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COVID-19: Problematic gambling could worsen

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The confluence of isolation, excess available time, and anxiety about illness or finances as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic have the potential to increase problem gambling behaviors during this public health emergency, so it’s essential to gather data and supply guidance on this issue, according to a call to action published May 18 in the Journal of Addiction Medicine.

humonia/iStock/Getty Images Plus

“When facing an unforeseen situation with confinement, fear of disease, and financial uncertainty for the future, problem gambling may be an important health hazard to monitor and prevent during and following the COVID-19 crisis, especially given current online gambling availability,” wrote Anders Håkansson, PhD, of Lund University in Sweden and coauthors.

Both stress and trauma have been linked to gambling problems, and both are occurring during the pandemic, said coauthor Marc N. Potenza, MD, PhD, of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in an interview.

“People are likely to be experiencing stress at levels they haven’t experienced previously,” Dr. Potenza said. While multiple factors can contribute to addictive behaviors, “with respect to the pandemic, one concern is that so-called negative reinforcement motivations – engaging in an addictive behavior to escape from depressed or negative mood states – may be a driving motivation for a significant number of people during this time,” he said.

David Hodgins, PhD, CPsych, a professor of psychology at the University of Calgary in Alberta, who was not involved with the commentary, noted that gambling relapse is triggered by “negative emotional states, interpersonal stress, and financial stress” – all three of which the pandemic contributes to.

Financial stress can especially “inflame erroneous gambling-related cognitions,” he said in an interview, including “beliefs such as the idea that gambling can solve financial problems, even when this is statistically almost impossible as debt increases, and that debt has been caused by gambling.”

Increased social isolation also is particularly problematic, pointed out Shane W. Kraus, PhD, from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Dr. Kraus also was not involved with the paper.

“If someone is already struggling with already negative emotions, negative feelings, thoughts, and depression, and you’re now isolating them quite a bit, that’s not going to be a recipe for success,” Dr. Kraus said in an interview.

The mental health effects of the pandemic could be extensive and long-lasting, and such effects often co-occur with addictive behaviors, Dr. Potenza said.

“We should be mindful of ways in which people develop addictions in these settings,” he said. “One of the aspects of the pandemic is that many people are at home for longer periods of time, and they use digital technologies more frequently.”

The use of digital technologies can include interaction on social media platforms and on meeting applications such as Zoom, but such use also offers opportunities for problematic gambling, gaming, and pornography use. The World Health Organization recognizes addiction disorders for gambling and for gaming, and online gaming platforms and pornography sites have reported substantial increases in their traffic during the pandemic, Dr. Potenza said.

The increase in frequency is unsurprising and not necessarily a concern by itself, Dr. Kraus said.

“It’s all about loss of control or difficulty engaging or disengaging,” Dr. Kraus said. “When you can’t stop doing something even if you like it or love it, when it interferes with your day-to-day activities and relationships, that’s when it’s a problem.”
 

 

 

Gambling online: Easy, available

The authors note that past research has identified increased gambling problems during economic crises in other countries.

“While currently speculative, financial hardships may promote gambling as individuals may be motivated to gamble to try to win money,” the authors suggested. “Although presently limited, existing data suggest that COVID-19–related financial concerns may increase gambling-related harms, and this possibility merits systematic research.”

But trends and characteristics of the gambling market, including direct effects from the pandemic, can potentially influence behaviors, too. Most casinos have closed during the pandemic, and most of the sports that people bet on have been canceled or postponed.

“Fewer people are gambling on sports, but they turn then to other areas,” Dr. Potenza said. “If they can’t bet on major league type sports, they might gamble on more local sporting events, or they may bet on other activities going on in society during the pandemic.”

But online gambling poses greater risk.

“Properties of online gambling may constitute a particular health hazard when many people are confined to their homes and have had rapid changes in working conditions, psychosocial stress, anxiety, and depression, as has been described in China,” the paper’s authors wrote. “Online gambling may be particularly concerning due to its availability and velocity” and association with higher debt levels.

In addition to online gaming’s ease and availability, past research has found patients report boredom and escapism as reasons they turned to it.

Again, boredom on its own is not necessarily a problem, but for those who already struggle with addictive behaviors, it can be a trigger, Dr. Kraus said.

“Boredom is very tough for them because it’s often associated with negative emotions,” such as dwelling on things not going well in their lives, he said. “In a pandemic, people are by themselves quite a bit, socially isolated, so for those who are struggling already with some depression or anxiety, it’s only going to be increased.”

Online gaming trends may vary with demographics, however. Dr. Kraus noted that his former clinic at the Veterans Administration has been seeing lower gambling in patients with addictive disorders, but those patients are also older and primarily frequented casinos.

“It’s going to depend on age and familiarity with technology,” he said, but even if older problem gamblers are not going to the Internet now, “let’s wait and see what happens in the next 2 or 3 months.”

The authors noted results from a small survey of patients in treatment for gambling addiction at the Bellvitge University Hospital in Barcelona, Spain, where two of the coauthors work. They conducted telephone surveys with 26 patients about the first 4 weeks of sheltering in place because of the coronavirus. All but four of the patients were male, and their average age was 45 years.

“Most presented worries about increased uncertainties, such as the negative impact on their work, risk of COVID-19 infection of themselves or their loved ones and their treatment,” the authors reported.

Although 19% were completely abstinent, an additional 12% (n = 3) reported worsened gambling. In addition, almost half (46%) reported anxiety symptoms and more than a quarter (27%) had depressive symptoms.
 

 

 

Appropriate care

A particularly complicating factor of the pandemic is how it has disrupted traditional ways of seeking health care, particularly with how much mental health and other medical care has shifted to telehealth and online delivery, Dr. Potenza pointed out.

“This is a change for many people, and it’s important for both caretakers and people in treatment to be mindful of this and to try to ensure that appropriate services are maintained for people during this time,” he said.

For example, 12-step programs traditionally meet in person, which is largely impossible during the pandemic. Some have moved meetings online, and other programs have turned to apps, such as the Addiction Policy Forum’s app Connections, an empirically validated digital therapy platform that lets patients and clinicians remain connected with remote check-ins.

The move to more telehealth may actually increase access, suggested Dr. Hodgins.

“There is no evidence that this is less effective, and in fact, its convenience might be an advantage in reaching more people,” he said. “More challenging is offering group therapies remotely, but this is also feasible.”

The treatment with the strongest evidence remains cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), Dr. Hodgins said.

“This therapy, in part, helps people become aware of their erroneous cognitions and to challenge them, but also helps people restructure their activities to change their habits,” he said. He also noted the rise of online therapy, whether supported by a therapist or entirely self-directed, such as Gambling Self-help.

“These programs typically provide cognitive behavior content but also content that comes from studying how people recover from gambling problems,” he said. “The challenge of completely self-directed approaches is follow-through. Like most online content, people tend to flit around more than they might in therapy.” Still, he added, research has shown good outcomes from these programs.

Dr. Potenza also noted that several organizations, including the International Society of Addiction Medicine and Children and Screens, have been hosting webinars related to COVID-19 coping and/or addiction that clinicians and patients might find helpful.
 

Identification of problematic behaviors

One challenge in watching for problematic gambling behaviors during the pandemic is the set of unusual living circumstances for most people right now. At almost no other time in history have people been primarily confined to their homes, many unable to go to work or working from home, with extra leisure time and nowhere to go.

“With the COVID-19 pandemic, a lot of daily life has changed,” Dr. Potenza said. “It’s unclear whether certain behaviors that have become habitual during the pandemic, such as gaming or online gambling, will then interfere with daily life when the pandemic subsides.”

“The problem is, a small proportion of people who are very vulnerable will develop a disorder and might maintain it,” Dr. Kraus said. Those who already struggle with mental health and may be out of work have greater potential for problematic behaviors.

Dr. Potenza collaborated with other psychiatrists in drafting consensus guidelines on maintaining healthy use of the Internet specifically during the pandemic (Compr Psychiatry. 2020 Jul. doi: 10.10161/comppsych.2020.152180).

“It’s important to think about where one draws the line between normative everyday behaviors – behaviors that are not interfering with life functioning – and those that do interfere with life functioning,” Dr. Potenza said. “If someone is having difficulty making work or family or school obligations, these are important signs that the behavior may be problematic.”

He offered suggestions for things people can do to promote their health during the pandemic, such as having regular routines that include getting physical exercise and social interaction, dining with family if isolating together, and making time for self-care. He also recommended setting limits on the use of digital devices and aiming for a healthy balance in keeping up with the news. The idea is to stay aware of what’s happening without getting burned out or traumatized by news coverage.

 

 

Guidance for clinicians

An urgent need for research and guidelines related to gambling and the pandemic exists, the authors argued.

In the meantime, aside from various validated screeners available, Dr. Kraus offered some practical advice for clinicians checking in with their patients: “Ask your patients what they have been doing to cope with this difficult time.”

Some might mention their faith, family, or friends, and others might not have an answer or mention drinking, gaming, or engaging in other activities. “We all do things to cope. Sometimes you use healthy coping and sometimes you use unhealthy coping,” Dr. Kraus said. “I would have a dialogue with my patients around, ‘How are you getting through? What’s helping you? What are some things you’ve tried that are tripping you up?’ ”

If gambling in particular is a possible concern, he encouraged clinicians to ask their patients whether they have tried to quit or what would happen if they stopped gambling.

“What we’d expect is the problem gamblers will have more irritability, crankiness, difficulty with quitting,” he said.

Dr. Hodgins agreed that checking in on how patients’ lives and activities have changed, and their emotion reactions to those changes, is prudent.

“The change in activities might be healthy or might include increased addictive behaviors, including increased use of substances, gaming, pornography, food, and gambling,” he said.

In addition, the paper authors list several examples of guidelines that might be considered in drafting guidance for clinicians, including the following:

  • Limiting the extent of gambling
  • Not gambling to regulate negative emotions
  • Not gambling in order to try to solve financial problems or financial concerns
  • Not gambling under the influence of alcohol or drugs
  • Carefully monitoring gambling-related time and financial expenditures
  • Maintaining and establishing daily routines involving activities other than gambling
  • Minding gambling-related attitudes and behaviors in the presence of minors
  • Not starting to gamble because of stressors

The research did not receive external funding. Dr. Håkansson has received research funding from the Swedish Sport Foundation, the Swedish alcohol monopoly Systembolaget, and the Swedish state-owned gambling operator AB Svenska Spel. He is working with the company Kontigo Care on devices for gambling addiction follow-up care. Dr. Potenza has received consulting or advisory compensation from several entities, including the Addiction Policy Forum, AXA Gaming, Idorsia, Opiant, and RiverMend Health. Dr. Potenza has received research funding from Mohegan Sun casino and the National Center for Responsible Gaming. No other authors or outside sources had industry-related disclosures.

SOURCE: Håkansson A et al. J Addict Med. 2020 May 18. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000690.

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The confluence of isolation, excess available time, and anxiety about illness or finances as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic have the potential to increase problem gambling behaviors during this public health emergency, so it’s essential to gather data and supply guidance on this issue, according to a call to action published May 18 in the Journal of Addiction Medicine.

humonia/iStock/Getty Images Plus

“When facing an unforeseen situation with confinement, fear of disease, and financial uncertainty for the future, problem gambling may be an important health hazard to monitor and prevent during and following the COVID-19 crisis, especially given current online gambling availability,” wrote Anders Håkansson, PhD, of Lund University in Sweden and coauthors.

Both stress and trauma have been linked to gambling problems, and both are occurring during the pandemic, said coauthor Marc N. Potenza, MD, PhD, of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in an interview.

“People are likely to be experiencing stress at levels they haven’t experienced previously,” Dr. Potenza said. While multiple factors can contribute to addictive behaviors, “with respect to the pandemic, one concern is that so-called negative reinforcement motivations – engaging in an addictive behavior to escape from depressed or negative mood states – may be a driving motivation for a significant number of people during this time,” he said.

David Hodgins, PhD, CPsych, a professor of psychology at the University of Calgary in Alberta, who was not involved with the commentary, noted that gambling relapse is triggered by “negative emotional states, interpersonal stress, and financial stress” – all three of which the pandemic contributes to.

Financial stress can especially “inflame erroneous gambling-related cognitions,” he said in an interview, including “beliefs such as the idea that gambling can solve financial problems, even when this is statistically almost impossible as debt increases, and that debt has been caused by gambling.”

Increased social isolation also is particularly problematic, pointed out Shane W. Kraus, PhD, from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Dr. Kraus also was not involved with the paper.

“If someone is already struggling with already negative emotions, negative feelings, thoughts, and depression, and you’re now isolating them quite a bit, that’s not going to be a recipe for success,” Dr. Kraus said in an interview.

The mental health effects of the pandemic could be extensive and long-lasting, and such effects often co-occur with addictive behaviors, Dr. Potenza said.

“We should be mindful of ways in which people develop addictions in these settings,” he said. “One of the aspects of the pandemic is that many people are at home for longer periods of time, and they use digital technologies more frequently.”

The use of digital technologies can include interaction on social media platforms and on meeting applications such as Zoom, but such use also offers opportunities for problematic gambling, gaming, and pornography use. The World Health Organization recognizes addiction disorders for gambling and for gaming, and online gaming platforms and pornography sites have reported substantial increases in their traffic during the pandemic, Dr. Potenza said.

The increase in frequency is unsurprising and not necessarily a concern by itself, Dr. Kraus said.

“It’s all about loss of control or difficulty engaging or disengaging,” Dr. Kraus said. “When you can’t stop doing something even if you like it or love it, when it interferes with your day-to-day activities and relationships, that’s when it’s a problem.”
 

 

 

Gambling online: Easy, available

The authors note that past research has identified increased gambling problems during economic crises in other countries.

“While currently speculative, financial hardships may promote gambling as individuals may be motivated to gamble to try to win money,” the authors suggested. “Although presently limited, existing data suggest that COVID-19–related financial concerns may increase gambling-related harms, and this possibility merits systematic research.”

But trends and characteristics of the gambling market, including direct effects from the pandemic, can potentially influence behaviors, too. Most casinos have closed during the pandemic, and most of the sports that people bet on have been canceled or postponed.

“Fewer people are gambling on sports, but they turn then to other areas,” Dr. Potenza said. “If they can’t bet on major league type sports, they might gamble on more local sporting events, or they may bet on other activities going on in society during the pandemic.”

But online gambling poses greater risk.

“Properties of online gambling may constitute a particular health hazard when many people are confined to their homes and have had rapid changes in working conditions, psychosocial stress, anxiety, and depression, as has been described in China,” the paper’s authors wrote. “Online gambling may be particularly concerning due to its availability and velocity” and association with higher debt levels.

In addition to online gaming’s ease and availability, past research has found patients report boredom and escapism as reasons they turned to it.

Again, boredom on its own is not necessarily a problem, but for those who already struggle with addictive behaviors, it can be a trigger, Dr. Kraus said.

“Boredom is very tough for them because it’s often associated with negative emotions,” such as dwelling on things not going well in their lives, he said. “In a pandemic, people are by themselves quite a bit, socially isolated, so for those who are struggling already with some depression or anxiety, it’s only going to be increased.”

Online gaming trends may vary with demographics, however. Dr. Kraus noted that his former clinic at the Veterans Administration has been seeing lower gambling in patients with addictive disorders, but those patients are also older and primarily frequented casinos.

“It’s going to depend on age and familiarity with technology,” he said, but even if older problem gamblers are not going to the Internet now, “let’s wait and see what happens in the next 2 or 3 months.”

The authors noted results from a small survey of patients in treatment for gambling addiction at the Bellvitge University Hospital in Barcelona, Spain, where two of the coauthors work. They conducted telephone surveys with 26 patients about the first 4 weeks of sheltering in place because of the coronavirus. All but four of the patients were male, and their average age was 45 years.

“Most presented worries about increased uncertainties, such as the negative impact on their work, risk of COVID-19 infection of themselves or their loved ones and their treatment,” the authors reported.

Although 19% were completely abstinent, an additional 12% (n = 3) reported worsened gambling. In addition, almost half (46%) reported anxiety symptoms and more than a quarter (27%) had depressive symptoms.
 

 

 

Appropriate care

A particularly complicating factor of the pandemic is how it has disrupted traditional ways of seeking health care, particularly with how much mental health and other medical care has shifted to telehealth and online delivery, Dr. Potenza pointed out.

“This is a change for many people, and it’s important for both caretakers and people in treatment to be mindful of this and to try to ensure that appropriate services are maintained for people during this time,” he said.

For example, 12-step programs traditionally meet in person, which is largely impossible during the pandemic. Some have moved meetings online, and other programs have turned to apps, such as the Addiction Policy Forum’s app Connections, an empirically validated digital therapy platform that lets patients and clinicians remain connected with remote check-ins.

The move to more telehealth may actually increase access, suggested Dr. Hodgins.

“There is no evidence that this is less effective, and in fact, its convenience might be an advantage in reaching more people,” he said. “More challenging is offering group therapies remotely, but this is also feasible.”

The treatment with the strongest evidence remains cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), Dr. Hodgins said.

“This therapy, in part, helps people become aware of their erroneous cognitions and to challenge them, but also helps people restructure their activities to change their habits,” he said. He also noted the rise of online therapy, whether supported by a therapist or entirely self-directed, such as Gambling Self-help.

“These programs typically provide cognitive behavior content but also content that comes from studying how people recover from gambling problems,” he said. “The challenge of completely self-directed approaches is follow-through. Like most online content, people tend to flit around more than they might in therapy.” Still, he added, research has shown good outcomes from these programs.

Dr. Potenza also noted that several organizations, including the International Society of Addiction Medicine and Children and Screens, have been hosting webinars related to COVID-19 coping and/or addiction that clinicians and patients might find helpful.
 

Identification of problematic behaviors

One challenge in watching for problematic gambling behaviors during the pandemic is the set of unusual living circumstances for most people right now. At almost no other time in history have people been primarily confined to their homes, many unable to go to work or working from home, with extra leisure time and nowhere to go.

“With the COVID-19 pandemic, a lot of daily life has changed,” Dr. Potenza said. “It’s unclear whether certain behaviors that have become habitual during the pandemic, such as gaming or online gambling, will then interfere with daily life when the pandemic subsides.”

“The problem is, a small proportion of people who are very vulnerable will develop a disorder and might maintain it,” Dr. Kraus said. Those who already struggle with mental health and may be out of work have greater potential for problematic behaviors.

Dr. Potenza collaborated with other psychiatrists in drafting consensus guidelines on maintaining healthy use of the Internet specifically during the pandemic (Compr Psychiatry. 2020 Jul. doi: 10.10161/comppsych.2020.152180).

“It’s important to think about where one draws the line between normative everyday behaviors – behaviors that are not interfering with life functioning – and those that do interfere with life functioning,” Dr. Potenza said. “If someone is having difficulty making work or family or school obligations, these are important signs that the behavior may be problematic.”

He offered suggestions for things people can do to promote their health during the pandemic, such as having regular routines that include getting physical exercise and social interaction, dining with family if isolating together, and making time for self-care. He also recommended setting limits on the use of digital devices and aiming for a healthy balance in keeping up with the news. The idea is to stay aware of what’s happening without getting burned out or traumatized by news coverage.

 

 

Guidance for clinicians

An urgent need for research and guidelines related to gambling and the pandemic exists, the authors argued.

In the meantime, aside from various validated screeners available, Dr. Kraus offered some practical advice for clinicians checking in with their patients: “Ask your patients what they have been doing to cope with this difficult time.”

Some might mention their faith, family, or friends, and others might not have an answer or mention drinking, gaming, or engaging in other activities. “We all do things to cope. Sometimes you use healthy coping and sometimes you use unhealthy coping,” Dr. Kraus said. “I would have a dialogue with my patients around, ‘How are you getting through? What’s helping you? What are some things you’ve tried that are tripping you up?’ ”

If gambling in particular is a possible concern, he encouraged clinicians to ask their patients whether they have tried to quit or what would happen if they stopped gambling.

“What we’d expect is the problem gamblers will have more irritability, crankiness, difficulty with quitting,” he said.

Dr. Hodgins agreed that checking in on how patients’ lives and activities have changed, and their emotion reactions to those changes, is prudent.

“The change in activities might be healthy or might include increased addictive behaviors, including increased use of substances, gaming, pornography, food, and gambling,” he said.

In addition, the paper authors list several examples of guidelines that might be considered in drafting guidance for clinicians, including the following:

  • Limiting the extent of gambling
  • Not gambling to regulate negative emotions
  • Not gambling in order to try to solve financial problems or financial concerns
  • Not gambling under the influence of alcohol or drugs
  • Carefully monitoring gambling-related time and financial expenditures
  • Maintaining and establishing daily routines involving activities other than gambling
  • Minding gambling-related attitudes and behaviors in the presence of minors
  • Not starting to gamble because of stressors

The research did not receive external funding. Dr. Håkansson has received research funding from the Swedish Sport Foundation, the Swedish alcohol monopoly Systembolaget, and the Swedish state-owned gambling operator AB Svenska Spel. He is working with the company Kontigo Care on devices for gambling addiction follow-up care. Dr. Potenza has received consulting or advisory compensation from several entities, including the Addiction Policy Forum, AXA Gaming, Idorsia, Opiant, and RiverMend Health. Dr. Potenza has received research funding from Mohegan Sun casino and the National Center for Responsible Gaming. No other authors or outside sources had industry-related disclosures.

SOURCE: Håkansson A et al. J Addict Med. 2020 May 18. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000690.

 

The confluence of isolation, excess available time, and anxiety about illness or finances as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic have the potential to increase problem gambling behaviors during this public health emergency, so it’s essential to gather data and supply guidance on this issue, according to a call to action published May 18 in the Journal of Addiction Medicine.

humonia/iStock/Getty Images Plus

“When facing an unforeseen situation with confinement, fear of disease, and financial uncertainty for the future, problem gambling may be an important health hazard to monitor and prevent during and following the COVID-19 crisis, especially given current online gambling availability,” wrote Anders Håkansson, PhD, of Lund University in Sweden and coauthors.

Both stress and trauma have been linked to gambling problems, and both are occurring during the pandemic, said coauthor Marc N. Potenza, MD, PhD, of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., in an interview.

“People are likely to be experiencing stress at levels they haven’t experienced previously,” Dr. Potenza said. While multiple factors can contribute to addictive behaviors, “with respect to the pandemic, one concern is that so-called negative reinforcement motivations – engaging in an addictive behavior to escape from depressed or negative mood states – may be a driving motivation for a significant number of people during this time,” he said.

David Hodgins, PhD, CPsych, a professor of psychology at the University of Calgary in Alberta, who was not involved with the commentary, noted that gambling relapse is triggered by “negative emotional states, interpersonal stress, and financial stress” – all three of which the pandemic contributes to.

Financial stress can especially “inflame erroneous gambling-related cognitions,” he said in an interview, including “beliefs such as the idea that gambling can solve financial problems, even when this is statistically almost impossible as debt increases, and that debt has been caused by gambling.”

Increased social isolation also is particularly problematic, pointed out Shane W. Kraus, PhD, from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Dr. Kraus also was not involved with the paper.

“If someone is already struggling with already negative emotions, negative feelings, thoughts, and depression, and you’re now isolating them quite a bit, that’s not going to be a recipe for success,” Dr. Kraus said in an interview.

The mental health effects of the pandemic could be extensive and long-lasting, and such effects often co-occur with addictive behaviors, Dr. Potenza said.

“We should be mindful of ways in which people develop addictions in these settings,” he said. “One of the aspects of the pandemic is that many people are at home for longer periods of time, and they use digital technologies more frequently.”

The use of digital technologies can include interaction on social media platforms and on meeting applications such as Zoom, but such use also offers opportunities for problematic gambling, gaming, and pornography use. The World Health Organization recognizes addiction disorders for gambling and for gaming, and online gaming platforms and pornography sites have reported substantial increases in their traffic during the pandemic, Dr. Potenza said.

The increase in frequency is unsurprising and not necessarily a concern by itself, Dr. Kraus said.

“It’s all about loss of control or difficulty engaging or disengaging,” Dr. Kraus said. “When you can’t stop doing something even if you like it or love it, when it interferes with your day-to-day activities and relationships, that’s when it’s a problem.”
 

 

 

Gambling online: Easy, available

The authors note that past research has identified increased gambling problems during economic crises in other countries.

“While currently speculative, financial hardships may promote gambling as individuals may be motivated to gamble to try to win money,” the authors suggested. “Although presently limited, existing data suggest that COVID-19–related financial concerns may increase gambling-related harms, and this possibility merits systematic research.”

But trends and characteristics of the gambling market, including direct effects from the pandemic, can potentially influence behaviors, too. Most casinos have closed during the pandemic, and most of the sports that people bet on have been canceled or postponed.

“Fewer people are gambling on sports, but they turn then to other areas,” Dr. Potenza said. “If they can’t bet on major league type sports, they might gamble on more local sporting events, or they may bet on other activities going on in society during the pandemic.”

But online gambling poses greater risk.

“Properties of online gambling may constitute a particular health hazard when many people are confined to their homes and have had rapid changes in working conditions, psychosocial stress, anxiety, and depression, as has been described in China,” the paper’s authors wrote. “Online gambling may be particularly concerning due to its availability and velocity” and association with higher debt levels.

In addition to online gaming’s ease and availability, past research has found patients report boredom and escapism as reasons they turned to it.

Again, boredom on its own is not necessarily a problem, but for those who already struggle with addictive behaviors, it can be a trigger, Dr. Kraus said.

“Boredom is very tough for them because it’s often associated with negative emotions,” such as dwelling on things not going well in their lives, he said. “In a pandemic, people are by themselves quite a bit, socially isolated, so for those who are struggling already with some depression or anxiety, it’s only going to be increased.”

Online gaming trends may vary with demographics, however. Dr. Kraus noted that his former clinic at the Veterans Administration has been seeing lower gambling in patients with addictive disorders, but those patients are also older and primarily frequented casinos.

“It’s going to depend on age and familiarity with technology,” he said, but even if older problem gamblers are not going to the Internet now, “let’s wait and see what happens in the next 2 or 3 months.”

The authors noted results from a small survey of patients in treatment for gambling addiction at the Bellvitge University Hospital in Barcelona, Spain, where two of the coauthors work. They conducted telephone surveys with 26 patients about the first 4 weeks of sheltering in place because of the coronavirus. All but four of the patients were male, and their average age was 45 years.

“Most presented worries about increased uncertainties, such as the negative impact on their work, risk of COVID-19 infection of themselves or their loved ones and their treatment,” the authors reported.

Although 19% were completely abstinent, an additional 12% (n = 3) reported worsened gambling. In addition, almost half (46%) reported anxiety symptoms and more than a quarter (27%) had depressive symptoms.
 

 

 

Appropriate care

A particularly complicating factor of the pandemic is how it has disrupted traditional ways of seeking health care, particularly with how much mental health and other medical care has shifted to telehealth and online delivery, Dr. Potenza pointed out.

“This is a change for many people, and it’s important for both caretakers and people in treatment to be mindful of this and to try to ensure that appropriate services are maintained for people during this time,” he said.

For example, 12-step programs traditionally meet in person, which is largely impossible during the pandemic. Some have moved meetings online, and other programs have turned to apps, such as the Addiction Policy Forum’s app Connections, an empirically validated digital therapy platform that lets patients and clinicians remain connected with remote check-ins.

The move to more telehealth may actually increase access, suggested Dr. Hodgins.

“There is no evidence that this is less effective, and in fact, its convenience might be an advantage in reaching more people,” he said. “More challenging is offering group therapies remotely, but this is also feasible.”

The treatment with the strongest evidence remains cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), Dr. Hodgins said.

“This therapy, in part, helps people become aware of their erroneous cognitions and to challenge them, but also helps people restructure their activities to change their habits,” he said. He also noted the rise of online therapy, whether supported by a therapist or entirely self-directed, such as Gambling Self-help.

“These programs typically provide cognitive behavior content but also content that comes from studying how people recover from gambling problems,” he said. “The challenge of completely self-directed approaches is follow-through. Like most online content, people tend to flit around more than they might in therapy.” Still, he added, research has shown good outcomes from these programs.

Dr. Potenza also noted that several organizations, including the International Society of Addiction Medicine and Children and Screens, have been hosting webinars related to COVID-19 coping and/or addiction that clinicians and patients might find helpful.
 

Identification of problematic behaviors

One challenge in watching for problematic gambling behaviors during the pandemic is the set of unusual living circumstances for most people right now. At almost no other time in history have people been primarily confined to their homes, many unable to go to work or working from home, with extra leisure time and nowhere to go.

“With the COVID-19 pandemic, a lot of daily life has changed,” Dr. Potenza said. “It’s unclear whether certain behaviors that have become habitual during the pandemic, such as gaming or online gambling, will then interfere with daily life when the pandemic subsides.”

“The problem is, a small proportion of people who are very vulnerable will develop a disorder and might maintain it,” Dr. Kraus said. Those who already struggle with mental health and may be out of work have greater potential for problematic behaviors.

Dr. Potenza collaborated with other psychiatrists in drafting consensus guidelines on maintaining healthy use of the Internet specifically during the pandemic (Compr Psychiatry. 2020 Jul. doi: 10.10161/comppsych.2020.152180).

“It’s important to think about where one draws the line between normative everyday behaviors – behaviors that are not interfering with life functioning – and those that do interfere with life functioning,” Dr. Potenza said. “If someone is having difficulty making work or family or school obligations, these are important signs that the behavior may be problematic.”

He offered suggestions for things people can do to promote their health during the pandemic, such as having regular routines that include getting physical exercise and social interaction, dining with family if isolating together, and making time for self-care. He also recommended setting limits on the use of digital devices and aiming for a healthy balance in keeping up with the news. The idea is to stay aware of what’s happening without getting burned out or traumatized by news coverage.

 

 

Guidance for clinicians

An urgent need for research and guidelines related to gambling and the pandemic exists, the authors argued.

In the meantime, aside from various validated screeners available, Dr. Kraus offered some practical advice for clinicians checking in with their patients: “Ask your patients what they have been doing to cope with this difficult time.”

Some might mention their faith, family, or friends, and others might not have an answer or mention drinking, gaming, or engaging in other activities. “We all do things to cope. Sometimes you use healthy coping and sometimes you use unhealthy coping,” Dr. Kraus said. “I would have a dialogue with my patients around, ‘How are you getting through? What’s helping you? What are some things you’ve tried that are tripping you up?’ ”

If gambling in particular is a possible concern, he encouraged clinicians to ask their patients whether they have tried to quit or what would happen if they stopped gambling.

“What we’d expect is the problem gamblers will have more irritability, crankiness, difficulty with quitting,” he said.

Dr. Hodgins agreed that checking in on how patients’ lives and activities have changed, and their emotion reactions to those changes, is prudent.

“The change in activities might be healthy or might include increased addictive behaviors, including increased use of substances, gaming, pornography, food, and gambling,” he said.

In addition, the paper authors list several examples of guidelines that might be considered in drafting guidance for clinicians, including the following:

  • Limiting the extent of gambling
  • Not gambling to regulate negative emotions
  • Not gambling in order to try to solve financial problems or financial concerns
  • Not gambling under the influence of alcohol or drugs
  • Carefully monitoring gambling-related time and financial expenditures
  • Maintaining and establishing daily routines involving activities other than gambling
  • Minding gambling-related attitudes and behaviors in the presence of minors
  • Not starting to gamble because of stressors

The research did not receive external funding. Dr. Håkansson has received research funding from the Swedish Sport Foundation, the Swedish alcohol monopoly Systembolaget, and the Swedish state-owned gambling operator AB Svenska Spel. He is working with the company Kontigo Care on devices for gambling addiction follow-up care. Dr. Potenza has received consulting or advisory compensation from several entities, including the Addiction Policy Forum, AXA Gaming, Idorsia, Opiant, and RiverMend Health. Dr. Potenza has received research funding from Mohegan Sun casino and the National Center for Responsible Gaming. No other authors or outside sources had industry-related disclosures.

SOURCE: Håkansson A et al. J Addict Med. 2020 May 18. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000690.

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Today’s top news highlights: Addressing racism in maternity care, group forms to protect health professionals from retaliation

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:06

 

Here are the stories our MDedge editors across specialties think you need to know about today:

Addressing racism in the maternal mortality crisis

The emerging racial disparities in COVID-19 incidence and outcomes in the United States are on a collision course with long-standing racial disparities in U.S. maternal care and mortality. “The saying is that ‘the virus doesn’t discriminate,’ but it understands our biases, right? So, the virus takes advantage of the weaknesses in our system,” said Joia A. Crear-Perry, MD, an ob.gyn. and founder and president of the National Birth Equity Collaborative, a New Orleans–based research, training, and advocacy organization working to optimize black maternal and infant health. This article is part of an ongoing feature series on the crisis in maternal mortality in the United States. Here we explore potential solutions for addressing the inequities as proposed by thought leaders and key stakeholders. Read more.

A ‘Beacon’ for physicians, nurses facing retaliation

Sejal Hathi, MD, and two colleagues had long kicked around the idea of starting a nonprofit group that would center on civic and legal advocacy. Once the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the three friends – who have a mix of legal, medical, and advocacy backgrounds – began chatting by email and through Zoom video meetings about how to make the plan a reality. The new organization – named Beacon – quickly mobilized, assembled their team, and launched a website. Beacon’s first project now aims to highlight and protect the legal rights of medical professionals who speak out about personal protection equipment supply and other matters of public concern related to coronavirus. “There are a flurry of reports coming our way about physicians and nurses, as well as other health care workers, who are for whatever reason being disciplined or retaliated against for simply seeking appropriate safety policies at their workplaces,” Dr. Hathi said. “What we’ve found is that many of them don’t even know what their options look like. Doctors, nurses, health care workers are not the typical type to engage politically, to speak out, [or to] advocate for themselves.” Read more.

COVID-19 ravages the Navajo Nation

The Navajo Nation has the most cases of the COVID-19 virus of any tribe in the United States, and numbers as of May 31, 2020, are 5,348, with 246 confirmed deaths. These devastating numbers, which might be leveling off, are associated with Navajo people having higher-than-average rates of diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. This is compounded with 30%-40% of homes having no electricity or running water, and a poverty rate of about 38%. “We endured and learned from each Naayee, hunger, and death to name a few adversities. The COVID-19 pandemic, or “Big Cough” (Dikos Nitsaa’igii -19 in Navajo language), is a monster confronting the Navajo today. It has had significant impact on our nation and people,” Mary Hasbah Roessel, MD, a Navajo board-certified psychiatrist practicing in Santa Fe, N.M., wrote in a commentary on MDedge. Read more.

 

 

Heart pump system authorized for COVID-19 patients

The Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization (EUA) for use of the Impella RP heart pump system in COVID-19 patients with right heart failure or decompensation. The EUA indication for the Impella RP system is to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in critical care patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by complications related to COVID-19, including pulmonary embolism. Read more.

Deprescribing hypertension meds looks safe for older adults

Some patients aged 80 years or older can potentially cut back on their number of antihypertensive meds, under physician guidance, without an important loss of blood pressure control, researchers concluded based on findings from a randomized multicenter trial. The study, called Optimising Treatment for Mild Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly (OPTIMISE), entered “patients in whom the benefits of taking blood pressure-lowering treatments might start to be outweighed by the potential harms,” said James P. Sheppard, PhD, of University of Oxford (England). The report was published in JAMA. Read more.

For more on COVID-19, visit our Resource Center. All of our latest news is available on MDedge.com.

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Here are the stories our MDedge editors across specialties think you need to know about today:

Addressing racism in the maternal mortality crisis

The emerging racial disparities in COVID-19 incidence and outcomes in the United States are on a collision course with long-standing racial disparities in U.S. maternal care and mortality. “The saying is that ‘the virus doesn’t discriminate,’ but it understands our biases, right? So, the virus takes advantage of the weaknesses in our system,” said Joia A. Crear-Perry, MD, an ob.gyn. and founder and president of the National Birth Equity Collaborative, a New Orleans–based research, training, and advocacy organization working to optimize black maternal and infant health. This article is part of an ongoing feature series on the crisis in maternal mortality in the United States. Here we explore potential solutions for addressing the inequities as proposed by thought leaders and key stakeholders. Read more.

A ‘Beacon’ for physicians, nurses facing retaliation

Sejal Hathi, MD, and two colleagues had long kicked around the idea of starting a nonprofit group that would center on civic and legal advocacy. Once the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the three friends – who have a mix of legal, medical, and advocacy backgrounds – began chatting by email and through Zoom video meetings about how to make the plan a reality. The new organization – named Beacon – quickly mobilized, assembled their team, and launched a website. Beacon’s first project now aims to highlight and protect the legal rights of medical professionals who speak out about personal protection equipment supply and other matters of public concern related to coronavirus. “There are a flurry of reports coming our way about physicians and nurses, as well as other health care workers, who are for whatever reason being disciplined or retaliated against for simply seeking appropriate safety policies at their workplaces,” Dr. Hathi said. “What we’ve found is that many of them don’t even know what their options look like. Doctors, nurses, health care workers are not the typical type to engage politically, to speak out, [or to] advocate for themselves.” Read more.

COVID-19 ravages the Navajo Nation

The Navajo Nation has the most cases of the COVID-19 virus of any tribe in the United States, and numbers as of May 31, 2020, are 5,348, with 246 confirmed deaths. These devastating numbers, which might be leveling off, are associated with Navajo people having higher-than-average rates of diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. This is compounded with 30%-40% of homes having no electricity or running water, and a poverty rate of about 38%. “We endured and learned from each Naayee, hunger, and death to name a few adversities. The COVID-19 pandemic, or “Big Cough” (Dikos Nitsaa’igii -19 in Navajo language), is a monster confronting the Navajo today. It has had significant impact on our nation and people,” Mary Hasbah Roessel, MD, a Navajo board-certified psychiatrist practicing in Santa Fe, N.M., wrote in a commentary on MDedge. Read more.

 

 

Heart pump system authorized for COVID-19 patients

The Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization (EUA) for use of the Impella RP heart pump system in COVID-19 patients with right heart failure or decompensation. The EUA indication for the Impella RP system is to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in critical care patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by complications related to COVID-19, including pulmonary embolism. Read more.

Deprescribing hypertension meds looks safe for older adults

Some patients aged 80 years or older can potentially cut back on their number of antihypertensive meds, under physician guidance, without an important loss of blood pressure control, researchers concluded based on findings from a randomized multicenter trial. The study, called Optimising Treatment for Mild Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly (OPTIMISE), entered “patients in whom the benefits of taking blood pressure-lowering treatments might start to be outweighed by the potential harms,” said James P. Sheppard, PhD, of University of Oxford (England). The report was published in JAMA. Read more.

For more on COVID-19, visit our Resource Center. All of our latest news is available on MDedge.com.

 

Here are the stories our MDedge editors across specialties think you need to know about today:

Addressing racism in the maternal mortality crisis

The emerging racial disparities in COVID-19 incidence and outcomes in the United States are on a collision course with long-standing racial disparities in U.S. maternal care and mortality. “The saying is that ‘the virus doesn’t discriminate,’ but it understands our biases, right? So, the virus takes advantage of the weaknesses in our system,” said Joia A. Crear-Perry, MD, an ob.gyn. and founder and president of the National Birth Equity Collaborative, a New Orleans–based research, training, and advocacy organization working to optimize black maternal and infant health. This article is part of an ongoing feature series on the crisis in maternal mortality in the United States. Here we explore potential solutions for addressing the inequities as proposed by thought leaders and key stakeholders. Read more.

A ‘Beacon’ for physicians, nurses facing retaliation

Sejal Hathi, MD, and two colleagues had long kicked around the idea of starting a nonprofit group that would center on civic and legal advocacy. Once the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the three friends – who have a mix of legal, medical, and advocacy backgrounds – began chatting by email and through Zoom video meetings about how to make the plan a reality. The new organization – named Beacon – quickly mobilized, assembled their team, and launched a website. Beacon’s first project now aims to highlight and protect the legal rights of medical professionals who speak out about personal protection equipment supply and other matters of public concern related to coronavirus. “There are a flurry of reports coming our way about physicians and nurses, as well as other health care workers, who are for whatever reason being disciplined or retaliated against for simply seeking appropriate safety policies at their workplaces,” Dr. Hathi said. “What we’ve found is that many of them don’t even know what their options look like. Doctors, nurses, health care workers are not the typical type to engage politically, to speak out, [or to] advocate for themselves.” Read more.

COVID-19 ravages the Navajo Nation

The Navajo Nation has the most cases of the COVID-19 virus of any tribe in the United States, and numbers as of May 31, 2020, are 5,348, with 246 confirmed deaths. These devastating numbers, which might be leveling off, are associated with Navajo people having higher-than-average rates of diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. This is compounded with 30%-40% of homes having no electricity or running water, and a poverty rate of about 38%. “We endured and learned from each Naayee, hunger, and death to name a few adversities. The COVID-19 pandemic, or “Big Cough” (Dikos Nitsaa’igii -19 in Navajo language), is a monster confronting the Navajo today. It has had significant impact on our nation and people,” Mary Hasbah Roessel, MD, a Navajo board-certified psychiatrist practicing in Santa Fe, N.M., wrote in a commentary on MDedge. Read more.

 

 

Heart pump system authorized for COVID-19 patients

The Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization (EUA) for use of the Impella RP heart pump system in COVID-19 patients with right heart failure or decompensation. The EUA indication for the Impella RP system is to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in critical care patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by complications related to COVID-19, including pulmonary embolism. Read more.

Deprescribing hypertension meds looks safe for older adults

Some patients aged 80 years or older can potentially cut back on their number of antihypertensive meds, under physician guidance, without an important loss of blood pressure control, researchers concluded based on findings from a randomized multicenter trial. The study, called Optimising Treatment for Mild Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly (OPTIMISE), entered “patients in whom the benefits of taking blood pressure-lowering treatments might start to be outweighed by the potential harms,” said James P. Sheppard, PhD, of University of Oxford (England). The report was published in JAMA. Read more.

For more on COVID-19, visit our Resource Center. All of our latest news is available on MDedge.com.

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TILs and PET-CT can predict pCR in HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer

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Changed
Wed, 01/04/2023 - 16:59

In an update of the PREDIX-HER2 trial, trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) remained equivalent to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus dual-targeted HER2 therapy in producing pathologic complete remissions (pCRs) among patients with HER2-positive, metastatic breast cancer.

Dr. Alan P. Lyss, now retired, was a community-based medical oncologist and clinical researcher for more than 35 years, practicing in St. Louis.
Dr. Alan P. Lyss

The new data also suggest tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and dramatic improvements in PET-CT scans can predict favorable outcomes in both treatment groups. Though these findings will be useful for research purposes, they likely won’t influence routine clinical practice.

Thomas Hatschek, MD, PhD, of Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, presented the updated results from PREDIX-HER2 during the European Society for Medical Oncology: Breast Cancer virtual meeting.

PREDIX-HER2 included patients with HER2-positive breast cancer and tumor size greater than 20 mm or lymph node metastases.

Patients received neoadjuvant therapy (NAT) with docetaxel and trastuzumab plus pertuzumab (DTP) or T-DM1 every 3 weeks for a planned total of six courses. The protocol permitted switching to the competing treatment for progression, lack of response, or drug-related severe toxicity.

Postoperatively, all patients received triweekly epirubicin plus cyclophosphamide – four courses for the T-DM1 arm and two courses for the DTP arm. All patients then received triweekly adjuvant trastuzumab for 11 courses. The 62% of patients whose tumors were hormone receptor (HR)–positive received standard endocrine therapy postoperatively.
 

Updated results, predictors of pCR

At the 2019 ASCO annual meeting, PREDIX-HER2 investigators reported that, when compared with DTP, T-DM1 produced the same likelihood of pCR with less toxicity (ASCO 2019, Abstract 501). Updated data presented at ESMO Breast Cancer 2020 showed similar results.

The pCR rate was 45.5% in the DTP arm and 43.9% in the T-DM1 arm (P = .824). pCR rates were higher for HR-negative tumors – 63.6% in the DTP arm and 59% in the T-DM1 arm – than for HR-positive tumors – 36.4% in the DTP arm and 33.9% in the TDM-1 arm.

Three patients had disease progression with T-DM1, and none progressed with DTP. However, almost twice as many patients switched from DTP to T-DM1, compared with the other sequence.

Dr. Hatschek reported that the presence of at least 10% TILs predicted pCR in both treatment groups. Among patients who achieved a pCR, 52.2% had at least 10% TILs in baseline biopsies, and 30.4% had less than 10% TILs.

In addition, a decrease of FDG maximum standardized uptake value by more than 75% on protocol-required PET-CT scans was highly predictive of pCR. Among patients who achieved a pCR, 70.3% had a maximum standardized uptake value decrease of more than 75%, and 22.5% had a decrease of 75% or less.

At median follow-up of 28.5 months, event-free survival was similar between the treatment arms. Overall, there were 13 cases of progression, relapse, contralateral breast cancer, distant metastases, or death from any cause. There were five such events in the DTP arm and eight in the TDM-1 arm.

Dr. Hatschek concluded that neoadjuvant T-DM1 may be as effective as standard NAT in all clinical subgroups evaluated. Both TILs and PET-CT showed the potential to predict pCR and merit further study in the NAT setting.
 

 

 

An imperfect surrogate

By definition, a surrogate is “one appointed to act in place of another.” In the case of PREDIX-HER2 and most other NAT studies in HER2-positive breast cancer patients, pCR is a surrogate for the endpoint about which doctors and patients really care – cancer-free survival.

As such, pCR is not a perfect surrogate. Reproducibly, pCR has been highly predictive of disease-free survival and overall survival, especially in the HR-negative subset of HER2-positive patients.

However, despite improvements with dual targeting of HER2 in the TRYPHAENA trial (Eur J Cancer. 2018;89:27-35) and the use of T-DM1 for patients failing to achieve pCR in the immediately practice-changing KATHERINE trial (N Engl J Med. 2019;380:617-28), eventual relapse is seen in 10%-20% of patients in various clinical-pathologic subgroups.

In PREDIX-HER2, the pCR rate for node-positive patients was considerably lower with T-DM1 than with DTP (54.1% vs. 38%), noted Valentina Guarneri, MD, of the University of Padova (Italy), in her discussion of the trial at ESMO Breast Cancer 2020.

Patients with larger initial tumor size and multiple involved axillary nodes at diagnosis remain at increased risk of death because of cancer relapse.

Central nervous system relapse remains a vexing problem. Among patients with triple-positive breast cancer, relapses may occur late, despite pCR.

Patients whose tumors transform from HER2 positive to HER2 negative with NAT, seen in approximately 8% of cases in the KATHERINE trial (ESMO Breast Cancer 2020, Abstract 96O), may be another poor-risk group.
 

Clinical implications

PREDIX-HER2 is an important study. At the early time point of 2.4 years (especially early since most patients were HR-positive), if pCR is achieved, event-free survival is excellent with T-DM1 or an aggressive multiagent cytotoxic combination plus dual HER2 targeting followed by anthracyclines.

It is ideal to have clinical-pathologic tests to distinguish those patients destined to achieve the surrogate endpoint of pCR from those who will not achieve it.

Despite linkage of TILs to improved outcome for triple-negative and HER2-enriched molecular subtypes (Lancet Oncol. 2018 Jan;19[1]:40-50), analysis of TILs is not standard practice in HER2-positive breast cancer in community settings. Optimal cutoffs are not well established, and TILs have not been linked to the choice of particular treatment options.

Currently, PET-CT scans are not part of National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines for pretreatment evaluation, except in patients for whom there is clinical suspicion of distant disease.

For those reasons, the main results of PREDIX-HER2 remain research tools that will focus our attention on the clinical-pathologic correlations Dr. Hatschek highlighted, but the results should have no influence on routine clinical practice at this time.

PREDIX-HER2 was funded by the Swedish Cancer Society, Radiumhemmet of Karolinska Institutet, Region Stockholm, and Roche Sweden. Dr. Hatschek disclosed relationships with Roche Sweden, Pfizer Sweden, and Pierre Fabre Sweden. Dr. Guarneri disclosed relationships with Roche, Novartis, and Eli Lilly.

Dr. Lyss was a community-based medical oncologist and clinical researcher for more than 35 years before his recent retirement. His clinical and research interests were focused on breast and lung cancers as well as expanding clinical trial access to medically underserved populations. He is based in St. Louis. He has no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Hatschek T et al. ESMO Breast Cancer 2020, Abstract 97O.

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In an update of the PREDIX-HER2 trial, trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) remained equivalent to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus dual-targeted HER2 therapy in producing pathologic complete remissions (pCRs) among patients with HER2-positive, metastatic breast cancer.

Dr. Alan P. Lyss, now retired, was a community-based medical oncologist and clinical researcher for more than 35 years, practicing in St. Louis.
Dr. Alan P. Lyss

The new data also suggest tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and dramatic improvements in PET-CT scans can predict favorable outcomes in both treatment groups. Though these findings will be useful for research purposes, they likely won’t influence routine clinical practice.

Thomas Hatschek, MD, PhD, of Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, presented the updated results from PREDIX-HER2 during the European Society for Medical Oncology: Breast Cancer virtual meeting.

PREDIX-HER2 included patients with HER2-positive breast cancer and tumor size greater than 20 mm or lymph node metastases.

Patients received neoadjuvant therapy (NAT) with docetaxel and trastuzumab plus pertuzumab (DTP) or T-DM1 every 3 weeks for a planned total of six courses. The protocol permitted switching to the competing treatment for progression, lack of response, or drug-related severe toxicity.

Postoperatively, all patients received triweekly epirubicin plus cyclophosphamide – four courses for the T-DM1 arm and two courses for the DTP arm. All patients then received triweekly adjuvant trastuzumab for 11 courses. The 62% of patients whose tumors were hormone receptor (HR)–positive received standard endocrine therapy postoperatively.
 

Updated results, predictors of pCR

At the 2019 ASCO annual meeting, PREDIX-HER2 investigators reported that, when compared with DTP, T-DM1 produced the same likelihood of pCR with less toxicity (ASCO 2019, Abstract 501). Updated data presented at ESMO Breast Cancer 2020 showed similar results.

The pCR rate was 45.5% in the DTP arm and 43.9% in the T-DM1 arm (P = .824). pCR rates were higher for HR-negative tumors – 63.6% in the DTP arm and 59% in the T-DM1 arm – than for HR-positive tumors – 36.4% in the DTP arm and 33.9% in the TDM-1 arm.

Three patients had disease progression with T-DM1, and none progressed with DTP. However, almost twice as many patients switched from DTP to T-DM1, compared with the other sequence.

Dr. Hatschek reported that the presence of at least 10% TILs predicted pCR in both treatment groups. Among patients who achieved a pCR, 52.2% had at least 10% TILs in baseline biopsies, and 30.4% had less than 10% TILs.

In addition, a decrease of FDG maximum standardized uptake value by more than 75% on protocol-required PET-CT scans was highly predictive of pCR. Among patients who achieved a pCR, 70.3% had a maximum standardized uptake value decrease of more than 75%, and 22.5% had a decrease of 75% or less.

At median follow-up of 28.5 months, event-free survival was similar between the treatment arms. Overall, there were 13 cases of progression, relapse, contralateral breast cancer, distant metastases, or death from any cause. There were five such events in the DTP arm and eight in the TDM-1 arm.

Dr. Hatschek concluded that neoadjuvant T-DM1 may be as effective as standard NAT in all clinical subgroups evaluated. Both TILs and PET-CT showed the potential to predict pCR and merit further study in the NAT setting.
 

 

 

An imperfect surrogate

By definition, a surrogate is “one appointed to act in place of another.” In the case of PREDIX-HER2 and most other NAT studies in HER2-positive breast cancer patients, pCR is a surrogate for the endpoint about which doctors and patients really care – cancer-free survival.

As such, pCR is not a perfect surrogate. Reproducibly, pCR has been highly predictive of disease-free survival and overall survival, especially in the HR-negative subset of HER2-positive patients.

However, despite improvements with dual targeting of HER2 in the TRYPHAENA trial (Eur J Cancer. 2018;89:27-35) and the use of T-DM1 for patients failing to achieve pCR in the immediately practice-changing KATHERINE trial (N Engl J Med. 2019;380:617-28), eventual relapse is seen in 10%-20% of patients in various clinical-pathologic subgroups.

In PREDIX-HER2, the pCR rate for node-positive patients was considerably lower with T-DM1 than with DTP (54.1% vs. 38%), noted Valentina Guarneri, MD, of the University of Padova (Italy), in her discussion of the trial at ESMO Breast Cancer 2020.

Patients with larger initial tumor size and multiple involved axillary nodes at diagnosis remain at increased risk of death because of cancer relapse.

Central nervous system relapse remains a vexing problem. Among patients with triple-positive breast cancer, relapses may occur late, despite pCR.

Patients whose tumors transform from HER2 positive to HER2 negative with NAT, seen in approximately 8% of cases in the KATHERINE trial (ESMO Breast Cancer 2020, Abstract 96O), may be another poor-risk group.
 

Clinical implications

PREDIX-HER2 is an important study. At the early time point of 2.4 years (especially early since most patients were HR-positive), if pCR is achieved, event-free survival is excellent with T-DM1 or an aggressive multiagent cytotoxic combination plus dual HER2 targeting followed by anthracyclines.

It is ideal to have clinical-pathologic tests to distinguish those patients destined to achieve the surrogate endpoint of pCR from those who will not achieve it.

Despite linkage of TILs to improved outcome for triple-negative and HER2-enriched molecular subtypes (Lancet Oncol. 2018 Jan;19[1]:40-50), analysis of TILs is not standard practice in HER2-positive breast cancer in community settings. Optimal cutoffs are not well established, and TILs have not been linked to the choice of particular treatment options.

Currently, PET-CT scans are not part of National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines for pretreatment evaluation, except in patients for whom there is clinical suspicion of distant disease.

For those reasons, the main results of PREDIX-HER2 remain research tools that will focus our attention on the clinical-pathologic correlations Dr. Hatschek highlighted, but the results should have no influence on routine clinical practice at this time.

PREDIX-HER2 was funded by the Swedish Cancer Society, Radiumhemmet of Karolinska Institutet, Region Stockholm, and Roche Sweden. Dr. Hatschek disclosed relationships with Roche Sweden, Pfizer Sweden, and Pierre Fabre Sweden. Dr. Guarneri disclosed relationships with Roche, Novartis, and Eli Lilly.

Dr. Lyss was a community-based medical oncologist and clinical researcher for more than 35 years before his recent retirement. His clinical and research interests were focused on breast and lung cancers as well as expanding clinical trial access to medically underserved populations. He is based in St. Louis. He has no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Hatschek T et al. ESMO Breast Cancer 2020, Abstract 97O.

In an update of the PREDIX-HER2 trial, trastuzumab emtansine (T-DM1) remained equivalent to standard neoadjuvant chemotherapy plus dual-targeted HER2 therapy in producing pathologic complete remissions (pCRs) among patients with HER2-positive, metastatic breast cancer.

Dr. Alan P. Lyss, now retired, was a community-based medical oncologist and clinical researcher for more than 35 years, practicing in St. Louis.
Dr. Alan P. Lyss

The new data also suggest tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and dramatic improvements in PET-CT scans can predict favorable outcomes in both treatment groups. Though these findings will be useful for research purposes, they likely won’t influence routine clinical practice.

Thomas Hatschek, MD, PhD, of Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, presented the updated results from PREDIX-HER2 during the European Society for Medical Oncology: Breast Cancer virtual meeting.

PREDIX-HER2 included patients with HER2-positive breast cancer and tumor size greater than 20 mm or lymph node metastases.

Patients received neoadjuvant therapy (NAT) with docetaxel and trastuzumab plus pertuzumab (DTP) or T-DM1 every 3 weeks for a planned total of six courses. The protocol permitted switching to the competing treatment for progression, lack of response, or drug-related severe toxicity.

Postoperatively, all patients received triweekly epirubicin plus cyclophosphamide – four courses for the T-DM1 arm and two courses for the DTP arm. All patients then received triweekly adjuvant trastuzumab for 11 courses. The 62% of patients whose tumors were hormone receptor (HR)–positive received standard endocrine therapy postoperatively.
 

Updated results, predictors of pCR

At the 2019 ASCO annual meeting, PREDIX-HER2 investigators reported that, when compared with DTP, T-DM1 produced the same likelihood of pCR with less toxicity (ASCO 2019, Abstract 501). Updated data presented at ESMO Breast Cancer 2020 showed similar results.

The pCR rate was 45.5% in the DTP arm and 43.9% in the T-DM1 arm (P = .824). pCR rates were higher for HR-negative tumors – 63.6% in the DTP arm and 59% in the T-DM1 arm – than for HR-positive tumors – 36.4% in the DTP arm and 33.9% in the TDM-1 arm.

Three patients had disease progression with T-DM1, and none progressed with DTP. However, almost twice as many patients switched from DTP to T-DM1, compared with the other sequence.

Dr. Hatschek reported that the presence of at least 10% TILs predicted pCR in both treatment groups. Among patients who achieved a pCR, 52.2% had at least 10% TILs in baseline biopsies, and 30.4% had less than 10% TILs.

In addition, a decrease of FDG maximum standardized uptake value by more than 75% on protocol-required PET-CT scans was highly predictive of pCR. Among patients who achieved a pCR, 70.3% had a maximum standardized uptake value decrease of more than 75%, and 22.5% had a decrease of 75% or less.

At median follow-up of 28.5 months, event-free survival was similar between the treatment arms. Overall, there were 13 cases of progression, relapse, contralateral breast cancer, distant metastases, or death from any cause. There were five such events in the DTP arm and eight in the TDM-1 arm.

Dr. Hatschek concluded that neoadjuvant T-DM1 may be as effective as standard NAT in all clinical subgroups evaluated. Both TILs and PET-CT showed the potential to predict pCR and merit further study in the NAT setting.
 

 

 

An imperfect surrogate

By definition, a surrogate is “one appointed to act in place of another.” In the case of PREDIX-HER2 and most other NAT studies in HER2-positive breast cancer patients, pCR is a surrogate for the endpoint about which doctors and patients really care – cancer-free survival.

As such, pCR is not a perfect surrogate. Reproducibly, pCR has been highly predictive of disease-free survival and overall survival, especially in the HR-negative subset of HER2-positive patients.

However, despite improvements with dual targeting of HER2 in the TRYPHAENA trial (Eur J Cancer. 2018;89:27-35) and the use of T-DM1 for patients failing to achieve pCR in the immediately practice-changing KATHERINE trial (N Engl J Med. 2019;380:617-28), eventual relapse is seen in 10%-20% of patients in various clinical-pathologic subgroups.

In PREDIX-HER2, the pCR rate for node-positive patients was considerably lower with T-DM1 than with DTP (54.1% vs. 38%), noted Valentina Guarneri, MD, of the University of Padova (Italy), in her discussion of the trial at ESMO Breast Cancer 2020.

Patients with larger initial tumor size and multiple involved axillary nodes at diagnosis remain at increased risk of death because of cancer relapse.

Central nervous system relapse remains a vexing problem. Among patients with triple-positive breast cancer, relapses may occur late, despite pCR.

Patients whose tumors transform from HER2 positive to HER2 negative with NAT, seen in approximately 8% of cases in the KATHERINE trial (ESMO Breast Cancer 2020, Abstract 96O), may be another poor-risk group.
 

Clinical implications

PREDIX-HER2 is an important study. At the early time point of 2.4 years (especially early since most patients were HR-positive), if pCR is achieved, event-free survival is excellent with T-DM1 or an aggressive multiagent cytotoxic combination plus dual HER2 targeting followed by anthracyclines.

It is ideal to have clinical-pathologic tests to distinguish those patients destined to achieve the surrogate endpoint of pCR from those who will not achieve it.

Despite linkage of TILs to improved outcome for triple-negative and HER2-enriched molecular subtypes (Lancet Oncol. 2018 Jan;19[1]:40-50), analysis of TILs is not standard practice in HER2-positive breast cancer in community settings. Optimal cutoffs are not well established, and TILs have not been linked to the choice of particular treatment options.

Currently, PET-CT scans are not part of National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines for pretreatment evaluation, except in patients for whom there is clinical suspicion of distant disease.

For those reasons, the main results of PREDIX-HER2 remain research tools that will focus our attention on the clinical-pathologic correlations Dr. Hatschek highlighted, but the results should have no influence on routine clinical practice at this time.

PREDIX-HER2 was funded by the Swedish Cancer Society, Radiumhemmet of Karolinska Institutet, Region Stockholm, and Roche Sweden. Dr. Hatschek disclosed relationships with Roche Sweden, Pfizer Sweden, and Pierre Fabre Sweden. Dr. Guarneri disclosed relationships with Roche, Novartis, and Eli Lilly.

Dr. Lyss was a community-based medical oncologist and clinical researcher for more than 35 years before his recent retirement. His clinical and research interests were focused on breast and lung cancers as well as expanding clinical trial access to medically underserved populations. He is based in St. Louis. He has no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Hatschek T et al. ESMO Breast Cancer 2020, Abstract 97O.

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Low IgG levels in COPD patients linked to increased risk of hospitalization

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Tue, 06/02/2020 - 20:58

Among patients with COPD, the presence of hypogammaglobulinemia confers a nearly 30% increased risk of hospitalization, results from a pooled analysis of four studies showed.

“Mechanistic studies are still warranted to better elucidate how IgG and other immunoglobulins, in particular IgA, may contribute to the local airway host defense,” researchers led by Fernando Sergio Leitao Filho, MD, PhD, wrote in a study published in Chest (2020 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.058). “Nevertheless, our results raise the possibility that, in select COPD patients, IgG replacement therapy may be effective in reducing the risk of COPD hospitalizations. Given the growing rate of COPD hospitalization in the U.S. and elsewhere, there is a pressing need for a large well-designed trial to test this hypothesis.”

In an effort to evaluate the effect of IgG levels on the cumulative incidence of COPD hospitalizations, Dr. Leitao Filho, of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and colleagues drew from 2,259 patients who participated in four different trials: Azithromycin for Prevention of Exacerbations of COPD (MACRO), Simvastatin for the Prevention of Exacerbations in Moderate and Severe COPD (STATCOPE), the Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial (LOTT), and COPD Activity: Serotonin Transporter, Cytokines and Depression (CASCADE). The mean baseline age of study participants was 66 years, and 641 (28.4%) had hypogammaglobulinemia, which was defined as having a serum IgG levels of less than 7.0 g/L, while the remainder had normal IgG levels.



The pooled meta-analysis, which is believed to be the largest of its kind, revealed that the presence of hypogammaglobulinemia was associated with an incidence of COPD hospitalizations that was 1.29-fold higher than that observed among participants who had normal IgG levels (P = .01). The incidence was even higher among patients with prior COPD admissions (pooled subdistribution hazard ratio, 1.58; P < .01), yet the risk of COPD admissions was similar between IgG groups in patients with no prior hospitalizations (pooled SHR, 1.15; P = .34). Patients with hypogammaglobulinemia also showed significantly higher rates of COPD hospitalizations per person-year, compared with their counterparts who had normal IgG levels (0.48 vs. 0.29, respectively; P < .001.)

The authors acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that they measured serum IgG levels only at baseline “when participants were clinically stable; thus, the variability of IgG levels in a given individual over time and during the course of an AECOPD [severe acute exacerbation of COPD] is uncertain. Secondly, clinical data on corticosteroid use (formulations, dose, and length of use) were not readily available. However, systemic steroid use (one or more courses due to AECOPD prior to study entry) was accounted for in our analyses.”

The MACRO, STATCOPE, LOTT trials, and the CASCADE cohort were supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and Department of Health & Human Services. The current study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and BC Lung Association. The authors reported having no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Leitao Filho SF et al. Chest. 2020 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.058.

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Among patients with COPD, the presence of hypogammaglobulinemia confers a nearly 30% increased risk of hospitalization, results from a pooled analysis of four studies showed.

“Mechanistic studies are still warranted to better elucidate how IgG and other immunoglobulins, in particular IgA, may contribute to the local airway host defense,” researchers led by Fernando Sergio Leitao Filho, MD, PhD, wrote in a study published in Chest (2020 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.058). “Nevertheless, our results raise the possibility that, in select COPD patients, IgG replacement therapy may be effective in reducing the risk of COPD hospitalizations. Given the growing rate of COPD hospitalization in the U.S. and elsewhere, there is a pressing need for a large well-designed trial to test this hypothesis.”

In an effort to evaluate the effect of IgG levels on the cumulative incidence of COPD hospitalizations, Dr. Leitao Filho, of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and colleagues drew from 2,259 patients who participated in four different trials: Azithromycin for Prevention of Exacerbations of COPD (MACRO), Simvastatin for the Prevention of Exacerbations in Moderate and Severe COPD (STATCOPE), the Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial (LOTT), and COPD Activity: Serotonin Transporter, Cytokines and Depression (CASCADE). The mean baseline age of study participants was 66 years, and 641 (28.4%) had hypogammaglobulinemia, which was defined as having a serum IgG levels of less than 7.0 g/L, while the remainder had normal IgG levels.



The pooled meta-analysis, which is believed to be the largest of its kind, revealed that the presence of hypogammaglobulinemia was associated with an incidence of COPD hospitalizations that was 1.29-fold higher than that observed among participants who had normal IgG levels (P = .01). The incidence was even higher among patients with prior COPD admissions (pooled subdistribution hazard ratio, 1.58; P < .01), yet the risk of COPD admissions was similar between IgG groups in patients with no prior hospitalizations (pooled SHR, 1.15; P = .34). Patients with hypogammaglobulinemia also showed significantly higher rates of COPD hospitalizations per person-year, compared with their counterparts who had normal IgG levels (0.48 vs. 0.29, respectively; P < .001.)

The authors acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that they measured serum IgG levels only at baseline “when participants were clinically stable; thus, the variability of IgG levels in a given individual over time and during the course of an AECOPD [severe acute exacerbation of COPD] is uncertain. Secondly, clinical data on corticosteroid use (formulations, dose, and length of use) were not readily available. However, systemic steroid use (one or more courses due to AECOPD prior to study entry) was accounted for in our analyses.”

The MACRO, STATCOPE, LOTT trials, and the CASCADE cohort were supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and Department of Health & Human Services. The current study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and BC Lung Association. The authors reported having no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Leitao Filho SF et al. Chest. 2020 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.058.

Among patients with COPD, the presence of hypogammaglobulinemia confers a nearly 30% increased risk of hospitalization, results from a pooled analysis of four studies showed.

“Mechanistic studies are still warranted to better elucidate how IgG and other immunoglobulins, in particular IgA, may contribute to the local airway host defense,” researchers led by Fernando Sergio Leitao Filho, MD, PhD, wrote in a study published in Chest (2020 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.058). “Nevertheless, our results raise the possibility that, in select COPD patients, IgG replacement therapy may be effective in reducing the risk of COPD hospitalizations. Given the growing rate of COPD hospitalization in the U.S. and elsewhere, there is a pressing need for a large well-designed trial to test this hypothesis.”

In an effort to evaluate the effect of IgG levels on the cumulative incidence of COPD hospitalizations, Dr. Leitao Filho, of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and colleagues drew from 2,259 patients who participated in four different trials: Azithromycin for Prevention of Exacerbations of COPD (MACRO), Simvastatin for the Prevention of Exacerbations in Moderate and Severe COPD (STATCOPE), the Long-Term Oxygen Treatment Trial (LOTT), and COPD Activity: Serotonin Transporter, Cytokines and Depression (CASCADE). The mean baseline age of study participants was 66 years, and 641 (28.4%) had hypogammaglobulinemia, which was defined as having a serum IgG levels of less than 7.0 g/L, while the remainder had normal IgG levels.



The pooled meta-analysis, which is believed to be the largest of its kind, revealed that the presence of hypogammaglobulinemia was associated with an incidence of COPD hospitalizations that was 1.29-fold higher than that observed among participants who had normal IgG levels (P = .01). The incidence was even higher among patients with prior COPD admissions (pooled subdistribution hazard ratio, 1.58; P < .01), yet the risk of COPD admissions was similar between IgG groups in patients with no prior hospitalizations (pooled SHR, 1.15; P = .34). Patients with hypogammaglobulinemia also showed significantly higher rates of COPD hospitalizations per person-year, compared with their counterparts who had normal IgG levels (0.48 vs. 0.29, respectively; P < .001.)

The authors acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that they measured serum IgG levels only at baseline “when participants were clinically stable; thus, the variability of IgG levels in a given individual over time and during the course of an AECOPD [severe acute exacerbation of COPD] is uncertain. Secondly, clinical data on corticosteroid use (formulations, dose, and length of use) were not readily available. However, systemic steroid use (one or more courses due to AECOPD prior to study entry) was accounted for in our analyses.”

The MACRO, STATCOPE, LOTT trials, and the CASCADE cohort were supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and Department of Health & Human Services. The current study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and BC Lung Association. The authors reported having no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Leitao Filho SF et al. Chest. 2020 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.058.

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Ticagrelor gets FDA nod for DAPT in high-risk patients with CAD

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Tue, 06/02/2020 - 15:01

The Food and Drug Administration has approved ticagrelor (Brilinta/Brilique, AstraZeneca) for use with aspirin to cut the risk for a first myocardial infarction or stroke in high-risk patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) but no history of MI or stroke, AstraZeneca announced today. 


The new indication is based on the results of THEMIS (Effect of Ticagrelor on Health Outcomes in Diabetes Mellitus Patients Intervention Study), in which such patients with both CAD and type 2 diabetes on dual-antiplatelet therapy that included ticagrelor 60 mg twice-daily showed a 10% drop in risk for major adverse cardiac events, compared with aspirin alone over about 3 years. The absolute difference was 0.8% in the 42-country trial with more than 19,000 patients. 


Patients falling under the new indication do not need to have diabetes, although THEMIS had entered patients with diabetes and CAD, the latter defined as a 50% or greater narrowing of a coronary artery or a history of coronary revascularization but without a history of MI or stroke. 


The trial showed a significant reduction in the rate of the primary efficacy end point (P = .04), a composite of cardiovascular death, MI, and stroke. But the risk of TIMI (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction) bleeding classification major bleeding was more than doubled in the ticagrelor group (P < .001) and the risk for intracranial hemorrhage went up 71% (P = .005). Net clinical benefit didn't differ significantly between the groups in an exploratory analysis. 


The benefit of dual-antiplatelet therapy with ticagrelor for the primary efficacy end point was even more pronounced in a prespecified THEMIS subanalysis of more than 11,000 patients with a history of percutaneous coronary intervention. In this group, the risk for  intracerebral hemorrhage didn't differ significantly between the groups, and the net clinical benefit favored ticagrelor by a significant 15%. 


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

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The Food and Drug Administration has approved ticagrelor (Brilinta/Brilique, AstraZeneca) for use with aspirin to cut the risk for a first myocardial infarction or stroke in high-risk patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) but no history of MI or stroke, AstraZeneca announced today. 


The new indication is based on the results of THEMIS (Effect of Ticagrelor on Health Outcomes in Diabetes Mellitus Patients Intervention Study), in which such patients with both CAD and type 2 diabetes on dual-antiplatelet therapy that included ticagrelor 60 mg twice-daily showed a 10% drop in risk for major adverse cardiac events, compared with aspirin alone over about 3 years. The absolute difference was 0.8% in the 42-country trial with more than 19,000 patients. 


Patients falling under the new indication do not need to have diabetes, although THEMIS had entered patients with diabetes and CAD, the latter defined as a 50% or greater narrowing of a coronary artery or a history of coronary revascularization but without a history of MI or stroke. 


The trial showed a significant reduction in the rate of the primary efficacy end point (P = .04), a composite of cardiovascular death, MI, and stroke. But the risk of TIMI (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction) bleeding classification major bleeding was more than doubled in the ticagrelor group (P < .001) and the risk for intracranial hemorrhage went up 71% (P = .005). Net clinical benefit didn't differ significantly between the groups in an exploratory analysis. 


The benefit of dual-antiplatelet therapy with ticagrelor for the primary efficacy end point was even more pronounced in a prespecified THEMIS subanalysis of more than 11,000 patients with a history of percutaneous coronary intervention. In this group, the risk for  intracerebral hemorrhage didn't differ significantly between the groups, and the net clinical benefit favored ticagrelor by a significant 15%. 


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

The Food and Drug Administration has approved ticagrelor (Brilinta/Brilique, AstraZeneca) for use with aspirin to cut the risk for a first myocardial infarction or stroke in high-risk patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) but no history of MI or stroke, AstraZeneca announced today. 


The new indication is based on the results of THEMIS (Effect of Ticagrelor on Health Outcomes in Diabetes Mellitus Patients Intervention Study), in which such patients with both CAD and type 2 diabetes on dual-antiplatelet therapy that included ticagrelor 60 mg twice-daily showed a 10% drop in risk for major adverse cardiac events, compared with aspirin alone over about 3 years. The absolute difference was 0.8% in the 42-country trial with more than 19,000 patients. 


Patients falling under the new indication do not need to have diabetes, although THEMIS had entered patients with diabetes and CAD, the latter defined as a 50% or greater narrowing of a coronary artery or a history of coronary revascularization but without a history of MI or stroke. 


The trial showed a significant reduction in the rate of the primary efficacy end point (P = .04), a composite of cardiovascular death, MI, and stroke. But the risk of TIMI (Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction) bleeding classification major bleeding was more than doubled in the ticagrelor group (P < .001) and the risk for intracranial hemorrhage went up 71% (P = .005). Net clinical benefit didn't differ significantly between the groups in an exploratory analysis. 


The benefit of dual-antiplatelet therapy with ticagrelor for the primary efficacy end point was even more pronounced in a prespecified THEMIS subanalysis of more than 11,000 patients with a history of percutaneous coronary intervention. In this group, the risk for  intracerebral hemorrhage didn't differ significantly between the groups, and the net clinical benefit favored ticagrelor by a significant 15%. 


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

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Deprescribing hypertension meds can be safe in older patients

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Tue, 06/02/2020 - 21:00

Some patients aged 80 years or older can potentially cut back on their number of antihypertensive meds, under physician guidance, without an important loss of blood pressure (BP) control, researchers concluded based on their randomized multicenter trial.

Deprescription of one of at least two antihypertensive meds in such patients was found noninferior to usual care in keeping systolic BP below 150 mm Hg at 12 weeks, in the study that randomly assigned only patients who were considered appropriate for BP-med reduction by their primary care physicians.

Major trials that have shaped some contemporary hypertension guidelines, notably SPRINT, in general have not included such older patients with hypertension along with other chronic conditions, such as diabetes or a history of stroke. So “it’s difficult to know whether their data are relevant for frail, multimorbid patients. In fact, the guidelines say you should use some clinical judgment when applying the results of SPRINT to the kind of patients seen in clinical practice,” James P. Sheppard, PhD, of University of Oxford (England) said in an interview.

The current study, called Optimising Treatment for Mild Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly (OPTIMISE), entered “patients in whom the benefits of taking blood pressure-lowering treatments might start to be outweighed by the potential harms,” Dr. Sheppard said.

The trial is meant to provide something of an otherwise-scant evidence base for how to deprescribe antihypertensive medications, said Dr. Sheppard, who is lead author on the report published May 25 in JAMA.

Of the trial’s 282 patients randomly assigned to the drug-reduction group, 86.4% reached the primary endpoint goal of systolic BP less than 150 mm Hg, compared with 87.7% of the 287 patients on usual care, a difference which in adjusted analysis met the predetermined standard for noninferiority.

The intervention group reduced its number of antihypertensive agents by a mean of 0.6 per patient, which the authors described as “a modest reduction.” However, they noted, drugs that were taken away could be reintroduced as judged necessary by the physicians, yet most of the group sustained their reductions until the end of the 12 weeks.

Had the primary endpoint instead specified a threshold of 130 mm Hg for BP control, which is more consistent with SPRINT and some guidelines in the United States, “the deprescribing strategy would have failed to be considered noninferior to usual care” as calculated by the OPTIMISE authors themselves, observed an accompanying editorial.

The 150 mm Hg threshold chosen by the trialists for the primary endpoint, therefore, “was somewhat of a low bar,” wrote Eric D. Peterson, MD, MPH, of Duke University, Durham, N.C., and Michael W. Rich, MD, of Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Mo.

“Here in the UK it wouldn’t be considered a low bar,” Dr. Sheppard said in an interview. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines in Britain “recommends that you treat people over the age of 18 regardless of whether they have any other conditions and to 150 mm Hg systolic.”



The study’s general practitioners, he said, “did what we told them to do, and as a result, two-thirds of the patients were able to reduce their medications. If we had a lower threshold for treatment, it’s possible that more patients might have had medications reintroduced. I think you still could have potentially ended up with a noninferior result.”

Participating physicians were instructed to enroll only “patients who, in their opinion, might potentially benefit from medication reduction due to one or more of the following existing characteristics: polypharmacy, comorbidity, nonadherence or dislike of medicines, or frailty,” the report notes.

They chose which antihypertensives would be dropped for each patient and “were given a medication reduction algorithm to assist with this decision.” Physicians also followed a guide for monitoring for safety issues and were told to reintroduce medications if systolic BP exceeded 150 mm Hg or diastolic BP rose above 90 mm Hg for more than 1 week or in the event of adverse events or signs of accelerated hypertension, the group wrote.

In the deprescription group, the mean systolic BP rose 4.3 points from baseline to 12 weeks, from 129.4 to 133.7 mm Hg. For those given usual care, mean systolic BP went from 130.5 to 130.8 mm Hg. Adjusted, the mean change in systolic BP was 3.4 mm Hg greater (P = .005) in the intervention group. The corresponding adjusted mean change in diastolic BP was a 2.2 mm Hg increase in the intervention group (P = .001).

Although the difference seems minimal, wrote Dr. Peterson and Dr. Rich, “such differences in BP can potentially lead to long-term differences in outcomes at the population level.”

Also, they pointed out, only about 10% of patients screened for enrollment actually entered the study, which brings into question the study’s generalizability, and “patients in the trial had relatively well-controlled BP at baseline.”

Dr. Sheppard said patients in the original screened population, taken from a national database, were directly invited to participate en masse by conventional mail, based on broad inclusion criteria. Far more than the number needed were invited, and nearly all of those excluded from the study had simply not responded to the invitation.

As for greater increases in systolic and diastolic pressures in the deprescribing group, the OPTIMISE authors acknowledged that “caution should be exercised when adopting this approach in routine clinical practice.”

His own view, Dr. Sheppard said, “is that there are some patients who will definitely benefit from intensive blood pressure lowering like you saw in the SPRINT trial. And there’s other patients who will benefit from deprescribing and having a slightly higher target. Those sorts of things very much need to be individualized at the patient level.”

And ideally, he added, clinicians in practice should probably be even more selective in choosing patients for a deprescribing strategy, “and focus on people who are at the highest risk of adverse events.”

Dr. Sheppard has disclosed no relevant financial relationships; disclosures for the other authors are in the report. Dr. Peterson disclosed receiving personal fees from Cerner and Livongo and grants and personal fees from AstraZeneca, Janssen, and Amgen; Dr. Rick has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Some patients aged 80 years or older can potentially cut back on their number of antihypertensive meds, under physician guidance, without an important loss of blood pressure (BP) control, researchers concluded based on their randomized multicenter trial.

Deprescription of one of at least two antihypertensive meds in such patients was found noninferior to usual care in keeping systolic BP below 150 mm Hg at 12 weeks, in the study that randomly assigned only patients who were considered appropriate for BP-med reduction by their primary care physicians.

Major trials that have shaped some contemporary hypertension guidelines, notably SPRINT, in general have not included such older patients with hypertension along with other chronic conditions, such as diabetes or a history of stroke. So “it’s difficult to know whether their data are relevant for frail, multimorbid patients. In fact, the guidelines say you should use some clinical judgment when applying the results of SPRINT to the kind of patients seen in clinical practice,” James P. Sheppard, PhD, of University of Oxford (England) said in an interview.

The current study, called Optimising Treatment for Mild Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly (OPTIMISE), entered “patients in whom the benefits of taking blood pressure-lowering treatments might start to be outweighed by the potential harms,” Dr. Sheppard said.

The trial is meant to provide something of an otherwise-scant evidence base for how to deprescribe antihypertensive medications, said Dr. Sheppard, who is lead author on the report published May 25 in JAMA.

Of the trial’s 282 patients randomly assigned to the drug-reduction group, 86.4% reached the primary endpoint goal of systolic BP less than 150 mm Hg, compared with 87.7% of the 287 patients on usual care, a difference which in adjusted analysis met the predetermined standard for noninferiority.

The intervention group reduced its number of antihypertensive agents by a mean of 0.6 per patient, which the authors described as “a modest reduction.” However, they noted, drugs that were taken away could be reintroduced as judged necessary by the physicians, yet most of the group sustained their reductions until the end of the 12 weeks.

Had the primary endpoint instead specified a threshold of 130 mm Hg for BP control, which is more consistent with SPRINT and some guidelines in the United States, “the deprescribing strategy would have failed to be considered noninferior to usual care” as calculated by the OPTIMISE authors themselves, observed an accompanying editorial.

The 150 mm Hg threshold chosen by the trialists for the primary endpoint, therefore, “was somewhat of a low bar,” wrote Eric D. Peterson, MD, MPH, of Duke University, Durham, N.C., and Michael W. Rich, MD, of Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Mo.

“Here in the UK it wouldn’t be considered a low bar,” Dr. Sheppard said in an interview. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines in Britain “recommends that you treat people over the age of 18 regardless of whether they have any other conditions and to 150 mm Hg systolic.”



The study’s general practitioners, he said, “did what we told them to do, and as a result, two-thirds of the patients were able to reduce their medications. If we had a lower threshold for treatment, it’s possible that more patients might have had medications reintroduced. I think you still could have potentially ended up with a noninferior result.”

Participating physicians were instructed to enroll only “patients who, in their opinion, might potentially benefit from medication reduction due to one or more of the following existing characteristics: polypharmacy, comorbidity, nonadherence or dislike of medicines, or frailty,” the report notes.

They chose which antihypertensives would be dropped for each patient and “were given a medication reduction algorithm to assist with this decision.” Physicians also followed a guide for monitoring for safety issues and were told to reintroduce medications if systolic BP exceeded 150 mm Hg or diastolic BP rose above 90 mm Hg for more than 1 week or in the event of adverse events or signs of accelerated hypertension, the group wrote.

In the deprescription group, the mean systolic BP rose 4.3 points from baseline to 12 weeks, from 129.4 to 133.7 mm Hg. For those given usual care, mean systolic BP went from 130.5 to 130.8 mm Hg. Adjusted, the mean change in systolic BP was 3.4 mm Hg greater (P = .005) in the intervention group. The corresponding adjusted mean change in diastolic BP was a 2.2 mm Hg increase in the intervention group (P = .001).

Although the difference seems minimal, wrote Dr. Peterson and Dr. Rich, “such differences in BP can potentially lead to long-term differences in outcomes at the population level.”

Also, they pointed out, only about 10% of patients screened for enrollment actually entered the study, which brings into question the study’s generalizability, and “patients in the trial had relatively well-controlled BP at baseline.”

Dr. Sheppard said patients in the original screened population, taken from a national database, were directly invited to participate en masse by conventional mail, based on broad inclusion criteria. Far more than the number needed were invited, and nearly all of those excluded from the study had simply not responded to the invitation.

As for greater increases in systolic and diastolic pressures in the deprescribing group, the OPTIMISE authors acknowledged that “caution should be exercised when adopting this approach in routine clinical practice.”

His own view, Dr. Sheppard said, “is that there are some patients who will definitely benefit from intensive blood pressure lowering like you saw in the SPRINT trial. And there’s other patients who will benefit from deprescribing and having a slightly higher target. Those sorts of things very much need to be individualized at the patient level.”

And ideally, he added, clinicians in practice should probably be even more selective in choosing patients for a deprescribing strategy, “and focus on people who are at the highest risk of adverse events.”

Dr. Sheppard has disclosed no relevant financial relationships; disclosures for the other authors are in the report. Dr. Peterson disclosed receiving personal fees from Cerner and Livongo and grants and personal fees from AstraZeneca, Janssen, and Amgen; Dr. Rick has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Some patients aged 80 years or older can potentially cut back on their number of antihypertensive meds, under physician guidance, without an important loss of blood pressure (BP) control, researchers concluded based on their randomized multicenter trial.

Deprescription of one of at least two antihypertensive meds in such patients was found noninferior to usual care in keeping systolic BP below 150 mm Hg at 12 weeks, in the study that randomly assigned only patients who were considered appropriate for BP-med reduction by their primary care physicians.

Major trials that have shaped some contemporary hypertension guidelines, notably SPRINT, in general have not included such older patients with hypertension along with other chronic conditions, such as diabetes or a history of stroke. So “it’s difficult to know whether their data are relevant for frail, multimorbid patients. In fact, the guidelines say you should use some clinical judgment when applying the results of SPRINT to the kind of patients seen in clinical practice,” James P. Sheppard, PhD, of University of Oxford (England) said in an interview.

The current study, called Optimising Treatment for Mild Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly (OPTIMISE), entered “patients in whom the benefits of taking blood pressure-lowering treatments might start to be outweighed by the potential harms,” Dr. Sheppard said.

The trial is meant to provide something of an otherwise-scant evidence base for how to deprescribe antihypertensive medications, said Dr. Sheppard, who is lead author on the report published May 25 in JAMA.

Of the trial’s 282 patients randomly assigned to the drug-reduction group, 86.4% reached the primary endpoint goal of systolic BP less than 150 mm Hg, compared with 87.7% of the 287 patients on usual care, a difference which in adjusted analysis met the predetermined standard for noninferiority.

The intervention group reduced its number of antihypertensive agents by a mean of 0.6 per patient, which the authors described as “a modest reduction.” However, they noted, drugs that were taken away could be reintroduced as judged necessary by the physicians, yet most of the group sustained their reductions until the end of the 12 weeks.

Had the primary endpoint instead specified a threshold of 130 mm Hg for BP control, which is more consistent with SPRINT and some guidelines in the United States, “the deprescribing strategy would have failed to be considered noninferior to usual care” as calculated by the OPTIMISE authors themselves, observed an accompanying editorial.

The 150 mm Hg threshold chosen by the trialists for the primary endpoint, therefore, “was somewhat of a low bar,” wrote Eric D. Peterson, MD, MPH, of Duke University, Durham, N.C., and Michael W. Rich, MD, of Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Mo.

“Here in the UK it wouldn’t be considered a low bar,” Dr. Sheppard said in an interview. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidelines in Britain “recommends that you treat people over the age of 18 regardless of whether they have any other conditions and to 150 mm Hg systolic.”



The study’s general practitioners, he said, “did what we told them to do, and as a result, two-thirds of the patients were able to reduce their medications. If we had a lower threshold for treatment, it’s possible that more patients might have had medications reintroduced. I think you still could have potentially ended up with a noninferior result.”

Participating physicians were instructed to enroll only “patients who, in their opinion, might potentially benefit from medication reduction due to one or more of the following existing characteristics: polypharmacy, comorbidity, nonadherence or dislike of medicines, or frailty,” the report notes.

They chose which antihypertensives would be dropped for each patient and “were given a medication reduction algorithm to assist with this decision.” Physicians also followed a guide for monitoring for safety issues and were told to reintroduce medications if systolic BP exceeded 150 mm Hg or diastolic BP rose above 90 mm Hg for more than 1 week or in the event of adverse events or signs of accelerated hypertension, the group wrote.

In the deprescription group, the mean systolic BP rose 4.3 points from baseline to 12 weeks, from 129.4 to 133.7 mm Hg. For those given usual care, mean systolic BP went from 130.5 to 130.8 mm Hg. Adjusted, the mean change in systolic BP was 3.4 mm Hg greater (P = .005) in the intervention group. The corresponding adjusted mean change in diastolic BP was a 2.2 mm Hg increase in the intervention group (P = .001).

Although the difference seems minimal, wrote Dr. Peterson and Dr. Rich, “such differences in BP can potentially lead to long-term differences in outcomes at the population level.”

Also, they pointed out, only about 10% of patients screened for enrollment actually entered the study, which brings into question the study’s generalizability, and “patients in the trial had relatively well-controlled BP at baseline.”

Dr. Sheppard said patients in the original screened population, taken from a national database, were directly invited to participate en masse by conventional mail, based on broad inclusion criteria. Far more than the number needed were invited, and nearly all of those excluded from the study had simply not responded to the invitation.

As for greater increases in systolic and diastolic pressures in the deprescribing group, the OPTIMISE authors acknowledged that “caution should be exercised when adopting this approach in routine clinical practice.”

His own view, Dr. Sheppard said, “is that there are some patients who will definitely benefit from intensive blood pressure lowering like you saw in the SPRINT trial. And there’s other patients who will benefit from deprescribing and having a slightly higher target. Those sorts of things very much need to be individualized at the patient level.”

And ideally, he added, clinicians in practice should probably be even more selective in choosing patients for a deprescribing strategy, “and focus on people who are at the highest risk of adverse events.”

Dr. Sheppard has disclosed no relevant financial relationships; disclosures for the other authors are in the report. Dr. Peterson disclosed receiving personal fees from Cerner and Livongo and grants and personal fees from AstraZeneca, Janssen, and Amgen; Dr. Rick has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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COVID-19: New group stands up for health professionals facing retaliation

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:06

Sejal Hathi, MD, and two colleagues had long kicked around the idea of starting a nonprofit group that would center on civic and legal advocacy.

Dr. Sejal Hathi of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Courtesy Dr. Sejal Hathi
Dr. Sejal Hathi

Once the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the three friends – who have a mix of legal, medical, and advocacy backgrounds – began chatting by email and through Zoom video meetings about how to make the plan a reality.

“When COVID came around, we began talking about where we could make a difference and help people where help was needed most,” said Dr. Hathi, an internal medicine resident at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “We decided the PPE issue makes a good first focus.”

The new organization – named Beacon – quickly mobilized, assembled their team, and launched a website. Beacon’s first project now aims to highlight and protect the legal rights of medical professionals who speak out about personal protection equipment (PPE) supply and other matters of public concern related to coronavirus.

In recent months, health care professionals have reported being reprimanded or even terminated for publicly discussing PPE shortages or sharing safety concerns. Other clinicians say they can’t share their experiences for fear of reprisal by their hospitals.

John Paul Schnapper-Casteras, attorney and cofounder of Beacon
Courtesy John Paul Schnapper-Casteras
John Paul Schnapper-Casteras

“The centrality of adequate PPE is pretty undeniable at this point,” said John Paul Schnapper-Casteras, JD, an attorney and cofounder of the organization. “In terms of speaking up about matters of workplace safety and public concern, when health care workers share knowledge, correct problems – and in some cases, blow the whistle – it affirmatively benefits medical science, disease control, and the public interest,” he said in an interview. “We have seen in other countries, the disastrous consequences that can stem from silencing medical professionals who try to speak out.”
 

Letter highlights hospitals’ obligations

As part of their efforts, Beacon leaders drafted a strongly worded letter on behalf of health care workers outlining the legal obligations of hospitals to ensure workplace safety, underscoring the federal protections that bar retaliation against employees who exercise their workplace rights. Whistleblower protections under the Occupational Safety and Health Act, the False Claims Act, and the National Labor Relations Act, for instance, prohibit retaliation against employees for blowing the whistle on unsafe or unlawful conditions.

Beacon’s letter urges hospitals to adopt a uniform policy that recognizes “the importance and legitimacy of doctors, nurses, and medical professionals who research, write, and speak about the use and supply of PPE in addressing coronavirus.”

“We are deeply troubled by reports that medical professionals are being fired, retaliated against, disciplined, or threatened for speaking (or potentially speaking) about PPE shortages and related safety conditions that directly place their and their patients’ lives in danger,” the letter states. “As a matter of law, medical personnel have a wide range of rights that protect their employment status and ability to comment on matters of public concern (and provide a cause of action in court if these rights are violated).”



Dr. Hathi, who over the last decade has founded two social enterprises advancing women’s rights, said organizers have sent the letter to hospitals and health systems that were publicly reported or otherwise known to have threatened, terminated, or retaliated against employees for protesting PPE shortages or speaking up about unsafe working conditions during this crisis. The letter is available on the Beacon website.

“Many letters have been written [recently] criticizing hospitals for retaliating against their workers,” Dr. Hathi said. “Ours amplifies this voice. But it also serves as a tool for self-empowerment, a stark warning to health systems that their actions bear consequences, and an assurance to health workers across the country that we’re listening and we’re here to help them safeguard their rights and their dignity at work.”

Dr. Hathi and her colleagues have also circulated the letter on social media and other platforms as a petition that health care professionals and others can sign in support of fair and safe treatment of employees with respect to PPE. So far, the group has collected signatures from individuals, communities, and organizations representing about 35,000 people, Dr. Hathi said.

 

 

Workplace rights, legal options

Beacon leaders have also begun counseling and advising health care workers who have experienced retaliation or discipline associated with PPE issues. Educating medical professionals about their workplace rights and legal options is another key focus of the group, according to its founders.

“There are a flurry of reports coming our way about physicians and nurses, as well as other health care workers, who are for whatever reason being disciplined or retaliated against for simply seeking appropriate safety policies at their workplaces,” Dr. Hathi said. “What we’ve found is that many of them don’t even know what their options look like. Doctors, nurses, health care workers are not the typical type to engage politically, to speak out, [or to] advocate for themselves.”

In one instance, they heard from a physician who wanted to protect nurses at his hospital because they did not have masks and were being coughed on by COVID-19 patients. The doctor requested that his hospital supply masks to the nurses. After making the request, the physician was disciplined by hospital leadership, Dr. Hathi said. In another case, a physician assistant told the group she was terminated because she wanted to wear her own mask in a hospital that was treating COVID patients.

Sheel Tyle, attorney and Beacon cofounder
Courtesy Sheel Tyle
Sheel Tyle

“She was not allowed to, and she was fired for even bringing it up,” said Sheel Tyle, JD, an attorney and Beacon cofounder.

Beacon intends to assist health care workers who face such retaliation and discipline in a number of ways, Mr. Tyle said. For instance, by helping an individual get compensation for what happened, aiding the professional in getting their job back, or helping the worker retain a severance package of some kind, he said.

“And then there is the larger public policy issue of preventing the hospital from being a bad actor,” Mr. Tyle said. “That can be done through state or federal complaints, largely under different statutes related to workplace protection or OSHA. Our group [has] lawyers that could represent clients individually as well as a number of friends who are attorneys in various states who we could partner with, depending on the situation.”

While the organization is positioned to represent health professionals in lawsuits if necessary, Mr. Tyle emphasized that litigation is not the intended goal of the group. Rather, they are seeking to deter hospitals and others from being “bad actors,” through any number of methods, including communication, advocacy, or complaints.

Ultimately, Dr. Hathi said she hopes the organization’s efforts activate health care workers as an organizing body and in the process, spark policy change at the federal level to better protect health care workers.

“The challenges we’re facing now – protecting workplace safety, employee voice, a living wage, adequate sick and family leave – long predate this pandemic,” Dr. Hathi said. “But they’ve deepened and acquired existential significance as, battered by policy failures and the unsparing virus itself, physicians shed their political indifference and join a growing nationwide chorus to restore workers’ rights and to fundamentally reimagine our broken healthcare system. Now, more than ever before, organizations like Beacon are vital for arming health workers in this fight.”

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Sejal Hathi, MD, and two colleagues had long kicked around the idea of starting a nonprofit group that would center on civic and legal advocacy.

Dr. Sejal Hathi of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Courtesy Dr. Sejal Hathi
Dr. Sejal Hathi

Once the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the three friends – who have a mix of legal, medical, and advocacy backgrounds – began chatting by email and through Zoom video meetings about how to make the plan a reality.

“When COVID came around, we began talking about where we could make a difference and help people where help was needed most,” said Dr. Hathi, an internal medicine resident at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “We decided the PPE issue makes a good first focus.”

The new organization – named Beacon – quickly mobilized, assembled their team, and launched a website. Beacon’s first project now aims to highlight and protect the legal rights of medical professionals who speak out about personal protection equipment (PPE) supply and other matters of public concern related to coronavirus.

In recent months, health care professionals have reported being reprimanded or even terminated for publicly discussing PPE shortages or sharing safety concerns. Other clinicians say they can’t share their experiences for fear of reprisal by their hospitals.

John Paul Schnapper-Casteras, attorney and cofounder of Beacon
Courtesy John Paul Schnapper-Casteras
John Paul Schnapper-Casteras

“The centrality of adequate PPE is pretty undeniable at this point,” said John Paul Schnapper-Casteras, JD, an attorney and cofounder of the organization. “In terms of speaking up about matters of workplace safety and public concern, when health care workers share knowledge, correct problems – and in some cases, blow the whistle – it affirmatively benefits medical science, disease control, and the public interest,” he said in an interview. “We have seen in other countries, the disastrous consequences that can stem from silencing medical professionals who try to speak out.”
 

Letter highlights hospitals’ obligations

As part of their efforts, Beacon leaders drafted a strongly worded letter on behalf of health care workers outlining the legal obligations of hospitals to ensure workplace safety, underscoring the federal protections that bar retaliation against employees who exercise their workplace rights. Whistleblower protections under the Occupational Safety and Health Act, the False Claims Act, and the National Labor Relations Act, for instance, prohibit retaliation against employees for blowing the whistle on unsafe or unlawful conditions.

Beacon’s letter urges hospitals to adopt a uniform policy that recognizes “the importance and legitimacy of doctors, nurses, and medical professionals who research, write, and speak about the use and supply of PPE in addressing coronavirus.”

“We are deeply troubled by reports that medical professionals are being fired, retaliated against, disciplined, or threatened for speaking (or potentially speaking) about PPE shortages and related safety conditions that directly place their and their patients’ lives in danger,” the letter states. “As a matter of law, medical personnel have a wide range of rights that protect their employment status and ability to comment on matters of public concern (and provide a cause of action in court if these rights are violated).”



Dr. Hathi, who over the last decade has founded two social enterprises advancing women’s rights, said organizers have sent the letter to hospitals and health systems that were publicly reported or otherwise known to have threatened, terminated, or retaliated against employees for protesting PPE shortages or speaking up about unsafe working conditions during this crisis. The letter is available on the Beacon website.

“Many letters have been written [recently] criticizing hospitals for retaliating against their workers,” Dr. Hathi said. “Ours amplifies this voice. But it also serves as a tool for self-empowerment, a stark warning to health systems that their actions bear consequences, and an assurance to health workers across the country that we’re listening and we’re here to help them safeguard their rights and their dignity at work.”

Dr. Hathi and her colleagues have also circulated the letter on social media and other platforms as a petition that health care professionals and others can sign in support of fair and safe treatment of employees with respect to PPE. So far, the group has collected signatures from individuals, communities, and organizations representing about 35,000 people, Dr. Hathi said.

 

 

Workplace rights, legal options

Beacon leaders have also begun counseling and advising health care workers who have experienced retaliation or discipline associated with PPE issues. Educating medical professionals about their workplace rights and legal options is another key focus of the group, according to its founders.

“There are a flurry of reports coming our way about physicians and nurses, as well as other health care workers, who are for whatever reason being disciplined or retaliated against for simply seeking appropriate safety policies at their workplaces,” Dr. Hathi said. “What we’ve found is that many of them don’t even know what their options look like. Doctors, nurses, health care workers are not the typical type to engage politically, to speak out, [or to] advocate for themselves.”

In one instance, they heard from a physician who wanted to protect nurses at his hospital because they did not have masks and were being coughed on by COVID-19 patients. The doctor requested that his hospital supply masks to the nurses. After making the request, the physician was disciplined by hospital leadership, Dr. Hathi said. In another case, a physician assistant told the group she was terminated because she wanted to wear her own mask in a hospital that was treating COVID patients.

Sheel Tyle, attorney and Beacon cofounder
Courtesy Sheel Tyle
Sheel Tyle

“She was not allowed to, and she was fired for even bringing it up,” said Sheel Tyle, JD, an attorney and Beacon cofounder.

Beacon intends to assist health care workers who face such retaliation and discipline in a number of ways, Mr. Tyle said. For instance, by helping an individual get compensation for what happened, aiding the professional in getting their job back, or helping the worker retain a severance package of some kind, he said.

“And then there is the larger public policy issue of preventing the hospital from being a bad actor,” Mr. Tyle said. “That can be done through state or federal complaints, largely under different statutes related to workplace protection or OSHA. Our group [has] lawyers that could represent clients individually as well as a number of friends who are attorneys in various states who we could partner with, depending on the situation.”

While the organization is positioned to represent health professionals in lawsuits if necessary, Mr. Tyle emphasized that litigation is not the intended goal of the group. Rather, they are seeking to deter hospitals and others from being “bad actors,” through any number of methods, including communication, advocacy, or complaints.

Ultimately, Dr. Hathi said she hopes the organization’s efforts activate health care workers as an organizing body and in the process, spark policy change at the federal level to better protect health care workers.

“The challenges we’re facing now – protecting workplace safety, employee voice, a living wage, adequate sick and family leave – long predate this pandemic,” Dr. Hathi said. “But they’ve deepened and acquired existential significance as, battered by policy failures and the unsparing virus itself, physicians shed their political indifference and join a growing nationwide chorus to restore workers’ rights and to fundamentally reimagine our broken healthcare system. Now, more than ever before, organizations like Beacon are vital for arming health workers in this fight.”

Sejal Hathi, MD, and two colleagues had long kicked around the idea of starting a nonprofit group that would center on civic and legal advocacy.

Dr. Sejal Hathi of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Courtesy Dr. Sejal Hathi
Dr. Sejal Hathi

Once the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the three friends – who have a mix of legal, medical, and advocacy backgrounds – began chatting by email and through Zoom video meetings about how to make the plan a reality.

“When COVID came around, we began talking about where we could make a difference and help people where help was needed most,” said Dr. Hathi, an internal medicine resident at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “We decided the PPE issue makes a good first focus.”

The new organization – named Beacon – quickly mobilized, assembled their team, and launched a website. Beacon’s first project now aims to highlight and protect the legal rights of medical professionals who speak out about personal protection equipment (PPE) supply and other matters of public concern related to coronavirus.

In recent months, health care professionals have reported being reprimanded or even terminated for publicly discussing PPE shortages or sharing safety concerns. Other clinicians say they can’t share their experiences for fear of reprisal by their hospitals.

John Paul Schnapper-Casteras, attorney and cofounder of Beacon
Courtesy John Paul Schnapper-Casteras
John Paul Schnapper-Casteras

“The centrality of adequate PPE is pretty undeniable at this point,” said John Paul Schnapper-Casteras, JD, an attorney and cofounder of the organization. “In terms of speaking up about matters of workplace safety and public concern, when health care workers share knowledge, correct problems – and in some cases, blow the whistle – it affirmatively benefits medical science, disease control, and the public interest,” he said in an interview. “We have seen in other countries, the disastrous consequences that can stem from silencing medical professionals who try to speak out.”
 

Letter highlights hospitals’ obligations

As part of their efforts, Beacon leaders drafted a strongly worded letter on behalf of health care workers outlining the legal obligations of hospitals to ensure workplace safety, underscoring the federal protections that bar retaliation against employees who exercise their workplace rights. Whistleblower protections under the Occupational Safety and Health Act, the False Claims Act, and the National Labor Relations Act, for instance, prohibit retaliation against employees for blowing the whistle on unsafe or unlawful conditions.

Beacon’s letter urges hospitals to adopt a uniform policy that recognizes “the importance and legitimacy of doctors, nurses, and medical professionals who research, write, and speak about the use and supply of PPE in addressing coronavirus.”

“We are deeply troubled by reports that medical professionals are being fired, retaliated against, disciplined, or threatened for speaking (or potentially speaking) about PPE shortages and related safety conditions that directly place their and their patients’ lives in danger,” the letter states. “As a matter of law, medical personnel have a wide range of rights that protect their employment status and ability to comment on matters of public concern (and provide a cause of action in court if these rights are violated).”



Dr. Hathi, who over the last decade has founded two social enterprises advancing women’s rights, said organizers have sent the letter to hospitals and health systems that were publicly reported or otherwise known to have threatened, terminated, or retaliated against employees for protesting PPE shortages or speaking up about unsafe working conditions during this crisis. The letter is available on the Beacon website.

“Many letters have been written [recently] criticizing hospitals for retaliating against their workers,” Dr. Hathi said. “Ours amplifies this voice. But it also serves as a tool for self-empowerment, a stark warning to health systems that their actions bear consequences, and an assurance to health workers across the country that we’re listening and we’re here to help them safeguard their rights and their dignity at work.”

Dr. Hathi and her colleagues have also circulated the letter on social media and other platforms as a petition that health care professionals and others can sign in support of fair and safe treatment of employees with respect to PPE. So far, the group has collected signatures from individuals, communities, and organizations representing about 35,000 people, Dr. Hathi said.

 

 

Workplace rights, legal options

Beacon leaders have also begun counseling and advising health care workers who have experienced retaliation or discipline associated with PPE issues. Educating medical professionals about their workplace rights and legal options is another key focus of the group, according to its founders.

“There are a flurry of reports coming our way about physicians and nurses, as well as other health care workers, who are for whatever reason being disciplined or retaliated against for simply seeking appropriate safety policies at their workplaces,” Dr. Hathi said. “What we’ve found is that many of them don’t even know what their options look like. Doctors, nurses, health care workers are not the typical type to engage politically, to speak out, [or to] advocate for themselves.”

In one instance, they heard from a physician who wanted to protect nurses at his hospital because they did not have masks and were being coughed on by COVID-19 patients. The doctor requested that his hospital supply masks to the nurses. After making the request, the physician was disciplined by hospital leadership, Dr. Hathi said. In another case, a physician assistant told the group she was terminated because she wanted to wear her own mask in a hospital that was treating COVID patients.

Sheel Tyle, attorney and Beacon cofounder
Courtesy Sheel Tyle
Sheel Tyle

“She was not allowed to, and she was fired for even bringing it up,” said Sheel Tyle, JD, an attorney and Beacon cofounder.

Beacon intends to assist health care workers who face such retaliation and discipline in a number of ways, Mr. Tyle said. For instance, by helping an individual get compensation for what happened, aiding the professional in getting their job back, or helping the worker retain a severance package of some kind, he said.

“And then there is the larger public policy issue of preventing the hospital from being a bad actor,” Mr. Tyle said. “That can be done through state or federal complaints, largely under different statutes related to workplace protection or OSHA. Our group [has] lawyers that could represent clients individually as well as a number of friends who are attorneys in various states who we could partner with, depending on the situation.”

While the organization is positioned to represent health professionals in lawsuits if necessary, Mr. Tyle emphasized that litigation is not the intended goal of the group. Rather, they are seeking to deter hospitals and others from being “bad actors,” through any number of methods, including communication, advocacy, or complaints.

Ultimately, Dr. Hathi said she hopes the organization’s efforts activate health care workers as an organizing body and in the process, spark policy change at the federal level to better protect health care workers.

“The challenges we’re facing now – protecting workplace safety, employee voice, a living wage, adequate sick and family leave – long predate this pandemic,” Dr. Hathi said. “But they’ve deepened and acquired existential significance as, battered by policy failures and the unsparing virus itself, physicians shed their political indifference and join a growing nationwide chorus to restore workers’ rights and to fundamentally reimagine our broken healthcare system. Now, more than ever before, organizations like Beacon are vital for arming health workers in this fight.”

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FDA okays emergency use for Impella RP in COVID-19 right heart failure

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:06

 

The Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization for use of the Impella RP heart pump system in COVID-19 patients with right heart failure or decompensation, Abiomed announced June 1.

“Based on extrapolation of data from the approved indication and reported clinical experience, FDA has concluded that the Impella RP may be effective at providing temporary right ventricular support for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by COVID-19 complications, including PE [pulmonary embolism],” the letter noted.

It cited, for example, use of the temporary heart pump in a 59-year-old woman suffering from COVID-19 who went into right ventricular failure and became hypotensive after an acute PE was removed. After placement of the device, the patient experienced a “dramatic and immediate” improvement in arterial pressure and the device was removed on the fifth day, according to Amir Kaki, MD, and Ted Schreiber, MD, of Ascension St. John Hospital, Detroit, whose review of the case has been posted online.

“Acute pulmonary embolism is clearly being recognized as a life-threatening manifestation of COVID-19. Impella RP is an important tool to help cardiologists save lives during this pandemic,” Dr. Kaki said in the letter. “As we have demonstrated in our series of patients, early recognition of right ventricular dysfunction and early placement of the Impella RP for patients who are hypotensive can be lifesaving.”

Other data cited in support of the Impella RP emergency use authorization (EUA) include a 2019 series of hemodynamically unstable patients with PE in Japan and a 2017 case report of a 47-year-old man with right ventricular failure, profound shock, and a massive PE.

The FDA granted premarket approval of the Impella RP system in 2017 to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 who develop acute right heart failure or decompensation following left ventricular assist device implantation, MI, heart transplant, or open-heart surgery.

The EUA indication for the Impella RP system is to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in critical care patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by complications related to COVID-19, including PE.

The Impella RP is authorized only for emergency use under the EUA and only for the duration of the circumstances justifying use of EUAs, the letter noted.

Last year, concerns were raised about off-indication use after interim results from a postapproval study suggested a higher risk for death than seen in premarket studies treated with the temporary heart pump.

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

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The Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization for use of the Impella RP heart pump system in COVID-19 patients with right heart failure or decompensation, Abiomed announced June 1.

“Based on extrapolation of data from the approved indication and reported clinical experience, FDA has concluded that the Impella RP may be effective at providing temporary right ventricular support for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by COVID-19 complications, including PE [pulmonary embolism],” the letter noted.

It cited, for example, use of the temporary heart pump in a 59-year-old woman suffering from COVID-19 who went into right ventricular failure and became hypotensive after an acute PE was removed. After placement of the device, the patient experienced a “dramatic and immediate” improvement in arterial pressure and the device was removed on the fifth day, according to Amir Kaki, MD, and Ted Schreiber, MD, of Ascension St. John Hospital, Detroit, whose review of the case has been posted online.

“Acute pulmonary embolism is clearly being recognized as a life-threatening manifestation of COVID-19. Impella RP is an important tool to help cardiologists save lives during this pandemic,” Dr. Kaki said in the letter. “As we have demonstrated in our series of patients, early recognition of right ventricular dysfunction and early placement of the Impella RP for patients who are hypotensive can be lifesaving.”

Other data cited in support of the Impella RP emergency use authorization (EUA) include a 2019 series of hemodynamically unstable patients with PE in Japan and a 2017 case report of a 47-year-old man with right ventricular failure, profound shock, and a massive PE.

The FDA granted premarket approval of the Impella RP system in 2017 to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 who develop acute right heart failure or decompensation following left ventricular assist device implantation, MI, heart transplant, or open-heart surgery.

The EUA indication for the Impella RP system is to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in critical care patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by complications related to COVID-19, including PE.

The Impella RP is authorized only for emergency use under the EUA and only for the duration of the circumstances justifying use of EUAs, the letter noted.

Last year, concerns were raised about off-indication use after interim results from a postapproval study suggested a higher risk for death than seen in premarket studies treated with the temporary heart pump.

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

 

The Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization for use of the Impella RP heart pump system in COVID-19 patients with right heart failure or decompensation, Abiomed announced June 1.

“Based on extrapolation of data from the approved indication and reported clinical experience, FDA has concluded that the Impella RP may be effective at providing temporary right ventricular support for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by COVID-19 complications, including PE [pulmonary embolism],” the letter noted.

It cited, for example, use of the temporary heart pump in a 59-year-old woman suffering from COVID-19 who went into right ventricular failure and became hypotensive after an acute PE was removed. After placement of the device, the patient experienced a “dramatic and immediate” improvement in arterial pressure and the device was removed on the fifth day, according to Amir Kaki, MD, and Ted Schreiber, MD, of Ascension St. John Hospital, Detroit, whose review of the case has been posted online.

“Acute pulmonary embolism is clearly being recognized as a life-threatening manifestation of COVID-19. Impella RP is an important tool to help cardiologists save lives during this pandemic,” Dr. Kaki said in the letter. “As we have demonstrated in our series of patients, early recognition of right ventricular dysfunction and early placement of the Impella RP for patients who are hypotensive can be lifesaving.”

Other data cited in support of the Impella RP emergency use authorization (EUA) include a 2019 series of hemodynamically unstable patients with PE in Japan and a 2017 case report of a 47-year-old man with right ventricular failure, profound shock, and a massive PE.

The FDA granted premarket approval of the Impella RP system in 2017 to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 who develop acute right heart failure or decompensation following left ventricular assist device implantation, MI, heart transplant, or open-heart surgery.

The EUA indication for the Impella RP system is to provide temporary right ventricular support for up to 14 days in critical care patients with a body surface area of at least 1.5 m2 for the treatment of acute right heart failure or decompensation caused by complications related to COVID-19, including PE.

The Impella RP is authorized only for emergency use under the EUA and only for the duration of the circumstances justifying use of EUAs, the letter noted.

Last year, concerns were raised about off-indication use after interim results from a postapproval study suggested a higher risk for death than seen in premarket studies treated with the temporary heart pump.

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

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DoD to Return to Work in Phases

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:06
Defense Department plan is tied to local conditions, not specific dates.

The US Department of Defense (DoD) has unveiled a plan for returning to normal operations. The plan is tied to “local conditions” and does not have specific dates for opening. Instead, the plan provides phase-by-phase guidance to commanders, supervisors, and employees to safely and effectively return to Pentagon Reservation offices. Along with guidelines for in-office and telework targets; vulnerable populations; entrance screening; and the status and cleaning of common areas, food courts, gyms and other facilities, the plan includes mandatory requirements regarding face coverings, social distancing, and symptomatic personnel throughout each phase.

 

Building on the 3-phase White House “Opening Up America Again” plan, the Joint Staff, military services, and the DoD COVID Task Force have developed a 5-phase plan. Currently, the department is at Phase Zero. The Pentagon Reservation Plan for Resilience and ‘Aligning with National Guidelines for Opening Up America Again’ “places the health and safety of our workforce first,” is “nested” within the White House, Office of Management and Budget, and Office of Personnel Management guidelines and plans. The goal is to allow the workforce to return to the Pentagon Reservation “in a controlled and steady manner.”

 

The DoD reported nearly 10,000 COVID-19 cases as of June 1, 2020, including 6,596 active-duty service members, 1,124 dependents, 1,516 civilians, and 649 DoD contractors. To date, 3 service members and 5 dependents have died of COVID-19, including Capt. Douglas Linn Hickok, a physician assistant and member of the New Jersey National Guard, who died March 28, 2020.

 

Since mid-March the DoD says it has taken “aggressive steps” to stop the spread of COVID-19, implementing health protection measures that resulted in a sustained transmission rate below that of the region at large. Teams have deep cleaned and sanitized more than 1 million square feet of office space on the Pentagon Reservation to US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention standards. And for the first time ever, according to the DoD, maximized telework options have enabled more than two-thirds of the Pentagon Reservation workforce to continue to work at alternate locations.

 

The criteria to enter Phase 1 require a downward trajectory of influenza-like illnesses reported with a 14-day period and a downward trajectory of COVID-like symptoms reported within a 14-day period. There must also be a downward trajectory of documented COVID-19 cases within a 14-day period or a downward trajectory of positive COVID-19 tests as a percentage of total tests within a 14-day period (flat or increasing volume of tests).

 

Finally, hospitals must treat all patients without crisis care and have a “robust” testing program in place for at-risk health care workers, including emerging antibody testing.

 

Those same criteria must be met between each phase of the plan. The “gates” for controlling moves from phase to phase are not tied to dates but are based on state, regional, and local public health conditions, availability of hospitals and testing capacity, and monitoring through the DoD’s Electronic Surveillance System for Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics (ESSENCE).

 

If the monitors detect a resurgence in the spread of COVID-19, the department will reassess its protection measures and workforce phase and respond appropriately. DoD service members and civilian employees are advised to talk with their commanders or supervisors to determine when it’s all right to return.

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Defense Department plan is tied to local conditions, not specific dates.
Defense Department plan is tied to local conditions, not specific dates.

The US Department of Defense (DoD) has unveiled a plan for returning to normal operations. The plan is tied to “local conditions” and does not have specific dates for opening. Instead, the plan provides phase-by-phase guidance to commanders, supervisors, and employees to safely and effectively return to Pentagon Reservation offices. Along with guidelines for in-office and telework targets; vulnerable populations; entrance screening; and the status and cleaning of common areas, food courts, gyms and other facilities, the plan includes mandatory requirements regarding face coverings, social distancing, and symptomatic personnel throughout each phase.

 

Building on the 3-phase White House “Opening Up America Again” plan, the Joint Staff, military services, and the DoD COVID Task Force have developed a 5-phase plan. Currently, the department is at Phase Zero. The Pentagon Reservation Plan for Resilience and ‘Aligning with National Guidelines for Opening Up America Again’ “places the health and safety of our workforce first,” is “nested” within the White House, Office of Management and Budget, and Office of Personnel Management guidelines and plans. The goal is to allow the workforce to return to the Pentagon Reservation “in a controlled and steady manner.”

 

The DoD reported nearly 10,000 COVID-19 cases as of June 1, 2020, including 6,596 active-duty service members, 1,124 dependents, 1,516 civilians, and 649 DoD contractors. To date, 3 service members and 5 dependents have died of COVID-19, including Capt. Douglas Linn Hickok, a physician assistant and member of the New Jersey National Guard, who died March 28, 2020.

 

Since mid-March the DoD says it has taken “aggressive steps” to stop the spread of COVID-19, implementing health protection measures that resulted in a sustained transmission rate below that of the region at large. Teams have deep cleaned and sanitized more than 1 million square feet of office space on the Pentagon Reservation to US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention standards. And for the first time ever, according to the DoD, maximized telework options have enabled more than two-thirds of the Pentagon Reservation workforce to continue to work at alternate locations.

 

The criteria to enter Phase 1 require a downward trajectory of influenza-like illnesses reported with a 14-day period and a downward trajectory of COVID-like symptoms reported within a 14-day period. There must also be a downward trajectory of documented COVID-19 cases within a 14-day period or a downward trajectory of positive COVID-19 tests as a percentage of total tests within a 14-day period (flat or increasing volume of tests).

 

Finally, hospitals must treat all patients without crisis care and have a “robust” testing program in place for at-risk health care workers, including emerging antibody testing.

 

Those same criteria must be met between each phase of the plan. The “gates” for controlling moves from phase to phase are not tied to dates but are based on state, regional, and local public health conditions, availability of hospitals and testing capacity, and monitoring through the DoD’s Electronic Surveillance System for Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics (ESSENCE).

 

If the monitors detect a resurgence in the spread of COVID-19, the department will reassess its protection measures and workforce phase and respond appropriately. DoD service members and civilian employees are advised to talk with their commanders or supervisors to determine when it’s all right to return.

The US Department of Defense (DoD) has unveiled a plan for returning to normal operations. The plan is tied to “local conditions” and does not have specific dates for opening. Instead, the plan provides phase-by-phase guidance to commanders, supervisors, and employees to safely and effectively return to Pentagon Reservation offices. Along with guidelines for in-office and telework targets; vulnerable populations; entrance screening; and the status and cleaning of common areas, food courts, gyms and other facilities, the plan includes mandatory requirements regarding face coverings, social distancing, and symptomatic personnel throughout each phase.

 

Building on the 3-phase White House “Opening Up America Again” plan, the Joint Staff, military services, and the DoD COVID Task Force have developed a 5-phase plan. Currently, the department is at Phase Zero. The Pentagon Reservation Plan for Resilience and ‘Aligning with National Guidelines for Opening Up America Again’ “places the health and safety of our workforce first,” is “nested” within the White House, Office of Management and Budget, and Office of Personnel Management guidelines and plans. The goal is to allow the workforce to return to the Pentagon Reservation “in a controlled and steady manner.”

 

The DoD reported nearly 10,000 COVID-19 cases as of June 1, 2020, including 6,596 active-duty service members, 1,124 dependents, 1,516 civilians, and 649 DoD contractors. To date, 3 service members and 5 dependents have died of COVID-19, including Capt. Douglas Linn Hickok, a physician assistant and member of the New Jersey National Guard, who died March 28, 2020.

 

Since mid-March the DoD says it has taken “aggressive steps” to stop the spread of COVID-19, implementing health protection measures that resulted in a sustained transmission rate below that of the region at large. Teams have deep cleaned and sanitized more than 1 million square feet of office space on the Pentagon Reservation to US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention standards. And for the first time ever, according to the DoD, maximized telework options have enabled more than two-thirds of the Pentagon Reservation workforce to continue to work at alternate locations.

 

The criteria to enter Phase 1 require a downward trajectory of influenza-like illnesses reported with a 14-day period and a downward trajectory of COVID-like symptoms reported within a 14-day period. There must also be a downward trajectory of documented COVID-19 cases within a 14-day period or a downward trajectory of positive COVID-19 tests as a percentage of total tests within a 14-day period (flat or increasing volume of tests).

 

Finally, hospitals must treat all patients without crisis care and have a “robust” testing program in place for at-risk health care workers, including emerging antibody testing.

 

Those same criteria must be met between each phase of the plan. The “gates” for controlling moves from phase to phase are not tied to dates but are based on state, regional, and local public health conditions, availability of hospitals and testing capacity, and monitoring through the DoD’s Electronic Surveillance System for Early Notification of Community-based Epidemics (ESSENCE).

 

If the monitors detect a resurgence in the spread of COVID-19, the department will reassess its protection measures and workforce phase and respond appropriately. DoD service members and civilian employees are advised to talk with their commanders or supervisors to determine when it’s all right to return.

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