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OTC Birth Control Pill Headed to US Pharmacies: What Your Patients Should Know

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Changed
Mon, 03/18/2024 - 15:30

Primary care clinicians have largely welcomed the arrival of Opill, the first over-the-counter (OTC) birth control pill from Perrigo, which will reach US pharmacy shelves this month. Although the medicine has a long-track record of safe use, physicians and nurse practitioners may want to ready themselves to answer questions from patients about shifting to the option.

The switch to OTC status for the norgestrel-only contraceptive has the support of many physician groups, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Family Physicians, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

The end of the prescription-requirement removes a barrier to access for many women, especially those who lack insurance. But it also will take away a chief reason many women in their childbearing years make appointments with doctors, as they will no longer need prescriptions for birth control pills.

Anne-Marie Amies Oelschlager, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at University of Washington School of Medicine, in Seattle, Washington, said she is also worried that the availability of an OTC pill will lead to missed opportunities to help patients avoid sexually transmitted diseases. For example, patients can get counseling about the need for testing for sexually transmitted diseases at the start of new relationships during a visit made to obtain a prescription for the pill.

“My hope is that they still follow our recommendations, which is to get tested with every partner,” said Dr. Oelschlager, who cares for many patients in their teens. “Adolescents are at a particularly high risk of infection compared to older ones.”

When clinicians do see patients, they may want to raise the issue of the OTC option and proper use. Patients will need to closely read materials provided for Opill, a step they might skip due to the ready access, according to Diana Zuckerman, PhD, president of the nonprofit National Center for Health Research, which scrutinizes the safety of medical products.

“When something is sold over the counter, it’s perceived by individuals as being safe,” Dr. Zuckerman told this news organization. “There’s less concern and a little less interest in reading the instructions and reading the warnings.”
 

Considerations for Safety

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in July approved the sales of a daily 0.075 mg norgestrel tablet without prescription. Perrigo told this news organization that it spent the intervening months ensuring retailers and consumers will receive education on the drug.

One of the biggest challenges for people using Opill may be sticking with the dosing schedule, according to Dr. Oelschlager.

“There are going to be people that have a harder time remembering to take a pill every day,” at the same time, said Dr. Oelschlager, who is chair of ACOG’s Clinical Consensus Gynecology Committee. “We need to watch and see what happens as it becomes more widely available, and people start using it.”

Unexpected vaginal bleeding is the most common adverse event linked to this form of birth control, with over one fifth of participants from one study of the OTC drug reporting this side effect, according to an FDA memo.

“It is more likely to be a tolerability issue rather than a safety issue,” the FDA wrote.

Many prescription of birth control options contain estrogen, which is associated with venous thromboembolism (VTE). But Opill contains only norgestrel, a form of progestin, which is not associated with thrombosis. Patients may be more likely to overestimate their potential risks for VTE than to underestimate them, according to Kwuan Paruchabutr, DNP, president of National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women’s Health and an assistant professor at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.

“This is a progesterone-only pill: The risk is relatively low” of VTE, Dr. Paruchabutr said.

Clinicians should also take special care with patients who are prescribed drugs for seizures, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and pulmonary hypertension or who are taking supplements containing St John’s wort.

Patients in their childbearing years who take isotretinoin are already expected to use some form of birth control.

“All patients on isotretinoin must be registered in the iPLEDGE program, which mandates monthly contraception counseling and monthly pregnancy tests for persons of childbearing potential,” Terrence A. Cronin, Jr, MD, president of the American Academy of Dermatology, told news organization through email.

Dr. Oelschlager noted that many patients who take isotretinoin may benefit from taking a birth control pill containing estrogen, for which they will need a prescription. At least three pills have an FDA-approved indication for treating moderate acne, including Ortho Tri-Cyclen, Estrostep, and Yaz.

The FDA has posted consumer-friendly information about the OTC pill that clinicians can refer their patients to. For clinicians who want more information, ACOG released a practice advisory about the switch in status for this progestin-only pill.
 

 

 

The Cost

While federal laws mandate employer-based and Medicaid plans cover prescription birth control pills for free, the OTC version will carry a cost, according to A. Mark Fendrick, MD, director of the University of Michigan Center for Value-Based Insurance Design in Ann Arbor, Michigan. 

Seven states, including New Mexico and New York, already have laws in effect that require health plans to cover certain OTC contraceptives without a prescription, according to a tally kept by the nonprofit research organization KFF.

Dr. Fendrick said it would be helpful for health plans to offer coverage for the OTC pill without copays even if they are not required to do so.

Priced at about $20 a month, Opill “is likely out of reach for many of the individuals who would most benefit from an OTC option,” Dr. Fendrick told this news organization in an email.

The new pill may be utilized most by those who do not have health insurance or have low incomes and cannot afford to see a doctor for a prescription, according to Sally Rafie, PharmD, a pharmacist specialist at University of California San Diego Health and founder of the Birth Control Pharmacist.

The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices will be $19.99 for a 1-month supply and $49.99 for a 3-month supply. Dublin-based Perrigo said it plans to offer a cost-assistance program for the drug in the coming weeks for people who have low incomes and lack insurance.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Primary care clinicians have largely welcomed the arrival of Opill, the first over-the-counter (OTC) birth control pill from Perrigo, which will reach US pharmacy shelves this month. Although the medicine has a long-track record of safe use, physicians and nurse practitioners may want to ready themselves to answer questions from patients about shifting to the option.

The switch to OTC status for the norgestrel-only contraceptive has the support of many physician groups, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Family Physicians, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

The end of the prescription-requirement removes a barrier to access for many women, especially those who lack insurance. But it also will take away a chief reason many women in their childbearing years make appointments with doctors, as they will no longer need prescriptions for birth control pills.

Anne-Marie Amies Oelschlager, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at University of Washington School of Medicine, in Seattle, Washington, said she is also worried that the availability of an OTC pill will lead to missed opportunities to help patients avoid sexually transmitted diseases. For example, patients can get counseling about the need for testing for sexually transmitted diseases at the start of new relationships during a visit made to obtain a prescription for the pill.

“My hope is that they still follow our recommendations, which is to get tested with every partner,” said Dr. Oelschlager, who cares for many patients in their teens. “Adolescents are at a particularly high risk of infection compared to older ones.”

When clinicians do see patients, they may want to raise the issue of the OTC option and proper use. Patients will need to closely read materials provided for Opill, a step they might skip due to the ready access, according to Diana Zuckerman, PhD, president of the nonprofit National Center for Health Research, which scrutinizes the safety of medical products.

“When something is sold over the counter, it’s perceived by individuals as being safe,” Dr. Zuckerman told this news organization. “There’s less concern and a little less interest in reading the instructions and reading the warnings.”
 

Considerations for Safety

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in July approved the sales of a daily 0.075 mg norgestrel tablet without prescription. Perrigo told this news organization that it spent the intervening months ensuring retailers and consumers will receive education on the drug.

One of the biggest challenges for people using Opill may be sticking with the dosing schedule, according to Dr. Oelschlager.

“There are going to be people that have a harder time remembering to take a pill every day,” at the same time, said Dr. Oelschlager, who is chair of ACOG’s Clinical Consensus Gynecology Committee. “We need to watch and see what happens as it becomes more widely available, and people start using it.”

Unexpected vaginal bleeding is the most common adverse event linked to this form of birth control, with over one fifth of participants from one study of the OTC drug reporting this side effect, according to an FDA memo.

“It is more likely to be a tolerability issue rather than a safety issue,” the FDA wrote.

Many prescription of birth control options contain estrogen, which is associated with venous thromboembolism (VTE). But Opill contains only norgestrel, a form of progestin, which is not associated with thrombosis. Patients may be more likely to overestimate their potential risks for VTE than to underestimate them, according to Kwuan Paruchabutr, DNP, president of National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women’s Health and an assistant professor at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.

“This is a progesterone-only pill: The risk is relatively low” of VTE, Dr. Paruchabutr said.

Clinicians should also take special care with patients who are prescribed drugs for seizures, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and pulmonary hypertension or who are taking supplements containing St John’s wort.

Patients in their childbearing years who take isotretinoin are already expected to use some form of birth control.

“All patients on isotretinoin must be registered in the iPLEDGE program, which mandates monthly contraception counseling and monthly pregnancy tests for persons of childbearing potential,” Terrence A. Cronin, Jr, MD, president of the American Academy of Dermatology, told news organization through email.

Dr. Oelschlager noted that many patients who take isotretinoin may benefit from taking a birth control pill containing estrogen, for which they will need a prescription. At least three pills have an FDA-approved indication for treating moderate acne, including Ortho Tri-Cyclen, Estrostep, and Yaz.

The FDA has posted consumer-friendly information about the OTC pill that clinicians can refer their patients to. For clinicians who want more information, ACOG released a practice advisory about the switch in status for this progestin-only pill.
 

 

 

The Cost

While federal laws mandate employer-based and Medicaid plans cover prescription birth control pills for free, the OTC version will carry a cost, according to A. Mark Fendrick, MD, director of the University of Michigan Center for Value-Based Insurance Design in Ann Arbor, Michigan. 

Seven states, including New Mexico and New York, already have laws in effect that require health plans to cover certain OTC contraceptives without a prescription, according to a tally kept by the nonprofit research organization KFF.

Dr. Fendrick said it would be helpful for health plans to offer coverage for the OTC pill without copays even if they are not required to do so.

Priced at about $20 a month, Opill “is likely out of reach for many of the individuals who would most benefit from an OTC option,” Dr. Fendrick told this news organization in an email.

The new pill may be utilized most by those who do not have health insurance or have low incomes and cannot afford to see a doctor for a prescription, according to Sally Rafie, PharmD, a pharmacist specialist at University of California San Diego Health and founder of the Birth Control Pharmacist.

The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices will be $19.99 for a 1-month supply and $49.99 for a 3-month supply. Dublin-based Perrigo said it plans to offer a cost-assistance program for the drug in the coming weeks for people who have low incomes and lack insurance.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Primary care clinicians have largely welcomed the arrival of Opill, the first over-the-counter (OTC) birth control pill from Perrigo, which will reach US pharmacy shelves this month. Although the medicine has a long-track record of safe use, physicians and nurse practitioners may want to ready themselves to answer questions from patients about shifting to the option.

The switch to OTC status for the norgestrel-only contraceptive has the support of many physician groups, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Family Physicians, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

The end of the prescription-requirement removes a barrier to access for many women, especially those who lack insurance. But it also will take away a chief reason many women in their childbearing years make appointments with doctors, as they will no longer need prescriptions for birth control pills.

Anne-Marie Amies Oelschlager, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at University of Washington School of Medicine, in Seattle, Washington, said she is also worried that the availability of an OTC pill will lead to missed opportunities to help patients avoid sexually transmitted diseases. For example, patients can get counseling about the need for testing for sexually transmitted diseases at the start of new relationships during a visit made to obtain a prescription for the pill.

“My hope is that they still follow our recommendations, which is to get tested with every partner,” said Dr. Oelschlager, who cares for many patients in their teens. “Adolescents are at a particularly high risk of infection compared to older ones.”

When clinicians do see patients, they may want to raise the issue of the OTC option and proper use. Patients will need to closely read materials provided for Opill, a step they might skip due to the ready access, according to Diana Zuckerman, PhD, president of the nonprofit National Center for Health Research, which scrutinizes the safety of medical products.

“When something is sold over the counter, it’s perceived by individuals as being safe,” Dr. Zuckerman told this news organization. “There’s less concern and a little less interest in reading the instructions and reading the warnings.”
 

Considerations for Safety

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in July approved the sales of a daily 0.075 mg norgestrel tablet without prescription. Perrigo told this news organization that it spent the intervening months ensuring retailers and consumers will receive education on the drug.

One of the biggest challenges for people using Opill may be sticking with the dosing schedule, according to Dr. Oelschlager.

“There are going to be people that have a harder time remembering to take a pill every day,” at the same time, said Dr. Oelschlager, who is chair of ACOG’s Clinical Consensus Gynecology Committee. “We need to watch and see what happens as it becomes more widely available, and people start using it.”

Unexpected vaginal bleeding is the most common adverse event linked to this form of birth control, with over one fifth of participants from one study of the OTC drug reporting this side effect, according to an FDA memo.

“It is more likely to be a tolerability issue rather than a safety issue,” the FDA wrote.

Many prescription of birth control options contain estrogen, which is associated with venous thromboembolism (VTE). But Opill contains only norgestrel, a form of progestin, which is not associated with thrombosis. Patients may be more likely to overestimate their potential risks for VTE than to underestimate them, according to Kwuan Paruchabutr, DNP, president of National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women’s Health and an assistant professor at Georgetown University in Washington, DC.

“This is a progesterone-only pill: The risk is relatively low” of VTE, Dr. Paruchabutr said.

Clinicians should also take special care with patients who are prescribed drugs for seizures, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and pulmonary hypertension or who are taking supplements containing St John’s wort.

Patients in their childbearing years who take isotretinoin are already expected to use some form of birth control.

“All patients on isotretinoin must be registered in the iPLEDGE program, which mandates monthly contraception counseling and monthly pregnancy tests for persons of childbearing potential,” Terrence A. Cronin, Jr, MD, president of the American Academy of Dermatology, told news organization through email.

Dr. Oelschlager noted that many patients who take isotretinoin may benefit from taking a birth control pill containing estrogen, for which they will need a prescription. At least three pills have an FDA-approved indication for treating moderate acne, including Ortho Tri-Cyclen, Estrostep, and Yaz.

The FDA has posted consumer-friendly information about the OTC pill that clinicians can refer their patients to. For clinicians who want more information, ACOG released a practice advisory about the switch in status for this progestin-only pill.
 

 

 

The Cost

While federal laws mandate employer-based and Medicaid plans cover prescription birth control pills for free, the OTC version will carry a cost, according to A. Mark Fendrick, MD, director of the University of Michigan Center for Value-Based Insurance Design in Ann Arbor, Michigan. 

Seven states, including New Mexico and New York, already have laws in effect that require health plans to cover certain OTC contraceptives without a prescription, according to a tally kept by the nonprofit research organization KFF.

Dr. Fendrick said it would be helpful for health plans to offer coverage for the OTC pill without copays even if they are not required to do so.

Priced at about $20 a month, Opill “is likely out of reach for many of the individuals who would most benefit from an OTC option,” Dr. Fendrick told this news organization in an email.

The new pill may be utilized most by those who do not have health insurance or have low incomes and cannot afford to see a doctor for a prescription, according to Sally Rafie, PharmD, a pharmacist specialist at University of California San Diego Health and founder of the Birth Control Pharmacist.

The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices will be $19.99 for a 1-month supply and $49.99 for a 3-month supply. Dublin-based Perrigo said it plans to offer a cost-assistance program for the drug in the coming weeks for people who have low incomes and lack insurance.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Sustained Control Reported for Anti–IL-17, Anti–IL-23 Psoriasis Treatments

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Mon, 03/18/2024 - 14:14

In published trials, both an interleukin (IL)–17 inhibitor and an IL-23 inhibitor achieved impressive rates of clear or almost clear responses in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, but late-breaker data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology show that these types of responses are sustained for as long as patients have remained on therapy.

Of the two, the longer follow up is with the IL-17 inhibitor bimekizumab (Bimzelx). In a 4-year open-label extension study, the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) 90 rate was approximately 85% in treated patients, according to Mark Lebwohl, MD, professor and chairman emeritus of the Department of Dermatology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City

A PASI 90 score signifies that 90% of skin surface area is cleared. The proportion of patients who achieved a PASI 100 score, signifying total clearance, approached 70% at 4 years in the group with the greatest response. PASI 90 and PASI 100 rates at this point were only modestly lower than those reported at the end of the double-blind phase 3 trial when evaluated 3 years earlier. 

Follow-up with a novel oral anti-IL-23 inhibitor JNJ-2113 (JNJ-77242113) was only 52 weeks, far shorter. But again, the response for the most effective dose at the end of this period was essentially unchanged from that at 16 weeks. Among those on the highest and most effective test dose of once-daily 100 mg, the PASI 90 at 1 year was 64.3%, a rate that was essentially unchanged from week 16.

No Apparent Loss of Benefit Over Time

“We can really look at those dose-response curves and see that there is, overall, a maintenance of response,” reported Laura K. Ferris, MD, PhD, professor and director of clinical trials, Department of Dermatology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In her presentation of the data, she showed similar sustained control for the most effective doses of JNJ-2113 for multiple clinical outcomes, including an investigator’s global assessment (IGA) score of 0 or 1, also signifying clear or near clear skin.

Bimekizumab, a monoclonal antibody that inhibits both IL-17A and IL-17F, is already approved for the treatment of plaque psoriasis. The 52-week BE SURE trial, which provided the 478 patients who entered into the BE BRIGHT open label extension study, was published in The New England Journal of Medicine in July 2021. 

In the 4-year data reported by Dr. Lebwohl, three groups were compared: Those initially randomized to an every-4-week dosing schedule of bimekizumab over the course of the 52-week BE SURE trial; those randomized to an every-4-week bimekizumab schedule who were then subsequently switched to an every-8-week schedule; and those initiated on the TNF-inhibitor adalimumab (Humira) and were then switched at week 24 to every-4-week bimekizumab.

The PASI 90 responses at 52 weeks in these three groups, respectively, were 91.2%, 89.3%, and 95.2%. At 4 years, this almost clear response was observed in 82.4%, 83.2%, and 87.6%, respectively. At 52 weeks, the PASI 100 responses in these three groups, respectively, were 75.3%, 74.2%, and 72.9%. At 4 years, 61.9%, 58.5%, and 69.5% still had complete skin clearance.

Bimekizumab was well tolerated during the randomized trial, reported Dr. Lebwohl. The rates of nasopharyngitis and oral candidiasis, which were observed in approximately 12% and 8%, respectively, of treated patients during the randomized phase remained at about the same level in the long-term follow up. There were no new safety signals, he said.
 

 

 

JNJ-2113 Is First Potential Oral IL-23 Inhibitor

JNJ-2113 is a first-in-class oral peptide that binds to the IL-23 receptor, blocking the IL-23 signaling pathway. If approved, it would be the first oral therapy targeting IL-23. The 16-week outcomes of the dose-finding FRONTIER 1 phase 2b trial were published in The New England Journal of Medicine earlier this year. The primary endpoint was PASI 75, achieved by 79% of those on the 100 mg twice daily dose at week 16, vs 9% on placebo, and at 52 weeks, was 76%. 

“The proportion of patients achieving the FRONTIER 1 primary endpoint was maintained from week 16 to the end of week 52 in the extension study,” Dr. Ferris said, but further pointed out that rates of near or complete clearance achieved at week 16 were also essentially unchanged at week 52. This was true of PASI scores and IGA. 

Clearance of psoriatic lesions on the scalp was particularly impressive. By scalp-specific IGA, rates of clear or near clear (0/1) were not just maintained but improved over the course of follow-up, reaching 75.1% at 52 weeks in the highest dose group, she said.

JNJ-2113 was well tolerated in FRONTIER 1 and remained so during long-term follow-up, in the FRONTIER 2 extension study, according to Dr. Ferris. The most common complaints with JNJ-2113, such as nasopharyngitis (18.1% vs 25.7% in placebo), did not appear to differ significantly from placebo and the treatment remained well tolerated over the course of the extended follow-up.

There are limited direct comparisons of different biologics active in the treatment of plaque psoriasis for efficacy and safety, but these data appear to show a depth and durability of benefit for psoriasis that is exceptional, Dr. Lebwohl told this news organization. “The PASI 100 scores achieved by bimekizumab exceed anything we have seen to date,” he said. “And the durability of those exceedingly high scores is remarkable.”

Dr. Lebwohl reports financial relationships with approximately 40 pharmaceutical companies, including UCB Pharma, which developed bimekizumab. Dr. Ferris reports financial relationships with more than 20 pharmaceutical companies, including Janssen, which is developing JNJ-2113. 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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In published trials, both an interleukin (IL)–17 inhibitor and an IL-23 inhibitor achieved impressive rates of clear or almost clear responses in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, but late-breaker data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology show that these types of responses are sustained for as long as patients have remained on therapy.

Of the two, the longer follow up is with the IL-17 inhibitor bimekizumab (Bimzelx). In a 4-year open-label extension study, the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) 90 rate was approximately 85% in treated patients, according to Mark Lebwohl, MD, professor and chairman emeritus of the Department of Dermatology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City

A PASI 90 score signifies that 90% of skin surface area is cleared. The proportion of patients who achieved a PASI 100 score, signifying total clearance, approached 70% at 4 years in the group with the greatest response. PASI 90 and PASI 100 rates at this point were only modestly lower than those reported at the end of the double-blind phase 3 trial when evaluated 3 years earlier. 

Follow-up with a novel oral anti-IL-23 inhibitor JNJ-2113 (JNJ-77242113) was only 52 weeks, far shorter. But again, the response for the most effective dose at the end of this period was essentially unchanged from that at 16 weeks. Among those on the highest and most effective test dose of once-daily 100 mg, the PASI 90 at 1 year was 64.3%, a rate that was essentially unchanged from week 16.

No Apparent Loss of Benefit Over Time

“We can really look at those dose-response curves and see that there is, overall, a maintenance of response,” reported Laura K. Ferris, MD, PhD, professor and director of clinical trials, Department of Dermatology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In her presentation of the data, she showed similar sustained control for the most effective doses of JNJ-2113 for multiple clinical outcomes, including an investigator’s global assessment (IGA) score of 0 or 1, also signifying clear or near clear skin.

Bimekizumab, a monoclonal antibody that inhibits both IL-17A and IL-17F, is already approved for the treatment of plaque psoriasis. The 52-week BE SURE trial, which provided the 478 patients who entered into the BE BRIGHT open label extension study, was published in The New England Journal of Medicine in July 2021. 

In the 4-year data reported by Dr. Lebwohl, three groups were compared: Those initially randomized to an every-4-week dosing schedule of bimekizumab over the course of the 52-week BE SURE trial; those randomized to an every-4-week bimekizumab schedule who were then subsequently switched to an every-8-week schedule; and those initiated on the TNF-inhibitor adalimumab (Humira) and were then switched at week 24 to every-4-week bimekizumab.

The PASI 90 responses at 52 weeks in these three groups, respectively, were 91.2%, 89.3%, and 95.2%. At 4 years, this almost clear response was observed in 82.4%, 83.2%, and 87.6%, respectively. At 52 weeks, the PASI 100 responses in these three groups, respectively, were 75.3%, 74.2%, and 72.9%. At 4 years, 61.9%, 58.5%, and 69.5% still had complete skin clearance.

Bimekizumab was well tolerated during the randomized trial, reported Dr. Lebwohl. The rates of nasopharyngitis and oral candidiasis, which were observed in approximately 12% and 8%, respectively, of treated patients during the randomized phase remained at about the same level in the long-term follow up. There were no new safety signals, he said.
 

 

 

JNJ-2113 Is First Potential Oral IL-23 Inhibitor

JNJ-2113 is a first-in-class oral peptide that binds to the IL-23 receptor, blocking the IL-23 signaling pathway. If approved, it would be the first oral therapy targeting IL-23. The 16-week outcomes of the dose-finding FRONTIER 1 phase 2b trial were published in The New England Journal of Medicine earlier this year. The primary endpoint was PASI 75, achieved by 79% of those on the 100 mg twice daily dose at week 16, vs 9% on placebo, and at 52 weeks, was 76%. 

“The proportion of patients achieving the FRONTIER 1 primary endpoint was maintained from week 16 to the end of week 52 in the extension study,” Dr. Ferris said, but further pointed out that rates of near or complete clearance achieved at week 16 were also essentially unchanged at week 52. This was true of PASI scores and IGA. 

Clearance of psoriatic lesions on the scalp was particularly impressive. By scalp-specific IGA, rates of clear or near clear (0/1) were not just maintained but improved over the course of follow-up, reaching 75.1% at 52 weeks in the highest dose group, she said.

JNJ-2113 was well tolerated in FRONTIER 1 and remained so during long-term follow-up, in the FRONTIER 2 extension study, according to Dr. Ferris. The most common complaints with JNJ-2113, such as nasopharyngitis (18.1% vs 25.7% in placebo), did not appear to differ significantly from placebo and the treatment remained well tolerated over the course of the extended follow-up.

There are limited direct comparisons of different biologics active in the treatment of plaque psoriasis for efficacy and safety, but these data appear to show a depth and durability of benefit for psoriasis that is exceptional, Dr. Lebwohl told this news organization. “The PASI 100 scores achieved by bimekizumab exceed anything we have seen to date,” he said. “And the durability of those exceedingly high scores is remarkable.”

Dr. Lebwohl reports financial relationships with approximately 40 pharmaceutical companies, including UCB Pharma, which developed bimekizumab. Dr. Ferris reports financial relationships with more than 20 pharmaceutical companies, including Janssen, which is developing JNJ-2113. 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

In published trials, both an interleukin (IL)–17 inhibitor and an IL-23 inhibitor achieved impressive rates of clear or almost clear responses in patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, but late-breaker data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology show that these types of responses are sustained for as long as patients have remained on therapy.

Of the two, the longer follow up is with the IL-17 inhibitor bimekizumab (Bimzelx). In a 4-year open-label extension study, the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) 90 rate was approximately 85% in treated patients, according to Mark Lebwohl, MD, professor and chairman emeritus of the Department of Dermatology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City

A PASI 90 score signifies that 90% of skin surface area is cleared. The proportion of patients who achieved a PASI 100 score, signifying total clearance, approached 70% at 4 years in the group with the greatest response. PASI 90 and PASI 100 rates at this point were only modestly lower than those reported at the end of the double-blind phase 3 trial when evaluated 3 years earlier. 

Follow-up with a novel oral anti-IL-23 inhibitor JNJ-2113 (JNJ-77242113) was only 52 weeks, far shorter. But again, the response for the most effective dose at the end of this period was essentially unchanged from that at 16 weeks. Among those on the highest and most effective test dose of once-daily 100 mg, the PASI 90 at 1 year was 64.3%, a rate that was essentially unchanged from week 16.

No Apparent Loss of Benefit Over Time

“We can really look at those dose-response curves and see that there is, overall, a maintenance of response,” reported Laura K. Ferris, MD, PhD, professor and director of clinical trials, Department of Dermatology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In her presentation of the data, she showed similar sustained control for the most effective doses of JNJ-2113 for multiple clinical outcomes, including an investigator’s global assessment (IGA) score of 0 or 1, also signifying clear or near clear skin.

Bimekizumab, a monoclonal antibody that inhibits both IL-17A and IL-17F, is already approved for the treatment of plaque psoriasis. The 52-week BE SURE trial, which provided the 478 patients who entered into the BE BRIGHT open label extension study, was published in The New England Journal of Medicine in July 2021. 

In the 4-year data reported by Dr. Lebwohl, three groups were compared: Those initially randomized to an every-4-week dosing schedule of bimekizumab over the course of the 52-week BE SURE trial; those randomized to an every-4-week bimekizumab schedule who were then subsequently switched to an every-8-week schedule; and those initiated on the TNF-inhibitor adalimumab (Humira) and were then switched at week 24 to every-4-week bimekizumab.

The PASI 90 responses at 52 weeks in these three groups, respectively, were 91.2%, 89.3%, and 95.2%. At 4 years, this almost clear response was observed in 82.4%, 83.2%, and 87.6%, respectively. At 52 weeks, the PASI 100 responses in these three groups, respectively, were 75.3%, 74.2%, and 72.9%. At 4 years, 61.9%, 58.5%, and 69.5% still had complete skin clearance.

Bimekizumab was well tolerated during the randomized trial, reported Dr. Lebwohl. The rates of nasopharyngitis and oral candidiasis, which were observed in approximately 12% and 8%, respectively, of treated patients during the randomized phase remained at about the same level in the long-term follow up. There were no new safety signals, he said.
 

 

 

JNJ-2113 Is First Potential Oral IL-23 Inhibitor

JNJ-2113 is a first-in-class oral peptide that binds to the IL-23 receptor, blocking the IL-23 signaling pathway. If approved, it would be the first oral therapy targeting IL-23. The 16-week outcomes of the dose-finding FRONTIER 1 phase 2b trial were published in The New England Journal of Medicine earlier this year. The primary endpoint was PASI 75, achieved by 79% of those on the 100 mg twice daily dose at week 16, vs 9% on placebo, and at 52 weeks, was 76%. 

“The proportion of patients achieving the FRONTIER 1 primary endpoint was maintained from week 16 to the end of week 52 in the extension study,” Dr. Ferris said, but further pointed out that rates of near or complete clearance achieved at week 16 were also essentially unchanged at week 52. This was true of PASI scores and IGA. 

Clearance of psoriatic lesions on the scalp was particularly impressive. By scalp-specific IGA, rates of clear or near clear (0/1) were not just maintained but improved over the course of follow-up, reaching 75.1% at 52 weeks in the highest dose group, she said.

JNJ-2113 was well tolerated in FRONTIER 1 and remained so during long-term follow-up, in the FRONTIER 2 extension study, according to Dr. Ferris. The most common complaints with JNJ-2113, such as nasopharyngitis (18.1% vs 25.7% in placebo), did not appear to differ significantly from placebo and the treatment remained well tolerated over the course of the extended follow-up.

There are limited direct comparisons of different biologics active in the treatment of plaque psoriasis for efficacy and safety, but these data appear to show a depth and durability of benefit for psoriasis that is exceptional, Dr. Lebwohl told this news organization. “The PASI 100 scores achieved by bimekizumab exceed anything we have seen to date,” he said. “And the durability of those exceedingly high scores is remarkable.”

Dr. Lebwohl reports financial relationships with approximately 40 pharmaceutical companies, including UCB Pharma, which developed bimekizumab. Dr. Ferris reports financial relationships with more than 20 pharmaceutical companies, including Janssen, which is developing JNJ-2113. 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Inexperience Diagnosing Syphilis Adding to Higher Rates

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Changed
Tue, 03/19/2024 - 13:41

With rates of syphilis rising quickly in the United States and elsewhere, clinicians are having to up their game when it comes to diagnosing and treating an infection that they may not be paying enough attention to.

More than 200,000 cases of syphilis were reported in the United States in 2022, which is the highest number since 1950 and is a 17.3% increase over 2021, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The rate of infection has increased almost every year since a historic low in 2001.

And the trend is not limited to the United States. Last year, the infection rate in the United Kingdom hit a 50-year high, said David Mabey, BCh, DM, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections are also a major problem in low- and middle-income countries, he added, although good data are not always available.

Many of today’s healthcare professionals have little experience with the disease, shared Ina Park, MD, a sexually transmitted infections specialist at the University of California at San Francisco. “An entire generation of physicians — including myself — did not see any cases until we were well out of our training,” Dr. Park reported. “We’re really playing catch-up.”
 

A Centuries-Old Ailment

Dr. Park offered some advice on the challenges of diagnosing what can be an elusive infection at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver. That advice boiled down to one simple rule: “Test, test, test.”

Because syphilis can mimic so many other conditions and can have long periods of latency, it can be easily missed or even misdiagnosed by experienced physicians, said Dr. Park. Clinicians need to keep it front of mind and have a lower threshold for testing, even if there are no obvious symptoms.

Following the CDC’s new recommendations for syphilis screening will help, she noted; every sexually active patient aged between 15 and 44 years who lives in a county with a syphilis infection rate of 4.6 per 100,000 people or higher should get the test. And clinicians should remain vigilant, even in areas with a lower prevalence. “If you can’t account for new symptoms in a sexually active patient, order a test,” said Dr. Park.
 

Complicated Cases

The lack of experience with syphilis affects not just diagnosis but also treatment, particularly for complex cases, said Khalil Ghanem, MD, PhD, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. “When you don’t have to deal with something for a while, you forget how to deal with it,” he added.

At CROI, Dr. Ghanem offered suggestions for how to navigate complicated cases of ocular syphilis, otic syphilis, and neurosyphilis, and how to interpret test results when a patient’s antigen titers are being “unruly.”

With potential ocular or otic syphilis, you shouldn’t wait for a specialist like an ophthalmologist to weigh in but instead refer the patient directly to the emergency department because of the risk that the symptoms may become irreversible and result in permanent blindness or deafness. “You don’t want to dilly-dally with those conditions,” Dr. Ghanem said.

Closely monitoring a patient’s rapid plasma regain and venereal disease research laboratory antigen levels is the only way to manage syphilis and to determine whether the infection is responding to treatment, he noted, but sometimes those titers “don’t do what you think they should be doing” and fail to decline or even go up after treatment.

“You don’t know if they went up because the patient was re-infected, or they developed neurosyphilis, or there was a problem at the lab,” he said. “It can be challenging to interpret.”

To decipher confusing test results, Dr. Ghanem recommended getting a detailed history to understand whether a patient is at risk for reinfection, whether there are signs of neurosyphilis or other complications, whether pregnancy is possible, and so on. “Based on the answers, you can determine what the most rational approach to treatment would be,” he shared.
 

 

 

Drug Shortages

Efforts to get the infection under control have become more complicated. Last summer, Pfizer announced that it had run out of penicillin G benzathine (Bicillin), an injectable, long-acting drug that is one of the main treatments for syphilis and the only one that can be given to pregnant people. Supplies for children ran out at the end of June 2023, and supplies for adults were gone by the end of September.

Because Pfizer is the only company that manufactures penicillin G benzathine, there is no one to pick up the slack in the short-term, so the shortage is expected to continue until at least the middle of 2024.

In response, the US Food and Drug Administration has temporarily allowed the use of benzylpenicillin benzathine (Extencilline), a French formulation that has not been approved in the United States, until supplies of penicillin G benzathine are stabilized.

The shortage has shone a spotlight on the important issue of a lack of alternatives for the treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, which increases the risk for congenital syphilis. “Hopefully, this pushes the National Institutes of Health and others to step up their game on studies for alternative drugs for use in pregnancy,” Dr. Ghanem said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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With rates of syphilis rising quickly in the United States and elsewhere, clinicians are having to up their game when it comes to diagnosing and treating an infection that they may not be paying enough attention to.

More than 200,000 cases of syphilis were reported in the United States in 2022, which is the highest number since 1950 and is a 17.3% increase over 2021, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The rate of infection has increased almost every year since a historic low in 2001.

And the trend is not limited to the United States. Last year, the infection rate in the United Kingdom hit a 50-year high, said David Mabey, BCh, DM, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections are also a major problem in low- and middle-income countries, he added, although good data are not always available.

Many of today’s healthcare professionals have little experience with the disease, shared Ina Park, MD, a sexually transmitted infections specialist at the University of California at San Francisco. “An entire generation of physicians — including myself — did not see any cases until we were well out of our training,” Dr. Park reported. “We’re really playing catch-up.”
 

A Centuries-Old Ailment

Dr. Park offered some advice on the challenges of diagnosing what can be an elusive infection at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver. That advice boiled down to one simple rule: “Test, test, test.”

Because syphilis can mimic so many other conditions and can have long periods of latency, it can be easily missed or even misdiagnosed by experienced physicians, said Dr. Park. Clinicians need to keep it front of mind and have a lower threshold for testing, even if there are no obvious symptoms.

Following the CDC’s new recommendations for syphilis screening will help, she noted; every sexually active patient aged between 15 and 44 years who lives in a county with a syphilis infection rate of 4.6 per 100,000 people or higher should get the test. And clinicians should remain vigilant, even in areas with a lower prevalence. “If you can’t account for new symptoms in a sexually active patient, order a test,” said Dr. Park.
 

Complicated Cases

The lack of experience with syphilis affects not just diagnosis but also treatment, particularly for complex cases, said Khalil Ghanem, MD, PhD, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. “When you don’t have to deal with something for a while, you forget how to deal with it,” he added.

At CROI, Dr. Ghanem offered suggestions for how to navigate complicated cases of ocular syphilis, otic syphilis, and neurosyphilis, and how to interpret test results when a patient’s antigen titers are being “unruly.”

With potential ocular or otic syphilis, you shouldn’t wait for a specialist like an ophthalmologist to weigh in but instead refer the patient directly to the emergency department because of the risk that the symptoms may become irreversible and result in permanent blindness or deafness. “You don’t want to dilly-dally with those conditions,” Dr. Ghanem said.

Closely monitoring a patient’s rapid plasma regain and venereal disease research laboratory antigen levels is the only way to manage syphilis and to determine whether the infection is responding to treatment, he noted, but sometimes those titers “don’t do what you think they should be doing” and fail to decline or even go up after treatment.

“You don’t know if they went up because the patient was re-infected, or they developed neurosyphilis, or there was a problem at the lab,” he said. “It can be challenging to interpret.”

To decipher confusing test results, Dr. Ghanem recommended getting a detailed history to understand whether a patient is at risk for reinfection, whether there are signs of neurosyphilis or other complications, whether pregnancy is possible, and so on. “Based on the answers, you can determine what the most rational approach to treatment would be,” he shared.
 

 

 

Drug Shortages

Efforts to get the infection under control have become more complicated. Last summer, Pfizer announced that it had run out of penicillin G benzathine (Bicillin), an injectable, long-acting drug that is one of the main treatments for syphilis and the only one that can be given to pregnant people. Supplies for children ran out at the end of June 2023, and supplies for adults were gone by the end of September.

Because Pfizer is the only company that manufactures penicillin G benzathine, there is no one to pick up the slack in the short-term, so the shortage is expected to continue until at least the middle of 2024.

In response, the US Food and Drug Administration has temporarily allowed the use of benzylpenicillin benzathine (Extencilline), a French formulation that has not been approved in the United States, until supplies of penicillin G benzathine are stabilized.

The shortage has shone a spotlight on the important issue of a lack of alternatives for the treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, which increases the risk for congenital syphilis. “Hopefully, this pushes the National Institutes of Health and others to step up their game on studies for alternative drugs for use in pregnancy,” Dr. Ghanem said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

With rates of syphilis rising quickly in the United States and elsewhere, clinicians are having to up their game when it comes to diagnosing and treating an infection that they may not be paying enough attention to.

More than 200,000 cases of syphilis were reported in the United States in 2022, which is the highest number since 1950 and is a 17.3% increase over 2021, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The rate of infection has increased almost every year since a historic low in 2001.

And the trend is not limited to the United States. Last year, the infection rate in the United Kingdom hit a 50-year high, said David Mabey, BCh, DM, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections are also a major problem in low- and middle-income countries, he added, although good data are not always available.

Many of today’s healthcare professionals have little experience with the disease, shared Ina Park, MD, a sexually transmitted infections specialist at the University of California at San Francisco. “An entire generation of physicians — including myself — did not see any cases until we were well out of our training,” Dr. Park reported. “We’re really playing catch-up.”
 

A Centuries-Old Ailment

Dr. Park offered some advice on the challenges of diagnosing what can be an elusive infection at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver. That advice boiled down to one simple rule: “Test, test, test.”

Because syphilis can mimic so many other conditions and can have long periods of latency, it can be easily missed or even misdiagnosed by experienced physicians, said Dr. Park. Clinicians need to keep it front of mind and have a lower threshold for testing, even if there are no obvious symptoms.

Following the CDC’s new recommendations for syphilis screening will help, she noted; every sexually active patient aged between 15 and 44 years who lives in a county with a syphilis infection rate of 4.6 per 100,000 people or higher should get the test. And clinicians should remain vigilant, even in areas with a lower prevalence. “If you can’t account for new symptoms in a sexually active patient, order a test,” said Dr. Park.
 

Complicated Cases

The lack of experience with syphilis affects not just diagnosis but also treatment, particularly for complex cases, said Khalil Ghanem, MD, PhD, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. “When you don’t have to deal with something for a while, you forget how to deal with it,” he added.

At CROI, Dr. Ghanem offered suggestions for how to navigate complicated cases of ocular syphilis, otic syphilis, and neurosyphilis, and how to interpret test results when a patient’s antigen titers are being “unruly.”

With potential ocular or otic syphilis, you shouldn’t wait for a specialist like an ophthalmologist to weigh in but instead refer the patient directly to the emergency department because of the risk that the symptoms may become irreversible and result in permanent blindness or deafness. “You don’t want to dilly-dally with those conditions,” Dr. Ghanem said.

Closely monitoring a patient’s rapid plasma regain and venereal disease research laboratory antigen levels is the only way to manage syphilis and to determine whether the infection is responding to treatment, he noted, but sometimes those titers “don’t do what you think they should be doing” and fail to decline or even go up after treatment.

“You don’t know if they went up because the patient was re-infected, or they developed neurosyphilis, or there was a problem at the lab,” he said. “It can be challenging to interpret.”

To decipher confusing test results, Dr. Ghanem recommended getting a detailed history to understand whether a patient is at risk for reinfection, whether there are signs of neurosyphilis or other complications, whether pregnancy is possible, and so on. “Based on the answers, you can determine what the most rational approach to treatment would be,” he shared.
 

 

 

Drug Shortages

Efforts to get the infection under control have become more complicated. Last summer, Pfizer announced that it had run out of penicillin G benzathine (Bicillin), an injectable, long-acting drug that is one of the main treatments for syphilis and the only one that can be given to pregnant people. Supplies for children ran out at the end of June 2023, and supplies for adults were gone by the end of September.

Because Pfizer is the only company that manufactures penicillin G benzathine, there is no one to pick up the slack in the short-term, so the shortage is expected to continue until at least the middle of 2024.

In response, the US Food and Drug Administration has temporarily allowed the use of benzylpenicillin benzathine (Extencilline), a French formulation that has not been approved in the United States, until supplies of penicillin G benzathine are stabilized.

The shortage has shone a spotlight on the important issue of a lack of alternatives for the treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, which increases the risk for congenital syphilis. “Hopefully, this pushes the National Institutes of Health and others to step up their game on studies for alternative drugs for use in pregnancy,” Dr. Ghanem said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Allergens Present in Most ‘Hypoallergenic’ Baby Cleansers, Study Finds

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 07/19/2024 - 13:52

 

TOPLINE:

A study found that 94% of best-selling baby cleansers contain allergens, despite their hypoallergenic claims.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Many baby cleansers are marketed as “hypoallergenic,” but these claims are not validated. 
  • This study assessed the potential allergens and marketing claims in best-selling baby cleansers. 
  • The researchers collected ingredients and marketing claims of the top 50 best-selling baby body wash products sold on Amazon on April 4, 2023. 
  • Ingredient lists were checked for potential allergens using the 2020 American Contact Dermatitis Society (ACDS) core allergen series, which lists 90 common allergens for adults and children.

TAKEAWAY:

  • In the 50 cleansers tested, 10 allergens were identified. Overall, 94% of the cleansers contained at least one allergen, averaging 2.9 allergens per product; cocamidopropyl betaine  (72%), fragrance (64%), and sodium benzoate (54%) were the most common allergens. 
  • All cleansers had at least five marketing claims, with an average of 10.9 claims per product; the most common claims were “paraben-free” (88%), “phthalate-free” (84%), “tear-free” (74%), and “hypoallergenic” or “allergy-tested” (74%). 
  • There was no significant difference in the number of allergens in the cleansers marketed as “hypoallergenic” or “allergy tested” compared with cleansers that did not have these claims (P = .843).
  • Fewer allergens were found in cleansers endorsed by the National Eczema Association (P = .004) or labeled “synthetic fragrance-free” (P = .003).
  • There was a positive correlation between a greater number of allergens and an increased number of marketing claims (r = 0.547, P < .001) and a negative correlation between cost and number of allergens (r = −0.450, P = .001).

IN PRACTICE:

Because marketing claims like “hypoallergenic” may be misleading, “clinicians should counsel parents to carefully examine cleanser ingredients or consider selecting cleansers” endorsed by the National Eczema Association or another international eczema organization, especially for infants and children with a history of atopic dermatitis, the authors wrote. 

SOURCE:

The study, led by Sasan D. Noveir, BA, from the University of California, Los Angeles, and coauthors from the division of dermatology at UCLA, was published online in Pediatric Dermatology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study only evaluated top-selling products from a single online source at a specific time, which may limit generalizability. Potential allergens not included in the ACDS core series may be present.

DISCLOSURES:

The study did not disclose any funding source. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

A study found that 94% of best-selling baby cleansers contain allergens, despite their hypoallergenic claims.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Many baby cleansers are marketed as “hypoallergenic,” but these claims are not validated. 
  • This study assessed the potential allergens and marketing claims in best-selling baby cleansers. 
  • The researchers collected ingredients and marketing claims of the top 50 best-selling baby body wash products sold on Amazon on April 4, 2023. 
  • Ingredient lists were checked for potential allergens using the 2020 American Contact Dermatitis Society (ACDS) core allergen series, which lists 90 common allergens for adults and children.

TAKEAWAY:

  • In the 50 cleansers tested, 10 allergens were identified. Overall, 94% of the cleansers contained at least one allergen, averaging 2.9 allergens per product; cocamidopropyl betaine  (72%), fragrance (64%), and sodium benzoate (54%) were the most common allergens. 
  • All cleansers had at least five marketing claims, with an average of 10.9 claims per product; the most common claims were “paraben-free” (88%), “phthalate-free” (84%), “tear-free” (74%), and “hypoallergenic” or “allergy-tested” (74%). 
  • There was no significant difference in the number of allergens in the cleansers marketed as “hypoallergenic” or “allergy tested” compared with cleansers that did not have these claims (P = .843).
  • Fewer allergens were found in cleansers endorsed by the National Eczema Association (P = .004) or labeled “synthetic fragrance-free” (P = .003).
  • There was a positive correlation between a greater number of allergens and an increased number of marketing claims (r = 0.547, P < .001) and a negative correlation between cost and number of allergens (r = −0.450, P = .001).

IN PRACTICE:

Because marketing claims like “hypoallergenic” may be misleading, “clinicians should counsel parents to carefully examine cleanser ingredients or consider selecting cleansers” endorsed by the National Eczema Association or another international eczema organization, especially for infants and children with a history of atopic dermatitis, the authors wrote. 

SOURCE:

The study, led by Sasan D. Noveir, BA, from the University of California, Los Angeles, and coauthors from the division of dermatology at UCLA, was published online in Pediatric Dermatology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study only evaluated top-selling products from a single online source at a specific time, which may limit generalizability. Potential allergens not included in the ACDS core series may be present.

DISCLOSURES:

The study did not disclose any funding source. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

A study found that 94% of best-selling baby cleansers contain allergens, despite their hypoallergenic claims.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Many baby cleansers are marketed as “hypoallergenic,” but these claims are not validated. 
  • This study assessed the potential allergens and marketing claims in best-selling baby cleansers. 
  • The researchers collected ingredients and marketing claims of the top 50 best-selling baby body wash products sold on Amazon on April 4, 2023. 
  • Ingredient lists were checked for potential allergens using the 2020 American Contact Dermatitis Society (ACDS) core allergen series, which lists 90 common allergens for adults and children.

TAKEAWAY:

  • In the 50 cleansers tested, 10 allergens were identified. Overall, 94% of the cleansers contained at least one allergen, averaging 2.9 allergens per product; cocamidopropyl betaine  (72%), fragrance (64%), and sodium benzoate (54%) were the most common allergens. 
  • All cleansers had at least five marketing claims, with an average of 10.9 claims per product; the most common claims were “paraben-free” (88%), “phthalate-free” (84%), “tear-free” (74%), and “hypoallergenic” or “allergy-tested” (74%). 
  • There was no significant difference in the number of allergens in the cleansers marketed as “hypoallergenic” or “allergy tested” compared with cleansers that did not have these claims (P = .843).
  • Fewer allergens were found in cleansers endorsed by the National Eczema Association (P = .004) or labeled “synthetic fragrance-free” (P = .003).
  • There was a positive correlation between a greater number of allergens and an increased number of marketing claims (r = 0.547, P < .001) and a negative correlation between cost and number of allergens (r = −0.450, P = .001).

IN PRACTICE:

Because marketing claims like “hypoallergenic” may be misleading, “clinicians should counsel parents to carefully examine cleanser ingredients or consider selecting cleansers” endorsed by the National Eczema Association or another international eczema organization, especially for infants and children with a history of atopic dermatitis, the authors wrote. 

SOURCE:

The study, led by Sasan D. Noveir, BA, from the University of California, Los Angeles, and coauthors from the division of dermatology at UCLA, was published online in Pediatric Dermatology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study only evaluated top-selling products from a single online source at a specific time, which may limit generalizability. Potential allergens not included in the ACDS core series may be present.

DISCLOSURES:

The study did not disclose any funding source. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Studies Reinforce JAK Inhibitor Efficacy for Most Challenging Alopecia Types

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Fri, 03/15/2024 - 10:02

 

FROM AAD 2024

In separate studies evaluating treatments for severe forms of alopecia, inhibitors of Janus kinases (JAKs) produced clinically meaningful hair regrowth, according to late-breaking data presented at the annual meeting of  the American Academy of Dermatology.

In one study of brepocitinib, the target was cicatricial alopecia (CA), a form of hair loss for which there are no approved therapies. In the other, a subanalysis from phase 3 trials of ritlecitinib for alopecia areata (AA), hair regrowth was shown in the subset of patients who entered the study with alopecia totalis or alopecia universalis (AT/AU).

Reflecting comments from several experts, including one of the late-breaking session moderators, April W. Armstrong, MD, MPH, professor and chief of dermatology, University of California, Los Angeles, said that the CA study, which matched clinical response to changes in CA biomarkers, suggested that the results are a potential breakthrough.

“This is the first placebo-controlled study with an oral JAK inhibitor that not only shows that scarring alopecia can be reversible but also gives insights to the mechanism of action and which patients might respond best,” Emma Guttman-Yassky, MD, PhD, said in an interview. Dr. Guttman-Yassky, professor of Dermatology and Immunology, and director of the Laboratory of Inflammatory Skin Diseases, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, was the study’s senior investigator.

Scarring Alopecia and Brepocitinib

For the study of scarring alopecia, 49 patients with CA were randomized in a 3:1 ratio to brepocitinib, a first-in-class inhibitor that targets both JAK1 and TYK2, or placebo. Because of the small size of the study, the primary endpoint was the change in CA biomarkers. The secondary outcome was clinical response, but because of a correlation between the two, these were mutually reinforcing.

Of the subtypes, nine patients enrolled in the study had frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA), 16 had lichen planopilaris (LPP) alopecia, and 24 had central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia (CCCA). All of the forms of CA are more common in women overall and women of color specifically, particularly CCCA. For this analysis, the FFA and LPP subtypes were considered similar for assessing response and were combined.

The data included a comparison of response and safety during the 24-week randomization phase, as well as an additional follow-up conducted after another 24 weeks of open-label treatment. During the second phase, all patients on placebo were switched to active treatment.

Overall, there was a reduction in all four of the key scalp inflammatory biomarkers measured among those in the combined FFA/LLP group. In the placebo group, each of these markers — interferon gamma (IFN-gamma), CCLS, CXCL10, and STAT1 — increased over the same time period. In almost all cases, the differences were statistically significant.

In the CCCA subgroup, the same pattern (an increase among those on placebo but a decrease among those on brepocitinib) was observed for CCLS and CXCL10. For IFN-gamma and STAT1, a rise was observed among those on placebo and those on active treatment, although the rise was greater for placebo.

For clinical response, improvement on brepocitinib was observed on disease activity indexes, particularly among those in the FFA/LLP group, according to Marguerite Meariman, MD, a dermatology resident at Mount Sinai, who presented the results. She called the improvement in clinical activity scores at 48 weeks “dramatic.” Moreover, improvement was apparent within 4 weeks of starting therapy.

For CCCA, a more challenging condition to treat, Dr. Meariman said that no further progression might represent an acceptable response for many patients, but there were also cases of hair regrowth in this subset. Although improvement was not generally on the order seen among those with FFA/LLP, she suggested that there is promise even in these more difficult patients.

Further studies are planned, but Dr. Meariman said that it might be important to focus on early treatment regardless of CA subtype. She noted that patients with less than 5 years disease duration typically did better than those with longer durations.

 

 

Ritlecitinib for AT/AU

The analysis of patients with AT/AU was based on a subset analysis from the ALLEGRO phase 2b/3 study of ritlecitinib, which targets JAK3 and TEC kinases. The full results of the ALLEGRO trial were published last year in The Lancet. In the new late-breaker analysis, Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) scores were evaluated on an observed or last-observation-carried-forward basis. Generally, responses in the subgroup of patients with AT/AU, who had a median SALT score of 80.3 (signifying 80.3% hair loss) at baseline, were only modestly lower than those in the overall trial.

At 24 months, about 50% of patients achieved a SALT score of 20, according to Melissa Piliang, MD, chair of Dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, who presented the data. In this group, as in the non-AT/AU population, responses climbed over time, and these responses have been maintained for as long as patients have remained on therapy.

At the more rigorous threshold of SALT < 10, the proportion of responders was only slightly lower, meaning a substantial proportion of patients with AT/AU “are achieving 90% or more of hair regrowth, so really an excellent response,” Dr. Piliang said.

For the subgroup with AU, specifically, regrowth of eyebrows and eyelashes was also observed in a substantial proportion, according to Dr. Piliang. Attributed to the often-devastating psychological burden of hair loss, patient-reported assessments of these responses global were generally “even better” than those reported by the investigators.

However, Dr. Piliang advised clinicians to treat AA as early as possible. Despite the benefits seen in the AT/AU subgroup, she pointed out that starting treatment before total hair loss is associated with a higher likelihood of complete or nearly complete hair regrowth.

There are no data from the ALLEGRO trial to determine how long hair regrowth persists after discontinuation of ritlecitinib, which has been approved for the treatment of AA, but Dr. Piliang said that patients should be told that lifelong therapy should be expected in the vast majority of individuals, whether or not AA has advanced to AT/AU.

“In my experience with JAK inhibitors, you lose response when you come off these drugs,” she said.

Dr. Meariman reported a financial relationship with AbbVie. Dr. Piliang reported financial relationships with Eli Lilly, Pfizer, and Proctor & Gamble. Dr. Armstrong reported financial relationships with more than 30 pharmaceutical companies, including those that manufacture JAK inhibitors. Dr. Guttman-Yassky reported financial relationships with more than 30 companies, including those that manufacture JAK inhibitors.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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FROM AAD 2024

In separate studies evaluating treatments for severe forms of alopecia, inhibitors of Janus kinases (JAKs) produced clinically meaningful hair regrowth, according to late-breaking data presented at the annual meeting of  the American Academy of Dermatology.

In one study of brepocitinib, the target was cicatricial alopecia (CA), a form of hair loss for which there are no approved therapies. In the other, a subanalysis from phase 3 trials of ritlecitinib for alopecia areata (AA), hair regrowth was shown in the subset of patients who entered the study with alopecia totalis or alopecia universalis (AT/AU).

Reflecting comments from several experts, including one of the late-breaking session moderators, April W. Armstrong, MD, MPH, professor and chief of dermatology, University of California, Los Angeles, said that the CA study, which matched clinical response to changes in CA biomarkers, suggested that the results are a potential breakthrough.

“This is the first placebo-controlled study with an oral JAK inhibitor that not only shows that scarring alopecia can be reversible but also gives insights to the mechanism of action and which patients might respond best,” Emma Guttman-Yassky, MD, PhD, said in an interview. Dr. Guttman-Yassky, professor of Dermatology and Immunology, and director of the Laboratory of Inflammatory Skin Diseases, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, was the study’s senior investigator.

Scarring Alopecia and Brepocitinib

For the study of scarring alopecia, 49 patients with CA were randomized in a 3:1 ratio to brepocitinib, a first-in-class inhibitor that targets both JAK1 and TYK2, or placebo. Because of the small size of the study, the primary endpoint was the change in CA biomarkers. The secondary outcome was clinical response, but because of a correlation between the two, these were mutually reinforcing.

Of the subtypes, nine patients enrolled in the study had frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA), 16 had lichen planopilaris (LPP) alopecia, and 24 had central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia (CCCA). All of the forms of CA are more common in women overall and women of color specifically, particularly CCCA. For this analysis, the FFA and LPP subtypes were considered similar for assessing response and were combined.

The data included a comparison of response and safety during the 24-week randomization phase, as well as an additional follow-up conducted after another 24 weeks of open-label treatment. During the second phase, all patients on placebo were switched to active treatment.

Overall, there was a reduction in all four of the key scalp inflammatory biomarkers measured among those in the combined FFA/LLP group. In the placebo group, each of these markers — interferon gamma (IFN-gamma), CCLS, CXCL10, and STAT1 — increased over the same time period. In almost all cases, the differences were statistically significant.

In the CCCA subgroup, the same pattern (an increase among those on placebo but a decrease among those on brepocitinib) was observed for CCLS and CXCL10. For IFN-gamma and STAT1, a rise was observed among those on placebo and those on active treatment, although the rise was greater for placebo.

For clinical response, improvement on brepocitinib was observed on disease activity indexes, particularly among those in the FFA/LLP group, according to Marguerite Meariman, MD, a dermatology resident at Mount Sinai, who presented the results. She called the improvement in clinical activity scores at 48 weeks “dramatic.” Moreover, improvement was apparent within 4 weeks of starting therapy.

For CCCA, a more challenging condition to treat, Dr. Meariman said that no further progression might represent an acceptable response for many patients, but there were also cases of hair regrowth in this subset. Although improvement was not generally on the order seen among those with FFA/LLP, she suggested that there is promise even in these more difficult patients.

Further studies are planned, but Dr. Meariman said that it might be important to focus on early treatment regardless of CA subtype. She noted that patients with less than 5 years disease duration typically did better than those with longer durations.

 

 

Ritlecitinib for AT/AU

The analysis of patients with AT/AU was based on a subset analysis from the ALLEGRO phase 2b/3 study of ritlecitinib, which targets JAK3 and TEC kinases. The full results of the ALLEGRO trial were published last year in The Lancet. In the new late-breaker analysis, Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) scores were evaluated on an observed or last-observation-carried-forward basis. Generally, responses in the subgroup of patients with AT/AU, who had a median SALT score of 80.3 (signifying 80.3% hair loss) at baseline, were only modestly lower than those in the overall trial.

At 24 months, about 50% of patients achieved a SALT score of 20, according to Melissa Piliang, MD, chair of Dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, who presented the data. In this group, as in the non-AT/AU population, responses climbed over time, and these responses have been maintained for as long as patients have remained on therapy.

At the more rigorous threshold of SALT < 10, the proportion of responders was only slightly lower, meaning a substantial proportion of patients with AT/AU “are achieving 90% or more of hair regrowth, so really an excellent response,” Dr. Piliang said.

For the subgroup with AU, specifically, regrowth of eyebrows and eyelashes was also observed in a substantial proportion, according to Dr. Piliang. Attributed to the often-devastating psychological burden of hair loss, patient-reported assessments of these responses global were generally “even better” than those reported by the investigators.

However, Dr. Piliang advised clinicians to treat AA as early as possible. Despite the benefits seen in the AT/AU subgroup, she pointed out that starting treatment before total hair loss is associated with a higher likelihood of complete or nearly complete hair regrowth.

There are no data from the ALLEGRO trial to determine how long hair regrowth persists after discontinuation of ritlecitinib, which has been approved for the treatment of AA, but Dr. Piliang said that patients should be told that lifelong therapy should be expected in the vast majority of individuals, whether or not AA has advanced to AT/AU.

“In my experience with JAK inhibitors, you lose response when you come off these drugs,” she said.

Dr. Meariman reported a financial relationship with AbbVie. Dr. Piliang reported financial relationships with Eli Lilly, Pfizer, and Proctor & Gamble. Dr. Armstrong reported financial relationships with more than 30 pharmaceutical companies, including those that manufacture JAK inhibitors. Dr. Guttman-Yassky reported financial relationships with more than 30 companies, including those that manufacture JAK inhibitors.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

FROM AAD 2024

In separate studies evaluating treatments for severe forms of alopecia, inhibitors of Janus kinases (JAKs) produced clinically meaningful hair regrowth, according to late-breaking data presented at the annual meeting of  the American Academy of Dermatology.

In one study of brepocitinib, the target was cicatricial alopecia (CA), a form of hair loss for which there are no approved therapies. In the other, a subanalysis from phase 3 trials of ritlecitinib for alopecia areata (AA), hair regrowth was shown in the subset of patients who entered the study with alopecia totalis or alopecia universalis (AT/AU).

Reflecting comments from several experts, including one of the late-breaking session moderators, April W. Armstrong, MD, MPH, professor and chief of dermatology, University of California, Los Angeles, said that the CA study, which matched clinical response to changes in CA biomarkers, suggested that the results are a potential breakthrough.

“This is the first placebo-controlled study with an oral JAK inhibitor that not only shows that scarring alopecia can be reversible but also gives insights to the mechanism of action and which patients might respond best,” Emma Guttman-Yassky, MD, PhD, said in an interview. Dr. Guttman-Yassky, professor of Dermatology and Immunology, and director of the Laboratory of Inflammatory Skin Diseases, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, was the study’s senior investigator.

Scarring Alopecia and Brepocitinib

For the study of scarring alopecia, 49 patients with CA were randomized in a 3:1 ratio to brepocitinib, a first-in-class inhibitor that targets both JAK1 and TYK2, or placebo. Because of the small size of the study, the primary endpoint was the change in CA biomarkers. The secondary outcome was clinical response, but because of a correlation between the two, these were mutually reinforcing.

Of the subtypes, nine patients enrolled in the study had frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA), 16 had lichen planopilaris (LPP) alopecia, and 24 had central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia (CCCA). All of the forms of CA are more common in women overall and women of color specifically, particularly CCCA. For this analysis, the FFA and LPP subtypes were considered similar for assessing response and were combined.

The data included a comparison of response and safety during the 24-week randomization phase, as well as an additional follow-up conducted after another 24 weeks of open-label treatment. During the second phase, all patients on placebo were switched to active treatment.

Overall, there was a reduction in all four of the key scalp inflammatory biomarkers measured among those in the combined FFA/LLP group. In the placebo group, each of these markers — interferon gamma (IFN-gamma), CCLS, CXCL10, and STAT1 — increased over the same time period. In almost all cases, the differences were statistically significant.

In the CCCA subgroup, the same pattern (an increase among those on placebo but a decrease among those on brepocitinib) was observed for CCLS and CXCL10. For IFN-gamma and STAT1, a rise was observed among those on placebo and those on active treatment, although the rise was greater for placebo.

For clinical response, improvement on brepocitinib was observed on disease activity indexes, particularly among those in the FFA/LLP group, according to Marguerite Meariman, MD, a dermatology resident at Mount Sinai, who presented the results. She called the improvement in clinical activity scores at 48 weeks “dramatic.” Moreover, improvement was apparent within 4 weeks of starting therapy.

For CCCA, a more challenging condition to treat, Dr. Meariman said that no further progression might represent an acceptable response for many patients, but there were also cases of hair regrowth in this subset. Although improvement was not generally on the order seen among those with FFA/LLP, she suggested that there is promise even in these more difficult patients.

Further studies are planned, but Dr. Meariman said that it might be important to focus on early treatment regardless of CA subtype. She noted that patients with less than 5 years disease duration typically did better than those with longer durations.

 

 

Ritlecitinib for AT/AU

The analysis of patients with AT/AU was based on a subset analysis from the ALLEGRO phase 2b/3 study of ritlecitinib, which targets JAK3 and TEC kinases. The full results of the ALLEGRO trial were published last year in The Lancet. In the new late-breaker analysis, Severity of Alopecia Tool (SALT) scores were evaluated on an observed or last-observation-carried-forward basis. Generally, responses in the subgroup of patients with AT/AU, who had a median SALT score of 80.3 (signifying 80.3% hair loss) at baseline, were only modestly lower than those in the overall trial.

At 24 months, about 50% of patients achieved a SALT score of 20, according to Melissa Piliang, MD, chair of Dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, who presented the data. In this group, as in the non-AT/AU population, responses climbed over time, and these responses have been maintained for as long as patients have remained on therapy.

At the more rigorous threshold of SALT < 10, the proportion of responders was only slightly lower, meaning a substantial proportion of patients with AT/AU “are achieving 90% or more of hair regrowth, so really an excellent response,” Dr. Piliang said.

For the subgroup with AU, specifically, regrowth of eyebrows and eyelashes was also observed in a substantial proportion, according to Dr. Piliang. Attributed to the often-devastating psychological burden of hair loss, patient-reported assessments of these responses global were generally “even better” than those reported by the investigators.

However, Dr. Piliang advised clinicians to treat AA as early as possible. Despite the benefits seen in the AT/AU subgroup, she pointed out that starting treatment before total hair loss is associated with a higher likelihood of complete or nearly complete hair regrowth.

There are no data from the ALLEGRO trial to determine how long hair regrowth persists after discontinuation of ritlecitinib, which has been approved for the treatment of AA, but Dr. Piliang said that patients should be told that lifelong therapy should be expected in the vast majority of individuals, whether or not AA has advanced to AT/AU.

“In my experience with JAK inhibitors, you lose response when you come off these drugs,” she said.

Dr. Meariman reported a financial relationship with AbbVie. Dr. Piliang reported financial relationships with Eli Lilly, Pfizer, and Proctor & Gamble. Dr. Armstrong reported financial relationships with more than 30 pharmaceutical companies, including those that manufacture JAK inhibitors. Dr. Guttman-Yassky reported financial relationships with more than 30 companies, including those that manufacture JAK inhibitors.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A 35-year-old female presented with a 1-day history of eroded papules and vesicles distributed periorally

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Changed
Thu, 03/14/2024 - 16:36

Hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) is a viral infection that commonly affects children under the age of five. It is primarily caused by coxsackieviruses and other enterovirus species.1 While it predominantly affects children, it is important to note that it can also affect adults. Although it is not a life threatening infection, it can cause a painful rash and is highly contagious. The infection is easily spread in multiple ways, including via respiratory droplets, contact with vesicular or nasal secretions, or through fecal-oral transmission. Most cases occur during the summer and fall seasons but individuals can be infected at any time of the year.

HFMD typically starts with a few days of non-specific viral symptoms, such as fever, cough, sore throat, and fatigue. It is then followed by an eruption of intraoral macules and vesicles and a widespread distribution of oval shaped macules that predominantly involve the hands and feet.1 Both children and adults can present atypically. Atypical presentations include vesicles and bullae on extensor surfaces such as the forearms, as well as eruptions on the face or buttocks.2 Other atypical morphologies include eczema herpeticum-like, Gianotti-Crosti-like, and purpuric/petechiae.3 Atypical hand, food, and mouth disease cases are often caused by coxsackievirus A6, however other strains of coxsackievirus can also cause atypical symptoms.2,3

Our 35-year-old female patient presented with eroded papules and vesicles around the mouth. A diagnosis of atypical HFMD was made clinically in the following days when the patient developed the more classic intraoral and acral macules and vesicles.

Vanessa Ortega, Dr. Brooke Resh Sateesh, and Dr. Justin Gordon


Similar to our case, HFMD is most often diagnosed clinically. PCR testing from an active vesicle or nasopharyngeal swab can be obtained. Treatment for HFMD is supportive and symptoms generally resolve over 7-10 days. Over-the-counter analgesics, such as ibuprofen and acetaminophen, as well as oral analgesics that contain lidocaine or diphenhydramine are often helpful3. In this case, our patient improved over the course of seven days without needing therapy.

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


This case and the photos were submitted by Vanessa Ortega, BS, University of California, San Diego; Brooke Resh Sateesh, MD, and Justin Gordon, MD, San Diego Family Dermatology. The column was edited by Donna Bilu Martin, MD.
 

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

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2023, June 20). Symptoms of hand, foot, and mouth disease.

2. Drago F et al. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2017 Aug;77(2):e51-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jaad.2017.03.046.

3. Starkey SY et al. Pediatr Dermatol. 2024 Jan-Feb;41(1):23-7. doi: 10.1111/pde.15461.

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Hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) is a viral infection that commonly affects children under the age of five. It is primarily caused by coxsackieviruses and other enterovirus species.1 While it predominantly affects children, it is important to note that it can also affect adults. Although it is not a life threatening infection, it can cause a painful rash and is highly contagious. The infection is easily spread in multiple ways, including via respiratory droplets, contact with vesicular or nasal secretions, or through fecal-oral transmission. Most cases occur during the summer and fall seasons but individuals can be infected at any time of the year.

HFMD typically starts with a few days of non-specific viral symptoms, such as fever, cough, sore throat, and fatigue. It is then followed by an eruption of intraoral macules and vesicles and a widespread distribution of oval shaped macules that predominantly involve the hands and feet.1 Both children and adults can present atypically. Atypical presentations include vesicles and bullae on extensor surfaces such as the forearms, as well as eruptions on the face or buttocks.2 Other atypical morphologies include eczema herpeticum-like, Gianotti-Crosti-like, and purpuric/petechiae.3 Atypical hand, food, and mouth disease cases are often caused by coxsackievirus A6, however other strains of coxsackievirus can also cause atypical symptoms.2,3

Our 35-year-old female patient presented with eroded papules and vesicles around the mouth. A diagnosis of atypical HFMD was made clinically in the following days when the patient developed the more classic intraoral and acral macules and vesicles.

Vanessa Ortega, Dr. Brooke Resh Sateesh, and Dr. Justin Gordon


Similar to our case, HFMD is most often diagnosed clinically. PCR testing from an active vesicle or nasopharyngeal swab can be obtained. Treatment for HFMD is supportive and symptoms generally resolve over 7-10 days. Over-the-counter analgesics, such as ibuprofen and acetaminophen, as well as oral analgesics that contain lidocaine or diphenhydramine are often helpful3. In this case, our patient improved over the course of seven days without needing therapy.

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


This case and the photos were submitted by Vanessa Ortega, BS, University of California, San Diego; Brooke Resh Sateesh, MD, and Justin Gordon, MD, San Diego Family Dermatology. The column was edited by Donna Bilu Martin, MD.
 

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

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2023, June 20). Symptoms of hand, foot, and mouth disease.

2. Drago F et al. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2017 Aug;77(2):e51-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jaad.2017.03.046.

3. Starkey SY et al. Pediatr Dermatol. 2024 Jan-Feb;41(1):23-7. doi: 10.1111/pde.15461.

Hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) is a viral infection that commonly affects children under the age of five. It is primarily caused by coxsackieviruses and other enterovirus species.1 While it predominantly affects children, it is important to note that it can also affect adults. Although it is not a life threatening infection, it can cause a painful rash and is highly contagious. The infection is easily spread in multiple ways, including via respiratory droplets, contact with vesicular or nasal secretions, or through fecal-oral transmission. Most cases occur during the summer and fall seasons but individuals can be infected at any time of the year.

HFMD typically starts with a few days of non-specific viral symptoms, such as fever, cough, sore throat, and fatigue. It is then followed by an eruption of intraoral macules and vesicles and a widespread distribution of oval shaped macules that predominantly involve the hands and feet.1 Both children and adults can present atypically. Atypical presentations include vesicles and bullae on extensor surfaces such as the forearms, as well as eruptions on the face or buttocks.2 Other atypical morphologies include eczema herpeticum-like, Gianotti-Crosti-like, and purpuric/petechiae.3 Atypical hand, food, and mouth disease cases are often caused by coxsackievirus A6, however other strains of coxsackievirus can also cause atypical symptoms.2,3

Our 35-year-old female patient presented with eroded papules and vesicles around the mouth. A diagnosis of atypical HFMD was made clinically in the following days when the patient developed the more classic intraoral and acral macules and vesicles.

Vanessa Ortega, Dr. Brooke Resh Sateesh, and Dr. Justin Gordon


Similar to our case, HFMD is most often diagnosed clinically. PCR testing from an active vesicle or nasopharyngeal swab can be obtained. Treatment for HFMD is supportive and symptoms generally resolve over 7-10 days. Over-the-counter analgesics, such as ibuprofen and acetaminophen, as well as oral analgesics that contain lidocaine or diphenhydramine are often helpful3. In this case, our patient improved over the course of seven days without needing therapy.

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


This case and the photos were submitted by Vanessa Ortega, BS, University of California, San Diego; Brooke Resh Sateesh, MD, and Justin Gordon, MD, San Diego Family Dermatology. The column was edited by Donna Bilu Martin, MD.
 

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

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2023, June 20). Symptoms of hand, foot, and mouth disease.

2. Drago F et al. J Am Acad Dermatol. 2017 Aug;77(2):e51-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jaad.2017.03.046.

3. Starkey SY et al. Pediatr Dermatol. 2024 Jan-Feb;41(1):23-7. doi: 10.1111/pde.15461.

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A 35-year-old woman presented with a 1-day history of eroded papules and vesicles distributed periorally. On the second day, she developed erythematous macules on her palms and soles. She then developed painful intraoral vesicles. Her review of systems was positive for several days of unexplained fatigue.  

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Rosemary, Part 2

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Rosemary plant
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Rosemary plant

Rosemary (Salvia rosmarinus, formerly Rosmarinus officinalis) has been a common ingredient in cosmetic and cosmeceutical products for the last few decades. Used as a spice in various, particularly Mediterranean, cuisines and in traditional medicine for hundreds of years, this aromatic shrub has been the focus of substantial research this century to clarify its roles in skin care. It is used broadly in cosmetic formulations, particularly to preserve the product, and acts as a skin conditioner and fragrance in safe concentrations.1 Rosemary essential oil is also a popular choice frequently used in aromatherapy.2,3 This column focuses on recent promising results supporting the antioxidant and anti-photoaging activities, especially, of rosemary.

UV Protection and Rosemary in Combination

A 2021 study in mice authored by Auh and Madhavan showed that a mixture of marigold and rosemary extracts yielded anti-photoaging effects, with the botanical formula suppressing UV-induced damage.4

Seven years earlier, Pérez-Sánchez et al. combined rosemary and citrus extracts and found that they exerted protective effects against UV damage in human HaCaT keratinocytes as well as human volunteers after oral consumption. Significant increases in minimal erythema dose (MED) were seen in participants, with daily intake of 250 mg of botanical combination, at 8 weeks (34%) and 12 weeks (56%). The investigators attributed the photoprotective effects of the formula to rosemary polyphenols and diterpenes as well as citrus flavonoids.5

Evaluation of a human skin cell model by Sánchez-Marzo et al. in 2020 revealed that rosemary diterpenes were instrumental in an herbal extract that combined citrus, olive, and rosemary in conferring genoprotection against UV-induced DNA damage. The authors note that human trials are needed to overcome the limitations of the cellular model in ascertaining whether the tested herbal formulations can yield oral and/or topical photoprotection.6

Anti-Photoaging and Anti-Pollution

In 2022, Ibrahim et al. assessed a hexane extract of rosemary leaves for anti-photoaging activity. Their evaluation showed an abundance of triterpenoids, monoterpenoids, and phenolic diterpenes in rosemary, with in vitro assays verifying the anti-aging, antioxidant, and wound healing functions of the extract. Further, topical rosemary hexane extract–loaded lipid nanocapsules protected rat skin from UV radiation, as epidermal and dermal histological parameters improved, antioxidant biochemical balance was restored, and inflammatory markers and wrinkling were diminished. The researchers concluded that the use of rosemary hexane extract represents a safe, efficient, and cost-effective way to deliver anti-aging, photoprotective functions to cosmeceutical formulations.7

In March 2021, Nobile et al. published a report on their randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled parallel group study to investigate the efficacy of a marketed polyphenol-enriched dietary supplement (Zeropollution, which contains four standardized herbal extracts: Olea europaea leaf, Lippia citriodora, S. rosmarinus, and Sophora japonica) in diminishing pollution-induced oxidative stress and in improving skin aging in 100 White and Asian women who were outdoor workers living in a polluted environment (Milan, Italy). Statistically significant improvements in reducing wrinkle depth and hyperpigmentation, enhancing elasticity and firmness, as well as promoting skin moisturization and diminishing transepidermal water loss were noted as early as 2 weeks after product consumption began, with inter-group and intra-group analysis verifying that all skin parameters were ameliorated in Asian and White subjects.8

Previously, Nobile et al. conducted a randomized, parallel-group study on 90 subjects to evaluate the photoprotective effects of a combination of rosemary and grapefruit (Citrus paradisi) extracts (Nutroxsun). The investigators also performed a pilot, randomized crossover study on five participants. Both studies included only females with Fitzpatrick skin phototypes I-III who manifested mild to moderate chronological aging or photoaging. Within as little as 2 weeks, treated individuals exhibited reductions in UVA- and UVB-induced skin changes. Skin elasticity improved in this group, with wrinkles diminishing along with skin redness and lipoperoxides. The investigators concluded that the oral blend of rosemary and grapefruit consumed long term merits consideration as an adjuvant approach to preventing the deleterious effects of solar exposure.9

In 2021, Hoskin et al. used ex vivo human biopsies exposed to diesel engine exhaust to study the impact of spray-dried algae-rosemary particles against pollution-induced damage. The spirulina-rosemary gel that was developed lowered levels of 4-hydroxynonenal protein adducts (4HNE-PA) as well as matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) and reduced the loss of filaggrin. The researchers concluded that their topically applied spirulina-rosemary gel was effective in mitigating or preventing skin aging and cutaneous damage caused by diesel air pollution.10

 

 

Antioxidant, Antibacterial, and Anti-Inflammatory Activity

Based on a 2023 literature search by Li Pomi et al. of in vitro as well as in vivo animal and human studies involving S. rosmarinus and the skin, researchers reported on substantial evidence buttressing the antioxidant role of the botanical agent. They cautioned that, while data support the harnessing of the bioactive constituents of rosemary to address inflammatory and infectious skin conditions, large controlled trials remain necessary to establish its potential functions in dermatologic clinical practice.11

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

Ten years earlier, Park et al. determined that a phenolic diterpene from rosemary (carnosic acid) prevented UV-induced expression of MMP-1, MMP-3, and MMP-9 in human skin fibroblasts and keratinocytes in a concentration-dependent manner by suppressing reactive oxygen species and blocking through the inhibition of ROS and the suppression of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)-mediated AP-1 activation.12

Around the same time, Sienkiewicz et al. showed that rosemary essential oil exhibits antibacterial activity against the standard strain Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and 60 other clinical strains of the bacteria.13

Further, anti-inflammatory properties have been attributed to rosemary essential oil, which are thought to be due to its suppression of nuclear factor kappa B transcription and inhibition of the arachidonic acid cascade.14

Other Functions of Rosemary

In 2022, Sutkowska-Skolimowska et al. demonstrated that rosemary extract in concentrations of 50 and 100mcg/mL significantly diminished accumulated collagen in the fibroblasts of four patients with severe and fatal osteogenesis imperfecta, suggesting that the botanical agent may have a role targeting cellular stress and inducing autophagy in therapy for this condition.15

In 2015, Akbari et al. established that 0.5% and 1% concentrations of rosemary essential oil were effective in facilitating the percutaneous absorption of diclofenac sodium topical gel.16

Conclusion

In Western culture, rosemary is thought of more as a spice to add flavor to food. However, there appears to be an emerging body of evidence suggesting various possible functions for rosemary in the dermatologic armamentarium. Much more research is necessary, though, to ascertain the most appropriate and optimal roles for this popular herb in skin care.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur in Miami, Florida. 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 Inc., 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. González-Minero FJ et al. Cosmetics. 2020 Oct 3;7(4):77.

2. Sayorwan W et al. Sci Pharm. 2013 Apr-Jun;81(2):531-42.

3. Pazyar N et al. Skin Pharmacol Physiol. 2014;27(6):303-10.

4. Auh JH and Madhavan J Biomed Pharmacother. 2021 Mar;135:111178.

5. Pérez-Sánchez A et al. J Photochem Photobiol B. 2014 Jul 5;136:12-8.

6. Sánchez-Marzo N et al. Antioxidants (Basel). 2020 Mar 20;9(3):255.

7. Ibrahim N et al. Sci Rep. 2022 Jul 30;12(1):13102.

8. Nobile V et al. Food Nutr Res. 2021 Mar 29:65.

9. Nobile V et al. Food Nutr Res. 2016 Jul 1;60:31871.

10. Hoskin R et al. Molecules. 2021 Jun 22;26(13):3781.

11. Li Pomi F et al. Antioxidants (Basel). 2023 Mar 9;12(3):680.

12. Park M et al. Exp Dermatol. 2013 May;22(5):336-41.

13. Sienkiewicz M et al. Molecules. 2013 Aug 5;18(8):9334-51.

14. Borges RS et al. J Ethnopharmacol. 2019 Jan 30;229:29-45.

15. Sutkowska-Skolimowska. Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Sep 7;23(18):10341.

16. Akbari J et al. Pharm Biol. 2015;53(10):1442-7.

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Rosemary plant
mjrodafotografia/Getty Images
Rosemary plant

Rosemary (Salvia rosmarinus, formerly Rosmarinus officinalis) has been a common ingredient in cosmetic and cosmeceutical products for the last few decades. Used as a spice in various, particularly Mediterranean, cuisines and in traditional medicine for hundreds of years, this aromatic shrub has been the focus of substantial research this century to clarify its roles in skin care. It is used broadly in cosmetic formulations, particularly to preserve the product, and acts as a skin conditioner and fragrance in safe concentrations.1 Rosemary essential oil is also a popular choice frequently used in aromatherapy.2,3 This column focuses on recent promising results supporting the antioxidant and anti-photoaging activities, especially, of rosemary.

UV Protection and Rosemary in Combination

A 2021 study in mice authored by Auh and Madhavan showed that a mixture of marigold and rosemary extracts yielded anti-photoaging effects, with the botanical formula suppressing UV-induced damage.4

Seven years earlier, Pérez-Sánchez et al. combined rosemary and citrus extracts and found that they exerted protective effects against UV damage in human HaCaT keratinocytes as well as human volunteers after oral consumption. Significant increases in minimal erythema dose (MED) were seen in participants, with daily intake of 250 mg of botanical combination, at 8 weeks (34%) and 12 weeks (56%). The investigators attributed the photoprotective effects of the formula to rosemary polyphenols and diterpenes as well as citrus flavonoids.5

Evaluation of a human skin cell model by Sánchez-Marzo et al. in 2020 revealed that rosemary diterpenes were instrumental in an herbal extract that combined citrus, olive, and rosemary in conferring genoprotection against UV-induced DNA damage. The authors note that human trials are needed to overcome the limitations of the cellular model in ascertaining whether the tested herbal formulations can yield oral and/or topical photoprotection.6

Anti-Photoaging and Anti-Pollution

In 2022, Ibrahim et al. assessed a hexane extract of rosemary leaves for anti-photoaging activity. Their evaluation showed an abundance of triterpenoids, monoterpenoids, and phenolic diterpenes in rosemary, with in vitro assays verifying the anti-aging, antioxidant, and wound healing functions of the extract. Further, topical rosemary hexane extract–loaded lipid nanocapsules protected rat skin from UV radiation, as epidermal and dermal histological parameters improved, antioxidant biochemical balance was restored, and inflammatory markers and wrinkling were diminished. The researchers concluded that the use of rosemary hexane extract represents a safe, efficient, and cost-effective way to deliver anti-aging, photoprotective functions to cosmeceutical formulations.7

In March 2021, Nobile et al. published a report on their randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled parallel group study to investigate the efficacy of a marketed polyphenol-enriched dietary supplement (Zeropollution, which contains four standardized herbal extracts: Olea europaea leaf, Lippia citriodora, S. rosmarinus, and Sophora japonica) in diminishing pollution-induced oxidative stress and in improving skin aging in 100 White and Asian women who were outdoor workers living in a polluted environment (Milan, Italy). Statistically significant improvements in reducing wrinkle depth and hyperpigmentation, enhancing elasticity and firmness, as well as promoting skin moisturization and diminishing transepidermal water loss were noted as early as 2 weeks after product consumption began, with inter-group and intra-group analysis verifying that all skin parameters were ameliorated in Asian and White subjects.8

Previously, Nobile et al. conducted a randomized, parallel-group study on 90 subjects to evaluate the photoprotective effects of a combination of rosemary and grapefruit (Citrus paradisi) extracts (Nutroxsun). The investigators also performed a pilot, randomized crossover study on five participants. Both studies included only females with Fitzpatrick skin phototypes I-III who manifested mild to moderate chronological aging or photoaging. Within as little as 2 weeks, treated individuals exhibited reductions in UVA- and UVB-induced skin changes. Skin elasticity improved in this group, with wrinkles diminishing along with skin redness and lipoperoxides. The investigators concluded that the oral blend of rosemary and grapefruit consumed long term merits consideration as an adjuvant approach to preventing the deleterious effects of solar exposure.9

In 2021, Hoskin et al. used ex vivo human biopsies exposed to diesel engine exhaust to study the impact of spray-dried algae-rosemary particles against pollution-induced damage. The spirulina-rosemary gel that was developed lowered levels of 4-hydroxynonenal protein adducts (4HNE-PA) as well as matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) and reduced the loss of filaggrin. The researchers concluded that their topically applied spirulina-rosemary gel was effective in mitigating or preventing skin aging and cutaneous damage caused by diesel air pollution.10

 

 

Antioxidant, Antibacterial, and Anti-Inflammatory Activity

Based on a 2023 literature search by Li Pomi et al. of in vitro as well as in vivo animal and human studies involving S. rosmarinus and the skin, researchers reported on substantial evidence buttressing the antioxidant role of the botanical agent. They cautioned that, while data support the harnessing of the bioactive constituents of rosemary to address inflammatory and infectious skin conditions, large controlled trials remain necessary to establish its potential functions in dermatologic clinical practice.11

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

Ten years earlier, Park et al. determined that a phenolic diterpene from rosemary (carnosic acid) prevented UV-induced expression of MMP-1, MMP-3, and MMP-9 in human skin fibroblasts and keratinocytes in a concentration-dependent manner by suppressing reactive oxygen species and blocking through the inhibition of ROS and the suppression of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)-mediated AP-1 activation.12

Around the same time, Sienkiewicz et al. showed that rosemary essential oil exhibits antibacterial activity against the standard strain Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and 60 other clinical strains of the bacteria.13

Further, anti-inflammatory properties have been attributed to rosemary essential oil, which are thought to be due to its suppression of nuclear factor kappa B transcription and inhibition of the arachidonic acid cascade.14

Other Functions of Rosemary

In 2022, Sutkowska-Skolimowska et al. demonstrated that rosemary extract in concentrations of 50 and 100mcg/mL significantly diminished accumulated collagen in the fibroblasts of four patients with severe and fatal osteogenesis imperfecta, suggesting that the botanical agent may have a role targeting cellular stress and inducing autophagy in therapy for this condition.15

In 2015, Akbari et al. established that 0.5% and 1% concentrations of rosemary essential oil were effective in facilitating the percutaneous absorption of diclofenac sodium topical gel.16

Conclusion

In Western culture, rosemary is thought of more as a spice to add flavor to food. However, there appears to be an emerging body of evidence suggesting various possible functions for rosemary in the dermatologic armamentarium. Much more research is necessary, though, to ascertain the most appropriate and optimal roles for this popular herb in skin care.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur in Miami, Florida. 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 Inc., 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. González-Minero FJ et al. Cosmetics. 2020 Oct 3;7(4):77.

2. Sayorwan W et al. Sci Pharm. 2013 Apr-Jun;81(2):531-42.

3. Pazyar N et al. Skin Pharmacol Physiol. 2014;27(6):303-10.

4. Auh JH and Madhavan J Biomed Pharmacother. 2021 Mar;135:111178.

5. Pérez-Sánchez A et al. J Photochem Photobiol B. 2014 Jul 5;136:12-8.

6. Sánchez-Marzo N et al. Antioxidants (Basel). 2020 Mar 20;9(3):255.

7. Ibrahim N et al. Sci Rep. 2022 Jul 30;12(1):13102.

8. Nobile V et al. Food Nutr Res. 2021 Mar 29:65.

9. Nobile V et al. Food Nutr Res. 2016 Jul 1;60:31871.

10. Hoskin R et al. Molecules. 2021 Jun 22;26(13):3781.

11. Li Pomi F et al. Antioxidants (Basel). 2023 Mar 9;12(3):680.

12. Park M et al. Exp Dermatol. 2013 May;22(5):336-41.

13. Sienkiewicz M et al. Molecules. 2013 Aug 5;18(8):9334-51.

14. Borges RS et al. J Ethnopharmacol. 2019 Jan 30;229:29-45.

15. Sutkowska-Skolimowska. Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Sep 7;23(18):10341.

16. Akbari J et al. Pharm Biol. 2015;53(10):1442-7.

 

Rosemary plant
mjrodafotografia/Getty Images
Rosemary plant

Rosemary (Salvia rosmarinus, formerly Rosmarinus officinalis) has been a common ingredient in cosmetic and cosmeceutical products for the last few decades. Used as a spice in various, particularly Mediterranean, cuisines and in traditional medicine for hundreds of years, this aromatic shrub has been the focus of substantial research this century to clarify its roles in skin care. It is used broadly in cosmetic formulations, particularly to preserve the product, and acts as a skin conditioner and fragrance in safe concentrations.1 Rosemary essential oil is also a popular choice frequently used in aromatherapy.2,3 This column focuses on recent promising results supporting the antioxidant and anti-photoaging activities, especially, of rosemary.

UV Protection and Rosemary in Combination

A 2021 study in mice authored by Auh and Madhavan showed that a mixture of marigold and rosemary extracts yielded anti-photoaging effects, with the botanical formula suppressing UV-induced damage.4

Seven years earlier, Pérez-Sánchez et al. combined rosemary and citrus extracts and found that they exerted protective effects against UV damage in human HaCaT keratinocytes as well as human volunteers after oral consumption. Significant increases in minimal erythema dose (MED) were seen in participants, with daily intake of 250 mg of botanical combination, at 8 weeks (34%) and 12 weeks (56%). The investigators attributed the photoprotective effects of the formula to rosemary polyphenols and diterpenes as well as citrus flavonoids.5

Evaluation of a human skin cell model by Sánchez-Marzo et al. in 2020 revealed that rosemary diterpenes were instrumental in an herbal extract that combined citrus, olive, and rosemary in conferring genoprotection against UV-induced DNA damage. The authors note that human trials are needed to overcome the limitations of the cellular model in ascertaining whether the tested herbal formulations can yield oral and/or topical photoprotection.6

Anti-Photoaging and Anti-Pollution

In 2022, Ibrahim et al. assessed a hexane extract of rosemary leaves for anti-photoaging activity. Their evaluation showed an abundance of triterpenoids, monoterpenoids, and phenolic diterpenes in rosemary, with in vitro assays verifying the anti-aging, antioxidant, and wound healing functions of the extract. Further, topical rosemary hexane extract–loaded lipid nanocapsules protected rat skin from UV radiation, as epidermal and dermal histological parameters improved, antioxidant biochemical balance was restored, and inflammatory markers and wrinkling were diminished. The researchers concluded that the use of rosemary hexane extract represents a safe, efficient, and cost-effective way to deliver anti-aging, photoprotective functions to cosmeceutical formulations.7

In March 2021, Nobile et al. published a report on their randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled parallel group study to investigate the efficacy of a marketed polyphenol-enriched dietary supplement (Zeropollution, which contains four standardized herbal extracts: Olea europaea leaf, Lippia citriodora, S. rosmarinus, and Sophora japonica) in diminishing pollution-induced oxidative stress and in improving skin aging in 100 White and Asian women who were outdoor workers living in a polluted environment (Milan, Italy). Statistically significant improvements in reducing wrinkle depth and hyperpigmentation, enhancing elasticity and firmness, as well as promoting skin moisturization and diminishing transepidermal water loss were noted as early as 2 weeks after product consumption began, with inter-group and intra-group analysis verifying that all skin parameters were ameliorated in Asian and White subjects.8

Previously, Nobile et al. conducted a randomized, parallel-group study on 90 subjects to evaluate the photoprotective effects of a combination of rosemary and grapefruit (Citrus paradisi) extracts (Nutroxsun). The investigators also performed a pilot, randomized crossover study on five participants. Both studies included only females with Fitzpatrick skin phototypes I-III who manifested mild to moderate chronological aging or photoaging. Within as little as 2 weeks, treated individuals exhibited reductions in UVA- and UVB-induced skin changes. Skin elasticity improved in this group, with wrinkles diminishing along with skin redness and lipoperoxides. The investigators concluded that the oral blend of rosemary and grapefruit consumed long term merits consideration as an adjuvant approach to preventing the deleterious effects of solar exposure.9

In 2021, Hoskin et al. used ex vivo human biopsies exposed to diesel engine exhaust to study the impact of spray-dried algae-rosemary particles against pollution-induced damage. The spirulina-rosemary gel that was developed lowered levels of 4-hydroxynonenal protein adducts (4HNE-PA) as well as matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) and reduced the loss of filaggrin. The researchers concluded that their topically applied spirulina-rosemary gel was effective in mitigating or preventing skin aging and cutaneous damage caused by diesel air pollution.10

 

 

Antioxidant, Antibacterial, and Anti-Inflammatory Activity

Based on a 2023 literature search by Li Pomi et al. of in vitro as well as in vivo animal and human studies involving S. rosmarinus and the skin, researchers reported on substantial evidence buttressing the antioxidant role of the botanical agent. They cautioned that, while data support the harnessing of the bioactive constituents of rosemary to address inflammatory and infectious skin conditions, large controlled trials remain necessary to establish its potential functions in dermatologic clinical practice.11

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

Ten years earlier, Park et al. determined that a phenolic diterpene from rosemary (carnosic acid) prevented UV-induced expression of MMP-1, MMP-3, and MMP-9 in human skin fibroblasts and keratinocytes in a concentration-dependent manner by suppressing reactive oxygen species and blocking through the inhibition of ROS and the suppression of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)-mediated AP-1 activation.12

Around the same time, Sienkiewicz et al. showed that rosemary essential oil exhibits antibacterial activity against the standard strain Escherichia coli ATCC 25922 and 60 other clinical strains of the bacteria.13

Further, anti-inflammatory properties have been attributed to rosemary essential oil, which are thought to be due to its suppression of nuclear factor kappa B transcription and inhibition of the arachidonic acid cascade.14

Other Functions of Rosemary

In 2022, Sutkowska-Skolimowska et al. demonstrated that rosemary extract in concentrations of 50 and 100mcg/mL significantly diminished accumulated collagen in the fibroblasts of four patients with severe and fatal osteogenesis imperfecta, suggesting that the botanical agent may have a role targeting cellular stress and inducing autophagy in therapy for this condition.15

In 2015, Akbari et al. established that 0.5% and 1% concentrations of rosemary essential oil were effective in facilitating the percutaneous absorption of diclofenac sodium topical gel.16

Conclusion

In Western culture, rosemary is thought of more as a spice to add flavor to food. However, there appears to be an emerging body of evidence suggesting various possible functions for rosemary in the dermatologic armamentarium. Much more research is necessary, though, to ascertain the most appropriate and optimal roles for this popular herb in skin care.

Dr. Baumann is a private practice dermatologist, researcher, author, and entrepreneur in Miami, Florida. 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 Inc., 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. González-Minero FJ et al. Cosmetics. 2020 Oct 3;7(4):77.

2. Sayorwan W et al. Sci Pharm. 2013 Apr-Jun;81(2):531-42.

3. Pazyar N et al. Skin Pharmacol Physiol. 2014;27(6):303-10.

4. Auh JH and Madhavan J Biomed Pharmacother. 2021 Mar;135:111178.

5. Pérez-Sánchez A et al. J Photochem Photobiol B. 2014 Jul 5;136:12-8.

6. Sánchez-Marzo N et al. Antioxidants (Basel). 2020 Mar 20;9(3):255.

7. Ibrahim N et al. Sci Rep. 2022 Jul 30;12(1):13102.

8. Nobile V et al. Food Nutr Res. 2021 Mar 29:65.

9. Nobile V et al. Food Nutr Res. 2016 Jul 1;60:31871.

10. Hoskin R et al. Molecules. 2021 Jun 22;26(13):3781.

11. Li Pomi F et al. Antioxidants (Basel). 2023 Mar 9;12(3):680.

12. Park M et al. Exp Dermatol. 2013 May;22(5):336-41.

13. Sienkiewicz M et al. Molecules. 2013 Aug 5;18(8):9334-51.

14. Borges RS et al. J Ethnopharmacol. 2019 Jan 30;229:29-45.

15. Sutkowska-Skolimowska. Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Sep 7;23(18):10341.

16. Akbari J et al. Pharm Biol. 2015;53(10):1442-7.

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Medicare Doc Pay Cut Eased, but When Will Serious Revisions Come?

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Changed
Thu, 03/14/2024 - 15:05

President Joe Biden on March 9 signed into law a measure that softened — but did not completely eliminate — a 2024 cut in a key rate used to determine how physicians are paid for treating Medicare patients.

While physician groups hailed the move as partial relief, they say they’ll continue to press for broader changes in the Medicare physician fee schedule.

The Medicare provision was tucked into a larger spending package approved by the US House and Senate.

The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the American Medical Association (AMA), and other groups have lobbied Congress for months to undo a 3.4% cut in the base rate, or conversion factor, in the physician fee schedule for 2024.

The conversion factor is used in calculations to determine reimbursement for myriad other services. Federal Medicare officials said the cut would mean a 1.25% decrease in overall payments in 2024, compared with 2023.

“With the passage of this legislation, Congress has offset 2.93% of that payment cut,” said Steven P. Furr, MD, AAFP’s president in a statement. “We appreciate this temporary measure but continue to urge Congress to advance comprehensive, long-term Medicare payment reform.”

In a statement, Representative Larry Bucshon, MD (R-IN), said the payment cut could not be completely eliminated because of budget constraints.

The Medicare physician fee schedule covers much of the care clinicians provide to people older than 65 and those with disabilities. It covers about 8000 different types of services, ranging from office visits to surgical procedures, imaging, and tests, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC).

Along with physicians, the fee schedule sets payments for nurse practitioners, physician assistants, podiatrists, physical therapists, psychologists, and other clinicians.

In 2021, the Medicare program and its beneficiaries paid $92.8 billion for services provided by almost 1.3 million clinicians, MedPAC said.
 

Larger Changes Ahead?

Rep. Bucshon is among the physicians serving in the House who are pressing for a permanent revamp of the Medicare physician fee schedule. He cosponsored a bill (HR 2474) that would peg future annual increases in the physician fee schedule to the Medicare Economic Index, which would reflect inflation’s effect.

In April, more than 120 state and national medical groups signed onto an AMA-led letter urging Congress to pass this bill.

The measure is a key priority for the AMA. The organization reached out repeatedly last year to federal officials about it through its own in-house lobbyists, this news organization found through a review of congressional lobbying forms submitted by AMA.

These required disclosure forms reveal how much AMA and other organizations spend each quarter to appeal to members of Congress and federal agencies on specific issues. The disclosure forms do not include a detailed accounting of spending on each issue.

But they do show which issues are priorities for an organization. AMA’s in-house lobbyists reported raising dozens of issues in 2024 within contacts in Congress and federal agencies. These issues included abortion access, maternal health, physician burnout, and potential for bias in clinical use of algorithms, as well as Medicare payment for physicians.

AMA reported spending estimated cost of $20.6 million. (AMA spent $6.7 million in the first quarter, $4.75 million in the second quarter, $3.42 million in the third quarter, and $5.74 million in the fourth quarter.)

In a March 6 statement, Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH, AMA president, urged Congress to turn to more serious consideration of Medicare physician pay beyond short-term tweaks attached to other larger bills.

“As physicians, we are trained to run toward emergencies. We urge Congress to do the same,” Dr. Ehrenfeld said. “We encourage Congress to act if this policy decision is an emergency because — in fact — it is. It is well past time to put an end to stopgap measures that fail to address the underlying causes of the continuing decline in Medicare physician payments.”

There’s bipartisan interest in a revamp of the physician fee schedule amid widespread criticism of the last such overhaul, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015.

For example, Senate Budget Chairman Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) has proposed the creation of a technical advisory committee to improve how Medicare sets the physician fee schedule. The existing fee schedule provides too little money for primary care services and primary care provider pay, contributing to shortages, Sen. Whitehouse said.

Sen. Whitehouse on March 6 held a hearing on ways to beef up US primary care. Among the experts who appeared was Amol Navathe, MD, PhD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Dr. Navathe said the current Medicare physician fee schedule tilts in favor of procedural services, leading to “underinvestment in cognitive, diagnostic, and supportive services such as primary care.”

In addition, much of what primary care clinicians do, “such as addressing social challenges, is not included in the codes of the fee schedule itself,” said Dr. Navathe, who also serves as the vice chairman of MedPAC.

It’s unclear when Congress will attempt a serious revision to the Medicare physician fee schedule. Lawmakers are unlikely to take on such a major challenge in this election year.

There would be significant opposition and challenges for lawmakers in trying to clear a bill that added an inflation adjustment for what’s already seen as an imperfect physician fee schedule, said Mark E. Miller, PhD, executive vice president of healthcare at the philanthropy Arnold Ventures, which studies how payment decisions affect medical care.

“That bill could cost a lot of money and raise a lot of questions,” Dr. Miller said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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President Joe Biden on March 9 signed into law a measure that softened — but did not completely eliminate — a 2024 cut in a key rate used to determine how physicians are paid for treating Medicare patients.

While physician groups hailed the move as partial relief, they say they’ll continue to press for broader changes in the Medicare physician fee schedule.

The Medicare provision was tucked into a larger spending package approved by the US House and Senate.

The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the American Medical Association (AMA), and other groups have lobbied Congress for months to undo a 3.4% cut in the base rate, or conversion factor, in the physician fee schedule for 2024.

The conversion factor is used in calculations to determine reimbursement for myriad other services. Federal Medicare officials said the cut would mean a 1.25% decrease in overall payments in 2024, compared with 2023.

“With the passage of this legislation, Congress has offset 2.93% of that payment cut,” said Steven P. Furr, MD, AAFP’s president in a statement. “We appreciate this temporary measure but continue to urge Congress to advance comprehensive, long-term Medicare payment reform.”

In a statement, Representative Larry Bucshon, MD (R-IN), said the payment cut could not be completely eliminated because of budget constraints.

The Medicare physician fee schedule covers much of the care clinicians provide to people older than 65 and those with disabilities. It covers about 8000 different types of services, ranging from office visits to surgical procedures, imaging, and tests, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC).

Along with physicians, the fee schedule sets payments for nurse practitioners, physician assistants, podiatrists, physical therapists, psychologists, and other clinicians.

In 2021, the Medicare program and its beneficiaries paid $92.8 billion for services provided by almost 1.3 million clinicians, MedPAC said.
 

Larger Changes Ahead?

Rep. Bucshon is among the physicians serving in the House who are pressing for a permanent revamp of the Medicare physician fee schedule. He cosponsored a bill (HR 2474) that would peg future annual increases in the physician fee schedule to the Medicare Economic Index, which would reflect inflation’s effect.

In April, more than 120 state and national medical groups signed onto an AMA-led letter urging Congress to pass this bill.

The measure is a key priority for the AMA. The organization reached out repeatedly last year to federal officials about it through its own in-house lobbyists, this news organization found through a review of congressional lobbying forms submitted by AMA.

These required disclosure forms reveal how much AMA and other organizations spend each quarter to appeal to members of Congress and federal agencies on specific issues. The disclosure forms do not include a detailed accounting of spending on each issue.

But they do show which issues are priorities for an organization. AMA’s in-house lobbyists reported raising dozens of issues in 2024 within contacts in Congress and federal agencies. These issues included abortion access, maternal health, physician burnout, and potential for bias in clinical use of algorithms, as well as Medicare payment for physicians.

AMA reported spending estimated cost of $20.6 million. (AMA spent $6.7 million in the first quarter, $4.75 million in the second quarter, $3.42 million in the third quarter, and $5.74 million in the fourth quarter.)

In a March 6 statement, Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH, AMA president, urged Congress to turn to more serious consideration of Medicare physician pay beyond short-term tweaks attached to other larger bills.

“As physicians, we are trained to run toward emergencies. We urge Congress to do the same,” Dr. Ehrenfeld said. “We encourage Congress to act if this policy decision is an emergency because — in fact — it is. It is well past time to put an end to stopgap measures that fail to address the underlying causes of the continuing decline in Medicare physician payments.”

There’s bipartisan interest in a revamp of the physician fee schedule amid widespread criticism of the last such overhaul, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015.

For example, Senate Budget Chairman Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) has proposed the creation of a technical advisory committee to improve how Medicare sets the physician fee schedule. The existing fee schedule provides too little money for primary care services and primary care provider pay, contributing to shortages, Sen. Whitehouse said.

Sen. Whitehouse on March 6 held a hearing on ways to beef up US primary care. Among the experts who appeared was Amol Navathe, MD, PhD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Dr. Navathe said the current Medicare physician fee schedule tilts in favor of procedural services, leading to “underinvestment in cognitive, diagnostic, and supportive services such as primary care.”

In addition, much of what primary care clinicians do, “such as addressing social challenges, is not included in the codes of the fee schedule itself,” said Dr. Navathe, who also serves as the vice chairman of MedPAC.

It’s unclear when Congress will attempt a serious revision to the Medicare physician fee schedule. Lawmakers are unlikely to take on such a major challenge in this election year.

There would be significant opposition and challenges for lawmakers in trying to clear a bill that added an inflation adjustment for what’s already seen as an imperfect physician fee schedule, said Mark E. Miller, PhD, executive vice president of healthcare at the philanthropy Arnold Ventures, which studies how payment decisions affect medical care.

“That bill could cost a lot of money and raise a lot of questions,” Dr. Miller said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

President Joe Biden on March 9 signed into law a measure that softened — but did not completely eliminate — a 2024 cut in a key rate used to determine how physicians are paid for treating Medicare patients.

While physician groups hailed the move as partial relief, they say they’ll continue to press for broader changes in the Medicare physician fee schedule.

The Medicare provision was tucked into a larger spending package approved by the US House and Senate.

The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the American Medical Association (AMA), and other groups have lobbied Congress for months to undo a 3.4% cut in the base rate, or conversion factor, in the physician fee schedule for 2024.

The conversion factor is used in calculations to determine reimbursement for myriad other services. Federal Medicare officials said the cut would mean a 1.25% decrease in overall payments in 2024, compared with 2023.

“With the passage of this legislation, Congress has offset 2.93% of that payment cut,” said Steven P. Furr, MD, AAFP’s president in a statement. “We appreciate this temporary measure but continue to urge Congress to advance comprehensive, long-term Medicare payment reform.”

In a statement, Representative Larry Bucshon, MD (R-IN), said the payment cut could not be completely eliminated because of budget constraints.

The Medicare physician fee schedule covers much of the care clinicians provide to people older than 65 and those with disabilities. It covers about 8000 different types of services, ranging from office visits to surgical procedures, imaging, and tests, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC).

Along with physicians, the fee schedule sets payments for nurse practitioners, physician assistants, podiatrists, physical therapists, psychologists, and other clinicians.

In 2021, the Medicare program and its beneficiaries paid $92.8 billion for services provided by almost 1.3 million clinicians, MedPAC said.
 

Larger Changes Ahead?

Rep. Bucshon is among the physicians serving in the House who are pressing for a permanent revamp of the Medicare physician fee schedule. He cosponsored a bill (HR 2474) that would peg future annual increases in the physician fee schedule to the Medicare Economic Index, which would reflect inflation’s effect.

In April, more than 120 state and national medical groups signed onto an AMA-led letter urging Congress to pass this bill.

The measure is a key priority for the AMA. The organization reached out repeatedly last year to federal officials about it through its own in-house lobbyists, this news organization found through a review of congressional lobbying forms submitted by AMA.

These required disclosure forms reveal how much AMA and other organizations spend each quarter to appeal to members of Congress and federal agencies on specific issues. The disclosure forms do not include a detailed accounting of spending on each issue.

But they do show which issues are priorities for an organization. AMA’s in-house lobbyists reported raising dozens of issues in 2024 within contacts in Congress and federal agencies. These issues included abortion access, maternal health, physician burnout, and potential for bias in clinical use of algorithms, as well as Medicare payment for physicians.

AMA reported spending estimated cost of $20.6 million. (AMA spent $6.7 million in the first quarter, $4.75 million in the second quarter, $3.42 million in the third quarter, and $5.74 million in the fourth quarter.)

In a March 6 statement, Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH, AMA president, urged Congress to turn to more serious consideration of Medicare physician pay beyond short-term tweaks attached to other larger bills.

“As physicians, we are trained to run toward emergencies. We urge Congress to do the same,” Dr. Ehrenfeld said. “We encourage Congress to act if this policy decision is an emergency because — in fact — it is. It is well past time to put an end to stopgap measures that fail to address the underlying causes of the continuing decline in Medicare physician payments.”

There’s bipartisan interest in a revamp of the physician fee schedule amid widespread criticism of the last such overhaul, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015.

For example, Senate Budget Chairman Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) has proposed the creation of a technical advisory committee to improve how Medicare sets the physician fee schedule. The existing fee schedule provides too little money for primary care services and primary care provider pay, contributing to shortages, Sen. Whitehouse said.

Sen. Whitehouse on March 6 held a hearing on ways to beef up US primary care. Among the experts who appeared was Amol Navathe, MD, PhD, of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Dr. Navathe said the current Medicare physician fee schedule tilts in favor of procedural services, leading to “underinvestment in cognitive, diagnostic, and supportive services such as primary care.”

In addition, much of what primary care clinicians do, “such as addressing social challenges, is not included in the codes of the fee schedule itself,” said Dr. Navathe, who also serves as the vice chairman of MedPAC.

It’s unclear when Congress will attempt a serious revision to the Medicare physician fee schedule. Lawmakers are unlikely to take on such a major challenge in this election year.

There would be significant opposition and challenges for lawmakers in trying to clear a bill that added an inflation adjustment for what’s already seen as an imperfect physician fee schedule, said Mark E. Miller, PhD, executive vice president of healthcare at the philanthropy Arnold Ventures, which studies how payment decisions affect medical care.

“That bill could cost a lot of money and raise a lot of questions,” Dr. Miller said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Treating Pediatric Vitiligo: Consensus Statement Provides Recommendations

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 03/14/2024 - 13:19

 

TOPLINE:

Topical calcineurin inhibitors (TCIs), topical corticosteroids (TCSs), and topical Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are supported as mainstay treatments in new expert recommendations on the use of topical therapeutics in children, adolescents, and young adults with vitiligo.

METHODOLOGY:

  • While half of all vitiligo cases manifest within the initial two decades of life, no guidelines specifically address the management of vitiligo in children, adolescents, and young adults with vitiligo.
  • A protocol was established to formulate consensus recommendations addressing questions related to pediatric vitiligo.
  • Overall, 50 articles on topical corticosteroids and/or topical calcineurin inhibitors, five on topical Janus kinase inhibitors, and two each on pseudocatalase and microdermabrasion were included.
  • The participants recorded their agreement levels with the formulated statements, using a 5-point Likert scale.

TAKEAWAY:

  • TCIs, TCSs, JAK inhibitors, and phototherapy, specifically narrowband ultraviolet (UV)-B light therapy, are mainstay treatments; the combination of UV-B light and topical therapy may enhance initial repigmentation.
  • Long-term monitoring for skin cancers is advised, and short outdoor UV exposure is suggested for pediatric patients.
  • TCIs, such as tacrolimus and pimecrolimus, are recommended as first-line therapy, particularly on the face, applied twice daily for ≥ 3 months; continued use for 6-12 additional months is recommended if repigmentation is observed.
  • The choice of TCS class depends on the site and planned usage duration. Short-term use or overlap with TCIs is recommended because of the risk for atrophy with long-term TCS use. Class 5-6 agents are another option.
  • For areas with thin skin, TCSs can be considered second-line treatments.
  • Topical JAK inhibitors, specifically topical 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, are recommended for patients aged ≥ 12 years, as first- or second-line therapy. Limitation to 10% body surface area is recommended to minimize systemic absorption. Limited evidence exists for children aged < 12 years.

IN PRACTICE:

“Effective therapy requires a focus on long-term therapeutic interventions to maximize the local gain and retention of pigmentation with a trial period of twice-weekly application. Counseling should include discussion of the chronicity of vitiligo and the need for long-term care,” the authors wrote.

LIMITATIONS:

Some of the recommendations were opinion-based because of the scarcity of evidence-based literature.

SOURCE:

The consensus statement was published on March 13 in JAMA Dermatology.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was supported by grants from Vitiligo Research Foundation and Incyte Pharmaceuticals. The majority of authors disclosed financial relationships outside this work; several reported no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Topical calcineurin inhibitors (TCIs), topical corticosteroids (TCSs), and topical Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are supported as mainstay treatments in new expert recommendations on the use of topical therapeutics in children, adolescents, and young adults with vitiligo.

METHODOLOGY:

  • While half of all vitiligo cases manifest within the initial two decades of life, no guidelines specifically address the management of vitiligo in children, adolescents, and young adults with vitiligo.
  • A protocol was established to formulate consensus recommendations addressing questions related to pediatric vitiligo.
  • Overall, 50 articles on topical corticosteroids and/or topical calcineurin inhibitors, five on topical Janus kinase inhibitors, and two each on pseudocatalase and microdermabrasion were included.
  • The participants recorded their agreement levels with the formulated statements, using a 5-point Likert scale.

TAKEAWAY:

  • TCIs, TCSs, JAK inhibitors, and phototherapy, specifically narrowband ultraviolet (UV)-B light therapy, are mainstay treatments; the combination of UV-B light and topical therapy may enhance initial repigmentation.
  • Long-term monitoring for skin cancers is advised, and short outdoor UV exposure is suggested for pediatric patients.
  • TCIs, such as tacrolimus and pimecrolimus, are recommended as first-line therapy, particularly on the face, applied twice daily for ≥ 3 months; continued use for 6-12 additional months is recommended if repigmentation is observed.
  • The choice of TCS class depends on the site and planned usage duration. Short-term use or overlap with TCIs is recommended because of the risk for atrophy with long-term TCS use. Class 5-6 agents are another option.
  • For areas with thin skin, TCSs can be considered second-line treatments.
  • Topical JAK inhibitors, specifically topical 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, are recommended for patients aged ≥ 12 years, as first- or second-line therapy. Limitation to 10% body surface area is recommended to minimize systemic absorption. Limited evidence exists for children aged < 12 years.

IN PRACTICE:

“Effective therapy requires a focus on long-term therapeutic interventions to maximize the local gain and retention of pigmentation with a trial period of twice-weekly application. Counseling should include discussion of the chronicity of vitiligo and the need for long-term care,” the authors wrote.

LIMITATIONS:

Some of the recommendations were opinion-based because of the scarcity of evidence-based literature.

SOURCE:

The consensus statement was published on March 13 in JAMA Dermatology.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was supported by grants from Vitiligo Research Foundation and Incyte Pharmaceuticals. The majority of authors disclosed financial relationships outside this work; several reported no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Topical calcineurin inhibitors (TCIs), topical corticosteroids (TCSs), and topical Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitors are supported as mainstay treatments in new expert recommendations on the use of topical therapeutics in children, adolescents, and young adults with vitiligo.

METHODOLOGY:

  • While half of all vitiligo cases manifest within the initial two decades of life, no guidelines specifically address the management of vitiligo in children, adolescents, and young adults with vitiligo.
  • A protocol was established to formulate consensus recommendations addressing questions related to pediatric vitiligo.
  • Overall, 50 articles on topical corticosteroids and/or topical calcineurin inhibitors, five on topical Janus kinase inhibitors, and two each on pseudocatalase and microdermabrasion were included.
  • The participants recorded their agreement levels with the formulated statements, using a 5-point Likert scale.

TAKEAWAY:

  • TCIs, TCSs, JAK inhibitors, and phototherapy, specifically narrowband ultraviolet (UV)-B light therapy, are mainstay treatments; the combination of UV-B light and topical therapy may enhance initial repigmentation.
  • Long-term monitoring for skin cancers is advised, and short outdoor UV exposure is suggested for pediatric patients.
  • TCIs, such as tacrolimus and pimecrolimus, are recommended as first-line therapy, particularly on the face, applied twice daily for ≥ 3 months; continued use for 6-12 additional months is recommended if repigmentation is observed.
  • The choice of TCS class depends on the site and planned usage duration. Short-term use or overlap with TCIs is recommended because of the risk for atrophy with long-term TCS use. Class 5-6 agents are another option.
  • For areas with thin skin, TCSs can be considered second-line treatments.
  • Topical JAK inhibitors, specifically topical 1.5% ruxolitinib cream, are recommended for patients aged ≥ 12 years, as first- or second-line therapy. Limitation to 10% body surface area is recommended to minimize systemic absorption. Limited evidence exists for children aged < 12 years.

IN PRACTICE:

“Effective therapy requires a focus on long-term therapeutic interventions to maximize the local gain and retention of pigmentation with a trial period of twice-weekly application. Counseling should include discussion of the chronicity of vitiligo and the need for long-term care,” the authors wrote.

LIMITATIONS:

Some of the recommendations were opinion-based because of the scarcity of evidence-based literature.

SOURCE:

The consensus statement was published on March 13 in JAMA Dermatology.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was supported by grants from Vitiligo Research Foundation and Incyte Pharmaceuticals. The majority of authors disclosed financial relationships outside this work; several reported no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Sublingual Immunotherapy Safe, Effective for Older Kids

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 03/14/2024 - 07:39

Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is as safe and effective for high-risk older children and adolescents as oral immunotherapy (OIT) is for infants and preschoolers, according to new research.

Preliminary data from a study of more than 180 pediatric patients with multiple food allergies showed that while most patients had mild symptoms, none experienced a severe grade 4 reaction during the buildup and maintenance phase of SLIT.

In addition, 70% of those tested at the end of the treatment protocol were able to tolerate 300 mg of their allergen, a success rate nearly as high as that for OIT.

The study was published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.

SLIT has been used successfully in the treatment of environmental allergens such as grass and tree pollen and dust mites. In this study, researchers decided to test SLIT’s effectiveness and safety in the treatment of food allergies in older children.

“We knew that OIT is very effective and safe in infants and toddlers, but there was literature illustrating that for older, school-age kids and adolescents, OIT is not safe enough, as those older age groups tend to have higher risk of severe reaction during treatment,” senior author Edmond Chan, MD, clinical professor of allergy at the University of British Columbia and pediatric allergist at BC Children’s Hospital, both in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, told this news organization. “With that knowledge, we decided to explore SLIT as another first-phase therapy for the older kids.”

The investigators recruited 188 high-risk older children aged 4-18 years for multifood SLIT. Most (61.7%) participants had multiple food allergies. Approximately 68% were male, and the population’s median age was 11.3 years.

Nearly half (48.4%) of participants had atopic dermatitis, 45.2% had asthma, 58.0% had allergic rhinitis, and 2.66% had preexisting eosinophilic esophagitis.

Most (75.0%) of the children were classified as higher risk, and 23 had a history of a grade 3 or 4 reaction before beginning SLIT.

Of the 188 children who were initially enrolled in the study, 173 (92.0%) finished their SLIT buildup phase.

Because the study started when COVID-19 pandemic restrictions were in place, the SLIT protocol mandated that patients be seen virtually. The patients’ caregivers learned how to mix and administer the required doses at home using recipes specially developed by the research team that used products bought at the grocery store.

A wide variety of food allergens were treated, including peanut, other legumes, tree nuts, sesame, other seeds, egg, cow’s milk, fish, wheat, shrimp, and other allergens.

The children built up to 2-mg protein SLIT maintenance over the course of three to five visits under nurse supervision.

After 1-2 years of daily SLIT maintenance, patients were offered a low-dose oral food challenge (OFC; cumulative dose: 300 mg of protein) with the goal of bypassing OIT buildup.

Nearly all patients (93.1%) had symptoms during SLIT buildup, but most were mild grade 1 (52.1%) or 2 (40.4%) reactions. Only one patient had a grade 3 reaction. None of the patients experienced a severe grade 4 reaction.

The most common grade 1 reaction was oral itch, an expected symptom of SLIT, which occurred in 82.7% of the patients.

Four patients (2.10%) received epinephrine during buildup and went to the emergency department. All these patients returned to continue SLIT without further need for epinephrine.

To test the effectiveness of SLIT, the researchers performed 50 low-dose OFCs in 20 patients. Of these food challenges, 35 (70%) were successful, and patients were asked to start daily 300-mg OIT maintenance, thus bypassing OIT buildup.

An additional nine OFCs that were unsuccessful were counseled to self-escalate from 80 mg or higher to 300 mg at home with medical guidance as needed.

“Our preliminary data of 20 patients and 50 low-dose oral food challenges suggest that an initial phase of 1-2 years of 2-mg daily SLIT therapy may be a safe and effective way to bypass the OIT buildup phase without the need for dozens of in-person visits with an allergist,” said Dr. Chan.

“So now we have the best of both worlds. We harness the safety of SLIT for the first 1-2 years, with the effectiveness of OIT for the remainder of the treatment period,” he said.
 

 

 

Adds to Evidence

Commenting on the study for this news organization, Julia Upton, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, said, “This study adds to the evidence that consistent, low exposure to food drives meaningful desensitization far above the daily dose.” Upton did not participate in the research.

“Prior prospective studies in SLIT demonstrated that small single-digit-milligram doses and time greatly increased the threshold of reaction. This real-world report suggests that a way to utilize that threshold increase is by switching to a commonly used maintenance dose of OIT,” said Dr. Upton.

“Although few patients have been assessed for the 300-mg challenge, this study is notable for the age group of 4-18 years, and that many of the patients had reacted to low doses in the past. It also shows that many families are capable of diluting and mixing their own immunotherapy solutions with store-bought foods under the guidance of an experienced allergy clinic,” she added.

“Overall, evidence is building that by various routes, initial small amounts with minimal updoses, plus the tincture of time, may be preferred to multiple frequent updosing from multiple perspectives, including safety, feasibility, cost, and medical resources. It will also be important to understand the preferences and goals of the patient and family as various regimens become more available,” Dr. Upton concluded.

The study was funded by BC Children’s Hospital Foundation. Dr. Chan reported receiving research support from DVB Technologies; has been a member of advisory boards for Pfizer, Miravo, Medexus, Leo Pharma, Kaleo, DBV, AllerGenis, Sanofi, Genzyme, Bausch Health, Avir Pharma, AstraZeneca, ALK, and Alladapt; and was a colead of the CSACI OIT guidelines. Dr. Upton reported research support/grants from Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi, ALK Abello, DBV Technologies, CIHR, and SickKids Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Program and fees from Pfizer, ALK Abello, Bausch Health, Astra Zeneca, and Pharming. She serves as an associate editor for Allergy, Asthma & Clinical Immunology and is on the Board of Directors of Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and the Healthcare Advisory Board of Food Allergy Canada.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is as safe and effective for high-risk older children and adolescents as oral immunotherapy (OIT) is for infants and preschoolers, according to new research.

Preliminary data from a study of more than 180 pediatric patients with multiple food allergies showed that while most patients had mild symptoms, none experienced a severe grade 4 reaction during the buildup and maintenance phase of SLIT.

In addition, 70% of those tested at the end of the treatment protocol were able to tolerate 300 mg of their allergen, a success rate nearly as high as that for OIT.

The study was published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.

SLIT has been used successfully in the treatment of environmental allergens such as grass and tree pollen and dust mites. In this study, researchers decided to test SLIT’s effectiveness and safety in the treatment of food allergies in older children.

“We knew that OIT is very effective and safe in infants and toddlers, but there was literature illustrating that for older, school-age kids and adolescents, OIT is not safe enough, as those older age groups tend to have higher risk of severe reaction during treatment,” senior author Edmond Chan, MD, clinical professor of allergy at the University of British Columbia and pediatric allergist at BC Children’s Hospital, both in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, told this news organization. “With that knowledge, we decided to explore SLIT as another first-phase therapy for the older kids.”

The investigators recruited 188 high-risk older children aged 4-18 years for multifood SLIT. Most (61.7%) participants had multiple food allergies. Approximately 68% were male, and the population’s median age was 11.3 years.

Nearly half (48.4%) of participants had atopic dermatitis, 45.2% had asthma, 58.0% had allergic rhinitis, and 2.66% had preexisting eosinophilic esophagitis.

Most (75.0%) of the children were classified as higher risk, and 23 had a history of a grade 3 or 4 reaction before beginning SLIT.

Of the 188 children who were initially enrolled in the study, 173 (92.0%) finished their SLIT buildup phase.

Because the study started when COVID-19 pandemic restrictions were in place, the SLIT protocol mandated that patients be seen virtually. The patients’ caregivers learned how to mix and administer the required doses at home using recipes specially developed by the research team that used products bought at the grocery store.

A wide variety of food allergens were treated, including peanut, other legumes, tree nuts, sesame, other seeds, egg, cow’s milk, fish, wheat, shrimp, and other allergens.

The children built up to 2-mg protein SLIT maintenance over the course of three to five visits under nurse supervision.

After 1-2 years of daily SLIT maintenance, patients were offered a low-dose oral food challenge (OFC; cumulative dose: 300 mg of protein) with the goal of bypassing OIT buildup.

Nearly all patients (93.1%) had symptoms during SLIT buildup, but most were mild grade 1 (52.1%) or 2 (40.4%) reactions. Only one patient had a grade 3 reaction. None of the patients experienced a severe grade 4 reaction.

The most common grade 1 reaction was oral itch, an expected symptom of SLIT, which occurred in 82.7% of the patients.

Four patients (2.10%) received epinephrine during buildup and went to the emergency department. All these patients returned to continue SLIT without further need for epinephrine.

To test the effectiveness of SLIT, the researchers performed 50 low-dose OFCs in 20 patients. Of these food challenges, 35 (70%) were successful, and patients were asked to start daily 300-mg OIT maintenance, thus bypassing OIT buildup.

An additional nine OFCs that were unsuccessful were counseled to self-escalate from 80 mg or higher to 300 mg at home with medical guidance as needed.

“Our preliminary data of 20 patients and 50 low-dose oral food challenges suggest that an initial phase of 1-2 years of 2-mg daily SLIT therapy may be a safe and effective way to bypass the OIT buildup phase without the need for dozens of in-person visits with an allergist,” said Dr. Chan.

“So now we have the best of both worlds. We harness the safety of SLIT for the first 1-2 years, with the effectiveness of OIT for the remainder of the treatment period,” he said.
 

 

 

Adds to Evidence

Commenting on the study for this news organization, Julia Upton, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, said, “This study adds to the evidence that consistent, low exposure to food drives meaningful desensitization far above the daily dose.” Upton did not participate in the research.

“Prior prospective studies in SLIT demonstrated that small single-digit-milligram doses and time greatly increased the threshold of reaction. This real-world report suggests that a way to utilize that threshold increase is by switching to a commonly used maintenance dose of OIT,” said Dr. Upton.

“Although few patients have been assessed for the 300-mg challenge, this study is notable for the age group of 4-18 years, and that many of the patients had reacted to low doses in the past. It also shows that many families are capable of diluting and mixing their own immunotherapy solutions with store-bought foods under the guidance of an experienced allergy clinic,” she added.

“Overall, evidence is building that by various routes, initial small amounts with minimal updoses, plus the tincture of time, may be preferred to multiple frequent updosing from multiple perspectives, including safety, feasibility, cost, and medical resources. It will also be important to understand the preferences and goals of the patient and family as various regimens become more available,” Dr. Upton concluded.

The study was funded by BC Children’s Hospital Foundation. Dr. Chan reported receiving research support from DVB Technologies; has been a member of advisory boards for Pfizer, Miravo, Medexus, Leo Pharma, Kaleo, DBV, AllerGenis, Sanofi, Genzyme, Bausch Health, Avir Pharma, AstraZeneca, ALK, and Alladapt; and was a colead of the CSACI OIT guidelines. Dr. Upton reported research support/grants from Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi, ALK Abello, DBV Technologies, CIHR, and SickKids Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Program and fees from Pfizer, ALK Abello, Bausch Health, Astra Zeneca, and Pharming. She serves as an associate editor for Allergy, Asthma & Clinical Immunology and is on the Board of Directors of Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and the Healthcare Advisory Board of Food Allergy Canada.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is as safe and effective for high-risk older children and adolescents as oral immunotherapy (OIT) is for infants and preschoolers, according to new research.

Preliminary data from a study of more than 180 pediatric patients with multiple food allergies showed that while most patients had mild symptoms, none experienced a severe grade 4 reaction during the buildup and maintenance phase of SLIT.

In addition, 70% of those tested at the end of the treatment protocol were able to tolerate 300 mg of their allergen, a success rate nearly as high as that for OIT.

The study was published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.

SLIT has been used successfully in the treatment of environmental allergens such as grass and tree pollen and dust mites. In this study, researchers decided to test SLIT’s effectiveness and safety in the treatment of food allergies in older children.

“We knew that OIT is very effective and safe in infants and toddlers, but there was literature illustrating that for older, school-age kids and adolescents, OIT is not safe enough, as those older age groups tend to have higher risk of severe reaction during treatment,” senior author Edmond Chan, MD, clinical professor of allergy at the University of British Columbia and pediatric allergist at BC Children’s Hospital, both in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, told this news organization. “With that knowledge, we decided to explore SLIT as another first-phase therapy for the older kids.”

The investigators recruited 188 high-risk older children aged 4-18 years for multifood SLIT. Most (61.7%) participants had multiple food allergies. Approximately 68% were male, and the population’s median age was 11.3 years.

Nearly half (48.4%) of participants had atopic dermatitis, 45.2% had asthma, 58.0% had allergic rhinitis, and 2.66% had preexisting eosinophilic esophagitis.

Most (75.0%) of the children were classified as higher risk, and 23 had a history of a grade 3 or 4 reaction before beginning SLIT.

Of the 188 children who were initially enrolled in the study, 173 (92.0%) finished their SLIT buildup phase.

Because the study started when COVID-19 pandemic restrictions were in place, the SLIT protocol mandated that patients be seen virtually. The patients’ caregivers learned how to mix and administer the required doses at home using recipes specially developed by the research team that used products bought at the grocery store.

A wide variety of food allergens were treated, including peanut, other legumes, tree nuts, sesame, other seeds, egg, cow’s milk, fish, wheat, shrimp, and other allergens.

The children built up to 2-mg protein SLIT maintenance over the course of three to five visits under nurse supervision.

After 1-2 years of daily SLIT maintenance, patients were offered a low-dose oral food challenge (OFC; cumulative dose: 300 mg of protein) with the goal of bypassing OIT buildup.

Nearly all patients (93.1%) had symptoms during SLIT buildup, but most were mild grade 1 (52.1%) or 2 (40.4%) reactions. Only one patient had a grade 3 reaction. None of the patients experienced a severe grade 4 reaction.

The most common grade 1 reaction was oral itch, an expected symptom of SLIT, which occurred in 82.7% of the patients.

Four patients (2.10%) received epinephrine during buildup and went to the emergency department. All these patients returned to continue SLIT without further need for epinephrine.

To test the effectiveness of SLIT, the researchers performed 50 low-dose OFCs in 20 patients. Of these food challenges, 35 (70%) were successful, and patients were asked to start daily 300-mg OIT maintenance, thus bypassing OIT buildup.

An additional nine OFCs that were unsuccessful were counseled to self-escalate from 80 mg or higher to 300 mg at home with medical guidance as needed.

“Our preliminary data of 20 patients and 50 low-dose oral food challenges suggest that an initial phase of 1-2 years of 2-mg daily SLIT therapy may be a safe and effective way to bypass the OIT buildup phase without the need for dozens of in-person visits with an allergist,” said Dr. Chan.

“So now we have the best of both worlds. We harness the safety of SLIT for the first 1-2 years, with the effectiveness of OIT for the remainder of the treatment period,” he said.
 

 

 

Adds to Evidence

Commenting on the study for this news organization, Julia Upton, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, said, “This study adds to the evidence that consistent, low exposure to food drives meaningful desensitization far above the daily dose.” Upton did not participate in the research.

“Prior prospective studies in SLIT demonstrated that small single-digit-milligram doses and time greatly increased the threshold of reaction. This real-world report suggests that a way to utilize that threshold increase is by switching to a commonly used maintenance dose of OIT,” said Dr. Upton.

“Although few patients have been assessed for the 300-mg challenge, this study is notable for the age group of 4-18 years, and that many of the patients had reacted to low doses in the past. It also shows that many families are capable of diluting and mixing their own immunotherapy solutions with store-bought foods under the guidance of an experienced allergy clinic,” she added.

“Overall, evidence is building that by various routes, initial small amounts with minimal updoses, plus the tincture of time, may be preferred to multiple frequent updosing from multiple perspectives, including safety, feasibility, cost, and medical resources. It will also be important to understand the preferences and goals of the patient and family as various regimens become more available,” Dr. Upton concluded.

The study was funded by BC Children’s Hospital Foundation. Dr. Chan reported receiving research support from DVB Technologies; has been a member of advisory boards for Pfizer, Miravo, Medexus, Leo Pharma, Kaleo, DBV, AllerGenis, Sanofi, Genzyme, Bausch Health, Avir Pharma, AstraZeneca, ALK, and Alladapt; and was a colead of the CSACI OIT guidelines. Dr. Upton reported research support/grants from Novartis, Regeneron, Sanofi, ALK Abello, DBV Technologies, CIHR, and SickKids Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Program and fees from Pfizer, ALK Abello, Bausch Health, Astra Zeneca, and Pharming. She serves as an associate editor for Allergy, Asthma & Clinical Immunology and is on the Board of Directors of Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and the Healthcare Advisory Board of Food Allergy Canada.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

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