child is unable to identify strategies other than suicide, said Crawford. “You can say, ‘I’m concerned because it’s highly likely that you’ll run into this guy and I wouldn’t want you to die. You have so much to live for.’”

Then, you can ask if it’s okay to bring in the parent or caregiver to talk about what the child just revealed. “If the kid says no — especially a teen — you can respond, ‘I hear what you’re saying, but I actually do have to bring your parent in because of your safety and we can discuss together how to keep you safe.’”

In advance, Crawford tells the patient what she plans to share with the parent. “That way, we’re on the same page and the kid has a sense of agency about how the conversation with the parent will go.” If the teen doesn’t want certain information revealed, “you can ask, ‘What would you leave out, and why?’ This lends itself to a helpful conversation about what the child is thinking about.”

Once the provider has received the green light, it’s time to bring the parent into the room. “Especially in the primary care or pediatric setting, the parent is often shocked, worried, and caught off-guard,” Crawford said.

“You can start by thanking the patient for being open and honest. Then you can tell the parent, ‘Your daughter shared she’s been having some difficult emotions and experiences, and she’s thought of ending her life because she doesn’t know how to cope. I wanted to talk to you about this because it’s important to look at resources we can connect her to and effective coping strategies.’”

Further interventions can include referring the patient to a child psychiatrist or therapist, or both. “Have a list of referrals readily available,” Greydanus advised. If you suspect or if the child reveals abuse, you’re a mandated reporter and need to inform Child Protective Services (CPS). “But don’t stop there,” he warned. “Make sure the child is indeed getting help through CPS and appropriate intervention has been taken regarding the abuse and potential suicide attempt.” Or you may send the child to the ED, where ED physicians are “trained in what to do if they suspect abuse. But make sure that when you ‘throw the ball,’ there’s someone who can ‘catch’ it and accept responsibility for the child’s safety.”

Crawford noted that many primary care settings — especially in under-resourced areas — lack child psychiatrists or therapists. “You need to know what’s feasible in the community you’re practicing in,” she advised. “Be aware of the local crisis line — 988 — and mental health resources in the school and community. There are often school psychologists, social workers, or counselors who can become involved.”

Greydanus emphasized that it’s critical to assess for the presence of firearms in the home and address it with the parents. “If a child is sad or angry and gets impulsive, it’s amazingly common for them to get their hands in a firearm and use it.”

As previously reported, pediatricians and other healthcare providers have a valuable role to play in screening parents for firearm ownership and offering counseling on safe storage practices, according to research presented on September 28 at the AAP 2024 National Conference.
 

 

 

Sometimes, Even the Best Efforts Aren’t Successful

“Suicide is complicated, and parents or doctors can take all the ‘right’ steps to get counseling for the child — hospitalization, medication, and support — and children might still take their lives,” said Ronnie Susan Walker, MS, LCPC, founder and executive director of Alliance of Hope for Suicide Loss Survivors. The organization was launched as a “postvention campaign” 7 years ago to provide support to survivors of suicide loss, who are themselves a high-risk population for suicide.

Walker alluded to the concept of a “ suicide trance” — a term coined by Richard Heckler, PhD, in his book Waking Up, Alive. This trance “is a state of mind and body that receives only the kind of input that reinforces the pain and corroborates the person’s conviction that the only way out is through death,” Heckler wrote.

Walker, whose stepson died by suicide, said physicians and other healthcare professionals who have lost a patient to suicide “should focus on postvention — finding support from other professionals and managing their own grief and guilt.”

It’s natural to feel guilt and second-guess yourself, Greydanus said. “You question whether you missed something or could have done more, so acknowledge that even with the best care and intentions, some suicides aren’t preventable,” he said.

Walker recommends reaching out to the family. “When I lost my stepson, his doctor came to the funeral and wrote us a very meaningful note. That meant so much to us.”

Greydanus agreed it’s appropriate for the clinician to offer comfort to the family “if he or she feels it necessary or feels moved to do so.” However, he cautioned, there’s “often a fear of malpractice charges that may interfere in certain cases.”

Egger added that records should always be “very detailed,” with clear documentation of how you interacted with the child and the rationale behind your interventions. “I’m not a legal expert, but I would always err on the side of connecting with family and sharing grief and compassion. My experience with physician-patient relationships is that the more connected, transparent, and empathetic they are, the better the outcome will be for everyone.”

Losing a patient to suicide is traumatic, so give yourself time to grieve, Egger advised. “Unfortunately, this is an experience that almost everyone in the field will likely go through at some point. Reach out for professional counseling or peer support.”

Physicians who have lost a patient to suicide may turn to an online forum, the Coalition of Clinician Survivors, designed to create a safe anonymous space for discussion, education, testimonials, and one-on-one support.

Greydanus emphasized that the most important role in working with suicidal youngsters is to provide hope. “Yes, you can’t help everyone, but you can help most of them. That’s why you’re there.”

Greydanus, Crawford, Egger, Edson, Smalley, and Walker reported no financial conflicts of interest.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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When she was 5 years old, Katherine Edson, LCSW, tried to end her life by drowning herself. “I was enduring severe physical and sexual abuse, and it had become unbearable,” she said. “I waded into a lake, knowing there was a point when it would become too deep and I’d go under.”

As she was walking toward the deeper water, it occurred to her that if she died, she wouldn’t be able to eat Rice Krispies again. “I thought, ‘no more Snap, Crackle, and Pop’ — the three little mascots on the cereal box — and I felt sad,” said Edson, a New York–based retired therapist. “But I still kept walking.”

A man on the shore saw her disappear under the water and pulled her out. “I remember vomiting a lot of water and I remember that the man had tattoos, but I don’t remember how I felt to be alive. I was just numb.”

Edson thinks there were clues her pediatrician missed. “We lived in a small Southern town. Everyone knew my parents were alcoholics. I was very dissociated and withdrawn in general and during pediatric visits. My affect broadcasted that something was wrong, but no one asked if I was okay.”

She acknowledged that professionals in those days “weren’t tuned in to mental health issues in kids. At least there’s more awareness today and hopefully more training — especially since it seems like more kids are trying to end their lives today than when I was growing up.”
 

Alarming Statistics

According to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), suicide is the second leading cause of death for people aged 10-24 years. Data from Children’s Hospital Association’s Pediatric Health Information System revealed that suicide attempts, ideation, and self-injury have become the most common mental health conditions seen in the emergency departments (EDs) of children’s hospitals, with a 166% increase in ED visits for suicide attempts in children aged 5-18 years, between 2016 and 2022.

Psychiatrist Helen Egger, MD, chief medical officer and co-founder of Little Otter, a specialty pediatric and whole family digital mental health company, recently coauthored a report analyzing data on 1434 children who completed a screening session and comprehensive diagnostic assessment at Little Otter from May 2023 to February 2024 (n = 1016 children aged 8-14 years and n = 418 aged 3-7 years).

Little Otter
Dr. Helen Egger


Almost one fifth of the older children presented with current positive suicide risk (suicidal ideation and/or behavior in the last month), while 6% of the younger age group presented with current suicide risk. The youngest was 5 years old.
 

Points of Contact

“It’s known that most children who die by suicide had a recent visit with a health professional — a pediatrician or child mental health professional. It’s unlikely that the child was fine and then, a few weeks later, stopped being fine. The likelihood is that the child wasn’t fine during that visit, but the clinician didn’t ask about mental health,” Egger said.

 

 

Christine Crawford, MD, MPH, associate medical director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), said that awareness of pediatric and adolescent suicidality is relevant to all physicians who treat children. “When you’re working with kids, anything can come up. Be prepared to navigate the conversation. You can never predict who the patient will feel most comfortable disclosing these thoughts to.”

NAMI
Dr. Christine Crawford


Pediatricians are the physicians most likely to be seen by children, and it’s important for pediatricians to inquire about a child’s mood, especially during child visits, according to Crawford, author of the book You Are Not Alone for Parents and Caregivers: The NAMI Guide to Navigating Your Child’s Mental Health.

Donald E. Greydanus, MD, professor and founding chair, Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan, said many fellow pediatricians have said the highly compressed exam doesn’t allow enough time to ask questions. “But pediatricians must find a way to make time,” he said. “Asking about depression and potential suicidality is top priority and can help keep your patients alive.”

Some pediatricians have told him, “I’m not prepared to provide counseling.” But “your role isn’t to provide counseling, just to open the conversation, offer hope, and direct the youngster to resources that can help.”
 

Don’t Be Afraid to Ask

According to the AAP, all children aged 12 years or older should be screened for suicidal risk, and children aged 8-11 years should be screened “when clinically indicated.” AAP also recommends annual screening for depression in children aged 12 years or older. However, Egger thinks that screening for depression should start sooner.

Katherine Kay Greydanus
Dr. Donald E. Greydanus

It can be tempting to screen by merely giving a youngster a form to fill out in the waiting room, but Greydanus strongly advises against this approach. “The important thing is having rapport with the child, being in the same room together. You can ask some simple questions. ‘How are you doing? How are things at school? How are things with your family?’”

“When you’re screening for depression and have a kid who’s talking about sadness or low mood for more than 2 weeks and endorsing other symptoms, such as problems with sleep or appetite, difficulty concentrating, anhedonia, losing interest in things they’d usually enjoy, feeling they’re a burden to others, hopelessness about the future, being unable to function the way they used to — that person meets criteria for depression and you should have a high suspicion and concern about potential suicide,” said Crawford, assistant professor of psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine.

She suggested probing further and being direct. “It sounds like you’ve been having a tough time. You talk about being sad. I wonder if you’re feeling so sad that you might not want to be alive anymore.” Some healthcare providers “tiptoe around when it comes to suicide, but it’s better to be direct and communicate the question in simple, plain language: ‘Have you ever had thoughts about hurting or killing yourself, that life is no longer worth living, or life would be easier for your family if you weren’t alive?’”

It’s a common myth that asking about depression or suicidality will “plant a seed” or “put ideas in people’s heads,” potentially leading to suicidality. “What we know to be true is that asking about suicide doesn’t put lives at risk. In fact, the contrary is true,” according to Crawford. Several studies have refuted this myth.

Two screening tools that might be helpful in ascertaining the presence of depression and suicidality are the PHQ-9 modified for Adolescents and the four-question Ask Suicide-Screening Questions.
 

 

 

Probe for More Details

If a child or adolescent affirms suicidal ideation, it’s important to ask if they have a plan, Crawford advised. “If they say, ‘yes,’ don’t run out of the office or shut down the conversation by picking up the phone and calling the closest child psychiatrist. We want kids to open up as much as possible when they’ve already opened up a little. So continue the conversation.”

If a child has a plan, the risk for following through on that plan is “high,” Crawford emphasized. “You want the maximum amount of information at your fingertips because this will equip you to navigate the next step in getting the child help.”

The suicide plan may not be realistic and, if carried out, might not actually end in death, especially in younger children. “A 6-year-old might say, ‘I’m gonna drink a whole bottle of apple juice and my belly will explode.’ Or ‘I’ll take 10 extra vitamins.’ The objective lethality of the plan doesn’t matter in that moment. What matters is that the child believes it’s going to work, and it provides a window into how depressed that child is.”

Greydanus added that it’s important to understand what might be going on in the child’s life. Could there be abuse in the family? Is the child being bullied? Bullying can take place at school or online, he noted. The overall risk for suicidal thoughts is elevated for youth who are involved in bullying, whether they’re the bully or the one being bullied.

Kirk Smalley, president and co-founder of Stand for the Silent, an organization designed to bring awareness about the devastating effects of bullying, agreed that pediatricians a should ask children if they’re being bullied. “Sometimes, kids will open up to someone who isn’t a parent or a teacher, who might be seen as ‘too close’ to the situation,” Smalley said.

“Let them know you’re a trusted adult they can confide in and you’re willing to help them navigate this — and then follow through,” advised Smalley, whose 11-year-old son died by suicide after being subjected to bullying.
 

Painting a Complete Picture

Crawford advises clinicians to “look at the whole picture and piece it together.”

For example, “if the child is functioning, going to school, maintaining relationships with other people, and not experiencing symptoms of depression but discloses the desire to kill him/herself, understand the context.” Sometimes, adolescents can be impulsive. Decision-making “can be driven by emotion.” The teen may have experienced emotional distress, such as “conflict with a peer, arguments with a parent, or romantic heartbreak. She might say, ‘I’m going to kill myself if I ever see him holding hands with another girl.’”

In the setting of an acute stressor, such as a breakup, the child might not need a higher level of care such as hospitalization. “But for non-psychiatry providers, it’s unclear if the child might act on it, so it’s important to have the child evaluated; talk to collateral supports, such as parents, teachers, or a therapist if they have one; and see what makes sense for that specific child.”

She also recommended “getting a sense if the kid is future-oriented in thinking. If they’re talking about an upcoming concert this weekend, or wanting to get to basketball practice, that’s reassuring. It suggests the likelihood of following through [on suicide] is low.”

And assess coping strategies. “You can say, ‘I see you’re really going through a lot. I worry that these thoughts will come up in school. What do you think you’d do in the moment if these thoughts come up?’ If there’s a coping strategy — for example, ‘I’d talk to my friend during lunch’ — that’s also reassuring,” Crawford said.

Of course, that doesn’t mean the statement should be ignored or dismissed. Rather, it informs the next preventive steps and how intensive the level of care should be.
 

 

 

Next Steps: Involving the Family, Getting Help

It’s particularly concerning if the child is unable to identify strategies other than suicide, said Crawford. “You can say, ‘I’m concerned because it’s highly likely that you’ll run into this guy and I wouldn’t want you to die. You have so much to live for.’”

Then, you can ask if it’s okay to bring in the parent or caregiver to talk about what the child just revealed. “If the kid says no — especially a teen — you can respond, ‘I hear what you’re saying, but I actually do have to bring your parent in because of your safety and we can discuss together how to keep you safe.’”

In advance, Crawford tells the patient what she plans to share with the parent. “That way, we’re on the same page and the kid has a sense of agency about how the conversation with the parent will go.” If the teen doesn’t want certain information revealed, “you can ask, ‘What would you leave out, and why?’ This lends itself to a helpful conversation about what the child is thinking about.”

Once the provider has received the green light, it’s time to bring the parent into the room. “Especially in the primary care or pediatric setting, the parent is often shocked, worried, and caught off-guard,” Crawford said.

“You can start by thanking the patient for being open and honest. Then you can tell the parent, ‘Your daughter shared she’s been having some difficult emotions and experiences, and she’s thought of ending her life because she doesn’t know how to cope. I wanted to talk to you about this because it’s important to look at resources we can connect her to and effective coping strategies.’”

Further interventions can include referring the patient to a child psychiatrist or therapist, or both. “Have a list of referrals readily available,” Greydanus advised. If you suspect or if the child reveals abuse, you’re a mandated reporter and need to inform Child Protective Services (CPS). “But don’t stop there,” he warned. “Make sure the child is indeed getting help through CPS and appropriate intervention has been taken regarding the abuse and potential suicide attempt.” Or you may send the child to the ED, where ED physicians are “trained in what to do if they suspect abuse. But make sure that when you ‘throw the ball,’ there’s someone who can ‘catch’ it and accept responsibility for the child’s safety.”

Crawford noted that many primary care settings — especially in under-resourced areas — lack child psychiatrists or therapists. “You need to know what’s feasible in the community you’re practicing in,” she advised. “Be aware of the local crisis line — 988 — and mental health resources in the school and community. There are often school psychologists, social workers, or counselors who can become involved.”

Greydanus emphasized that it’s critical to assess for the presence of firearms in the home and address it with the parents. “If a child is sad or angry and gets impulsive, it’s amazingly common for them to get their hands in a firearm and use it.”

As previously reported, pediatricians and other healthcare providers have a valuable role to play in screening parents for firearm ownership and offering counseling on safe storage practices, according to research presented on September 28 at the AAP 2024 National Conference.
 

 

 

Sometimes, Even the Best Efforts Aren’t Successful

“Suicide is complicated, and parents or doctors can take all the ‘right’ steps to get counseling for the child — hospitalization, medication, and support — and children might still take their lives,” said Ronnie Susan Walker, MS, LCPC, founder and executive director of Alliance of Hope for Suicide Loss Survivors. The organization was launched as a “postvention campaign” 7 years ago to provide support to survivors of suicide loss, who are themselves a high-risk population for suicide.

Walker alluded to the concept of a “ suicide trance” — a term coined by Richard Heckler, PhD, in his book Waking Up, Alive. This trance “is a state of mind and body that receives only the kind of input that reinforces the pain and corroborates the person’s conviction that the only way out is through death,” Heckler wrote.

Walker, whose stepson died by suicide, said physicians and other healthcare professionals who have lost a patient to suicide “should focus on postvention — finding support from other professionals and managing their own grief and guilt.”

It’s natural to feel guilt and second-guess yourself, Greydanus said. “You question whether you missed something or could have done more, so acknowledge that even with the best care and intentions, some suicides aren’t preventable,” he said.

Walker recommends reaching out to the family. “When I lost my stepson, his doctor came to the funeral and wrote us a very meaningful note. That meant so much to us.”

Greydanus agreed it’s appropriate for the clinician to offer comfort to the family “if he or she feels it necessary or feels moved to do so.” However, he cautioned, there’s “often a fear of malpractice charges that may interfere in certain cases.”

Egger added that records should always be “very detailed,” with clear documentation of how you interacted with the child and the rationale behind your interventions. “I’m not a legal expert, but I would always err on the side of connecting with family and sharing grief and compassion. My experience with physician-patient relationships is that the more connected, transparent, and empathetic they are, the better the outcome will be for everyone.”

Losing a patient to suicide is traumatic, so give yourself time to grieve, Egger advised. “Unfortunately, this is an experience that almost everyone in the field will likely go through at some point. Reach out for professional counseling or peer support.”

Physicians who have lost a patient to suicide may turn to an online forum, the Coalition of Clinician Survivors, designed to create a safe anonymous space for discussion, education, testimonials, and one-on-one support.

Greydanus emphasized that the most important role in working with suicidal youngsters is to provide hope. “Yes, you can’t help everyone, but you can help most of them. That’s why you’re there.”

Greydanus, Crawford, Egger, Edson, Smalley, and Walker reported no financial conflicts of interest.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

When she was 5 years old, Katherine Edson, LCSW, tried to end her life by drowning herself. “I was enduring severe physical and sexual abuse, and it had become unbearable,” she said. “I waded into a lake, knowing there was a point when it would become too deep and I’d go under.”

As she was walking toward the deeper water, it occurred to her that if she died, she wouldn’t be able to eat Rice Krispies again. “I thought, ‘no more Snap, Crackle, and Pop’ — the three little mascots on the cereal box — and I felt sad,” said Edson, a New York–based retired therapist. “But I still kept walking.”

A man on the shore saw her disappear under the water and pulled her out. “I remember vomiting a lot of water and I remember that the man had tattoos, but I don’t remember how I felt to be alive. I was just numb.”

Edson thinks there were clues her pediatrician missed. “We lived in a small Southern town. Everyone knew my parents were alcoholics. I was very dissociated and withdrawn in general and during pediatric visits. My affect broadcasted that something was wrong, but no one asked if I was okay.”

She acknowledged that professionals in those days “weren’t tuned in to mental health issues in kids. At least there’s more awareness today and hopefully more training — especially since it seems like more kids are trying to end their lives today than when I was growing up.”
 

Alarming Statistics

According to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), suicide is the second leading cause of death for people aged 10-24 years. Data from Children’s Hospital Association’s Pediatric Health Information System revealed that suicide attempts, ideation, and self-injury have become the most common mental health conditions seen in the emergency departments (EDs) of children’s hospitals, with a 166% increase in ED visits for suicide attempts in children aged 5-18 years, between 2016 and 2022.

Psychiatrist Helen Egger, MD, chief medical officer and co-founder of Little Otter, a specialty pediatric and whole family digital mental health company, recently coauthored a report analyzing data on 1434 children who completed a screening session and comprehensive diagnostic assessment at Little Otter from May 2023 to February 2024 (n = 1016 children aged 8-14 years and n = 418 aged 3-7 years).

Little Otter
Dr. Helen Egger


Almost one fifth of the older children presented with current positive suicide risk (suicidal ideation and/or behavior in the last month), while 6% of the younger age group presented with current suicide risk. The youngest was 5 years old.
 

Points of Contact

“It’s known that most children who die by suicide had a recent visit with a health professional — a pediatrician or child mental health professional. It’s unlikely that the child was fine and then, a few weeks later, stopped being fine. The likelihood is that the child wasn’t fine during that visit, but the clinician didn’t ask about mental health,” Egger said.

 

 

Christine Crawford, MD, MPH, associate medical director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), said that awareness of pediatric and adolescent suicidality is relevant to all physicians who treat children. “When you’re working with kids, anything can come up. Be prepared to navigate the conversation. You can never predict who the patient will feel most comfortable disclosing these thoughts to.”

NAMI
Dr. Christine Crawford


Pediatricians are the physicians most likely to be seen by children, and it’s important for pediatricians to inquire about a child’s mood, especially during child visits, according to Crawford, author of the book You Are Not Alone for Parents and Caregivers: The NAMI Guide to Navigating Your Child’s Mental Health.

Donald E. Greydanus, MD, professor and founding chair, Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan, said many fellow pediatricians have said the highly compressed exam doesn’t allow enough time to ask questions. “But pediatricians must find a way to make time,” he said. “Asking about depression and potential suicidality is top priority and can help keep your patients alive.”

Some pediatricians have told him, “I’m not prepared to provide counseling.” But “your role isn’t to provide counseling, just to open the conversation, offer hope, and direct the youngster to resources that can help.”
 

Don’t Be Afraid to Ask

According to the AAP, all children aged 12 years or older should be screened for suicidal risk, and children aged 8-11 years should be screened “when clinically indicated.” AAP also recommends annual screening for depression in children aged 12 years or older. However, Egger thinks that screening for depression should start sooner.

Katherine Kay Greydanus
Dr. Donald E. Greydanus

It can be tempting to screen by merely giving a youngster a form to fill out in the waiting room, but Greydanus strongly advises against this approach. “The important thing is having rapport with the child, being in the same room together. You can ask some simple questions. ‘How are you doing? How are things at school? How are things with your family?’”

“When you’re screening for depression and have a kid who’s talking about sadness or low mood for more than 2 weeks and endorsing other symptoms, such as problems with sleep or appetite, difficulty concentrating, anhedonia, losing interest in things they’d usually enjoy, feeling they’re a burden to others, hopelessness about the future, being unable to function the way they used to — that person meets criteria for depression and you should have a high suspicion and concern about potential suicide,” said Crawford, assistant professor of psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine.

She suggested probing further and being direct. “It sounds like you’ve been having a tough time. You talk about being sad. I wonder if you’re feeling so sad that you might not want to be alive anymore.” Some healthcare providers “tiptoe around when it comes to suicide, but it’s better to be direct and communicate the question in simple, plain language: ‘Have you ever had thoughts about hurting or killing yourself, that life is no longer worth living, or life would be easier for your family if you weren’t alive?’”

It’s a common myth that asking about depression or suicidality will “plant a seed” or “put ideas in people’s heads,” potentially leading to suicidality. “What we know to be true is that asking about suicide doesn’t put lives at risk. In fact, the contrary is true,” according to Crawford. Several studies have refuted this myth.

Two screening tools that might be helpful in ascertaining the presence of depression and suicidality are the PHQ-9 modified for Adolescents and the four-question Ask Suicide-Screening Questions.
 

 

 

Probe for More Details

If a child or adolescent affirms suicidal ideation, it’s important to ask if they have a plan, Crawford advised. “If they say, ‘yes,’ don’t run out of the office or shut down the conversation by picking up the phone and calling the closest child psychiatrist. We want kids to open up as much as possible when they’ve already opened up a little. So continue the conversation.”

If a child has a plan, the risk for following through on that plan is “high,” Crawford emphasized. “You want the maximum amount of information at your fingertips because this will equip you to navigate the next step in getting the child help.”

The suicide plan may not be realistic and, if carried out, might not actually end in death, especially in younger children. “A 6-year-old might say, ‘I’m gonna drink a whole bottle of apple juice and my belly will explode.’ Or ‘I’ll take 10 extra vitamins.’ The objective lethality of the plan doesn’t matter in that moment. What matters is that the child believes it’s going to work, and it provides a window into how depressed that child is.”

Greydanus added that it’s important to understand what might be going on in the child’s life. Could there be abuse in the family? Is the child being bullied? Bullying can take place at school or online, he noted. The overall risk for suicidal thoughts is elevated for youth who are involved in bullying, whether they’re the bully or the one being bullied.

Kirk Smalley, president and co-founder of Stand for the Silent, an organization designed to bring awareness about the devastating effects of bullying, agreed that pediatricians a should ask children if they’re being bullied. “Sometimes, kids will open up to someone who isn’t a parent or a teacher, who might be seen as ‘too close’ to the situation,” Smalley said.

“Let them know you’re a trusted adult they can confide in and you’re willing to help them navigate this — and then follow through,” advised Smalley, whose 11-year-old son died by suicide after being subjected to bullying.
 

Painting a Complete Picture

Crawford advises clinicians to “look at the whole picture and piece it together.”

For example, “if the child is functioning, going to school, maintaining relationships with other people, and not experiencing symptoms of depression but discloses the desire to kill him/herself, understand the context.” Sometimes, adolescents can be impulsive. Decision-making “can be driven by emotion.” The teen may have experienced emotional distress, such as “conflict with a peer, arguments with a parent, or romantic heartbreak. She might say, ‘I’m going to kill myself if I ever see him holding hands with another girl.’”

In the setting of an acute stressor, such as a breakup, the child might not need a higher level of care such as hospitalization. “But for non-psychiatry providers, it’s unclear if the child might act on it, so it’s important to have the child evaluated; talk to collateral supports, such as parents, teachers, or a therapist if they have one; and see what makes sense for that specific child.”

She also recommended “getting a sense if the kid is future-oriented in thinking. If they’re talking about an upcoming concert this weekend, or wanting to get to basketball practice, that’s reassuring. It suggests the likelihood of following through [on suicide] is low.”

And assess coping strategies. “You can say, ‘I see you’re really going through a lot. I worry that these thoughts will come up in school. What do you think you’d do in the moment if these thoughts come up?’ If there’s a coping strategy — for example, ‘I’d talk to my friend during lunch’ — that’s also reassuring,” Crawford said.

Of course, that doesn’t mean the statement should be ignored or dismissed. Rather, it informs the next preventive steps and how intensive the level of care should be.
 

 

 

Next Steps: Involving the Family, Getting Help

It’s particularly concerning if the child is unable to identify strategies other than suicide, said Crawford. “You can say, ‘I’m concerned because it’s highly likely that you’ll run into this guy and I wouldn’t want you to die. You have so much to live for.’”

Then, you can ask if it’s okay to bring in the parent or caregiver to talk about what the child just revealed. “If the kid says no — especially a teen — you can respond, ‘I hear what you’re saying, but I actually do have to bring your parent in because of your safety and we can discuss together how to keep you safe.’”

In advance, Crawford tells the patient what she plans to share with the parent. “That way, we’re on the same page and the kid has a sense of agency about how the conversation with the parent will go.” If the teen doesn’t want certain information revealed, “you can ask, ‘What would you leave out, and why?’ This lends itself to a helpful conversation about what the child is thinking about.”

Once the provider has received the green light, it’s time to bring the parent into the room. “Especially in the primary care or pediatric setting, the parent is often shocked, worried, and caught off-guard,” Crawford said.

“You can start by thanking the patient for being open and honest. Then you can tell the parent, ‘Your daughter shared she’s been having some difficult emotions and experiences, and she’s thought of ending her life because she doesn’t know how to cope. I wanted to talk to you about this because it’s important to look at resources we can connect her to and effective coping strategies.’”

Further interventions can include referring the patient to a child psychiatrist or therapist, or both. “Have a list of referrals readily available,” Greydanus advised. If you suspect or if the child reveals abuse, you’re a mandated reporter and need to inform Child Protective Services (CPS). “But don’t stop there,” he warned. “Make sure the child is indeed getting help through CPS and appropriate intervention has been taken regarding the abuse and potential suicide attempt.” Or you may send the child to the ED, where ED physicians are “trained in what to do if they suspect abuse. But make sure that when you ‘throw the ball,’ there’s someone who can ‘catch’ it and accept responsibility for the child’s safety.”

Crawford noted that many primary care settings — especially in under-resourced areas — lack child psychiatrists or therapists. “You need to know what’s feasible in the community you’re practicing in,” she advised. “Be aware of the local crisis line — 988 — and mental health resources in the school and community. There are often school psychologists, social workers, or counselors who can become involved.”

Greydanus emphasized that it’s critical to assess for the presence of firearms in the home and address it with the parents. “If a child is sad or angry and gets impulsive, it’s amazingly common for them to get their hands in a firearm and use it.”

As previously reported, pediatricians and other healthcare providers have a valuable role to play in screening parents for firearm ownership and offering counseling on safe storage practices, according to research presented on September 28 at the AAP 2024 National Conference.
 

 

 

Sometimes, Even the Best Efforts Aren’t Successful

“Suicide is complicated, and parents or doctors can take all the ‘right’ steps to get counseling for the child — hospitalization, medication, and support — and children might still take their lives,” said Ronnie Susan Walker, MS, LCPC, founder and executive director of Alliance of Hope for Suicide Loss Survivors. The organization was launched as a “postvention campaign” 7 years ago to provide support to survivors of suicide loss, who are themselves a high-risk population for suicide.

Walker alluded to the concept of a “ suicide trance” — a term coined by Richard Heckler, PhD, in his book Waking Up, Alive. This trance “is a state of mind and body that receives only the kind of input that reinforces the pain and corroborates the person’s conviction that the only way out is through death,” Heckler wrote.

Walker, whose stepson died by suicide, said physicians and other healthcare professionals who have lost a patient to suicide “should focus on postvention — finding support from other professionals and managing their own grief and guilt.”

It’s natural to feel guilt and second-guess yourself, Greydanus said. “You question whether you missed something or could have done more, so acknowledge that even with the best care and intentions, some suicides aren’t preventable,” he said.

Walker recommends reaching out to the family. “When I lost my stepson, his doctor came to the funeral and wrote us a very meaningful note. That meant so much to us.”

Greydanus agreed it’s appropriate for the clinician to offer comfort to the family “if he or she feels it necessary or feels moved to do so.” However, he cautioned, there’s “often a fear of malpractice charges that may interfere in certain cases.”

Egger added that records should always be “very detailed,” with clear documentation of how you interacted with the child and the rationale behind your interventions. “I’m not a legal expert, but I would always err on the side of connecting with family and sharing grief and compassion. My experience with physician-patient relationships is that the more connected, transparent, and empathetic they are, the better the outcome will be for everyone.”

Losing a patient to suicide is traumatic, so give yourself time to grieve, Egger advised. “Unfortunately, this is an experience that almost everyone in the field will likely go through at some point. Reach out for professional counseling or peer support.”

Physicians who have lost a patient to suicide may turn to an online forum, the Coalition of Clinician Survivors, designed to create a safe anonymous space for discussion, education, testimonials, and one-on-one support.

Greydanus emphasized that the most important role in working with suicidal youngsters is to provide hope. “Yes, you can’t help everyone, but you can help most of them. That’s why you’re there.”

Greydanus, Crawford, Egger, Edson, Smalley, and Walker reported no financial conflicts of interest.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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FDA Okays Abuse-Deterrent Opioid for Severe Pain

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Changed
Tue, 11/05/2024 - 08:01

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a 10-mg dose of Roxybond (Protega Pharmaceuticals), an opioid analgesic indicated for the management of severe pain in cases where other treatments are not well-tolerated or prove ineffective.

Roxybond, an immediate-release (IR) formulation of oxycodone hydrochloride, is made with Protega’s SentryBond technology, which makes it harder for people to crush, inject, or snort, according to the company.

In a statement from Protega, Paul Howe, the company’s chief commercial officer, said the drug meets an “unmet need for an IR opioid with abuse-deterrent technology that may reduce misuse and abuse while providing pain relief to medically appropriate patients when used as indicated.”

To determine the tablet’s ability to withstand manipulation, more than 2000 in vitro tests were conducted, according to the release. The findings indicate Roxybond reduces — but does not entirely negate — the potential for intranasal and intravenous abuse.

Roxybond was previously approved in 5-, 15-, and 30-mg doses. The 10 mg option provides clinicians with the ability to better modify side effects, manage titration, and provide precision care for patients on opioid therapy, according to Protega.

“For patients, the range of doses can provide better pain control, reduce the risk of side effects, and provide a smoother transition during dosing transitions,” the company stated.

Roxybond is contraindicated in patients with significant respiratory depression, acute or severe bronchial asthma, gastrointestinal obstruction, or hypersensitivity to oxycodone. The drug is not intended for long-term use unless otherwise determined by a clinician. Roxybond also is subject to the FDA’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for opioids.

“The development of Roxybond with SentryBond is a step forward in fighting the national epidemic of prescription opioid overdose,” said Eric Kinzler, PhD, vice president of medical and regulatory affairs for Protega, in a release. “Protega is dedicated to our mission to block the path to abuse and work with healthcare professionals across the continuum of care to reduce misuse and abuse.”

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

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The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a 10-mg dose of Roxybond (Protega Pharmaceuticals), an opioid analgesic indicated for the management of severe pain in cases where other treatments are not well-tolerated or prove ineffective.

Roxybond, an immediate-release (IR) formulation of oxycodone hydrochloride, is made with Protega’s SentryBond technology, which makes it harder for people to crush, inject, or snort, according to the company.

In a statement from Protega, Paul Howe, the company’s chief commercial officer, said the drug meets an “unmet need for an IR opioid with abuse-deterrent technology that may reduce misuse and abuse while providing pain relief to medically appropriate patients when used as indicated.”

To determine the tablet’s ability to withstand manipulation, more than 2000 in vitro tests were conducted, according to the release. The findings indicate Roxybond reduces — but does not entirely negate — the potential for intranasal and intravenous abuse.

Roxybond was previously approved in 5-, 15-, and 30-mg doses. The 10 mg option provides clinicians with the ability to better modify side effects, manage titration, and provide precision care for patients on opioid therapy, according to Protega.

“For patients, the range of doses can provide better pain control, reduce the risk of side effects, and provide a smoother transition during dosing transitions,” the company stated.

Roxybond is contraindicated in patients with significant respiratory depression, acute or severe bronchial asthma, gastrointestinal obstruction, or hypersensitivity to oxycodone. The drug is not intended for long-term use unless otherwise determined by a clinician. Roxybond also is subject to the FDA’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for opioids.

“The development of Roxybond with SentryBond is a step forward in fighting the national epidemic of prescription opioid overdose,” said Eric Kinzler, PhD, vice president of medical and regulatory affairs for Protega, in a release. “Protega is dedicated to our mission to block the path to abuse and work with healthcare professionals across the continuum of care to reduce misuse and abuse.”

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

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a 10-mg dose of Roxybond (Protega Pharmaceuticals), an opioid analgesic indicated for the management of severe pain in cases where other treatments are not well-tolerated or prove ineffective.

Roxybond, an immediate-release (IR) formulation of oxycodone hydrochloride, is made with Protega’s SentryBond technology, which makes it harder for people to crush, inject, or snort, according to the company.

In a statement from Protega, Paul Howe, the company’s chief commercial officer, said the drug meets an “unmet need for an IR opioid with abuse-deterrent technology that may reduce misuse and abuse while providing pain relief to medically appropriate patients when used as indicated.”

To determine the tablet’s ability to withstand manipulation, more than 2000 in vitro tests were conducted, according to the release. The findings indicate Roxybond reduces — but does not entirely negate — the potential for intranasal and intravenous abuse.

Roxybond was previously approved in 5-, 15-, and 30-mg doses. The 10 mg option provides clinicians with the ability to better modify side effects, manage titration, and provide precision care for patients on opioid therapy, according to Protega.

“For patients, the range of doses can provide better pain control, reduce the risk of side effects, and provide a smoother transition during dosing transitions,” the company stated.

Roxybond is contraindicated in patients with significant respiratory depression, acute or severe bronchial asthma, gastrointestinal obstruction, or hypersensitivity to oxycodone. The drug is not intended for long-term use unless otherwise determined by a clinician. Roxybond also is subject to the FDA’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies for opioids.

“The development of Roxybond with SentryBond is a step forward in fighting the national epidemic of prescription opioid overdose,” said Eric Kinzler, PhD, vice president of medical and regulatory affairs for Protega, in a release. “Protega is dedicated to our mission to block the path to abuse and work with healthcare professionals across the continuum of care to reduce misuse and abuse.”

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

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