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FDA Approves Deuruxolitinib for Severe Alopecia Areata in Adults

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Mon, 07/29/2024 - 15:10

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the oral Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor deuruxolitinib for the treatment of adults with severe alopecia areata.

The development, which was announced in a July 25, 2024, news release from the drug’s manufacturer Sun Pharma, is based on data from two pivotal randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 clinical trials: THRIVE-AA1 and THRIVE-AA2, which included 1220 adults with severe alopecia areata enrolled at sites in the United States, Canada, and Europe. Study participants had at least 50% scalp hair loss as measured by Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) for more than 6 months. Data were also collected from two open-label, long-term extension trials in which patients were eligible to enroll upon completion of the 24-week trials.

Deuruxolitinib, which comes in 8-mg tablets, is an oral selective inhibitor of JAK1 and JAK2 and is administered twice a day. According to the company press release, the average patient enrolled in the clinical trials had only 13% of their scalp hair coverage at baseline. At week 24, more than 30% of patients taking deuruxolitinib experiencing 80% or more scalp hair coverage (SALT score ≤ 20). Also, up to 25% of patients had almost all of their scalp hair back at 24 weeks (≥ 90% coverage).



In terms of safety, the data showed that 3.1% of patients who received deuruxolitinib 8 mg twice daily in the phase 2 dose-ranging study and phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trials discontinued treatment owing to adverse reactions. The three most common adverse events in placebo-controlled trials were headache (12.4% vs 9.4% with placebo), acne (10% vs 4.3% with placebo), and nasopharyngitis (8.1% vs 6.7% with placebo). More than 100 people continued taking deuruxolitinib for more than 3 years.

Deuruxolitinib is the third treatment and third JAK inhibitor approved by the FDA for severe alopecia areata. Baricitinib (Olumiant) was approved in June 2022 for adults with alopecia areata, followed by ritlecitinib (Litfulo) approved in June 2023 for patients aged 12 years and older. 

In a statement from the National Alopecia Areata Foundation (NAAF), Nicole Friedland, NAAF’s president and CEO, said that “it is with tremendous excitement that we welcome the FDA’s approval of a third treatment for severe alopecia areata in as many years.”

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

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The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the oral Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor deuruxolitinib for the treatment of adults with severe alopecia areata.

The development, which was announced in a July 25, 2024, news release from the drug’s manufacturer Sun Pharma, is based on data from two pivotal randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 clinical trials: THRIVE-AA1 and THRIVE-AA2, which included 1220 adults with severe alopecia areata enrolled at sites in the United States, Canada, and Europe. Study participants had at least 50% scalp hair loss as measured by Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) for more than 6 months. Data were also collected from two open-label, long-term extension trials in which patients were eligible to enroll upon completion of the 24-week trials.

Deuruxolitinib, which comes in 8-mg tablets, is an oral selective inhibitor of JAK1 and JAK2 and is administered twice a day. According to the company press release, the average patient enrolled in the clinical trials had only 13% of their scalp hair coverage at baseline. At week 24, more than 30% of patients taking deuruxolitinib experiencing 80% or more scalp hair coverage (SALT score ≤ 20). Also, up to 25% of patients had almost all of their scalp hair back at 24 weeks (≥ 90% coverage).



In terms of safety, the data showed that 3.1% of patients who received deuruxolitinib 8 mg twice daily in the phase 2 dose-ranging study and phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trials discontinued treatment owing to adverse reactions. The three most common adverse events in placebo-controlled trials were headache (12.4% vs 9.4% with placebo), acne (10% vs 4.3% with placebo), and nasopharyngitis (8.1% vs 6.7% with placebo). More than 100 people continued taking deuruxolitinib for more than 3 years.

Deuruxolitinib is the third treatment and third JAK inhibitor approved by the FDA for severe alopecia areata. Baricitinib (Olumiant) was approved in June 2022 for adults with alopecia areata, followed by ritlecitinib (Litfulo) approved in June 2023 for patients aged 12 years and older. 

In a statement from the National Alopecia Areata Foundation (NAAF), Nicole Friedland, NAAF’s president and CEO, said that “it is with tremendous excitement that we welcome the FDA’s approval of a third treatment for severe alopecia areata in as many years.”

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

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the oral Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor deuruxolitinib for the treatment of adults with severe alopecia areata.

The development, which was announced in a July 25, 2024, news release from the drug’s manufacturer Sun Pharma, is based on data from two pivotal randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 clinical trials: THRIVE-AA1 and THRIVE-AA2, which included 1220 adults with severe alopecia areata enrolled at sites in the United States, Canada, and Europe. Study participants had at least 50% scalp hair loss as measured by Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) for more than 6 months. Data were also collected from two open-label, long-term extension trials in which patients were eligible to enroll upon completion of the 24-week trials.

Deuruxolitinib, which comes in 8-mg tablets, is an oral selective inhibitor of JAK1 and JAK2 and is administered twice a day. According to the company press release, the average patient enrolled in the clinical trials had only 13% of their scalp hair coverage at baseline. At week 24, more than 30% of patients taking deuruxolitinib experiencing 80% or more scalp hair coverage (SALT score ≤ 20). Also, up to 25% of patients had almost all of their scalp hair back at 24 weeks (≥ 90% coverage).



In terms of safety, the data showed that 3.1% of patients who received deuruxolitinib 8 mg twice daily in the phase 2 dose-ranging study and phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trials discontinued treatment owing to adverse reactions. The three most common adverse events in placebo-controlled trials were headache (12.4% vs 9.4% with placebo), acne (10% vs 4.3% with placebo), and nasopharyngitis (8.1% vs 6.7% with placebo). More than 100 people continued taking deuruxolitinib for more than 3 years.

Deuruxolitinib is the third treatment and third JAK inhibitor approved by the FDA for severe alopecia areata. Baricitinib (Olumiant) was approved in June 2022 for adults with alopecia areata, followed by ritlecitinib (Litfulo) approved in June 2023 for patients aged 12 years and older. 

In a statement from the National Alopecia Areata Foundation (NAAF), Nicole Friedland, NAAF’s president and CEO, said that “it is with tremendous excitement that we welcome the FDA’s approval of a third treatment for severe alopecia areata in as many years.”

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

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Pilot Study Finds Experimental CBD Cream Decreases UVA Skin Damage

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Mon, 07/29/2024 - 15:05

Application of an investigative topical cannabidiol (CBD) cream to buttock skin demonstrated protective properties against ultraviolet A (UVA) radiation-induced DNA and mitochondrial DNA damage, results from a small prospective pilot study showed.

“This study hopefully reinvigorates interest in the utilization of whether it be plant-based, human-derived, or synthetic cannabinoids in the management of dermatologic disease,” one of the study investigators, Adam Friedman, MD, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, DC, told this news organization. The study was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

Adam Friedman, MD, professor and interim chief of dermatology, George Washington University, Washington
George Washington University
Dr. Adam Friedman

For the prospective, single-center, pilot trial, which is believed to be the first of its kind, 19 volunteers aged 22-65 with Fitzpatrick skin types I-III applied either a nano-encapsulated CBD cream or a vehicle cream to blind spots on the skin of the buttocks twice daily for 14 days. Next, researchers applied a minimal erythema dose of UV radiation to the treated skin areas for 30 minutes. After 24 hours, they visually inspected the treated areas to clinically compare the erythema. They also performed five 4-mm punch biopsies from UVA- and non-UVA–exposed treatment sites on each buttock, as well as from an untreated control site that was at least 5 cm away from the treated left buttock.

At 24 hours, 21% of study participants showed less redness on CBD-treated skin compared with control-treated skin, while histology showed that CBD-treated skin demonstrated reduced UVA-induced epidermal hyperplasia compared with control-treated skin (a mean 11.3% change from baseline vs 28.7%, respectively; P = .01). In other findings, application of CBD cream reduced DNA damage and DNA mutations associated with UVA-induced skin aging/damage and ultimately skin cancer.

In addition, the CBD-treated skin samples had a reduction in the UVA-associated increase in the premutagenic marker 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 and a reduction of two major UVA-induced mitochondrial DNA deletions associated with skin photoaging.

The research, Dr. Friedman noted, “took a village of collaborators and almost 3 years to pull together,” including collaborating with his long-standing mentor, Brian Berman, MD, PhD, professor emeritus of dermatology and dermatologic surgery at the University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, and a study coauthor. The study “demonstrated that purposeful delivery of CBD using an established nanoparticle platform ... can have a quantifiable impact on preventing the expected DNA damage and cellular injury one should see from UVA exposure,” said Dr. Friedman, who codeveloped the nanoparticle platform with his father, Joel M. Friedman, MD, PhD, professor of microbiology and immunology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York City.



“Never before has a dermatologic study on topical cannabinoids dove so deeply into the biological impact of this natural ingredient to highlight its potential, here, as a mitigation strategy for unprotected exposure to prevent the downstream sequelae of UV radiation,” Dr. Friedman said.

In the paper, he and his coauthors acknowledged certain limitations of their study, including its small sample size and the single-center design.

Dr. Friedman disclosed that he coinvented the nanoparticle technology used in the trial. Dr. Berman is a consultant at MINO Labs, which funded the study. The remaining authors had no disclosures. The study was done in collaboration with the Center for Clinical and Cosmetic Research in Aventura, Florida.

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

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Application of an investigative topical cannabidiol (CBD) cream to buttock skin demonstrated protective properties against ultraviolet A (UVA) radiation-induced DNA and mitochondrial DNA damage, results from a small prospective pilot study showed.

“This study hopefully reinvigorates interest in the utilization of whether it be plant-based, human-derived, or synthetic cannabinoids in the management of dermatologic disease,” one of the study investigators, Adam Friedman, MD, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, DC, told this news organization. The study was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

Adam Friedman, MD, professor and interim chief of dermatology, George Washington University, Washington
George Washington University
Dr. Adam Friedman

For the prospective, single-center, pilot trial, which is believed to be the first of its kind, 19 volunteers aged 22-65 with Fitzpatrick skin types I-III applied either a nano-encapsulated CBD cream or a vehicle cream to blind spots on the skin of the buttocks twice daily for 14 days. Next, researchers applied a minimal erythema dose of UV radiation to the treated skin areas for 30 minutes. After 24 hours, they visually inspected the treated areas to clinically compare the erythema. They also performed five 4-mm punch biopsies from UVA- and non-UVA–exposed treatment sites on each buttock, as well as from an untreated control site that was at least 5 cm away from the treated left buttock.

At 24 hours, 21% of study participants showed less redness on CBD-treated skin compared with control-treated skin, while histology showed that CBD-treated skin demonstrated reduced UVA-induced epidermal hyperplasia compared with control-treated skin (a mean 11.3% change from baseline vs 28.7%, respectively; P = .01). In other findings, application of CBD cream reduced DNA damage and DNA mutations associated with UVA-induced skin aging/damage and ultimately skin cancer.

In addition, the CBD-treated skin samples had a reduction in the UVA-associated increase in the premutagenic marker 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 and a reduction of two major UVA-induced mitochondrial DNA deletions associated with skin photoaging.

The research, Dr. Friedman noted, “took a village of collaborators and almost 3 years to pull together,” including collaborating with his long-standing mentor, Brian Berman, MD, PhD, professor emeritus of dermatology and dermatologic surgery at the University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, and a study coauthor. The study “demonstrated that purposeful delivery of CBD using an established nanoparticle platform ... can have a quantifiable impact on preventing the expected DNA damage and cellular injury one should see from UVA exposure,” said Dr. Friedman, who codeveloped the nanoparticle platform with his father, Joel M. Friedman, MD, PhD, professor of microbiology and immunology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York City.



“Never before has a dermatologic study on topical cannabinoids dove so deeply into the biological impact of this natural ingredient to highlight its potential, here, as a mitigation strategy for unprotected exposure to prevent the downstream sequelae of UV radiation,” Dr. Friedman said.

In the paper, he and his coauthors acknowledged certain limitations of their study, including its small sample size and the single-center design.

Dr. Friedman disclosed that he coinvented the nanoparticle technology used in the trial. Dr. Berman is a consultant at MINO Labs, which funded the study. The remaining authors had no disclosures. The study was done in collaboration with the Center for Clinical and Cosmetic Research in Aventura, Florida.

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

Application of an investigative topical cannabidiol (CBD) cream to buttock skin demonstrated protective properties against ultraviolet A (UVA) radiation-induced DNA and mitochondrial DNA damage, results from a small prospective pilot study showed.

“This study hopefully reinvigorates interest in the utilization of whether it be plant-based, human-derived, or synthetic cannabinoids in the management of dermatologic disease,” one of the study investigators, Adam Friedman, MD, professor and chair of dermatology at George Washington University, Washington, DC, told this news organization. The study was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

Adam Friedman, MD, professor and interim chief of dermatology, George Washington University, Washington
George Washington University
Dr. Adam Friedman

For the prospective, single-center, pilot trial, which is believed to be the first of its kind, 19 volunteers aged 22-65 with Fitzpatrick skin types I-III applied either a nano-encapsulated CBD cream or a vehicle cream to blind spots on the skin of the buttocks twice daily for 14 days. Next, researchers applied a minimal erythema dose of UV radiation to the treated skin areas for 30 minutes. After 24 hours, they visually inspected the treated areas to clinically compare the erythema. They also performed five 4-mm punch biopsies from UVA- and non-UVA–exposed treatment sites on each buttock, as well as from an untreated control site that was at least 5 cm away from the treated left buttock.

At 24 hours, 21% of study participants showed less redness on CBD-treated skin compared with control-treated skin, while histology showed that CBD-treated skin demonstrated reduced UVA-induced epidermal hyperplasia compared with control-treated skin (a mean 11.3% change from baseline vs 28.7%, respectively; P = .01). In other findings, application of CBD cream reduced DNA damage and DNA mutations associated with UVA-induced skin aging/damage and ultimately skin cancer.

In addition, the CBD-treated skin samples had a reduction in the UVA-associated increase in the premutagenic marker 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 and a reduction of two major UVA-induced mitochondrial DNA deletions associated with skin photoaging.

The research, Dr. Friedman noted, “took a village of collaborators and almost 3 years to pull together,” including collaborating with his long-standing mentor, Brian Berman, MD, PhD, professor emeritus of dermatology and dermatologic surgery at the University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, and a study coauthor. The study “demonstrated that purposeful delivery of CBD using an established nanoparticle platform ... can have a quantifiable impact on preventing the expected DNA damage and cellular injury one should see from UVA exposure,” said Dr. Friedman, who codeveloped the nanoparticle platform with his father, Joel M. Friedman, MD, PhD, professor of microbiology and immunology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York City.



“Never before has a dermatologic study on topical cannabinoids dove so deeply into the biological impact of this natural ingredient to highlight its potential, here, as a mitigation strategy for unprotected exposure to prevent the downstream sequelae of UV radiation,” Dr. Friedman said.

In the paper, he and his coauthors acknowledged certain limitations of their study, including its small sample size and the single-center design.

Dr. Friedman disclosed that he coinvented the nanoparticle technology used in the trial. Dr. Berman is a consultant at MINO Labs, which funded the study. The remaining authors had no disclosures. The study was done in collaboration with the Center for Clinical and Cosmetic Research in Aventura, Florida.

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

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Gluconolactone

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Fri, 07/26/2024 - 15:37

 

Gluconolactone, 3,4,5-trihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl) oxan-2-one (C6H10O6), is known to display antioxidant, moisturizing, and soothing activity as well as enhance skin barrier function and protect elastin fibers from UV-engendered damage.1 This derivative of oxidized glucose lactone is present naturally in bread, cheese, fruit juices, honey, tofu, and wine, and is used as a food additive in Europe.1,2 In dermatology, it is most often used in chemical peels.

Polyhydroxy acids (PHAs) were discovered about 3 decades ago to exert similar functions as alpha hydroxy acids without provoking sensory irritation reactions. Gluconolactone along with lactobionic acid were the identified PHAs and further characterized as delivering more humectant and moisturizing activity than alpha hydroxy acids and effective in combination with retinoic acid to treat adult acne and with retinyl acetate to confer antiaging benefits.3 It is typically added to products for its skin-conditioning qualities, resulting in smoother, brighter, more toned skin.4 This column focuses on recent studies using this bioactive agent for dermatologic purposes.
 

Split-Face Studies Show Various Benefits

peepo/E+/Getty Images

In 2023, Jarząbek-Perz and colleagues conducted a split-face evaluation to assess the effects on various skin parameters (ie, hydration, pH, sebum, and transepidermal water loss [TEWL]) of gluconolactone and oxybrasion, compared with gluconolactone and microneedling. Twenty-one White women underwent a series of three split-face treatments at 1-week intervals. Chemical peels with 10% gluconolactone were performed on the whole face. The right side of the face was also treated with oxybrasion and the left with microneedle mesotherapy. Skin parameters were measured before the first and third treatments and 2 weeks following the final treatment. Photos were taken before and after the study. Both treatments resulted in improved hydration and reductions in sebum, pH, and TEWL. No statistically significant differences were noted between the treatment protocols. The researchers concluded that gluconolactone peels can be effectively combined with oxybrasion or microneedle mesotherapy to enhance skin hydration and to secure the hydrolipid barrier.5

Later that year, the same team evaluated pH, sebum levels, and TEWL before, during, and after several applications of 10% and 30% gluconolactone chemical peels in a split-face model in 16 female participants. The investigators conducted three procedures on both sides of the face, taking measurements on the forehead, periorbital area, on the cheek, and on the nose wing before, during, and 7 days after the final treatment. They found statistically significant improvements in sebum levels in the cheeks after the treatment series. Also, pH values were lower at each measurement site after each procedure. TEWL levels were significantly diminished around the eyes, as well as the left forehead and right cheek, with no significant discrepancy between gluconolactone concentrations. The researchers concluded that gluconolactone plays a major role in reducing cutaneous pH and TEWL and imparts a regulatory effect on sebum.1

Two years earlier, Jarząbek-Perz and colleagues assessed skin moisture in a split-face model in 16 healthy women after the application of 10% and 30% gluconolactone. Investigators measured skin moisture before and after each of three treatments and a week after the final treatment from the forehead, periorbital area, and on the cheek. They observed no significant discrepancies between the 10% and 30% formulations, but a significant elevation in facial skin hydration was found to be promoted by gluconolactone. The investigators concluded that gluconolactone is an effective moisturizer for care of dry skin.6

Topical Formulation

In 2023, Zerbinati and colleagues determined that a gluconolactone-based lotion that they had begun testing 2 years earlier was safe and effective for dermatologic applications, with the noncomedogenic formulation found suitable as an antiaging agent, particularly as it treats aging-related pore dilatation.7,8

Acne Treatment

In 2019, Kantikosum and colleagues conducted a double-blind, within-person comparative study to assess the efficacy of various cosmeceutical ingredients, including gluconolactone, glycolic acid, licochalcone A, and salicylic acid, combined with the acne treatment adapalene vs adapalene monotherapy for mild to moderate acne. Each of 25 subjects over 28 days applied a product mixed with 0.1% adapalene on one side of the face, and 0.1% adapalene alone on the other side of the face once nightly. The VISIA camera system spot score pointed to a statistically significant improvement on the combination sides. Differences in lesion reduction and severity were within acceptable margins, the authors reported. They concluded that the cosmeceutical combinations yielded similar benefits as adapalene alone, with the combination formulations decreasing acne complications.9

Potential Use as an Antifibrotic Agent

Dr. Leslie S. Baumann, a dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur who practices in Miami.
Baumann Cosmetic & Research Institute
Dr. Leslie S. Baumann

In 2018, Jayamani and colleagues investigated the antifibrotic characteristics of glucono-delta-lactone, a known acidifier, to ascertain if it could directly suppress collagen fibrils or even cause them to disintegrate. The researchers noted that collagen fibrillation is pH dependent, and that glucono-delta-lactone was found to exert a concentration-dependent suppression of fibrils and disintegration of preformed collagen fibrils with the antifibrotic function of the compound ascribed to its capacity to decrease pH. Further, glucono-delta-lactone appeared to emerge as an ideal antifibrotic agent as it left intact the triple helical structure of collagen after treatment. The investigators concluded that glucono-delta-lactone provides the foundation for developing antifibrotic agents intended to treat disorders characterized by collagen deposition.10

Conclusion

Gluconolactone emerged in the 1990s as a PHA useful in skin peels as an alternative to alpha hydroxy acids because of its nonirritating qualities. Since then, its soothing, hydrating, and, in particular, antiacne and antiaging qualities have become established. Wider applications of this versatile agent for dermatologic purposes are likely to be further investigated.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur in Miami. She founded the division of cosmetic dermatology at the University of Miami in 1997. The third edition of her bestselling textbook, “Cosmetic Dermatology,” was published in 2022. Dr. Baumann has received funding for advisory boards and/or clinical research trials from Allergan, Galderma, Johnson & Johnson, and Burt’s Bees. She is the CEO of Skin Type Solutions, a SaaS company used to generate skin care routines in office and as a ecommerce solution. Write to her at dermnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2023 Dec;22(12):3305-3312..

2. Qin X et al. Front Physiol. 2022 Mar 14;13:856699.

3. Grimes PE et al. Cutis. 2004 Feb;73(2 Suppl):3-13.

4. Glaser DA. Facial Plast Surg Clin North Am. 2003 May;11(2):219-227.

5. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. Skin Res Technol. 2023 Jun;29(6):e13353.

6. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. Skin Res Technol. 2021 Sep;27(5):925-930.

7. Zerbinati N et al. Molecules. 2021 Dec 15;26(24):7592.

8. Zerbinati Net al. Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2023 Apr 27;16(5):655.

9. Kantikosum K et al. Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol. 2019 Feb 19;12:151-161.

10. Jayamani J et al. Int J Biol Macromol. 2018 Feb;107(Pt A):175-185.

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Gluconolactone, 3,4,5-trihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl) oxan-2-one (C6H10O6), is known to display antioxidant, moisturizing, and soothing activity as well as enhance skin barrier function and protect elastin fibers from UV-engendered damage.1 This derivative of oxidized glucose lactone is present naturally in bread, cheese, fruit juices, honey, tofu, and wine, and is used as a food additive in Europe.1,2 In dermatology, it is most often used in chemical peels.

Polyhydroxy acids (PHAs) were discovered about 3 decades ago to exert similar functions as alpha hydroxy acids without provoking sensory irritation reactions. Gluconolactone along with lactobionic acid were the identified PHAs and further characterized as delivering more humectant and moisturizing activity than alpha hydroxy acids and effective in combination with retinoic acid to treat adult acne and with retinyl acetate to confer antiaging benefits.3 It is typically added to products for its skin-conditioning qualities, resulting in smoother, brighter, more toned skin.4 This column focuses on recent studies using this bioactive agent for dermatologic purposes.
 

Split-Face Studies Show Various Benefits

peepo/E+/Getty Images

In 2023, Jarząbek-Perz and colleagues conducted a split-face evaluation to assess the effects on various skin parameters (ie, hydration, pH, sebum, and transepidermal water loss [TEWL]) of gluconolactone and oxybrasion, compared with gluconolactone and microneedling. Twenty-one White women underwent a series of three split-face treatments at 1-week intervals. Chemical peels with 10% gluconolactone were performed on the whole face. The right side of the face was also treated with oxybrasion and the left with microneedle mesotherapy. Skin parameters were measured before the first and third treatments and 2 weeks following the final treatment. Photos were taken before and after the study. Both treatments resulted in improved hydration and reductions in sebum, pH, and TEWL. No statistically significant differences were noted between the treatment protocols. The researchers concluded that gluconolactone peels can be effectively combined with oxybrasion or microneedle mesotherapy to enhance skin hydration and to secure the hydrolipid barrier.5

Later that year, the same team evaluated pH, sebum levels, and TEWL before, during, and after several applications of 10% and 30% gluconolactone chemical peels in a split-face model in 16 female participants. The investigators conducted three procedures on both sides of the face, taking measurements on the forehead, periorbital area, on the cheek, and on the nose wing before, during, and 7 days after the final treatment. They found statistically significant improvements in sebum levels in the cheeks after the treatment series. Also, pH values were lower at each measurement site after each procedure. TEWL levels were significantly diminished around the eyes, as well as the left forehead and right cheek, with no significant discrepancy between gluconolactone concentrations. The researchers concluded that gluconolactone plays a major role in reducing cutaneous pH and TEWL and imparts a regulatory effect on sebum.1

Two years earlier, Jarząbek-Perz and colleagues assessed skin moisture in a split-face model in 16 healthy women after the application of 10% and 30% gluconolactone. Investigators measured skin moisture before and after each of three treatments and a week after the final treatment from the forehead, periorbital area, and on the cheek. They observed no significant discrepancies between the 10% and 30% formulations, but a significant elevation in facial skin hydration was found to be promoted by gluconolactone. The investigators concluded that gluconolactone is an effective moisturizer for care of dry skin.6

Topical Formulation

In 2023, Zerbinati and colleagues determined that a gluconolactone-based lotion that they had begun testing 2 years earlier was safe and effective for dermatologic applications, with the noncomedogenic formulation found suitable as an antiaging agent, particularly as it treats aging-related pore dilatation.7,8

Acne Treatment

In 2019, Kantikosum and colleagues conducted a double-blind, within-person comparative study to assess the efficacy of various cosmeceutical ingredients, including gluconolactone, glycolic acid, licochalcone A, and salicylic acid, combined with the acne treatment adapalene vs adapalene monotherapy for mild to moderate acne. Each of 25 subjects over 28 days applied a product mixed with 0.1% adapalene on one side of the face, and 0.1% adapalene alone on the other side of the face once nightly. The VISIA camera system spot score pointed to a statistically significant improvement on the combination sides. Differences in lesion reduction and severity were within acceptable margins, the authors reported. They concluded that the cosmeceutical combinations yielded similar benefits as adapalene alone, with the combination formulations decreasing acne complications.9

Potential Use as an Antifibrotic Agent

Dr. Leslie S. Baumann, a dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur who practices in Miami.
Baumann Cosmetic & Research Institute
Dr. Leslie S. Baumann

In 2018, Jayamani and colleagues investigated the antifibrotic characteristics of glucono-delta-lactone, a known acidifier, to ascertain if it could directly suppress collagen fibrils or even cause them to disintegrate. The researchers noted that collagen fibrillation is pH dependent, and that glucono-delta-lactone was found to exert a concentration-dependent suppression of fibrils and disintegration of preformed collagen fibrils with the antifibrotic function of the compound ascribed to its capacity to decrease pH. Further, glucono-delta-lactone appeared to emerge as an ideal antifibrotic agent as it left intact the triple helical structure of collagen after treatment. The investigators concluded that glucono-delta-lactone provides the foundation for developing antifibrotic agents intended to treat disorders characterized by collagen deposition.10

Conclusion

Gluconolactone emerged in the 1990s as a PHA useful in skin peels as an alternative to alpha hydroxy acids because of its nonirritating qualities. Since then, its soothing, hydrating, and, in particular, antiacne and antiaging qualities have become established. Wider applications of this versatile agent for dermatologic purposes are likely to be further investigated.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur in Miami. She founded the division of cosmetic dermatology at the University of Miami in 1997. The third edition of her bestselling textbook, “Cosmetic Dermatology,” was published in 2022. Dr. Baumann has received funding for advisory boards and/or clinical research trials from Allergan, Galderma, Johnson & Johnson, and Burt’s Bees. She is the CEO of Skin Type Solutions, a SaaS company used to generate skin care routines in office and as a ecommerce solution. Write to her at dermnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2023 Dec;22(12):3305-3312..

2. Qin X et al. Front Physiol. 2022 Mar 14;13:856699.

3. Grimes PE et al. Cutis. 2004 Feb;73(2 Suppl):3-13.

4. Glaser DA. Facial Plast Surg Clin North Am. 2003 May;11(2):219-227.

5. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. Skin Res Technol. 2023 Jun;29(6):e13353.

6. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. Skin Res Technol. 2021 Sep;27(5):925-930.

7. Zerbinati N et al. Molecules. 2021 Dec 15;26(24):7592.

8. Zerbinati Net al. Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2023 Apr 27;16(5):655.

9. Kantikosum K et al. Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol. 2019 Feb 19;12:151-161.

10. Jayamani J et al. Int J Biol Macromol. 2018 Feb;107(Pt A):175-185.

 

Gluconolactone, 3,4,5-trihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl) oxan-2-one (C6H10O6), is known to display antioxidant, moisturizing, and soothing activity as well as enhance skin barrier function and protect elastin fibers from UV-engendered damage.1 This derivative of oxidized glucose lactone is present naturally in bread, cheese, fruit juices, honey, tofu, and wine, and is used as a food additive in Europe.1,2 In dermatology, it is most often used in chemical peels.

Polyhydroxy acids (PHAs) were discovered about 3 decades ago to exert similar functions as alpha hydroxy acids without provoking sensory irritation reactions. Gluconolactone along with lactobionic acid were the identified PHAs and further characterized as delivering more humectant and moisturizing activity than alpha hydroxy acids and effective in combination with retinoic acid to treat adult acne and with retinyl acetate to confer antiaging benefits.3 It is typically added to products for its skin-conditioning qualities, resulting in smoother, brighter, more toned skin.4 This column focuses on recent studies using this bioactive agent for dermatologic purposes.
 

Split-Face Studies Show Various Benefits

peepo/E+/Getty Images

In 2023, Jarząbek-Perz and colleagues conducted a split-face evaluation to assess the effects on various skin parameters (ie, hydration, pH, sebum, and transepidermal water loss [TEWL]) of gluconolactone and oxybrasion, compared with gluconolactone and microneedling. Twenty-one White women underwent a series of three split-face treatments at 1-week intervals. Chemical peels with 10% gluconolactone were performed on the whole face. The right side of the face was also treated with oxybrasion and the left with microneedle mesotherapy. Skin parameters were measured before the first and third treatments and 2 weeks following the final treatment. Photos were taken before and after the study. Both treatments resulted in improved hydration and reductions in sebum, pH, and TEWL. No statistically significant differences were noted between the treatment protocols. The researchers concluded that gluconolactone peels can be effectively combined with oxybrasion or microneedle mesotherapy to enhance skin hydration and to secure the hydrolipid barrier.5

Later that year, the same team evaluated pH, sebum levels, and TEWL before, during, and after several applications of 10% and 30% gluconolactone chemical peels in a split-face model in 16 female participants. The investigators conducted three procedures on both sides of the face, taking measurements on the forehead, periorbital area, on the cheek, and on the nose wing before, during, and 7 days after the final treatment. They found statistically significant improvements in sebum levels in the cheeks after the treatment series. Also, pH values were lower at each measurement site after each procedure. TEWL levels were significantly diminished around the eyes, as well as the left forehead and right cheek, with no significant discrepancy between gluconolactone concentrations. The researchers concluded that gluconolactone plays a major role in reducing cutaneous pH and TEWL and imparts a regulatory effect on sebum.1

Two years earlier, Jarząbek-Perz and colleagues assessed skin moisture in a split-face model in 16 healthy women after the application of 10% and 30% gluconolactone. Investigators measured skin moisture before and after each of three treatments and a week after the final treatment from the forehead, periorbital area, and on the cheek. They observed no significant discrepancies between the 10% and 30% formulations, but a significant elevation in facial skin hydration was found to be promoted by gluconolactone. The investigators concluded that gluconolactone is an effective moisturizer for care of dry skin.6

Topical Formulation

In 2023, Zerbinati and colleagues determined that a gluconolactone-based lotion that they had begun testing 2 years earlier was safe and effective for dermatologic applications, with the noncomedogenic formulation found suitable as an antiaging agent, particularly as it treats aging-related pore dilatation.7,8

Acne Treatment

In 2019, Kantikosum and colleagues conducted a double-blind, within-person comparative study to assess the efficacy of various cosmeceutical ingredients, including gluconolactone, glycolic acid, licochalcone A, and salicylic acid, combined with the acne treatment adapalene vs adapalene monotherapy for mild to moderate acne. Each of 25 subjects over 28 days applied a product mixed with 0.1% adapalene on one side of the face, and 0.1% adapalene alone on the other side of the face once nightly. The VISIA camera system spot score pointed to a statistically significant improvement on the combination sides. Differences in lesion reduction and severity were within acceptable margins, the authors reported. They concluded that the cosmeceutical combinations yielded similar benefits as adapalene alone, with the combination formulations decreasing acne complications.9

Potential Use as an Antifibrotic Agent

Dr. Leslie S. Baumann, a dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur who practices in Miami.
Baumann Cosmetic & Research Institute
Dr. Leslie S. Baumann

In 2018, Jayamani and colleagues investigated the antifibrotic characteristics of glucono-delta-lactone, a known acidifier, to ascertain if it could directly suppress collagen fibrils or even cause them to disintegrate. The researchers noted that collagen fibrillation is pH dependent, and that glucono-delta-lactone was found to exert a concentration-dependent suppression of fibrils and disintegration of preformed collagen fibrils with the antifibrotic function of the compound ascribed to its capacity to decrease pH. Further, glucono-delta-lactone appeared to emerge as an ideal antifibrotic agent as it left intact the triple helical structure of collagen after treatment. The investigators concluded that glucono-delta-lactone provides the foundation for developing antifibrotic agents intended to treat disorders characterized by collagen deposition.10

Conclusion

Gluconolactone emerged in the 1990s as a PHA useful in skin peels as an alternative to alpha hydroxy acids because of its nonirritating qualities. Since then, its soothing, hydrating, and, in particular, antiacne and antiaging qualities have become established. Wider applications of this versatile agent for dermatologic purposes are likely to be further investigated.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur in Miami. She founded the division of cosmetic dermatology at the University of Miami in 1997. The third edition of her bestselling textbook, “Cosmetic Dermatology,” was published in 2022. Dr. Baumann has received funding for advisory boards and/or clinical research trials from Allergan, Galderma, Johnson & Johnson, and Burt’s Bees. She is the CEO of Skin Type Solutions, a SaaS company used to generate skin care routines in office and as a ecommerce solution. Write to her at dermnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. J Cosmet Dermatol. 2023 Dec;22(12):3305-3312..

2. Qin X et al. Front Physiol. 2022 Mar 14;13:856699.

3. Grimes PE et al. Cutis. 2004 Feb;73(2 Suppl):3-13.

4. Glaser DA. Facial Plast Surg Clin North Am. 2003 May;11(2):219-227.

5. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. Skin Res Technol. 2023 Jun;29(6):e13353.

6. Jarząbek-Perz S et al. Skin Res Technol. 2021 Sep;27(5):925-930.

7. Zerbinati N et al. Molecules. 2021 Dec 15;26(24):7592.

8. Zerbinati Net al. Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2023 Apr 27;16(5):655.

9. Kantikosum K et al. Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol. 2019 Feb 19;12:151-161.

10. Jayamani J et al. Int J Biol Macromol. 2018 Feb;107(Pt A):175-185.

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Study Finds Differences in Side Effect Profiles With Two Oral Psoriasis Therapies

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TOPLINE:

More gastrointestinal and nervous symptom adverse events (AEs) are linked to apremilast than deucravacitinib, which is associated with more cutaneous AEs, according to a retrospective comparison using US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) data.

METHODOLOGY:

  • To evaluate the adverse events associated with apremilast, an oral phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) inhibitor, and deucravacitinib, an oral tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor, data were drawn from the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System database.
  • The Medex_UIMA_1.8.3 system was used to standardize drug names, and MedDRA terminology was used to encode, categorize, and localize signals.
  • AE event signals were grouped by skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, infections and infestations, and nervous system disorders.

TAKEAWAY:

  • There were 95,734 AE reports for apremilast and 760 AE reports for deucravacitinib, and AEs were found to be significant over time.
  • The more common cutaneous AEs were psoriasis recurrence and acne (associated with apremilast) and skin burning and erythema (associated with deucravacitinib).
  • The more common gastrointestinal AEs were diarrhea and nausea (apremilast) and mouth ulceration (deucravacitinib).
  • Deucravacitinib-related pruritus and rash, as well as apremilast-related tension headache, were more common in women than men; deucravacitinib-related skin burning was more common in men.

IN PRACTICE:

The results “can help the doctors to choose the right treatment options based on the baseline characteristics of different patients,” said Yuanyuan Xu, a graduate student in the Department of Dermatology, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.

SOURCE:

Mr. Xu presented the study as a poster at the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis 2024 annual meeting.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was retrospective and cannot prove causality, and there were far fewer AE reports related to deucravacitinib, likely because the drug was introduced more recently.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no funding, and the authors had no relevant financial disclosures.

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

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TOPLINE:

More gastrointestinal and nervous symptom adverse events (AEs) are linked to apremilast than deucravacitinib, which is associated with more cutaneous AEs, according to a retrospective comparison using US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) data.

METHODOLOGY:

  • To evaluate the adverse events associated with apremilast, an oral phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) inhibitor, and deucravacitinib, an oral tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor, data were drawn from the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System database.
  • The Medex_UIMA_1.8.3 system was used to standardize drug names, and MedDRA terminology was used to encode, categorize, and localize signals.
  • AE event signals were grouped by skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, infections and infestations, and nervous system disorders.

TAKEAWAY:

  • There were 95,734 AE reports for apremilast and 760 AE reports for deucravacitinib, and AEs were found to be significant over time.
  • The more common cutaneous AEs were psoriasis recurrence and acne (associated with apremilast) and skin burning and erythema (associated with deucravacitinib).
  • The more common gastrointestinal AEs were diarrhea and nausea (apremilast) and mouth ulceration (deucravacitinib).
  • Deucravacitinib-related pruritus and rash, as well as apremilast-related tension headache, were more common in women than men; deucravacitinib-related skin burning was more common in men.

IN PRACTICE:

The results “can help the doctors to choose the right treatment options based on the baseline characteristics of different patients,” said Yuanyuan Xu, a graduate student in the Department of Dermatology, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.

SOURCE:

Mr. Xu presented the study as a poster at the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis 2024 annual meeting.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was retrospective and cannot prove causality, and there were far fewer AE reports related to deucravacitinib, likely because the drug was introduced more recently.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no funding, and the authors had no relevant financial disclosures.

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

 

TOPLINE:

More gastrointestinal and nervous symptom adverse events (AEs) are linked to apremilast than deucravacitinib, which is associated with more cutaneous AEs, according to a retrospective comparison using US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) data.

METHODOLOGY:

  • To evaluate the adverse events associated with apremilast, an oral phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) inhibitor, and deucravacitinib, an oral tyrosine kinase 2 (TYK2) inhibitor, data were drawn from the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System database.
  • The Medex_UIMA_1.8.3 system was used to standardize drug names, and MedDRA terminology was used to encode, categorize, and localize signals.
  • AE event signals were grouped by skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, infections and infestations, and nervous system disorders.

TAKEAWAY:

  • There were 95,734 AE reports for apremilast and 760 AE reports for deucravacitinib, and AEs were found to be significant over time.
  • The more common cutaneous AEs were psoriasis recurrence and acne (associated with apremilast) and skin burning and erythema (associated with deucravacitinib).
  • The more common gastrointestinal AEs were diarrhea and nausea (apremilast) and mouth ulceration (deucravacitinib).
  • Deucravacitinib-related pruritus and rash, as well as apremilast-related tension headache, were more common in women than men; deucravacitinib-related skin burning was more common in men.

IN PRACTICE:

The results “can help the doctors to choose the right treatment options based on the baseline characteristics of different patients,” said Yuanyuan Xu, a graduate student in the Department of Dermatology, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.

SOURCE:

Mr. Xu presented the study as a poster at the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis 2024 annual meeting.

LIMITATIONS:

The study was retrospective and cannot prove causality, and there were far fewer AE reports related to deucravacitinib, likely because the drug was introduced more recently.

DISCLOSURES:

The study received no funding, and the authors had no relevant financial disclosures.

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

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Risk of MACE Comparable Among Biologic Classes for Psoriasis, PsA

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 07/26/2024 - 12:28

 

TOPLINE:

Rates of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) do not differ significantly among individual biologics used for psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis (PsA), a database analysis finds. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • Data from the TriNetX health records database included 32,758 patients treated with TNF inhibitors (TNFi, 62.9%), interleukin-17 inhibitors (IL-17i, 15.4%), IL-23i (10.7%), and IL-12i/IL-23i (10.7%).
  • The researchers calculated time-dependent risk for MACE using multinomial Cox proportional hazard ratios. The reference was TNFi exposure.
  • Subset analyses compared MACE in patients with and without existing cardiovascular disease.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with TNFi use, there was no difference in the incidence of MACE events in the IL-17i, IL-23i, or IL-12i/IL-23i group.
  • There were also no significant differences between biologic groups in the incidence of congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, or cerebral vascular accident/stroke.

IN PRACTICE:

Despite some concern about increased risk for MACE with TNFi use, this study suggests no special risk for patients with psoriasis or PsA associated with TNFi vs other biologics. “Given our results, as it pertains to MACE, prescribers shouldn’t favor any one biologic class over another,” said lead investigator Shikha Singla, MD, medical director of the Psoriatic Arthritis Program at Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

SOURCE:

Bonit Gill, MD, a second-year fellow at Medical College of Wisconsin, presented the study as a poster at the annual meeting of the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s retrospective nature makes it impossible to prove causation and the patients included in the study were from Wisconsin, which may limit generalizability.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Gill had no relevant financial disclosures. Other study authors participated in trials or consulted for AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Novartis, Eli Lilly, Janssen, and UCB.

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

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TOPLINE:

Rates of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) do not differ significantly among individual biologics used for psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis (PsA), a database analysis finds. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • Data from the TriNetX health records database included 32,758 patients treated with TNF inhibitors (TNFi, 62.9%), interleukin-17 inhibitors (IL-17i, 15.4%), IL-23i (10.7%), and IL-12i/IL-23i (10.7%).
  • The researchers calculated time-dependent risk for MACE using multinomial Cox proportional hazard ratios. The reference was TNFi exposure.
  • Subset analyses compared MACE in patients with and without existing cardiovascular disease.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with TNFi use, there was no difference in the incidence of MACE events in the IL-17i, IL-23i, or IL-12i/IL-23i group.
  • There were also no significant differences between biologic groups in the incidence of congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, or cerebral vascular accident/stroke.

IN PRACTICE:

Despite some concern about increased risk for MACE with TNFi use, this study suggests no special risk for patients with psoriasis or PsA associated with TNFi vs other biologics. “Given our results, as it pertains to MACE, prescribers shouldn’t favor any one biologic class over another,” said lead investigator Shikha Singla, MD, medical director of the Psoriatic Arthritis Program at Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

SOURCE:

Bonit Gill, MD, a second-year fellow at Medical College of Wisconsin, presented the study as a poster at the annual meeting of the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s retrospective nature makes it impossible to prove causation and the patients included in the study were from Wisconsin, which may limit generalizability.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Gill had no relevant financial disclosures. Other study authors participated in trials or consulted for AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Novartis, Eli Lilly, Janssen, and UCB.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Rates of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) do not differ significantly among individual biologics used for psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis (PsA), a database analysis finds. 

METHODOLOGY:

  • Data from the TriNetX health records database included 32,758 patients treated with TNF inhibitors (TNFi, 62.9%), interleukin-17 inhibitors (IL-17i, 15.4%), IL-23i (10.7%), and IL-12i/IL-23i (10.7%).
  • The researchers calculated time-dependent risk for MACE using multinomial Cox proportional hazard ratios. The reference was TNFi exposure.
  • Subset analyses compared MACE in patients with and without existing cardiovascular disease.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Compared with TNFi use, there was no difference in the incidence of MACE events in the IL-17i, IL-23i, or IL-12i/IL-23i group.
  • There were also no significant differences between biologic groups in the incidence of congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, or cerebral vascular accident/stroke.

IN PRACTICE:

Despite some concern about increased risk for MACE with TNFi use, this study suggests no special risk for patients with psoriasis or PsA associated with TNFi vs other biologics. “Given our results, as it pertains to MACE, prescribers shouldn’t favor any one biologic class over another,” said lead investigator Shikha Singla, MD, medical director of the Psoriatic Arthritis Program at Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

SOURCE:

Bonit Gill, MD, a second-year fellow at Medical College of Wisconsin, presented the study as a poster at the annual meeting of the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s retrospective nature makes it impossible to prove causation and the patients included in the study were from Wisconsin, which may limit generalizability.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Gill had no relevant financial disclosures. Other study authors participated in trials or consulted for AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Novartis, Eli Lilly, Janssen, and UCB.

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

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Study Links Newer Shingles Vaccine to Delayed Dementia Diagnosis

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Fri, 07/26/2024 - 12:24

 

Receipt of a newer recombinant version of a shingles vaccine is associated with a significant delay in dementia diagnosis in older adults, a new study suggests.

The study builds on previous observations of a reduction in dementia risk with the older live shingles vaccine and reports a delay in dementia diagnosis of 164 days with the newer recombinant version, compared with the live vaccine. 

“Given the prevalence of dementia, a delay of 164 days in diagnosis would not be a trivial effect at the public health level. It’s a big enough effect that if there is a causality it feels meaningful,” said senior author Paul Harrison, DM, FRCPsych, professor of psychiatry at the University of Oxford, Oxford, England. 

But Dr. Harrison stressed that the study had not proven that the shingles vaccine reduced dementia risk. 

“The design of the study allows us to do away with many of the confounding effects we usually see in observational studies, but this is still an observational study, and as such it cannot prove a definite causal effect,” he said. 

The study was published online on July 25 in Nature Medicine.
 

‘Natural Experiment’

Given the risk for deleterious consequences of shingles, vaccination is now recommended for older adults in many countries. The previously used live shingles vaccine (Zostavax) is being replaced in most countries with the new recombinant shingles vaccine (Shingrix), which is more effective at preventing shingles infection. 

The current study made use of a “natural experiment” in the United States, which switched over from use of the live vaccine to the recombinant vaccine in October 2017. 

Researchers used electronic heath records to compare the incidence of a dementia diagnosis in individuals who received the live shingles vaccine prior to October 2017 with those who received the recombinant version after the United States made the switch. 

They also used propensity score matching to further control for confounding factors, comparing 103,837 individuals who received a first dose of the live shingles vaccine between October 2014 and September 2017 with the same number of matched people who received the recombinant vaccine between November 2017 and October 2020. 

Results showed that within the 6 years after vaccination, the recombinant vaccine was associated with a delay in the diagnosis of dementia, compared with the live vaccine. Specifically, receiving the recombinant vaccine was associated with a 17% increase in diagnosis-free time, translating to 164 additional days lived without a diagnosis of dementia in those subsequently affected. 

As an additional control, the researchers also found significantly lower risks for dementia in individuals receiving the new recombinant shingles vaccine vs two other vaccines commonly used in older people: influenza and tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis vaccines, with increases in diagnosis-free time of 14%-27%. 

Reduced Risk or Delayed Diagnosis?

Speaking at a Science Media Centre press conference on the study, lead author Maxime Taquet, PhD, FRCPsych, clinical lecturer in psychiatry at the University of Oxford, noted that the total number of dementia cases were similar in the two shingles vaccine groups by the end of the 6-year follow-up period but there was a difference in the time at which they received a diagnosis of dementia.

“The study suggests that rather than actually reducing dementia risk, the recombinant vaccine delays the onset of dementia compared to the live vaccine in patients who go on to develop the condition,” he explained. 

But when comparing the recombinant vaccine with the influenza and tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis vaccines there was a clear reduction in dementia risk itself, Dr. Taquet reported. 

“It might well be that the live vaccine has a potential effect on the risk of dementia itself and therefore the recombinant vaccine only shows a delay in dementia compared to the live vaccine, but both of them might decrease the overall risk of dementia,” he suggested. 

But the researchers cautioned that this study could not prove causality. 

“While the two groups were very carefully matched in terms of factors that might influence the development of dementia, we still have to be cautious before assuming that the vaccine is indeed causally reducing the risk of onset of dementia,” Dr. Harrison warned. 

The researchers say the results would need to be confirmed in a randomized trial, which may have to be conducted in a slightly younger age group, as currently shingles vaccine is recommended for all older individuals in the United Kingdom. 

Vaccine recommendations vary from country to country, Dr. Harrison added. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the recombinant shingles vaccine for all adults aged 50 years or older. 

In the meantime, it would be interesting to see whether further observational studies in other countries find similar results as this US study, Dr. Harrison said.  
 

Mechanism Uncertain

Speculating on a possible mechanism behind the findings, Dr. Harrison suggested two plausible explanations.

“First, it is thought that the herpes virus could be one of many factors that could promote dementia, so a vaccine that stops reactivation of this virus might therefore be delaying that process,” he noted. 

The other possibility is that adjuvants included in the recombinant vaccine to stimulate the immune system might have played a role. 

“We don’t have any data on the mechanism, and thus study did not address that, so further studies are needed to look into this,” Dr. Harrison said. 
 

Stronger Effect in Women

Another intriguing finding is that the association with the recombinant vaccine and delayed dementia diagnosis seemed to be stronger in women vs men. 

In the original study of the live shingles vaccine, a protective effect against dementia was shown only in women. 

In the current study, the delay in dementia diagnosis was seen in both sexes but was stronger in women, showing a 22% increased time without dementia in women versus a 13% increased time in men with the recombinant versus the live vaccine. 

As expected, the recombinant vaccine was associated with a lower risk for shingles disease vs the live vaccine (2.5% versus 3.5%), but women did not have a better response than men did in this respect. 

“The better protection against shingles with the recombinant vaccine was similar in men and women, an observation that might be one reason to question the possible mechanism behind the dementia effect being better suppression of the herpes zoster virus by the recombinant vaccine,” Dr. Harrison commented. 

Though these findings are not likely to lead to any immediate changes in policy regarding the shingles vaccine, Dr. Harrison said it would be interesting to see whether uptake of the vaccine increased after this study. 

He estimated that, currently in the United Kingdom, about 60% of older adults choose to have the shingles vaccine. A 2020 study in the United States found that only about one-third of US adults over 60 had received the vaccine. 

“It will be interesting to see if that figure increases after these data are publicized, but I am not recommending that people have the vaccine specifically to lower their risk of dementia because of the caveats about the study that we have discussed,” he commented. 
 

Outside Experts Positive 

Outside experts, providing comment to the Science Media Centre, welcomed the new research. 

“ The study is very well-conducted and adds to previous data indicating that vaccination against shingles is associated with lower dementia risk. More research is needed in future to determine why this vaccine is associated with lower dementia risk,” said Tara Spires-Jones, FMedSci, president of the British Neuroscience Association. 

The high number of patients in the study and the adjustments for potential confounders are also strong points, noted Andrew Doig, PhD, professor of biochemistry, University of Manchester, Manchester, England.

“This is a significant result, comparable in effectiveness to the recent antibody drugs for Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Doig said. “Administering the recombinant shingles vaccine could well be a simple and cheap way to lower the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.”

Dr. Doig noted that a link between herpes zoster infection and the onset of dementia has been suspected for some time, and a trial of the antiviral drug valacyclovir against Alzheimer’s disease is currently underway.

In regard to the shingles vaccine, he said a placebo-controlled trial would be needed to prove causality. 

“We also need to see how many years the effect might last and whether we should vaccinate people at a younger age. We know that the path to Alzheimer’s can start decades before any symptoms are apparent, so the vaccine might be even more effective if given to people in their 40s or 50s,” he said.

Dr. Harrison and Dr. Taquet reported no disclosures. Dr. Doig is a founder, director, and consultant for PharmaKure, which works on Alzheimer’s drugs and diagnostics. Other commentators declared no disclosures.

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

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Receipt of a newer recombinant version of a shingles vaccine is associated with a significant delay in dementia diagnosis in older adults, a new study suggests.

The study builds on previous observations of a reduction in dementia risk with the older live shingles vaccine and reports a delay in dementia diagnosis of 164 days with the newer recombinant version, compared with the live vaccine. 

“Given the prevalence of dementia, a delay of 164 days in diagnosis would not be a trivial effect at the public health level. It’s a big enough effect that if there is a causality it feels meaningful,” said senior author Paul Harrison, DM, FRCPsych, professor of psychiatry at the University of Oxford, Oxford, England. 

But Dr. Harrison stressed that the study had not proven that the shingles vaccine reduced dementia risk. 

“The design of the study allows us to do away with many of the confounding effects we usually see in observational studies, but this is still an observational study, and as such it cannot prove a definite causal effect,” he said. 

The study was published online on July 25 in Nature Medicine.
 

‘Natural Experiment’

Given the risk for deleterious consequences of shingles, vaccination is now recommended for older adults in many countries. The previously used live shingles vaccine (Zostavax) is being replaced in most countries with the new recombinant shingles vaccine (Shingrix), which is more effective at preventing shingles infection. 

The current study made use of a “natural experiment” in the United States, which switched over from use of the live vaccine to the recombinant vaccine in October 2017. 

Researchers used electronic heath records to compare the incidence of a dementia diagnosis in individuals who received the live shingles vaccine prior to October 2017 with those who received the recombinant version after the United States made the switch. 

They also used propensity score matching to further control for confounding factors, comparing 103,837 individuals who received a first dose of the live shingles vaccine between October 2014 and September 2017 with the same number of matched people who received the recombinant vaccine between November 2017 and October 2020. 

Results showed that within the 6 years after vaccination, the recombinant vaccine was associated with a delay in the diagnosis of dementia, compared with the live vaccine. Specifically, receiving the recombinant vaccine was associated with a 17% increase in diagnosis-free time, translating to 164 additional days lived without a diagnosis of dementia in those subsequently affected. 

As an additional control, the researchers also found significantly lower risks for dementia in individuals receiving the new recombinant shingles vaccine vs two other vaccines commonly used in older people: influenza and tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis vaccines, with increases in diagnosis-free time of 14%-27%. 

Reduced Risk or Delayed Diagnosis?

Speaking at a Science Media Centre press conference on the study, lead author Maxime Taquet, PhD, FRCPsych, clinical lecturer in psychiatry at the University of Oxford, noted that the total number of dementia cases were similar in the two shingles vaccine groups by the end of the 6-year follow-up period but there was a difference in the time at which they received a diagnosis of dementia.

“The study suggests that rather than actually reducing dementia risk, the recombinant vaccine delays the onset of dementia compared to the live vaccine in patients who go on to develop the condition,” he explained. 

But when comparing the recombinant vaccine with the influenza and tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis vaccines there was a clear reduction in dementia risk itself, Dr. Taquet reported. 

“It might well be that the live vaccine has a potential effect on the risk of dementia itself and therefore the recombinant vaccine only shows a delay in dementia compared to the live vaccine, but both of them might decrease the overall risk of dementia,” he suggested. 

But the researchers cautioned that this study could not prove causality. 

“While the two groups were very carefully matched in terms of factors that might influence the development of dementia, we still have to be cautious before assuming that the vaccine is indeed causally reducing the risk of onset of dementia,” Dr. Harrison warned. 

The researchers say the results would need to be confirmed in a randomized trial, which may have to be conducted in a slightly younger age group, as currently shingles vaccine is recommended for all older individuals in the United Kingdom. 

Vaccine recommendations vary from country to country, Dr. Harrison added. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the recombinant shingles vaccine for all adults aged 50 years or older. 

In the meantime, it would be interesting to see whether further observational studies in other countries find similar results as this US study, Dr. Harrison said.  
 

Mechanism Uncertain

Speculating on a possible mechanism behind the findings, Dr. Harrison suggested two plausible explanations.

“First, it is thought that the herpes virus could be one of many factors that could promote dementia, so a vaccine that stops reactivation of this virus might therefore be delaying that process,” he noted. 

The other possibility is that adjuvants included in the recombinant vaccine to stimulate the immune system might have played a role. 

“We don’t have any data on the mechanism, and thus study did not address that, so further studies are needed to look into this,” Dr. Harrison said. 
 

Stronger Effect in Women

Another intriguing finding is that the association with the recombinant vaccine and delayed dementia diagnosis seemed to be stronger in women vs men. 

In the original study of the live shingles vaccine, a protective effect against dementia was shown only in women. 

In the current study, the delay in dementia diagnosis was seen in both sexes but was stronger in women, showing a 22% increased time without dementia in women versus a 13% increased time in men with the recombinant versus the live vaccine. 

As expected, the recombinant vaccine was associated with a lower risk for shingles disease vs the live vaccine (2.5% versus 3.5%), but women did not have a better response than men did in this respect. 

“The better protection against shingles with the recombinant vaccine was similar in men and women, an observation that might be one reason to question the possible mechanism behind the dementia effect being better suppression of the herpes zoster virus by the recombinant vaccine,” Dr. Harrison commented. 

Though these findings are not likely to lead to any immediate changes in policy regarding the shingles vaccine, Dr. Harrison said it would be interesting to see whether uptake of the vaccine increased after this study. 

He estimated that, currently in the United Kingdom, about 60% of older adults choose to have the shingles vaccine. A 2020 study in the United States found that only about one-third of US adults over 60 had received the vaccine. 

“It will be interesting to see if that figure increases after these data are publicized, but I am not recommending that people have the vaccine specifically to lower their risk of dementia because of the caveats about the study that we have discussed,” he commented. 
 

Outside Experts Positive 

Outside experts, providing comment to the Science Media Centre, welcomed the new research. 

“ The study is very well-conducted and adds to previous data indicating that vaccination against shingles is associated with lower dementia risk. More research is needed in future to determine why this vaccine is associated with lower dementia risk,” said Tara Spires-Jones, FMedSci, president of the British Neuroscience Association. 

The high number of patients in the study and the adjustments for potential confounders are also strong points, noted Andrew Doig, PhD, professor of biochemistry, University of Manchester, Manchester, England.

“This is a significant result, comparable in effectiveness to the recent antibody drugs for Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Doig said. “Administering the recombinant shingles vaccine could well be a simple and cheap way to lower the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.”

Dr. Doig noted that a link between herpes zoster infection and the onset of dementia has been suspected for some time, and a trial of the antiviral drug valacyclovir against Alzheimer’s disease is currently underway.

In regard to the shingles vaccine, he said a placebo-controlled trial would be needed to prove causality. 

“We also need to see how many years the effect might last and whether we should vaccinate people at a younger age. We know that the path to Alzheimer’s can start decades before any symptoms are apparent, so the vaccine might be even more effective if given to people in their 40s or 50s,” he said.

Dr. Harrison and Dr. Taquet reported no disclosures. Dr. Doig is a founder, director, and consultant for PharmaKure, which works on Alzheimer’s drugs and diagnostics. Other commentators declared no disclosures.

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

 

Receipt of a newer recombinant version of a shingles vaccine is associated with a significant delay in dementia diagnosis in older adults, a new study suggests.

The study builds on previous observations of a reduction in dementia risk with the older live shingles vaccine and reports a delay in dementia diagnosis of 164 days with the newer recombinant version, compared with the live vaccine. 

“Given the prevalence of dementia, a delay of 164 days in diagnosis would not be a trivial effect at the public health level. It’s a big enough effect that if there is a causality it feels meaningful,” said senior author Paul Harrison, DM, FRCPsych, professor of psychiatry at the University of Oxford, Oxford, England. 

But Dr. Harrison stressed that the study had not proven that the shingles vaccine reduced dementia risk. 

“The design of the study allows us to do away with many of the confounding effects we usually see in observational studies, but this is still an observational study, and as such it cannot prove a definite causal effect,” he said. 

The study was published online on July 25 in Nature Medicine.
 

‘Natural Experiment’

Given the risk for deleterious consequences of shingles, vaccination is now recommended for older adults in many countries. The previously used live shingles vaccine (Zostavax) is being replaced in most countries with the new recombinant shingles vaccine (Shingrix), which is more effective at preventing shingles infection. 

The current study made use of a “natural experiment” in the United States, which switched over from use of the live vaccine to the recombinant vaccine in October 2017. 

Researchers used electronic heath records to compare the incidence of a dementia diagnosis in individuals who received the live shingles vaccine prior to October 2017 with those who received the recombinant version after the United States made the switch. 

They also used propensity score matching to further control for confounding factors, comparing 103,837 individuals who received a first dose of the live shingles vaccine between October 2014 and September 2017 with the same number of matched people who received the recombinant vaccine between November 2017 and October 2020. 

Results showed that within the 6 years after vaccination, the recombinant vaccine was associated with a delay in the diagnosis of dementia, compared with the live vaccine. Specifically, receiving the recombinant vaccine was associated with a 17% increase in diagnosis-free time, translating to 164 additional days lived without a diagnosis of dementia in those subsequently affected. 

As an additional control, the researchers also found significantly lower risks for dementia in individuals receiving the new recombinant shingles vaccine vs two other vaccines commonly used in older people: influenza and tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis vaccines, with increases in diagnosis-free time of 14%-27%. 

Reduced Risk or Delayed Diagnosis?

Speaking at a Science Media Centre press conference on the study, lead author Maxime Taquet, PhD, FRCPsych, clinical lecturer in psychiatry at the University of Oxford, noted that the total number of dementia cases were similar in the two shingles vaccine groups by the end of the 6-year follow-up period but there was a difference in the time at which they received a diagnosis of dementia.

“The study suggests that rather than actually reducing dementia risk, the recombinant vaccine delays the onset of dementia compared to the live vaccine in patients who go on to develop the condition,” he explained. 

But when comparing the recombinant vaccine with the influenza and tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis vaccines there was a clear reduction in dementia risk itself, Dr. Taquet reported. 

“It might well be that the live vaccine has a potential effect on the risk of dementia itself and therefore the recombinant vaccine only shows a delay in dementia compared to the live vaccine, but both of them might decrease the overall risk of dementia,” he suggested. 

But the researchers cautioned that this study could not prove causality. 

“While the two groups were very carefully matched in terms of factors that might influence the development of dementia, we still have to be cautious before assuming that the vaccine is indeed causally reducing the risk of onset of dementia,” Dr. Harrison warned. 

The researchers say the results would need to be confirmed in a randomized trial, which may have to be conducted in a slightly younger age group, as currently shingles vaccine is recommended for all older individuals in the United Kingdom. 

Vaccine recommendations vary from country to country, Dr. Harrison added. In the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the recombinant shingles vaccine for all adults aged 50 years or older. 

In the meantime, it would be interesting to see whether further observational studies in other countries find similar results as this US study, Dr. Harrison said.  
 

Mechanism Uncertain

Speculating on a possible mechanism behind the findings, Dr. Harrison suggested two plausible explanations.

“First, it is thought that the herpes virus could be one of many factors that could promote dementia, so a vaccine that stops reactivation of this virus might therefore be delaying that process,” he noted. 

The other possibility is that adjuvants included in the recombinant vaccine to stimulate the immune system might have played a role. 

“We don’t have any data on the mechanism, and thus study did not address that, so further studies are needed to look into this,” Dr. Harrison said. 
 

Stronger Effect in Women

Another intriguing finding is that the association with the recombinant vaccine and delayed dementia diagnosis seemed to be stronger in women vs men. 

In the original study of the live shingles vaccine, a protective effect against dementia was shown only in women. 

In the current study, the delay in dementia diagnosis was seen in both sexes but was stronger in women, showing a 22% increased time without dementia in women versus a 13% increased time in men with the recombinant versus the live vaccine. 

As expected, the recombinant vaccine was associated with a lower risk for shingles disease vs the live vaccine (2.5% versus 3.5%), but women did not have a better response than men did in this respect. 

“The better protection against shingles with the recombinant vaccine was similar in men and women, an observation that might be one reason to question the possible mechanism behind the dementia effect being better suppression of the herpes zoster virus by the recombinant vaccine,” Dr. Harrison commented. 

Though these findings are not likely to lead to any immediate changes in policy regarding the shingles vaccine, Dr. Harrison said it would be interesting to see whether uptake of the vaccine increased after this study. 

He estimated that, currently in the United Kingdom, about 60% of older adults choose to have the shingles vaccine. A 2020 study in the United States found that only about one-third of US adults over 60 had received the vaccine. 

“It will be interesting to see if that figure increases after these data are publicized, but I am not recommending that people have the vaccine specifically to lower their risk of dementia because of the caveats about the study that we have discussed,” he commented. 
 

Outside Experts Positive 

Outside experts, providing comment to the Science Media Centre, welcomed the new research. 

“ The study is very well-conducted and adds to previous data indicating that vaccination against shingles is associated with lower dementia risk. More research is needed in future to determine why this vaccine is associated with lower dementia risk,” said Tara Spires-Jones, FMedSci, president of the British Neuroscience Association. 

The high number of patients in the study and the adjustments for potential confounders are also strong points, noted Andrew Doig, PhD, professor of biochemistry, University of Manchester, Manchester, England.

“This is a significant result, comparable in effectiveness to the recent antibody drugs for Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Doig said. “Administering the recombinant shingles vaccine could well be a simple and cheap way to lower the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.”

Dr. Doig noted that a link between herpes zoster infection and the onset of dementia has been suspected for some time, and a trial of the antiviral drug valacyclovir against Alzheimer’s disease is currently underway.

In regard to the shingles vaccine, he said a placebo-controlled trial would be needed to prove causality. 

“We also need to see how many years the effect might last and whether we should vaccinate people at a younger age. We know that the path to Alzheimer’s can start decades before any symptoms are apparent, so the vaccine might be even more effective if given to people in their 40s or 50s,” he said.

Dr. Harrison and Dr. Taquet reported no disclosures. Dr. Doig is a founder, director, and consultant for PharmaKure, which works on Alzheimer’s drugs and diagnostics. Other commentators declared no disclosures.

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

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The Rise of the Scribes

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Fri, 07/26/2024 - 09:27

 

“We really aren’t taking care of records — we’re taking care of people.”Dr. Lawrence Weed

What is the purpose of a progress note? Anyone? Yes, you there. “Insurance billing?” Yes, that’s a good one. Anyone else? “To remember what you did?” Excellent. Another? Yes, that’s right, for others to follow along in your care. These are all good reasons for a progress note to exist. But they aren’t the whole story. Let’s start at the beginning.

Charts were once a collection of paper sheets with handwritten notes. Sometimes illegible, sometimes beautiful, always efficient. A progress note back then could be just 10 characters, AK, LN2, X,X,X,X,X (with X’s marking nitrogen sprays). Then came the healthcare K-Pg event: the conversion to EMRs. Those doctors who survived evolved into computer programmers, creating blocks of text from a few keystrokes. But like toddler-sized Legos, the blocks made it impossible to build a note that is nuanced or precise. Worse yet, many notes consisting of blocks from one note added awkwardly to a new note, creating grotesque structures unrecognizable as anything that should exist in nature. Words and numbers, but no information.

Paper medical records
Newtown grafitti / flickr / CC BY-2.0
Paper medical records

Thanks to the eternity of EMR, these creations live on, hideous and useless. They waste not only the server’s energy but also our time. Few things are more maddening than scrolling to reach the bottom of another physician’s note only to find there is nothing there.

Whose fault is this? Anyone? Yes, that’s right, insurers. As there are probably no payers in this audience, let’s blame them. I agree, the crushing burden of documentation-to-get-reimbursed has forced us to create “notes” that add no value to us but add up points for us to get paid for them. CMS, payers, prior authorizations, and now even patients, it seems we are documenting for lots of people except for us. There isn’t time to satisfy all and this significant burden for every encounter is a proximate cause for doctors despair. Until now.

In 2024, came our story’s deus ex machina: the AI scribe. A tool that can listen to a doctor visit, then from the ether, generate a note. A fully formed, comprehensive, sometimes pretty note that satisfies all audiences. Dr. Larry Weed must be dancing in heaven. It was Dr. Weed who led us from the nicotine-stained logs of the 1950s to the powerful problem-based notes we use today, an innovation that rivals the stethoscope in its impact.

Professor Weed also predicted that computers would be important to capture and make sense of patient data, helping us make accurate diagnoses and efficient plans. Again, he was right. He would surely be advocating to take advantage of AI scribes’ marvelous ability to capture salient data and present it in the form of a problem-oriented medical record.

AI scribes will be ubiquitous soon; I’m fast and even for me they save time. They also allow, for the first time in a decade, to turn from the glow of a screen to actually face the patient – we no longer have to scribe and care simultaneously. Hallelujah. And yet, lest I disappoint you without a twist, it seems with AI scribes, like EMRs we lose a little something too.

Like self-driving cars or ChatGPT-generated letters, they remove cognitive loads. They are lovely when you have to multitask or are trying to recall a visit from hours (days) ago. Using them, you’ll feel faster, lighter, freer, happier. But what’s missing is the thinking. At the end, you have an exquisite note, but you didn’t write it. It has the salient points, but none of the mental work to create it. AI scribes subvert the valuable work of synthesis. That was the critical part of Dr. Weed’s discovery: writing problem-oriented notes helped us think better.

Dr. Jeffrey Benabio, director of Healthcare Transformation and chief of dermatology at Kaiser Permanente, San Diego.
Kaiser Permanente
Dr. Jeffrey Benabio

Writing allows for the friction that helps us process what is going on with a patient. It allows for the discovery of diagnoses and prompts plans. When I was an intern, one of my attendings would hand write notes, succinctly showing what he had observed and was thinking. He’d sketch diagrams in the chart, for example, to help illustrate how we’d work though the toxic, metabolic, and infectious etiologies of acute liver failure. Sublime.

The act of writing also helps remind us there is a person attached to these words. Like a handwritten sympathy card, it is intimate, human. Even using our EMR, I’d still often type sentences that help tell the patient’s story. “Her sister just died. Utterly devastated. I’ll forward chart to Bob (her PCP) to check in on her.” Or: “Scratch golfer wants to know why he is getting so many SCCs now. ‘Like bankruptcy, gradually then suddenly,’ I explained. I think I broke through.”

Since we’ve concluded the purpose of a note is mostly to capture data, AI scribes are a godsend. They do so with remarkable quality and efficiency. We’ll just have to remember if the diagnosis is unclear, then it might help to write the note out yourself. And even when done by the AI machine, we might add human touches now and again lest there be no art left in what we do.

“For sale. Sun hat. Never worn.”

 

Dr. Benabio is director of Healthcare Transformation and chief of dermatology at Kaiser Permanente San Diego. The opinions expressed in this column are his own and do not represent those of Kaiser Permanente. Dr. Benabio is @Dermdoc on X. Write to him at dermnews@mdedge.com.

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“We really aren’t taking care of records — we’re taking care of people.”Dr. Lawrence Weed

What is the purpose of a progress note? Anyone? Yes, you there. “Insurance billing?” Yes, that’s a good one. Anyone else? “To remember what you did?” Excellent. Another? Yes, that’s right, for others to follow along in your care. These are all good reasons for a progress note to exist. But they aren’t the whole story. Let’s start at the beginning.

Charts were once a collection of paper sheets with handwritten notes. Sometimes illegible, sometimes beautiful, always efficient. A progress note back then could be just 10 characters, AK, LN2, X,X,X,X,X (with X’s marking nitrogen sprays). Then came the healthcare K-Pg event: the conversion to EMRs. Those doctors who survived evolved into computer programmers, creating blocks of text from a few keystrokes. But like toddler-sized Legos, the blocks made it impossible to build a note that is nuanced or precise. Worse yet, many notes consisting of blocks from one note added awkwardly to a new note, creating grotesque structures unrecognizable as anything that should exist in nature. Words and numbers, but no information.

Paper medical records
Newtown grafitti / flickr / CC BY-2.0
Paper medical records

Thanks to the eternity of EMR, these creations live on, hideous and useless. They waste not only the server’s energy but also our time. Few things are more maddening than scrolling to reach the bottom of another physician’s note only to find there is nothing there.

Whose fault is this? Anyone? Yes, that’s right, insurers. As there are probably no payers in this audience, let’s blame them. I agree, the crushing burden of documentation-to-get-reimbursed has forced us to create “notes” that add no value to us but add up points for us to get paid for them. CMS, payers, prior authorizations, and now even patients, it seems we are documenting for lots of people except for us. There isn’t time to satisfy all and this significant burden for every encounter is a proximate cause for doctors despair. Until now.

In 2024, came our story’s deus ex machina: the AI scribe. A tool that can listen to a doctor visit, then from the ether, generate a note. A fully formed, comprehensive, sometimes pretty note that satisfies all audiences. Dr. Larry Weed must be dancing in heaven. It was Dr. Weed who led us from the nicotine-stained logs of the 1950s to the powerful problem-based notes we use today, an innovation that rivals the stethoscope in its impact.

Professor Weed also predicted that computers would be important to capture and make sense of patient data, helping us make accurate diagnoses and efficient plans. Again, he was right. He would surely be advocating to take advantage of AI scribes’ marvelous ability to capture salient data and present it in the form of a problem-oriented medical record.

AI scribes will be ubiquitous soon; I’m fast and even for me they save time. They also allow, for the first time in a decade, to turn from the glow of a screen to actually face the patient – we no longer have to scribe and care simultaneously. Hallelujah. And yet, lest I disappoint you without a twist, it seems with AI scribes, like EMRs we lose a little something too.

Like self-driving cars or ChatGPT-generated letters, they remove cognitive loads. They are lovely when you have to multitask or are trying to recall a visit from hours (days) ago. Using them, you’ll feel faster, lighter, freer, happier. But what’s missing is the thinking. At the end, you have an exquisite note, but you didn’t write it. It has the salient points, but none of the mental work to create it. AI scribes subvert the valuable work of synthesis. That was the critical part of Dr. Weed’s discovery: writing problem-oriented notes helped us think better.

Dr. Jeffrey Benabio, director of Healthcare Transformation and chief of dermatology at Kaiser Permanente, San Diego.
Kaiser Permanente
Dr. Jeffrey Benabio

Writing allows for the friction that helps us process what is going on with a patient. It allows for the discovery of diagnoses and prompts plans. When I was an intern, one of my attendings would hand write notes, succinctly showing what he had observed and was thinking. He’d sketch diagrams in the chart, for example, to help illustrate how we’d work though the toxic, metabolic, and infectious etiologies of acute liver failure. Sublime.

The act of writing also helps remind us there is a person attached to these words. Like a handwritten sympathy card, it is intimate, human. Even using our EMR, I’d still often type sentences that help tell the patient’s story. “Her sister just died. Utterly devastated. I’ll forward chart to Bob (her PCP) to check in on her.” Or: “Scratch golfer wants to know why he is getting so many SCCs now. ‘Like bankruptcy, gradually then suddenly,’ I explained. I think I broke through.”

Since we’ve concluded the purpose of a note is mostly to capture data, AI scribes are a godsend. They do so with remarkable quality and efficiency. We’ll just have to remember if the diagnosis is unclear, then it might help to write the note out yourself. And even when done by the AI machine, we might add human touches now and again lest there be no art left in what we do.

“For sale. Sun hat. Never worn.”

 

Dr. Benabio is director of Healthcare Transformation and chief of dermatology at Kaiser Permanente San Diego. The opinions expressed in this column are his own and do not represent those of Kaiser Permanente. Dr. Benabio is @Dermdoc on X. Write to him at dermnews@mdedge.com.

 

“We really aren’t taking care of records — we’re taking care of people.”Dr. Lawrence Weed

What is the purpose of a progress note? Anyone? Yes, you there. “Insurance billing?” Yes, that’s a good one. Anyone else? “To remember what you did?” Excellent. Another? Yes, that’s right, for others to follow along in your care. These are all good reasons for a progress note to exist. But they aren’t the whole story. Let’s start at the beginning.

Charts were once a collection of paper sheets with handwritten notes. Sometimes illegible, sometimes beautiful, always efficient. A progress note back then could be just 10 characters, AK, LN2, X,X,X,X,X (with X’s marking nitrogen sprays). Then came the healthcare K-Pg event: the conversion to EMRs. Those doctors who survived evolved into computer programmers, creating blocks of text from a few keystrokes. But like toddler-sized Legos, the blocks made it impossible to build a note that is nuanced or precise. Worse yet, many notes consisting of blocks from one note added awkwardly to a new note, creating grotesque structures unrecognizable as anything that should exist in nature. Words and numbers, but no information.

Paper medical records
Newtown grafitti / flickr / CC BY-2.0
Paper medical records

Thanks to the eternity of EMR, these creations live on, hideous and useless. They waste not only the server’s energy but also our time. Few things are more maddening than scrolling to reach the bottom of another physician’s note only to find there is nothing there.

Whose fault is this? Anyone? Yes, that’s right, insurers. As there are probably no payers in this audience, let’s blame them. I agree, the crushing burden of documentation-to-get-reimbursed has forced us to create “notes” that add no value to us but add up points for us to get paid for them. CMS, payers, prior authorizations, and now even patients, it seems we are documenting for lots of people except for us. There isn’t time to satisfy all and this significant burden for every encounter is a proximate cause for doctors despair. Until now.

In 2024, came our story’s deus ex machina: the AI scribe. A tool that can listen to a doctor visit, then from the ether, generate a note. A fully formed, comprehensive, sometimes pretty note that satisfies all audiences. Dr. Larry Weed must be dancing in heaven. It was Dr. Weed who led us from the nicotine-stained logs of the 1950s to the powerful problem-based notes we use today, an innovation that rivals the stethoscope in its impact.

Professor Weed also predicted that computers would be important to capture and make sense of patient data, helping us make accurate diagnoses and efficient plans. Again, he was right. He would surely be advocating to take advantage of AI scribes’ marvelous ability to capture salient data and present it in the form of a problem-oriented medical record.

AI scribes will be ubiquitous soon; I’m fast and even for me they save time. They also allow, for the first time in a decade, to turn from the glow of a screen to actually face the patient – we no longer have to scribe and care simultaneously. Hallelujah. And yet, lest I disappoint you without a twist, it seems with AI scribes, like EMRs we lose a little something too.

Like self-driving cars or ChatGPT-generated letters, they remove cognitive loads. They are lovely when you have to multitask or are trying to recall a visit from hours (days) ago. Using them, you’ll feel faster, lighter, freer, happier. But what’s missing is the thinking. At the end, you have an exquisite note, but you didn’t write it. It has the salient points, but none of the mental work to create it. AI scribes subvert the valuable work of synthesis. That was the critical part of Dr. Weed’s discovery: writing problem-oriented notes helped us think better.

Dr. Jeffrey Benabio, director of Healthcare Transformation and chief of dermatology at Kaiser Permanente, San Diego.
Kaiser Permanente
Dr. Jeffrey Benabio

Writing allows for the friction that helps us process what is going on with a patient. It allows for the discovery of diagnoses and prompts plans. When I was an intern, one of my attendings would hand write notes, succinctly showing what he had observed and was thinking. He’d sketch diagrams in the chart, for example, to help illustrate how we’d work though the toxic, metabolic, and infectious etiologies of acute liver failure. Sublime.

The act of writing also helps remind us there is a person attached to these words. Like a handwritten sympathy card, it is intimate, human. Even using our EMR, I’d still often type sentences that help tell the patient’s story. “Her sister just died. Utterly devastated. I’ll forward chart to Bob (her PCP) to check in on her.” Or: “Scratch golfer wants to know why he is getting so many SCCs now. ‘Like bankruptcy, gradually then suddenly,’ I explained. I think I broke through.”

Since we’ve concluded the purpose of a note is mostly to capture data, AI scribes are a godsend. They do so with remarkable quality and efficiency. We’ll just have to remember if the diagnosis is unclear, then it might help to write the note out yourself. And even when done by the AI machine, we might add human touches now and again lest there be no art left in what we do.

“For sale. Sun hat. Never worn.”

 

Dr. Benabio is director of Healthcare Transformation and chief of dermatology at Kaiser Permanente San Diego. The opinions expressed in this column are his own and do not represent those of Kaiser Permanente. Dr. Benabio is @Dermdoc on X. Write to him at dermnews@mdedge.com.

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Steroids’ 75th Anniversary: Clinicians Strive to Use Less

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Thu, 07/25/2024 - 15:35

Now, 75 years after the first presentations were made on the “sensational” effects of cortisone in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), glucocorticoids (GCs) are still highly relevant and widely used in the management of RA and other immune-mediated inflammatory diseases.

“It makes me smile because this is such an old drug, and we need it still so much. It still hasn’t been replaced,” Josef S. Smolen, MD, observed at annual European Congress of Rheumatology.

At low doses, GCs are highly effective as anti-inflammatory and anti-destructive agents in RA and many other diseases, said Dr. Smolen, a rheumatologist and immunologist and professor emeritus at the Medical University of Vienna, Austria.

But even after all this time, the mechanisms that lead to efficacy vs toxicity have yet to be clarified. “Such separation may provide further insights into future treatment options,” said Dr. Smolen.

Dr. Josef S. Smolen of the Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Dr. Josef S. Smolen


His comments, made during a special session on the 75th anniversary of GCs at EULAR 2024, underscore the endless saga to manage GCs while finding better alternatives. Opinions differ on what the research says on toxicity and dosage and whether a long-term, low-dose option is viable. Alternative therapies are being studied, but those endeavors are still in the early stages of development.

While GCs are still used chronically in many patients, clinicians should always attempt to discontinue them whenever possible, Frank Buttgereit, MD, professor of rheumatology and deputy head of the Department of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany, told attendees at the congress. Up to 60% of patients in registries use GCs, and many patients with early or established RA enter randomized controlled trials on GCs as maintenance therapy.

Dr. Frank Buttgereit, professor in the department of rheumatology at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin in Germany
Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Frank Buttgereit


The ubiquity of GC usage stems in part from overprescribing by non-rheumatologist physicians who might not have access to or aren’t aware of newer biologics or disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). “We see a lot of patients on long-term glucocorticoids, chronic use for years and years, decades of glucocorticoids,” said Giovanni Adami, MD, PhD, a rheumatologist at the University of Verona, Italy, who has coauthored several studies on the use of GCs.

Dr. Giovanni Adami of the University of Verona, Italy
Dr. Giovanni Adami

 

Societies Agree: Discontinue as Fast as Possible

GCs have been associated with a long list of adverse events, most notably Cushing syndrome, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, myopathy, peptic ulcer, adrenal insufficiency (AI), infections, mood disorders, ophthalmologic disorders such as cataracts, skin disorders, menstrual septic necrosis, and pancreatitis.

Dose matters, Dr. Smolen said, citing studies that found that cumulative GC doses of 1000 or 1100 mg increase risks. One study by German researchers found that doses above 10 mg/d significantly raised the hazard ratio for death.

Because high disease activity is also associated with an equally high mortality risk, “we have to balance this out: Active disease vs glucocorticoid use, especially in countries that have less access to modern therapies than we have in the more affluent Western regions,” Dr. Smolen said.

Rheumatology societies generally agree that clinicians should try to minimize GC use or eventually discontinue the therapy.

The American College of Rheumatology recommends not using GCs as part of the first-line treatment of RA. “And if you want to use [them], you should do that for less than 3 months, taper and discontinue as fast as possible, and use the lowest dose possible,” Dr. Adami said.

EULAR’s recommendation is more nuanced in that it allows for a lower dose but gives physicians more choice in how they want to handle GCs, Dr. Adami said. The task force added that all patients should try to taper down or discontinue as fast as possible, he said.

For GCs in the management of systemic lupus erythematosus, a EULAR task force recommended that the type and severity of organ involvement should determine dose, with a long-term goal of maintaining the dose < 5 mg/d or possibly withdrawing it.

EULAR also recommends GC bridging when initiating or changing conventional synthetic (cs) DMARDs. This effectively dismisses the use of GCs when using biologic DMARDs or targeted synthetic DMARDs. As a bridging therapy, EULAR recommends either a single parenteral dose of GC or a predefined tapering or discontinuation scheme within 3 months, when starting an oral GC.
 

 

 

Low-Dose Approach Gains Ground

While saying he’d be the first physician to eliminate GCs whenever possible, Dr. Buttgereit made the case before the EULAR Congress that GCs in low doses could still play a role in treatment.

Many physicians believe that very low doses between 2 and 4 mg/d are a realistic therapy option for RA, he said, adding that a mean daily usage < 5 mg could be used over a longer period with relatively low risk.

Several studies he coauthored tested the 5-mg approach. The GLORIA trial compared 5 mg/d prednisolone and placebo in 451 patients aged 65 years and older with active RA over the course of 2 years. The researchers found that patients on prednisolone had a mean Disease Activity Score in 28 joints (DAS28) that was 0.37 points lower and mean joint damage score that was 1.7 points lower than those of patients on placebo, suggesting that the GC had long-term benefits in these patients with RA.

The tradeoff was a 24% increase in the risk of having at least one adverse event of special interest, but most of these events were non-severe infections, Dr. Buttgereit said.

Another study, the SEMIRA trial, assigned 128 patients to a continued regimen of prednisone 5 mg/d for 24 weeks. Another group of 131 patients received a tapered-prednisone regimen. All patients received tocilizumab 162 mg with or without csDMARDs, maintained at stable doses.

Patients in the first cohort achieved superior disease activity control than those in the tapered regimen group. “The side effects showed that in the tapering prednisone group, there were more treatment-emergent adverse effects in this double-blind trial as compared to the continued prednisone group,” Dr. Buttgereit said.

One limitation of the SEMIRA trial was that it studied the effect of tocilizumab as a GC-sparing agent, and it didn’t consider using a tumor necrosis factor or Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, which might have a more potent effect on pain and GC dose reduction, Dr. Adami said. “Why do we need to use glucocorticoids if we know they might be detrimental, if we know there might be some other option in our armamentarium?”

Other studies have shown that low-dose GC protocols can be used with standard treatment, according to Sebastian E. Sattui, MD, assistant professor of medicine and director of the Vasculitis Center at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

“Examples of this are the LoVAS and PEXIVAS studies for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated [ANCA] vasculitis. This has been highlighted in existing treatment recommendations for ANCA vasculitis and systemic lupus erythematosus nephritis,” Dr. Sattui said.

Dr. Sebastian E. Sattui, director of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Vasculitis Clinic
Dr. Sebastian E. Sattui


Two-year results from LoVAS showed noninferiority in remission induction rates and rates of relapse and significantly less frequent serious adverse events between a reduced-dose GC regimen at 0.5 mg/kg/d and conventional high-dose GC regimen at 1 mg/kg/d plus rituximab for ANCA vasculitis.

PEXIVAS demonstrated the noninferiority of a reduced-dose regimen of GCs vs a standard-dose regimen with respect to death or end-stage kidney disease in patients with severe disease involvement.
 

 

 

Debating the Toxicity Threshold

Are low GC dosages significantly associated with adverse events like mortality, cardiovascular, or diabetes risk? It depends on who you ask.

Much of the toxicity data on GCs come from inadequately powered or controlled studies and often refer to doses that currently are considered too high, Dr. Buttgereit said. His presentation highlighted a study from Hong Kong, a time-varying analysis of GC dose and incident risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in more than 12,000 patients with RA. Researchers found that GC regimens ≥ 5 mg/d significantly increased the risk for MACE. Comparatively, doses below this threshold did not confer excessive risk, he said.

Low-dose GCs are lesser toxic than high-dose GCs, noted Joan Merrill, MD, a professor with the Arthritis and Clinical Immunology Research Program at The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City. “There may be less weight gain, less chance of acne, and less risk for all the slower, more organ-threatening side effects.”

Dr. Joan Merrill, professor of medicine at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City
Bianca Nogrady/MDedge News
Dr. Joan Merrill


Dr. Merrill, who cares for patients with lupus, said physicians can keep lupus in check for years, using constant, low-dose GCs. “The one thing we know is that steroids work.” But over many years, damage may still occur, she cautioned.

But even a low dose could present health problems to patients. The GLORIA trial of patients with RA, which showed promising results on disease control with 5 mg/d, found an association between GCs and increased risk for infection and osteoporosis. There was a higher overall risk for adverse events related to skin, infections, and bone mineral density changes. Bone mineral density loss and fractures were more common in the GC group, Adami noted.

Surprisingly, some of the trial’s authors said patients could handle such adverse events. But what is your threshold of “acceptable?” Dr. Adami asked.

Other studies have found associations between low-dose GC regimens and adverse events. Researchers of a 2023 study reported bone mineral density loss in patients with inflammatory rheumatic musculoskeletal diseases on a 2.5-mg/d regimen. Another decade-long analysis of Medicare and Optum data found a link between serious infection and low-dose GCs in patients receiving stable DMARD therapy. Investigators reported risk even at daily doses of ≤ 5 mg.

Dr. Adami acknowledged that these studies may have “confounding by indication,” a channeling bias in which people with severe RA are more likely to be treated with GCs. For this reason, it’s a challenge to disentangle the independent role of GCs from the disease activity itself, he said.

The big question is: Why don’t these observational studies show an increased risk for adverse events with biologic drugs that are given to more severe patients? “That confirms the hypothesis that confounding by indication for GCs is minimal, and most of the risk is driven by GCs,” he said.


 

Tapering Options Across Diseases

Rheumatologists in the field continue to navigate GC-tapering options and treatment combinations that reduce the cumulative use of GCs over time, finding their own solutions based on the conditions they treat.

In his EULAR presentation, Dr. Buttgereit suggested that current therapeutic approaches for RA may be too narrow when they don’t consider the possibility of including very low doses of GCs.

For RA, “why shouldn’t we not do a combination of something like methotrexate plus a JAK inhibitor or a biological,” plus a very low dose of GCs < 5 mg/d, he asked.

However, Dr. Adami said he generally avoids GCs if RA disease activity is not severe (based on DAS28) and if the patient has a visual analog scale pain score < 7. “Nonetheless, even in patients with more severe disease, I would avoid GCs for more than 3 months. Usually, 1 month of steroids, tapered rapidly and discontinued.”

All patients should receive an appropriate treat-to-target strategy with csDMARDs and biologics if needed, he added.

A patient coming to clinic with difficult-to-treat RA who chronically uses GCs deserves special attention. The priority is bone protection with an anti-osteoporosis medication. “I found that JAK inhibitors, in some cases, help with the discontinuation of steroids, especially in those with residual pain. Therefore, I would think of switching medication,” Dr. Adami said.

For polymyalgia rheumatica, most clinicians will likely try to taper GCs around 52 weeks, similar to ACR/EULAR guidelines, according to Robert F. Spiera, MD, director of the Scleroderma and Vasculitis Program at Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City.

Dr. Robert Spiera, director of the Scleroderma and Vasculitis Program at Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City
Hospital for Special Surgery
Dr. Robert F. Spiera


“I usually challenge patients with a more rapid taper, hoping to get them off GCs in 6 or even 4 months in some patients, recognizing that many will flare, and we will have to bump up their GC dose,” Dr. Spiera said.

For patients with lupus, GCs remain the most effective treatment, Dr. Merrill said. “The toxicities are unacceptable for long-term use. So we try to get in fast when we need them and get out as soon as possible after that, tapering down as fast as the patient can tolerate it.”

Unfortunately, that’s not always as fast as the clinician or patient hopes for, she said.

“New treatments are being developed that may help us avoid the constant use of steroids. However, it would be wonderful to see how these new safer types of steroids work in lupus,” she said.

Minimizing GCs is an important goal that should be considered and aimed for in every single patient, Dr. Sattui said. “Risk of GC toxicity should be considered in all patients, assessing [them] for cardiometabolic comorbidities, bone metabolic diseases, risk of infection, among many others.” Sticking to one specific GC-tapering protocol might not be achievable for every patient, however, based on disease characteristics, response, and other factors, he added.

Monitoring for GC toxicity is important and should occur during and after every single clinical visit, he emphasized. Patient education is critical. “Different tools have been developed and employed in clinical trials, both patient- and physician-facing instruments. Implementation to clinical practice of some of these should be the next step in order to achieve a more systematic approach.”
 

 

 

What to Consider for AI Symptoms

Clinicians also need to address AI in patients who are coming off GCs, Dr. Sattui said. He advised that symptoms suggestive of AI, including malaise, fatigue, nausea, and muscle and/or joint pain, should guide testing.

Even in the absence of symptoms, clinicians should consider assessing patients who have been on high doses for prolonged periods or obese or older adults who might be at a high risk for AI. “Signs to consider include weight loss, hypotension, or orthostatism,” he said.

Differentiating between AI symptoms and symptoms from the underlying disease can be a challenge. This requires a physical exam and workup, including morning serum cortisol. Collaboration with endocrinology colleagues and other treating providers is important, as well as patient education of symptoms and monitoring for possible adjustments in treating AI and other acute diseases, he said.

Dr. Smolen received research grants from AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Galapagos, and Eli Lilly. Dr. Adami received speaker fees and/or was a consultant for Galapagos, Theramex, Amgen, Eli Lilly, UCB, Fresenius Kabi, Bristol Myers Squibb, Abiogen, and Pfizer. Dr. Buttgereit’s disclosures included AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Grünenthal, Horizon Therapeutics, Mundipharma, Pfizer, and Roche. Dr. Merrill had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Spiera has been a consultant for Roche-Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi, ChemoCentryx, Novartis, Galderma, Cytori, AstraZeneca, Amgen, and AbbVie and received research grant support from GlaxoSmithKline, Roche-Genentech, AstraZeneca, Bristol Myers Squibb, Kadmon, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cytori, ChemoCentryx, Corbus, Novartis, Amgen, and AbbVie. Dr. Sattui reported receiving research support from AstraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline (clinical trials), receiving consulting fees from Sanofi (funds toward research support), serving on advisory boards for Sanofi and Amgen (funds toward research support), and receiving speaker fees from Fresenius Kabi (funds toward research support).
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Now, 75 years after the first presentations were made on the “sensational” effects of cortisone in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), glucocorticoids (GCs) are still highly relevant and widely used in the management of RA and other immune-mediated inflammatory diseases.

“It makes me smile because this is such an old drug, and we need it still so much. It still hasn’t been replaced,” Josef S. Smolen, MD, observed at annual European Congress of Rheumatology.

At low doses, GCs are highly effective as anti-inflammatory and anti-destructive agents in RA and many other diseases, said Dr. Smolen, a rheumatologist and immunologist and professor emeritus at the Medical University of Vienna, Austria.

But even after all this time, the mechanisms that lead to efficacy vs toxicity have yet to be clarified. “Such separation may provide further insights into future treatment options,” said Dr. Smolen.

Dr. Josef S. Smolen of the Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Dr. Josef S. Smolen


His comments, made during a special session on the 75th anniversary of GCs at EULAR 2024, underscore the endless saga to manage GCs while finding better alternatives. Opinions differ on what the research says on toxicity and dosage and whether a long-term, low-dose option is viable. Alternative therapies are being studied, but those endeavors are still in the early stages of development.

While GCs are still used chronically in many patients, clinicians should always attempt to discontinue them whenever possible, Frank Buttgereit, MD, professor of rheumatology and deputy head of the Department of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany, told attendees at the congress. Up to 60% of patients in registries use GCs, and many patients with early or established RA enter randomized controlled trials on GCs as maintenance therapy.

Dr. Frank Buttgereit, professor in the department of rheumatology at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin in Germany
Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Frank Buttgereit


The ubiquity of GC usage stems in part from overprescribing by non-rheumatologist physicians who might not have access to or aren’t aware of newer biologics or disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). “We see a lot of patients on long-term glucocorticoids, chronic use for years and years, decades of glucocorticoids,” said Giovanni Adami, MD, PhD, a rheumatologist at the University of Verona, Italy, who has coauthored several studies on the use of GCs.

Dr. Giovanni Adami of the University of Verona, Italy
Dr. Giovanni Adami

 

Societies Agree: Discontinue as Fast as Possible

GCs have been associated with a long list of adverse events, most notably Cushing syndrome, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, myopathy, peptic ulcer, adrenal insufficiency (AI), infections, mood disorders, ophthalmologic disorders such as cataracts, skin disorders, menstrual septic necrosis, and pancreatitis.

Dose matters, Dr. Smolen said, citing studies that found that cumulative GC doses of 1000 or 1100 mg increase risks. One study by German researchers found that doses above 10 mg/d significantly raised the hazard ratio for death.

Because high disease activity is also associated with an equally high mortality risk, “we have to balance this out: Active disease vs glucocorticoid use, especially in countries that have less access to modern therapies than we have in the more affluent Western regions,” Dr. Smolen said.

Rheumatology societies generally agree that clinicians should try to minimize GC use or eventually discontinue the therapy.

The American College of Rheumatology recommends not using GCs as part of the first-line treatment of RA. “And if you want to use [them], you should do that for less than 3 months, taper and discontinue as fast as possible, and use the lowest dose possible,” Dr. Adami said.

EULAR’s recommendation is more nuanced in that it allows for a lower dose but gives physicians more choice in how they want to handle GCs, Dr. Adami said. The task force added that all patients should try to taper down or discontinue as fast as possible, he said.

For GCs in the management of systemic lupus erythematosus, a EULAR task force recommended that the type and severity of organ involvement should determine dose, with a long-term goal of maintaining the dose < 5 mg/d or possibly withdrawing it.

EULAR also recommends GC bridging when initiating or changing conventional synthetic (cs) DMARDs. This effectively dismisses the use of GCs when using biologic DMARDs or targeted synthetic DMARDs. As a bridging therapy, EULAR recommends either a single parenteral dose of GC or a predefined tapering or discontinuation scheme within 3 months, when starting an oral GC.
 

 

 

Low-Dose Approach Gains Ground

While saying he’d be the first physician to eliminate GCs whenever possible, Dr. Buttgereit made the case before the EULAR Congress that GCs in low doses could still play a role in treatment.

Many physicians believe that very low doses between 2 and 4 mg/d are a realistic therapy option for RA, he said, adding that a mean daily usage < 5 mg could be used over a longer period with relatively low risk.

Several studies he coauthored tested the 5-mg approach. The GLORIA trial compared 5 mg/d prednisolone and placebo in 451 patients aged 65 years and older with active RA over the course of 2 years. The researchers found that patients on prednisolone had a mean Disease Activity Score in 28 joints (DAS28) that was 0.37 points lower and mean joint damage score that was 1.7 points lower than those of patients on placebo, suggesting that the GC had long-term benefits in these patients with RA.

The tradeoff was a 24% increase in the risk of having at least one adverse event of special interest, but most of these events were non-severe infections, Dr. Buttgereit said.

Another study, the SEMIRA trial, assigned 128 patients to a continued regimen of prednisone 5 mg/d for 24 weeks. Another group of 131 patients received a tapered-prednisone regimen. All patients received tocilizumab 162 mg with or without csDMARDs, maintained at stable doses.

Patients in the first cohort achieved superior disease activity control than those in the tapered regimen group. “The side effects showed that in the tapering prednisone group, there were more treatment-emergent adverse effects in this double-blind trial as compared to the continued prednisone group,” Dr. Buttgereit said.

One limitation of the SEMIRA trial was that it studied the effect of tocilizumab as a GC-sparing agent, and it didn’t consider using a tumor necrosis factor or Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, which might have a more potent effect on pain and GC dose reduction, Dr. Adami said. “Why do we need to use glucocorticoids if we know they might be detrimental, if we know there might be some other option in our armamentarium?”

Other studies have shown that low-dose GC protocols can be used with standard treatment, according to Sebastian E. Sattui, MD, assistant professor of medicine and director of the Vasculitis Center at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

“Examples of this are the LoVAS and PEXIVAS studies for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated [ANCA] vasculitis. This has been highlighted in existing treatment recommendations for ANCA vasculitis and systemic lupus erythematosus nephritis,” Dr. Sattui said.

Dr. Sebastian E. Sattui, director of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Vasculitis Clinic
Dr. Sebastian E. Sattui


Two-year results from LoVAS showed noninferiority in remission induction rates and rates of relapse and significantly less frequent serious adverse events between a reduced-dose GC regimen at 0.5 mg/kg/d and conventional high-dose GC regimen at 1 mg/kg/d plus rituximab for ANCA vasculitis.

PEXIVAS demonstrated the noninferiority of a reduced-dose regimen of GCs vs a standard-dose regimen with respect to death or end-stage kidney disease in patients with severe disease involvement.
 

 

 

Debating the Toxicity Threshold

Are low GC dosages significantly associated with adverse events like mortality, cardiovascular, or diabetes risk? It depends on who you ask.

Much of the toxicity data on GCs come from inadequately powered or controlled studies and often refer to doses that currently are considered too high, Dr. Buttgereit said. His presentation highlighted a study from Hong Kong, a time-varying analysis of GC dose and incident risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in more than 12,000 patients with RA. Researchers found that GC regimens ≥ 5 mg/d significantly increased the risk for MACE. Comparatively, doses below this threshold did not confer excessive risk, he said.

Low-dose GCs are lesser toxic than high-dose GCs, noted Joan Merrill, MD, a professor with the Arthritis and Clinical Immunology Research Program at The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City. “There may be less weight gain, less chance of acne, and less risk for all the slower, more organ-threatening side effects.”

Dr. Joan Merrill, professor of medicine at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City
Bianca Nogrady/MDedge News
Dr. Joan Merrill


Dr. Merrill, who cares for patients with lupus, said physicians can keep lupus in check for years, using constant, low-dose GCs. “The one thing we know is that steroids work.” But over many years, damage may still occur, she cautioned.

But even a low dose could present health problems to patients. The GLORIA trial of patients with RA, which showed promising results on disease control with 5 mg/d, found an association between GCs and increased risk for infection and osteoporosis. There was a higher overall risk for adverse events related to skin, infections, and bone mineral density changes. Bone mineral density loss and fractures were more common in the GC group, Adami noted.

Surprisingly, some of the trial’s authors said patients could handle such adverse events. But what is your threshold of “acceptable?” Dr. Adami asked.

Other studies have found associations between low-dose GC regimens and adverse events. Researchers of a 2023 study reported bone mineral density loss in patients with inflammatory rheumatic musculoskeletal diseases on a 2.5-mg/d regimen. Another decade-long analysis of Medicare and Optum data found a link between serious infection and low-dose GCs in patients receiving stable DMARD therapy. Investigators reported risk even at daily doses of ≤ 5 mg.

Dr. Adami acknowledged that these studies may have “confounding by indication,” a channeling bias in which people with severe RA are more likely to be treated with GCs. For this reason, it’s a challenge to disentangle the independent role of GCs from the disease activity itself, he said.

The big question is: Why don’t these observational studies show an increased risk for adverse events with biologic drugs that are given to more severe patients? “That confirms the hypothesis that confounding by indication for GCs is minimal, and most of the risk is driven by GCs,” he said.


 

Tapering Options Across Diseases

Rheumatologists in the field continue to navigate GC-tapering options and treatment combinations that reduce the cumulative use of GCs over time, finding their own solutions based on the conditions they treat.

In his EULAR presentation, Dr. Buttgereit suggested that current therapeutic approaches for RA may be too narrow when they don’t consider the possibility of including very low doses of GCs.

For RA, “why shouldn’t we not do a combination of something like methotrexate plus a JAK inhibitor or a biological,” plus a very low dose of GCs < 5 mg/d, he asked.

However, Dr. Adami said he generally avoids GCs if RA disease activity is not severe (based on DAS28) and if the patient has a visual analog scale pain score < 7. “Nonetheless, even in patients with more severe disease, I would avoid GCs for more than 3 months. Usually, 1 month of steroids, tapered rapidly and discontinued.”

All patients should receive an appropriate treat-to-target strategy with csDMARDs and biologics if needed, he added.

A patient coming to clinic with difficult-to-treat RA who chronically uses GCs deserves special attention. The priority is bone protection with an anti-osteoporosis medication. “I found that JAK inhibitors, in some cases, help with the discontinuation of steroids, especially in those with residual pain. Therefore, I would think of switching medication,” Dr. Adami said.

For polymyalgia rheumatica, most clinicians will likely try to taper GCs around 52 weeks, similar to ACR/EULAR guidelines, according to Robert F. Spiera, MD, director of the Scleroderma and Vasculitis Program at Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City.

Dr. Robert Spiera, director of the Scleroderma and Vasculitis Program at Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City
Hospital for Special Surgery
Dr. Robert F. Spiera


“I usually challenge patients with a more rapid taper, hoping to get them off GCs in 6 or even 4 months in some patients, recognizing that many will flare, and we will have to bump up their GC dose,” Dr. Spiera said.

For patients with lupus, GCs remain the most effective treatment, Dr. Merrill said. “The toxicities are unacceptable for long-term use. So we try to get in fast when we need them and get out as soon as possible after that, tapering down as fast as the patient can tolerate it.”

Unfortunately, that’s not always as fast as the clinician or patient hopes for, she said.

“New treatments are being developed that may help us avoid the constant use of steroids. However, it would be wonderful to see how these new safer types of steroids work in lupus,” she said.

Minimizing GCs is an important goal that should be considered and aimed for in every single patient, Dr. Sattui said. “Risk of GC toxicity should be considered in all patients, assessing [them] for cardiometabolic comorbidities, bone metabolic diseases, risk of infection, among many others.” Sticking to one specific GC-tapering protocol might not be achievable for every patient, however, based on disease characteristics, response, and other factors, he added.

Monitoring for GC toxicity is important and should occur during and after every single clinical visit, he emphasized. Patient education is critical. “Different tools have been developed and employed in clinical trials, both patient- and physician-facing instruments. Implementation to clinical practice of some of these should be the next step in order to achieve a more systematic approach.”
 

 

 

What to Consider for AI Symptoms

Clinicians also need to address AI in patients who are coming off GCs, Dr. Sattui said. He advised that symptoms suggestive of AI, including malaise, fatigue, nausea, and muscle and/or joint pain, should guide testing.

Even in the absence of symptoms, clinicians should consider assessing patients who have been on high doses for prolonged periods or obese or older adults who might be at a high risk for AI. “Signs to consider include weight loss, hypotension, or orthostatism,” he said.

Differentiating between AI symptoms and symptoms from the underlying disease can be a challenge. This requires a physical exam and workup, including morning serum cortisol. Collaboration with endocrinology colleagues and other treating providers is important, as well as patient education of symptoms and monitoring for possible adjustments in treating AI and other acute diseases, he said.

Dr. Smolen received research grants from AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Galapagos, and Eli Lilly. Dr. Adami received speaker fees and/or was a consultant for Galapagos, Theramex, Amgen, Eli Lilly, UCB, Fresenius Kabi, Bristol Myers Squibb, Abiogen, and Pfizer. Dr. Buttgereit’s disclosures included AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Grünenthal, Horizon Therapeutics, Mundipharma, Pfizer, and Roche. Dr. Merrill had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Spiera has been a consultant for Roche-Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi, ChemoCentryx, Novartis, Galderma, Cytori, AstraZeneca, Amgen, and AbbVie and received research grant support from GlaxoSmithKline, Roche-Genentech, AstraZeneca, Bristol Myers Squibb, Kadmon, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cytori, ChemoCentryx, Corbus, Novartis, Amgen, and AbbVie. Dr. Sattui reported receiving research support from AstraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline (clinical trials), receiving consulting fees from Sanofi (funds toward research support), serving on advisory boards for Sanofi and Amgen (funds toward research support), and receiving speaker fees from Fresenius Kabi (funds toward research support).
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Now, 75 years after the first presentations were made on the “sensational” effects of cortisone in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), glucocorticoids (GCs) are still highly relevant and widely used in the management of RA and other immune-mediated inflammatory diseases.

“It makes me smile because this is such an old drug, and we need it still so much. It still hasn’t been replaced,” Josef S. Smolen, MD, observed at annual European Congress of Rheumatology.

At low doses, GCs are highly effective as anti-inflammatory and anti-destructive agents in RA and many other diseases, said Dr. Smolen, a rheumatologist and immunologist and professor emeritus at the Medical University of Vienna, Austria.

But even after all this time, the mechanisms that lead to efficacy vs toxicity have yet to be clarified. “Such separation may provide further insights into future treatment options,” said Dr. Smolen.

Dr. Josef S. Smolen of the Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Dr. Josef S. Smolen


His comments, made during a special session on the 75th anniversary of GCs at EULAR 2024, underscore the endless saga to manage GCs while finding better alternatives. Opinions differ on what the research says on toxicity and dosage and whether a long-term, low-dose option is viable. Alternative therapies are being studied, but those endeavors are still in the early stages of development.

While GCs are still used chronically in many patients, clinicians should always attempt to discontinue them whenever possible, Frank Buttgereit, MD, professor of rheumatology and deputy head of the Department of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany, told attendees at the congress. Up to 60% of patients in registries use GCs, and many patients with early or established RA enter randomized controlled trials on GCs as maintenance therapy.

Dr. Frank Buttgereit, professor in the department of rheumatology at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin in Germany
Sara Freeman/MDedge News
Dr. Frank Buttgereit


The ubiquity of GC usage stems in part from overprescribing by non-rheumatologist physicians who might not have access to or aren’t aware of newer biologics or disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). “We see a lot of patients on long-term glucocorticoids, chronic use for years and years, decades of glucocorticoids,” said Giovanni Adami, MD, PhD, a rheumatologist at the University of Verona, Italy, who has coauthored several studies on the use of GCs.

Dr. Giovanni Adami of the University of Verona, Italy
Dr. Giovanni Adami

 

Societies Agree: Discontinue as Fast as Possible

GCs have been associated with a long list of adverse events, most notably Cushing syndrome, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, myopathy, peptic ulcer, adrenal insufficiency (AI), infections, mood disorders, ophthalmologic disorders such as cataracts, skin disorders, menstrual septic necrosis, and pancreatitis.

Dose matters, Dr. Smolen said, citing studies that found that cumulative GC doses of 1000 or 1100 mg increase risks. One study by German researchers found that doses above 10 mg/d significantly raised the hazard ratio for death.

Because high disease activity is also associated with an equally high mortality risk, “we have to balance this out: Active disease vs glucocorticoid use, especially in countries that have less access to modern therapies than we have in the more affluent Western regions,” Dr. Smolen said.

Rheumatology societies generally agree that clinicians should try to minimize GC use or eventually discontinue the therapy.

The American College of Rheumatology recommends not using GCs as part of the first-line treatment of RA. “And if you want to use [them], you should do that for less than 3 months, taper and discontinue as fast as possible, and use the lowest dose possible,” Dr. Adami said.

EULAR’s recommendation is more nuanced in that it allows for a lower dose but gives physicians more choice in how they want to handle GCs, Dr. Adami said. The task force added that all patients should try to taper down or discontinue as fast as possible, he said.

For GCs in the management of systemic lupus erythematosus, a EULAR task force recommended that the type and severity of organ involvement should determine dose, with a long-term goal of maintaining the dose < 5 mg/d or possibly withdrawing it.

EULAR also recommends GC bridging when initiating or changing conventional synthetic (cs) DMARDs. This effectively dismisses the use of GCs when using biologic DMARDs or targeted synthetic DMARDs. As a bridging therapy, EULAR recommends either a single parenteral dose of GC or a predefined tapering or discontinuation scheme within 3 months, when starting an oral GC.
 

 

 

Low-Dose Approach Gains Ground

While saying he’d be the first physician to eliminate GCs whenever possible, Dr. Buttgereit made the case before the EULAR Congress that GCs in low doses could still play a role in treatment.

Many physicians believe that very low doses between 2 and 4 mg/d are a realistic therapy option for RA, he said, adding that a mean daily usage < 5 mg could be used over a longer period with relatively low risk.

Several studies he coauthored tested the 5-mg approach. The GLORIA trial compared 5 mg/d prednisolone and placebo in 451 patients aged 65 years and older with active RA over the course of 2 years. The researchers found that patients on prednisolone had a mean Disease Activity Score in 28 joints (DAS28) that was 0.37 points lower and mean joint damage score that was 1.7 points lower than those of patients on placebo, suggesting that the GC had long-term benefits in these patients with RA.

The tradeoff was a 24% increase in the risk of having at least one adverse event of special interest, but most of these events were non-severe infections, Dr. Buttgereit said.

Another study, the SEMIRA trial, assigned 128 patients to a continued regimen of prednisone 5 mg/d for 24 weeks. Another group of 131 patients received a tapered-prednisone regimen. All patients received tocilizumab 162 mg with or without csDMARDs, maintained at stable doses.

Patients in the first cohort achieved superior disease activity control than those in the tapered regimen group. “The side effects showed that in the tapering prednisone group, there were more treatment-emergent adverse effects in this double-blind trial as compared to the continued prednisone group,” Dr. Buttgereit said.

One limitation of the SEMIRA trial was that it studied the effect of tocilizumab as a GC-sparing agent, and it didn’t consider using a tumor necrosis factor or Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, which might have a more potent effect on pain and GC dose reduction, Dr. Adami said. “Why do we need to use glucocorticoids if we know they might be detrimental, if we know there might be some other option in our armamentarium?”

Other studies have shown that low-dose GC protocols can be used with standard treatment, according to Sebastian E. Sattui, MD, assistant professor of medicine and director of the Vasculitis Center at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

“Examples of this are the LoVAS and PEXIVAS studies for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated [ANCA] vasculitis. This has been highlighted in existing treatment recommendations for ANCA vasculitis and systemic lupus erythematosus nephritis,” Dr. Sattui said.

Dr. Sebastian E. Sattui, director of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Vasculitis Clinic
Dr. Sebastian E. Sattui


Two-year results from LoVAS showed noninferiority in remission induction rates and rates of relapse and significantly less frequent serious adverse events between a reduced-dose GC regimen at 0.5 mg/kg/d and conventional high-dose GC regimen at 1 mg/kg/d plus rituximab for ANCA vasculitis.

PEXIVAS demonstrated the noninferiority of a reduced-dose regimen of GCs vs a standard-dose regimen with respect to death or end-stage kidney disease in patients with severe disease involvement.
 

 

 

Debating the Toxicity Threshold

Are low GC dosages significantly associated with adverse events like mortality, cardiovascular, or diabetes risk? It depends on who you ask.

Much of the toxicity data on GCs come from inadequately powered or controlled studies and often refer to doses that currently are considered too high, Dr. Buttgereit said. His presentation highlighted a study from Hong Kong, a time-varying analysis of GC dose and incident risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in more than 12,000 patients with RA. Researchers found that GC regimens ≥ 5 mg/d significantly increased the risk for MACE. Comparatively, doses below this threshold did not confer excessive risk, he said.

Low-dose GCs are lesser toxic than high-dose GCs, noted Joan Merrill, MD, a professor with the Arthritis and Clinical Immunology Research Program at The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City. “There may be less weight gain, less chance of acne, and less risk for all the slower, more organ-threatening side effects.”

Dr. Joan Merrill, professor of medicine at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City
Bianca Nogrady/MDedge News
Dr. Joan Merrill


Dr. Merrill, who cares for patients with lupus, said physicians can keep lupus in check for years, using constant, low-dose GCs. “The one thing we know is that steroids work.” But over many years, damage may still occur, she cautioned.

But even a low dose could present health problems to patients. The GLORIA trial of patients with RA, which showed promising results on disease control with 5 mg/d, found an association between GCs and increased risk for infection and osteoporosis. There was a higher overall risk for adverse events related to skin, infections, and bone mineral density changes. Bone mineral density loss and fractures were more common in the GC group, Adami noted.

Surprisingly, some of the trial’s authors said patients could handle such adverse events. But what is your threshold of “acceptable?” Dr. Adami asked.

Other studies have found associations between low-dose GC regimens and adverse events. Researchers of a 2023 study reported bone mineral density loss in patients with inflammatory rheumatic musculoskeletal diseases on a 2.5-mg/d regimen. Another decade-long analysis of Medicare and Optum data found a link between serious infection and low-dose GCs in patients receiving stable DMARD therapy. Investigators reported risk even at daily doses of ≤ 5 mg.

Dr. Adami acknowledged that these studies may have “confounding by indication,” a channeling bias in which people with severe RA are more likely to be treated with GCs. For this reason, it’s a challenge to disentangle the independent role of GCs from the disease activity itself, he said.

The big question is: Why don’t these observational studies show an increased risk for adverse events with biologic drugs that are given to more severe patients? “That confirms the hypothesis that confounding by indication for GCs is minimal, and most of the risk is driven by GCs,” he said.


 

Tapering Options Across Diseases

Rheumatologists in the field continue to navigate GC-tapering options and treatment combinations that reduce the cumulative use of GCs over time, finding their own solutions based on the conditions they treat.

In his EULAR presentation, Dr. Buttgereit suggested that current therapeutic approaches for RA may be too narrow when they don’t consider the possibility of including very low doses of GCs.

For RA, “why shouldn’t we not do a combination of something like methotrexate plus a JAK inhibitor or a biological,” plus a very low dose of GCs < 5 mg/d, he asked.

However, Dr. Adami said he generally avoids GCs if RA disease activity is not severe (based on DAS28) and if the patient has a visual analog scale pain score < 7. “Nonetheless, even in patients with more severe disease, I would avoid GCs for more than 3 months. Usually, 1 month of steroids, tapered rapidly and discontinued.”

All patients should receive an appropriate treat-to-target strategy with csDMARDs and biologics if needed, he added.

A patient coming to clinic with difficult-to-treat RA who chronically uses GCs deserves special attention. The priority is bone protection with an anti-osteoporosis medication. “I found that JAK inhibitors, in some cases, help with the discontinuation of steroids, especially in those with residual pain. Therefore, I would think of switching medication,” Dr. Adami said.

For polymyalgia rheumatica, most clinicians will likely try to taper GCs around 52 weeks, similar to ACR/EULAR guidelines, according to Robert F. Spiera, MD, director of the Scleroderma and Vasculitis Program at Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City.

Dr. Robert Spiera, director of the Scleroderma and Vasculitis Program at Hospital for Special Surgery, New York City
Hospital for Special Surgery
Dr. Robert F. Spiera


“I usually challenge patients with a more rapid taper, hoping to get them off GCs in 6 or even 4 months in some patients, recognizing that many will flare, and we will have to bump up their GC dose,” Dr. Spiera said.

For patients with lupus, GCs remain the most effective treatment, Dr. Merrill said. “The toxicities are unacceptable for long-term use. So we try to get in fast when we need them and get out as soon as possible after that, tapering down as fast as the patient can tolerate it.”

Unfortunately, that’s not always as fast as the clinician or patient hopes for, she said.

“New treatments are being developed that may help us avoid the constant use of steroids. However, it would be wonderful to see how these new safer types of steroids work in lupus,” she said.

Minimizing GCs is an important goal that should be considered and aimed for in every single patient, Dr. Sattui said. “Risk of GC toxicity should be considered in all patients, assessing [them] for cardiometabolic comorbidities, bone metabolic diseases, risk of infection, among many others.” Sticking to one specific GC-tapering protocol might not be achievable for every patient, however, based on disease characteristics, response, and other factors, he added.

Monitoring for GC toxicity is important and should occur during and after every single clinical visit, he emphasized. Patient education is critical. “Different tools have been developed and employed in clinical trials, both patient- and physician-facing instruments. Implementation to clinical practice of some of these should be the next step in order to achieve a more systematic approach.”
 

 

 

What to Consider for AI Symptoms

Clinicians also need to address AI in patients who are coming off GCs, Dr. Sattui said. He advised that symptoms suggestive of AI, including malaise, fatigue, nausea, and muscle and/or joint pain, should guide testing.

Even in the absence of symptoms, clinicians should consider assessing patients who have been on high doses for prolonged periods or obese or older adults who might be at a high risk for AI. “Signs to consider include weight loss, hypotension, or orthostatism,” he said.

Differentiating between AI symptoms and symptoms from the underlying disease can be a challenge. This requires a physical exam and workup, including morning serum cortisol. Collaboration with endocrinology colleagues and other treating providers is important, as well as patient education of symptoms and monitoring for possible adjustments in treating AI and other acute diseases, he said.

Dr. Smolen received research grants from AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Galapagos, and Eli Lilly. Dr. Adami received speaker fees and/or was a consultant for Galapagos, Theramex, Amgen, Eli Lilly, UCB, Fresenius Kabi, Bristol Myers Squibb, Abiogen, and Pfizer. Dr. Buttgereit’s disclosures included AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Grünenthal, Horizon Therapeutics, Mundipharma, Pfizer, and Roche. Dr. Merrill had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Spiera has been a consultant for Roche-Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi, ChemoCentryx, Novartis, Galderma, Cytori, AstraZeneca, Amgen, and AbbVie and received research grant support from GlaxoSmithKline, Roche-Genentech, AstraZeneca, Bristol Myers Squibb, Kadmon, Boehringer Ingelheim, Cytori, ChemoCentryx, Corbus, Novartis, Amgen, and AbbVie. Dr. Sattui reported receiving research support from AstraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline (clinical trials), receiving consulting fees from Sanofi (funds toward research support), serving on advisory boards for Sanofi and Amgen (funds toward research support), and receiving speaker fees from Fresenius Kabi (funds toward research support).
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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FROM EULAR 2024

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A young adult with a 1-year history of erythema, papules, and pustules on her cheeks and skin

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Changed
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Pyoderma faciale, also known as rosacea fulminans, is a rare and severe form of rosacea that primarily affects women between the ages of 15 and 46. It typically presents with a sudden onset of papules, pustules, cysts, painful inflammatory nodules, and erythema on the centrofacial areas. The etiology is unknown but has been speculated to be hormone-related as it is more common in women and can be triggered by acute changes such as stress or medications.

Because of overlapping symptoms with other conditions, an accurate clinical assessment is crucial. Typically, there are no comedones and about half of the patients have a history of acne. Some cases have shown a possible link between pyoderma faciale with inflammatory bowel disease, thyroid disease and liver disease, highlighting the importance of considering these associations in treatment decisions.

Treatment options for pyoderma faciale include isotretinoin, corticosteroids, dapsone, and antibiotics such as doxycycline. Isotretinoin is usually the first-line treatment, with dapsone reserved for cases where other methods have failed. Despite concerns about isotretinoin exacerbating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), there has been at least one reported case where a patient with ulcerative colitis who had pyoderma faciale that was successfully treated with isotretinoin with no adverse effects.

Dr. Donna Bilu Martin, Premier Dermatology, MD, Aventura, Fla.
Dr. Donna Bilu Martin


Isotretinoin has been shown to be effective in treating pyoderma faciale by significantly reducing inflammation and scarring. This is imperative because the scarring from pyoderma faciale can be disfiguring and psychologically harmful for patients. Therefore, an early diagnosis and effective treatment method are essential in preventing these scars and improving patients’ confidence and overall dermatological care.

Pyoderma faciale: After treatment
Mallory Towe, MS, and Donna Bilu Martin, MD


This patient’s initial bacterial culture was negative. She was treated with a course of low dose isotretinoin. Prednisone was initiated two weeks before starting isotretinoin and then was tapered off during the first month of isotretinoin treatment. The patient was also started on spironolactone. The course of isotretinoin was 9 months. She has remained clear and still takes oral contraceptive pills and low dose spironolactone.

This case and the photos were submitted by Ms. Towe, Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Donna Bilu Martin, MD, of Premier Dermatology, MD, Aventura, Florida. The column was edited by Dr. Bilu Martin.


 

Dr. Bilu Martin is a board-certified dermatologist in private practice at Premier Dermatology, MD, in Aventura, Fla. More diagnostic cases are available at mdedge.com/dermatology. To submit a case for possible publication, send an email to dermnews@mdedge.com.

References

Angileri L et al. J Dermatolog Treat. 2021 Feb;32(1):110-3. doi: 10.1080/09546634.2019.1628175.

Coutinho JC et al. An Bras Dermatol. 2016 Sep-Oct;91(5 suppl 1):151-3. doi: 10.1590/abd1806-4841.20164943.

Rosen T and Unkefer RP. Cutis. 1999 Aug;64(2):107-9.

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Pyoderma faciale, also known as rosacea fulminans, is a rare and severe form of rosacea that primarily affects women between the ages of 15 and 46. It typically presents with a sudden onset of papules, pustules, cysts, painful inflammatory nodules, and erythema on the centrofacial areas. The etiology is unknown but has been speculated to be hormone-related as it is more common in women and can be triggered by acute changes such as stress or medications.

Because of overlapping symptoms with other conditions, an accurate clinical assessment is crucial. Typically, there are no comedones and about half of the patients have a history of acne. Some cases have shown a possible link between pyoderma faciale with inflammatory bowel disease, thyroid disease and liver disease, highlighting the importance of considering these associations in treatment decisions.

Treatment options for pyoderma faciale include isotretinoin, corticosteroids, dapsone, and antibiotics such as doxycycline. Isotretinoin is usually the first-line treatment, with dapsone reserved for cases where other methods have failed. Despite concerns about isotretinoin exacerbating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), there has been at least one reported case where a patient with ulcerative colitis who had pyoderma faciale that was successfully treated with isotretinoin with no adverse effects.

Dr. Donna Bilu Martin, Premier Dermatology, MD, Aventura, Fla.
Dr. Donna Bilu Martin


Isotretinoin has been shown to be effective in treating pyoderma faciale by significantly reducing inflammation and scarring. This is imperative because the scarring from pyoderma faciale can be disfiguring and psychologically harmful for patients. Therefore, an early diagnosis and effective treatment method are essential in preventing these scars and improving patients’ confidence and overall dermatological care.

Pyoderma faciale: After treatment
Mallory Towe, MS, and Donna Bilu Martin, MD


This patient’s initial bacterial culture was negative. She was treated with a course of low dose isotretinoin. Prednisone was initiated two weeks before starting isotretinoin and then was tapered off during the first month of isotretinoin treatment. The patient was also started on spironolactone. The course of isotretinoin was 9 months. She has remained clear and still takes oral contraceptive pills and low dose spironolactone.

This case and the photos were submitted by Ms. Towe, Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Donna Bilu Martin, MD, of Premier Dermatology, MD, Aventura, Florida. The column was edited by Dr. Bilu Martin.


 

Dr. Bilu Martin is a board-certified dermatologist in private practice at Premier Dermatology, MD, in Aventura, Fla. More diagnostic cases are available at mdedge.com/dermatology. To submit a case for possible publication, send an email to dermnews@mdedge.com.

References

Angileri L et al. J Dermatolog Treat. 2021 Feb;32(1):110-3. doi: 10.1080/09546634.2019.1628175.

Coutinho JC et al. An Bras Dermatol. 2016 Sep-Oct;91(5 suppl 1):151-3. doi: 10.1590/abd1806-4841.20164943.

Rosen T and Unkefer RP. Cutis. 1999 Aug;64(2):107-9.

Pyoderma faciale, also known as rosacea fulminans, is a rare and severe form of rosacea that primarily affects women between the ages of 15 and 46. It typically presents with a sudden onset of papules, pustules, cysts, painful inflammatory nodules, and erythema on the centrofacial areas. The etiology is unknown but has been speculated to be hormone-related as it is more common in women and can be triggered by acute changes such as stress or medications.

Because of overlapping symptoms with other conditions, an accurate clinical assessment is crucial. Typically, there are no comedones and about half of the patients have a history of acne. Some cases have shown a possible link between pyoderma faciale with inflammatory bowel disease, thyroid disease and liver disease, highlighting the importance of considering these associations in treatment decisions.

Treatment options for pyoderma faciale include isotretinoin, corticosteroids, dapsone, and antibiotics such as doxycycline. Isotretinoin is usually the first-line treatment, with dapsone reserved for cases where other methods have failed. Despite concerns about isotretinoin exacerbating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), there has been at least one reported case where a patient with ulcerative colitis who had pyoderma faciale that was successfully treated with isotretinoin with no adverse effects.

Dr. Donna Bilu Martin, Premier Dermatology, MD, Aventura, Fla.
Dr. Donna Bilu Martin


Isotretinoin has been shown to be effective in treating pyoderma faciale by significantly reducing inflammation and scarring. This is imperative because the scarring from pyoderma faciale can be disfiguring and psychologically harmful for patients. Therefore, an early diagnosis and effective treatment method are essential in preventing these scars and improving patients’ confidence and overall dermatological care.

Pyoderma faciale: After treatment
Mallory Towe, MS, and Donna Bilu Martin, MD


This patient’s initial bacterial culture was negative. She was treated with a course of low dose isotretinoin. Prednisone was initiated two weeks before starting isotretinoin and then was tapered off during the first month of isotretinoin treatment. The patient was also started on spironolactone. The course of isotretinoin was 9 months. She has remained clear and still takes oral contraceptive pills and low dose spironolactone.

This case and the photos were submitted by Ms. Towe, Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Donna Bilu Martin, MD, of Premier Dermatology, MD, Aventura, Florida. The column was edited by Dr. Bilu Martin.


 

Dr. Bilu Martin is a board-certified dermatologist in private practice at Premier Dermatology, MD, in Aventura, Fla. More diagnostic cases are available at mdedge.com/dermatology. To submit a case for possible publication, send an email to dermnews@mdedge.com.

References

Angileri L et al. J Dermatolog Treat. 2021 Feb;32(1):110-3. doi: 10.1080/09546634.2019.1628175.

Coutinho JC et al. An Bras Dermatol. 2016 Sep-Oct;91(5 suppl 1):151-3. doi: 10.1590/abd1806-4841.20164943.

Rosen T and Unkefer RP. Cutis. 1999 Aug;64(2):107-9.

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A 25-year-old White female presented with a 1-year history of erythema, papules, and pustules on the cheeks and chin. She was previously treated unsuccessfully with oral doxycycline and intralesional steroids. She was on oral contraceptive pills. Her past medical history was negative for any systemic diseases.

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Emergency Contraception Recommended for Teens on Isotretinoin

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Changed
Thu, 07/25/2024 - 12:12

Dermatologists should prescribe emergency contraception (EC) to adolescent patients being treated with isotretinoin for acne.

That was one of the main messages from Andrea L. Zaenglein, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, Penn State University, Hershey, who discussed hormonal therapies for pediatric acne at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Dr. Andrea L. Zaenglein, Penn State University
Dr. Andrea L. Zaenglein

Many doctors are reluctant to prescribe EC, which refers to contraceptive methods used to prevent unintended pregnancy after unprotected sexual intercourse or contraceptive failure, whether that’s from discomfort with EC or lack of training, Dr. Zaenglein said in an interview.

Isotretinoin, a retinoid marketed as Accutane and other brand names, is an effective treatment for acne but carries serious teratogenicity risks; the iPLEDGE Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy is designed to manage this risk and minimize fetal exposure. Yet from 2011 to 2017, 210-310 pregnancies per year were reported to the Food and Drug Administration, according to a 2019 study.

There is a knowledge gap regarding EC among dermatologists who prescribe isotretinoin, which “is perpetuated by the iPLEDGE program because it is inadequate in guiding clinicians or educating patients about the use of EC,” Dr. Zaenglein and colleagues wrote in a recently published viewpoint on EC prescribing in patients on isotretinoin.

Types of EC include oral levonorgestrel (plan B), available over the counter; oral ulipristal acetate (ella), which requires a prescription; and the copper/hormonal intrauterine device.

Not all teens taking isotretinoin can be trusted to be sexually abstinent. Dr. Zaenglein cited research showing 39% of female high school students have had sexual relations. “In my opinion, these patients should have emergency contraception prescribed to them as a backup,” she said.

Dr. Zaenglein believes there’s a fair amount of “misunderstanding” about EC, with many people thinking it’s an abortion pill. “It’s a totally different medicine. This is contraception; if you’re pregnant, it’s not going to affect your fetus.”

Outgoing SPD President Sheilagh Maguiness, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, agreed that Dr. Zaenglein raised an important issue. “She has identified a practice gap and a knowledge gap that we need to address,” she said in an interview.

When discussing contraception with female patients taking isotretinoin, assume they’re sexually active or could be, Dr. Zaenglein told meeting attendees. Be explicit about the risks to the fetus and consider their past compliance.
 

Complex Disorder

During her presentation, Dr. Zaenglein described acne as a “very complex, multifactorial inflammatory disorder” of the skin. It involves four steps: Increased sebum production, hyperkeratinization, Cutibacterium acnes, and inflammation. External factors such as diet, genes, and the environment play a role.

“But at the heart of all of it is androgens; if you didn’t have androgens, you wouldn’t have acne.” That’s why some acne treatments block androgen receptors.

Clinicians are increasingly using one such therapy, spironolactone, to treat acne in female adolescents. Dr. Zaenglein referred to a Mayo Clinic study of 80 patients (mean age, 19 years), who had moderate to severe acne treated with a mean dose of 100 mg/day, that found 80% had improvement with a favorable side effect profile. This included nearly 23% who had a complete response (90% or more) and 36% who had a partial response (more than 50%); 20% had no response.

However, response rates are higher in adults, said Dr. Zaenglein, noting that spironolactone works “much better” in adult women.

Side effects of spironolactone can include menstrual disturbances, breast enlargement and tenderness, and premenstrual syndrome–like symptoms.

Dermatologists should also consider combined oral contraceptives (COCs) in their adolescent patients with acne. These have an estrogen component as well as a progestin component.

They have proven effectiveness for acne in adolescents, yet a US survey of 170 dermatology residents found only 60% felt comfortable prescribing them to healthy adolescents. The survey also found only 62% of respondents felt adequately trained on the efficacy of COCs, and 42% felt adequately trained on their safety.

Contraindications for COCs include thrombosis, migraine with aura, lupus, seizures, and hypertension. Complex valvular heart disease and liver tumors also need to be ruled out, said Dr. Zaenglein. One of the “newer concerns” with COCs is depression. “There’s biological plausibility because, obviously, hormones impact the brain.”
 

 

 

Preventing Drug Interactions

Before prescribing hormonal therapy, clinicians should carry out an acne assessment, aimed in part at preventing drug interactions. “The one we mostly have to watch out for is rifampin,” an antibiotic that could interact with COCs, said Dr. Zaenglein.

The herbal supplement St John’s Wort can reduce the efficacy of COCs. “You also want to make sure that they’re not on any medicines that will increase potassium, such as ACE inhibitors,” said Dr. Zaenglein. But tetracyclines, ampicillin, or metronidazole are usually “all okay” when combined with COCs.

It’s important to get baseline blood pressure levels and to check these along with weight on a regular basis, she added.

Always Consider PCOS

Before starting hormonal therapy, she advises dermatologists to “always consider” polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a condition that’s “probably much underdiagnosed.” Acne is common in adolescents with PCOS. She suggests using a PCOS checklist, a reminder to ask about irregular periods, hirsutism, signs of insulin resistance such as increased body mass index, a history of premature adrenarche, and a family history of PCOS, said Dr. Zaenglein, noting that a person with a sibling who has PCOS has about a 40% chance of developing the condition.

“We play an important role in getting kids diagnosed at an early age so that we can make interventions because the impact of the metabolic syndrome can have lifelong effects on their cardiovascular system, as well as infertility.”

Dr. Zaenglein is a member of the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) Acne Guidelines work group, the immediate past president of the American Acne and Rosacea Society, a member of the AAD iPLEDGE work group, co–editor in chief of Pediatric Dermatology, an advisory board member of Ortho Dermatologics, and a consultant for Church & Dwight. Dr. Maguiness had no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

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Dermatologists should prescribe emergency contraception (EC) to adolescent patients being treated with isotretinoin for acne.

That was one of the main messages from Andrea L. Zaenglein, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, Penn State University, Hershey, who discussed hormonal therapies for pediatric acne at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Dr. Andrea L. Zaenglein, Penn State University
Dr. Andrea L. Zaenglein

Many doctors are reluctant to prescribe EC, which refers to contraceptive methods used to prevent unintended pregnancy after unprotected sexual intercourse or contraceptive failure, whether that’s from discomfort with EC or lack of training, Dr. Zaenglein said in an interview.

Isotretinoin, a retinoid marketed as Accutane and other brand names, is an effective treatment for acne but carries serious teratogenicity risks; the iPLEDGE Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy is designed to manage this risk and minimize fetal exposure. Yet from 2011 to 2017, 210-310 pregnancies per year were reported to the Food and Drug Administration, according to a 2019 study.

There is a knowledge gap regarding EC among dermatologists who prescribe isotretinoin, which “is perpetuated by the iPLEDGE program because it is inadequate in guiding clinicians or educating patients about the use of EC,” Dr. Zaenglein and colleagues wrote in a recently published viewpoint on EC prescribing in patients on isotretinoin.

Types of EC include oral levonorgestrel (plan B), available over the counter; oral ulipristal acetate (ella), which requires a prescription; and the copper/hormonal intrauterine device.

Not all teens taking isotretinoin can be trusted to be sexually abstinent. Dr. Zaenglein cited research showing 39% of female high school students have had sexual relations. “In my opinion, these patients should have emergency contraception prescribed to them as a backup,” she said.

Dr. Zaenglein believes there’s a fair amount of “misunderstanding” about EC, with many people thinking it’s an abortion pill. “It’s a totally different medicine. This is contraception; if you’re pregnant, it’s not going to affect your fetus.”

Outgoing SPD President Sheilagh Maguiness, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, agreed that Dr. Zaenglein raised an important issue. “She has identified a practice gap and a knowledge gap that we need to address,” she said in an interview.

When discussing contraception with female patients taking isotretinoin, assume they’re sexually active or could be, Dr. Zaenglein told meeting attendees. Be explicit about the risks to the fetus and consider their past compliance.
 

Complex Disorder

During her presentation, Dr. Zaenglein described acne as a “very complex, multifactorial inflammatory disorder” of the skin. It involves four steps: Increased sebum production, hyperkeratinization, Cutibacterium acnes, and inflammation. External factors such as diet, genes, and the environment play a role.

“But at the heart of all of it is androgens; if you didn’t have androgens, you wouldn’t have acne.” That’s why some acne treatments block androgen receptors.

Clinicians are increasingly using one such therapy, spironolactone, to treat acne in female adolescents. Dr. Zaenglein referred to a Mayo Clinic study of 80 patients (mean age, 19 years), who had moderate to severe acne treated with a mean dose of 100 mg/day, that found 80% had improvement with a favorable side effect profile. This included nearly 23% who had a complete response (90% or more) and 36% who had a partial response (more than 50%); 20% had no response.

However, response rates are higher in adults, said Dr. Zaenglein, noting that spironolactone works “much better” in adult women.

Side effects of spironolactone can include menstrual disturbances, breast enlargement and tenderness, and premenstrual syndrome–like symptoms.

Dermatologists should also consider combined oral contraceptives (COCs) in their adolescent patients with acne. These have an estrogen component as well as a progestin component.

They have proven effectiveness for acne in adolescents, yet a US survey of 170 dermatology residents found only 60% felt comfortable prescribing them to healthy adolescents. The survey also found only 62% of respondents felt adequately trained on the efficacy of COCs, and 42% felt adequately trained on their safety.

Contraindications for COCs include thrombosis, migraine with aura, lupus, seizures, and hypertension. Complex valvular heart disease and liver tumors also need to be ruled out, said Dr. Zaenglein. One of the “newer concerns” with COCs is depression. “There’s biological plausibility because, obviously, hormones impact the brain.”
 

 

 

Preventing Drug Interactions

Before prescribing hormonal therapy, clinicians should carry out an acne assessment, aimed in part at preventing drug interactions. “The one we mostly have to watch out for is rifampin,” an antibiotic that could interact with COCs, said Dr. Zaenglein.

The herbal supplement St John’s Wort can reduce the efficacy of COCs. “You also want to make sure that they’re not on any medicines that will increase potassium, such as ACE inhibitors,” said Dr. Zaenglein. But tetracyclines, ampicillin, or metronidazole are usually “all okay” when combined with COCs.

It’s important to get baseline blood pressure levels and to check these along with weight on a regular basis, she added.

Always Consider PCOS

Before starting hormonal therapy, she advises dermatologists to “always consider” polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a condition that’s “probably much underdiagnosed.” Acne is common in adolescents with PCOS. She suggests using a PCOS checklist, a reminder to ask about irregular periods, hirsutism, signs of insulin resistance such as increased body mass index, a history of premature adrenarche, and a family history of PCOS, said Dr. Zaenglein, noting that a person with a sibling who has PCOS has about a 40% chance of developing the condition.

“We play an important role in getting kids diagnosed at an early age so that we can make interventions because the impact of the metabolic syndrome can have lifelong effects on their cardiovascular system, as well as infertility.”

Dr. Zaenglein is a member of the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) Acne Guidelines work group, the immediate past president of the American Acne and Rosacea Society, a member of the AAD iPLEDGE work group, co–editor in chief of Pediatric Dermatology, an advisory board member of Ortho Dermatologics, and a consultant for Church & Dwight. Dr. Maguiness had no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

Dermatologists should prescribe emergency contraception (EC) to adolescent patients being treated with isotretinoin for acne.

That was one of the main messages from Andrea L. Zaenglein, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, Penn State University, Hershey, who discussed hormonal therapies for pediatric acne at the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology.

Dr. Andrea L. Zaenglein, Penn State University
Dr. Andrea L. Zaenglein

Many doctors are reluctant to prescribe EC, which refers to contraceptive methods used to prevent unintended pregnancy after unprotected sexual intercourse or contraceptive failure, whether that’s from discomfort with EC or lack of training, Dr. Zaenglein said in an interview.

Isotretinoin, a retinoid marketed as Accutane and other brand names, is an effective treatment for acne but carries serious teratogenicity risks; the iPLEDGE Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy is designed to manage this risk and minimize fetal exposure. Yet from 2011 to 2017, 210-310 pregnancies per year were reported to the Food and Drug Administration, according to a 2019 study.

There is a knowledge gap regarding EC among dermatologists who prescribe isotretinoin, which “is perpetuated by the iPLEDGE program because it is inadequate in guiding clinicians or educating patients about the use of EC,” Dr. Zaenglein and colleagues wrote in a recently published viewpoint on EC prescribing in patients on isotretinoin.

Types of EC include oral levonorgestrel (plan B), available over the counter; oral ulipristal acetate (ella), which requires a prescription; and the copper/hormonal intrauterine device.

Not all teens taking isotretinoin can be trusted to be sexually abstinent. Dr. Zaenglein cited research showing 39% of female high school students have had sexual relations. “In my opinion, these patients should have emergency contraception prescribed to them as a backup,” she said.

Dr. Zaenglein believes there’s a fair amount of “misunderstanding” about EC, with many people thinking it’s an abortion pill. “It’s a totally different medicine. This is contraception; if you’re pregnant, it’s not going to affect your fetus.”

Outgoing SPD President Sheilagh Maguiness, MD, professor of dermatology and pediatrics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, agreed that Dr. Zaenglein raised an important issue. “She has identified a practice gap and a knowledge gap that we need to address,” she said in an interview.

When discussing contraception with female patients taking isotretinoin, assume they’re sexually active or could be, Dr. Zaenglein told meeting attendees. Be explicit about the risks to the fetus and consider their past compliance.
 

Complex Disorder

During her presentation, Dr. Zaenglein described acne as a “very complex, multifactorial inflammatory disorder” of the skin. It involves four steps: Increased sebum production, hyperkeratinization, Cutibacterium acnes, and inflammation. External factors such as diet, genes, and the environment play a role.

“But at the heart of all of it is androgens; if you didn’t have androgens, you wouldn’t have acne.” That’s why some acne treatments block androgen receptors.

Clinicians are increasingly using one such therapy, spironolactone, to treat acne in female adolescents. Dr. Zaenglein referred to a Mayo Clinic study of 80 patients (mean age, 19 years), who had moderate to severe acne treated with a mean dose of 100 mg/day, that found 80% had improvement with a favorable side effect profile. This included nearly 23% who had a complete response (90% or more) and 36% who had a partial response (more than 50%); 20% had no response.

However, response rates are higher in adults, said Dr. Zaenglein, noting that spironolactone works “much better” in adult women.

Side effects of spironolactone can include menstrual disturbances, breast enlargement and tenderness, and premenstrual syndrome–like symptoms.

Dermatologists should also consider combined oral contraceptives (COCs) in their adolescent patients with acne. These have an estrogen component as well as a progestin component.

They have proven effectiveness for acne in adolescents, yet a US survey of 170 dermatology residents found only 60% felt comfortable prescribing them to healthy adolescents. The survey also found only 62% of respondents felt adequately trained on the efficacy of COCs, and 42% felt adequately trained on their safety.

Contraindications for COCs include thrombosis, migraine with aura, lupus, seizures, and hypertension. Complex valvular heart disease and liver tumors also need to be ruled out, said Dr. Zaenglein. One of the “newer concerns” with COCs is depression. “There’s biological plausibility because, obviously, hormones impact the brain.”
 

 

 

Preventing Drug Interactions

Before prescribing hormonal therapy, clinicians should carry out an acne assessment, aimed in part at preventing drug interactions. “The one we mostly have to watch out for is rifampin,” an antibiotic that could interact with COCs, said Dr. Zaenglein.

The herbal supplement St John’s Wort can reduce the efficacy of COCs. “You also want to make sure that they’re not on any medicines that will increase potassium, such as ACE inhibitors,” said Dr. Zaenglein. But tetracyclines, ampicillin, or metronidazole are usually “all okay” when combined with COCs.

It’s important to get baseline blood pressure levels and to check these along with weight on a regular basis, she added.

Always Consider PCOS

Before starting hormonal therapy, she advises dermatologists to “always consider” polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a condition that’s “probably much underdiagnosed.” Acne is common in adolescents with PCOS. She suggests using a PCOS checklist, a reminder to ask about irregular periods, hirsutism, signs of insulin resistance such as increased body mass index, a history of premature adrenarche, and a family history of PCOS, said Dr. Zaenglein, noting that a person with a sibling who has PCOS has about a 40% chance of developing the condition.

“We play an important role in getting kids diagnosed at an early age so that we can make interventions because the impact of the metabolic syndrome can have lifelong effects on their cardiovascular system, as well as infertility.”

Dr. Zaenglein is a member of the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) Acne Guidelines work group, the immediate past president of the American Acne and Rosacea Society, a member of the AAD iPLEDGE work group, co–editor in chief of Pediatric Dermatology, an advisory board member of Ortho Dermatologics, and a consultant for Church & Dwight. Dr. Maguiness had no relevant conflicts of interest.

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

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