Cancer care ‘transformed in space of a month’ because of pandemic

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Thu, 12/15/2022 - 17:37

There will be some change for the better when oncology care emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic, the most “revolutionary” being a deep dive into telehealth, predicts Deborah Schrag, MD, MPH, a medical oncologist specializing in gastrointestinal cancers at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts.

“In the space of a month, approaches and accepted norms of cancer care delivery have been transformed of necessity,” Schrag and colleagues write in an article published in JAMA on April 13.

“Most of these changes would not have occurred without the pandemic,” they add. They predict that some changes will last after the crisis is over.

“None of us want to be thrown in the deep end.... On the other hand, sometimes it works,” Schrag told Medscape Medical News.

“The in-person visit between patient and physician has been upended,” she said.

“I don’t think there’s any going back to the way it was before because cancer patients won’t stand for it,” she said. “They’re not going to drive in to get the results of a blood test.

“I think that on balance, of course, there are situations where you need eye-to-eye contact. No one wants to have an initial oncology meeting by telehealth – doctors or patients – that’s ridiculous,” she said. “But for follow-up visits, patients are now going to be more demanding, and doctors will be more willing.”

The “essential empathy” of oncologists can still “transcend the new physical barriers presented by masks and telehealth,” Schrag and colleagues comment.

“Doctors are figuring out how to deliver empathy by Zoom,” she told Medscape Medical News. “It’s not the same, but we all convey empathy to our elderly relatives over the phone.”

Pandemic impact on oncology

While the crisis has affected all of medicine – dismantling how care is delivered and forcing clinicians to make difficult decisions regarding triage – the fact that some cancers present an immediate threat to survival means that oncology “provides a lens into the major shifts currently underway in clinical care,” Schrag and colleagues write.

They illustrate the point by highlighting systemic chemotherapy, which is provided to a large proportion of patients with advanced cancer. The pandemic has tipped the risk-benefit ratio away from treatments that have a marginal effect on quality or quantity of life, they note. It has forced an “elimination of low-value treatments that were identified by the Choosing Wisely campaign,” the authors write. Up to now, the uptake of recommendations to eliminate these treatments has been slow.

“For example, for most metastatic solid tumors, chemotherapy beyond the third regimen does not improve survival for more than a few weeks; therefore, oncologists are advising supportive care instead. For patients receiving adjuvant therapy for curable cancers, delaying initiation or abbreviating the number of cycles is appropriate. Oncologists are postponing initiation of adjuvant chemotherapy for some estrogen receptor–negative stage II breast cancers by 8 weeks and administering 6 rather than 12 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colorectal cancers,” Schrag and colleagues write.

On the other hand, even in the epicenters of the pandemic, thus far, oncologists are still delivering cancer treatments that have the potential to cure and cannot safely be delayed, they point out. “This includes most patients with new diagnoses of acute leukemia, high-grade lymphoma, and those with chemotherapy-responsive tumors such as testicular, ovarian, and small cell lung cancer. Despite the risks, oncologists are not modifying such treatments because these cancers are likely more lethal than COVID-19.”

It’s the cancer patients who fall in between these two extremes who pose the biggest treatment challenge during this crisis – the patients for whom a delay would have “moderate clinically important adverse influence on quality of life or survival.” In these cases, oncologists are “prescribing marginally less effective regimens that have lower risk of precipitating hospitalization,” the authors note.

These treatments include the use of “white cell growth factor, more stringent neutrophil counts for proceeding with a next cycle of therapy, and omitting use of steroids to manage nausea.” In addition, where possible, oncologists are substituting oral agents for intravenous agents and “myriad other modifications to minimize visits and hospitalizations.”

Most hospitals and outpatient infusion centers now prohibit visitors from accompanying patients, and oncologists are prioritizing conversations with patients about advance directives, healthcare proxies, and end-of-life care preferences. Yet, even here, telehealth offers a new, enhanced layer to those conversations by enabling families to gather with their loved one and the doctor, she said.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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There will be some change for the better when oncology care emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic, the most “revolutionary” being a deep dive into telehealth, predicts Deborah Schrag, MD, MPH, a medical oncologist specializing in gastrointestinal cancers at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts.

“In the space of a month, approaches and accepted norms of cancer care delivery have been transformed of necessity,” Schrag and colleagues write in an article published in JAMA on April 13.

“Most of these changes would not have occurred without the pandemic,” they add. They predict that some changes will last after the crisis is over.

“None of us want to be thrown in the deep end.... On the other hand, sometimes it works,” Schrag told Medscape Medical News.

“The in-person visit between patient and physician has been upended,” she said.

“I don’t think there’s any going back to the way it was before because cancer patients won’t stand for it,” she said. “They’re not going to drive in to get the results of a blood test.

“I think that on balance, of course, there are situations where you need eye-to-eye contact. No one wants to have an initial oncology meeting by telehealth – doctors or patients – that’s ridiculous,” she said. “But for follow-up visits, patients are now going to be more demanding, and doctors will be more willing.”

The “essential empathy” of oncologists can still “transcend the new physical barriers presented by masks and telehealth,” Schrag and colleagues comment.

“Doctors are figuring out how to deliver empathy by Zoom,” she told Medscape Medical News. “It’s not the same, but we all convey empathy to our elderly relatives over the phone.”

Pandemic impact on oncology

While the crisis has affected all of medicine – dismantling how care is delivered and forcing clinicians to make difficult decisions regarding triage – the fact that some cancers present an immediate threat to survival means that oncology “provides a lens into the major shifts currently underway in clinical care,” Schrag and colleagues write.

They illustrate the point by highlighting systemic chemotherapy, which is provided to a large proportion of patients with advanced cancer. The pandemic has tipped the risk-benefit ratio away from treatments that have a marginal effect on quality or quantity of life, they note. It has forced an “elimination of low-value treatments that were identified by the Choosing Wisely campaign,” the authors write. Up to now, the uptake of recommendations to eliminate these treatments has been slow.

“For example, for most metastatic solid tumors, chemotherapy beyond the third regimen does not improve survival for more than a few weeks; therefore, oncologists are advising supportive care instead. For patients receiving adjuvant therapy for curable cancers, delaying initiation or abbreviating the number of cycles is appropriate. Oncologists are postponing initiation of adjuvant chemotherapy for some estrogen receptor–negative stage II breast cancers by 8 weeks and administering 6 rather than 12 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colorectal cancers,” Schrag and colleagues write.

On the other hand, even in the epicenters of the pandemic, thus far, oncologists are still delivering cancer treatments that have the potential to cure and cannot safely be delayed, they point out. “This includes most patients with new diagnoses of acute leukemia, high-grade lymphoma, and those with chemotherapy-responsive tumors such as testicular, ovarian, and small cell lung cancer. Despite the risks, oncologists are not modifying such treatments because these cancers are likely more lethal than COVID-19.”

It’s the cancer patients who fall in between these two extremes who pose the biggest treatment challenge during this crisis – the patients for whom a delay would have “moderate clinically important adverse influence on quality of life or survival.” In these cases, oncologists are “prescribing marginally less effective regimens that have lower risk of precipitating hospitalization,” the authors note.

These treatments include the use of “white cell growth factor, more stringent neutrophil counts for proceeding with a next cycle of therapy, and omitting use of steroids to manage nausea.” In addition, where possible, oncologists are substituting oral agents for intravenous agents and “myriad other modifications to minimize visits and hospitalizations.”

Most hospitals and outpatient infusion centers now prohibit visitors from accompanying patients, and oncologists are prioritizing conversations with patients about advance directives, healthcare proxies, and end-of-life care preferences. Yet, even here, telehealth offers a new, enhanced layer to those conversations by enabling families to gather with their loved one and the doctor, she said.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

There will be some change for the better when oncology care emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic, the most “revolutionary” being a deep dive into telehealth, predicts Deborah Schrag, MD, MPH, a medical oncologist specializing in gastrointestinal cancers at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts.

“In the space of a month, approaches and accepted norms of cancer care delivery have been transformed of necessity,” Schrag and colleagues write in an article published in JAMA on April 13.

“Most of these changes would not have occurred without the pandemic,” they add. They predict that some changes will last after the crisis is over.

“None of us want to be thrown in the deep end.... On the other hand, sometimes it works,” Schrag told Medscape Medical News.

“The in-person visit between patient and physician has been upended,” she said.

“I don’t think there’s any going back to the way it was before because cancer patients won’t stand for it,” she said. “They’re not going to drive in to get the results of a blood test.

“I think that on balance, of course, there are situations where you need eye-to-eye contact. No one wants to have an initial oncology meeting by telehealth – doctors or patients – that’s ridiculous,” she said. “But for follow-up visits, patients are now going to be more demanding, and doctors will be more willing.”

The “essential empathy” of oncologists can still “transcend the new physical barriers presented by masks and telehealth,” Schrag and colleagues comment.

“Doctors are figuring out how to deliver empathy by Zoom,” she told Medscape Medical News. “It’s not the same, but we all convey empathy to our elderly relatives over the phone.”

Pandemic impact on oncology

While the crisis has affected all of medicine – dismantling how care is delivered and forcing clinicians to make difficult decisions regarding triage – the fact that some cancers present an immediate threat to survival means that oncology “provides a lens into the major shifts currently underway in clinical care,” Schrag and colleagues write.

They illustrate the point by highlighting systemic chemotherapy, which is provided to a large proportion of patients with advanced cancer. The pandemic has tipped the risk-benefit ratio away from treatments that have a marginal effect on quality or quantity of life, they note. It has forced an “elimination of low-value treatments that were identified by the Choosing Wisely campaign,” the authors write. Up to now, the uptake of recommendations to eliminate these treatments has been slow.

“For example, for most metastatic solid tumors, chemotherapy beyond the third regimen does not improve survival for more than a few weeks; therefore, oncologists are advising supportive care instead. For patients receiving adjuvant therapy for curable cancers, delaying initiation or abbreviating the number of cycles is appropriate. Oncologists are postponing initiation of adjuvant chemotherapy for some estrogen receptor–negative stage II breast cancers by 8 weeks and administering 6 rather than 12 cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colorectal cancers,” Schrag and colleagues write.

On the other hand, even in the epicenters of the pandemic, thus far, oncologists are still delivering cancer treatments that have the potential to cure and cannot safely be delayed, they point out. “This includes most patients with new diagnoses of acute leukemia, high-grade lymphoma, and those with chemotherapy-responsive tumors such as testicular, ovarian, and small cell lung cancer. Despite the risks, oncologists are not modifying such treatments because these cancers are likely more lethal than COVID-19.”

It’s the cancer patients who fall in between these two extremes who pose the biggest treatment challenge during this crisis – the patients for whom a delay would have “moderate clinically important adverse influence on quality of life or survival.” In these cases, oncologists are “prescribing marginally less effective regimens that have lower risk of precipitating hospitalization,” the authors note.

These treatments include the use of “white cell growth factor, more stringent neutrophil counts for proceeding with a next cycle of therapy, and omitting use of steroids to manage nausea.” In addition, where possible, oncologists are substituting oral agents for intravenous agents and “myriad other modifications to minimize visits and hospitalizations.”

Most hospitals and outpatient infusion centers now prohibit visitors from accompanying patients, and oncologists are prioritizing conversations with patients about advance directives, healthcare proxies, and end-of-life care preferences. Yet, even here, telehealth offers a new, enhanced layer to those conversations by enabling families to gather with their loved one and the doctor, she said.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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COVID-19 pandemic spells trouble for children’s health

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Tue, 02/14/2023 - 13:03

Although priority number one lies in controlling the spread of COVID-19, public health researchers are calling attention to the long-term repercussions of the pandemic on children’s health.

School closures could noticeably worsen the epidemic of childhood obesity that already threatens many children in the United States, say Paul Rundle, DrPH, and colleagues from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York City, in a perspective published online March 30 in Obesity.

“In part, we wrote the perspective to remind people that summer unhealthy weight gain seems to accumulate year to year,” he told Medscape Medical News in an email.

Rundle and colleagues estimate that time spent out of school will double this year because of school closures due to COVID-19. That, along with shelter-in-place orders, will pose challenges both for physical activity and healthy eating among children.

In addition, playgrounds have closed in many areas, and even where parks remain open, social distancing decreases opportunities for exercise. Team sports are on hold, and without physical education taught in schools, many children will not be getting as much active outdoor play as needed.

That’s especially true for children in urban areas, who may find it even more difficult to exercise inside cramped apartments, they add.

As a result, more and more children may turn to sedentary activities, and increased screen time goes hand in hand with childhood overweight and obesity, not just because of the lack of exercise but also because of snacking on unhealthy, empty-calorie foods while glued to the screen.

“We were hoping to get the word out on this issue, do some education or reminding, and at least let people know that this should be something to keep an eye on, among so many other things,” Rundle added.

Excess Eating Because of Stress and Boredom

Jessica Sparks Lilley, MD, director of the Pediatric Diabetes and Lipid Program at the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine in Madison, agrees that it is crucial to address these issues.

“Just like adults, children eat in response to emotions, including stress and boredom, and stress levels are high during these uncertain times,” she told Medscape Medical News.

Although both Rundle and Sparks Lilley acknowledged the challenges of finding good solutions at this time, they do offer some tips.

Schools should make physical education and at-home exercise a priority alongside other remote teaching. Physical education teachers could even stream exercise classes to children at home.

Even just walking in the park while maintaining social distancing could be better than nothing, and a brisk walk is probably even better.

Depending on the age of the child, online yoga may also be useful. Even though yoga burns relatively few calories, it incorporates mindfulness training that may be helpful.

“I think focusing on promoting mindful eating as compared to mindless or distracted eating is important. Even in the best of circumstances, it is hard to exercise enough to burn off high energy snacks,” Rundle said.

Additional Stressors From Poverty: Schools Can Help With Meals

Children living in poverty, already the most vulnerable to obesity and related health problems, have additional stressors, add the two experts.

“As more Americans are losing jobs, poverty is a real threat to many of the children I care for. Families living in poverty often rely on processed, high-calorie, low-nutrient foods for survival, because they are inexpensive and shelf-stable,” Sparks Lilley said.

Rundle and colleagues agree: “Our own experiences in supermarkets show...shelves that held...crackers, chips, ramen noodles, soda, sugary cereals, and processed ready-to-eat meals are quite empty. We anticipate that many children will experience higher calorie diets during the pandemic response.”

Similar to how they address food insecurity during summer holidays, school districts have responded by offering grab-and-go meals, Rundle and colleagues note.

To maintain social distancing for people with vulnerable family members, some school districts have also started delivering food using school buses that run along regularly scheduled routes.

Rundle also stresses that farmers’ markets, which often provide foods that appeal to immigrant and ethnic communities, should be considered part of essential food services.

As such, social distancing protocols should be established for them and they should be allowed to stay open, he argues.

“The safety of American children is at stake in many ways. The threat to themselves or their caregivers being infected with COVID-19 is rightly foremost in our concerns,” Sparks Lilley stressed.

“However, there is other fallout to consider. We’ve seen very clearly the need for public health and preventive medicine and can’t let vulnerable children fall through the cracks.”

Rundle agrees. Although it is a “priority” to mitigate the immediate impact of COVID-19, “it is important to consider ways to prevent its long-term effects, including new risks for childhood obesity.”

Rundle and coauthors, as well as Sparks Lilley, have reported no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Although priority number one lies in controlling the spread of COVID-19, public health researchers are calling attention to the long-term repercussions of the pandemic on children’s health.

School closures could noticeably worsen the epidemic of childhood obesity that already threatens many children in the United States, say Paul Rundle, DrPH, and colleagues from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York City, in a perspective published online March 30 in Obesity.

“In part, we wrote the perspective to remind people that summer unhealthy weight gain seems to accumulate year to year,” he told Medscape Medical News in an email.

Rundle and colleagues estimate that time spent out of school will double this year because of school closures due to COVID-19. That, along with shelter-in-place orders, will pose challenges both for physical activity and healthy eating among children.

In addition, playgrounds have closed in many areas, and even where parks remain open, social distancing decreases opportunities for exercise. Team sports are on hold, and without physical education taught in schools, many children will not be getting as much active outdoor play as needed.

That’s especially true for children in urban areas, who may find it even more difficult to exercise inside cramped apartments, they add.

As a result, more and more children may turn to sedentary activities, and increased screen time goes hand in hand with childhood overweight and obesity, not just because of the lack of exercise but also because of snacking on unhealthy, empty-calorie foods while glued to the screen.

“We were hoping to get the word out on this issue, do some education or reminding, and at least let people know that this should be something to keep an eye on, among so many other things,” Rundle added.

Excess Eating Because of Stress and Boredom

Jessica Sparks Lilley, MD, director of the Pediatric Diabetes and Lipid Program at the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine in Madison, agrees that it is crucial to address these issues.

“Just like adults, children eat in response to emotions, including stress and boredom, and stress levels are high during these uncertain times,” she told Medscape Medical News.

Although both Rundle and Sparks Lilley acknowledged the challenges of finding good solutions at this time, they do offer some tips.

Schools should make physical education and at-home exercise a priority alongside other remote teaching. Physical education teachers could even stream exercise classes to children at home.

Even just walking in the park while maintaining social distancing could be better than nothing, and a brisk walk is probably even better.

Depending on the age of the child, online yoga may also be useful. Even though yoga burns relatively few calories, it incorporates mindfulness training that may be helpful.

“I think focusing on promoting mindful eating as compared to mindless or distracted eating is important. Even in the best of circumstances, it is hard to exercise enough to burn off high energy snacks,” Rundle said.

Additional Stressors From Poverty: Schools Can Help With Meals

Children living in poverty, already the most vulnerable to obesity and related health problems, have additional stressors, add the two experts.

“As more Americans are losing jobs, poverty is a real threat to many of the children I care for. Families living in poverty often rely on processed, high-calorie, low-nutrient foods for survival, because they are inexpensive and shelf-stable,” Sparks Lilley said.

Rundle and colleagues agree: “Our own experiences in supermarkets show...shelves that held...crackers, chips, ramen noodles, soda, sugary cereals, and processed ready-to-eat meals are quite empty. We anticipate that many children will experience higher calorie diets during the pandemic response.”

Similar to how they address food insecurity during summer holidays, school districts have responded by offering grab-and-go meals, Rundle and colleagues note.

To maintain social distancing for people with vulnerable family members, some school districts have also started delivering food using school buses that run along regularly scheduled routes.

Rundle also stresses that farmers’ markets, which often provide foods that appeal to immigrant and ethnic communities, should be considered part of essential food services.

As such, social distancing protocols should be established for them and they should be allowed to stay open, he argues.

“The safety of American children is at stake in many ways. The threat to themselves or their caregivers being infected with COVID-19 is rightly foremost in our concerns,” Sparks Lilley stressed.

“However, there is other fallout to consider. We’ve seen very clearly the need for public health and preventive medicine and can’t let vulnerable children fall through the cracks.”

Rundle agrees. Although it is a “priority” to mitigate the immediate impact of COVID-19, “it is important to consider ways to prevent its long-term effects, including new risks for childhood obesity.”

Rundle and coauthors, as well as Sparks Lilley, have reported no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Although priority number one lies in controlling the spread of COVID-19, public health researchers are calling attention to the long-term repercussions of the pandemic on children’s health.

School closures could noticeably worsen the epidemic of childhood obesity that already threatens many children in the United States, say Paul Rundle, DrPH, and colleagues from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, New York City, in a perspective published online March 30 in Obesity.

“In part, we wrote the perspective to remind people that summer unhealthy weight gain seems to accumulate year to year,” he told Medscape Medical News in an email.

Rundle and colleagues estimate that time spent out of school will double this year because of school closures due to COVID-19. That, along with shelter-in-place orders, will pose challenges both for physical activity and healthy eating among children.

In addition, playgrounds have closed in many areas, and even where parks remain open, social distancing decreases opportunities for exercise. Team sports are on hold, and without physical education taught in schools, many children will not be getting as much active outdoor play as needed.

That’s especially true for children in urban areas, who may find it even more difficult to exercise inside cramped apartments, they add.

As a result, more and more children may turn to sedentary activities, and increased screen time goes hand in hand with childhood overweight and obesity, not just because of the lack of exercise but also because of snacking on unhealthy, empty-calorie foods while glued to the screen.

“We were hoping to get the word out on this issue, do some education or reminding, and at least let people know that this should be something to keep an eye on, among so many other things,” Rundle added.

Excess Eating Because of Stress and Boredom

Jessica Sparks Lilley, MD, director of the Pediatric Diabetes and Lipid Program at the Mississippi Center for Advanced Medicine in Madison, agrees that it is crucial to address these issues.

“Just like adults, children eat in response to emotions, including stress and boredom, and stress levels are high during these uncertain times,” she told Medscape Medical News.

Although both Rundle and Sparks Lilley acknowledged the challenges of finding good solutions at this time, they do offer some tips.

Schools should make physical education and at-home exercise a priority alongside other remote teaching. Physical education teachers could even stream exercise classes to children at home.

Even just walking in the park while maintaining social distancing could be better than nothing, and a brisk walk is probably even better.

Depending on the age of the child, online yoga may also be useful. Even though yoga burns relatively few calories, it incorporates mindfulness training that may be helpful.

“I think focusing on promoting mindful eating as compared to mindless or distracted eating is important. Even in the best of circumstances, it is hard to exercise enough to burn off high energy snacks,” Rundle said.

Additional Stressors From Poverty: Schools Can Help With Meals

Children living in poverty, already the most vulnerable to obesity and related health problems, have additional stressors, add the two experts.

“As more Americans are losing jobs, poverty is a real threat to many of the children I care for. Families living in poverty often rely on processed, high-calorie, low-nutrient foods for survival, because they are inexpensive and shelf-stable,” Sparks Lilley said.

Rundle and colleagues agree: “Our own experiences in supermarkets show...shelves that held...crackers, chips, ramen noodles, soda, sugary cereals, and processed ready-to-eat meals are quite empty. We anticipate that many children will experience higher calorie diets during the pandemic response.”

Similar to how they address food insecurity during summer holidays, school districts have responded by offering grab-and-go meals, Rundle and colleagues note.

To maintain social distancing for people with vulnerable family members, some school districts have also started delivering food using school buses that run along regularly scheduled routes.

Rundle also stresses that farmers’ markets, which often provide foods that appeal to immigrant and ethnic communities, should be considered part of essential food services.

As such, social distancing protocols should be established for them and they should be allowed to stay open, he argues.

“The safety of American children is at stake in many ways. The threat to themselves or their caregivers being infected with COVID-19 is rightly foremost in our concerns,” Sparks Lilley stressed.

“However, there is other fallout to consider. We’ve seen very clearly the need for public health and preventive medicine and can’t let vulnerable children fall through the cracks.”

Rundle agrees. Although it is a “priority” to mitigate the immediate impact of COVID-19, “it is important to consider ways to prevent its long-term effects, including new risks for childhood obesity.”

Rundle and coauthors, as well as Sparks Lilley, have reported no relevant financial relationships.

This article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Imaging recommendations issued for COVID-19 patients

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:13

A consensus statement on the role of imaging during the acute work-up of COVID-19 patients called for liberal use in patients with moderate to severe clinical features indicative of infection, regardless of their COVID-19 test results, but limited use in patients who present with mild symptoms or are asymptomatic.

Dr. Geoffrey D. Rubin, professor of of cardiovascular research, radiology, and bioengineering, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, N.C.
Dr. Geoffrey D. Rubin

The consensus statement on The Role of Imaging in Patient Management during the COVID-19 Pandemic released by the Fleischner Society on April 7 was designed to highlight the “key decision points around imaging” in COVID-19 patients.

“We developed the statement to be applicable across settings” so that each clinic or hospital managing COVID-19 patients could decide the situations where chest radiography (CXR) or CT would work best, said Geoffrey D. Rubin, MD, professor of cardiovascular research, radiology, and bioengineering at Duke University in Durham, N.C., and lead author of the statement.

Written by 15 thoracic radiologists and 10 pulmonologists/intensivists including an anesthesiologist, a pathologist, and additional experts in emergency medicine, infection control, and laboratory medicine, and with members from any of 10 countries on three continents, the panel arrived at agreement by more than 70% for each of the 14 questions.

“I was impressed and a little surprised that consensus was achieved for every question” posed to the panel by the Fleischner Society for Thoracic Imaging and Diagnosis, Dr. Rubin said in an interview. The panel also placed their 14 decisions about imaging within the context of three distinct clinical scenarios chosen to mirror common real-world situations: mild COVID-19 features, moderate to severe features with no critical-resource constraints, and moderate to severe features with constrained resources. The statement also summarized its conclusions as five main recommendations and three additional recommendations.
 

Main recommendations

  • Imaging is not routinely indicated for COVID-19 screening in asymptomatic people.
  • Imaging is not indicated for patients with mild features of COVID-19 unless they are at risk for disease progression.
  • Imaging is indicated for patients with features of moderate to severe COVID-19 regardless of COVID-19 test results.
  • Imaging is indicated for patients with COVID-19 and evidence of worsening respiratory status.
  • When access to CT is limited, chest radiography may be preferred for COVID-19 patients unless features of respiratory worsening warrant using CT.

Additional recommendations

  • Daily chest radiographs are not indicated in stable, intubated patients with COVID-19.
  • CT is indicated in patients with functional impairment, hypoxemia, or both, after COVID-19 recovery.
  • COVID-19 testing is warranted in patients incidentally found to have findings suggestive of COVID-19 on a CT scan.


The statement particularly called out one of its recommendations – that a COVID-19 diagnosis “may be presumed when imaging findings are strongly suggestive of COVID-19 despite negative COVID-19 testing” in a patient who has moderate to severe clinical features of COVID-19 and whose pretest probability is high. The panel voted unanimously in favor of this concept, that imaging is “indicated” in hospitalized patients with moderate to severe symptoms consistent with COVID-19 despite a negative COVID-19 test result. “This guidance represents variance from other published recommendations which advise against the use of imaging for the initial diagnosis of COVID-19,” the statement acknowledged and specifically cited the recommendations issued in March 2020 by the American College of Radiology. Despite that, the ACR and Fleischner recommendations “are not at odds with one another,” maintained Dr. Rubin. The panel based its take on this question on the “direct experience” of its members caring for COVID-19 patients, according to the statement.

Dr. Sachin Gupta, pulmonary and critical care physician in group private practice in the San Francisco Bay Area
Dr. Sachin Gupta

“I wholeheartedly agree with the suggested uses of imaging outlined by the panel,” commented Sachin Gupta, MD, FCCP, a pulmonologist and critical care physician in San Francisco. “The consensus statement brings a practical way to consider obtaining imaging. It leaves the door open to local standards and best judgment for using CXR or CT. Many physicians are unclear whether to image low-risk and mildly symptomatic patients. This statement gives support to a watchful waiting approach.” Another recommendation advises against daily CXR in stable, intubated COVID-19 patients. This “now gives backing from an important society and thought leaders while giving an explanation” for why daily imaging is problematic, he noted in an interview. The daily CXR in these patients adds no value, and skipping unneeded imaging minimizes SARS-CoV-2 exposure to radiology personnel, and conserves personal protection equipment, said the statement.

“The Fleischner Society is known worldwide for its recommendations. Having the society lend its weight on triage with imaging for COVID-19 patients is important. I suspect it will help standardize practice.”



Dr. Gupta also highlighted that lung imaging with a portable ultrasound unit has quickly become recognized as a very useful imaging tool with increasing use as the pandemic has unfolded, an option not covered by the Fleischner statement. Study results have “confirmed excellent sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility” with lung ultrasound, and it’s also “easy to use,” Dr. Gupta said.

Ultrasound chest imaging of COVID-19 patients did not get included in the statement despite the reliance some U.S. sites have already placed on it largely because few on the panel had direct experience using it. “We didn’t feel we could contribute” to a discussion of ultrasound, Dr. Rubin said.

The statement’s recommendations appear to have already begun influencing practice. “The feedback I’ve gotten is that people are relying on them,” said Dr. Rubin, and some programs have sent him screen shots of the recommendations embedded in their local electronic health record.

The Radiological Society of North America is hosting a webinar on the statement on April 17.

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A consensus statement on the role of imaging during the acute work-up of COVID-19 patients called for liberal use in patients with moderate to severe clinical features indicative of infection, regardless of their COVID-19 test results, but limited use in patients who present with mild symptoms or are asymptomatic.

Dr. Geoffrey D. Rubin, professor of of cardiovascular research, radiology, and bioengineering, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, N.C.
Dr. Geoffrey D. Rubin

The consensus statement on The Role of Imaging in Patient Management during the COVID-19 Pandemic released by the Fleischner Society on April 7 was designed to highlight the “key decision points around imaging” in COVID-19 patients.

“We developed the statement to be applicable across settings” so that each clinic or hospital managing COVID-19 patients could decide the situations where chest radiography (CXR) or CT would work best, said Geoffrey D. Rubin, MD, professor of cardiovascular research, radiology, and bioengineering at Duke University in Durham, N.C., and lead author of the statement.

Written by 15 thoracic radiologists and 10 pulmonologists/intensivists including an anesthesiologist, a pathologist, and additional experts in emergency medicine, infection control, and laboratory medicine, and with members from any of 10 countries on three continents, the panel arrived at agreement by more than 70% for each of the 14 questions.

“I was impressed and a little surprised that consensus was achieved for every question” posed to the panel by the Fleischner Society for Thoracic Imaging and Diagnosis, Dr. Rubin said in an interview. The panel also placed their 14 decisions about imaging within the context of three distinct clinical scenarios chosen to mirror common real-world situations: mild COVID-19 features, moderate to severe features with no critical-resource constraints, and moderate to severe features with constrained resources. The statement also summarized its conclusions as five main recommendations and three additional recommendations.
 

Main recommendations

  • Imaging is not routinely indicated for COVID-19 screening in asymptomatic people.
  • Imaging is not indicated for patients with mild features of COVID-19 unless they are at risk for disease progression.
  • Imaging is indicated for patients with features of moderate to severe COVID-19 regardless of COVID-19 test results.
  • Imaging is indicated for patients with COVID-19 and evidence of worsening respiratory status.
  • When access to CT is limited, chest radiography may be preferred for COVID-19 patients unless features of respiratory worsening warrant using CT.

Additional recommendations

  • Daily chest radiographs are not indicated in stable, intubated patients with COVID-19.
  • CT is indicated in patients with functional impairment, hypoxemia, or both, after COVID-19 recovery.
  • COVID-19 testing is warranted in patients incidentally found to have findings suggestive of COVID-19 on a CT scan.


The statement particularly called out one of its recommendations – that a COVID-19 diagnosis “may be presumed when imaging findings are strongly suggestive of COVID-19 despite negative COVID-19 testing” in a patient who has moderate to severe clinical features of COVID-19 and whose pretest probability is high. The panel voted unanimously in favor of this concept, that imaging is “indicated” in hospitalized patients with moderate to severe symptoms consistent with COVID-19 despite a negative COVID-19 test result. “This guidance represents variance from other published recommendations which advise against the use of imaging for the initial diagnosis of COVID-19,” the statement acknowledged and specifically cited the recommendations issued in March 2020 by the American College of Radiology. Despite that, the ACR and Fleischner recommendations “are not at odds with one another,” maintained Dr. Rubin. The panel based its take on this question on the “direct experience” of its members caring for COVID-19 patients, according to the statement.

Dr. Sachin Gupta, pulmonary and critical care physician in group private practice in the San Francisco Bay Area
Dr. Sachin Gupta

“I wholeheartedly agree with the suggested uses of imaging outlined by the panel,” commented Sachin Gupta, MD, FCCP, a pulmonologist and critical care physician in San Francisco. “The consensus statement brings a practical way to consider obtaining imaging. It leaves the door open to local standards and best judgment for using CXR or CT. Many physicians are unclear whether to image low-risk and mildly symptomatic patients. This statement gives support to a watchful waiting approach.” Another recommendation advises against daily CXR in stable, intubated COVID-19 patients. This “now gives backing from an important society and thought leaders while giving an explanation” for why daily imaging is problematic, he noted in an interview. The daily CXR in these patients adds no value, and skipping unneeded imaging minimizes SARS-CoV-2 exposure to radiology personnel, and conserves personal protection equipment, said the statement.

“The Fleischner Society is known worldwide for its recommendations. Having the society lend its weight on triage with imaging for COVID-19 patients is important. I suspect it will help standardize practice.”



Dr. Gupta also highlighted that lung imaging with a portable ultrasound unit has quickly become recognized as a very useful imaging tool with increasing use as the pandemic has unfolded, an option not covered by the Fleischner statement. Study results have “confirmed excellent sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility” with lung ultrasound, and it’s also “easy to use,” Dr. Gupta said.

Ultrasound chest imaging of COVID-19 patients did not get included in the statement despite the reliance some U.S. sites have already placed on it largely because few on the panel had direct experience using it. “We didn’t feel we could contribute” to a discussion of ultrasound, Dr. Rubin said.

The statement’s recommendations appear to have already begun influencing practice. “The feedback I’ve gotten is that people are relying on them,” said Dr. Rubin, and some programs have sent him screen shots of the recommendations embedded in their local electronic health record.

The Radiological Society of North America is hosting a webinar on the statement on April 17.

A consensus statement on the role of imaging during the acute work-up of COVID-19 patients called for liberal use in patients with moderate to severe clinical features indicative of infection, regardless of their COVID-19 test results, but limited use in patients who present with mild symptoms or are asymptomatic.

Dr. Geoffrey D. Rubin, professor of of cardiovascular research, radiology, and bioengineering, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, N.C.
Dr. Geoffrey D. Rubin

The consensus statement on The Role of Imaging in Patient Management during the COVID-19 Pandemic released by the Fleischner Society on April 7 was designed to highlight the “key decision points around imaging” in COVID-19 patients.

“We developed the statement to be applicable across settings” so that each clinic or hospital managing COVID-19 patients could decide the situations where chest radiography (CXR) or CT would work best, said Geoffrey D. Rubin, MD, professor of cardiovascular research, radiology, and bioengineering at Duke University in Durham, N.C., and lead author of the statement.

Written by 15 thoracic radiologists and 10 pulmonologists/intensivists including an anesthesiologist, a pathologist, and additional experts in emergency medicine, infection control, and laboratory medicine, and with members from any of 10 countries on three continents, the panel arrived at agreement by more than 70% for each of the 14 questions.

“I was impressed and a little surprised that consensus was achieved for every question” posed to the panel by the Fleischner Society for Thoracic Imaging and Diagnosis, Dr. Rubin said in an interview. The panel also placed their 14 decisions about imaging within the context of three distinct clinical scenarios chosen to mirror common real-world situations: mild COVID-19 features, moderate to severe features with no critical-resource constraints, and moderate to severe features with constrained resources. The statement also summarized its conclusions as five main recommendations and three additional recommendations.
 

Main recommendations

  • Imaging is not routinely indicated for COVID-19 screening in asymptomatic people.
  • Imaging is not indicated for patients with mild features of COVID-19 unless they are at risk for disease progression.
  • Imaging is indicated for patients with features of moderate to severe COVID-19 regardless of COVID-19 test results.
  • Imaging is indicated for patients with COVID-19 and evidence of worsening respiratory status.
  • When access to CT is limited, chest radiography may be preferred for COVID-19 patients unless features of respiratory worsening warrant using CT.

Additional recommendations

  • Daily chest radiographs are not indicated in stable, intubated patients with COVID-19.
  • CT is indicated in patients with functional impairment, hypoxemia, or both, after COVID-19 recovery.
  • COVID-19 testing is warranted in patients incidentally found to have findings suggestive of COVID-19 on a CT scan.


The statement particularly called out one of its recommendations – that a COVID-19 diagnosis “may be presumed when imaging findings are strongly suggestive of COVID-19 despite negative COVID-19 testing” in a patient who has moderate to severe clinical features of COVID-19 and whose pretest probability is high. The panel voted unanimously in favor of this concept, that imaging is “indicated” in hospitalized patients with moderate to severe symptoms consistent with COVID-19 despite a negative COVID-19 test result. “This guidance represents variance from other published recommendations which advise against the use of imaging for the initial diagnosis of COVID-19,” the statement acknowledged and specifically cited the recommendations issued in March 2020 by the American College of Radiology. Despite that, the ACR and Fleischner recommendations “are not at odds with one another,” maintained Dr. Rubin. The panel based its take on this question on the “direct experience” of its members caring for COVID-19 patients, according to the statement.

Dr. Sachin Gupta, pulmonary and critical care physician in group private practice in the San Francisco Bay Area
Dr. Sachin Gupta

“I wholeheartedly agree with the suggested uses of imaging outlined by the panel,” commented Sachin Gupta, MD, FCCP, a pulmonologist and critical care physician in San Francisco. “The consensus statement brings a practical way to consider obtaining imaging. It leaves the door open to local standards and best judgment for using CXR or CT. Many physicians are unclear whether to image low-risk and mildly symptomatic patients. This statement gives support to a watchful waiting approach.” Another recommendation advises against daily CXR in stable, intubated COVID-19 patients. This “now gives backing from an important society and thought leaders while giving an explanation” for why daily imaging is problematic, he noted in an interview. The daily CXR in these patients adds no value, and skipping unneeded imaging minimizes SARS-CoV-2 exposure to radiology personnel, and conserves personal protection equipment, said the statement.

“The Fleischner Society is known worldwide for its recommendations. Having the society lend its weight on triage with imaging for COVID-19 patients is important. I suspect it will help standardize practice.”



Dr. Gupta also highlighted that lung imaging with a portable ultrasound unit has quickly become recognized as a very useful imaging tool with increasing use as the pandemic has unfolded, an option not covered by the Fleischner statement. Study results have “confirmed excellent sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility” with lung ultrasound, and it’s also “easy to use,” Dr. Gupta said.

Ultrasound chest imaging of COVID-19 patients did not get included in the statement despite the reliance some U.S. sites have already placed on it largely because few on the panel had direct experience using it. “We didn’t feel we could contribute” to a discussion of ultrasound, Dr. Rubin said.

The statement’s recommendations appear to have already begun influencing practice. “The feedback I’ve gotten is that people are relying on them,” said Dr. Rubin, and some programs have sent him screen shots of the recommendations embedded in their local electronic health record.

The Radiological Society of North America is hosting a webinar on the statement on April 17.

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Evidence suggests possible RAS-blocker benefit in COVID-19 patients

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Patients infected by the COVID-19 virus may benefit from treatments that dampen the renin-angiotensin system, according to a review of several animal studies. These preclinical findings generally support the positions taken in recent week by several cardiology societies that recommended patients taking drugs that moderate the renin-angiotensin system stay on these treatments.

“In patients with cardiovascular disease and SARS-CoV2, the use of ACE inhibitors, ARBs [angiotensin receptor blockers], or MRAs [mineralocorticoid-receptor antagonists] may be favorable as a method to endogenously upregulate ACE2 as a compensatory mechanism that provides anti-inflammatory, antifibrotic, and antithrombotic support as well as reduction in progression of vascular/cardiac remodeling and heart failure,” wrote Jeffrey Bander, MD, and his associates in a report published online (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.04.028).

“Based on our review, we hypothesize cardiovascular patients with COVID-19 should remain on RAS [renin-angiotensin system] inhibitors given the protective effects of the ACE2 pathway until RAS blockade is proven to increase the risk to COVID-19,” said the researchers, who are affiliated with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.



The ACE2 protein, found both in human blood as well as in cell membranes, especially cells of the lungs, heart, kidneys, and gastrointestinal tissues, functions as both a key enzyme in RAS regulation as well as the primary cell receptor for entry of SARS-CoV2.

Their conclusion jibed with both a joint statement in March from the American College of Cardiology, American Heart Association, and the Heart Failure Society of America; and with the conclusions of a review organized by the European Society of Hypertension’s COVID-19 Task Force (Cardiovasc Res. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.1093/cvr/cvaa097).

In their review, the Mount Sinai authors described results from several animal studies suggesting that ACE2 and its associated signaling proteins could potentially be a “valuable therapeutic target.” They also highlighted several clinical intervention studies recently launched to target ACE2, related proteins, and regulation of this arm of the RAS.

Currently, “no data support any conclusive effects of the use of RAS inhibitors in patients with COVID-19,” they concluded. They acknowledged that “the question remains whether the use of ACE inhibitors, ARBs, and MRAs should be avoided in the setting of SARS-CoV infection,” but emphasized that “adequate data on the effects of RAS inhibition in COVID-19 patients is not available,” with more data becoming available soon from ongoing clinical studies.

None of the authors had any disclosures.

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Patients infected by the COVID-19 virus may benefit from treatments that dampen the renin-angiotensin system, according to a review of several animal studies. These preclinical findings generally support the positions taken in recent week by several cardiology societies that recommended patients taking drugs that moderate the renin-angiotensin system stay on these treatments.

“In patients with cardiovascular disease and SARS-CoV2, the use of ACE inhibitors, ARBs [angiotensin receptor blockers], or MRAs [mineralocorticoid-receptor antagonists] may be favorable as a method to endogenously upregulate ACE2 as a compensatory mechanism that provides anti-inflammatory, antifibrotic, and antithrombotic support as well as reduction in progression of vascular/cardiac remodeling and heart failure,” wrote Jeffrey Bander, MD, and his associates in a report published online (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.04.028).

“Based on our review, we hypothesize cardiovascular patients with COVID-19 should remain on RAS [renin-angiotensin system] inhibitors given the protective effects of the ACE2 pathway until RAS blockade is proven to increase the risk to COVID-19,” said the researchers, who are affiliated with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.



The ACE2 protein, found both in human blood as well as in cell membranes, especially cells of the lungs, heart, kidneys, and gastrointestinal tissues, functions as both a key enzyme in RAS regulation as well as the primary cell receptor for entry of SARS-CoV2.

Their conclusion jibed with both a joint statement in March from the American College of Cardiology, American Heart Association, and the Heart Failure Society of America; and with the conclusions of a review organized by the European Society of Hypertension’s COVID-19 Task Force (Cardiovasc Res. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.1093/cvr/cvaa097).

In their review, the Mount Sinai authors described results from several animal studies suggesting that ACE2 and its associated signaling proteins could potentially be a “valuable therapeutic target.” They also highlighted several clinical intervention studies recently launched to target ACE2, related proteins, and regulation of this arm of the RAS.

Currently, “no data support any conclusive effects of the use of RAS inhibitors in patients with COVID-19,” they concluded. They acknowledged that “the question remains whether the use of ACE inhibitors, ARBs, and MRAs should be avoided in the setting of SARS-CoV infection,” but emphasized that “adequate data on the effects of RAS inhibition in COVID-19 patients is not available,” with more data becoming available soon from ongoing clinical studies.

None of the authors had any disclosures.

Patients infected by the COVID-19 virus may benefit from treatments that dampen the renin-angiotensin system, according to a review of several animal studies. These preclinical findings generally support the positions taken in recent week by several cardiology societies that recommended patients taking drugs that moderate the renin-angiotensin system stay on these treatments.

“In patients with cardiovascular disease and SARS-CoV2, the use of ACE inhibitors, ARBs [angiotensin receptor blockers], or MRAs [mineralocorticoid-receptor antagonists] may be favorable as a method to endogenously upregulate ACE2 as a compensatory mechanism that provides anti-inflammatory, antifibrotic, and antithrombotic support as well as reduction in progression of vascular/cardiac remodeling and heart failure,” wrote Jeffrey Bander, MD, and his associates in a report published online (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.04.028).

“Based on our review, we hypothesize cardiovascular patients with COVID-19 should remain on RAS [renin-angiotensin system] inhibitors given the protective effects of the ACE2 pathway until RAS blockade is proven to increase the risk to COVID-19,” said the researchers, who are affiliated with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.



The ACE2 protein, found both in human blood as well as in cell membranes, especially cells of the lungs, heart, kidneys, and gastrointestinal tissues, functions as both a key enzyme in RAS regulation as well as the primary cell receptor for entry of SARS-CoV2.

Their conclusion jibed with both a joint statement in March from the American College of Cardiology, American Heart Association, and the Heart Failure Society of America; and with the conclusions of a review organized by the European Society of Hypertension’s COVID-19 Task Force (Cardiovasc Res. 2020 Apr 15. doi: 10.1093/cvr/cvaa097).

In their review, the Mount Sinai authors described results from several animal studies suggesting that ACE2 and its associated signaling proteins could potentially be a “valuable therapeutic target.” They also highlighted several clinical intervention studies recently launched to target ACE2, related proteins, and regulation of this arm of the RAS.

Currently, “no data support any conclusive effects of the use of RAS inhibitors in patients with COVID-19,” they concluded. They acknowledged that “the question remains whether the use of ACE inhibitors, ARBs, and MRAs should be avoided in the setting of SARS-CoV infection,” but emphasized that “adequate data on the effects of RAS inhibition in COVID-19 patients is not available,” with more data becoming available soon from ongoing clinical studies.

None of the authors had any disclosures.

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COPD, smoking independently associated with developing depression

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People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) and those who smoke are at an increased risk of developing depression, results of a population-based cohort study of more than 3 million patients show.

Using data from the Veterans Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse, Natalie B. Riblet, MD, MPH, and colleagues conducted the study on 3,284,496 patients who accessed VA health care during 2004-2014 and had a negative depression screen. About 95% of this population was male, 83.4% were white, and the average age was 61.3 years. Just under 40,000 people were patients with COPD, reported Dr. Riblet, of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in White River Junction, Vt., and the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H. The study was published in General Hospital Psychiatry.

The investigators found that current, former, and never smokers were split fairly evenly at 32.1%, 32.4%, and 30.3% of the total study population, respectively. Of those with COPD, 53.6% were current smokers, 27% were former smokers, and 11.6% were never smokers.

The odds of developing depression in a year were 2.3%, 1.5%, and 1.4% in current, former, and never smokers without COPD, respectively; for those with COPD, the odds were 2.9%, 2.2%, and 2% for current, former, and never smokers, respectively. Overall, the odds ratio of patients with COPD developing depression, compared with those without COPD, was 1.57 (95% confidence interval, 1.54-1.61). Current smokers also were at an increased risk, compared with never smokers (OR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.81-1.85), though the effect was somewhat mitigated after adjusting for confounders (OR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.55-1.58).

“Future research should examine biological factors that may explain the COPD-depression relationship and in particular, smoking as an interaction, as this may guide the development and implementation of new treatments for depression in the COPD population,” the investigators concluded. “If COPD-related depression is due, at least in part, to adverse physiological effects related to chronic hypoxia, these patients may require new or more tailored interventions.”

No disclosures or conflicts of interest were reported.

SOURCE: Riblet NB et al. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2020 May-Jun;64:72-9.
 

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People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) and those who smoke are at an increased risk of developing depression, results of a population-based cohort study of more than 3 million patients show.

Using data from the Veterans Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse, Natalie B. Riblet, MD, MPH, and colleagues conducted the study on 3,284,496 patients who accessed VA health care during 2004-2014 and had a negative depression screen. About 95% of this population was male, 83.4% were white, and the average age was 61.3 years. Just under 40,000 people were patients with COPD, reported Dr. Riblet, of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in White River Junction, Vt., and the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H. The study was published in General Hospital Psychiatry.

The investigators found that current, former, and never smokers were split fairly evenly at 32.1%, 32.4%, and 30.3% of the total study population, respectively. Of those with COPD, 53.6% were current smokers, 27% were former smokers, and 11.6% were never smokers.

The odds of developing depression in a year were 2.3%, 1.5%, and 1.4% in current, former, and never smokers without COPD, respectively; for those with COPD, the odds were 2.9%, 2.2%, and 2% for current, former, and never smokers, respectively. Overall, the odds ratio of patients with COPD developing depression, compared with those without COPD, was 1.57 (95% confidence interval, 1.54-1.61). Current smokers also were at an increased risk, compared with never smokers (OR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.81-1.85), though the effect was somewhat mitigated after adjusting for confounders (OR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.55-1.58).

“Future research should examine biological factors that may explain the COPD-depression relationship and in particular, smoking as an interaction, as this may guide the development and implementation of new treatments for depression in the COPD population,” the investigators concluded. “If COPD-related depression is due, at least in part, to adverse physiological effects related to chronic hypoxia, these patients may require new or more tailored interventions.”

No disclosures or conflicts of interest were reported.

SOURCE: Riblet NB et al. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2020 May-Jun;64:72-9.
 

People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) and those who smoke are at an increased risk of developing depression, results of a population-based cohort study of more than 3 million patients show.

Using data from the Veterans Affairs Corporate Data Warehouse, Natalie B. Riblet, MD, MPH, and colleagues conducted the study on 3,284,496 patients who accessed VA health care during 2004-2014 and had a negative depression screen. About 95% of this population was male, 83.4% were white, and the average age was 61.3 years. Just under 40,000 people were patients with COPD, reported Dr. Riblet, of the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in White River Junction, Vt., and the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, N.H. The study was published in General Hospital Psychiatry.

The investigators found that current, former, and never smokers were split fairly evenly at 32.1%, 32.4%, and 30.3% of the total study population, respectively. Of those with COPD, 53.6% were current smokers, 27% were former smokers, and 11.6% were never smokers.

The odds of developing depression in a year were 2.3%, 1.5%, and 1.4% in current, former, and never smokers without COPD, respectively; for those with COPD, the odds were 2.9%, 2.2%, and 2% for current, former, and never smokers, respectively. Overall, the odds ratio of patients with COPD developing depression, compared with those without COPD, was 1.57 (95% confidence interval, 1.54-1.61). Current smokers also were at an increased risk, compared with never smokers (OR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.81-1.85), though the effect was somewhat mitigated after adjusting for confounders (OR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.55-1.58).

“Future research should examine biological factors that may explain the COPD-depression relationship and in particular, smoking as an interaction, as this may guide the development and implementation of new treatments for depression in the COPD population,” the investigators concluded. “If COPD-related depression is due, at least in part, to adverse physiological effects related to chronic hypoxia, these patients may require new or more tailored interventions.”

No disclosures or conflicts of interest were reported.

SOURCE: Riblet NB et al. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2020 May-Jun;64:72-9.
 

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Sleep in the time of COVID-19

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:13

Mass social distancing and social isolation to prevent the spread of a deadly disease, along with technological tools that allow social communication and continued work and school, is an unprecedented situation.

A grumpy insomniac man is shown
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The current reality of most people’s lives during the COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to induce or exacerbate sleep problems, though it may also present some with an opportunity to improve sleep, wrote Ellemarije Altena, PhD, of the University of Bordeaux (France), and her colleagues in a recent research review in the Journal of Sleep Research.

The review was conducted by a task force of the European Academy for Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia. The European CBT-I Academy is an initiative of the European Insomnia Network to promote implementation and dissemination of treatment.

After discussing the known effects of stress, confinement, and altered schedules on sleep, the authors present recommendations on ways to manage sleep problems such as insomnia in the general public and potentially encourage people to take advantage of the opportunity to align their schedules with their natural circadian rhythms. Physicians may find the recommendations helpful in advising patients with sleep problems related to the COVID-19 emergency.

“Being forced to stay at home, work from home, do homeschooling with children, drastically minimize outings, reduce social interaction or work many more hours under stressful circumstances, and in parallel manage the attendant health risks, can have a major impact on daily functioning and nighttime sleep,” Dr. Altena and colleagues wrote.

Dr. Krishna M. Sundar, University of Utah, Salt Lake City
Dr. Krishna M. Sundar

There may also be a lag time in physicians hearing about changes in sleep or sleeping problems from patients, said Krishna M. Sundar, MD, FCCP, medical director of the Sleep-Wake Center at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. “There may actually be some improvement in sleep durations given that most folks are working from home with more time with family and less work-related stress,” he said in an interview. “In terms of sleep or other effects on worsening of psychiatric problems, it is still not clear what the overall effects are going to be.”

Although daylight has the biggest impact on regulating circadian rhythms, artificial light, meal times, diet, and amount of physical activity can also have an influence. Negative effects on sleep can result from both excessively high activity levels, such as stress and work overload, or excessively low levels, such as from depression or confinement, the authors note.

The current situation also opens the door to interactions between stress, sleep, anxiety, and risk of PTSD. “Those sensitive to stress-related sleep disruption are more likely to develop chronic insomnia,” which, in combination with a major stressor, is a risk factor for PTSD, the authors write. They note that 7% of Wuhan residents, the city in China where the virus appears to have originated, particularly women, reported PTSD symptoms after the COVID-19 outbreak, and anxiety was highest in those under age 35 years and those who followed news about the disease for more than 3 hours a day.

Better sleep quality and fewer early morning awakenings, however, appeared to be protective against PTSD symptoms. The authors note the value of physical exercise, cognitive interventions, and relaxation techniques, including meditation, for reducing stress and milder symptoms of PTSD.

“Some patients are sleeping a bit better because of the pace of things has slowed down a bit,” said Anne C. Trainor, a nurse practitioner and instructor in the neurology department’s sleep disorders program at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, who was not involved in the study. “Keeping a regular schedule for sleeping and eating, getting exercise daily – preferably in sunlight and not just before bedtime – and using relaxation or mindfulness practice and cognitive interventions to help manage anxiety” were the key takeaways from this review, Ms. Trainor said in an interview.


 

 

 

Home confinement, stressors and sleep

A wide range of stressors could affect sleep during COVID-19 social distancing interventions, including “major changes in routines, living with uncertainty,” and anxiety about health, the economic situation, and how long this situation will last, the authors write.

Parents must juggle work, homeschooling, and ordinary household errands and management. Meanwhile, entrepreneurs, small business owners ,and workers in entertainment, hospitality and food service must contend with anxiety about job uncertainty and financial security. For anyone working from home, disruptions to work and home routines can make it difficult to associate being home with relaxation – and sleep.

“The more regular our sleep schedule is the better quality our sleep tends to be, but it is a struggle when we don’t have separate spaces to work and parent in,” Ms. Trainor said.

At the same time, “confinement-related stress may be caused by an inability to engage in rewarding activities, such as visiting friends and family, shopping, attending cultural and sports events, and visiting bars or restaurants,” the authors write. “Spending more time with family in a limited space can also induce stress, particularly in situations where there are preexisting family difficulties.”

Being stuck at home may lead to less daylight exposure than usual, reduced physical activity, and increased eating, which can contribute to weight gain and other health risks. However, “the effect of stress from confinement, loss of work, and health concerns needs to be individualized and may be difficult to generalize,” Dr. Sundar said.

The authors of the review note the established associations between too little social interaction, increased stress, and poor sleep quality, though loneliness mediates this relationship. Loneliness is also a risk during this time, with or without online social interaction.

Children and teens may also have difficulty sleeping, which can affect their behavioral and emotional regulation, and primary caregivers experience more stress while juggling childcare, household duties, and work.

“While many parents share childcare and household responsibilities, in most families these tasks are still predominantly managed by mothers,” the authors added.

Dr. Brandon M. Seay, pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist for the Children's Physician Group Pulmonology in Atlanta
Dr. Brandon M. Seay

“Sharing responsibilities between parents and not overworking just one parent is key,” said Brandon M. Seay MD, a pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. He also recommended trying to incorporate work into the day while kids are doing online learning.

Ms. Trainor agreed that trading off responsibilities between parents is ideal, though the challenge is greater for single parents. It may be possible for some to take family leave, but not all families have that option, she said.

The study authors also point out a Catch-22 for many people: The blurred boundary between home life and work life can undermine work productivity and efficiency, thereby increasing stress. “Healthy sleep may be a key protective factor to cope positively with these challenges, although adequate opportunity to sleep may be affected by increased time pressure of work, childcare, and household requirements.”

Dr. Seay advises adults to try to get at least 6-8 hours of sleep each night, even taking advantage of a later waking time – if the kids also sleep in – to help. “If anything, the ability to sleep later and wake up later is of benefit for a lot of my teenage patients,” he said in an interview.

In fact, the study authors also address possible positive effects on sleep for some people during the current situation. Since social support can improve sleep quality, social media interaction might provide some social support, though it’s not the same as meeting people in person and “screen exposure may hamper sleep quality when used close to bedtime.”

Some people may actually have an opportunity to get more daylight exposure or exercise, which can improve sleep, and some, especially night owls and teenagers, may be able to align their daily schedules more closely to their natural circadian rhythms.

“Given that we are not bound by usual work or social schedules, there may be a tendency to drift to our sleep chronotypes,” especially for teenagers, Dr. Sundar said.

For some, this may be their first opportunity to learn what their chronotype is, Dr. Seay said.

“It is always advantageous to ‘obey’ your natural sleep timing, [although] it simply isn’t always the most efficient outside of our current situation,” he said. “Use this as a time to figure out your natural sleep timing if you constantly have issues being able to wake up in the morning. Now that you don’t have to be up for work or school, you can figure out what time works for you.”

At the same time, if you have an extreme circadian rhythm disorder, especially an irregular one, it may still be best to try to keep a regular sleep schedule to avoid feeling isolated if others are socializing while you’re asleep, Ms. Trainor said.

The authors similarly note the limits of potential benefits during this time, noting that they “may not be enough to counteract the negative effects of the increased work and family requirements, as well as the overwhelming levels of stress and anxiety about the well-being of oneself and others, and the negative effects of confinement for family social reactions.”
 

 

 

Treating stress, anxiety, and insomnia

The first-line treatment for chronic insomnia is cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia, but “recent evidence shows that cognitive-behavioral therapy can also serve to treat sudden-onset (acute) insomnia due to rapid stress-causing situation changes,” the authors noted. They also reviewed the key elements of CBT-I: stimulus control, sleep hygiene, relaxation interventions, cognitive reappraisal, paradoxical intention, and sleep restriction.

CBT-I lends very naturally to telemedicine, Dr. Seay, Dr. Sundar, and Ms. Trainor all agreed.

“I actually see this current situation as an opportunity for health care practices and providers to expand the reach of telemedicine – due to necessity – which will hopefully continue after confinement has been lifted worldwide,” Dr. Seay said.  

Dr. Sundar pointed to research supporting CBT-I online and several apps that can be used for it, such as SHUTi and Sleepio. Ms. Trainor noted that the Cleveland Clinic offers a basic CBT-I online class for $40.

The authors note that prescribing medication is generally discouraged because it lacks evidence for long-term effectiveness of chronic insomnia, but it might be worth considering as a second-line therapy for acute insomnia from outside stressors, such as home confinement, if CBT-I doesn’t work or isn’t possible. Pharmacologic treatment can include benzodiazepines, hypnotic benzodiazepine receptor agonists, or sedating antidepressants, particularly if used for a comorbid mood disorder.

The authors then offer general recommendations for improving sleep that doctors can pass on to their patients:

  • Get up and go to bed at approximately the same times daily.
  • Schedule 15-minute breaks during the day to manage stress and reflect on worries and the situation.
  • Reserve the bed for sleep and sex only; not for working, watching TV, using the computer, or doing other activities.
  • Try to follow your natural sleep rhythm as much as possible.
  • Use social media as stress relief, an opportunity to communicate with friends and family, and distraction, especially with uplifting stories or humor.
  • Leave devices out of the bedroom.
  • Limit your exposure to news about the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Exercise regularly, ideally in daylight.
  • Look for ways to stay busy and distracted, including making your home or bedroom more comfortable if possible.
  • Get as much daylight during the day as possible, and keep lights dim or dark at night.
  • Engage in familiar, comfortable, relaxing activities before bedtime.
  • If your daily activity level is lower, eat less as well, ideally at least 2 hours before going to bed.

The authors also offered recommendations specifically for families:

  • Divide child care, home maintenance, and chores between adults, being sure not to let the lion’s share fall on women.
  • Maintain regular sleep times for children and spend the 30 minutes before their bedtime doing a calming, familiar activity that both the children and parents enjoy.
  • “While using computer, smartphones, and watching TV more than usual may be inevitable in confinement, avoid technological devices after dinner or too close to bedtime.”
  • Ensure your child has daily physical activity, keep a relatively consistent schedule or routine, expose them to as much daylight or bright light as possible during the day, and try to limit their bed use only to sleeping if possible. “Parents need to be involved in setting schedules for sleep and meal times so that kids do not get into sleep patterns that are difficult to change when school starts back,” Dr. Sundar said. “Limiting screen time is also important especially during nighttime.”
  • Reassure children if they wake up anxious at night.

SOURCE: Altena E et al. J Sleep Res. 2020 Apr 4. doi: 10.1111/jsr.13052.

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Mass social distancing and social isolation to prevent the spread of a deadly disease, along with technological tools that allow social communication and continued work and school, is an unprecedented situation.

A grumpy insomniac man is shown
Stockbyte/Thinkstock.com

The current reality of most people’s lives during the COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to induce or exacerbate sleep problems, though it may also present some with an opportunity to improve sleep, wrote Ellemarije Altena, PhD, of the University of Bordeaux (France), and her colleagues in a recent research review in the Journal of Sleep Research.

The review was conducted by a task force of the European Academy for Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia. The European CBT-I Academy is an initiative of the European Insomnia Network to promote implementation and dissemination of treatment.

After discussing the known effects of stress, confinement, and altered schedules on sleep, the authors present recommendations on ways to manage sleep problems such as insomnia in the general public and potentially encourage people to take advantage of the opportunity to align their schedules with their natural circadian rhythms. Physicians may find the recommendations helpful in advising patients with sleep problems related to the COVID-19 emergency.

“Being forced to stay at home, work from home, do homeschooling with children, drastically minimize outings, reduce social interaction or work many more hours under stressful circumstances, and in parallel manage the attendant health risks, can have a major impact on daily functioning and nighttime sleep,” Dr. Altena and colleagues wrote.

Dr. Krishna M. Sundar, University of Utah, Salt Lake City
Dr. Krishna M. Sundar

There may also be a lag time in physicians hearing about changes in sleep or sleeping problems from patients, said Krishna M. Sundar, MD, FCCP, medical director of the Sleep-Wake Center at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. “There may actually be some improvement in sleep durations given that most folks are working from home with more time with family and less work-related stress,” he said in an interview. “In terms of sleep or other effects on worsening of psychiatric problems, it is still not clear what the overall effects are going to be.”

Although daylight has the biggest impact on regulating circadian rhythms, artificial light, meal times, diet, and amount of physical activity can also have an influence. Negative effects on sleep can result from both excessively high activity levels, such as stress and work overload, or excessively low levels, such as from depression or confinement, the authors note.

The current situation also opens the door to interactions between stress, sleep, anxiety, and risk of PTSD. “Those sensitive to stress-related sleep disruption are more likely to develop chronic insomnia,” which, in combination with a major stressor, is a risk factor for PTSD, the authors write. They note that 7% of Wuhan residents, the city in China where the virus appears to have originated, particularly women, reported PTSD symptoms after the COVID-19 outbreak, and anxiety was highest in those under age 35 years and those who followed news about the disease for more than 3 hours a day.

Better sleep quality and fewer early morning awakenings, however, appeared to be protective against PTSD symptoms. The authors note the value of physical exercise, cognitive interventions, and relaxation techniques, including meditation, for reducing stress and milder symptoms of PTSD.

“Some patients are sleeping a bit better because of the pace of things has slowed down a bit,” said Anne C. Trainor, a nurse practitioner and instructor in the neurology department’s sleep disorders program at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, who was not involved in the study. “Keeping a regular schedule for sleeping and eating, getting exercise daily – preferably in sunlight and not just before bedtime – and using relaxation or mindfulness practice and cognitive interventions to help manage anxiety” were the key takeaways from this review, Ms. Trainor said in an interview.


 

 

 

Home confinement, stressors and sleep

A wide range of stressors could affect sleep during COVID-19 social distancing interventions, including “major changes in routines, living with uncertainty,” and anxiety about health, the economic situation, and how long this situation will last, the authors write.

Parents must juggle work, homeschooling, and ordinary household errands and management. Meanwhile, entrepreneurs, small business owners ,and workers in entertainment, hospitality and food service must contend with anxiety about job uncertainty and financial security. For anyone working from home, disruptions to work and home routines can make it difficult to associate being home with relaxation – and sleep.

“The more regular our sleep schedule is the better quality our sleep tends to be, but it is a struggle when we don’t have separate spaces to work and parent in,” Ms. Trainor said.

At the same time, “confinement-related stress may be caused by an inability to engage in rewarding activities, such as visiting friends and family, shopping, attending cultural and sports events, and visiting bars or restaurants,” the authors write. “Spending more time with family in a limited space can also induce stress, particularly in situations where there are preexisting family difficulties.”

Being stuck at home may lead to less daylight exposure than usual, reduced physical activity, and increased eating, which can contribute to weight gain and other health risks. However, “the effect of stress from confinement, loss of work, and health concerns needs to be individualized and may be difficult to generalize,” Dr. Sundar said.

The authors of the review note the established associations between too little social interaction, increased stress, and poor sleep quality, though loneliness mediates this relationship. Loneliness is also a risk during this time, with or without online social interaction.

Children and teens may also have difficulty sleeping, which can affect their behavioral and emotional regulation, and primary caregivers experience more stress while juggling childcare, household duties, and work.

“While many parents share childcare and household responsibilities, in most families these tasks are still predominantly managed by mothers,” the authors added.

Dr. Brandon M. Seay, pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist for the Children's Physician Group Pulmonology in Atlanta
Dr. Brandon M. Seay

“Sharing responsibilities between parents and not overworking just one parent is key,” said Brandon M. Seay MD, a pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. He also recommended trying to incorporate work into the day while kids are doing online learning.

Ms. Trainor agreed that trading off responsibilities between parents is ideal, though the challenge is greater for single parents. It may be possible for some to take family leave, but not all families have that option, she said.

The study authors also point out a Catch-22 for many people: The blurred boundary between home life and work life can undermine work productivity and efficiency, thereby increasing stress. “Healthy sleep may be a key protective factor to cope positively with these challenges, although adequate opportunity to sleep may be affected by increased time pressure of work, childcare, and household requirements.”

Dr. Seay advises adults to try to get at least 6-8 hours of sleep each night, even taking advantage of a later waking time – if the kids also sleep in – to help. “If anything, the ability to sleep later and wake up later is of benefit for a lot of my teenage patients,” he said in an interview.

In fact, the study authors also address possible positive effects on sleep for some people during the current situation. Since social support can improve sleep quality, social media interaction might provide some social support, though it’s not the same as meeting people in person and “screen exposure may hamper sleep quality when used close to bedtime.”

Some people may actually have an opportunity to get more daylight exposure or exercise, which can improve sleep, and some, especially night owls and teenagers, may be able to align their daily schedules more closely to their natural circadian rhythms.

“Given that we are not bound by usual work or social schedules, there may be a tendency to drift to our sleep chronotypes,” especially for teenagers, Dr. Sundar said.

For some, this may be their first opportunity to learn what their chronotype is, Dr. Seay said.

“It is always advantageous to ‘obey’ your natural sleep timing, [although] it simply isn’t always the most efficient outside of our current situation,” he said. “Use this as a time to figure out your natural sleep timing if you constantly have issues being able to wake up in the morning. Now that you don’t have to be up for work or school, you can figure out what time works for you.”

At the same time, if you have an extreme circadian rhythm disorder, especially an irregular one, it may still be best to try to keep a regular sleep schedule to avoid feeling isolated if others are socializing while you’re asleep, Ms. Trainor said.

The authors similarly note the limits of potential benefits during this time, noting that they “may not be enough to counteract the negative effects of the increased work and family requirements, as well as the overwhelming levels of stress and anxiety about the well-being of oneself and others, and the negative effects of confinement for family social reactions.”
 

 

 

Treating stress, anxiety, and insomnia

The first-line treatment for chronic insomnia is cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia, but “recent evidence shows that cognitive-behavioral therapy can also serve to treat sudden-onset (acute) insomnia due to rapid stress-causing situation changes,” the authors noted. They also reviewed the key elements of CBT-I: stimulus control, sleep hygiene, relaxation interventions, cognitive reappraisal, paradoxical intention, and sleep restriction.

CBT-I lends very naturally to telemedicine, Dr. Seay, Dr. Sundar, and Ms. Trainor all agreed.

“I actually see this current situation as an opportunity for health care practices and providers to expand the reach of telemedicine – due to necessity – which will hopefully continue after confinement has been lifted worldwide,” Dr. Seay said.  

Dr. Sundar pointed to research supporting CBT-I online and several apps that can be used for it, such as SHUTi and Sleepio. Ms. Trainor noted that the Cleveland Clinic offers a basic CBT-I online class for $40.

The authors note that prescribing medication is generally discouraged because it lacks evidence for long-term effectiveness of chronic insomnia, but it might be worth considering as a second-line therapy for acute insomnia from outside stressors, such as home confinement, if CBT-I doesn’t work or isn’t possible. Pharmacologic treatment can include benzodiazepines, hypnotic benzodiazepine receptor agonists, or sedating antidepressants, particularly if used for a comorbid mood disorder.

The authors then offer general recommendations for improving sleep that doctors can pass on to their patients:

  • Get up and go to bed at approximately the same times daily.
  • Schedule 15-minute breaks during the day to manage stress and reflect on worries and the situation.
  • Reserve the bed for sleep and sex only; not for working, watching TV, using the computer, or doing other activities.
  • Try to follow your natural sleep rhythm as much as possible.
  • Use social media as stress relief, an opportunity to communicate with friends and family, and distraction, especially with uplifting stories or humor.
  • Leave devices out of the bedroom.
  • Limit your exposure to news about the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Exercise regularly, ideally in daylight.
  • Look for ways to stay busy and distracted, including making your home or bedroom more comfortable if possible.
  • Get as much daylight during the day as possible, and keep lights dim or dark at night.
  • Engage in familiar, comfortable, relaxing activities before bedtime.
  • If your daily activity level is lower, eat less as well, ideally at least 2 hours before going to bed.

The authors also offered recommendations specifically for families:

  • Divide child care, home maintenance, and chores between adults, being sure not to let the lion’s share fall on women.
  • Maintain regular sleep times for children and spend the 30 minutes before their bedtime doing a calming, familiar activity that both the children and parents enjoy.
  • “While using computer, smartphones, and watching TV more than usual may be inevitable in confinement, avoid technological devices after dinner or too close to bedtime.”
  • Ensure your child has daily physical activity, keep a relatively consistent schedule or routine, expose them to as much daylight or bright light as possible during the day, and try to limit their bed use only to sleeping if possible. “Parents need to be involved in setting schedules for sleep and meal times so that kids do not get into sleep patterns that are difficult to change when school starts back,” Dr. Sundar said. “Limiting screen time is also important especially during nighttime.”
  • Reassure children if they wake up anxious at night.

SOURCE: Altena E et al. J Sleep Res. 2020 Apr 4. doi: 10.1111/jsr.13052.

Mass social distancing and social isolation to prevent the spread of a deadly disease, along with technological tools that allow social communication and continued work and school, is an unprecedented situation.

A grumpy insomniac man is shown
Stockbyte/Thinkstock.com

The current reality of most people’s lives during the COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to induce or exacerbate sleep problems, though it may also present some with an opportunity to improve sleep, wrote Ellemarije Altena, PhD, of the University of Bordeaux (France), and her colleagues in a recent research review in the Journal of Sleep Research.

The review was conducted by a task force of the European Academy for Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia. The European CBT-I Academy is an initiative of the European Insomnia Network to promote implementation and dissemination of treatment.

After discussing the known effects of stress, confinement, and altered schedules on sleep, the authors present recommendations on ways to manage sleep problems such as insomnia in the general public and potentially encourage people to take advantage of the opportunity to align their schedules with their natural circadian rhythms. Physicians may find the recommendations helpful in advising patients with sleep problems related to the COVID-19 emergency.

“Being forced to stay at home, work from home, do homeschooling with children, drastically minimize outings, reduce social interaction or work many more hours under stressful circumstances, and in parallel manage the attendant health risks, can have a major impact on daily functioning and nighttime sleep,” Dr. Altena and colleagues wrote.

Dr. Krishna M. Sundar, University of Utah, Salt Lake City
Dr. Krishna M. Sundar

There may also be a lag time in physicians hearing about changes in sleep or sleeping problems from patients, said Krishna M. Sundar, MD, FCCP, medical director of the Sleep-Wake Center at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. “There may actually be some improvement in sleep durations given that most folks are working from home with more time with family and less work-related stress,” he said in an interview. “In terms of sleep or other effects on worsening of psychiatric problems, it is still not clear what the overall effects are going to be.”

Although daylight has the biggest impact on regulating circadian rhythms, artificial light, meal times, diet, and amount of physical activity can also have an influence. Negative effects on sleep can result from both excessively high activity levels, such as stress and work overload, or excessively low levels, such as from depression or confinement, the authors note.

The current situation also opens the door to interactions between stress, sleep, anxiety, and risk of PTSD. “Those sensitive to stress-related sleep disruption are more likely to develop chronic insomnia,” which, in combination with a major stressor, is a risk factor for PTSD, the authors write. They note that 7% of Wuhan residents, the city in China where the virus appears to have originated, particularly women, reported PTSD symptoms after the COVID-19 outbreak, and anxiety was highest in those under age 35 years and those who followed news about the disease for more than 3 hours a day.

Better sleep quality and fewer early morning awakenings, however, appeared to be protective against PTSD symptoms. The authors note the value of physical exercise, cognitive interventions, and relaxation techniques, including meditation, for reducing stress and milder symptoms of PTSD.

“Some patients are sleeping a bit better because of the pace of things has slowed down a bit,” said Anne C. Trainor, a nurse practitioner and instructor in the neurology department’s sleep disorders program at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, who was not involved in the study. “Keeping a regular schedule for sleeping and eating, getting exercise daily – preferably in sunlight and not just before bedtime – and using relaxation or mindfulness practice and cognitive interventions to help manage anxiety” were the key takeaways from this review, Ms. Trainor said in an interview.


 

 

 

Home confinement, stressors and sleep

A wide range of stressors could affect sleep during COVID-19 social distancing interventions, including “major changes in routines, living with uncertainty,” and anxiety about health, the economic situation, and how long this situation will last, the authors write.

Parents must juggle work, homeschooling, and ordinary household errands and management. Meanwhile, entrepreneurs, small business owners ,and workers in entertainment, hospitality and food service must contend with anxiety about job uncertainty and financial security. For anyone working from home, disruptions to work and home routines can make it difficult to associate being home with relaxation – and sleep.

“The more regular our sleep schedule is the better quality our sleep tends to be, but it is a struggle when we don’t have separate spaces to work and parent in,” Ms. Trainor said.

At the same time, “confinement-related stress may be caused by an inability to engage in rewarding activities, such as visiting friends and family, shopping, attending cultural and sports events, and visiting bars or restaurants,” the authors write. “Spending more time with family in a limited space can also induce stress, particularly in situations where there are preexisting family difficulties.”

Being stuck at home may lead to less daylight exposure than usual, reduced physical activity, and increased eating, which can contribute to weight gain and other health risks. However, “the effect of stress from confinement, loss of work, and health concerns needs to be individualized and may be difficult to generalize,” Dr. Sundar said.

The authors of the review note the established associations between too little social interaction, increased stress, and poor sleep quality, though loneliness mediates this relationship. Loneliness is also a risk during this time, with or without online social interaction.

Children and teens may also have difficulty sleeping, which can affect their behavioral and emotional regulation, and primary caregivers experience more stress while juggling childcare, household duties, and work.

“While many parents share childcare and household responsibilities, in most families these tasks are still predominantly managed by mothers,” the authors added.

Dr. Brandon M. Seay, pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist for the Children's Physician Group Pulmonology in Atlanta
Dr. Brandon M. Seay

“Sharing responsibilities between parents and not overworking just one parent is key,” said Brandon M. Seay MD, a pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. He also recommended trying to incorporate work into the day while kids are doing online learning.

Ms. Trainor agreed that trading off responsibilities between parents is ideal, though the challenge is greater for single parents. It may be possible for some to take family leave, but not all families have that option, she said.

The study authors also point out a Catch-22 for many people: The blurred boundary between home life and work life can undermine work productivity and efficiency, thereby increasing stress. “Healthy sleep may be a key protective factor to cope positively with these challenges, although adequate opportunity to sleep may be affected by increased time pressure of work, childcare, and household requirements.”

Dr. Seay advises adults to try to get at least 6-8 hours of sleep each night, even taking advantage of a later waking time – if the kids also sleep in – to help. “If anything, the ability to sleep later and wake up later is of benefit for a lot of my teenage patients,” he said in an interview.

In fact, the study authors also address possible positive effects on sleep for some people during the current situation. Since social support can improve sleep quality, social media interaction might provide some social support, though it’s not the same as meeting people in person and “screen exposure may hamper sleep quality when used close to bedtime.”

Some people may actually have an opportunity to get more daylight exposure or exercise, which can improve sleep, and some, especially night owls and teenagers, may be able to align their daily schedules more closely to their natural circadian rhythms.

“Given that we are not bound by usual work or social schedules, there may be a tendency to drift to our sleep chronotypes,” especially for teenagers, Dr. Sundar said.

For some, this may be their first opportunity to learn what their chronotype is, Dr. Seay said.

“It is always advantageous to ‘obey’ your natural sleep timing, [although] it simply isn’t always the most efficient outside of our current situation,” he said. “Use this as a time to figure out your natural sleep timing if you constantly have issues being able to wake up in the morning. Now that you don’t have to be up for work or school, you can figure out what time works for you.”

At the same time, if you have an extreme circadian rhythm disorder, especially an irregular one, it may still be best to try to keep a regular sleep schedule to avoid feeling isolated if others are socializing while you’re asleep, Ms. Trainor said.

The authors similarly note the limits of potential benefits during this time, noting that they “may not be enough to counteract the negative effects of the increased work and family requirements, as well as the overwhelming levels of stress and anxiety about the well-being of oneself and others, and the negative effects of confinement for family social reactions.”
 

 

 

Treating stress, anxiety, and insomnia

The first-line treatment for chronic insomnia is cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia, but “recent evidence shows that cognitive-behavioral therapy can also serve to treat sudden-onset (acute) insomnia due to rapid stress-causing situation changes,” the authors noted. They also reviewed the key elements of CBT-I: stimulus control, sleep hygiene, relaxation interventions, cognitive reappraisal, paradoxical intention, and sleep restriction.

CBT-I lends very naturally to telemedicine, Dr. Seay, Dr. Sundar, and Ms. Trainor all agreed.

“I actually see this current situation as an opportunity for health care practices and providers to expand the reach of telemedicine – due to necessity – which will hopefully continue after confinement has been lifted worldwide,” Dr. Seay said.  

Dr. Sundar pointed to research supporting CBT-I online and several apps that can be used for it, such as SHUTi and Sleepio. Ms. Trainor noted that the Cleveland Clinic offers a basic CBT-I online class for $40.

The authors note that prescribing medication is generally discouraged because it lacks evidence for long-term effectiveness of chronic insomnia, but it might be worth considering as a second-line therapy for acute insomnia from outside stressors, such as home confinement, if CBT-I doesn’t work or isn’t possible. Pharmacologic treatment can include benzodiazepines, hypnotic benzodiazepine receptor agonists, or sedating antidepressants, particularly if used for a comorbid mood disorder.

The authors then offer general recommendations for improving sleep that doctors can pass on to their patients:

  • Get up and go to bed at approximately the same times daily.
  • Schedule 15-minute breaks during the day to manage stress and reflect on worries and the situation.
  • Reserve the bed for sleep and sex only; not for working, watching TV, using the computer, or doing other activities.
  • Try to follow your natural sleep rhythm as much as possible.
  • Use social media as stress relief, an opportunity to communicate with friends and family, and distraction, especially with uplifting stories or humor.
  • Leave devices out of the bedroom.
  • Limit your exposure to news about the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Exercise regularly, ideally in daylight.
  • Look for ways to stay busy and distracted, including making your home or bedroom more comfortable if possible.
  • Get as much daylight during the day as possible, and keep lights dim or dark at night.
  • Engage in familiar, comfortable, relaxing activities before bedtime.
  • If your daily activity level is lower, eat less as well, ideally at least 2 hours before going to bed.

The authors also offered recommendations specifically for families:

  • Divide child care, home maintenance, and chores between adults, being sure not to let the lion’s share fall on women.
  • Maintain regular sleep times for children and spend the 30 minutes before their bedtime doing a calming, familiar activity that both the children and parents enjoy.
  • “While using computer, smartphones, and watching TV more than usual may be inevitable in confinement, avoid technological devices after dinner or too close to bedtime.”
  • Ensure your child has daily physical activity, keep a relatively consistent schedule or routine, expose them to as much daylight or bright light as possible during the day, and try to limit their bed use only to sleeping if possible. “Parents need to be involved in setting schedules for sleep and meal times so that kids do not get into sleep patterns that are difficult to change when school starts back,” Dr. Sundar said. “Limiting screen time is also important especially during nighttime.”
  • Reassure children if they wake up anxious at night.

SOURCE: Altena E et al. J Sleep Res. 2020 Apr 4. doi: 10.1111/jsr.13052.

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No hydroxychloroquine benefit in small, randomized COVID-19 trial

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:13

 

Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) does not help clear the SARS-CoV-2 virus or relieve symptoms for COVID-19 patients more than standard care alone and has more side effects, a randomized controlled trial of 150 hospitalized adults in China suggests.

However, two experts caution that, because of confounding, the trial is unable to answer convincingly the question of whether HCQ can benefit COVID-19 patients.

Wei Tang, with the Departments of Pulmonology and Critical Care Medicine at Ruijin Hospital, in Shanghai, China, and colleagues enrolled patients with COVID-19 from 16 treatment centers in China in February. They posted their findings on the medRxiv preprint server, but their paper has not been peer reviewed. A coauthor told Medscape Medical News the work has been submitted to a journal.

The overall 28-day negative conversion rate of SARS-CoV-2, which was the primary endpoint, was similar in the two 75-patient treatment groups. The Kaplan-Meier estimate for negative conversion rate was 85.4% in the HCQ plus standard of care (SOC) arm, vs 81.3% in the SOC-only group (P = .341). Negative conversion rates for the two groups were similar at days 4, 7, 10, 14, and 21.

Adverse events were reported in 8.8% of patients in the control group compared with 30% in the HCQ group. Diarrhea was the most common side effect, occurring in 10% of patients in the HCQ group vs none in the control group. Two patients in the HCQ arm had serious adverse events; one experienced disease progression, and the other experienced upper respiratory tract infection.

Patients in the HCQ group received a high loading dose of 1200 mg daily for 3 days followed by a maintenance dose of 800 mg daily for the remaining days. Total duration was 2 weeks for patients with mild or moderate disease and 3 weeks for those with severe disease.

No Difference in Relief of Symptoms

The two arms were similar in alleviation of symptoms by day 28: 59.9% with HCQ plus SOC vs 66.6% with SOC alone.

However, the researchers said that in a post hoc analysis, they found a significant reduction of symptoms after adjusting for the confounding effects of antiviral agents (hazard ratio, 8.83; 95% confidence interval, 1.09 – 71.3).

In addition, Tang and colleagues report a significantly greater reduction of C-reactive protein (CRP), a biomarker for inflammation, from baseline to day 28 in the HCQ group in comparison with the control group (6.986 vs 2.723 mg/L).

The authors suggest the alleviation of symptoms may come from HCQ’s anti-inflammatory effects.

The mean age of the patients was 46 years, and 55% were male. Almost all patients had mild or moderate disease; two had severe disease.

Experts Say Study Arms May Not Have Been Comparable

J. Michelle Kahlenberg, MD, PhD, research professor of rheumatology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, told Medscape Medical News that it’s important to note that in the post hoc analysis, 89% of the patients in this trial were receiving other therapy in addition to HCQ.

“When [the researchers] say they saw improvement in symptoms when they removed the confounders, what they actually did was remove the patients from the analysis that got antivirals, and that left 14 patients in each arm,” Kahlenberg said.

Moreover, Kahlenberg noted, 20% of patients who received HCQ had mild symptoms, whereas only 9% of those in the SOC group did.

“We don’t know how those patients played out in the post hoc analysis — whether it was the patients who were really mild that didn’t get the antivirals that were left in the hydroxychloroquine group and that’s why they had a slightly faster resolution of symptoms,” she said.

She said that in this study, the researchers calculated CRP in milligrams per liter, whereas in the United States, it is measured in milligrams per deciliter. The conversion highlights the fact that the reduction in CRP was not terribly noteworthy, she said.

“The patients with COVID who tend to tank and have cytokine storms ― their CRP is much higher,” she said. “So the small improvement in CRP wasn’t that exciting.

“I don’t think this gets us anywhere closer to an answer. It’s another muddy study,” she said.

Similarly, Christopher V. Plowe, MD, MPH, director of the Global Health Institute at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, told Medscape Medical News he sees no convincing answers in this study.

Plowe, professor of medicine, molecular genetics, microbiology, and global health at Duke, also noted differences between the two groups at enrollment.

For example, the HCQ group had more than three times the number of patients with shortness of breath (22.1% vs 5.9%); more with sputum production (16.2 vs 5.9%); and more with cough (51.5% vs 38.2%). In addition, the average age was 4 years higher in the HCQ group.

“It makes me wonder whether the randomization was truly random,” Plowe said.

Plowe also questioned the authors’ statement that they didn’t see cardiac arrhythmia events, such as prolonged QT intervals. “I can’t see any evidence that they did an EKG on anybody,” he said.

“This study leaves the door open to the possibility that hydroxychloroquine may have a clinical benefit. If there is a benefit, it seems to be related to the drug’s anti-inflammatory properties. If that’s the case, I’m not sure this particular drug, as opposed to others, would be the way to go,” Plowe said.

 

 

Mixed Results in Other Studies

“Our negative results on the anti-viral efficacy of HCQ obtained in this trial are on the contrary to the encouraging in-vitro results and to the recently reported promising results from a non-randomized trial with 36 COVID-19 patients,” the authors write.

However, the 36-patient trial to which they refer has since been called into question, as previously reported by Retraction Watch.

Despite lack of clear evidence of benefit, HCQ is recommended off label for the treatment of COVID-19 by the Chinese National guideline, and the US Food and Drug Administration has issued an emergency-use authorization for the treatment of adult patients with COVID-19.

By contrast, the Infectious Diseases Society of America recently concluded that because of insufficient data, they could not recommend any particular treatment for patients with COVID-19.

The work was supported by the Emergent Projects of National Science and Technology; the National Natural Science Foundation of China; the National Key Research and Development Program of China; the Shanghai Municipal Key Clinical Specialty; the National Innovative Research Team of High-Level Local Universities in Shanghai; the Shanghai Key Discipline for Respiratory Diseases; the National Major Scientific and Technological Special Project for Significant New Drugs Development; and Key Projects in the National Science and Technology Pillar Program. The authors, Kahlenberg, and Plowe have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This story first appeared on Medscape.com.
 

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Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) does not help clear the SARS-CoV-2 virus or relieve symptoms for COVID-19 patients more than standard care alone and has more side effects, a randomized controlled trial of 150 hospitalized adults in China suggests.

However, two experts caution that, because of confounding, the trial is unable to answer convincingly the question of whether HCQ can benefit COVID-19 patients.

Wei Tang, with the Departments of Pulmonology and Critical Care Medicine at Ruijin Hospital, in Shanghai, China, and colleagues enrolled patients with COVID-19 from 16 treatment centers in China in February. They posted their findings on the medRxiv preprint server, but their paper has not been peer reviewed. A coauthor told Medscape Medical News the work has been submitted to a journal.

The overall 28-day negative conversion rate of SARS-CoV-2, which was the primary endpoint, was similar in the two 75-patient treatment groups. The Kaplan-Meier estimate for negative conversion rate was 85.4% in the HCQ plus standard of care (SOC) arm, vs 81.3% in the SOC-only group (P = .341). Negative conversion rates for the two groups were similar at days 4, 7, 10, 14, and 21.

Adverse events were reported in 8.8% of patients in the control group compared with 30% in the HCQ group. Diarrhea was the most common side effect, occurring in 10% of patients in the HCQ group vs none in the control group. Two patients in the HCQ arm had serious adverse events; one experienced disease progression, and the other experienced upper respiratory tract infection.

Patients in the HCQ group received a high loading dose of 1200 mg daily for 3 days followed by a maintenance dose of 800 mg daily for the remaining days. Total duration was 2 weeks for patients with mild or moderate disease and 3 weeks for those with severe disease.

No Difference in Relief of Symptoms

The two arms were similar in alleviation of symptoms by day 28: 59.9% with HCQ plus SOC vs 66.6% with SOC alone.

However, the researchers said that in a post hoc analysis, they found a significant reduction of symptoms after adjusting for the confounding effects of antiviral agents (hazard ratio, 8.83; 95% confidence interval, 1.09 – 71.3).

In addition, Tang and colleagues report a significantly greater reduction of C-reactive protein (CRP), a biomarker for inflammation, from baseline to day 28 in the HCQ group in comparison with the control group (6.986 vs 2.723 mg/L).

The authors suggest the alleviation of symptoms may come from HCQ’s anti-inflammatory effects.

The mean age of the patients was 46 years, and 55% were male. Almost all patients had mild or moderate disease; two had severe disease.

Experts Say Study Arms May Not Have Been Comparable

J. Michelle Kahlenberg, MD, PhD, research professor of rheumatology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, told Medscape Medical News that it’s important to note that in the post hoc analysis, 89% of the patients in this trial were receiving other therapy in addition to HCQ.

“When [the researchers] say they saw improvement in symptoms when they removed the confounders, what they actually did was remove the patients from the analysis that got antivirals, and that left 14 patients in each arm,” Kahlenberg said.

Moreover, Kahlenberg noted, 20% of patients who received HCQ had mild symptoms, whereas only 9% of those in the SOC group did.

“We don’t know how those patients played out in the post hoc analysis — whether it was the patients who were really mild that didn’t get the antivirals that were left in the hydroxychloroquine group and that’s why they had a slightly faster resolution of symptoms,” she said.

She said that in this study, the researchers calculated CRP in milligrams per liter, whereas in the United States, it is measured in milligrams per deciliter. The conversion highlights the fact that the reduction in CRP was not terribly noteworthy, she said.

“The patients with COVID who tend to tank and have cytokine storms ― their CRP is much higher,” she said. “So the small improvement in CRP wasn’t that exciting.

“I don’t think this gets us anywhere closer to an answer. It’s another muddy study,” she said.

Similarly, Christopher V. Plowe, MD, MPH, director of the Global Health Institute at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, told Medscape Medical News he sees no convincing answers in this study.

Plowe, professor of medicine, molecular genetics, microbiology, and global health at Duke, also noted differences between the two groups at enrollment.

For example, the HCQ group had more than three times the number of patients with shortness of breath (22.1% vs 5.9%); more with sputum production (16.2 vs 5.9%); and more with cough (51.5% vs 38.2%). In addition, the average age was 4 years higher in the HCQ group.

“It makes me wonder whether the randomization was truly random,” Plowe said.

Plowe also questioned the authors’ statement that they didn’t see cardiac arrhythmia events, such as prolonged QT intervals. “I can’t see any evidence that they did an EKG on anybody,” he said.

“This study leaves the door open to the possibility that hydroxychloroquine may have a clinical benefit. If there is a benefit, it seems to be related to the drug’s anti-inflammatory properties. If that’s the case, I’m not sure this particular drug, as opposed to others, would be the way to go,” Plowe said.

 

 

Mixed Results in Other Studies

“Our negative results on the anti-viral efficacy of HCQ obtained in this trial are on the contrary to the encouraging in-vitro results and to the recently reported promising results from a non-randomized trial with 36 COVID-19 patients,” the authors write.

However, the 36-patient trial to which they refer has since been called into question, as previously reported by Retraction Watch.

Despite lack of clear evidence of benefit, HCQ is recommended off label for the treatment of COVID-19 by the Chinese National guideline, and the US Food and Drug Administration has issued an emergency-use authorization for the treatment of adult patients with COVID-19.

By contrast, the Infectious Diseases Society of America recently concluded that because of insufficient data, they could not recommend any particular treatment for patients with COVID-19.

The work was supported by the Emergent Projects of National Science and Technology; the National Natural Science Foundation of China; the National Key Research and Development Program of China; the Shanghai Municipal Key Clinical Specialty; the National Innovative Research Team of High-Level Local Universities in Shanghai; the Shanghai Key Discipline for Respiratory Diseases; the National Major Scientific and Technological Special Project for Significant New Drugs Development; and Key Projects in the National Science and Technology Pillar Program. The authors, Kahlenberg, and Plowe have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This story first appeared on Medscape.com.
 

 

Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) does not help clear the SARS-CoV-2 virus or relieve symptoms for COVID-19 patients more than standard care alone and has more side effects, a randomized controlled trial of 150 hospitalized adults in China suggests.

However, two experts caution that, because of confounding, the trial is unable to answer convincingly the question of whether HCQ can benefit COVID-19 patients.

Wei Tang, with the Departments of Pulmonology and Critical Care Medicine at Ruijin Hospital, in Shanghai, China, and colleagues enrolled patients with COVID-19 from 16 treatment centers in China in February. They posted their findings on the medRxiv preprint server, but their paper has not been peer reviewed. A coauthor told Medscape Medical News the work has been submitted to a journal.

The overall 28-day negative conversion rate of SARS-CoV-2, which was the primary endpoint, was similar in the two 75-patient treatment groups. The Kaplan-Meier estimate for negative conversion rate was 85.4% in the HCQ plus standard of care (SOC) arm, vs 81.3% in the SOC-only group (P = .341). Negative conversion rates for the two groups were similar at days 4, 7, 10, 14, and 21.

Adverse events were reported in 8.8% of patients in the control group compared with 30% in the HCQ group. Diarrhea was the most common side effect, occurring in 10% of patients in the HCQ group vs none in the control group. Two patients in the HCQ arm had serious adverse events; one experienced disease progression, and the other experienced upper respiratory tract infection.

Patients in the HCQ group received a high loading dose of 1200 mg daily for 3 days followed by a maintenance dose of 800 mg daily for the remaining days. Total duration was 2 weeks for patients with mild or moderate disease and 3 weeks for those with severe disease.

No Difference in Relief of Symptoms

The two arms were similar in alleviation of symptoms by day 28: 59.9% with HCQ plus SOC vs 66.6% with SOC alone.

However, the researchers said that in a post hoc analysis, they found a significant reduction of symptoms after adjusting for the confounding effects of antiviral agents (hazard ratio, 8.83; 95% confidence interval, 1.09 – 71.3).

In addition, Tang and colleagues report a significantly greater reduction of C-reactive protein (CRP), a biomarker for inflammation, from baseline to day 28 in the HCQ group in comparison with the control group (6.986 vs 2.723 mg/L).

The authors suggest the alleviation of symptoms may come from HCQ’s anti-inflammatory effects.

The mean age of the patients was 46 years, and 55% were male. Almost all patients had mild or moderate disease; two had severe disease.

Experts Say Study Arms May Not Have Been Comparable

J. Michelle Kahlenberg, MD, PhD, research professor of rheumatology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, told Medscape Medical News that it’s important to note that in the post hoc analysis, 89% of the patients in this trial were receiving other therapy in addition to HCQ.

“When [the researchers] say they saw improvement in symptoms when they removed the confounders, what they actually did was remove the patients from the analysis that got antivirals, and that left 14 patients in each arm,” Kahlenberg said.

Moreover, Kahlenberg noted, 20% of patients who received HCQ had mild symptoms, whereas only 9% of those in the SOC group did.

“We don’t know how those patients played out in the post hoc analysis — whether it was the patients who were really mild that didn’t get the antivirals that were left in the hydroxychloroquine group and that’s why they had a slightly faster resolution of symptoms,” she said.

She said that in this study, the researchers calculated CRP in milligrams per liter, whereas in the United States, it is measured in milligrams per deciliter. The conversion highlights the fact that the reduction in CRP was not terribly noteworthy, she said.

“The patients with COVID who tend to tank and have cytokine storms ― their CRP is much higher,” she said. “So the small improvement in CRP wasn’t that exciting.

“I don’t think this gets us anywhere closer to an answer. It’s another muddy study,” she said.

Similarly, Christopher V. Plowe, MD, MPH, director of the Global Health Institute at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, told Medscape Medical News he sees no convincing answers in this study.

Plowe, professor of medicine, molecular genetics, microbiology, and global health at Duke, also noted differences between the two groups at enrollment.

For example, the HCQ group had more than three times the number of patients with shortness of breath (22.1% vs 5.9%); more with sputum production (16.2 vs 5.9%); and more with cough (51.5% vs 38.2%). In addition, the average age was 4 years higher in the HCQ group.

“It makes me wonder whether the randomization was truly random,” Plowe said.

Plowe also questioned the authors’ statement that they didn’t see cardiac arrhythmia events, such as prolonged QT intervals. “I can’t see any evidence that they did an EKG on anybody,” he said.

“This study leaves the door open to the possibility that hydroxychloroquine may have a clinical benefit. If there is a benefit, it seems to be related to the drug’s anti-inflammatory properties. If that’s the case, I’m not sure this particular drug, as opposed to others, would be the way to go,” Plowe said.

 

 

Mixed Results in Other Studies

“Our negative results on the anti-viral efficacy of HCQ obtained in this trial are on the contrary to the encouraging in-vitro results and to the recently reported promising results from a non-randomized trial with 36 COVID-19 patients,” the authors write.

However, the 36-patient trial to which they refer has since been called into question, as previously reported by Retraction Watch.

Despite lack of clear evidence of benefit, HCQ is recommended off label for the treatment of COVID-19 by the Chinese National guideline, and the US Food and Drug Administration has issued an emergency-use authorization for the treatment of adult patients with COVID-19.

By contrast, the Infectious Diseases Society of America recently concluded that because of insufficient data, they could not recommend any particular treatment for patients with COVID-19.

The work was supported by the Emergent Projects of National Science and Technology; the National Natural Science Foundation of China; the National Key Research and Development Program of China; the Shanghai Municipal Key Clinical Specialty; the National Innovative Research Team of High-Level Local Universities in Shanghai; the Shanghai Key Discipline for Respiratory Diseases; the National Major Scientific and Technological Special Project for Significant New Drugs Development; and Key Projects in the National Science and Technology Pillar Program. The authors, Kahlenberg, and Plowe have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This story first appeared on Medscape.com.
 

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'Silent Hypoxemia' and Other Curious Clinical Observations in COVID-19

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'Silent Hypoxemia' and Other Curious Clinical Observations in COVID-19

 

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This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS: I'm Gary Ferenchick with Hannah Ferenchick, who has agreed to join us to talk about what's going on in Detroit, and also about PPE and decontamination processes. Why don't you introduce yourself?

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD: I am Hannah Ferenchick. I'm an ER physician and medical intensivist. I split my time between the medical ICU and the emergency department at Detroit Medical Center.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: We were talking earlier about some of the not-well-described clinical scenarios that patients with definitive COVID might present with. One of these was the idea of "silent hypoxemia." Could you describe that?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Silent hypoxemia is being described in many of these COVID patients. That means the patient is very hypoxemic—they may have an oxygen saturation of about 85% on room air, but clinically they look very comfortable—they are not dyspneic or tachypneic and may not even verbalize a significant sense of shortness of breath. It's not every patient, but it has been interesting to see patients sitting there looking fairly normal, with a resting oxygen saturation much lower than you would expect for someone who doesn't have underlying pulmonary disease or other symptoms.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: What abnormalities are you seeing on standard or not-so-standard lab tests?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Some of the characteristic lab findings we are seeing are lymphopenia and elevated inflammatory markers (eg, CRP). A couple of other atypical findings seem to be specific for COVID—elevated LDH, ferritin, CPK, and procalcitonin levels. Some of the hematologic markers that we look at—the coagulation profile studies—are also abnormal, showing thrombocytopenia and elevated D-dimer levels.

That constellation of symptoms represents more of a clinical picture. A lot of times we have only a very high clinical suspicion, because in many parts of the country it still takes days to get back a confirmatory PCR test.

Much like we do for the flu, the confirmatory test is a nasopharyngeal swab that is run for COVID/coronavirus PCR. Unfortunately the sensitivity of that test is not great. Some studies have quoted 75%-80%, so even a negative PCR does not necessarily rule out the disease, especially if you have a high clinical suspicion. A clinical suspicion is based on the typical symptoms. Many patients, although not all, will have symptoms of lower respiratory tract infection.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: So the right clinical scenario with the right hematologic/biochemical findings dramatically raises the chance that the patient has COVID?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Yes, and one thing that we have all been astonished by is how terrible some of these x-rays can look. There are a lot of typical findings on x-ray. Some describe them as looking like pulmonary edema, but the patient has no history of heart failure. Peripheral consolidation and ground-glass opacities are classically described. If you saw one of these x-rays from a patient with bacterial pneumonia, you would expect that patient to be very ill-appearing. Sometimes we get x-rays on patients who are sitting there, maybe mildly symptomatic on room air, and we are astonished by how terrible their x-rays look.

Unfortunately, imaging studies are something we haven't been able to rely on too much for diagnosis. Part of that is to maintain hospital safety, because to take a patient to CT scan, you have to consider the turnaround time for cleaning the CT scanner and the exposure of additional staff to a possibly infected patient. Some of those logistical considerations have limited the availability of radiography.

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS, is a family physician and professor in the Department of Medicine at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan. His daughter, Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, and a medical intensivist and emergency medicine physician at Detroit Medical Center.

Author and Disclosure Information

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS
Professor, Department of Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD
Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD
Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS
Professor, Department of Medicine, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD
Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

 

Vidyard Video

 

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS: I'm Gary Ferenchick with Hannah Ferenchick, who has agreed to join us to talk about what's going on in Detroit, and also about PPE and decontamination processes. Why don't you introduce yourself?

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD: I am Hannah Ferenchick. I'm an ER physician and medical intensivist. I split my time between the medical ICU and the emergency department at Detroit Medical Center.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: We were talking earlier about some of the not-well-described clinical scenarios that patients with definitive COVID might present with. One of these was the idea of "silent hypoxemia." Could you describe that?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Silent hypoxemia is being described in many of these COVID patients. That means the patient is very hypoxemic—they may have an oxygen saturation of about 85% on room air, but clinically they look very comfortable—they are not dyspneic or tachypneic and may not even verbalize a significant sense of shortness of breath. It's not every patient, but it has been interesting to see patients sitting there looking fairly normal, with a resting oxygen saturation much lower than you would expect for someone who doesn't have underlying pulmonary disease or other symptoms.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: What abnormalities are you seeing on standard or not-so-standard lab tests?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Some of the characteristic lab findings we are seeing are lymphopenia and elevated inflammatory markers (eg, CRP). A couple of other atypical findings seem to be specific for COVID—elevated LDH, ferritin, CPK, and procalcitonin levels. Some of the hematologic markers that we look at—the coagulation profile studies—are also abnormal, showing thrombocytopenia and elevated D-dimer levels.

That constellation of symptoms represents more of a clinical picture. A lot of times we have only a very high clinical suspicion, because in many parts of the country it still takes days to get back a confirmatory PCR test.

Much like we do for the flu, the confirmatory test is a nasopharyngeal swab that is run for COVID/coronavirus PCR. Unfortunately the sensitivity of that test is not great. Some studies have quoted 75%-80%, so even a negative PCR does not necessarily rule out the disease, especially if you have a high clinical suspicion. A clinical suspicion is based on the typical symptoms. Many patients, although not all, will have symptoms of lower respiratory tract infection.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: So the right clinical scenario with the right hematologic/biochemical findings dramatically raises the chance that the patient has COVID?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Yes, and one thing that we have all been astonished by is how terrible some of these x-rays can look. There are a lot of typical findings on x-ray. Some describe them as looking like pulmonary edema, but the patient has no history of heart failure. Peripheral consolidation and ground-glass opacities are classically described. If you saw one of these x-rays from a patient with bacterial pneumonia, you would expect that patient to be very ill-appearing. Sometimes we get x-rays on patients who are sitting there, maybe mildly symptomatic on room air, and we are astonished by how terrible their x-rays look.

Unfortunately, imaging studies are something we haven't been able to rely on too much for diagnosis. Part of that is to maintain hospital safety, because to take a patient to CT scan, you have to consider the turnaround time for cleaning the CT scanner and the exposure of additional staff to a possibly infected patient. Some of those logistical considerations have limited the availability of radiography.

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS, is a family physician and professor in the Department of Medicine at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan. His daughter, Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, and a medical intensivist and emergency medicine physician at Detroit Medical Center.

 

Vidyard Video

 

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS: I'm Gary Ferenchick with Hannah Ferenchick, who has agreed to join us to talk about what's going on in Detroit, and also about PPE and decontamination processes. Why don't you introduce yourself?

Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD: I am Hannah Ferenchick. I'm an ER physician and medical intensivist. I split my time between the medical ICU and the emergency department at Detroit Medical Center.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: We were talking earlier about some of the not-well-described clinical scenarios that patients with definitive COVID might present with. One of these was the idea of "silent hypoxemia." Could you describe that?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Silent hypoxemia is being described in many of these COVID patients. That means the patient is very hypoxemic—they may have an oxygen saturation of about 85% on room air, but clinically they look very comfortable—they are not dyspneic or tachypneic and may not even verbalize a significant sense of shortness of breath. It's not every patient, but it has been interesting to see patients sitting there looking fairly normal, with a resting oxygen saturation much lower than you would expect for someone who doesn't have underlying pulmonary disease or other symptoms.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: What abnormalities are you seeing on standard or not-so-standard lab tests?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Some of the characteristic lab findings we are seeing are lymphopenia and elevated inflammatory markers (eg, CRP). A couple of other atypical findings seem to be specific for COVID—elevated LDH, ferritin, CPK, and procalcitonin levels. Some of the hematologic markers that we look at—the coagulation profile studies—are also abnormal, showing thrombocytopenia and elevated D-dimer levels.

That constellation of symptoms represents more of a clinical picture. A lot of times we have only a very high clinical suspicion, because in many parts of the country it still takes days to get back a confirmatory PCR test.

Much like we do for the flu, the confirmatory test is a nasopharyngeal swab that is run for COVID/coronavirus PCR. Unfortunately the sensitivity of that test is not great. Some studies have quoted 75%-80%, so even a negative PCR does not necessarily rule out the disease, especially if you have a high clinical suspicion. A clinical suspicion is based on the typical symptoms. Many patients, although not all, will have symptoms of lower respiratory tract infection.

Dr Gary Ferenchick: So the right clinical scenario with the right hematologic/biochemical findings dramatically raises the chance that the patient has COVID?

Dr Hannah Ferenchick: Yes, and one thing that we have all been astonished by is how terrible some of these x-rays can look. There are a lot of typical findings on x-ray. Some describe them as looking like pulmonary edema, but the patient has no history of heart failure. Peripheral consolidation and ground-glass opacities are classically described. If you saw one of these x-rays from a patient with bacterial pneumonia, you would expect that patient to be very ill-appearing. Sometimes we get x-rays on patients who are sitting there, maybe mildly symptomatic on room air, and we are astonished by how terrible their x-rays look.

Unfortunately, imaging studies are something we haven't been able to rely on too much for diagnosis. Part of that is to maintain hospital safety, because to take a patient to CT scan, you have to consider the turnaround time for cleaning the CT scanner and the exposure of additional staff to a possibly infected patient. Some of those logistical considerations have limited the availability of radiography.

Gary S. Ferenchick, MD, MS, is a family physician and professor in the Department of Medicine at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan. His daughter, Hannah R.B. Ferenchick, MD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, and a medical intensivist and emergency medicine physician at Detroit Medical Center.

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Coronavirus 101 for gastroenterologists

Now in AGA University: Gain a clear understanding of the lifespan and gastrointestinal manifestations of SARS-CoV-2 and best practices for protecting yourself while working with at-risk patients. http://agau.gastro.org/diweb/catalog/item/eid/COVID-19

Get the latest information and resources on coronavirus by visiting www.gastro.org/COVID.

A message from our president to the GI community

“Our commitment at AGA is to support you. We’ll get through this together,” says AGA President Hashem El-Serag, MD, MPH, AGAF.

Dear colleagues,

The coronavirus pandemic has affected every facet of society, bringing almost unprecedented challenges to our world, and especially to our world of health care.

But our profession has been ignited in the way only a crisis can spark. Many of you are working on the front lines of patient care, at personal risk, lacking sufficient information and adequate resources. This is heroic work.

AGA’s priority during this time of disruption is to get practical guidance into your hands to help you treat patients, and protect yourselves and your coworkers. We’re also advocating on your behalf to get the resources you need and economic relief necessitated by the measures taken to fight the pandemic.

We are continually updating our COVID-19 website, www.gastro.org/covid. Check it for the latest clinical guidance, practice management information, and advocacy initiatives.

Our journals have started a collection of submissions related to COVID-19. Your AGA colleagues on the Clinical Guidelines Committee and Clinical Practice Updates Committee have been hard at work developing guidance for questions that you have asked us on Twitter, @AmerGastroAssn, and the AGA Community. So join us there where resources and insights are being shared in real time.

Your commitment to our patients is a testament to your professionalism. Our commitment at AGA is to support you.

We’ll get through this together.

Hashem B. El-Serag, MD, MPH, AGAF
President, AGA Institute

 

 

AGA selects two new social media editors

Congratulations to our new social media editors, Mindy Engevik, PhD, and Sultan Mahmood, MD.

Both editors will have the opportunity to positively impact AGA journal engagement by increasing the dissemination of each of the AGA publications’ content across their social media platforms. Dr. Engevik will focus on basic and translational science research and Dr. Mahmood will focus on clinical research. They will be sharing noteworthy research and news across AGA’s diverse publication portfolio, which includes Gastroenterology, Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Techniques and Innovations in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, GI & Hepatology News, and the New Gastroenterologist.
 

Melinda Engevik, PhD
@MicroMindy

Melinda Engevik, PhD, is an instructor at Baylor College of Medicine in the department of pathology and immunology
Dr. Melinda Engevik

Dr. Engevik is an instructor at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, in the department of pathology and immunology. She has a PhD in systems biology and physiology from the University of Cincinnati and completed her postdoctoral training at Baylor College of Medicine. Her research focuses on microbe-epithelial interactions in the gastrointestinal tract, with a particular focus on infection and inflammatory bowel disease. Dr. Engevik currently serves as an AGA Young Delegate and enjoys her involvement in the GI community.

 

Sultan Mahmood, MD
@SultanMahmoodMD

Sultan Mahmood, MD,is currently an assistant professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology at University at Buffalo, New York.
Dr. Sultan Mahmood

Dr. Mahmood finished his medical school in King Edward Medical University in Lahore, Pakistan. He did his internal medicine residency as well as GI fellowship training in University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, where he also served as the chief fellow from 2017 to 2018. He is the cofounder of @GIjournal, which is a weekly GI journal club on Twitter. He is currently an assistant professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology, at the University at Buffalo (N.Y.). He also serves the role of coprogram director of the GI fellowship program in University at Buffalo. His research interests include medical education, work-life balance, quality improvement in the endoscopy suite, and cold snare.

The journals’ board of editors and editorial staff congratulate the new social media editors and are excited to work with them over the next 3 years.
 

 

 

Diversify GI: Fola May

We’re celebrating diversity in our field with a new series spotlighting members of the AGA Diversity Committee and AGA FORWARD Program.

The University of California, Los Angeles, Women’s Basketball Program recognized AGA FORWARD Scholar Fola May, MD, PhD, MPhil, for exemplifying their values of being “uncommon” and going above and beyond.

Fola May, MD, is a researcher at University of California, Los Angeles.
Dr. Fola May

You’ll find proof she meets these criteria through extracurriculars like her participation in the AGA FORWARD program – a National Institute of Health–funded initiative that supports underrepresented minority physician scientists – and as a GI patient advocate on Capitol Hill.

Dr. May’s unconventional career path is also testament to her ability to color outside the lines while creating a masterpiece.

“Realizing late in my training that I wanted a career in research, I joined the STAR program at UCLA which allowed me to complete a PhD in health policy and management [a health services research degree] during my GI fellowship. With this training, I have been able to pursue a career in research and clinical care far beyond what I ever imagined.”

But she noticed a void along her career path that she couldn’t fill on her own: limited access to diverse research leaders in the field who can serve as her mentors, supporters, and advocators.

“Though I have a wonderful mentorship team that has been instrumental to my success thus far, there are currently no senior health services researchers in gastroenterology or gastroenterologists of color at my institution.”

At Dr. May’s institution, there are about 60 faculty members – only 1 Hispanic female. At the academic health center where Dr. May works, she is the only African American gastroenterologist. Other divisions and departments do not look much different, she explained.

“We serve a massive, diverse urban center. I don’t understand it, and I feel strongly that we can do better.”

She stressed that the key to breaking unjust cultural norms is for white colleagues to acknowledge the issues minorities face and to make intentional efforts to increase diversity in the workforce.

“We can’t expect black and brown faculty to do it on their own. The ‘minority tax’ that we face is a heavy toll and has the potential to paralyze our careers. We need members of the majority populations to also embrace diversity issues.”
 

Let’s get personal

  • What do you know now that you wish someone told you when you started your career? “I wish that someone told me earlier that there will come a time when you will transition from working hard to check off all the check boxes to working hard in the things that make you happy. So much of medical school and residency is about doing what you are told you have to do to succeed. Finally, I feel that I am encouraged to find the research topics and patient populations that I am most passionate about. In dedicating ourselves to the things we care most about we have the best opportunity for real impact.”
  • Who is your professional hero and why? “Wow. Honestly, I do not have one. Maybe Michelle Obama. I know she is not in medicine, but I pick her because she is an African American women who I know has been put through a lot and has to put up with a lot. But she keeps her head up high and stays strong. Reading her book transformed me. You can’t tell by just looking at her, all that she’s had to deal with. I would like to be seen as someone who is strong despite all of the background noise.”
  • Something you may not know about me is: “I am pretty obsessed with CrossFit and fitness. I really enjoy staying active.”
  • If I weren’t in gastroenterology, I would be: “A television/movie writer or movie producer.”
  • In my free time I like to: “Spend time with my husband and kids, travel, stay active.”
Publications
Topics
Sections

 

Coronavirus 101 for gastroenterologists

Now in AGA University: Gain a clear understanding of the lifespan and gastrointestinal manifestations of SARS-CoV-2 and best practices for protecting yourself while working with at-risk patients. http://agau.gastro.org/diweb/catalog/item/eid/COVID-19

Get the latest information and resources on coronavirus by visiting www.gastro.org/COVID.

A message from our president to the GI community

“Our commitment at AGA is to support you. We’ll get through this together,” says AGA President Hashem El-Serag, MD, MPH, AGAF.

Dear colleagues,

The coronavirus pandemic has affected every facet of society, bringing almost unprecedented challenges to our world, and especially to our world of health care.

But our profession has been ignited in the way only a crisis can spark. Many of you are working on the front lines of patient care, at personal risk, lacking sufficient information and adequate resources. This is heroic work.

AGA’s priority during this time of disruption is to get practical guidance into your hands to help you treat patients, and protect yourselves and your coworkers. We’re also advocating on your behalf to get the resources you need and economic relief necessitated by the measures taken to fight the pandemic.

We are continually updating our COVID-19 website, www.gastro.org/covid. Check it for the latest clinical guidance, practice management information, and advocacy initiatives.

Our journals have started a collection of submissions related to COVID-19. Your AGA colleagues on the Clinical Guidelines Committee and Clinical Practice Updates Committee have been hard at work developing guidance for questions that you have asked us on Twitter, @AmerGastroAssn, and the AGA Community. So join us there where resources and insights are being shared in real time.

Your commitment to our patients is a testament to your professionalism. Our commitment at AGA is to support you.

We’ll get through this together.

Hashem B. El-Serag, MD, MPH, AGAF
President, AGA Institute

 

 

AGA selects two new social media editors

Congratulations to our new social media editors, Mindy Engevik, PhD, and Sultan Mahmood, MD.

Both editors will have the opportunity to positively impact AGA journal engagement by increasing the dissemination of each of the AGA publications’ content across their social media platforms. Dr. Engevik will focus on basic and translational science research and Dr. Mahmood will focus on clinical research. They will be sharing noteworthy research and news across AGA’s diverse publication portfolio, which includes Gastroenterology, Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Techniques and Innovations in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, GI & Hepatology News, and the New Gastroenterologist.
 

Melinda Engevik, PhD
@MicroMindy

Melinda Engevik, PhD, is an instructor at Baylor College of Medicine in the department of pathology and immunology
Dr. Melinda Engevik

Dr. Engevik is an instructor at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, in the department of pathology and immunology. She has a PhD in systems biology and physiology from the University of Cincinnati and completed her postdoctoral training at Baylor College of Medicine. Her research focuses on microbe-epithelial interactions in the gastrointestinal tract, with a particular focus on infection and inflammatory bowel disease. Dr. Engevik currently serves as an AGA Young Delegate and enjoys her involvement in the GI community.

 

Sultan Mahmood, MD
@SultanMahmoodMD

Sultan Mahmood, MD,is currently an assistant professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology at University at Buffalo, New York.
Dr. Sultan Mahmood

Dr. Mahmood finished his medical school in King Edward Medical University in Lahore, Pakistan. He did his internal medicine residency as well as GI fellowship training in University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, where he also served as the chief fellow from 2017 to 2018. He is the cofounder of @GIjournal, which is a weekly GI journal club on Twitter. He is currently an assistant professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology, at the University at Buffalo (N.Y.). He also serves the role of coprogram director of the GI fellowship program in University at Buffalo. His research interests include medical education, work-life balance, quality improvement in the endoscopy suite, and cold snare.

The journals’ board of editors and editorial staff congratulate the new social media editors and are excited to work with them over the next 3 years.
 

 

 

Diversify GI: Fola May

We’re celebrating diversity in our field with a new series spotlighting members of the AGA Diversity Committee and AGA FORWARD Program.

The University of California, Los Angeles, Women’s Basketball Program recognized AGA FORWARD Scholar Fola May, MD, PhD, MPhil, for exemplifying their values of being “uncommon” and going above and beyond.

Fola May, MD, is a researcher at University of California, Los Angeles.
Dr. Fola May

You’ll find proof she meets these criteria through extracurriculars like her participation in the AGA FORWARD program – a National Institute of Health–funded initiative that supports underrepresented minority physician scientists – and as a GI patient advocate on Capitol Hill.

Dr. May’s unconventional career path is also testament to her ability to color outside the lines while creating a masterpiece.

“Realizing late in my training that I wanted a career in research, I joined the STAR program at UCLA which allowed me to complete a PhD in health policy and management [a health services research degree] during my GI fellowship. With this training, I have been able to pursue a career in research and clinical care far beyond what I ever imagined.”

But she noticed a void along her career path that she couldn’t fill on her own: limited access to diverse research leaders in the field who can serve as her mentors, supporters, and advocators.

“Though I have a wonderful mentorship team that has been instrumental to my success thus far, there are currently no senior health services researchers in gastroenterology or gastroenterologists of color at my institution.”

At Dr. May’s institution, there are about 60 faculty members – only 1 Hispanic female. At the academic health center where Dr. May works, she is the only African American gastroenterologist. Other divisions and departments do not look much different, she explained.

“We serve a massive, diverse urban center. I don’t understand it, and I feel strongly that we can do better.”

She stressed that the key to breaking unjust cultural norms is for white colleagues to acknowledge the issues minorities face and to make intentional efforts to increase diversity in the workforce.

“We can’t expect black and brown faculty to do it on their own. The ‘minority tax’ that we face is a heavy toll and has the potential to paralyze our careers. We need members of the majority populations to also embrace diversity issues.”
 

Let’s get personal

  • What do you know now that you wish someone told you when you started your career? “I wish that someone told me earlier that there will come a time when you will transition from working hard to check off all the check boxes to working hard in the things that make you happy. So much of medical school and residency is about doing what you are told you have to do to succeed. Finally, I feel that I am encouraged to find the research topics and patient populations that I am most passionate about. In dedicating ourselves to the things we care most about we have the best opportunity for real impact.”
  • Who is your professional hero and why? “Wow. Honestly, I do not have one. Maybe Michelle Obama. I know she is not in medicine, but I pick her because she is an African American women who I know has been put through a lot and has to put up with a lot. But she keeps her head up high and stays strong. Reading her book transformed me. You can’t tell by just looking at her, all that she’s had to deal with. I would like to be seen as someone who is strong despite all of the background noise.”
  • Something you may not know about me is: “I am pretty obsessed with CrossFit and fitness. I really enjoy staying active.”
  • If I weren’t in gastroenterology, I would be: “A television/movie writer or movie producer.”
  • In my free time I like to: “Spend time with my husband and kids, travel, stay active.”

 

Coronavirus 101 for gastroenterologists

Now in AGA University: Gain a clear understanding of the lifespan and gastrointestinal manifestations of SARS-CoV-2 and best practices for protecting yourself while working with at-risk patients. http://agau.gastro.org/diweb/catalog/item/eid/COVID-19

Get the latest information and resources on coronavirus by visiting www.gastro.org/COVID.

A message from our president to the GI community

“Our commitment at AGA is to support you. We’ll get through this together,” says AGA President Hashem El-Serag, MD, MPH, AGAF.

Dear colleagues,

The coronavirus pandemic has affected every facet of society, bringing almost unprecedented challenges to our world, and especially to our world of health care.

But our profession has been ignited in the way only a crisis can spark. Many of you are working on the front lines of patient care, at personal risk, lacking sufficient information and adequate resources. This is heroic work.

AGA’s priority during this time of disruption is to get practical guidance into your hands to help you treat patients, and protect yourselves and your coworkers. We’re also advocating on your behalf to get the resources you need and economic relief necessitated by the measures taken to fight the pandemic.

We are continually updating our COVID-19 website, www.gastro.org/covid. Check it for the latest clinical guidance, practice management information, and advocacy initiatives.

Our journals have started a collection of submissions related to COVID-19. Your AGA colleagues on the Clinical Guidelines Committee and Clinical Practice Updates Committee have been hard at work developing guidance for questions that you have asked us on Twitter, @AmerGastroAssn, and the AGA Community. So join us there where resources and insights are being shared in real time.

Your commitment to our patients is a testament to your professionalism. Our commitment at AGA is to support you.

We’ll get through this together.

Hashem B. El-Serag, MD, MPH, AGAF
President, AGA Institute

 

 

AGA selects two new social media editors

Congratulations to our new social media editors, Mindy Engevik, PhD, and Sultan Mahmood, MD.

Both editors will have the opportunity to positively impact AGA journal engagement by increasing the dissemination of each of the AGA publications’ content across their social media platforms. Dr. Engevik will focus on basic and translational science research and Dr. Mahmood will focus on clinical research. They will be sharing noteworthy research and news across AGA’s diverse publication portfolio, which includes Gastroenterology, Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Techniques and Innovations in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, GI & Hepatology News, and the New Gastroenterologist.
 

Melinda Engevik, PhD
@MicroMindy

Melinda Engevik, PhD, is an instructor at Baylor College of Medicine in the department of pathology and immunology
Dr. Melinda Engevik

Dr. Engevik is an instructor at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, in the department of pathology and immunology. She has a PhD in systems biology and physiology from the University of Cincinnati and completed her postdoctoral training at Baylor College of Medicine. Her research focuses on microbe-epithelial interactions in the gastrointestinal tract, with a particular focus on infection and inflammatory bowel disease. Dr. Engevik currently serves as an AGA Young Delegate and enjoys her involvement in the GI community.

 

Sultan Mahmood, MD
@SultanMahmoodMD

Sultan Mahmood, MD,is currently an assistant professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology at University at Buffalo, New York.
Dr. Sultan Mahmood

Dr. Mahmood finished his medical school in King Edward Medical University in Lahore, Pakistan. He did his internal medicine residency as well as GI fellowship training in University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, where he also served as the chief fellow from 2017 to 2018. He is the cofounder of @GIjournal, which is a weekly GI journal club on Twitter. He is currently an assistant professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology, at the University at Buffalo (N.Y.). He also serves the role of coprogram director of the GI fellowship program in University at Buffalo. His research interests include medical education, work-life balance, quality improvement in the endoscopy suite, and cold snare.

The journals’ board of editors and editorial staff congratulate the new social media editors and are excited to work with them over the next 3 years.
 

 

 

Diversify GI: Fola May

We’re celebrating diversity in our field with a new series spotlighting members of the AGA Diversity Committee and AGA FORWARD Program.

The University of California, Los Angeles, Women’s Basketball Program recognized AGA FORWARD Scholar Fola May, MD, PhD, MPhil, for exemplifying their values of being “uncommon” and going above and beyond.

Fola May, MD, is a researcher at University of California, Los Angeles.
Dr. Fola May

You’ll find proof she meets these criteria through extracurriculars like her participation in the AGA FORWARD program – a National Institute of Health–funded initiative that supports underrepresented minority physician scientists – and as a GI patient advocate on Capitol Hill.

Dr. May’s unconventional career path is also testament to her ability to color outside the lines while creating a masterpiece.

“Realizing late in my training that I wanted a career in research, I joined the STAR program at UCLA which allowed me to complete a PhD in health policy and management [a health services research degree] during my GI fellowship. With this training, I have been able to pursue a career in research and clinical care far beyond what I ever imagined.”

But she noticed a void along her career path that she couldn’t fill on her own: limited access to diverse research leaders in the field who can serve as her mentors, supporters, and advocators.

“Though I have a wonderful mentorship team that has been instrumental to my success thus far, there are currently no senior health services researchers in gastroenterology or gastroenterologists of color at my institution.”

At Dr. May’s institution, there are about 60 faculty members – only 1 Hispanic female. At the academic health center where Dr. May works, she is the only African American gastroenterologist. Other divisions and departments do not look much different, she explained.

“We serve a massive, diverse urban center. I don’t understand it, and I feel strongly that we can do better.”

She stressed that the key to breaking unjust cultural norms is for white colleagues to acknowledge the issues minorities face and to make intentional efforts to increase diversity in the workforce.

“We can’t expect black and brown faculty to do it on their own. The ‘minority tax’ that we face is a heavy toll and has the potential to paralyze our careers. We need members of the majority populations to also embrace diversity issues.”
 

Let’s get personal

  • What do you know now that you wish someone told you when you started your career? “I wish that someone told me earlier that there will come a time when you will transition from working hard to check off all the check boxes to working hard in the things that make you happy. So much of medical school and residency is about doing what you are told you have to do to succeed. Finally, I feel that I am encouraged to find the research topics and patient populations that I am most passionate about. In dedicating ourselves to the things we care most about we have the best opportunity for real impact.”
  • Who is your professional hero and why? “Wow. Honestly, I do not have one. Maybe Michelle Obama. I know she is not in medicine, but I pick her because she is an African American women who I know has been put through a lot and has to put up with a lot. But she keeps her head up high and stays strong. Reading her book transformed me. You can’t tell by just looking at her, all that she’s had to deal with. I would like to be seen as someone who is strong despite all of the background noise.”
  • Something you may not know about me is: “I am pretty obsessed with CrossFit and fitness. I really enjoy staying active.”
  • If I weren’t in gastroenterology, I would be: “A television/movie writer or movie producer.”
  • In my free time I like to: “Spend time with my husband and kids, travel, stay active.”
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COVID-19 mythconceptions

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:13

his month, I would like to touch on a few COVID-19 topics that have received much publicity, with some messages about them having been confusing.

Dr. Douglas S. Paauw, University of Washington, Seattle
Dr. Douglas S. Paauw

Let’s start with a case:

A 37-year-old woman is seen in clinic for a 5-day history of cough, fever, chest tightness, and onset of dyspnea on the day of her office visit.

An exam reveals her blood pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, her pulse is 100 beats per minute, her temperature is 38.7° C, her oxygen saturation is 93%, and her respiratory rate is 20 breaths per minute.

Auscultation of the chest revealed bilateral wheezing and rhonchi. A nasopharyngeal swab is sent for COVID-19 and is negative; she also tests negative for influenza.

Her hemoglobin level is 13 g/dL, hematocrit was 39%, platelet count was 155,000 per mcL of blood, and D-dimer level was 8.4 mcg/mL (normal is less than 0.4 mcg/mL.) Her white blood cell count was 6,000 per mcL of blood (neutrophils, 4,900; lymphocytes, 800; basophils, 200). Her chest x-ray showed bilateral lower lobe infiltrates.
 

What do you recommend?

A. Begin azithromycin plus ceftriaxone

B. Begin azithromycin

C. Begin oseltamivir

D. Obtain chest CT

E. Repeat COVID-19 test

With the massive amount of information coming out every day on COVID-19, it is hard to keep up with all of it, and sort out accurate, reviewed studies. We are in a position where we need to take in what we can and assess the best data available.

In the case above, I think choices D or E would make sense. This patient very likely has COVID-19 based on clinical symptoms and lab parameters. The negative COVID-19 test gives us pause, but several studies show that false negative tests are not uncommon.

Long et al. reported on 36 patients who had received both chest CT and real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) for COVID-19.1 All were eventually diagnosed with COVID-19 pneumonia. The CT scan had a very high sensitivity (35/36) of 97.2%, whereas the rRT-PCR had a lower sensitivity (30/36) of 83%. All six of the patients with a negative COVID-19 test initially were positive on repeat testing (three on the second test, three on the third test).

There are concerns about what the sensitivity of the rRT-PCR tests being run in the United States are. At this point, I think that, when the pretest probability of COVID-19 infection is very high based on local epidemiology and clinical symptoms, a negative COVID rRT-PCR does not eliminate the diagnosis. In many cases, COVID-19 may still be the most likely diagnosis.

Early in the pandemic, the symptoms that were emphasized were fever, cough, and dyspnea. Those were all crucial symptoms for a disease that causes pneumonia. GI symptoms were initially deemphasized. In an early study released from Wuhan, China, only about 5% of COVID-19 patients had nausea or diarrhea.2 In a study of 305 patients focused on gastrointestinal symptoms, half of the patients had diarrhea, half had anorexia and 30% had nausea.3 In a small series of nine patients who presented with only GI symptoms, four of these patients never developed fever or pulmonary symptoms.3

On March 14, the French health minister, Olivier Véran, tweeted that “taking anti-inflammatory drugs (ibuprofen, cortisone ...) could be an aggravating factor for the infection. If you have a fever, take paracetamol.” This was picked up by many news services, and soon became standard recommendations, despite no data.

There is reason for concern for NSAIDs, as regular NSAID use has been tied to more complications in patients with respiratory tract infections.4 I have never been a proponent of regular NSAID use in patients who are infected, because the likelihood of toxicity is elevated in patients who are volume depleted or under physiologic stress. But at this time, there is no evidence on problems with episodic NSAID use in patients with COVID-19.

Another widely disseminated decree was that patients with COVID-19 should not use ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs). COVID-19 binds to their target cells through ACE2, which is expressed by epithelial cells of the lung, intestine and kidney. Patients who are treated with ACE inhibitors and ARBs have been shown to have more ACE2 expression.

In a letter to the editor by Fang et al. published in Lancet Respiratory Medicine, the authors raised the question of whether patients might be better served to be switched from ACE inhibitors and ARBs to calcium-channel blockers for the treatment of hypertension.5 A small study by Meng et al. looked at outcomes of patients on these drugs who had COVID-19 infection.6 They looked at 417 patients admitted to a hospital in China with COVID-19 infection. A total of 42 patients were on medications for hypertension. Group 1 were patients on ACE inhibitors/ARBs (17 patients) and group 2 were patients on other antihypertensives (25 patients). During hospitalization 12 patients (48%) in group 2 were categorized as having severe disease and 1 patient died. In group 1 (the ACE inhibitor/ARB–treated patients) only four (23%) were categorized as having severe disease, and no patients in this group died.

Vaduganathan et al. published a special report in the New England Journal of Medicine strongly arguing the point that “[u]ntil further data are available, we think that [renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system] inhibitors should be continued in patients in otherwise stable condition who are at risk for, being evaluated for, or with COVID-19”.7 This position is supported by the American Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology, the American College of Physicians, and 11 other medical organizations.
 

Take-home messages

  • Testing isn’t perfect – if you have strong suspicion for COVID-19 disease, retest.
  • GI symptoms appear to be common, and rarely may be the only symptoms initially.
  • NSAIDs are always risky in really sick patients, but data specific to COVID-19 is lacking.
  • ACE inhibitors/ARBs should not be avoided in patients with COVID-19.

Dr. Paauw is professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and he serves as third-year medical student clerkship director at the University of Washington. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News. Dr. Paauw has no conflicts to disclose. Contact Dr. Paauw at imnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Long C et al. Diagnosis of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): rRT-PCR or CT? Eur J Radiol. 2020 Mar 25;126:108961.

2. Zhou F et al. Clinical course and risk factors for mortality of adult inpatients with COVID-19 in Wuhan, China: A retrospective cohort study. Lancet. 2020 Mar 28;395(10229):1054-62.

3. Tian Y et al. Review article: Gastrointestinal features in COVID-19 and the possibility of faecal transmission. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2020;00:1–9.

4. Voiriot G et al. Risks related to the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in community-acquired pneumonia in adult and pediatric patients. J Clin Med. 2019;8:E786.

5. Fang L et al. Are patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus at increased risk for COVID-19 infection? Lancet Respir Med. 2020 Mar 11. doi:10.1016/S2213-2600(20)30116-8.

6. Meng J et al. Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors improve the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients with hypertension. Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors improve the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients with hypertension. Emerg Microbes Infect. 2020 Dec;9(1):757-60.

7. Vaduganathan M et al. Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors in patients with COVID-19. N Engl J Med. 2020 Mar 30. doi: 10.1056/NEJMsr2005760.

Publications
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Sections

his month, I would like to touch on a few COVID-19 topics that have received much publicity, with some messages about them having been confusing.

Dr. Douglas S. Paauw, University of Washington, Seattle
Dr. Douglas S. Paauw

Let’s start with a case:

A 37-year-old woman is seen in clinic for a 5-day history of cough, fever, chest tightness, and onset of dyspnea on the day of her office visit.

An exam reveals her blood pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, her pulse is 100 beats per minute, her temperature is 38.7° C, her oxygen saturation is 93%, and her respiratory rate is 20 breaths per minute.

Auscultation of the chest revealed bilateral wheezing and rhonchi. A nasopharyngeal swab is sent for COVID-19 and is negative; she also tests negative for influenza.

Her hemoglobin level is 13 g/dL, hematocrit was 39%, platelet count was 155,000 per mcL of blood, and D-dimer level was 8.4 mcg/mL (normal is less than 0.4 mcg/mL.) Her white blood cell count was 6,000 per mcL of blood (neutrophils, 4,900; lymphocytes, 800; basophils, 200). Her chest x-ray showed bilateral lower lobe infiltrates.
 

What do you recommend?

A. Begin azithromycin plus ceftriaxone

B. Begin azithromycin

C. Begin oseltamivir

D. Obtain chest CT

E. Repeat COVID-19 test

With the massive amount of information coming out every day on COVID-19, it is hard to keep up with all of it, and sort out accurate, reviewed studies. We are in a position where we need to take in what we can and assess the best data available.

In the case above, I think choices D or E would make sense. This patient very likely has COVID-19 based on clinical symptoms and lab parameters. The negative COVID-19 test gives us pause, but several studies show that false negative tests are not uncommon.

Long et al. reported on 36 patients who had received both chest CT and real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) for COVID-19.1 All were eventually diagnosed with COVID-19 pneumonia. The CT scan had a very high sensitivity (35/36) of 97.2%, whereas the rRT-PCR had a lower sensitivity (30/36) of 83%. All six of the patients with a negative COVID-19 test initially were positive on repeat testing (three on the second test, three on the third test).

There are concerns about what the sensitivity of the rRT-PCR tests being run in the United States are. At this point, I think that, when the pretest probability of COVID-19 infection is very high based on local epidemiology and clinical symptoms, a negative COVID rRT-PCR does not eliminate the diagnosis. In many cases, COVID-19 may still be the most likely diagnosis.

Early in the pandemic, the symptoms that were emphasized were fever, cough, and dyspnea. Those were all crucial symptoms for a disease that causes pneumonia. GI symptoms were initially deemphasized. In an early study released from Wuhan, China, only about 5% of COVID-19 patients had nausea or diarrhea.2 In a study of 305 patients focused on gastrointestinal symptoms, half of the patients had diarrhea, half had anorexia and 30% had nausea.3 In a small series of nine patients who presented with only GI symptoms, four of these patients never developed fever or pulmonary symptoms.3

On March 14, the French health minister, Olivier Véran, tweeted that “taking anti-inflammatory drugs (ibuprofen, cortisone ...) could be an aggravating factor for the infection. If you have a fever, take paracetamol.” This was picked up by many news services, and soon became standard recommendations, despite no data.

There is reason for concern for NSAIDs, as regular NSAID use has been tied to more complications in patients with respiratory tract infections.4 I have never been a proponent of regular NSAID use in patients who are infected, because the likelihood of toxicity is elevated in patients who are volume depleted or under physiologic stress. But at this time, there is no evidence on problems with episodic NSAID use in patients with COVID-19.

Another widely disseminated decree was that patients with COVID-19 should not use ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs). COVID-19 binds to their target cells through ACE2, which is expressed by epithelial cells of the lung, intestine and kidney. Patients who are treated with ACE inhibitors and ARBs have been shown to have more ACE2 expression.

In a letter to the editor by Fang et al. published in Lancet Respiratory Medicine, the authors raised the question of whether patients might be better served to be switched from ACE inhibitors and ARBs to calcium-channel blockers for the treatment of hypertension.5 A small study by Meng et al. looked at outcomes of patients on these drugs who had COVID-19 infection.6 They looked at 417 patients admitted to a hospital in China with COVID-19 infection. A total of 42 patients were on medications for hypertension. Group 1 were patients on ACE inhibitors/ARBs (17 patients) and group 2 were patients on other antihypertensives (25 patients). During hospitalization 12 patients (48%) in group 2 were categorized as having severe disease and 1 patient died. In group 1 (the ACE inhibitor/ARB–treated patients) only four (23%) were categorized as having severe disease, and no patients in this group died.

Vaduganathan et al. published a special report in the New England Journal of Medicine strongly arguing the point that “[u]ntil further data are available, we think that [renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system] inhibitors should be continued in patients in otherwise stable condition who are at risk for, being evaluated for, or with COVID-19”.7 This position is supported by the American Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology, the American College of Physicians, and 11 other medical organizations.
 

Take-home messages

  • Testing isn’t perfect – if you have strong suspicion for COVID-19 disease, retest.
  • GI symptoms appear to be common, and rarely may be the only symptoms initially.
  • NSAIDs are always risky in really sick patients, but data specific to COVID-19 is lacking.
  • ACE inhibitors/ARBs should not be avoided in patients with COVID-19.

Dr. Paauw is professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and he serves as third-year medical student clerkship director at the University of Washington. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News. Dr. Paauw has no conflicts to disclose. Contact Dr. Paauw at imnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Long C et al. Diagnosis of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): rRT-PCR or CT? Eur J Radiol. 2020 Mar 25;126:108961.

2. Zhou F et al. Clinical course and risk factors for mortality of adult inpatients with COVID-19 in Wuhan, China: A retrospective cohort study. Lancet. 2020 Mar 28;395(10229):1054-62.

3. Tian Y et al. Review article: Gastrointestinal features in COVID-19 and the possibility of faecal transmission. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2020;00:1–9.

4. Voiriot G et al. Risks related to the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in community-acquired pneumonia in adult and pediatric patients. J Clin Med. 2019;8:E786.

5. Fang L et al. Are patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus at increased risk for COVID-19 infection? Lancet Respir Med. 2020 Mar 11. doi:10.1016/S2213-2600(20)30116-8.

6. Meng J et al. Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors improve the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients with hypertension. Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors improve the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients with hypertension. Emerg Microbes Infect. 2020 Dec;9(1):757-60.

7. Vaduganathan M et al. Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors in patients with COVID-19. N Engl J Med. 2020 Mar 30. doi: 10.1056/NEJMsr2005760.

his month, I would like to touch on a few COVID-19 topics that have received much publicity, with some messages about them having been confusing.

Dr. Douglas S. Paauw, University of Washington, Seattle
Dr. Douglas S. Paauw

Let’s start with a case:

A 37-year-old woman is seen in clinic for a 5-day history of cough, fever, chest tightness, and onset of dyspnea on the day of her office visit.

An exam reveals her blood pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, her pulse is 100 beats per minute, her temperature is 38.7° C, her oxygen saturation is 93%, and her respiratory rate is 20 breaths per minute.

Auscultation of the chest revealed bilateral wheezing and rhonchi. A nasopharyngeal swab is sent for COVID-19 and is negative; she also tests negative for influenza.

Her hemoglobin level is 13 g/dL, hematocrit was 39%, platelet count was 155,000 per mcL of blood, and D-dimer level was 8.4 mcg/mL (normal is less than 0.4 mcg/mL.) Her white blood cell count was 6,000 per mcL of blood (neutrophils, 4,900; lymphocytes, 800; basophils, 200). Her chest x-ray showed bilateral lower lobe infiltrates.
 

What do you recommend?

A. Begin azithromycin plus ceftriaxone

B. Begin azithromycin

C. Begin oseltamivir

D. Obtain chest CT

E. Repeat COVID-19 test

With the massive amount of information coming out every day on COVID-19, it is hard to keep up with all of it, and sort out accurate, reviewed studies. We are in a position where we need to take in what we can and assess the best data available.

In the case above, I think choices D or E would make sense. This patient very likely has COVID-19 based on clinical symptoms and lab parameters. The negative COVID-19 test gives us pause, but several studies show that false negative tests are not uncommon.

Long et al. reported on 36 patients who had received both chest CT and real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) for COVID-19.1 All were eventually diagnosed with COVID-19 pneumonia. The CT scan had a very high sensitivity (35/36) of 97.2%, whereas the rRT-PCR had a lower sensitivity (30/36) of 83%. All six of the patients with a negative COVID-19 test initially were positive on repeat testing (three on the second test, three on the third test).

There are concerns about what the sensitivity of the rRT-PCR tests being run in the United States are. At this point, I think that, when the pretest probability of COVID-19 infection is very high based on local epidemiology and clinical symptoms, a negative COVID rRT-PCR does not eliminate the diagnosis. In many cases, COVID-19 may still be the most likely diagnosis.

Early in the pandemic, the symptoms that were emphasized were fever, cough, and dyspnea. Those were all crucial symptoms for a disease that causes pneumonia. GI symptoms were initially deemphasized. In an early study released from Wuhan, China, only about 5% of COVID-19 patients had nausea or diarrhea.2 In a study of 305 patients focused on gastrointestinal symptoms, half of the patients had diarrhea, half had anorexia and 30% had nausea.3 In a small series of nine patients who presented with only GI symptoms, four of these patients never developed fever or pulmonary symptoms.3

On March 14, the French health minister, Olivier Véran, tweeted that “taking anti-inflammatory drugs (ibuprofen, cortisone ...) could be an aggravating factor for the infection. If you have a fever, take paracetamol.” This was picked up by many news services, and soon became standard recommendations, despite no data.

There is reason for concern for NSAIDs, as regular NSAID use has been tied to more complications in patients with respiratory tract infections.4 I have never been a proponent of regular NSAID use in patients who are infected, because the likelihood of toxicity is elevated in patients who are volume depleted or under physiologic stress. But at this time, there is no evidence on problems with episodic NSAID use in patients with COVID-19.

Another widely disseminated decree was that patients with COVID-19 should not use ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs). COVID-19 binds to their target cells through ACE2, which is expressed by epithelial cells of the lung, intestine and kidney. Patients who are treated with ACE inhibitors and ARBs have been shown to have more ACE2 expression.

In a letter to the editor by Fang et al. published in Lancet Respiratory Medicine, the authors raised the question of whether patients might be better served to be switched from ACE inhibitors and ARBs to calcium-channel blockers for the treatment of hypertension.5 A small study by Meng et al. looked at outcomes of patients on these drugs who had COVID-19 infection.6 They looked at 417 patients admitted to a hospital in China with COVID-19 infection. A total of 42 patients were on medications for hypertension. Group 1 were patients on ACE inhibitors/ARBs (17 patients) and group 2 were patients on other antihypertensives (25 patients). During hospitalization 12 patients (48%) in group 2 were categorized as having severe disease and 1 patient died. In group 1 (the ACE inhibitor/ARB–treated patients) only four (23%) were categorized as having severe disease, and no patients in this group died.

Vaduganathan et al. published a special report in the New England Journal of Medicine strongly arguing the point that “[u]ntil further data are available, we think that [renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system] inhibitors should be continued in patients in otherwise stable condition who are at risk for, being evaluated for, or with COVID-19”.7 This position is supported by the American Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology, the American College of Physicians, and 11 other medical organizations.
 

Take-home messages

  • Testing isn’t perfect – if you have strong suspicion for COVID-19 disease, retest.
  • GI symptoms appear to be common, and rarely may be the only symptoms initially.
  • NSAIDs are always risky in really sick patients, but data specific to COVID-19 is lacking.
  • ACE inhibitors/ARBs should not be avoided in patients with COVID-19.

Dr. Paauw is professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and he serves as third-year medical student clerkship director at the University of Washington. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News. Dr. Paauw has no conflicts to disclose. Contact Dr. Paauw at imnews@mdedge.com.

References

1. Long C et al. Diagnosis of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): rRT-PCR or CT? Eur J Radiol. 2020 Mar 25;126:108961.

2. Zhou F et al. Clinical course and risk factors for mortality of adult inpatients with COVID-19 in Wuhan, China: A retrospective cohort study. Lancet. 2020 Mar 28;395(10229):1054-62.

3. Tian Y et al. Review article: Gastrointestinal features in COVID-19 and the possibility of faecal transmission. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2020;00:1–9.

4. Voiriot G et al. Risks related to the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in community-acquired pneumonia in adult and pediatric patients. J Clin Med. 2019;8:E786.

5. Fang L et al. Are patients with hypertension and diabetes mellitus at increased risk for COVID-19 infection? Lancet Respir Med. 2020 Mar 11. doi:10.1016/S2213-2600(20)30116-8.

6. Meng J et al. Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors improve the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients with hypertension. Renin-angiotensin system inhibitors improve the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients with hypertension. Emerg Microbes Infect. 2020 Dec;9(1):757-60.

7. Vaduganathan M et al. Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors in patients with COVID-19. N Engl J Med. 2020 Mar 30. doi: 10.1056/NEJMsr2005760.

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