Spinal cord stimulator restores Parkinson patient’s gait

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 11/16/2023 - 11:54

A patient with Parkinson’s disease (PD) can now walk with a normal gait without balance problems or fear of falling after implantation of a neuroprosthetic device.

The neuroprosthesis involves targeted epidural electrical stimulation of areas of the lumbosacral spinal cord that produce walking.

This new therapeutic tool offers hope to patients with PD and, combined with existing approaches, may alleviate a motor sign in PD for which there is currently “no real solution,” study investigator Eduardo Martin Moraud, PhD, who leads PD research at the Defitech Center for Interventional Neurotherapies (NeuroRestore), Lausanne, Switzerland, said in an interview.

“This is exciting for the many patients that develop gait deficits and experience frequent falls, who can only rely on physical therapy to try and minimize the consequences,” he added.

The findings were published online in Nature Medicine.
 

Personalized stimulation

About 90% of people with advanced PD experience gait and balance problems or freezing-of-gait episodes. These locomotor deficits typically don’t respond well to dopamine replacement therapy or deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus, possibly because the neural origins of these motor problems involve brain circuits not related to dopamine, said Dr. Moraud.

Continuous electrical stimulation over the cervical or thoracic segments of the spinal cord reduces locomotor deficits in some people with PD, but the broader application of this strategy has led to variable and unsatisfying outcomes.

The new approach focuses on correcting abnormal activation of circuits in the lumbar spinal cord, a region that hosts all the neurons that control activation of the leg muscles used for walking.

The stimulating device is placed on the lumbar region of the spinal cord, which sends messages to leg muscles. It is wired to a small impulse generator implanted under the skin of the abdomen. Sensors placed in shoes align the stimulation to the patient’s movement.

The system can detect the beginning of a movement, immediately activate the appropriate electrode, and so facilitate the necessary movement, be that leg flexion, extension, or propulsion, said Dr. Moraud. “This allows for increased walking symmetry, reinforced balance, and increased length of steps.”

The concept of this neuroprosthesis is similar to that used to allow patients with a spinal cord injury (SCI) to walk. But unlike patients with SCI, those with PD can move their legs, indicating that there is a descending command from the brain that needs to interact with the stimulation of the spinal cord, and patients with PD can feel the stimulation.

“Both these elements imply that amplitudes of stimulation need to be much lower in PD than SCI, and that stimulation needs to be fully personalized in PD to synergistically interact with the descending commands from the brain.”

After fine-tuning this new neuroprosthesis in animal models, researchers implanted the device in a 62-year-old man with a 30-year history of PD who presented with severe gait impairments, including marked gait asymmetry, reduced stride length, and balance problems.
 

Gait restored to near normal

The patient had frequent freezing-of-gait episodes when turning and passing through narrow paths, which led to multiple falls a day. This was despite being treated with DBS and dopaminergic replacement therapies.

But after getting used to the neuroprosthesis, the patient now walks with a gait akin to that of people without PD.

“Our experience in the preclinical animal models and this first patient is that gait can be restored to an almost healthy level, but this, of course, may vary across patients, depending on the severity of their disease progression, and their other motor deficits,” said Dr. Moraud.

When the neuroprosthesis is turned on, freezing of gait nearly vanishes, both with and without DBS.

In addition, the neuroprosthesis augmented the impact of the patient’s rehabilitation program, which involved a variety of regular exercises, including walking on basic and complex terrains, navigating outdoors in community settings, balance training, and basic physical therapy.

Frequent use of the neuroprosthesis during gait rehabilitation also translated into “highly improved” quality of life as reported by the patient (and his wife), said Dr. Moraud.

The patient has now been using the neuroprosthesis about 8 hours a day for nearly 2 years, only switching it off when sitting for long periods of time or while sleeping.

“He regained the capacity to walk in complex or crowded environments such as shops, airports, or his own home, without falling,” said Dr. Moraud. “He went from falling five to six times per day to one or two [falls] every couple of weeks. He’s also much more confident. He can walk for many miles, run, and go on holidays, without the constant fear of falling and having related injuries.”

Dr. Moraud stressed that the device does not replace DBS, which is a “key therapy” that addresses other deficits in PD, such as rigidity or slowness of movement. “What we propose here is a fully complementary approach for the gait problems that are not well addressed by DBS.”

One of the next steps will be to evaluate the efficacy of this approach across a wider spectrum of patient profiles to fully define the best responders, said Dr. Moraud.
 

A ‘tour de force’

In a comment, Michael S. Okun, MD, director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida, Gainesville, and medical director of the Parkinson’s Foundation, noted that the researchers used “a smarter device” than past approaches that failed to adequately address progressive walking challenges of patients with PD.

Although it’s “tempting to get excited” about the findings, it’s important to consider that the study included only one human subject and did not target circuits for both walking and balance, said Dr. Okun. “It’s possible that even if future studies revealed a benefit for walking, the device may or may not address falling.”

In an accompanying editorial, Aviv Mizrahi-Kliger, MD, PhD, department of neurology, University of California, San Francisco, and Karunesh Ganguly, MD, PhD, Neurology and Rehabilitation Service, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System, called the study an “impressive tour de force,” with data from the nonhuman primate model and the individual with PD “jointly” indicating that epidural electrical stimulation (EES) “is a very promising treatment for several aspects of gait, posture and balance impairments in PD.”

But although the effect in the single patient “is quite impressive,” the “next crucial step” is to test this approach in a larger cohort of patients, they said.

They noted the nonhuman model does not exhibit freezing of gait, “which precluded the ability to corroborate or further study the role of EES in alleviating this symptom of PD in an animal model.”

In addition, stimulation parameters in the patient with PD “had to rely on estimated normal activity patterns, owing to the inability to measure pre-disease patterns at the individual level,” they wrote.

The study received funding from the Defitech Foundation, ONWARD Medical, CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Parkinson Schweiz Foundation, European Community’s Seventh Framework Program (NeuWalk), European Research Council, Wyss Center for Bio and Neuroengineering, Bertarelli Foundation, and Swiss National Science Foundation. Dr. Moraud and other study authors hold various patents or applications in relation to the present work. Dr. Mizrahi-Kliger has no relevant conflicts of interest; Dr. Ganguly has a patent for modulation of sensory inputs to improve motor recovery from stroke and has been a consultant to Cala Health.

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

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A patient with Parkinson’s disease (PD) can now walk with a normal gait without balance problems or fear of falling after implantation of a neuroprosthetic device.

The neuroprosthesis involves targeted epidural electrical stimulation of areas of the lumbosacral spinal cord that produce walking.

This new therapeutic tool offers hope to patients with PD and, combined with existing approaches, may alleviate a motor sign in PD for which there is currently “no real solution,” study investigator Eduardo Martin Moraud, PhD, who leads PD research at the Defitech Center for Interventional Neurotherapies (NeuroRestore), Lausanne, Switzerland, said in an interview.

“This is exciting for the many patients that develop gait deficits and experience frequent falls, who can only rely on physical therapy to try and minimize the consequences,” he added.

The findings were published online in Nature Medicine.
 

Personalized stimulation

About 90% of people with advanced PD experience gait and balance problems or freezing-of-gait episodes. These locomotor deficits typically don’t respond well to dopamine replacement therapy or deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus, possibly because the neural origins of these motor problems involve brain circuits not related to dopamine, said Dr. Moraud.

Continuous electrical stimulation over the cervical or thoracic segments of the spinal cord reduces locomotor deficits in some people with PD, but the broader application of this strategy has led to variable and unsatisfying outcomes.

The new approach focuses on correcting abnormal activation of circuits in the lumbar spinal cord, a region that hosts all the neurons that control activation of the leg muscles used for walking.

The stimulating device is placed on the lumbar region of the spinal cord, which sends messages to leg muscles. It is wired to a small impulse generator implanted under the skin of the abdomen. Sensors placed in shoes align the stimulation to the patient’s movement.

The system can detect the beginning of a movement, immediately activate the appropriate electrode, and so facilitate the necessary movement, be that leg flexion, extension, or propulsion, said Dr. Moraud. “This allows for increased walking symmetry, reinforced balance, and increased length of steps.”

The concept of this neuroprosthesis is similar to that used to allow patients with a spinal cord injury (SCI) to walk. But unlike patients with SCI, those with PD can move their legs, indicating that there is a descending command from the brain that needs to interact with the stimulation of the spinal cord, and patients with PD can feel the stimulation.

“Both these elements imply that amplitudes of stimulation need to be much lower in PD than SCI, and that stimulation needs to be fully personalized in PD to synergistically interact with the descending commands from the brain.”

After fine-tuning this new neuroprosthesis in animal models, researchers implanted the device in a 62-year-old man with a 30-year history of PD who presented with severe gait impairments, including marked gait asymmetry, reduced stride length, and balance problems.
 

Gait restored to near normal

The patient had frequent freezing-of-gait episodes when turning and passing through narrow paths, which led to multiple falls a day. This was despite being treated with DBS and dopaminergic replacement therapies.

But after getting used to the neuroprosthesis, the patient now walks with a gait akin to that of people without PD.

“Our experience in the preclinical animal models and this first patient is that gait can be restored to an almost healthy level, but this, of course, may vary across patients, depending on the severity of their disease progression, and their other motor deficits,” said Dr. Moraud.

When the neuroprosthesis is turned on, freezing of gait nearly vanishes, both with and without DBS.

In addition, the neuroprosthesis augmented the impact of the patient’s rehabilitation program, which involved a variety of regular exercises, including walking on basic and complex terrains, navigating outdoors in community settings, balance training, and basic physical therapy.

Frequent use of the neuroprosthesis during gait rehabilitation also translated into “highly improved” quality of life as reported by the patient (and his wife), said Dr. Moraud.

The patient has now been using the neuroprosthesis about 8 hours a day for nearly 2 years, only switching it off when sitting for long periods of time or while sleeping.

“He regained the capacity to walk in complex or crowded environments such as shops, airports, or his own home, without falling,” said Dr. Moraud. “He went from falling five to six times per day to one or two [falls] every couple of weeks. He’s also much more confident. He can walk for many miles, run, and go on holidays, without the constant fear of falling and having related injuries.”

Dr. Moraud stressed that the device does not replace DBS, which is a “key therapy” that addresses other deficits in PD, such as rigidity or slowness of movement. “What we propose here is a fully complementary approach for the gait problems that are not well addressed by DBS.”

One of the next steps will be to evaluate the efficacy of this approach across a wider spectrum of patient profiles to fully define the best responders, said Dr. Moraud.
 

A ‘tour de force’

In a comment, Michael S. Okun, MD, director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida, Gainesville, and medical director of the Parkinson’s Foundation, noted that the researchers used “a smarter device” than past approaches that failed to adequately address progressive walking challenges of patients with PD.

Although it’s “tempting to get excited” about the findings, it’s important to consider that the study included only one human subject and did not target circuits for both walking and balance, said Dr. Okun. “It’s possible that even if future studies revealed a benefit for walking, the device may or may not address falling.”

In an accompanying editorial, Aviv Mizrahi-Kliger, MD, PhD, department of neurology, University of California, San Francisco, and Karunesh Ganguly, MD, PhD, Neurology and Rehabilitation Service, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System, called the study an “impressive tour de force,” with data from the nonhuman primate model and the individual with PD “jointly” indicating that epidural electrical stimulation (EES) “is a very promising treatment for several aspects of gait, posture and balance impairments in PD.”

But although the effect in the single patient “is quite impressive,” the “next crucial step” is to test this approach in a larger cohort of patients, they said.

They noted the nonhuman model does not exhibit freezing of gait, “which precluded the ability to corroborate or further study the role of EES in alleviating this symptom of PD in an animal model.”

In addition, stimulation parameters in the patient with PD “had to rely on estimated normal activity patterns, owing to the inability to measure pre-disease patterns at the individual level,” they wrote.

The study received funding from the Defitech Foundation, ONWARD Medical, CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Parkinson Schweiz Foundation, European Community’s Seventh Framework Program (NeuWalk), European Research Council, Wyss Center for Bio and Neuroengineering, Bertarelli Foundation, and Swiss National Science Foundation. Dr. Moraud and other study authors hold various patents or applications in relation to the present work. Dr. Mizrahi-Kliger has no relevant conflicts of interest; Dr. Ganguly has a patent for modulation of sensory inputs to improve motor recovery from stroke and has been a consultant to Cala Health.

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

A patient with Parkinson’s disease (PD) can now walk with a normal gait without balance problems or fear of falling after implantation of a neuroprosthetic device.

The neuroprosthesis involves targeted epidural electrical stimulation of areas of the lumbosacral spinal cord that produce walking.

This new therapeutic tool offers hope to patients with PD and, combined with existing approaches, may alleviate a motor sign in PD for which there is currently “no real solution,” study investigator Eduardo Martin Moraud, PhD, who leads PD research at the Defitech Center for Interventional Neurotherapies (NeuroRestore), Lausanne, Switzerland, said in an interview.

“This is exciting for the many patients that develop gait deficits and experience frequent falls, who can only rely on physical therapy to try and minimize the consequences,” he added.

The findings were published online in Nature Medicine.
 

Personalized stimulation

About 90% of people with advanced PD experience gait and balance problems or freezing-of-gait episodes. These locomotor deficits typically don’t respond well to dopamine replacement therapy or deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus, possibly because the neural origins of these motor problems involve brain circuits not related to dopamine, said Dr. Moraud.

Continuous electrical stimulation over the cervical or thoracic segments of the spinal cord reduces locomotor deficits in some people with PD, but the broader application of this strategy has led to variable and unsatisfying outcomes.

The new approach focuses on correcting abnormal activation of circuits in the lumbar spinal cord, a region that hosts all the neurons that control activation of the leg muscles used for walking.

The stimulating device is placed on the lumbar region of the spinal cord, which sends messages to leg muscles. It is wired to a small impulse generator implanted under the skin of the abdomen. Sensors placed in shoes align the stimulation to the patient’s movement.

The system can detect the beginning of a movement, immediately activate the appropriate electrode, and so facilitate the necessary movement, be that leg flexion, extension, or propulsion, said Dr. Moraud. “This allows for increased walking symmetry, reinforced balance, and increased length of steps.”

The concept of this neuroprosthesis is similar to that used to allow patients with a spinal cord injury (SCI) to walk. But unlike patients with SCI, those with PD can move their legs, indicating that there is a descending command from the brain that needs to interact with the stimulation of the spinal cord, and patients with PD can feel the stimulation.

“Both these elements imply that amplitudes of stimulation need to be much lower in PD than SCI, and that stimulation needs to be fully personalized in PD to synergistically interact with the descending commands from the brain.”

After fine-tuning this new neuroprosthesis in animal models, researchers implanted the device in a 62-year-old man with a 30-year history of PD who presented with severe gait impairments, including marked gait asymmetry, reduced stride length, and balance problems.
 

Gait restored to near normal

The patient had frequent freezing-of-gait episodes when turning and passing through narrow paths, which led to multiple falls a day. This was despite being treated with DBS and dopaminergic replacement therapies.

But after getting used to the neuroprosthesis, the patient now walks with a gait akin to that of people without PD.

“Our experience in the preclinical animal models and this first patient is that gait can be restored to an almost healthy level, but this, of course, may vary across patients, depending on the severity of their disease progression, and their other motor deficits,” said Dr. Moraud.

When the neuroprosthesis is turned on, freezing of gait nearly vanishes, both with and without DBS.

In addition, the neuroprosthesis augmented the impact of the patient’s rehabilitation program, which involved a variety of regular exercises, including walking on basic and complex terrains, navigating outdoors in community settings, balance training, and basic physical therapy.

Frequent use of the neuroprosthesis during gait rehabilitation also translated into “highly improved” quality of life as reported by the patient (and his wife), said Dr. Moraud.

The patient has now been using the neuroprosthesis about 8 hours a day for nearly 2 years, only switching it off when sitting for long periods of time or while sleeping.

“He regained the capacity to walk in complex or crowded environments such as shops, airports, or his own home, without falling,” said Dr. Moraud. “He went from falling five to six times per day to one or two [falls] every couple of weeks. He’s also much more confident. He can walk for many miles, run, and go on holidays, without the constant fear of falling and having related injuries.”

Dr. Moraud stressed that the device does not replace DBS, which is a “key therapy” that addresses other deficits in PD, such as rigidity or slowness of movement. “What we propose here is a fully complementary approach for the gait problems that are not well addressed by DBS.”

One of the next steps will be to evaluate the efficacy of this approach across a wider spectrum of patient profiles to fully define the best responders, said Dr. Moraud.
 

A ‘tour de force’

In a comment, Michael S. Okun, MD, director of the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases, University of Florida, Gainesville, and medical director of the Parkinson’s Foundation, noted that the researchers used “a smarter device” than past approaches that failed to adequately address progressive walking challenges of patients with PD.

Although it’s “tempting to get excited” about the findings, it’s important to consider that the study included only one human subject and did not target circuits for both walking and balance, said Dr. Okun. “It’s possible that even if future studies revealed a benefit for walking, the device may or may not address falling.”

In an accompanying editorial, Aviv Mizrahi-Kliger, MD, PhD, department of neurology, University of California, San Francisco, and Karunesh Ganguly, MD, PhD, Neurology and Rehabilitation Service, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System, called the study an “impressive tour de force,” with data from the nonhuman primate model and the individual with PD “jointly” indicating that epidural electrical stimulation (EES) “is a very promising treatment for several aspects of gait, posture and balance impairments in PD.”

But although the effect in the single patient “is quite impressive,” the “next crucial step” is to test this approach in a larger cohort of patients, they said.

They noted the nonhuman model does not exhibit freezing of gait, “which precluded the ability to corroborate or further study the role of EES in alleviating this symptom of PD in an animal model.”

In addition, stimulation parameters in the patient with PD “had to rely on estimated normal activity patterns, owing to the inability to measure pre-disease patterns at the individual level,” they wrote.

The study received funding from the Defitech Foundation, ONWARD Medical, CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Parkinson Schweiz Foundation, European Community’s Seventh Framework Program (NeuWalk), European Research Council, Wyss Center for Bio and Neuroengineering, Bertarelli Foundation, and Swiss National Science Foundation. Dr. Moraud and other study authors hold various patents or applications in relation to the present work. Dr. Mizrahi-Kliger has no relevant conflicts of interest; Dr. Ganguly has a patent for modulation of sensory inputs to improve motor recovery from stroke and has been a consultant to Cala Health.

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

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Outcomes of PF ablation for AFib similar between sexes

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 11/08/2023 - 15:37

 

TOPLINE:

There are no sex differences in the effectiveness and safety of pulsed field ablation (PFA), a novel modality that uses short, high-energy electrical pulses to treat atrial fibrillation (AFib), results of a large registry study show.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study included all 1,568 patients (mean age 64.5 years and 35.3% women) in the MANIFEST-PF registry, which includes 24 European centers that began using PFA for treating AFib after regulatory approval in 2021.
  • Researchers categorized patients by sex and evaluated them for clinical outcomes of PFA, including freedom from AFib and adverse events.
  • All patients underwent pulmonary vein isolation (Farawave, Boston Scientific) and were followed up at 3, 6, and 12 months.
  • The primary effectiveness outcome was freedom from atrial arrhythmia outside the 90-day blanking period lasting 30 seconds or longer.
  • The primary safety outcome included the composite of acute (less than 7 days post-procedure) and chronic (more than 7 days post-procedure) major adverse events, including atrioesophageal fistula, symptomatic pulmonary vein stenosis, cardiac tamponade/perforation requiring intervention or surgery, stroke or systemic thromboembolism, persistent phrenic nerve injury, vascular access complications requiring surgery, coronary artery spasm, and death.

TAKEAWAY:

  • There was no significant difference in 12-month recurrence of atrial arrhythmia between male and female patients (79.0% vs 76.3%; P = .28), with greater overall effectiveness in the paroxysmal AFib cohort (men, 82.5% vs women, 80.2%; P = .30) than in the persistent AF/long-standing persistent AFib cohort (men, 73.3% vs women, 67.3%; P = .40).
  • Repeated ablation rates were similar between sexes (men, 8.3% vs women, 10.0%; P = .32).
  • Among patients who underwent repeat ablation, pulmonary vein isolation durability was higher in female than in male patients (per vein, 82.6% vs 68.1%; P = .15 and per patient, 63.0% vs 37.8%; P = .005).
  • Major adverse events occurred in 2.5% of women and 1.5% of men (P = .19), with such events mostly consisting of cardiac tamponade (women, 1.4% vs men, 1.0%; P = .46) and stroke (0.4% vs 0.4%, P > .99), and with no atrioesophageal fistulas or symptomatic pulmonary valve stenosis in either group.

IN PRACTICE:

“These results are important, as women are underrepresented in prior ablation studies and the results have been mixed with regards to both safety and effectiveness using conventional ablation strategies such as radiofrequency or cryoablation,” lead author Mohit Turagam, MD, associate professor of medicine (cardiology), Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, said in a press release.

In an accompanying commentary, Peter M. Kistler, MBBS, PhD, Department of Cardiology, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, and a colleague said that the study authors should be congratulated “for presenting much-needed data on sex-specific outcomes in catheter ablation,” which “reassuringly” suggest that success and safety for AFib ablation are comparable between the sexes, although the study does have “important limitations.”

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Turagam and colleagues. It was published online in JAMA Cardiology.

LIMITATIONS:

Researchers can’t rule out the possibility that treatment selection and unmeasured confounders between sexes affected the validity of the study findings. The median number of follow-up 24-hour Holter monitors used for AFib monitoring was only two, which may have resulted in inaccurate estimates of AFib recurrence rates and treatment effectiveness.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Boston Scientific Corporation, the PFA device manufacturer. Turagam has no relevant conflicts of interest; see paper for disclosures of other study authors. The commentary authors have no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

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TOPLINE:

There are no sex differences in the effectiveness and safety of pulsed field ablation (PFA), a novel modality that uses short, high-energy electrical pulses to treat atrial fibrillation (AFib), results of a large registry study show.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study included all 1,568 patients (mean age 64.5 years and 35.3% women) in the MANIFEST-PF registry, which includes 24 European centers that began using PFA for treating AFib after regulatory approval in 2021.
  • Researchers categorized patients by sex and evaluated them for clinical outcomes of PFA, including freedom from AFib and adverse events.
  • All patients underwent pulmonary vein isolation (Farawave, Boston Scientific) and were followed up at 3, 6, and 12 months.
  • The primary effectiveness outcome was freedom from atrial arrhythmia outside the 90-day blanking period lasting 30 seconds or longer.
  • The primary safety outcome included the composite of acute (less than 7 days post-procedure) and chronic (more than 7 days post-procedure) major adverse events, including atrioesophageal fistula, symptomatic pulmonary vein stenosis, cardiac tamponade/perforation requiring intervention or surgery, stroke or systemic thromboembolism, persistent phrenic nerve injury, vascular access complications requiring surgery, coronary artery spasm, and death.

TAKEAWAY:

  • There was no significant difference in 12-month recurrence of atrial arrhythmia between male and female patients (79.0% vs 76.3%; P = .28), with greater overall effectiveness in the paroxysmal AFib cohort (men, 82.5% vs women, 80.2%; P = .30) than in the persistent AF/long-standing persistent AFib cohort (men, 73.3% vs women, 67.3%; P = .40).
  • Repeated ablation rates were similar between sexes (men, 8.3% vs women, 10.0%; P = .32).
  • Among patients who underwent repeat ablation, pulmonary vein isolation durability was higher in female than in male patients (per vein, 82.6% vs 68.1%; P = .15 and per patient, 63.0% vs 37.8%; P = .005).
  • Major adverse events occurred in 2.5% of women and 1.5% of men (P = .19), with such events mostly consisting of cardiac tamponade (women, 1.4% vs men, 1.0%; P = .46) and stroke (0.4% vs 0.4%, P > .99), and with no atrioesophageal fistulas or symptomatic pulmonary valve stenosis in either group.

IN PRACTICE:

“These results are important, as women are underrepresented in prior ablation studies and the results have been mixed with regards to both safety and effectiveness using conventional ablation strategies such as radiofrequency or cryoablation,” lead author Mohit Turagam, MD, associate professor of medicine (cardiology), Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, said in a press release.

In an accompanying commentary, Peter M. Kistler, MBBS, PhD, Department of Cardiology, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, and a colleague said that the study authors should be congratulated “for presenting much-needed data on sex-specific outcomes in catheter ablation,” which “reassuringly” suggest that success and safety for AFib ablation are comparable between the sexes, although the study does have “important limitations.”

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Turagam and colleagues. It was published online in JAMA Cardiology.

LIMITATIONS:

Researchers can’t rule out the possibility that treatment selection and unmeasured confounders between sexes affected the validity of the study findings. The median number of follow-up 24-hour Holter monitors used for AFib monitoring was only two, which may have resulted in inaccurate estimates of AFib recurrence rates and treatment effectiveness.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Boston Scientific Corporation, the PFA device manufacturer. Turagam has no relevant conflicts of interest; see paper for disclosures of other study authors. The commentary authors have no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

 

TOPLINE:

There are no sex differences in the effectiveness and safety of pulsed field ablation (PFA), a novel modality that uses short, high-energy electrical pulses to treat atrial fibrillation (AFib), results of a large registry study show.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study included all 1,568 patients (mean age 64.5 years and 35.3% women) in the MANIFEST-PF registry, which includes 24 European centers that began using PFA for treating AFib after regulatory approval in 2021.
  • Researchers categorized patients by sex and evaluated them for clinical outcomes of PFA, including freedom from AFib and adverse events.
  • All patients underwent pulmonary vein isolation (Farawave, Boston Scientific) and were followed up at 3, 6, and 12 months.
  • The primary effectiveness outcome was freedom from atrial arrhythmia outside the 90-day blanking period lasting 30 seconds or longer.
  • The primary safety outcome included the composite of acute (less than 7 days post-procedure) and chronic (more than 7 days post-procedure) major adverse events, including atrioesophageal fistula, symptomatic pulmonary vein stenosis, cardiac tamponade/perforation requiring intervention or surgery, stroke or systemic thromboembolism, persistent phrenic nerve injury, vascular access complications requiring surgery, coronary artery spasm, and death.

TAKEAWAY:

  • There was no significant difference in 12-month recurrence of atrial arrhythmia between male and female patients (79.0% vs 76.3%; P = .28), with greater overall effectiveness in the paroxysmal AFib cohort (men, 82.5% vs women, 80.2%; P = .30) than in the persistent AF/long-standing persistent AFib cohort (men, 73.3% vs women, 67.3%; P = .40).
  • Repeated ablation rates were similar between sexes (men, 8.3% vs women, 10.0%; P = .32).
  • Among patients who underwent repeat ablation, pulmonary vein isolation durability was higher in female than in male patients (per vein, 82.6% vs 68.1%; P = .15 and per patient, 63.0% vs 37.8%; P = .005).
  • Major adverse events occurred in 2.5% of women and 1.5% of men (P = .19), with such events mostly consisting of cardiac tamponade (women, 1.4% vs men, 1.0%; P = .46) and stroke (0.4% vs 0.4%, P > .99), and with no atrioesophageal fistulas or symptomatic pulmonary valve stenosis in either group.

IN PRACTICE:

“These results are important, as women are underrepresented in prior ablation studies and the results have been mixed with regards to both safety and effectiveness using conventional ablation strategies such as radiofrequency or cryoablation,” lead author Mohit Turagam, MD, associate professor of medicine (cardiology), Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, said in a press release.

In an accompanying commentary, Peter M. Kistler, MBBS, PhD, Department of Cardiology, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, and a colleague said that the study authors should be congratulated “for presenting much-needed data on sex-specific outcomes in catheter ablation,” which “reassuringly” suggest that success and safety for AFib ablation are comparable between the sexes, although the study does have “important limitations.”

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Turagam and colleagues. It was published online in JAMA Cardiology.

LIMITATIONS:

Researchers can’t rule out the possibility that treatment selection and unmeasured confounders between sexes affected the validity of the study findings. The median number of follow-up 24-hour Holter monitors used for AFib monitoring was only two, which may have resulted in inaccurate estimates of AFib recurrence rates and treatment effectiveness.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by Boston Scientific Corporation, the PFA device manufacturer. Turagam has no relevant conflicts of interest; see paper for disclosures of other study authors. The commentary authors have no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

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Stroke patients benefit from neurologic music therapy

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 11/08/2023 - 15:05

Neurologic music therapy (NMT), a specially designed intervention targeting movement, balance, and cognitive functioning, improves depressive symptoms and increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), early results of a small study suggest.

“We’re really happy with the results,” said lead study author psychotherapist Honey Bryant, a PhD candidate and research assistant at the Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ont.

“We showed neurologic music therapy improves mental health and increases neuroplasticity, when used in conjunction with stroke rehabilitation.

The findings were presented at the virtual XXVI World Congress of Neurology.
 

Moving with music

With improved stroke survival rates and longer life expectancy, there’s an increasing need for effective post-stroke interventions for neurocognitive impairments and mood disorders, the authors noted.

NMT is an evidence-based treatment system that uses elements of music such as rhythm, melody, and tempo to treat various brain conditions. A trained NMT therapist uses standardized techniques to address goals in the areas of speech, movement, and cognition.

The intervention is not new – it’s been around for a few decades – but there are “minimal papers on NMT and nothing on stroke rehabilitation used in the way we did it,” said Ms. Bryant.

The study included 57 patients, mean age 75 years, receiving rehabilitation following a stroke who were randomly assigned to NMT or passive music listening.

In the NMT group, a music therapist asked participants to choose music beforehand and integrated this into each session.

“Each day was different,” said Ms. Bryant. “For example, if it involved motor movement, the music therapist would say, ‘When I sing this word, raise your arm up.’ For Johnny Cash’s ‘Ring of Fire,’ we made our arms into a circle.”

She explained that the rhythm and timing of the music can affect the motor system and other areas of the brain.

Those in the passive music group listened to a curated list of calming classical and relaxing spa music.

Both groups were offered five 45-minute sessions per week for 2 weeks.

Among other things, researchers used the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), administered a semistructured interview, and collected blood samples to determine levels of cortisol and BDNF.

After the 2-week intervention, the researchers found participants in the NMT group had a significant mean decrease in depression.

They also had increased cortisol levels, which is not unexpected after a stroke, especially with increased anxiety linked to financial and other stressors, said Ms. Bryant, adding these levels should decrease with treatment.

Recipients of the NMT had significant increases in BDNF, a neurotrophin that plays an important role in neuronal survival and growth, but only in those who attended several consecutive sessions.
 

Increased plasticity

“We see greater increases in plasticity when the therapy is used intensively, meaning at least four treatments consecutively,” said Ms. Bryant. Participants in the NMT group also reported they “overall felt well,” she added.

She noted NMT can be tailored to individual deficit, “so you can make it solely for motor movement or you can make it solely for language.”

Next steps could include more closely targeting the music to individual preferences and investigating whether the benefits of the intervention extend to other types of brain injury, for example traumatic brain injury, which typically affects younger people, said Ms. Bryant.

“In this study, participants were older and there was an unknown; a lot of them were going back into the community but didn’t know if it was into a retirement home or long-term care.”

It’s unclear if the benefits are sustained after the intervention stops, she said.

There are also the issues of cost and accessibility; in Kingston, there are few music therapists certified in the area of NMT.

Ms. Bryant hopes NMT is eventually included in stroke rehabilitation. “Stroke therapy is typically very intensive on its own; you’re doing it every single day for about a month or 6 weeks,” she said. “It would be interesting to see whether we would see a shorter hospital stay if this is included in stroke rehab.”

Asked to comment, Michael H. Thaut, PhD, professor, faculty of music and faculty of medicine, and Canada research chair in music, neuroscience and health at the University of Toronto, said while these data are preliminary, “they do extend the benefits of NMT in stroke rehabilitation, especially measuring BDNF in addition to having behavioral data.”

However, it’s “unfortunate” the poster didn’t specify which cognitive intervention techniques were used in the study, said Dr. Thaut. “There are nine coded techniques in NMT, including for attention, memory, psychosocial function, and executive function.”

His own study, published in NeuroRehabilitation, focused on training for motor goals in stroke patients. It showed that NMT benefited cognitive functioning and affective responses.

The study was funded by a Queen’s University Research Initiation Grant. Ms. Bryant and Dr. Thaut have not disclosed any relevant financial relationships.

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

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Neurologic music therapy (NMT), a specially designed intervention targeting movement, balance, and cognitive functioning, improves depressive symptoms and increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), early results of a small study suggest.

“We’re really happy with the results,” said lead study author psychotherapist Honey Bryant, a PhD candidate and research assistant at the Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ont.

“We showed neurologic music therapy improves mental health and increases neuroplasticity, when used in conjunction with stroke rehabilitation.

The findings were presented at the virtual XXVI World Congress of Neurology.
 

Moving with music

With improved stroke survival rates and longer life expectancy, there’s an increasing need for effective post-stroke interventions for neurocognitive impairments and mood disorders, the authors noted.

NMT is an evidence-based treatment system that uses elements of music such as rhythm, melody, and tempo to treat various brain conditions. A trained NMT therapist uses standardized techniques to address goals in the areas of speech, movement, and cognition.

The intervention is not new – it’s been around for a few decades – but there are “minimal papers on NMT and nothing on stroke rehabilitation used in the way we did it,” said Ms. Bryant.

The study included 57 patients, mean age 75 years, receiving rehabilitation following a stroke who were randomly assigned to NMT or passive music listening.

In the NMT group, a music therapist asked participants to choose music beforehand and integrated this into each session.

“Each day was different,” said Ms. Bryant. “For example, if it involved motor movement, the music therapist would say, ‘When I sing this word, raise your arm up.’ For Johnny Cash’s ‘Ring of Fire,’ we made our arms into a circle.”

She explained that the rhythm and timing of the music can affect the motor system and other areas of the brain.

Those in the passive music group listened to a curated list of calming classical and relaxing spa music.

Both groups were offered five 45-minute sessions per week for 2 weeks.

Among other things, researchers used the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), administered a semistructured interview, and collected blood samples to determine levels of cortisol and BDNF.

After the 2-week intervention, the researchers found participants in the NMT group had a significant mean decrease in depression.

They also had increased cortisol levels, which is not unexpected after a stroke, especially with increased anxiety linked to financial and other stressors, said Ms. Bryant, adding these levels should decrease with treatment.

Recipients of the NMT had significant increases in BDNF, a neurotrophin that plays an important role in neuronal survival and growth, but only in those who attended several consecutive sessions.
 

Increased plasticity

“We see greater increases in plasticity when the therapy is used intensively, meaning at least four treatments consecutively,” said Ms. Bryant. Participants in the NMT group also reported they “overall felt well,” she added.

She noted NMT can be tailored to individual deficit, “so you can make it solely for motor movement or you can make it solely for language.”

Next steps could include more closely targeting the music to individual preferences and investigating whether the benefits of the intervention extend to other types of brain injury, for example traumatic brain injury, which typically affects younger people, said Ms. Bryant.

“In this study, participants were older and there was an unknown; a lot of them were going back into the community but didn’t know if it was into a retirement home or long-term care.”

It’s unclear if the benefits are sustained after the intervention stops, she said.

There are also the issues of cost and accessibility; in Kingston, there are few music therapists certified in the area of NMT.

Ms. Bryant hopes NMT is eventually included in stroke rehabilitation. “Stroke therapy is typically very intensive on its own; you’re doing it every single day for about a month or 6 weeks,” she said. “It would be interesting to see whether we would see a shorter hospital stay if this is included in stroke rehab.”

Asked to comment, Michael H. Thaut, PhD, professor, faculty of music and faculty of medicine, and Canada research chair in music, neuroscience and health at the University of Toronto, said while these data are preliminary, “they do extend the benefits of NMT in stroke rehabilitation, especially measuring BDNF in addition to having behavioral data.”

However, it’s “unfortunate” the poster didn’t specify which cognitive intervention techniques were used in the study, said Dr. Thaut. “There are nine coded techniques in NMT, including for attention, memory, psychosocial function, and executive function.”

His own study, published in NeuroRehabilitation, focused on training for motor goals in stroke patients. It showed that NMT benefited cognitive functioning and affective responses.

The study was funded by a Queen’s University Research Initiation Grant. Ms. Bryant and Dr. Thaut have not disclosed any relevant financial relationships.

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

Neurologic music therapy (NMT), a specially designed intervention targeting movement, balance, and cognitive functioning, improves depressive symptoms and increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), early results of a small study suggest.

“We’re really happy with the results,” said lead study author psychotherapist Honey Bryant, a PhD candidate and research assistant at the Centre for Neuroscience Studies, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ont.

“We showed neurologic music therapy improves mental health and increases neuroplasticity, when used in conjunction with stroke rehabilitation.

The findings were presented at the virtual XXVI World Congress of Neurology.
 

Moving with music

With improved stroke survival rates and longer life expectancy, there’s an increasing need for effective post-stroke interventions for neurocognitive impairments and mood disorders, the authors noted.

NMT is an evidence-based treatment system that uses elements of music such as rhythm, melody, and tempo to treat various brain conditions. A trained NMT therapist uses standardized techniques to address goals in the areas of speech, movement, and cognition.

The intervention is not new – it’s been around for a few decades – but there are “minimal papers on NMT and nothing on stroke rehabilitation used in the way we did it,” said Ms. Bryant.

The study included 57 patients, mean age 75 years, receiving rehabilitation following a stroke who were randomly assigned to NMT or passive music listening.

In the NMT group, a music therapist asked participants to choose music beforehand and integrated this into each session.

“Each day was different,” said Ms. Bryant. “For example, if it involved motor movement, the music therapist would say, ‘When I sing this word, raise your arm up.’ For Johnny Cash’s ‘Ring of Fire,’ we made our arms into a circle.”

She explained that the rhythm and timing of the music can affect the motor system and other areas of the brain.

Those in the passive music group listened to a curated list of calming classical and relaxing spa music.

Both groups were offered five 45-minute sessions per week for 2 weeks.

Among other things, researchers used the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), administered a semistructured interview, and collected blood samples to determine levels of cortisol and BDNF.

After the 2-week intervention, the researchers found participants in the NMT group had a significant mean decrease in depression.

They also had increased cortisol levels, which is not unexpected after a stroke, especially with increased anxiety linked to financial and other stressors, said Ms. Bryant, adding these levels should decrease with treatment.

Recipients of the NMT had significant increases in BDNF, a neurotrophin that plays an important role in neuronal survival and growth, but only in those who attended several consecutive sessions.
 

Increased plasticity

“We see greater increases in plasticity when the therapy is used intensively, meaning at least four treatments consecutively,” said Ms. Bryant. Participants in the NMT group also reported they “overall felt well,” she added.

She noted NMT can be tailored to individual deficit, “so you can make it solely for motor movement or you can make it solely for language.”

Next steps could include more closely targeting the music to individual preferences and investigating whether the benefits of the intervention extend to other types of brain injury, for example traumatic brain injury, which typically affects younger people, said Ms. Bryant.

“In this study, participants were older and there was an unknown; a lot of them were going back into the community but didn’t know if it was into a retirement home or long-term care.”

It’s unclear if the benefits are sustained after the intervention stops, she said.

There are also the issues of cost and accessibility; in Kingston, there are few music therapists certified in the area of NMT.

Ms. Bryant hopes NMT is eventually included in stroke rehabilitation. “Stroke therapy is typically very intensive on its own; you’re doing it every single day for about a month or 6 weeks,” she said. “It would be interesting to see whether we would see a shorter hospital stay if this is included in stroke rehab.”

Asked to comment, Michael H. Thaut, PhD, professor, faculty of music and faculty of medicine, and Canada research chair in music, neuroscience and health at the University of Toronto, said while these data are preliminary, “they do extend the benefits of NMT in stroke rehabilitation, especially measuring BDNF in addition to having behavioral data.”

However, it’s “unfortunate” the poster didn’t specify which cognitive intervention techniques were used in the study, said Dr. Thaut. “There are nine coded techniques in NMT, including for attention, memory, psychosocial function, and executive function.”

His own study, published in NeuroRehabilitation, focused on training for motor goals in stroke patients. It showed that NMT benefited cognitive functioning and affective responses.

The study was funded by a Queen’s University Research Initiation Grant. Ms. Bryant and Dr. Thaut have not disclosed any relevant financial relationships.

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

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Five hours or less of sleep per night tied to subsequent depression

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 11/07/2023 - 12:08

 

TOPLINE:

A genetic predisposition to sleep 5 or fewer hours per night is associated with a significantly higher risk for subsequent depression. However, a genetic propensity to depression is not associated with suboptimal sleep patterns later on, new research shows.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The analysis included participants in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), a prospective cohort study of a representative U.K. sample (mean age, 65 years) that is assessed biennially.
  • Researchers collected data on sleep duration and depression through nursing home visits and computer-assisted personal interviews and used combined ELSA waves from 2004 to 2008, when collection of genetic data began.
  • Using genome-wide association studies from the U.K. Biobank, the authors constructed polygenic scores (PGSs) to predict an individual’s genetic risk over an average of 8 years for a disease or outcome, overall sleep duration, short sleep (≤ 5 hours nightly), long sleep (≥ 9 hours of sleep nightly), and depression.
  • The analysis included two analytic samples; one involved 6,521 persons to determine the role of baseline sleep on depression (assessed using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale) at follow-up, and the other involved 6,070 persons to determine the role of baseline depression on suboptimal sleep at follow-up.

TAKEAWAY:

  • After adjustments, including for age and sex, a 1–standard deviation increase in PGS for short sleep was associated with an increase of 14% in odds of developing depression during the follow-up period (odds ratio, 1.14; P = .008).
  • There was no significant association of the PGS for sleep duration (P = .053) or long sleep (P = .544) with the onset of depression.
  • There were no significant associations between PGS for depression and future overall sleep duration, short sleep, and long sleep by the end of the follow-up, suggesting that different mechanisms underlie the relationship between depression and subsequent onset of suboptimal sleep in older adults.
  • Several sensitivity analyses – including additional adjustment for socioeconomic, environmental, and behavioral factors – upheld the findings of the main analysis, highlighting the robustness of the results.

IN PRACTICE:

The study showed that common genetic markers for short sleep play an important role in the incidence of depression in older adults, the authors note, adding that the new findings “support a growing view that short-sleep is more salient to the experience of depression than long sleep” across the lifespan.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Odessa S. Hamilton, department of behavioral science and health, University College London. It was published online  in Translational Psychiatry.

LIMITATIONS:

There are probably intraindividual differences in sleep duration that were not assessed in the study. The depression scale used may be indicative of subclinical depression and not major depressive disorder. The phenotypic sensitivity analyses did not account for comorbidities or medications that can affect sleep duration and depression.

DISCLOSURES:

ELSA is funded by the National Institute on Aging and by a consortium of U.K. government departments coordinated by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. The authors report no relevant conflicts of interests.

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

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TOPLINE:

A genetic predisposition to sleep 5 or fewer hours per night is associated with a significantly higher risk for subsequent depression. However, a genetic propensity to depression is not associated with suboptimal sleep patterns later on, new research shows.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The analysis included participants in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), a prospective cohort study of a representative U.K. sample (mean age, 65 years) that is assessed biennially.
  • Researchers collected data on sleep duration and depression through nursing home visits and computer-assisted personal interviews and used combined ELSA waves from 2004 to 2008, when collection of genetic data began.
  • Using genome-wide association studies from the U.K. Biobank, the authors constructed polygenic scores (PGSs) to predict an individual’s genetic risk over an average of 8 years for a disease or outcome, overall sleep duration, short sleep (≤ 5 hours nightly), long sleep (≥ 9 hours of sleep nightly), and depression.
  • The analysis included two analytic samples; one involved 6,521 persons to determine the role of baseline sleep on depression (assessed using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale) at follow-up, and the other involved 6,070 persons to determine the role of baseline depression on suboptimal sleep at follow-up.

TAKEAWAY:

  • After adjustments, including for age and sex, a 1–standard deviation increase in PGS for short sleep was associated with an increase of 14% in odds of developing depression during the follow-up period (odds ratio, 1.14; P = .008).
  • There was no significant association of the PGS for sleep duration (P = .053) or long sleep (P = .544) with the onset of depression.
  • There were no significant associations between PGS for depression and future overall sleep duration, short sleep, and long sleep by the end of the follow-up, suggesting that different mechanisms underlie the relationship between depression and subsequent onset of suboptimal sleep in older adults.
  • Several sensitivity analyses – including additional adjustment for socioeconomic, environmental, and behavioral factors – upheld the findings of the main analysis, highlighting the robustness of the results.

IN PRACTICE:

The study showed that common genetic markers for short sleep play an important role in the incidence of depression in older adults, the authors note, adding that the new findings “support a growing view that short-sleep is more salient to the experience of depression than long sleep” across the lifespan.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Odessa S. Hamilton, department of behavioral science and health, University College London. It was published online  in Translational Psychiatry.

LIMITATIONS:

There are probably intraindividual differences in sleep duration that were not assessed in the study. The depression scale used may be indicative of subclinical depression and not major depressive disorder. The phenotypic sensitivity analyses did not account for comorbidities or medications that can affect sleep duration and depression.

DISCLOSURES:

ELSA is funded by the National Institute on Aging and by a consortium of U.K. government departments coordinated by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. The authors report no relevant conflicts of interests.

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

 

TOPLINE:

A genetic predisposition to sleep 5 or fewer hours per night is associated with a significantly higher risk for subsequent depression. However, a genetic propensity to depression is not associated with suboptimal sleep patterns later on, new research shows.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The analysis included participants in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), a prospective cohort study of a representative U.K. sample (mean age, 65 years) that is assessed biennially.
  • Researchers collected data on sleep duration and depression through nursing home visits and computer-assisted personal interviews and used combined ELSA waves from 2004 to 2008, when collection of genetic data began.
  • Using genome-wide association studies from the U.K. Biobank, the authors constructed polygenic scores (PGSs) to predict an individual’s genetic risk over an average of 8 years for a disease or outcome, overall sleep duration, short sleep (≤ 5 hours nightly), long sleep (≥ 9 hours of sleep nightly), and depression.
  • The analysis included two analytic samples; one involved 6,521 persons to determine the role of baseline sleep on depression (assessed using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale) at follow-up, and the other involved 6,070 persons to determine the role of baseline depression on suboptimal sleep at follow-up.

TAKEAWAY:

  • After adjustments, including for age and sex, a 1–standard deviation increase in PGS for short sleep was associated with an increase of 14% in odds of developing depression during the follow-up period (odds ratio, 1.14; P = .008).
  • There was no significant association of the PGS for sleep duration (P = .053) or long sleep (P = .544) with the onset of depression.
  • There were no significant associations between PGS for depression and future overall sleep duration, short sleep, and long sleep by the end of the follow-up, suggesting that different mechanisms underlie the relationship between depression and subsequent onset of suboptimal sleep in older adults.
  • Several sensitivity analyses – including additional adjustment for socioeconomic, environmental, and behavioral factors – upheld the findings of the main analysis, highlighting the robustness of the results.

IN PRACTICE:

The study showed that common genetic markers for short sleep play an important role in the incidence of depression in older adults, the authors note, adding that the new findings “support a growing view that short-sleep is more salient to the experience of depression than long sleep” across the lifespan.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Odessa S. Hamilton, department of behavioral science and health, University College London. It was published online  in Translational Psychiatry.

LIMITATIONS:

There are probably intraindividual differences in sleep duration that were not assessed in the study. The depression scale used may be indicative of subclinical depression and not major depressive disorder. The phenotypic sensitivity analyses did not account for comorbidities or medications that can affect sleep duration and depression.

DISCLOSURES:

ELSA is funded by the National Institute on Aging and by a consortium of U.K. government departments coordinated by the National Institute for Health and Care Research. The authors report no relevant conflicts of interests.

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

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Black psychiatric inpatients more likely to be restrained and for longer

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 11/07/2023 - 11:10

 

TOPLINE:

Black psychiatric inpatients are 85% more likely to be restrained with a physical or mechanical hold or with medication than White patients, and often for longer periods, new research suggests.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study, part of a larger retrospective chart review of inpatient psychiatric electronic medical records (EMRs), included 29,739 adolescents (aged 12-17 years) and adults admitted because of severe and disruptive psychiatric illness or concerns about self-harm.
  • A restraint event was defined as a physician-ordered physical or mechanical hold in which patients are unable to move their limbs, body, or head or are given medication to restrict their movement.
  • Researchers used scores on the Dynamic Appraisal of Situational Aggression (DASA) at admission to assess risk for aggression among high-risk psychiatric inpatients (scores ranged from a low of 0 to a high of 7).
  • From restraint event data extracted from the EMR, researchers investigated whether restraint frequency or duration was affected by “adultification,” a form of racial bias in which adolescents are perceived as being older than their actual age and are treated accordingly.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Of the entire cohort, 1867 (6.3%) experienced a restraint event, and 27,872 (93.7%) did not.
  • Compared with White patients, restraint was 85% more likely among Black patients (adjusted odds ratio, 1.85; P < .001) and 36% more likely among multiracial patients (aOR, 1.36; P = .006), which researchers suggest may reflect systemic racism within psychiatry and medicine, as well as an implicit or learned perception that people of color are more aggressive and dangerous.
  • Lower DASA score at admission (P = .001), shorter length of stay (P < .001), adult age (P = .001), female sex (P = .042), and Black race, compared with White race (P = .001), were significantly associated with longer restraint duration, which may serve as a proxy for psychiatric symptom severity.
  • Neither age group alone (adolescent or adult) nor the interaction of race and age group was significantly associated with experiencing a restraint event, suggesting no evidence of “adultification.”

IN PRACTICE:

It’s important to raise awareness about racial differences in restraint events in inpatient psychiatric settings, the authors write, adding that addressing overcrowding and investing in bias assessment and restraint education may reduce bias in the care of agitated patients and the use of restraints.

SOURCE:

The study was carried out by Sonali Singal, BS, Institute of Behavioral Science, Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, Manhasset, N.Y., and colleagues. It was published online  in Psychiatric Services.

LIMITATIONS:

The variables analyzed in the study were limited by the retrospective chart review and by the available EMR data, which may have contained entry errors. Although the investigators used DASA scores to control for differences in aggression, they could not control for symptom severity. The study could not examine the impact of race on seclusion (involuntary confinement), a variable often examined in tandem with restraint, because there were too few such events. The analysis also did not control for substance use disorder, which can influence a patient’s behavior and be related to restraint use.

DISCLOSURES:

Ms. Singal reported no relevant financial relationships. The original article has disclosures of other authors.

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

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TOPLINE:

Black psychiatric inpatients are 85% more likely to be restrained with a physical or mechanical hold or with medication than White patients, and often for longer periods, new research suggests.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study, part of a larger retrospective chart review of inpatient psychiatric electronic medical records (EMRs), included 29,739 adolescents (aged 12-17 years) and adults admitted because of severe and disruptive psychiatric illness or concerns about self-harm.
  • A restraint event was defined as a physician-ordered physical or mechanical hold in which patients are unable to move their limbs, body, or head or are given medication to restrict their movement.
  • Researchers used scores on the Dynamic Appraisal of Situational Aggression (DASA) at admission to assess risk for aggression among high-risk psychiatric inpatients (scores ranged from a low of 0 to a high of 7).
  • From restraint event data extracted from the EMR, researchers investigated whether restraint frequency or duration was affected by “adultification,” a form of racial bias in which adolescents are perceived as being older than their actual age and are treated accordingly.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Of the entire cohort, 1867 (6.3%) experienced a restraint event, and 27,872 (93.7%) did not.
  • Compared with White patients, restraint was 85% more likely among Black patients (adjusted odds ratio, 1.85; P < .001) and 36% more likely among multiracial patients (aOR, 1.36; P = .006), which researchers suggest may reflect systemic racism within psychiatry and medicine, as well as an implicit or learned perception that people of color are more aggressive and dangerous.
  • Lower DASA score at admission (P = .001), shorter length of stay (P < .001), adult age (P = .001), female sex (P = .042), and Black race, compared with White race (P = .001), were significantly associated with longer restraint duration, which may serve as a proxy for psychiatric symptom severity.
  • Neither age group alone (adolescent or adult) nor the interaction of race and age group was significantly associated with experiencing a restraint event, suggesting no evidence of “adultification.”

IN PRACTICE:

It’s important to raise awareness about racial differences in restraint events in inpatient psychiatric settings, the authors write, adding that addressing overcrowding and investing in bias assessment and restraint education may reduce bias in the care of agitated patients and the use of restraints.

SOURCE:

The study was carried out by Sonali Singal, BS, Institute of Behavioral Science, Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, Manhasset, N.Y., and colleagues. It was published online  in Psychiatric Services.

LIMITATIONS:

The variables analyzed in the study were limited by the retrospective chart review and by the available EMR data, which may have contained entry errors. Although the investigators used DASA scores to control for differences in aggression, they could not control for symptom severity. The study could not examine the impact of race on seclusion (involuntary confinement), a variable often examined in tandem with restraint, because there were too few such events. The analysis also did not control for substance use disorder, which can influence a patient’s behavior and be related to restraint use.

DISCLOSURES:

Ms. Singal reported no relevant financial relationships. The original article has disclosures of other authors.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Black psychiatric inpatients are 85% more likely to be restrained with a physical or mechanical hold or with medication than White patients, and often for longer periods, new research suggests.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study, part of a larger retrospective chart review of inpatient psychiatric electronic medical records (EMRs), included 29,739 adolescents (aged 12-17 years) and adults admitted because of severe and disruptive psychiatric illness or concerns about self-harm.
  • A restraint event was defined as a physician-ordered physical or mechanical hold in which patients are unable to move their limbs, body, or head or are given medication to restrict their movement.
  • Researchers used scores on the Dynamic Appraisal of Situational Aggression (DASA) at admission to assess risk for aggression among high-risk psychiatric inpatients (scores ranged from a low of 0 to a high of 7).
  • From restraint event data extracted from the EMR, researchers investigated whether restraint frequency or duration was affected by “adultification,” a form of racial bias in which adolescents are perceived as being older than their actual age and are treated accordingly.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Of the entire cohort, 1867 (6.3%) experienced a restraint event, and 27,872 (93.7%) did not.
  • Compared with White patients, restraint was 85% more likely among Black patients (adjusted odds ratio, 1.85; P < .001) and 36% more likely among multiracial patients (aOR, 1.36; P = .006), which researchers suggest may reflect systemic racism within psychiatry and medicine, as well as an implicit or learned perception that people of color are more aggressive and dangerous.
  • Lower DASA score at admission (P = .001), shorter length of stay (P < .001), adult age (P = .001), female sex (P = .042), and Black race, compared with White race (P = .001), were significantly associated with longer restraint duration, which may serve as a proxy for psychiatric symptom severity.
  • Neither age group alone (adolescent or adult) nor the interaction of race and age group was significantly associated with experiencing a restraint event, suggesting no evidence of “adultification.”

IN PRACTICE:

It’s important to raise awareness about racial differences in restraint events in inpatient psychiatric settings, the authors write, adding that addressing overcrowding and investing in bias assessment and restraint education may reduce bias in the care of agitated patients and the use of restraints.

SOURCE:

The study was carried out by Sonali Singal, BS, Institute of Behavioral Science, Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, Manhasset, N.Y., and colleagues. It was published online  in Psychiatric Services.

LIMITATIONS:

The variables analyzed in the study were limited by the retrospective chart review and by the available EMR data, which may have contained entry errors. Although the investigators used DASA scores to control for differences in aggression, they could not control for symptom severity. The study could not examine the impact of race on seclusion (involuntary confinement), a variable often examined in tandem with restraint, because there were too few such events. The analysis also did not control for substance use disorder, which can influence a patient’s behavior and be related to restraint use.

DISCLOSURES:

Ms. Singal reported no relevant financial relationships. The original article has disclosures of other authors.

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

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Gaps persist in awareness, treatment of high LDL cholesterol

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 11/06/2023 - 15:11

 

TOPLINE:

The prevalence of elevated LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) has declined over the past 2 decades, but 1 in 17 Americans still have a level of 160-189 mg/dL, and 1 in 48 have a level of at least 190 mg/dL, new research shows. Among people with the higher LDL-C level, one in four are both unaware and untreated, the authors report.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Using data on 23,667 adult participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey conducted from 1999 to 2020, researchers identified 1,851 (7.8%) with an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL and 669 (2.8%) with an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL.
  • Individuals were classified as “unaware” if they had never had their LDL-C measured or had never been informed of having elevated LDL-C and as “untreated” if their medications didn’t include a statin, ezetimibe, a bile acid sequestrant, or a proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 inhibitor.
  • The authors compared the prevalence of “unaware” and “untreated” by age, sex, race and ethnicity, educational attainment, poverty index, and insurance status.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During the study period, the age-adjusted prevalence of an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL declined from 12.4% (95% confidence interval, 10.0%-15.3%), representing 21.5 million U.S. adults, to 6.1% (95% CI, 4.8%-7.6%), representing 14.0 million adults (P < .001).
  • The age-adjusted prevalence of an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL declined from 3.8% (95% CI, 2.8%-5.2%), representing 6.6 million adults, to 2.1% (95% CI, 1.4%-3.0%), representing 4.8 million adults (P = .001).
  • Among those with an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL, the proportion of who were unaware and untreated declined from 52.1% to 42.7%, and among those with an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL, it declined from 40.8% to 26.8%.
  • Being unaware and untreated was more common in younger adults, men, racial and ethnic minority groups, those with lower educational attainment, those with lower income, and those without health insurance.

IN PRACTICE:

The lack of awareness and treatment of high LDL-C uncovered by the study “may be due to difficulties accessing primary care, low rates of screening in primary care, lack of consensus on screening recommendations, insufficient emphasis on LDL-C as a quality measure, and hesitance to treat asymptomatic individuals,” the authors concluded.

SOURCE:

The research was led by Ahmed Sayed, MBBS, faculty of medicine, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt. It was published online in JAMA Cardiology.

LIMITATIONS:

The analysis was limited by a small number of participants with LDL-C levels of at least 190 mg/dL, possible nonresponse bias, and dependency on participant recall of whether LDL-C was previously measured. The inclusion of pregnant women may have influenced LDL-C levels.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Sayed has no relevant conflict of interest. The disclosures of the other authors are listed in the original publication.

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

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TOPLINE:

The prevalence of elevated LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) has declined over the past 2 decades, but 1 in 17 Americans still have a level of 160-189 mg/dL, and 1 in 48 have a level of at least 190 mg/dL, new research shows. Among people with the higher LDL-C level, one in four are both unaware and untreated, the authors report.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Using data on 23,667 adult participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey conducted from 1999 to 2020, researchers identified 1,851 (7.8%) with an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL and 669 (2.8%) with an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL.
  • Individuals were classified as “unaware” if they had never had their LDL-C measured or had never been informed of having elevated LDL-C and as “untreated” if their medications didn’t include a statin, ezetimibe, a bile acid sequestrant, or a proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 inhibitor.
  • The authors compared the prevalence of “unaware” and “untreated” by age, sex, race and ethnicity, educational attainment, poverty index, and insurance status.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During the study period, the age-adjusted prevalence of an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL declined from 12.4% (95% confidence interval, 10.0%-15.3%), representing 21.5 million U.S. adults, to 6.1% (95% CI, 4.8%-7.6%), representing 14.0 million adults (P < .001).
  • The age-adjusted prevalence of an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL declined from 3.8% (95% CI, 2.8%-5.2%), representing 6.6 million adults, to 2.1% (95% CI, 1.4%-3.0%), representing 4.8 million adults (P = .001).
  • Among those with an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL, the proportion of who were unaware and untreated declined from 52.1% to 42.7%, and among those with an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL, it declined from 40.8% to 26.8%.
  • Being unaware and untreated was more common in younger adults, men, racial and ethnic minority groups, those with lower educational attainment, those with lower income, and those without health insurance.

IN PRACTICE:

The lack of awareness and treatment of high LDL-C uncovered by the study “may be due to difficulties accessing primary care, low rates of screening in primary care, lack of consensus on screening recommendations, insufficient emphasis on LDL-C as a quality measure, and hesitance to treat asymptomatic individuals,” the authors concluded.

SOURCE:

The research was led by Ahmed Sayed, MBBS, faculty of medicine, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt. It was published online in JAMA Cardiology.

LIMITATIONS:

The analysis was limited by a small number of participants with LDL-C levels of at least 190 mg/dL, possible nonresponse bias, and dependency on participant recall of whether LDL-C was previously measured. The inclusion of pregnant women may have influenced LDL-C levels.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Sayed has no relevant conflict of interest. The disclosures of the other authors are listed in the original publication.

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

 

TOPLINE:

The prevalence of elevated LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) has declined over the past 2 decades, but 1 in 17 Americans still have a level of 160-189 mg/dL, and 1 in 48 have a level of at least 190 mg/dL, new research shows. Among people with the higher LDL-C level, one in four are both unaware and untreated, the authors report.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Using data on 23,667 adult participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey conducted from 1999 to 2020, researchers identified 1,851 (7.8%) with an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL and 669 (2.8%) with an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL.
  • Individuals were classified as “unaware” if they had never had their LDL-C measured or had never been informed of having elevated LDL-C and as “untreated” if their medications didn’t include a statin, ezetimibe, a bile acid sequestrant, or a proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 inhibitor.
  • The authors compared the prevalence of “unaware” and “untreated” by age, sex, race and ethnicity, educational attainment, poverty index, and insurance status.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During the study period, the age-adjusted prevalence of an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL declined from 12.4% (95% confidence interval, 10.0%-15.3%), representing 21.5 million U.S. adults, to 6.1% (95% CI, 4.8%-7.6%), representing 14.0 million adults (P < .001).
  • The age-adjusted prevalence of an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL declined from 3.8% (95% CI, 2.8%-5.2%), representing 6.6 million adults, to 2.1% (95% CI, 1.4%-3.0%), representing 4.8 million adults (P = .001).
  • Among those with an LDL-C level of 160-189 mg/dL, the proportion of who were unaware and untreated declined from 52.1% to 42.7%, and among those with an LDL-C level of at least 190 mg/dL, it declined from 40.8% to 26.8%.
  • Being unaware and untreated was more common in younger adults, men, racial and ethnic minority groups, those with lower educational attainment, those with lower income, and those without health insurance.

IN PRACTICE:

The lack of awareness and treatment of high LDL-C uncovered by the study “may be due to difficulties accessing primary care, low rates of screening in primary care, lack of consensus on screening recommendations, insufficient emphasis on LDL-C as a quality measure, and hesitance to treat asymptomatic individuals,” the authors concluded.

SOURCE:

The research was led by Ahmed Sayed, MBBS, faculty of medicine, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt. It was published online in JAMA Cardiology.

LIMITATIONS:

The analysis was limited by a small number of participants with LDL-C levels of at least 190 mg/dL, possible nonresponse bias, and dependency on participant recall of whether LDL-C was previously measured. The inclusion of pregnant women may have influenced LDL-C levels.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Sayed has no relevant conflict of interest. The disclosures of the other authors are listed in the original publication.

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

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AF tied to 45% increase in mild cognitive impairment

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 11/06/2023 - 09:46

 

TOPLINE:

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with a 45% increased risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), an outcome that’s linked to cardiovascular risk factors and multi-comorbidity, results of a new study suggest.

METHODOLOGY:

  • From over 4.3 million people in the UK primary electronic health record (EHR) database, researchers identified 233,833 (5.4%) with AF (mean age, 74.2 years) and randomly selected one age- and sex-matched control person without AF for each AF case patient.
  • The primary outcome was incidence of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).
  • The authors adjusted for age, sex, year at study entry, socioeconomic status, smoking, and a number of comorbid conditions.
  • During a median of 5.3 years of follow-up, there were 4,269 incident MCI cases among both AF and non-AF patients.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Individuals with AF had a higher risk of MCI than that of those without AF (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.45; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.35-1.56).
  • Besides AF, older age (risk ratio [RR], 1.08) and history of depression (RR, 1.44) were associated with greater risk of MCI, as were female sex, greater socioeconomic deprivation, stroke, and multimorbidity, including, for example, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, and peripheral artery disease (all P < .001).
  • Individuals with AF who received oral anticoagulants or amiodarone were not at increased risk of MCI, as was the case for those treated with digoxin.
  • Individuals with AF and MCI were at greater risk of dementia (aHR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.09-1.42). Sex, smoking, chronic kidney disease, and multi-comorbidity were among factors linked to elevated dementia risk.

IN PRACTICE:

The findings emphasize the association of multi-comorbidity and cardiovascular risk factors with development of MCI and progression to dementia in AF patients, the authors wrote. They noted that the data suggest combining anticoagulation and symptom and comorbidity management may prevent cognitive deterioration.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Sheng-Chia Chung, PhD, Institute of Health informatics Research, University College London, and colleagues. It was published online Oct. 25, 2023, as a research letter in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC): Advances. 

LIMITATIONS:

The EHR dataset may have lacked granularity and detail, and some risk factors or comorbidities may not have been measured. While those with AF receiving digoxin or amiodarone treatment had no higher risk of MCI than their non-AF peers, the study’s observational design and very wide confidence intervals for these subgroups prevent making solid inferences about causality or a potential protective role of these drugs.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Chung is supported by the National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR) Author Rui Providencia, MD, PhD, of the Institute of Health informatics Research, University College London, is supported by the University College London British Heart Foundation and NIHR. All other authors report no relevant conflicts of interest.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with a 45% increased risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), an outcome that’s linked to cardiovascular risk factors and multi-comorbidity, results of a new study suggest.

METHODOLOGY:

  • From over 4.3 million people in the UK primary electronic health record (EHR) database, researchers identified 233,833 (5.4%) with AF (mean age, 74.2 years) and randomly selected one age- and sex-matched control person without AF for each AF case patient.
  • The primary outcome was incidence of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).
  • The authors adjusted for age, sex, year at study entry, socioeconomic status, smoking, and a number of comorbid conditions.
  • During a median of 5.3 years of follow-up, there were 4,269 incident MCI cases among both AF and non-AF patients.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Individuals with AF had a higher risk of MCI than that of those without AF (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.45; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.35-1.56).
  • Besides AF, older age (risk ratio [RR], 1.08) and history of depression (RR, 1.44) were associated with greater risk of MCI, as were female sex, greater socioeconomic deprivation, stroke, and multimorbidity, including, for example, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, and peripheral artery disease (all P < .001).
  • Individuals with AF who received oral anticoagulants or amiodarone were not at increased risk of MCI, as was the case for those treated with digoxin.
  • Individuals with AF and MCI were at greater risk of dementia (aHR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.09-1.42). Sex, smoking, chronic kidney disease, and multi-comorbidity were among factors linked to elevated dementia risk.

IN PRACTICE:

The findings emphasize the association of multi-comorbidity and cardiovascular risk factors with development of MCI and progression to dementia in AF patients, the authors wrote. They noted that the data suggest combining anticoagulation and symptom and comorbidity management may prevent cognitive deterioration.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Sheng-Chia Chung, PhD, Institute of Health informatics Research, University College London, and colleagues. It was published online Oct. 25, 2023, as a research letter in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC): Advances. 

LIMITATIONS:

The EHR dataset may have lacked granularity and detail, and some risk factors or comorbidities may not have been measured. While those with AF receiving digoxin or amiodarone treatment had no higher risk of MCI than their non-AF peers, the study’s observational design and very wide confidence intervals for these subgroups prevent making solid inferences about causality or a potential protective role of these drugs.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Chung is supported by the National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR) Author Rui Providencia, MD, PhD, of the Institute of Health informatics Research, University College London, is supported by the University College London British Heart Foundation and NIHR. All other authors report no relevant conflicts of interest.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with a 45% increased risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), an outcome that’s linked to cardiovascular risk factors and multi-comorbidity, results of a new study suggest.

METHODOLOGY:

  • From over 4.3 million people in the UK primary electronic health record (EHR) database, researchers identified 233,833 (5.4%) with AF (mean age, 74.2 years) and randomly selected one age- and sex-matched control person without AF for each AF case patient.
  • The primary outcome was incidence of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).
  • The authors adjusted for age, sex, year at study entry, socioeconomic status, smoking, and a number of comorbid conditions.
  • During a median of 5.3 years of follow-up, there were 4,269 incident MCI cases among both AF and non-AF patients.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Individuals with AF had a higher risk of MCI than that of those without AF (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.45; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.35-1.56).
  • Besides AF, older age (risk ratio [RR], 1.08) and history of depression (RR, 1.44) were associated with greater risk of MCI, as were female sex, greater socioeconomic deprivation, stroke, and multimorbidity, including, for example, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, and peripheral artery disease (all P < .001).
  • Individuals with AF who received oral anticoagulants or amiodarone were not at increased risk of MCI, as was the case for those treated with digoxin.
  • Individuals with AF and MCI were at greater risk of dementia (aHR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.09-1.42). Sex, smoking, chronic kidney disease, and multi-comorbidity were among factors linked to elevated dementia risk.

IN PRACTICE:

The findings emphasize the association of multi-comorbidity and cardiovascular risk factors with development of MCI and progression to dementia in AF patients, the authors wrote. They noted that the data suggest combining anticoagulation and symptom and comorbidity management may prevent cognitive deterioration.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Sheng-Chia Chung, PhD, Institute of Health informatics Research, University College London, and colleagues. It was published online Oct. 25, 2023, as a research letter in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC): Advances. 

LIMITATIONS:

The EHR dataset may have lacked granularity and detail, and some risk factors or comorbidities may not have been measured. While those with AF receiving digoxin or amiodarone treatment had no higher risk of MCI than their non-AF peers, the study’s observational design and very wide confidence intervals for these subgroups prevent making solid inferences about causality or a potential protective role of these drugs.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Chung is supported by the National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR) Author Rui Providencia, MD, PhD, of the Institute of Health informatics Research, University College London, is supported by the University College London British Heart Foundation and NIHR. All other authors report no relevant conflicts of interest.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Childhood trauma linked to adult headache

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 10/31/2023 - 13:38

 

TOPLINE:

Childhood trauma increases the risk of developing a primary headache disorder in adulthood, with more early adverse experiences raising the risk even more, a new study found.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The meta-analysis included 28 observational studies with 154,739 persons in 19 countries that assessed the relationship between at least one adverse childhood experience (ACE) and primary headache (including migraine, tension-type headache, cluster headache, and chronic/severe headache) at age 21 years or older.
  • From each study, researchers extracted outcome point estimates and corresponding 95% confidence intervals, number of events in each group, and covariates included in the model. They subcategorized ACEs according to those involving threat (for example, physical, emotional, or sexual abuse) and deprivation (for example, neglect, household substance misuse).
  • For the primary analysis, the researchers calculated the odds ratios and hazard ratios of headache among persons with at least one ACE, compared with those with no ACEs.
  • They also tested an underlying biological theory that threat and deprivation ACEs may manifest differently in neurodevelopment, with distinct impacts on primary headaches.
  •  

TAKEAWAY:

  • The most commonly reported ACEs were physical abuse (77%), sexual abuse (73%), and exposure to family violence (38%).
  • Compared with having experienced no ACEs, experiencing at least one was associated with primary headaches (pooled OR, 1.48; 95% confidence interval, 1.36-1.61).
  • As the number of ACEs increased, the strength of the association with primary headaches increased in a dose-response relationship (P for trend < .0001).
  • Both threat and deprivation were independently associated with primary headaches; the pooled main effect was consistent for threat (OR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.32-1.60) and for deprivation (OR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.23-1.49), suggesting possible distinct pathways of early adversity.
  •  

IN PRACTICE:

Clinicians who treat primary headaches in adults “should routinely screen for ACEs, educate patients on the connection between ACEs and health, and provide referrals for treatment strategies,” the investigators write. Strategies such as trauma-informed or attachment-based therapy may help rewire parts of the brain that have been dysregulated, they add.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Claudia Sikorski, department of health research methods, evidence, and impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont. It was published online in Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The findings reflect a conservative estimate of the true impact of ACEs on primary headaches, because ACEs are commonly underreported. The analysis could not statistically disentangle younger adults with developing brains (age 21-26 years) from older adults. Not all included studies adjusted for age and sex, which are known risk factors for headaches. The study did not explore the relationship between ACEs and primary headache disorders in childhood and adolescence. Owing to the inherent nature of studies investigating ACEs, causation cannot be inferred.

DISCLOSURES:

The authors report no targeted funding and no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

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TOPLINE:

Childhood trauma increases the risk of developing a primary headache disorder in adulthood, with more early adverse experiences raising the risk even more, a new study found.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The meta-analysis included 28 observational studies with 154,739 persons in 19 countries that assessed the relationship between at least one adverse childhood experience (ACE) and primary headache (including migraine, tension-type headache, cluster headache, and chronic/severe headache) at age 21 years or older.
  • From each study, researchers extracted outcome point estimates and corresponding 95% confidence intervals, number of events in each group, and covariates included in the model. They subcategorized ACEs according to those involving threat (for example, physical, emotional, or sexual abuse) and deprivation (for example, neglect, household substance misuse).
  • For the primary analysis, the researchers calculated the odds ratios and hazard ratios of headache among persons with at least one ACE, compared with those with no ACEs.
  • They also tested an underlying biological theory that threat and deprivation ACEs may manifest differently in neurodevelopment, with distinct impacts on primary headaches.
  •  

TAKEAWAY:

  • The most commonly reported ACEs were physical abuse (77%), sexual abuse (73%), and exposure to family violence (38%).
  • Compared with having experienced no ACEs, experiencing at least one was associated with primary headaches (pooled OR, 1.48; 95% confidence interval, 1.36-1.61).
  • As the number of ACEs increased, the strength of the association with primary headaches increased in a dose-response relationship (P for trend < .0001).
  • Both threat and deprivation were independently associated with primary headaches; the pooled main effect was consistent for threat (OR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.32-1.60) and for deprivation (OR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.23-1.49), suggesting possible distinct pathways of early adversity.
  •  

IN PRACTICE:

Clinicians who treat primary headaches in adults “should routinely screen for ACEs, educate patients on the connection between ACEs and health, and provide referrals for treatment strategies,” the investigators write. Strategies such as trauma-informed or attachment-based therapy may help rewire parts of the brain that have been dysregulated, they add.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Claudia Sikorski, department of health research methods, evidence, and impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont. It was published online in Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The findings reflect a conservative estimate of the true impact of ACEs on primary headaches, because ACEs are commonly underreported. The analysis could not statistically disentangle younger adults with developing brains (age 21-26 years) from older adults. Not all included studies adjusted for age and sex, which are known risk factors for headaches. The study did not explore the relationship between ACEs and primary headache disorders in childhood and adolescence. Owing to the inherent nature of studies investigating ACEs, causation cannot be inferred.

DISCLOSURES:

The authors report no targeted funding and no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Childhood trauma increases the risk of developing a primary headache disorder in adulthood, with more early adverse experiences raising the risk even more, a new study found.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The meta-analysis included 28 observational studies with 154,739 persons in 19 countries that assessed the relationship between at least one adverse childhood experience (ACE) and primary headache (including migraine, tension-type headache, cluster headache, and chronic/severe headache) at age 21 years or older.
  • From each study, researchers extracted outcome point estimates and corresponding 95% confidence intervals, number of events in each group, and covariates included in the model. They subcategorized ACEs according to those involving threat (for example, physical, emotional, or sexual abuse) and deprivation (for example, neglect, household substance misuse).
  • For the primary analysis, the researchers calculated the odds ratios and hazard ratios of headache among persons with at least one ACE, compared with those with no ACEs.
  • They also tested an underlying biological theory that threat and deprivation ACEs may manifest differently in neurodevelopment, with distinct impacts on primary headaches.
  •  

TAKEAWAY:

  • The most commonly reported ACEs were physical abuse (77%), sexual abuse (73%), and exposure to family violence (38%).
  • Compared with having experienced no ACEs, experiencing at least one was associated with primary headaches (pooled OR, 1.48; 95% confidence interval, 1.36-1.61).
  • As the number of ACEs increased, the strength of the association with primary headaches increased in a dose-response relationship (P for trend < .0001).
  • Both threat and deprivation were independently associated with primary headaches; the pooled main effect was consistent for threat (OR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.32-1.60) and for deprivation (OR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.23-1.49), suggesting possible distinct pathways of early adversity.
  •  

IN PRACTICE:

Clinicians who treat primary headaches in adults “should routinely screen for ACEs, educate patients on the connection between ACEs and health, and provide referrals for treatment strategies,” the investigators write. Strategies such as trauma-informed or attachment-based therapy may help rewire parts of the brain that have been dysregulated, they add.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Claudia Sikorski, department of health research methods, evidence, and impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont. It was published online in Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The findings reflect a conservative estimate of the true impact of ACEs on primary headaches, because ACEs are commonly underreported. The analysis could not statistically disentangle younger adults with developing brains (age 21-26 years) from older adults. Not all included studies adjusted for age and sex, which are known risk factors for headaches. The study did not explore the relationship between ACEs and primary headache disorders in childhood and adolescence. Owing to the inherent nature of studies investigating ACEs, causation cannot be inferred.

DISCLOSURES:

The authors report no targeted funding and no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

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Higher triglycerides linked to lower dementia risk

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Tue, 10/31/2023 - 13:34

 

TOPLINE:

Higher triglyceride levels – a main energy source for the brain – are associated with lower risk for dementia that is not mediated by age, sex, or APOE epsilon-4 allele status, a large study of community-dwelling older adults suggests.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The analysis included 18,294 participants, median age 75 years and median triglyceride level 106 mg/dL, from the Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) study, a placebo-controlled, randomized trial of daily low-dose aspirin in older people without dementia or history of cardiovascular disease (CVD) at recruitment.
  • Researchers repeated their main analyses in a sub-cohort of 13,976 subjects with APOE epsilon-4 genetic data, and an external cohort of 68,200 participants, mean age 66.9 years and a median nonfasting triglyceride of 139 mg/dL, from the UK biobank, followed for a median of 12.5 years.
  • The main outcome was incident dementia over 6.4 years and secondary outcomes included changes in composite cognitive function and domain-specific cognition.
  • Researchers controlled for a number of potential confounders, including age, sex, race, smoking, alcohol consumption, education, family history of dementia, diabetes, hypertension, and statin use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Every doubling of baseline triglycerides was associated with an 18% lower risk of incident dementia across the entire study cohort (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.82) and in participants with genotypic data (aHR, 0.82) and a 17% lower risk in the external UK Biobank cohort (aHR, 0.83) (P ≤ .01 for all).
  • In the entire cohort, the risk for dementia was 15% lower in those with triglyceride levels at 63-106 mg/dL (aHR, 0.85); 24% lower in those at 107-186 mg/dL (aHR, 0.76); and 36% lower for those with levels higher than 187 mg/dL (aHR, 0.64), compared with individuals with levels below 62 mg/dL (P for trend <.001).
  • The direction and magnitude of the inverse association between triglycerides and dementia risk were not modified by age, sex, or risk factors related to triglycerides or dementia.
  • In the entire study cohort, higher triglyceride levels were significantly associated with slower decline in global cognition (P = .02), composite cognition (P = .03), and a borderline significantly slower decline in episodic memory (P = .05).

IN PRACTICE:

“Triglyceride levels may serve as a useful predictor for dementia risk and cognitive decline in older populations,” the investigators write. Higher triglyceride levels may reflect better overall health and/or lifestyle behaviors that protect against dementia.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Zhen Zhou, of Monash University, Melbourne. It was published online in Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study can’t establish a causal relationship between triglyceride levels and dementia or fully exclude reverse causality. As most ASPREE participants had normal to high-normal triglyceride levels, the results can’t be generalized to those with severe hypertriglyceridemia. The findings are unique to older people without CVD and may not be generalizable to other populations.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received support from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP)/HCF Research Foundation. Dr. Zhou reported receiving salary from the RACGP/HCF Research Foundation.

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

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TOPLINE:

Higher triglyceride levels – a main energy source for the brain – are associated with lower risk for dementia that is not mediated by age, sex, or APOE epsilon-4 allele status, a large study of community-dwelling older adults suggests.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The analysis included 18,294 participants, median age 75 years and median triglyceride level 106 mg/dL, from the Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) study, a placebo-controlled, randomized trial of daily low-dose aspirin in older people without dementia or history of cardiovascular disease (CVD) at recruitment.
  • Researchers repeated their main analyses in a sub-cohort of 13,976 subjects with APOE epsilon-4 genetic data, and an external cohort of 68,200 participants, mean age 66.9 years and a median nonfasting triglyceride of 139 mg/dL, from the UK biobank, followed for a median of 12.5 years.
  • The main outcome was incident dementia over 6.4 years and secondary outcomes included changes in composite cognitive function and domain-specific cognition.
  • Researchers controlled for a number of potential confounders, including age, sex, race, smoking, alcohol consumption, education, family history of dementia, diabetes, hypertension, and statin use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Every doubling of baseline triglycerides was associated with an 18% lower risk of incident dementia across the entire study cohort (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.82) and in participants with genotypic data (aHR, 0.82) and a 17% lower risk in the external UK Biobank cohort (aHR, 0.83) (P ≤ .01 for all).
  • In the entire cohort, the risk for dementia was 15% lower in those with triglyceride levels at 63-106 mg/dL (aHR, 0.85); 24% lower in those at 107-186 mg/dL (aHR, 0.76); and 36% lower for those with levels higher than 187 mg/dL (aHR, 0.64), compared with individuals with levels below 62 mg/dL (P for trend <.001).
  • The direction and magnitude of the inverse association between triglycerides and dementia risk were not modified by age, sex, or risk factors related to triglycerides or dementia.
  • In the entire study cohort, higher triglyceride levels were significantly associated with slower decline in global cognition (P = .02), composite cognition (P = .03), and a borderline significantly slower decline in episodic memory (P = .05).

IN PRACTICE:

“Triglyceride levels may serve as a useful predictor for dementia risk and cognitive decline in older populations,” the investigators write. Higher triglyceride levels may reflect better overall health and/or lifestyle behaviors that protect against dementia.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Zhen Zhou, of Monash University, Melbourne. It was published online in Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study can’t establish a causal relationship between triglyceride levels and dementia or fully exclude reverse causality. As most ASPREE participants had normal to high-normal triglyceride levels, the results can’t be generalized to those with severe hypertriglyceridemia. The findings are unique to older people without CVD and may not be generalizable to other populations.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received support from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP)/HCF Research Foundation. Dr. Zhou reported receiving salary from the RACGP/HCF Research Foundation.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Higher triglyceride levels – a main energy source for the brain – are associated with lower risk for dementia that is not mediated by age, sex, or APOE epsilon-4 allele status, a large study of community-dwelling older adults suggests.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The analysis included 18,294 participants, median age 75 years and median triglyceride level 106 mg/dL, from the Aspirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) study, a placebo-controlled, randomized trial of daily low-dose aspirin in older people without dementia or history of cardiovascular disease (CVD) at recruitment.
  • Researchers repeated their main analyses in a sub-cohort of 13,976 subjects with APOE epsilon-4 genetic data, and an external cohort of 68,200 participants, mean age 66.9 years and a median nonfasting triglyceride of 139 mg/dL, from the UK biobank, followed for a median of 12.5 years.
  • The main outcome was incident dementia over 6.4 years and secondary outcomes included changes in composite cognitive function and domain-specific cognition.
  • Researchers controlled for a number of potential confounders, including age, sex, race, smoking, alcohol consumption, education, family history of dementia, diabetes, hypertension, and statin use.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Every doubling of baseline triglycerides was associated with an 18% lower risk of incident dementia across the entire study cohort (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.82) and in participants with genotypic data (aHR, 0.82) and a 17% lower risk in the external UK Biobank cohort (aHR, 0.83) (P ≤ .01 for all).
  • In the entire cohort, the risk for dementia was 15% lower in those with triglyceride levels at 63-106 mg/dL (aHR, 0.85); 24% lower in those at 107-186 mg/dL (aHR, 0.76); and 36% lower for those with levels higher than 187 mg/dL (aHR, 0.64), compared with individuals with levels below 62 mg/dL (P for trend <.001).
  • The direction and magnitude of the inverse association between triglycerides and dementia risk were not modified by age, sex, or risk factors related to triglycerides or dementia.
  • In the entire study cohort, higher triglyceride levels were significantly associated with slower decline in global cognition (P = .02), composite cognition (P = .03), and a borderline significantly slower decline in episodic memory (P = .05).

IN PRACTICE:

“Triglyceride levels may serve as a useful predictor for dementia risk and cognitive decline in older populations,” the investigators write. Higher triglyceride levels may reflect better overall health and/or lifestyle behaviors that protect against dementia.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Zhen Zhou, of Monash University, Melbourne. It was published online in Neurology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study can’t establish a causal relationship between triglyceride levels and dementia or fully exclude reverse causality. As most ASPREE participants had normal to high-normal triglyceride levels, the results can’t be generalized to those with severe hypertriglyceridemia. The findings are unique to older people without CVD and may not be generalizable to other populations.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received support from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP)/HCF Research Foundation. Dr. Zhou reported receiving salary from the RACGP/HCF Research Foundation.

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

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Portfolio diet tied to lower risk for CVD, stroke

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 10/30/2023 - 13:07

 

TOPLINE:

Close adherence to the Portfolio dietary pattern, including foods that have been shown to actively lower cholesterol (for example, plant proteins, nuts, viscous fiber, phytosterols, and plant monounsaturated fats) is associated with a 14% lower risk for total cardiovascular disease (CVD), coronary heart disease (CHD), and stroke, pooled results from three large observational studies suggest.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study included 73,924 women from the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS), 92,346 women from the Nurses’ Health Study II (NHSII), and 43,970 men from the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS) without CVD at baseline who were followed biennially on lifestyle, medical history, and other health-related factors.
  • From food-frequency questionnaires (FFQs) completed every 4 years, researchers categorized foods into the six components of the Portfolio diet:
  • Plant protein such as legumes, beans, tofu, peas, and soymilk
  • Nuts and seeds
  • Fiber sources such as bran, oats, berries, and eggplant
  • Phytosterols
  • Monounsaturated fat (MUFA) sources such as olive oil and avocado
  • High saturated fat and cholesterol sources such as whole-fat dairy and red and processed meats
  • They scored each from 1 (least adherent) to 5 (most adherent), with a higher score indicating higher consumption.
  • Researchers examined the association of this Portfolio Diet Score (PDS) with total CVD, CHD, and stroke, in the three cohorts, and associations with plasma levels of lipid and inflammatory biomarkers in a subpopulation of the cohorts.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During up to 30 years of follow-up, there were 16,917 incident CVD cases, including 10,666 CHD cases and 6,473 strokes.
  • In a pooled analysis of the three cohorts, the fully adjusted hazard ratio for total CVD comparing the highest with the lowest quintile of the PDS was 0.86 (95% confidence interval, 0.81-0.92; P for trend < .001).
  • Also comparing extreme quintiles, the pooled HR for CHD was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.80-0.93; P for trend = .0001) and for stroke, it was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.78-0.95; for trend = .0003).
  • A higher PDS was also associated with a more favorable lipid profile and lower levels of inflammation.

IN PRACTICE:

“This study provides additional evidence to support the use of the plant-based Portfolio dietary pattern for reducing the risk of CVD,” which aligns with American Heart Association guidelines promoting consumption of whole grains, fruits and vegetables, plant-based proteins, minimally processed foods, and healthy unsaturated plant oils, the authors conclude.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Andrea J. Glenn, PhD, RD, department of nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, and colleagues. It was published online in the journal Circulation.

LIMITATIONS:

As the study was observational, residual confounding can’t be ruled out. Diet was self-reported, which may have resulted in measurement errors. Consumption of some recommended foods was low, even in the top quintiles, so the association with CVD risk may be underestimated. Information on a few key Portfolio diet foods, including barley and okra, was unavailable, potentially leading to underestimation of intake, which may also attenuate the findings.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the Diabetes Canada End Diabetes 100 Award. The NH and HPFS studies are supported by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Glenn is supported by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research fellowship; she has received honoraria or travel support from the Soy Nutrition Institute Global, Vinasoy, and the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. See original article for disclosures of other authors.

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

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TOPLINE:

Close adherence to the Portfolio dietary pattern, including foods that have been shown to actively lower cholesterol (for example, plant proteins, nuts, viscous fiber, phytosterols, and plant monounsaturated fats) is associated with a 14% lower risk for total cardiovascular disease (CVD), coronary heart disease (CHD), and stroke, pooled results from three large observational studies suggest.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study included 73,924 women from the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS), 92,346 women from the Nurses’ Health Study II (NHSII), and 43,970 men from the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS) without CVD at baseline who were followed biennially on lifestyle, medical history, and other health-related factors.
  • From food-frequency questionnaires (FFQs) completed every 4 years, researchers categorized foods into the six components of the Portfolio diet:
  • Plant protein such as legumes, beans, tofu, peas, and soymilk
  • Nuts and seeds
  • Fiber sources such as bran, oats, berries, and eggplant
  • Phytosterols
  • Monounsaturated fat (MUFA) sources such as olive oil and avocado
  • High saturated fat and cholesterol sources such as whole-fat dairy and red and processed meats
  • They scored each from 1 (least adherent) to 5 (most adherent), with a higher score indicating higher consumption.
  • Researchers examined the association of this Portfolio Diet Score (PDS) with total CVD, CHD, and stroke, in the three cohorts, and associations with plasma levels of lipid and inflammatory biomarkers in a subpopulation of the cohorts.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During up to 30 years of follow-up, there were 16,917 incident CVD cases, including 10,666 CHD cases and 6,473 strokes.
  • In a pooled analysis of the three cohorts, the fully adjusted hazard ratio for total CVD comparing the highest with the lowest quintile of the PDS was 0.86 (95% confidence interval, 0.81-0.92; P for trend < .001).
  • Also comparing extreme quintiles, the pooled HR for CHD was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.80-0.93; P for trend = .0001) and for stroke, it was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.78-0.95; for trend = .0003).
  • A higher PDS was also associated with a more favorable lipid profile and lower levels of inflammation.

IN PRACTICE:

“This study provides additional evidence to support the use of the plant-based Portfolio dietary pattern for reducing the risk of CVD,” which aligns with American Heart Association guidelines promoting consumption of whole grains, fruits and vegetables, plant-based proteins, minimally processed foods, and healthy unsaturated plant oils, the authors conclude.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Andrea J. Glenn, PhD, RD, department of nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, and colleagues. It was published online in the journal Circulation.

LIMITATIONS:

As the study was observational, residual confounding can’t be ruled out. Diet was self-reported, which may have resulted in measurement errors. Consumption of some recommended foods was low, even in the top quintiles, so the association with CVD risk may be underestimated. Information on a few key Portfolio diet foods, including barley and okra, was unavailable, potentially leading to underestimation of intake, which may also attenuate the findings.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the Diabetes Canada End Diabetes 100 Award. The NH and HPFS studies are supported by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Glenn is supported by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research fellowship; she has received honoraria or travel support from the Soy Nutrition Institute Global, Vinasoy, and the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. See original article for disclosures of other authors.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Close adherence to the Portfolio dietary pattern, including foods that have been shown to actively lower cholesterol (for example, plant proteins, nuts, viscous fiber, phytosterols, and plant monounsaturated fats) is associated with a 14% lower risk for total cardiovascular disease (CVD), coronary heart disease (CHD), and stroke, pooled results from three large observational studies suggest.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The study included 73,924 women from the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS), 92,346 women from the Nurses’ Health Study II (NHSII), and 43,970 men from the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS) without CVD at baseline who were followed biennially on lifestyle, medical history, and other health-related factors.
  • From food-frequency questionnaires (FFQs) completed every 4 years, researchers categorized foods into the six components of the Portfolio diet:
  • Plant protein such as legumes, beans, tofu, peas, and soymilk
  • Nuts and seeds
  • Fiber sources such as bran, oats, berries, and eggplant
  • Phytosterols
  • Monounsaturated fat (MUFA) sources such as olive oil and avocado
  • High saturated fat and cholesterol sources such as whole-fat dairy and red and processed meats
  • They scored each from 1 (least adherent) to 5 (most adherent), with a higher score indicating higher consumption.
  • Researchers examined the association of this Portfolio Diet Score (PDS) with total CVD, CHD, and stroke, in the three cohorts, and associations with plasma levels of lipid and inflammatory biomarkers in a subpopulation of the cohorts.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During up to 30 years of follow-up, there were 16,917 incident CVD cases, including 10,666 CHD cases and 6,473 strokes.
  • In a pooled analysis of the three cohorts, the fully adjusted hazard ratio for total CVD comparing the highest with the lowest quintile of the PDS was 0.86 (95% confidence interval, 0.81-0.92; P for trend < .001).
  • Also comparing extreme quintiles, the pooled HR for CHD was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.80-0.93; P for trend = .0001) and for stroke, it was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.78-0.95; for trend = .0003).
  • A higher PDS was also associated with a more favorable lipid profile and lower levels of inflammation.

IN PRACTICE:

“This study provides additional evidence to support the use of the plant-based Portfolio dietary pattern for reducing the risk of CVD,” which aligns with American Heart Association guidelines promoting consumption of whole grains, fruits and vegetables, plant-based proteins, minimally processed foods, and healthy unsaturated plant oils, the authors conclude.

SOURCE:

The study was conducted by Andrea J. Glenn, PhD, RD, department of nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, and colleagues. It was published online in the journal Circulation.

LIMITATIONS:

As the study was observational, residual confounding can’t be ruled out. Diet was self-reported, which may have resulted in measurement errors. Consumption of some recommended foods was low, even in the top quintiles, so the association with CVD risk may be underestimated. Information on a few key Portfolio diet foods, including barley and okra, was unavailable, potentially leading to underestimation of intake, which may also attenuate the findings.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by the Diabetes Canada End Diabetes 100 Award. The NH and HPFS studies are supported by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Glenn is supported by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research fellowship; she has received honoraria or travel support from the Soy Nutrition Institute Global, Vinasoy, and the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. See original article for disclosures of other authors.

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

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